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"Baseball Pitchers," "Jackie Mitchell" and "Unusual Baseball Plays"
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April 4, 2013 Issue # 813The Little Paper Ever Read®NeatestPublished by: Wick Publications • P.O. Box 12861, Grand Forks, ND 58208 • For Advertising Call: 701-772-8239 • [email protected]
TIDBITS® LOOKS AT
BASEBALL PITCHERSby Janet Spencer
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In honor of spring training, come along with Tid-bits as we remember some unforgettable moments brought to you by memorable pitchers.• In the 1940s, Bobo Newsom was batting for
the Yankees against White Sox pitcher Joe Haynes. He swung and nicked the ball, which rolled back to the pitcher. Realizing it was use-less to even try to run to first base, Bobo head-ed back to the dugout. But instead of throwing to first, Haynes just stood and watched Bobo walk away. When the crowd began to laugh, Bobo turned and saw the pitcher still had the ball. So he began to stroll towards first base. So did Haynes. He walked a little faster. Haynes did too. Suddenly he broke into a sprint. Haynes began to run, finally lobbing the ball to first base seconds ahead of Bobo.
• In 1934, Dodger manager Casey Stengel had pitcher Walter Beck replaced in the game. In a temper, Beck threw the ball and it hit the rightfield wall. The Dodger rightfielder had been “resting his eyes” while recovering from a hangover. He heard the ball hit the wall, scooped it up, threw it to second, and then dis-covered that no one had hit it.
• Luke Appling went to bat for the White Sox in a game against the Tigers in the 1930s. He hit 14 consecutive foul balls. On the 15th pitch, the dis-
gusted pitcher threw his glove instead of the ball. turn the page for more!
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• In 1961, Cleveland Indian pitcher Herb Score was hit in the eye by a line drive hit by New York Yankee Gil McDougald. The ball bounced off Score’s head and rolled to first base, where the Cleveland first baseman nabbed it and put the batter out. Score was credited with an assist.
• William Kennedy was pitching for Brooklyn in 1897 when the umpire called a close deci-sion against him. Kennedy lost his temper and hurled the baseball at the umpire, intending to smack him in the head. The ball narrowly missed the ump, who called the ball in play. A runner on base scored before the catcher could retrieve the ball. Brooklyn lost the game 2 - 1.
• Joe Engel, pitching in Washington, did not do a very good job. The question was not whether his pitches would go over the plate but whether they would stay in the ballpark. Manager Clark Griffith called him to his office one day and informed him he was being sent to Minneapo-lis. “Who am I being traded for?” Engel asked. “No one,” replied Griffith. “It’s an even trade!”
• In 1918, Otis Crandall was pitching for Los Angeles against Salt Lake City. He had a per-fect no-hitter going. There were two out in the ninth inning and not a single man had reached base. Then his brother Karl came to bat for Salt Lake. He made a base hit — the only known instance where a no-hitter was broken by the pitcher’s brother.
• Bob Fothergill was a big man. He was a good hitter, but he was sensitive about his weight. As Leo Durocher got ready to pitch against him, he called out, “Stop the game!” and ap-proached the umpire. When the ump asked what was wrong, Durocher replied, “Don’t you know the rules?” he asked, pointing at Fother-gill. “BOTH those guys can’t bat at the same time!” Fothergill was so angry he couldn’t bat well and struck out.
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T or F: The spitball was out-lawed in MLB in 1920, but it had a clause that allowed pitchers who already used the spitball to continue using it until they retired.Name the two New York Yankee players who have hit home runs in a Game Seven of the World Series three times each.T or F: All ten MLB teams to reach the 2012 postseason finished the regular season with at least 90 wins.
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• Ty Cobb, playing for the Detroit Tigers in 1912, was suspended from play when he jumped into the stands and beat up an abusive heckler. His sympathetic teammates went on strike. So the manager advertised for new players to fill in the next day at a game in Philadelphia. This im-promptu team went up against the world cham-pion Oakland A’s. The pitcher allowed 25 hits and 7 walks in 8 innings, but did manage to get one strike-out. An infielder was hit in the mouth by a ground ball and lost two teeth. An outfield-er was hit on the head by a fly ball. This pick-up team got 4 hits and made 10 errors and the final score was 24 - 2. The next day, the regular team members ended their strike, paid their fines, and went back to work, except for Cobb, who was suspended for 10 days.
