Today's thoughts

Category: Chicago Cubs (Page 26 of 26)

Cubbies

Old Sport Shorts: I’ll Take A Chance #54

I’ve added Frank Chance to my baseball card collection.  A T-206 Sweet Caporal “The Standard for Years” tobacco card from  1909-1910.   This particular card was of interest to me since it was issued just after the last year that the Cubs had won the World Series in 1908.  First Baseman Frank Chance batted .421 against the Tigers in those games.  The Sweet Caporal  cigarette brand was created by the Kinney Tobacco Company.  Kinney merged in 1890 into the American Tobacco Company and continued sales in Canada until 2011.  The Frank Chance card is also part of the series that includes the “most famous collectible,” the Honus Wagner T-206 trading card, as described by the National Baseball Hall of Fame.   Wagner apparently refused to allow production of his card to continue, so only 50 to 200 of these cards were ever distributed to the public (exact number unknown).  The limited supply is what escalated its value.

Trade Cards, as they were called, were a popular form of advertising, with baseball cards making up only a small fraction of the total distribution.  The original N-series, issued in the 1880s, on Kinney Bro’s High Class Cigarettes, that included Sweet Caporal, featured cards of multiple topics:  Actresses, Animals, Military, Fish, Famous Gems of the World, Famous Running Horses, Novelties, Naval Vessels of the World, Butterflies of the World, Flags of All Nations, and Surf Beauties, among others.   Other tobacco competitors like Goodwin & Co. issued Old Judge cards, inserted them both as a “stiffener” for their cigarette packs and to boost sales.   Allen and Ginter, Buchner & Co., Mayo & Co., and Kimball produced higher quality cards.  Yum Yum tobacco, S.H. Hess, and Four Base Hits card inserts are very rare.  Most of these tobacco company insert cards are much smaller in size than modern day baseball cards.

Honus Wagner, “The Flying Dutchman,” starred for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1908, losing the National League Pennant by one game to the World Champion Cubs.  At that time, there was of course no instant replay and the fans were not confined to the stands.  In a late September controversial play that would ultimately determine the fate of both teams, the Cubs held a 2-0 lead.  The bases were loaded and Ed Abbaticchio, Wagner’s good friend and teammate was at the plate.  His hot smash down the third base line was ruled foul after hitting a fan.  Now considered an urban legend, in a court battle several months later initiated by the woman who was struck by that ball, it was conclusively established that she was standing in fair territory.  That was not the only controversy in the Cubs 1908 Championship drive.  This was the same official that ruled at the infamous “Merkle game” earlier that year that led to a “playoff” game, a Cubs 4-2 victory to end the regular season and send them to the World Series.

As a collector and a Cubs fan, I wanted cards from the most memorable players from those Championship teams, including Chance, Mordecai “Three Finger” Brown, Johnny Evers, and Joe Tinker.  That’s right – I’ll take a Chance, plus a Brown, Evers, and Tinker.  It was also suggested that I take a card from Orval Overall who won the final World Series game in 1908.  Mordecai won games 1 and 4 while Orval won games 2 and 5.  Joe Tinker hit a home run off Christy Mathewson and Johnny Evers alerted umpire Hank O’Day to Merkle’s base running boner.  In the “playoff” game, Tinker hit a trip off Mathewson that started the rally that gave the Cubs the victory.  Finally, as a poet, I was most aware of the Tinkers, Evers, and Chance threesome, the Cubs double-play combination that achieved mythological status through this poem:

Baseball’s Sad Lexicon

These are the saddest of possible words”

“Tinker to Evers to Chance”

Trio of bear cubs, and fleeter than birds.

Tinker and Evers and Chance.

Ruthlessly pricking our gonfalon bubble,

Making a Giant hit into a double –

Words that are heavy with nothing but trouble:

“Tinker to Evers to Chance”

Franklin Pierce Adams wrote a weekly column for the New York Evening Mail, called “Always in Good Humor.”  He is credited with this poem, from the viewpoint of a Giants fan,  that even he thought never would be memorable.

History is a product of the right people being in the right place at the right time, and this team is certainly reflective of this phenomenon. Frank Chance joined the Chicago Cubs in 1898 as a reserve catcher.  Chance opposed his move to First Base and even threatened to quit following Manager Frank Selee’s shuffle of the lineup.  He eventually replaced Salee as Manager of the team in 1905 but continued playing. Joe Tinker was a third baseman in the minors but made the club as a shortstop.  Evers position at second was a result of Bobby Lowe’s injury.  The rest is poetic justice.

Were they really worthy of being legendary?  Probably not!  The double-play combination of Frank Chance, Joe Tinker, and Johnny Evers, ranked only third in the National League at that time with a total of 491 between 1906-1910.  There were also no double plays during any one of their 21 World Series games.  Plus, They were prone to many errors, considering the poor field conditions of their time.

The 2016-2017 Cubs version of Tinker, Evers, and Chance is Russell, Baez, and Rizzo.  The modern day trio has yet to solidify their everyday positions, since Kris Bryant and Ben Zobrist have such great versatility.  It’s not such a bad problem to have!  By the way, I have all their cards in my collection, as well.  Will they go back-to-back like their predecessors?  I will write them a poem if they do!

 

Old Sport Shorts: Cubs Crazy in Maui #51

If you read my earlier post this week, I wrote about how the Hawaiian Islands were so magical when following the Chicago Cubs. Unfortunately, the winning magic that I experienced on a previous trip had turned sour on the first few days of this adventure to Maui.  After losing three straight games to the Pirates and game one of the Brewers series, all a Wrigley Field, I vowed not to leave the Islands until they won.  Fortunately, they won the next two games against the Brewers and maintained their home field dignity, so I can leave now.

Once the Cubs broke the curse, expectations for me were high this year – probably unrealistic.  Admittedly, I’ve expected at least a couple of sweeps early in the season, and that has yet to happen.  They lost to the Cardinals on opening day, before taking the next two games at Busch. They then lost game one to the Brewers before winning the next two;  and beat the Dodgers on opening day at Wrigley before dropping the final two at home.  The Brewers took the first two in Milwaukee before the Cubs could salvage game 3, followed by the shocking four-game losing streak at home, that ended happily with the Cubbies coming through to win the series.

