 Chuck "Bobo" Brayton hitchhiked to Pullman from Birdsview in 1942. Pullman's never been the same. Photo by Robert Hubner.
“Bobo's my name, baseball's my game,” says Frederick Charles
“Bobo” Brayton as he sits down across from me. His face crinkles
into a grin. “That's what I tell everybody.”
At age 81, Brayton doesn't appear intimidating—-former
Washington State University catcher Scott Hatteberg describes him
as “a Yogi-Berra-type guy”—-but Bobo’s career overwhelms me.
Brayton won 1,162 games in his 33 years at WSU and was honored as
the co-namesake of WSU's baseball field.
Brayton played baseball with his father in Birdsview, Washington
(near Mount Vernon), from the time he was eight years old-—and not
your everyday father-son game of catch. Dad pitched for a local
team and would practice those pitches with Bobo.
Seventy years later, Brayton recalls his father.
“He never did anything without me,” he says. But Herbert died in
a logging accident in July 1936. “[My dad] was bringing in the last
log before lunch,” Brayton says of the accident. “A snag fell and
hit him.”
Brayton maintained the character learned from his father
throughout his life: helping his family; in college; during the
World War II draft; and, of course, through 44 years of
coaching.
However, WSU wouldn't have Bobo were it not for a roller rink.
In ’43, planning to attend Western Washington University, Brayton
ran into friend Dick Morgan at Hamilton Skating Rink. Morgan was
starting at WSC, playing football, and Bobo thought Dick's plan
sounded better than Western.
Three days later, Brayton’s stepfather “put my trunk on a
train,” and Bobo hitched to Pullman. He was heading toward Vantage,
when the late summer sun caught up with him. “Evening found me
standing on a prairie outside of Ellensburg,” he says. “I just
about gave up.”
But he pressed on, making his way to Spokane, staying at the
YMCA, and then heading to Colfax the next morning. In Colfax,
Brayton walked down “the longest road I've ever seen in my life. It
was so hot.” Once he reached the end, he bought a 7up—-to this day
he remembers that drink—-and hitched to Pullman. There, he stumbled
across athletic department worker Shorty Seaver and was introduced
to Babe Hollingbery. “Babe commented on how great my legs looked,”
Bobo says.
Bobo played football, basketball, and baseball his first year.
In fact, basketball was where Brayton got his nickname. When the
basketball team rode trains to away games, Bobo got motion
sickness. Teammate Bob Renick would walk down the train aisle
teasing people, Brayton says. “Bob would yell, ‘Come see Bobo, the
dog-faced boy,’ like in the circus. I was too sick to be mad.”
Before he could finish his WSC education, Brayton was called to
serve in ’44. After a stint in the Air Corps (where he was boxing
heavyweight champ in his extension, knocking out people “colder
than a fritter”), Bobo briefly defected to UW because of the G.I.
bill. Fortunately, by February ’45, he was back at WSC.
Bobo married Eileen Lyman December 21, 1947. On New Year’s Day
1948, they fought their way from Kirkland through a snowstorm,
running out of gas at their doorstep in Pullman.
Herbert Brady Brayton was born September ’49—-“the apple of my
eye,” Bobo says—-and after Bobo graduated with a degree in physical
education in ’50, the young family moved to Yakima, where Bobo
began coaching Yakima Valley College baseball.
“The first season [’51] we didn't win the division, and I was
really disappointed,” Bobo says of the YVC team. But his players
came back with a vengeance, winning the division the next 10
straight seasons and the State Junior College Championship nine
times.
In 1959, an accident nearly ended Bobo’s life. While he was
pitching warm-ups, a line drive shot back, hitting him in the head.
“I was on my hands and knees on the mound,” Bobo says. “It should
have killed me, but it didn’t.” Brayton began wearing a batting
helmet whenever he coached.
The helmet was what pitcher Mel Stottlemyre first noticed when
joining the ’61 YVC team. “He was very aggressive in practices,”
Stottlemyre says, “and he knew what he wanted.” After finishing 7-2
that year, Stottlemyre signed with the Yankees and eventually won a
World Series ring before becoming New York’s pitching coach. “I
taught Mel that sinkerball,” Brayton says. “He made a living off
that pitch.”
The same year Stottlemyre was perfecting his sinkerball, rumors
swirled about Buck Bailey’s retirement. When Buck and the Cougars
played at YVC, he and Bobo took a walk on the field. “I said,
‘What’s with this job over at WSU?’” Bobo recalls. “Buck put a big
ol’ raw hand on my shoulder and said, ‘Charlie, they're treating me
like I'm from I-de-ho.’”