• Charlie Grimm was managing the losing Chi-cago Cubs. One day he got an excited call from his scout saying that he found a pitcher who struck out 27 men in a row. Only one man had even managed to hit a foul. He asked if he should sign the pitcher. Grimm replied, “Sign up the guy who hit the foul. We’re looking for hitters!”
• In 1939, Bob Feller was the best known pitcher in the country, playing for Cleveland. On Moth-er’s Day, he brought his mother from her Iowa farm to Chicago so she could see him play. A Chicago White Sox batter slugged a foul ball into the stands — where it hit Feller’s mother, knocking her unconscious.
• Germany Schaefer was batting against Nick Al-trock. There was a man on first. Schaefer swung and missed a fast ball. Then the pitcher, pretend-ing he was getting ready to throw to the batter, let loose with a fast ball to first base, where the runner was leading off.
PITCHING SHENANIGANS (continued):
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• When he got the ball back, Altrock let fly an-other scorcher of a fastball. Schaefer got a sec-ond strike. He threw down his bat and walked back to the dugout. “Hey,” called the ump, “You’ve only got two strikes!” “No,” replied Schaefer, “It’s three strikes — I swung at that pitch he threw to first base!”
• In the early 1900s, Rube Waddell was such a great pitcher that all batters feared him. One day the pitcher on the opposing team got a great idea: if he could tire Waddell out before the game, his pitching would be off. So he chal-lenged Waddell to a pitching contest. Whichev-er one of them could throw the farthest would win $5. They both showed up before the game and threw the ball as far as they could. Wad-dell’s throw went farthest. The opposing pitch-er challenged him to throw that far again. He did. In fact, he threw the ball that far around 50 times. Convinced that Waddell’s arm would be worn out, the rival pitcher handed over the $5. That afternoon, Waddell struck out 14 batters and his team won handily. As he was walking to the clubhouse, he called out to the other pitcher, “Hey, thanks for the workout this morning. That was swell practice!”
• Texas University was up against the Yankees in an exhibition game when Lou Gehrig came up to bat. There were two runners on base and it was three and two for Gehrig. The catcher signaled the pitcher, the pitcher nodded — then threw a straight ball right to home plate. Geh-rig sent it clear out of the park. The catcher marched up the pitcher, ranting at him for not paying attention to the signals. “Why did you throw him such a nice pitch?” he yelled. The pitcher was not sorry. “I got to thinking: I’ll never pitch a Big League game and maybe I’ll never get to see a game at the Yankee Stadi-um, and I sure did want to see Gehrig bust just one!”
PITCHING SHENANIGANS (continued):
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Jackie Mitchell was born in Tennessee in 1913. Her neighbor, Dazzy Vance, was a pitcher in the minor leagues. Though Jackie was only five, Dazzy taught her basic pitching techniques, and she quickly caught on. Dazzy told her she could become a great ball player. Jackie grew up believ-ing him.• At 16, Jackie played for a women’s team in
Chattanooga. At 17, she attended a baseball school in Atlanta, where she was noticed by the owner of the Chattanooga Lookouts, a minor league team. He offered her a contract to play for the 1931 season. The newspapers ran stories about the first woman ever to play in the minor leagues. (However, in 1898, Lizzie Arlington played a single game for Reading, PA, techni-cally making Jackie the second woman in minor league history.)
• Meanwhile, the New York Yankees had finished spring training in Florida and were on their way to New York. They stopped in Chattanooga to play the Lookouts in an exhibition game.
• The game began before a crowd of 4,000. Re-porters, wire services, and a newsreel camera were on hand. The Lookouts’ manager sent Clyde Barfoot out to pitch the first inning. The Yankees’ lead-off batter slugged a double, and their next hitter smacked a single, allowing a run. The manager pulled Barfoot out and sent rookie southpaw Jackie to the mound. The next hitter up at bat was the legendary Babe Ruth.