Maybe Maui can provide the powerful magic to get that first Cubs sweep of the year.  I’m currently monitoring the first game at Cincinnati, where they were “struggling,” to the point that Anthony Rizzo needed three-run homer heroics  in the bottom of the ninth to get to extra innings.  Kris Bryant put them ahead in the 11th with a sacrifice fly and Davis got the save.  They are off to a good start against the first place Reds.  I’d like to come back again, and I’d like to think that when I do make the trip here, the Cubs will always win!  Fly the Pacific “W” I’m coming home!

Old Sport Shorts: Fly the L #49

Aloha!  I’m watching the MLB Gamecast of the Cubs as they open their series with the Brewers.  Kyle Schwarber just struck out in the bottom of the 9th and the Cubs lost their fourth straight game, including a three-game sweep by the Pirates in Chicago to fall below the .500 mark in defending their World Series title.  The expectations going into this season were high, but there was also a strong sense of both relief and satisfaction in finally breaking the curse.  Even in the course of a losing streak, things don’t seem so desolate.  I’m certainly not feeling the pain from the beach here in Maui.  In fact, I only got the urge to write this post, because of an experience many years back in Hawaii.

It was 2003 and we were in Honolulu.  Even with the stellar weather, I could not stay away from the T.V. during prime sunning time.  My wife had bought me a Hawaiian shirt with the Cubs logo subtly integrated in the blue and red flowery design.  I wore it all the time and the Cubs kept winning.  The thought of winning it all was definitely top-of-mind.  I remember sending a postcard home to my dad, also a Cubs fan, saying, “Hawaii is a magical place where the Cubs win all the time.”  They had won game five against Atlanta to clinch the NLDS and won three straight games against Florida to lead the Championship Series 3-0.  It was truly magical, and I was reluctant to leave the Islands, fearing the worst for the Cubs.  My wife was also reluctant to leave for sunny reasons.   When we got back to the mainland to catch our connection home, the rush to the airport bar confirmed my worries – the Cubs and Carlos Zambrano were in the process of losing a shutout to Josh Beckett.  As I feared, the shirt and the islands had lost their magic.

It was only one “L” yes, but my confidence had deflated.  As my tan began to fade, as well, I watched them blow the 3-0 lead in the 8th of game 5 in my living room, with all the misplaced blame going to a lowly fan, Steve Bartman.    That was the lowest point for me as a Cubs fan, as all hope faded for a chance to be in the World Series.  I knew that the blame was not on Bartman, but on me for leaving Hawaii.  It certainly made more sense.  I now admit that I was the Curse of 2003!

Well, here I am again back in Hawaii, but the Cubs magic has left the building.  It may be because I’m on the wrong island, I’m not wearing the right Hawaiian shirt, or that it’s not playoff time?  You can’t get to the playoffs unless you “Fly the W,” and when you lose four straight at Wrigley Field it’s not a good sign.  Every time in history that the Cubs have won the World Series they have repeated the following year.  I would expect nothing less, and I’m taking a stand.  I’m not leaving Hawaii until they win again!

Mahalo.

 

Old Sport Shorts: What’s with all the Streaks? #36

A streak in sports by definition is an inherent, often  contrasting quality.  In other words, any streak needs a point of reference, a beginning.  A winning streak starts with a win, while a losing streak starts with a loss.  The most infamous “losing” streak in sports ended last November, when the Chicago Cubs finally reclaimed the World Series Championship again after a 108 year drought.  It may have seemed like a long time, but the fact still remains that they did win it before, which is a lot better than never having won it at all.  Their victory left the Cleveland Indians without a World Series title since 1948, 69 years of frustration, now the longest in Major League Baseball.  Once again, at least they were once a winner, and that streak of misfortune will someday end.

When the Cubs won the 1908 series, it started a streak of two, since they also won in 1909.  Will history repeat itself, or will Cleveland find an end to their ugly streak?  Baseball starts tonight, signifying the end of “March Madness,” which always gets a couple bonus days of April.  I’d like to call it “April Anguish” for all but one remaining college team.

It has been an eventful 35 days of streak-making and breaking.  After all, it takes a streak of least six games to win the N.C.A.A. Championship. The most notable streak in college basketball history ended this weekend with the Mississippi State Lady Bulldogs’ stunning overtime victory over the University of  Connecticut. One-Hundred-Eleven consecutive games is a remarkable feat, but ending it was even more newsworthy!  I’m sure the Huskies will rebound once they’ve had a chance to reflect on their remarkable accomplishments.  After all, every streak eventually comes to an end – right Chicago?

A few pieces of “March Madness” are being assembled in these April bonus days.  The Oregon Ducks have not won a National Championship since 1939, making their first Final Four since that eventful year.  If you do the math, that’s 78 years, a streak that will unfortunately continue at least another year after yesterday’s loss.  Yet, once again they have at least won one.  Gonzaga University, on the other hand, entered the Final Four for the first time ever, and they’ve never won a National Championship.   The Zag’s steak of Final Four appearances starts at one, and we’ll see what happens on Monday night.   South Carolina, had both a men’s and women’s team in the Final Four this year.  In years prior, the Gamecock men’s team had never won back-to-back tourney games, let alone make a Final Four.  The women had also never been to a Final Four, so there was little tourney history to draw from both of these teams.  The South Carolina women still have a chance tonight to win their first national title.  Conversely, their Carolina neighbors to the North have been to 20 Final Fours and have won 5 National Championships. The Tar Heels men’s team won it it last in 2009, so it’s been only seven years since they’ve captured the big one.  The fate of that streak too, will be decided on Monday night when they battle Gonzaga for the crown.

Before “March Madness,” there was “Hoosier Hysteria.”  Every state has its high school basketball history, but I would argue that there is none greater than the state of Indiana, especially when the single-class tournament existed.  Or is that just bias? The very best story was captured in the movie, Hoosiers,  based on the Milan Indians basketball team of 1954.  Milan has not won a state championship since that fateful year, a drought of 63 years and perhaps another movie in the making when that lengthy streak eventually ends.  One of the teams that Milan defeated in the 1954 tournament was Indianapolis Crispus Attucks, the first all-African-American high school in Indiana.  The Attucks “Flying Tigers” were led that year by Sophomore Oscar Robertson, the Big O.   As most know, Robertson eventually landed in the NBA Hall of Fame.  Following the Milan Miracle of 1954, Crispus Attucks and Oscar Robertson won the next two Indiana State High School Basketball Championships, losing only one game in 1955 and going undefeated at 31-0 in 1956.  After “Big O” graduated and continued his basketball excellence at the University of Cincinnati, Attucks won the State Championship again in 1959.  Just last week, Crispus Attacks claimed another championship.  It only took 58 years, while Milan is still counting.  Oscar Robertson at age 78 handed out the medals.

