Tag Archives: Babe Ruth

October 30, 2025

Ohtani and Betts

The other day during the World Series broadcast Joe Davis talked about Shohei Ohtani and Babe Ruth. He made the point that Ohtani spent a lot more time as a two-way player. I believe he said that after a couple of seasons Ruth just wanted to hit.

It should be obvious that in 1920, Ruth didn’t really have a choice. All hitters back then played in the field, and faced all the wear and tear cause by that. If Ruth had tried to keep doing both, at least one of his skills would have suffered.

When Ohtani came to the Angels, management was very careful about putting too much stress on him. He would only bat as a designated hitter, and until Joe Maddon came along, he would not play the day before he was supposed to pitch. If baseball adopted a DH in the 1920s, two way players might have been a bit more common, with Ruth, and maybe Red Ruffing taking that role.

Which brings me to Mookie Betts. Cy Morong at Cybermetrics notes this about Betts’ defense:

He might be the only guy to ever lead his league in defensive WAR at 2 different positions. That is among all players, regardless of position. All data from Baseball Reference.

I made a list of all the guys who led their league in defensive WAR more than once since 1901 (Just the AL & NL). There were 51 guys. I counted OF as one position (this actually did not matter). Then I looked at each guy one by one and only Mookie Betts has led his league in defensive WAR at 2 different positions(OF in 2016, SS in 2025).

Cybermetric.Blogspot.com

What an amazing defensive performance, especially since Betts moved to the most difficult position behind the pitcher, and did it at seasonal age 32. It came at a cost, however, as Betts posted batting number far below his career averages; down about 30 points in BA, 40 points in OBP, 100 points in slugging percentage. Shortstop wears down players much more than the outfield. There are more dives into the dirt, more throws, more collisions with base runners.

Which brings us back to Ohtani. The Blue Jays walked him five times in the 18 inning game, four times intentionally. They could do that because they no longer feared Mookie Betts. Betts gave his all to post a gold glove season in the field, and it hurt him at the plate. The Dodgers also could not use the DH position to rest fielders, since it’s the only position Ohtani plays.

If Ohtani had to play the outfield or first base in order to hit and pitch, we would not be as good a hitter or as good a pitcher. Ruth pitched great. Ruth hit great. The game at the time did not allow him to do both well at the same time. We are lucky the rules allow us to see Ohtani be superlative at both at the simultaneously. And while we marvel at Ohtani, let Betts remind us that defense takes a toll on the body of players, and Ohtani doesn’t pay that toll.

September 24, 2025 August 23, 2024

Still Time to Buy History

The jersey worn by Babe Ruth in the 1932 World Series when he called his home run is on auction right now. The current bid stands at $15.1 million.

Please read the article for the fascinating look at how the process of photo matching authenticated the jersey.

Companies such as Resolution Photomatching rely on checks and balances. People hired to do the job train four to six weeks before working on a single item, and they use a three-round system: one researcher utilizes databases to screen images that might include the item; another checks those flagged images; a third makes a call. Resolution often pores through tens of thousands of images per photo-match.

“The IRS doesn’t have photo-matching as a [job] classification yet,” said John Robinson, owner and founder of Resolution, “so their official classifications are ‘historians.’ One of our researchers’ young daughters called him a ‘sports history detective.’ That might be the best description.”

ESPN.com

Get your bid in now!

June 25, 2024 June 9, 2024

The Other Ruth Record

Aaron Judge of the Yankees collected another double and another home run in the 6-4 win over the Dodgers. That gives Judge 46 extra-base hits in 67 Yankees games.

The record for extra-base hits in a season belongs to Babe Ruth, who hit 119 in 1921. This spreadsheet will track both Judge’s probability of breaking the extra-base hit record and his probability of reaching 100 extra-base hits. Note the last time someone reached that level was 2001, when four players did it, Barry Bonds, Todd Helton, Sammy Sosa, and Luis Gonzalez.

After Sunday’s game, the probability is still long for Judge to break the record, about 0.00005. That’s based on his Musings Marcels projection of 0.11 Extra-Base Hits per PA. For reaching 100, the probability is a much more likely 0.147. Using his Marcels rate, he projects to 93 Extra-Base Hits on the season, while his current pace would put him at 111 EXBH. That would rank third all time.

Stay tuned.