Buck did retire, and Bobo was hired in ’62. Pat Crook, number
one catcher for Buck, caught for Brayton that first year. “I knew
it was going to be tougher than playing for Buck Bailey,” Crook
says. “Bobo had us work out more. We came in third in the
conference, behind OSU and Oregon.”
Unfortunately, Buck would not get to see his protégé coach for
long. In ’64, Bailey died in a car accident.
Now Bobo had a legacy to carry-—and he met it head-on. The ’65
team sailed through the northern division and played Cal-Berkeley
for the championship. “These kids I brought in, they made up their
minds that they were going to the College World Series,” Brayton
says.
And they did. The team beat Cal-—a fitting tribute to Buck—-and
headed to Omaha. There, WSU became famous for playing the
then-longest game in CWS history: 15 innings against Ohio State,
with OSU finally winning 1-0.
Brayton continued coaching division-winning teams, capturing the
title every year from ’70 to ’79. The team again made the World
Series in ’76.
Many of those ’70s games included arguments with umpire C.J.
Mitchell-—good-natured, of course. Today Mitchell praises Brayton
for his innovations in college baseball playoffs. Brayton worked on
that while president of the American Baseball Coaches Association
Rules Committee. “Teams couldn't beat the Trojans, for example,”
Mitchell says, “Bobo made brackets where you get in [the playoffs]
different ways. Basketball picked it up from baseball. He won't
take credit for it, but I'd give him credit.” Former WSU sports
media director Dick Fry agrees with Mitchell. “The present playoff
system is largely a result of Bobo’s preparation and influence,”
Fry says. “His hand in there is unmistakable.”
The essence of Bobo, according to his players, colleagues, and
friends, is that everything he did was for the good of
baseball.
Brayton was an assistant coach in the ’72 Pan-Am games in
Nicaragua and took pitcher Joe McIntosh with him. The American team
became baseball ambassadors. “We played all over,” McIntosh
says. “In Managua, Granada, and Leon.”
Back in Pullman, Brayton orchestrated the building of Bailey
Field in the late ’70s. After problems at the old place (located
where Mooberry track is now) with players hitting line drives into
the “Lake de Puddle” center field, Bobo knew it was time to
rebuild.
First, he raided the torn-down parts of Sick’s Seattle Stadium,
including bleachers and foul poles, and sold them in a
fundraiser-—but kept a few bits for the WSU field. “The first fence
at Bailey field was from Sick’s Stadium,” he says.
Now, with the money he needed, Brayton got to work. “He’d go out
each day, dig around in the dirt, and one day a field appeared,”
Bobo's son, Fritz Brayton, says. Fellow Cougars pitched in. WSU
football coach Jim Walden helped put in the first-base retaining
wall; players carried bricks; several farmers built the
center-field fence with 10-foot-high plywood boards. “I had a heart
operation one December,” says Brayton. “I come back out in January,
and it’s 10 degrees or less, and farmers were putting seats
together with bolts. I just stood there and cried.”
With the improved field, the Cougars went on winning. Brayton
had his 700th, 800th, and 900th wins in ’83, ’85, and ’88. In ’88,
they won 52 games.
1988 also marked the rise of John Olerud. Brayton describes
“Oly” as speaking softly and carrying a big stick. “I always
started my lineup by putting J.O. in the number three spot,” he
says.
Even in “The Show,” Bobo’s rules stuck with Olerud—-such as not
playing catch in front of dugouts to keep foul lines and grass
edging intact. “It wasn’t that it was wrong, because guys in the
big leagues did it,” Olerud says. “But at Washington State, you
didn’t.”
Following on Olerud’s major league heels was Scott Hatteberg,
current Cincinnati Reds player. Like Olerud, Hatteberg says Bobo
stays with him. “I still hear his voice in my head when I’m on the
field sometimes.”
Bobo has staying power in the minds of everyone who’s known him.
“We learned a lot more on the field than just baseball,” says Rob
Nichols, an infielder from ’86-’90. Bob Stephens, pitcher and
assistant coach in the ’60s, says Bobo always kept in touch with
players. “When you graduated, you didn’t leave the program,”
Stephens says, “You became a bigger part of it.”
These days, Bobo and Eileen tend their Red Cougar Ranch. The
couple has a menagerie of animals: four horses, four cats, two
dogs, a mule, even a goose. They owned 11 horses in the ’60s,
Eileen says. “When we were younger, we did a lot of trail riding,”
she explains. Bobo pats Grande, an older quarter horse, and
whispers, “You gonna outlive Bobo?”
—-Shannon Bartlett
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