In 1971, I went to my first NBA game in Milwaukee and was fortunate to see Oscar Robertson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar play for the Bucks.  I find it interesting that the Indiana Pacers will don the Hickory High School uniforms from Hoosiers and play the Milwaukee Bucks on April 6th. To me, it commemorates that 1954 tournament game, 63 years ago, between the Milan Indians and Oscar Robertson’s Crispus Attucks Tigers.  It’s a great way to celebrate “Hoosier Hysteria” and “March Madness in April.”  Let’s now get ready for baseball season that starts tonight and the Masters Golf Tournament and see what other streaks we can start or break?

 

 

 

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Old Sport Shorts: March “Bad”ness #23

Typically this is my favorite time of the year.  After all, it’s “March Madness!”  The sun should be shining, the NCAA basketball tourney is about to begin, and Spring Training is in full swing.  On Sunday, the basketball brackets will be announced, and since I’m now retired, I can watch all the games I want without feeling guilty about skipping work.  I also have the freedom to travel and see my team play once the pairings are set in place this weekend.  Unfortunately my team, Indiana , has played “badly” this year and unless a minor miracle occurs and they can win three more games in the Big Ten Tournament, I will not have a team to follow throughout March Madness.  I could be stuck with “March Badness,” and a spot in the N.I.T. (Not in Tournament).  Should I also mention that the sun is not shining, as the Portland monsoon continues?  No sun and no team equals a BAD March and a reason to be MAD.

I am excited today, as the Indiana team seems to have come together, so I’m meeting some fellow alumni at Buffalo Wild Wings for the televised game this afternoon against Wisconsin.   Indiana cannot seem to beat Wisconsin so I have reduced expectations.  However, yesterday’s get together for the game against Iowa created some guarded optimism. As a friend pointed out, all Indiana has to do is win 10 straight games to win the National Championship, something I haven’t witnessed since 1986 – over 30 years ago.  It’s a great memory – taking time off work to drive to New Orleans and win it all on a last second shot.  I’d like to have just one more of those memories before I die.  I won’t have to take off work to do it – if the team is willing and able.

I have another reason to be upset.  Having grown up in Indiana, the rival school Purdue has already won the regular season Big Ten Championship and I’m jealous.  I’ve lost most of my hatred for Purdue, since a “cruel” twist of fate took my career to Lafayette and the Boilermaker community.  I used to always say:  “Spring arrives when Indiana is still playing basketball and Purdue is not.”   Since Spring in Portland is all about rain – it’s no longer one of my favorite seasons, and Purdue is no longer my enemy.  I also have to contend with the Butler Bulldogs, since my wife is a graduate. Both Purdue and Butler are on firmly on track this year to be part of the Big Dance.  I hate to say it but Indiana just may be the first sign of Spring this year!

My friends and I are making plans to go to San Jose for the Sweet 16, with expectations of Gonzaga or Oregon playing there.  These are two teams that I’ve adopted since moving to Portland, but I can’t seem to find the same passion that I feel for Indiana.  Maybe Purdue or Butler will be there – who knows?  I do enjoy the excitement of high school and college basketball, so regardless of who makes the Sweet 16 it will be a fun weekend and a reunion with other college buddies that I haven’t seen since that last Indiana National Championship.

It’s been a good sports year for me so far!  The Cubs are World Champions and I was there.  Plus, I’ve already been to one Spring Training game with plans to attend regular season games in LA, Chicago, and Seattle.  I also plan to attend All Star Weekend in Miami with my son.  Baseball seems to have surpassed Basketball as my favorite sport for the first time in my life – and they say you’re too old to change.

I like this retirement stage in life, and hope that it doesn’t get “old.”  I know that I will – but I don’t have to play – just watch!  Go Hoosiers!

Old Sport Shorts: Would you spend $10 for a place in Baseball History? #11

The Fort Wayne Kekiongas back in 1871 invested $10 in the newly formed National Association of Professional Base Ball Players (NAPBBP).  It evolved from the National Association of Base Ball Players (NABBP), with the decision to legitimately pay players, a practice that had been going on under-the-table for years.  The original organization had its first convention of sixteen New York City area clubs in 1857, and grew to over 400 members by 1867.  These included teams from San Francisco and Louisiana.  By 1869, clubs desiring to pay their players were free to declare themselves professional.  The Cincinnati Red Stockings were the first professional team established in a new league of twelve, but issues involving championship procedures and player regulation, added the additional “P for Professional” in the NABBP alphabet soup to start the 1871 season.  For the next two years the NAPBBP oversaw the game of baseball, before state and regional associations took over these responsibilities.

As a side note, it was the NAPBBP (National Association) in 1867 that established in its rules to bar any club “composed of one or more colored persons.”   This racist attitude was fueled by Chicago’s Cap Anson, who played for Rockford against the Kekiongas in 1871.  Thirteen years later in 1884, Anson’s White Stockings (or Colts) had won three consecutive National Association titles and was playing Toledo. Moses Fleetwood Walker, their mulatto catcher, was the target of Anson’s prejudice, when he stated, “won’t play never no more with the nigger in.”  Unfortunately, his attitude at the time was further enforced by the leagues in 1897.  Detroit’s Ty Cobb was another great player who allegedly was a racist when it came to baseball.  It wasn’t until April 15, 1947 that Dodger’s owner Branch Rickey introduced Jackie Robinson, who finally broke the baseball color barrier, and led the integration of the sport.

Native Americans also faced baseball’s color barrier, so it’s ironic that any team be named after Indian terminology. The word Kekionga means “Blackberry Patch” in the language of the Miami Indians who settled at where the St. Joseph River flows into the St. Mary’s River to form the Maumee River.  Today the city of Ft. Wayne is known for the “Three Rivers,” Johnny Appleseed, and General “Mad” Anthony Wayne.  It’s also known for a sports heritage that includes the Kekiongas, the NBL Champion Zolner Pistons (who moved to Detroit), the Ft. Wayne Daisies All-American girl’s professional baseball team, and the Men’s and Girl’s 1944 World Champion Zolner Pistons softball teams.  It’s currently home to three minor league sports teams:  Fort Wayne Comets hockey of the ECHL, Mad Ants of the NBA Development League, and the Tin Cups of baseball’s Midwest League.

