Daniels enjoyed the distinction of starting the last game played in Ebbets Field by the Brooklyn Dodgers, on September 24, 1957. The Pirates were defeated by the Dodgers’ Danny McDevitt, 2–0.[3]
On December 16, 1960, Daniels was involved in one of the first trades made by the expansion Washington Senators, set to enter the American League the following April. The four-player deal sent veteran southpaw pitcher Bobby Shantz to the Pirates for Daniels and two others, infieldersHarry Bright and R. C. Stevens.[1] Daniels led the 1961 Senators' pitching staff in games won (12), complete games (11), strikeouts (110), and innings pitched (212, tied with Joe McClain).[5] The following year, managerMickey Vernon selected Daniels to start the 1962 Presidential Opener on April 9—the first one played at the new DC Stadium. He went the distance and defeated the Detroit Tigers, 4–1, allowing only five hits.[6] He pitched for Washington through 1965, going 37–60 (4.14 ERA) in 177 games for the perennial second-division club. He retired from baseball after the 1966 season, which he spent with the Triple-AHawaii Islanders.
Later life
After retiring from baseball, Daniels returned to Compton, California, with his wife, Jimmie Sue Daniels. He has two children, Michael and Vickie Daniels. Bennie Daniels’ daughter, Vickie died, in September 2017. He currently resides in Compton.