• Jackie’s first pitch was a ball, but the next three pitches were strikes, with Babe taking a use-less swing at the first two, and the third drop-ping across the plate for a strike. Jackie Mitch-ell struck Babe Ruth out. The crowd went wild! Babe Ruth kicked the dirt, called the umpire nasty names, gave his bat a wild heave, and stomped out to the Yank’s dugout.
WOMEN IN HISTORY:JACKIE MITCHELL
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JACKIE MITCHELL (continued):• But there was still work to be done, for the next
batter up was Lou Gehrig. She struck him out on three pitches. Jackie Mitchell had fanned the “Sultan of Swat” and the “Iron Horse” back-to-back. The crowd rose to its feet in a lengthy standing ovation.
• Jackie pitched to one more batter, allowing a walk, before the manager pulled her out and sent Barfoot in. The Yankees won 14 – 4.
• The news spread across the country. Fan mail poured in. One envelope had no address aside from the words “The Girl Who Struck Out Babe Ruth.”
• A few days later, the baseball commissioner voided her contract, declaring that women were unfit to play baseball because it was “too strenu-ous.” In 1952, Major League Baseball formally banned women from contracts, a ban that lasted until 1992.
• Crushed, Jackie began pitching in exhibition games. At 19, she signed with the House of Da-vid, a men’s team famous for their long hair and beards. She traveled with them until 1937, but eventually got tired of the sideshow aspects of her career, such as being asked to wear a fake beard, or playing an inning while riding a donkey.
• She retired at 23, but played with local teams. She refused to come out of retirement when the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League formed in 1943.
• In 1982, she was invited to throw out the cer-emonial first pitch for the Chattanooga Lookouts on their season opening day. She died in 1987, and was buried in Chattanooga.
• Her mentor, Dazzy Vance, went on to pitch major league for Brooklyn, and was the only pitcher to lead the National League in strikeouts for seven consecutive seasons. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1955 and died in 1961.
Tidbits of Grand Forks/East Grand Forks is Locally
Owned and Operated.
by Samantha Weaver
© 2013 King Features Synd., Inc.
dates through the years saying whatever was necessary to get elected. Take the 1950 senato-rial campaign in Florida, for example. In the Democratic primary, incumbent Claude Pepper was being challenged by George Smathers, a sitting congressman. Taking unfair advantage of the lack of edu-cation in some parts of the state, Smathers sent campaign materials to rural areas accus-ing Pepper of, among other things, having a brother who was a “practicing Homosa-pien” and a sister who was a “thespian.” The charge against Pepper himself was that he had “matriculated” with young women. In a victory for sleazy politics, Smathers did, in fact, win the primary.• Some species of penguin can jump as high as 6 feet in the air. * * *Thought for the Day: “If you want to give up the admiration of thousands of men for the dis-dain of one, go ahead, get mar-ried.” -- Katharine Hepburn
• It was world champion race-car driver Mario An-dretti who made the fol-lowing sage observation: “Everything comes to those who wait ... except a cat.”• Those who study such things say it takes three apples to make one glass of apple cider.• You might be surprised to learn that John Denver -- best known for singing “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” an ode to West Virginia -- was not actually from the Moun-tain State. He didn’t write the song, either. Interesting-ly, the two people who did write the song, Bill Danoff and Taffy Nivert, had never been there at the time that they wrote it. They were on their way to Maryland when Danoff started writing a tune about the lovely countryside they were driving through. West Virginia was put in be-cause Danoff had been sent several postcards from the state and was impressed.• Politics has always been a dirty business, with candi-
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NEW LOCATION: 210 Gateway Dr NE, East Grand Forks , MN 56721 n 218-793-0035107 E 2ND St, Crookston , MN 56716 n 218-281-3658
GETTING THE MOST BACKSTARTS WITH GETTINGTHE MOST EXPERTISE.