Baseball history was made on May 4, 1871 when the Kekiongas beat the Cleveland Forest Citys 2-0 in the very first professional baseball game.  It was that $10 franchise fee into the NAPBBP and a coin flip, or maybe a rainout of the Boston vs. Washington D.C. scheduled opener as another account suggests, that earned this place in baseball lore.  Bobby Matthews pitched the shutout that was rained out in the top of the 9th inning.  Matthews was one of several players recruited by the Kekiongas from a mid-season break-up of the Maryland Club of Baltimore.  He’s credited for inventing the spitball and being the first master of the curve.  He went on to play five seasons each in the National Association, National League, and American Association, becoming the only pitcher of over 100 games to win at least 50 in three different major leagues.  Deacon White, who collected 3 hits against Matthews, was the other historic player in that first game, who’s 22-year career ended as playing owner of Buffalo’s Brotherhood team.

Jim Foran, who came from the Philadelphia Athletics (1869) and Troy Haymakers (1870) led the Kekiongas in hitting at .348 for the 1871 season.  Catcher and Manager Bill Lennon, also part of the migration of Kekionga players from Maryland is credited with throwing out the very first major league baserunner attempting to steal.  Harry Deane took over the managing duties from Lennon after he deserted the Kekiongas in mid-June.  His claim to fame was a substitute player for the Cincinnati Red Stockings in 1870, filling  in for an injured George Wright at shortstop.  He played center field during his brief stint in Fort Wayne, and eventually joined the Baltimore Canaries for 46 games in 1874.

Prior to their historical game with the Forest Citys, the Kekiongas played the legendary undefeated (57 victories and one tie) 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings twice.  The Red Stockings employed all paid players legally according to the NAPBBP rules established that year.  The Red Stockings, of course, won both games 86-6 and 41-7 respectably.  Baseball in Ft. Wayne was organized in 1862 as the Summit City Club.  In 1866, following the Civil War, a second team, the Kekionga Baseball Club of Fort Wayne emerged.  In the years to follow, the Kekiongas played Summit City, Sydney (Ohio), Peru, Toledo, Kendallville, and tried to schedule games with LaPorte and other surrounding teams.  It was apparently hard to find competition, and when game was finally scheduled the visiting club would often be treated like royalty.  Eventually, the opportunity to join a league was worth the $10 and the chance to play regularly.  It is ironic that the Kekiongas who were never a very good team, often “reorganizing” to lure opponents into thinking they were playing an improved team, got this honor to play the very first game on their home field where the lavish grandstand was known as the “Grand Dutchess.”

What’s in a name?

In addition to the Kekiongas and Forest Citys, the other 1871 professional teams included the New York Mutuals, Chicago White Stockings, Boston Red Stockings, Philadelphia Athletics, Washington Olympics, Troy Haymakers, and Rockford Forest Citys.  All were recognized in the standings only by their nick-name, not the city where they resided.  The nick-name “Forest City” was obviously quite popular, with two clubs of the same name in the same league.  Of all these teams, only the Chicago White Stockings survived attrition and continuously played in the same city into today’s game.  The Chicago White Stockings name stuck through 1889, becoming the Colts (Anson’s Colts) through 1905, along with “Orphans” and “Remnants,” as the media referred to them following the departure of Anson.  The name “Cubs” surfaced around 1902 and gained the popularity necessary to earn its official place in 1906 throughout today. The White Stockings, according to some sources, were also called the Panamas, Rainmakers, Spuds, Trojans, Microbes, and Zephyrs before the Cubs name finally stuck.

The Philadelphia Athletics won the 1871 title winning 21 games.  The Chicago White Stockings finished two games back, followed by the Boston Red Stockings.  The Kekiongas only won seven games out of the 19 they played, with no victories over these top three teams in the league.  It was their final season, with rumors of the team moving to Brooklyn to become the Dodgers.  This was, in fact, a question in the game Trivial Pursuit – so it has to be true!  There are some connections to Brooklyn, including the two teams from Brooklyn that joined the National Association in the place of Ft. Wayne and Rockford the following year, but only one Kekionga player joined a Brooklyn team.

Kekiongas no more 1872-1875

The 1872 season included eleven teams.  The Kekiongas and Rockford Forest Citys were out and the Baltimore Canaries, Middletown Mansfields, and two teams from Brooklyn (Eckfords and Atlantics) were in.  The Mansfields existed only that year but featured future Hall of Famers Asa Brainard, who was a star pitcher for the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings and also played for the Canaries and Olympics, plus catcher Jim O’Rourke, who moved on to Boston.  Tom Carey and Bobby Matthews moved from the Kekiongas to the Canaries, while their teammate in Ft. Wayne, James McDermott went on to pitch for the Brooklyn Eckfords.  Other stars in the league included Cap Anson of the Athletics, and Deacon White of the Forest Citys.  The Washington Nationals did not win a game, and folded after a short season along with the Olympics.

1873 reverted back to 9 teams with the loss of the Nationals, Olympics, Mansfields, Eckfords, and Forest Citys.  The Washington Blue Legs, Elizabeth Resolutes, and the Baltimore Marylands joined.  The Blue Legs would lose all 6 games they played, and the 1874 season would add the Hartford Dark Blues and Philadelphia Whites to an 8-team league.  Boston would win it again with 52 victories, up from 43 the year before.   They would go on to win 71 in 1875, the final year of the NAPBBP.  Newcomers would be the St. Louis Brown Stockings, The New Haven Elm Citys, the St. Louis Red Stockings, the Philadelphia Centennials, and Keokuk Westerns, growing the league to a record 13 teams, even though the franchise fee had doubled to $20.  Hall of Fame bound players included George and Harry Wright from Boston, Pud Galvin from St. Louis (the first pitcher to win 300 games), and Candy Cummings of the New York Mutuals.  It should be noted that even though the Kekiongas only made it through year one of the league, their pitcher Bobby Matthews did manage to win 297 games (just short of the magic number), had eight 20 win seasons, and won 42 games in 1874 for the New York Mutuals, although it was not enough to get him in the Hall of Fame.

