

- BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME FULL
- BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME PROFESSIONAL
- BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME SERIES
- BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME FREE
Ellis later said that he never pitched a game without using amphetamines. Stressed by the pressure of his "can't-miss" status as a prospect, Ellis became addicted. He also used pills when he pitched, specifically the amphetamines Benzedrine and Dexamyl. He had a 2–0 win-loss record with Macon and a 5–7 record with Columbus.ĭuring his minor league career, Ellis once chased a heckler in the stands with a baseball bat. Ellis said that he was promoted back to Columbus after shaving his head. Ellis was sent down to the Macon Peaches of the Southern League, which Ellis believed was due to the length of his hair. He believed that he was not on the major league club because the Pirates already had a number of African American players he felt that the team did not want to alienate white fans. The Pirates called Ellis up to the majors near the end of the season, but the team did not use him in a game that year.Įllis started the 1967 season with Columbus. In 1966, Ellis played for the Asheville Tourists of the Class AA Southern League, pitching to a 10–9 win–loss record, a 2.77 earned run average (ERA), and an All-Star Game appearance. After the season, the Pirates added Ellis to their 40-man roster. Ellis pitched in an exhibition game for the Pirates against the Cleveland Indians in July, receiving the win. The next season, he played for the Kinston Eagles of the Class A Carolina League and the Columbus Jets of the Class AAA International League. Brewer, working as a scout for the Pirates, signed Ellis to the Pirates as a result of the arrest, the Pirates offered Ellis $500 a month and a $2,500 signing bonus.Įllis played for the Batavia Pirates of the Class A New York–Pennsylvania League in 1964.

He was arrested for stealing a car, and given probation.
BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME PROFESSIONAL
While Ellis attended LAHC, various Major League Baseball teams attempted to sign him to a professional contract, but as he heard the Pittsburgh Pirates gave out signing bonuses of $60,000, he held out until the Pirates made him an offer. Watch the film’s trailer below.Ellis was diagnosed with sickle cell anemia at age 17 the diagnosis was later changed to sickle cell trait.
BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME FULL
His wild life and career get a full treatment in the documentary No No, which just screened at Sundance this past month.
BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME FREE
(See Part 1, “Superfly Spitball,” above.) In an essay for Deadspin, Alexander laments that Ellis-an outspoken critic of racism in baseball-has been largely reduced to the LSD no-hitter, which he calls “a short take on a big life.” While it’s a hell of a good story, Alexander also sees Ellis “on a continuum with Jackie Robinson” (who advised him to tone it down), “a black ballplayer straddling the reserve-clause era and the arrival of free agency, a man who brought many of the old ways with him into baseball’s new, Day-Glo epoch.” Ellis-who died in 2008 of liver failure at age 63 after years as a drug counselor-certainly lived up to the hype.

The short film premiered at Sundance and film festivals worldwide in 2010, and the Dock Ellis legend has only grown since. The same interview become part of Beyond Ellis D, a “ multimedia book” for iPads developed in 2012 by Donnell Alexander and animated by Heidi Perry. (We also see allusions to Ellis’ other storied antics, like appearing on the mound in curlers and beaning opposing players with fastballs.) “It was easier,” he says, “to pitch with the LSD because I was used to medicating myself.” In this instance at least, the meds were magic. “I didn’t see the hitters,” Ellis says, “all I could tell was whether they were on the right side or left side.” Above, his colorful narration gets a full compliment of sound effects and day-glo exclamations. He woke up two days later, still tripping, went to the stadium, took some stimulants-which “over 90% of the league was using,” he says-and got to work, pitching a no-hitter against the San Diego Padres. In June 1970, Ellis took a day off, dropped acid at the airport and, “high as a Georgia pine,” checked into a friend’s girlfriend’s house to enjoy the rest of his trip. The drugs eventually became too much and he got help, but they gave Ellis his career best anecdote, the story he tells in the short film above, “ Dock Ellis and the LSD No-No.” It’s animated by James Blagdon from an interview Ellis gave to Donnell Alexander and Neille Ilel that aired on NPR in March of 2008.
BOX SCORE OF DOC ELLIS LSD GAME SERIES
One of those characters, pitcher Dock Ellis, had a drug-fueled run in the 70s with the Pittsburgh Pirates, claiming that he almost never pitched a game sober, including several National League East Championships and a 1971 World Series win. For a sport obsessed with statistical averages, baseball seems to thrive like no other on outrageous anecdotes and singular characters.