If you discover an H&R Block error on your return that entitles you to a smaller tax liability, we’llrefund the tax prep fee for that return. Refund claims must be made during the calendar year in
which the return was prepared. OBTP# B13696 ©2012 HRB Tax Group, Inc.
NEW LOCATION: 210 Gateway Dr NE, East Grand Forks , MN 56721 n 218-793-0035107 E 2ND St, Crookston , MN 56716 n 218-281-3658
GETTING THE MOST BACKSTARTS WITH GETTINGTHE MOST EXPERTISE.
NeW LoCAtioN:210 Gateway Dr. NE
East Grand Forks, MN218-793-0035
107 E. 2nd St. Crookston, MN218-281-3658
2475 32nd Ave. S. Grand Forks, ND
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UNUSUAL BASEBALL PLAYS• Brooklyn had the bases loaded. Hank De-
Berry was on third, Dazzy Vance on second, and Chick Fewster was on first. Babe Herman came up to bat and hit a long one. DeBerry ran home and scored. Vance advanced to third and decided to stay there. Fewster ran to sec-ond and was on his way to third when he saw that Vance had stopped, so he turned around and went back to second. But Babe Herman was running full speed ahead, past first, past second, and on to third. At third he made a great slide, only to find Vance already occupy-ing the base. Fewster stood halfway between second and third, wondering what he should do. The third baseman got the ball and began tagging everybody in sight. When the umpire recovered his senses, he called Herman and Fewster out, and Vance safe. It took half an hour for the audience to stop laughing, and it spawned a popular joke: “How’s the game go-ing?” “Brooklyn has three men on base!” “Oh really? Which base?”
• Herman Schaefer, playing for Washington in 1910, was on first and a teammate was on third. Schaefer stole second, hoping the catch-er would try to throw him out, giving the team-mate on third a chance to go for home. But the catcher didn’t make the throw. So Schaefer stole first base back. The rule book revealed no rule against stealing bases backwards. When play resumed, Schaefer stole second again. The catcher threw (too late) and the teammate on third scored. Later the rules were amended and stealing backwards became an automatic out.
• Herman Schaefer once hit a homer out of the park. He slid into first, slid into second, slid into third, and slid home.
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MOMENTs IN TIME the History Channel
© 2013 King Features Synd., Inc.
The only man to be elected to four terms as president of the United States, Roosevelt is remembered for his New Deal social policies and his leadership during wartime.
• On April 10, 1953, the horror film “The House of Wax,” starring Vin-cent Price, opens at New York’s Paramount Theater. It was the first feature from a major motion-picture studio to be shot using the three-dimensional, or stereoscopic, film process, and one of the first horror films to be shot in color.
• On April 9, 1962, President John F. Kennedy throws out the ceremo-nial first pitch in Washington D.C.’s new stadium. He continued a long-standing tradition that began in 1910 when President William H. Taft threw out Major League Baseball’s first opening-day pitch in Wash-ington D.C.’s old Griffith Stadium.
• On April 11, 1970, Apollo 13, the third lunar landing mission, is success-fully launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla. After an oxygen tank exploded on the evening of April 13, however, the new mission objective became to get the Apollo 13 crew home alive.
• On April 14, 1865, John Wilkes Booth, an actor and Confederate sympathizer, fatally shoots Presi-dent Abraham Lincoln at a play at Ford’s Theater in Washington, D.C. The attack came only five days af-ter Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered his army at Ap-pomattox Court House in Virginia.
• On April 8, 1916, at the Boule-vard Race in Corona, Calif., an early racing car careens into a crowd of spectators, killing the driver and two others. The fatal accident helped encourage organizers to be-gin holding races on specially built tracks instead of regular streets.
• On April 13, 1939, the heavy cruiser USS Astoria arrives in Ja-pan under the command of Capt. Richmond Turner in an attempt to photograph the Japanese battleships Yamato and Musash in a pre-war re-connaissance. The Astoria was sunk during Operation Watchtower in the Solomon Islands in August 1942.
• On April 12, 1945, U.S. Presi-dent Franklin Delano Roosevelt dies of a cerebral hemorrhage in his home at Warm Springs, Ga.