1875 marked the end of the NAPBBP (National Association) and the formation of the National League by William Hulbert, a Chicago businessman. As a baseball enthusiast and officer with the Chicago White Stockings, he was upset with the dominance of the four-time National Association Champion Boston Red Stockings and their alleged conspiracy against the success of “Western” clubs.  Furthermore, he was tired of contract jumpers, like his shortstop Davy Force, who was trying to get more money from the rival Philadelphia Athletics.  To get even, he signed future Hall of Famers Albert Spalding, Deacon White, and Cap Anson, among others, to move to Chicago.  In the process, he formed the new National League on February 2, 1876. The new league consisted of the Boston Red Stockings (now the Atlanta Braves), Chicago White Stockings (now the Chicago Cubs), Cincinnati Red Stockings, Hartford Dark Blues, Louisville Grays, Mutual of New York, Philadelphia Athletics, and St. Louis Brown Stockings.  Included in his plan was limiting membership to cities of over 75,000.  This would have affected a small time club like the Kekiongas had they been able to stay together. Absent from the former National  Association were The Brooklyn Atlantics, New Haven, Philadelphia Centennials, and Keokuk (Iowa) Westerns.  Keokuk was another small-town team that had gone out of business after a 1-12 record.  Their catcher “Paddy” Quinn had made his major league debut with the Ft. Wayne Kekiongas in 1871 and ended his career with the Chicago White Stockings in 1877.  New Haven and the Centennials were both one-season teams, while the Atlantics continued to play independently after not being invited to join the National League.

The New National League 1876-1900

White and Spalding, plus Cal McVey and Ross Barnes, two more of Hulbert’s acquisitions, led the Chicago White Stockings to the 1876 pennant, ending the dominance of the Red Stockings.  Spalding started his Sporting Goods business in Chicago and Hulbert became President of the White Stockings and the National League.  He eventually was recognized as a Hall of Fame inductee himself in 1995, nearly 125 years later. But in 1877, the Hartford team moved to Brooklyn and became the Brooklyn Hartfords, the New York Mutuals and Philadelphia Athletics dropped out of his league, and the Red Stockings became simply the Reds.  Unfortunately for Hulbert, Boston (renamed the Red Caps) jumped back on top, while the White Stockings finished next to last.

In 1878, Blues and Grays joined the league, as Indianapolis, Providence, and Milwaukee respectively fielded teams.  The Red Caps and Reds finished first and second, while the White Stockings finished at .500 and in fourth of only six teams.  Finally, a league resurgence occurred with the addition of the Buffalo Bisons, Cleveland Blues, Syracuse Stars, and Troy Trojans.  By 1880 the White Stockings and Hulbert were back on top of the now 8 team league, including the Worchesters from Worchester.  Cincinnati would leave for the newly forming American Association, replaced by the Detroit Wolverines. The revolving door at the bottom of the league would continue, but the White Stockings prevailed for back-to-back-to-back crowns 1980-1982.

1882 was the year baseball’s American Association got its start, known as the “Beer and Whiskey League,” consisting of “River City” teams from Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, St. Louis, and Louisville.  Many of these teams had left, or were asked to leave, the “puritanical” National League because of gambling, religion, and alcohol related issues.  It’s ironic that the new league was abbreviated to “AA.”  As the two leagues competed for players, it was decided that beginning in 1884 the winner of the NL would meet the winner of the AA in a Championship game.  This innovation set the stage for what would eventually become the  World Series of 1903.  The first AA league winner was the Cincinnati Reds, but it was the 1884 New York Metropolitans that lost the first “World Championship” to the Providence Grays of the NL.  The series would continue until 1890, with the only NL loss by the Chicago White Stockings of 1886 to the St. Louis Browns.  There were several ties.

The New American League 1901 and the World Series

In 1901, the National League’s modern rival, the American League of Professional Baseball Clubs, was founded. By then it had been 30 years since the Kekiongas hosted the very first National Association professional game and 25 years after the first National League season.  I guess the question is when does baseball history start.  Does it start with the Knickerbocker era back in 1842?  the Doubleday myth back in 1839? Or 1947 when the game was finally integrated?  Cap Anson was a competitor.  I think his prejudicial words were designed to give him a better chance to be a star and claim a championship by simply excluding an entire race.  It is the judgement of organizations like Major League Baseball and The Hall of Fame as to what should be recognized as baseball history and who should be recognized for firsts in the sport?  There are those that believe that organized baseball began with the National League in 1875.  These were essentially the exact same players and teams that played in the National Association of 1871, and its predecessor the NABBP of 1857.  The baseball genealogy then extends back to the Knickerbocker leagues of 1842, and maybe even to that game in Cooperstown in 1839, when Abner Doubleday was at West Point.  I feel it extends back to the first time that a club connected with a projectile with the object being to hit it as far as you can – if you can hit it.  As we try to give credit to this unknown moment in history, let’s also give credit to that $10 investment that the Ft. Wayne Kekiongas made to the NAPBBP, when playing baseball became a career, worthy of statistics, rather than a pastime.

Starting in 1903, the best team from each league began competing against each other in the World Series.   The first “World Champions” were the Boston Americans – not Red Stockings, Red Sox, Red Caps, Braves, Beaneaters, Somersets, Pligrims, Collinsites, Bostonians, or Plymouth Rocks.  They defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates five games to three – isn’t that an eight game series?  They did it again in 1904 over the New York Giants, and three more times before 1918.  They then waited 86 years.  I’m sure Harry Hulbert would be happy.  No wait – his Cubs would have to wait 108 years.  The Fort Wayne Kekiongas never won a World Series and probably wouldn’t have even if the opportunity existed.  Please don’t take away there one claim to baseball history – the very first game.

Old Sport Shorts: Goat Stew #10

For every hero,

It’s a shame.

There’s a goat,

To take the blame.  

In 1961, Tracy Stallard surrendered Roger Maris’ 61st Home Run.  He started his career with for the Lafayette, Indiana Red Sox – members of the Midwest League.  Being a goat in this case, means never being forgotten.  He claims to not have grooved the pitch.  I happened to grow up in Indiana, so every connection with my home state and the game of baseball is important to me.  Here are some stories that may ring of importance to you:

Guy Bush gave up Babe Ruth’s last two home runs.  He hit Babe himself in Game 4 of the 1932 World Series, then gave up two hits and one earned run in a Cubs loss to the Yankees.  His goat-like stats in that series:  0-1 record, 14.29 ERA, and gave up nine earned runs in less than six innings of work.

“Rookie Fred Merkle’s “Boner” on September 23 1908 resulted in a one game playoff on  October 8, 1908 for the NL Pennant.  That rematch was won by Hoosier native Mordecai Brown, who then went on to win the World Series against the Tigers.  Sorry – I snuck in that Indiana reference again.  Mordecai was also the 1920 pitching coach for the Indiana Hoosiers baseball team, where he claimed a state championship.

Merkle had singled, putting a runner on third.  When Al Bridwell hit the apparent winner into center field, Merkle failed to touch second base as fans rushed the field, thinking the Giants had won.  Instead the Cubs’ Johnny Evers retrieved the ball and claimed the Merkle force-out, a decision enforced several days later with the game ruled a tie.  “Merkle’s Boner” was arguably the most controversial decision in the history of the game.

Another “boner” belongs to Boston’s Bill Buckner, who’s ground ball fielding error in game 6 of the 1986 World Series against the Met’s proved to stink of goat.  It was the 10th inning with two outs, after three singles and a wild pitch put Mookie Wilson in position to win the game.  His slow dribbler down the first base line went between the legs of Buckner, allowing Ray Knight to score the winning run from second base.  Perhaps the greater “boner” was made by Boston manager, John McNamara, who chose not to relieve the ailing Buckner with the defensive replacement Dave Stapleton as he had in games one, two, and five.  Boston was one out away from winning the Series for the first time since 1918, with a three game to two advantage before that ugly sequence led to a game 7.  Boston then “rebounded” to lead the decisive 7th Game  3-0, until the bottom of the 6th when the Mets scored three runs off Bruce Hurst.  Prematurely, Hurst had already been named World Series MVP before that improbable comeback in Game 6.  It was just another example of how the game of baseball turns a hero into a goat in just a blink of a horned mammal’s eye.

In the 1988 World Series, Oakland Athletics pitching ace, Dennis Eckersley, made a hero of Dodger pinch-hitter Kirk Gibson.  On the other hand, maybe it was Gibson who made a goat out of Eckersley as they faced each other in the bottom of the 9th of Game One?  Gibson, who was not expected to play due to injuries in both legs, limped to the plate with two outs and in dramatic fashion hit the game winning homer on a full count.  He would not make another appearance in the series, but his Dodgers claimed the World Series title four games to one.   Eckersley would redeem himself in the 1989 World Series by winning Game 2 and getting the save in a Game 4 sweep of the Giants.  Then, he would go on to win the Cy Young and MVP in 1992 by posting 51 saves – hero once again.

It was Eckersley who coined the phrase, “walk-off homer,” when describing the Gibson blast of 1988.  However, perhaps the most famous World Series “walk-off” occurred in 1960 when Bill Mazeroski won it for the Pittsburgh Pirates over the New York Yankees.  To this date, it is the only time that a Game 7 has ended on a homer, and in this case the goat was Yankee starter Ralph Tracy.  It was also the only series in history where the MVP award did not go to a member of the winning team.  Instead, Bobby Richardson, of the losing New York Yankees received the honor.   Ralph Terry, ironically, went on to become the MVP of the 1962 World Series, despite continuing his goatish struggles the previous year, giving up a two-run homer to Cincinnati’s Gordy Coleman in Game 2, plus a 3-run homer to Frank Robinson in Game 5 of the 1961 World Series.

Known as the “Shot heard round the world,” Brooklyn Dodger pitcher, Ralph Branca, gave up another historic “walk-off” to New York Giants outfielder, Bobby Thomson, to win the National League Pennant in 1951.  It was the decisive blow in this three-game tie-breaker playoff series to determine who would eventually lose to the “third” New York baseball team, the Yankees in the 1951 World Series.  Thomson had also homered against Branca in Game 1, so in retrospect, maybe the goat was Dodger’s coach, Clyde Sukeforth, who apparently instructed manager Charlie Dressen to go with Branca?  Or was the true hero of the game a “cheater” who admittedly relayed stolen signs from Branca to Thomson?

With this thought in mind, other “cheaters” have taken a “seat of shame” on the outside of baseball’s Hall of Fame.  Two of the best-known examples are “Shoeless Joe” Jackson and Pete Rose, who turned heroic careers into goat stew.  Not to mention those who cheated through the use of steroids and other performance enhancing drugs. Please have a seat next to the goats outside.

Perhaps the greatest “boner,” the “goat of all goats” in baseball, occurred off the playing field.  On April 6, 1987, Al Campanis, the Los Angeles Dodgers VP and GM, was invited to appear on the ABC Network news show, “Nightline” with Ted Koppel.  The appearance was to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of when Jackie Robinson finally broke Baseball’s color barrier.   Companis was also a friend, teammate, and roommate of Jackie Robinson, having come up together with the Dodger minor league team, the Montreal Royals.

Koppel’s question to Campanis was as to why there had only been few black managers and no black general managers in Major League Baseball.   Campanis answered:  “I truly believe that they may not have some of the necessities to be, let’s say, a field manager, or perhaps a general manager. ”  He then went on uncomfortably, digging an even bigger hole in race relations. Needless to say, he conveniently resigned from the Dodger’s organization two days later, as civil rights groups showed their outrage.  Campanis’ comments literally set baseball relations back forty years, mimicking the exact same ridiculous attitudes that prevailed pre-Robinson about the baseball skills of black attitudes.  In defense of Campanis, many of his peers have suggested that he was known for butchering words, and that what he really meant was  “lack of experience” instead of “necessities.”  However, unlike many of the players who had “a goat moment” found a second chance – Campanis never did.

Ralph Branca, who was the “goat” to Bobby Thomson’s heroic homer, was at least one time a hero on the field himself.  It was Branca who lined up beside Jackie Robinson on Opening Day of 1947.  Other teammates refused.  In all fairness, Al Campanis did agree to be Robinson’s roommate – the very first interracial roommates in all of baseball.  Does that make Campanis less of a goat?

The game’s greatest hero, the Bambino, had his own curse that lasted from 1918 until 2004.  That’s only 86 years, compared with the Chicago Cubs’ “Curse of the Billy Goat,” that kept them from winning the World Series for 108 years. Now granted, both curses didn’t really get started with each team’s last World Series victory.  The Red Sox curse supposedly started in 1920 when Ruth was traded to the Yankees, while the Cubs curse allegedly began in 1945 by Billy Goat Tavern owner William Sianis.  The point is that both curses lasted a really long time, and thankfully both have finally ended.  It comes as no surprise that the Cubs lost that 1918 series to the Red Sox, but did manage to break Ruth’s 29 1/3 scoreless inning streak that stood for 43 years – another really long time.

I love a really good “goat” story and there are many surrounding Major League Baseball.  I’ve tried to highlight a few throughout this particular collection of baseball memories.  I would also be remiss if I did not bring up the name of Steve Bartman, who in my opinion has been unfairly judged as a “goat” in this long, painful process of making our Chicago Cubs heroes again, at last.   Finally, I would also like to take credit for ending the “Billy Goat Curse” by sitting in the top row of Wrigley Field for the game 5 victory, and then having lunch at the Billy Goat Tavern the next day.  I could literally feel the curse lift as we left the tavern in a giddy state.