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DEERE. JOHN DEERE. (continued): • It was while living in Illinois that John no-
ticed the problems that farmers faced when attempting to till soil. Because the area had formerly been woodland, the soil was rich with hummus, which clumped and clung to the blades of the plows farmers were accus-tomed to using. While repairing a broken cir-cular saw, Deere stumbled upon an idea. He employed his smith skills to fashion the steel blade into the shape of a plow. He affixed two wooden spokes, then hitched the device to a horse. It plowed the heavy Illinois soil like a charm. In fact, a farmer who happened to be observing the test run immediately put in an order for his own John Deere plow.
• In short order, Deere gave up his blacksmith shop and focused on making plows. The company grew steadily and added many em-ployees. In the late 1840s, John relocated the entire operation to Moline, Illinois. Ashamed of his own lack of education, John sent his children to the state’s finest schools. One of his proudest days occurred when son Charles earned the equivalent of an MBA from Bell’s Commercial College in Chicago.
• With his son Charles managing the company, John found time to pursue philanthropic in-terests. He co-founded both the First Nation-al Bank and the First Congregational Church. He was elected the mayor of Moline in 1873, where one of his first actions – the replace-ment of the city’s open drains with a sewer pipe system – saved countless lives by reduc-ing the spread of disease.
• The original John Deere logo, registered in 1876, depicted a deer that was native to Afri-ca. Thirty-six years later, in 1912, it was re-placed with the image of a North American white-tailed deer. In the decades that fol-lowed, the now-familiar “outline” logo took over as the symbol of the John Deere brand.
III?
TRILOGYSend $24.95 (plus $5 S&H)
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(Alabama residentsplease add $1 sales tax.)LIMITED EDITION BOOK SET
Reprints of Books I, II & III
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DIFFERENCES: 1. Hat logo is missing. 2. Pocket is missing. 3. Tape is missing from hockey stick. 4. Puck is missing. 5. Arm stripe is missing. 6 Leg is moved.
Find at least 6 differences in details between panels
• In Fenway Park, rules declare that if a batted ball hits one of the pigeons who roost in the stadium, the ball is declared dead.
• In 1984, Dave Kingman went to bat for the Oakland Athletics against the Minnesota Twins. Kingman hit a fly ball that penetrated the protective netting of the Metrodome ceil-ing 180 feet up. It never fell. Umpires called it a ground rule double. When the ball was re-trieved by the groundskeeper, it was sent to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
• In 1920, the Cleveland Indians were up against Brooklyn in the World Series. Bill Wamb-sganss was in center field for the Indians when he caught a fly for one out. The force of the running jump carried him to second base, where he tagged out the second base runner who had been heading for third. Then he got another easy out by tagging the first base run-ner heading for second. It was an unassisted triple play. The crowd was silent while they tried to figure out what had happened and how many outs there were. When realization set in, fans went wild.
• Mike Grady, third baseman for the New York Giants, holds the distinction of making the most errors in one play. In 1895, he missed a ground ball and the batter reached first. He overthrew the ball to first, and the batter got to second. When the runner headed for third, the first base man threw to Grady, but he dropped it and the runner raced home, whereupon Grady threw the ball over the catcher’s head. Four errors on a single play.
• In 1931, the Braves were losing to the Cardi-nals, 12-0. Rabbit Maranville called time out and gathered the team for an infield confer-ence. They gathered in a football-type huddle. Rabbit called the signals, someone snapped the baseball back to him, and the players went crazy tackling each other.
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UNUSUAL PLAYS (continued):
1916AdvertisingFranklin D. RooseveltToni Basil40 days
Bob Dylan, in 1967The Eurotunnel,or ChunnelTheodore Roosevelt
Quiz Answers1.2.3.
4.5.
6.
7.
8.
Sammy Sosa with 20Barry Bondsin 2004Jamie Moyer44 yrs, 322 days(Phillies, 2007)
1.
2.
3.
5 pitches TrueYogi Berra &Bill SkowronFalse: St. Louis & Detroit won 88 games each
4.5.6.
7.
sports Answers
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