Old Sport Shorts: Baseball Notes #2

-Chicago White Sox spitball pitcher Ed Walsh beat Cubs ace, Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown, known as “Three Fingers Brown,” in Game 3 of the 1906 World Series,   It was a series the Cubs were heavily favored to win, having won 116 games that year.  Brown was born in Nyesville, Indiana in 1876 (Oct. 19) and died in Terre Haute in 1948 (Feb. 14).  He was a two time World Series champion for the Cubs in 1907 and 1908.  It would be 108 years later, in 2016, that the Cubs would win another World Series.  Brown was also the pitching coach for the 1920 Indiana Hoosiers baseball team.  He was posthumously inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1949.

-The Fort Wayne Daisies  was a professional baseball team that played from 1945 through 1954, during the war years, in the All-American Girls Baseball League. The Daisies made the playoffs every year from 1947 to 1954, and finished in first from 1951-54, but never won a championship,

-May 4, 1871 the very first Major League game was played in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. The Ft. Wayne Kekiongas defeated the Forest Citys (Cleveland) 2-0 in the inaugural game of the National Association (player-organized – that later became the National League).  The decision to play the game in Ft. Wayne was the result of a coin flip, and a rain-out of the originally scheduled opener between Boston and D.C. made this game historically first. The game ended early with rain in the top of the 9th.  The Kekiongas paid a $10 league franchise fee to be part of baseball history.   Bobby Matthews, who’s credited with developing the spitball and was first to have his pitch curve away from batters, pitched the shutout and went on to win 297 games.  The Kekiongas did not make it through the season in this their final year since forming just after the Civil War.

The word Kekionga means Blackberry Patch in the language of the Miami Indians who settled at where the St. Joseph River flows into the St. Mary’s River to form the Maumee River.  Today the city of Ft. Wayne is known for the “Three Rivers,” Johnny Appleseed, and General “Mad” Anthony Wayne.  It’s also known for a sports heritage that includes the Kekiongas, the NBL Champion Zolner Pistons (who moved to Detroit), the Ft. Wayne Daisies All-American girl’s professional baseball team, and the Men’s and Girl’s 1944 World Champion Zolner Pistons softball teams.  It’s now home to three minor league sports teams:  Fort Wayne Comets hockey of the ECHL, Mad Ants of the NBA Development League, and the Tin Cups of baseball’s Midwest League.

-Eddie Cicotte of the 1906 Indianapolis Indians threw for what is believed to be the first time, a pitch gripped with the knuckles.  He then refined it into “The Finger Nail Ball” (Baseball Magazine article in 1908) that was more controllable.  He was suspended by the Chicago White Sox late in the 1920 season for his role in the “Black Sox” gambling scandal the year before.

-Albert Von Tilzer  – Indianapolis native (434 S. Illinois) composed “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.” It was a 1908 Tin Pan Alley song with lyrics written by Jack Norworth.  Both had apparently never attended a baseball game.  It was played for the first time at a ballpark in 1934 at a Los Angeles High school and later that year in the 4th game of the World Series at Sportsman’s Park, now Busch Stadium in St. Louis.

-Amos Rusie, “The Hoosier Thunderbolt” was born May 30, 1871 in Mooresville, Indiana.  His major league debut was on May 9, 1889 with the Indianapolis Hoosiers of the National League.  He spent the next eight years with the New York Giants from 1890 to 1898, and and his final year with the 1901 Cincinnati Reds.  The Giants traded him in 1900 for then unknown Christy Mathewson, who would play for them for 17 years as one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball history.

Rusi’s fastball speed, estimated to be in he upper 90s, and inherent wildness eventually led to an 1893 rule that changed the 50 foot pitching distance from the rubber to home plate to the modern day 60 feet.   His delivery was so erratic  that in 1890 he set a record of walking 289 batters.  The rule change came about when he hit Hughie Jennings with a fastball in the head in 1897.  Rusie was finally inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977 by the Veterans Committee.

-Hank Aaron played briefly in Indianapolis for the Clowns before his contract was sold to the Milwaukee Braves in 1952 for $10,000.

-The Hoofeds – Hoosiers of the Federal League – were the 1914 champions of the short-lived rival league that folded just before Major League Baseball was exempted from antitrust laws.  Two future Hall of Famers played in Indianapolis that championship season – third baseman William Boyd McKechnie and outfielder Edd Roush.

The 1884 Hoosiers, for instance, hosted a Toledo Blue Stockings team with two African-American players – brothers Moses Fleetwood Walker and Weldy Walker – more than 50 years before Jackie Robinson broke the modern baseball color barrier.

The earliest-known African-American player in organized baseball, John “Bud” Fowler, whose playing days date to 1878, later played for teams in Indiana.

-The Indianapolis Blues of the three-year-old National League called the city home in 1878. The Indianapolis Hoosiers played in the precursor to the American League in 1884, and another Hoosiers team was fielded in the National League from 1887 to 1889.

-In 1967, Satchel Paige appeared with the Globetrotters in Chicago and played with the Indianapolis Clowns for $1,000 a month.

More from Scott Tartar article:   http://www.theindianalawyer.com/little-known-indiana-baseball-roots-rediscovered-in-lawyers-exhibit/PARAMS/article/35211
I just bought this book from author Chad Gramling:

https://www.amazon.com/Baseball-Fort-Wayne-Images/dp/073854129X

Historical Baseball Blunders:

For every hero,

It’s a shame.

There’s a goat,

To take the blame.  

In 1961, Tracy Stallard surrendered Roger Maris’ 61st Home Run.  He played for the Lafayette, Indiana Red Sox, also members of the Midwest League.  Being a goat in this case, means never being forgotten.  He claims to not have grooved the pitch.

Guy Bush gave up Babe Ruth’s last two home runs.  He hit Babe himself in Game 4 of the 1932 World Series, then gave up two hits and one earned run in a Cubs loss to the Yankees.  His goat-like stats in that series:  0-1 record, 14.29 ERA, and gave up nine earned runs in less than six innings of work.

“Rookie Fred Merkle’s “Boner” on September 23 1908 resulted in a one game playoff on  October 8, 1908 for the NL Penant.  That rematch was won by Hoosier native Mordecai Brown, who then went on to win the World Series against the Tigers.

Merkle had singled, putting a runner on third.  When Al Bridwell hit the apparent winner into Center, Merkle failed to touch second base as the fans rushed the field thinking the Giants had won.  Instead the Cubs’ Johnny Evers retrieved the ball and claimed the Merkle force-out, a decision enforced several days later and the game ruled a tie.  “Merkle’s Boner” was arguably  the most controversial decision in the history of the game.

Another boner belongs to Boston’s Bill Buckner, who’s ground ball fielding error in game 6 of the 1986 World Series against the Met’s.  It was the 10th inning with two outs, after three singles and a wild pitch put Mookie Wilson in position to win the game.  His slow dribbler down the first base line went between the legs of Buckner, allowing Ray Knight to score the winning run from second base.  Perhaps the greater boner was made by Boston manager, John McNamara, who chose not to relieve the ailing Buckner with the defensive replacement Stapleton as he had in games one, two, and five.  Boston was one out away from winning the Series for the first time since 1918, with a three games to two advantage before that ugly sequence led to a game 7.  Boston the went on to lead the decisive 7th Game  3-0 until the bottom of the 6th when the Mets scored three runs off Bruce Hurst, already named World Series MVP before that improbable comeback in Game 6.  Just another example of how the game of baseball turns a hero into a goat in just a blink of an eye.

In the 1988 World Series, Oakland Athletics pitching ace, Dennis Eckersley, made a hero of Dodger pinch-hitter Kirk Gibson.  On the other hand, maybe it was Gibson who made a goat out of Eckersley as they faced each other in the bottom of the 9th of Game One?  Gibson, who was not expected to play due to injuries in both legs, limped to the plate with two outs and in dramatic fashion hit the game winning homer on a full count.  He would not make another appearance in the series, but his Dodgers claimed the World Series title four games to one.   Eckersley would redeem himself in the 1989 World Series by winning Game 2 and getting the save in a Game 4 sweep of the Giants.  Then, he would go on to win the Cy Young and MVP in 1992 by posting 51 saves.

It was Eckersley who coined the phrase, “walk-off homer,” when describing the Gibson blast of 1988, but perhaps the most famous World Series “walk-off” occurred in 1960 when Bill Mazeroski won it for the Pittsburgh Pirates over the New York Yankees.  To this date, it is the only time that a Game 7 has ended on a homer, and in this case the goat was Ralph Tracy.  It was also the only series in history where the MVP  did not go to a member of the winning team.  Instead, Bobby Richardson, of the losing New York Yankees received the award.   Ralph Terry, ironically, went on to become the MVP of the 1962 World Series, after giving up a two-run homer to Cincinnati’s Gordy Coleman in Game 2, plus a 3-run homer to Frank Robinson in Game 5 of the 1961 World Series.

Known as the “Shot heard round the world,” Brooklyn Dodger’s pitcher, Ralph Branca, gave up another historic “walk-off” to New York Giants outfielder, Bobby Thomson, to win the National League Pennant in 1951.  It was the decisive blow in this three-game tie-breaker playoff series to determine who would eventually lose to the “third” New York baseball team, the Yankees in the 1951 World Series.  Thomson had also homered against Branca in Game 1,  In retrospect, maybe the goat was Dodger’s coach, Clyde Sukeforth, who apparently instructed manager Charlie Dressen to go with Branca?  Or was the true hero of the game a “cheater” who admittedly relayed stolen signs from Branca to Thomson?   Or is that just smart baseball?

With this in mind, other “cheaters” have taken a seat on the outside of baseball’s Hall of Fame.  Two of the best known examples are “Shoeless Joe” Jackson and Pete Rose, who turned heroic careers into goat stew.  Not to mention those who cheated through the use of steroids and other performance enhancing drugs.

Perhaps the greatest “boner,” the goat of all goats in baseball, occurred off the playing field.  On April 6, 1987, Al Campanis, the Los Angeles Dodgers VP and GM, was invited to appear on the ABC  Network news show, “Nightline” with Ted Koppel.  The appearance was to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of when Jackie Robinson broke Baseball’s color barrier.   Companis was also a friend, teammate, and roommate of Jackie Robinson, having come up together with the Dodger’s minor league team, the Montreal Royals.

Koppel’s question to Campanis was as to why there had been few black managers and no black general managers in Major League Baseball.   Campanis answered:  “I truly believe that they may not have some of the necessities to be, let’s say, a field manager, or perhaps a general manager. ”  He then went on uncomfortably, digging an even bigger hole in race relations. Needless to say, he conveniently resigned from the Dodger’s organization two days later, as civil rights groups showed their outrage.  Campanis’ comments literally set baseball relations back forty years, mimicking the exact same ridiculous  attitudes that prevailed pre-Robinson about the baseball abilities of black attitudes.  In defense of Campanis, many of his peers have suggested was known for butchering his words, and that what he really meant was  “lack of experience” instead of “necessities.”  However, unlike many of the players who had “a goat moment” usually got a second chance – Campanis never did.

Ralph Branca, who was the goat to Bobby Thomson’s heroic homer, was at least one time a hero on the field himself.  It was Branca who lined up  beside Jackie Robinson on Opening Day of 1947.  Other teammates refused.  Al Campanis agreed to be Robinson’s roommate – the very first interracial roommates in all of baseball.  Does that make Campanis less of a goat?

The game’s greatest hero, the Bambino, had his own curse that lasted from 1918 until 2004.  That’s only 86 years, compared with the Chicago Cubs “Curse of the Billy Goat,” that kept them from winning the World Series for 108 years. Now granted, both curses didn’t really get started with each team’s last World Series victory.  The Red Sox curse supposedly started in 1920 when Ruth was traded to the Yankees, while the Cubs curse allegedly began in 1945 by Billy Goat Tavern owner William Sianis.  The point is that both curses lasted a really long time, and thankfully both have finally ended.  Ironically, the Cubs lost that 1918 series to the Red Sox,  but did manage to break Ruth’s 29 1/3 scoreless inning streak that stood for 43 years – another really long time.

I love a really good “goat” story and there are many surrounding Major League Baseball.  I’ve tried to highlight a few throughout this particular article.  I would also be remiss if I did not bring up the name of Steve Bartman, who in my opinion has been unfairly judged as a goat in this long, painful process of making our Chicago Cubs heroes again, at last.   Finally, I would also like to take credit for ending the “Billy Goat Curse” by sitting in the top row of Wrigley Field for the game 5 victory, and then having lunch at the Billy Goat Tavern the next day.  I could literallyu feel the curse lift as we left the tavern in a giddy state.

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