July 15, 2023 April 18, 2023

Yankee Stadium Centenial

Today marks 100 years since the opening of “The House that Ruth Built”, the original Yankee Stadium. Joe Guzzardi sends along this guest post:

Opening Day, 1923, the ‘House that Ruth Built’ Begins the Golden Age Baseball Era

Opening Day, 1923, a century ago, dawned cloudy and cold. Babe Ruth woke up in his plush Upper West Side Ansonia Hotel apartment and prepared to play the first-ever game in the brand-new edifice that would become known as the “House that Ruth Built.” Always a snappy dresser, Ruth donned his perfectly tailored suit, then around noon, hopped into his Pierce-Arrow automobile to drive to the Bronx. Had the weather been warmer, Ruth would have selected his sporty Stutz Bearcat.

A notoriously reckless motorist, Ruth had been involved in numerous minor collisions and rarely held a valid driver’s license. To avoid incidents, the Yankees’ owner, Col. Jacob Ruppert, sent police to escort the “Big Bam” safely to the stadium. Along the way, Ruth stopped to sign a few autographs and invited some kids to join him as he roared along.

The largest baseball crowd ever – 74,000, with 25,000 turned away – witnessed a pre-game ceremony befitting the stadium’s grandeur. While New York Gov. Al Smith looked on, John Phillip Sousa led the Seventh Regiment Army Band in full military dress onto the field.

In 1923, Ruth was on a redemption mission, and the new Yankee Stadium, the biggest and most lavish ever built, was the perfect place to carry out his undertaking. Ruth considered his 1922 season a failure. His performance at the plate, for him a paltry .315 batting average with 35 home runs and 99 RBIs, a sharp drop off from 1921, embarrassed Ruth. Moreover, during the season, Ruth was suspended five times. Worst of all, Ruth’s final 1922 baseball appearance was against the New York Giants in the World Series in which Ruth hit a pathetic .188. Giants’ manager John McGraw called every pitch from the bench. Some were slow curves that Ruth swung on, twisting himself into a corkscrew while missing by a mile. During the off-season, McGraw, a scientific baseball genius, chided Ruth whose style of play – the long ball – he disdained. McGraw called Ruth “the Big Baboon” and incorrectly predicted that the home run fad would soon die out. The media and fans got on Ruth too. The New York Sun labeled Ruth “an exploded phenomenon,” and for the first time, Ruth heard boos.

A humbled Ruth vowed to make amends, on and off the field. Over the winter months, Ruth said that liquor never touched his lips. And now the day had come, April 18, against the last place Boston Red Sox, for Ruth to regain respect and admiration from teammates and his millions of fans. Before the game, Ruth said in the locker room that he would “give a year off his life” to hit a homer in the season opener.

Red Sox starter Howard Ehmke, taking a page out of McGraw’s book, tossed junk balls to Ruth, and in the first inning the Bambino flied out. The third inning, however, was a different story. With two Yankees on base, Ruth deposited a titanic homer ten rows back in the right-field bleachers. Rush’s blast made the score 4-0, a lead the Yankees never relinquished.

As the season unfolded, Ruth and the Yankees dominated. The Yankees won the American League pennant by 16 games over the Cleveland Indians. Ruth hit .393, 41 homers, and unanimously won the Most Valuable Player award. Rules at the time prevented any player from winning the MVP more than once.

More, greater redemption awaited Ruth. For the third straight year, the Yankees would meet the Giants in the World Series. In 1921 and 1922, McGraw’s pitch calling and inside baseball strategy outsmarted the Yankees. But, in 1923, the tables turned on McGraw. The Yankees won the series 4-2, Ruth hit .368, three homers, had a .556 on base percentage, and slugged 1.000. A reporter wrote that when one of Ruth’s shots, a 450-foot job, returned to earth, “the ball was covered in ice.”

In defeat, McGraw was uncharacteristically gracious. He strode over to the winners’ locker room to shake hands with everyone – except the Babe. McGraw preferred to talk about the Giants’ hitting star who almost outshone Ruth. Casey Stengel hit .417 with two homers.

Yankee Stadium became a cash cow for Ruppert who reinvested his money in the team’s future, a decision that kept the Yankees atop the American League for years to come. The original Yankee Stadium no longer stands. In 2009, the first game at the new venue took place, and today’s Yankee Stadium is rarely referred to as the “House that Ruth Built.” But Ruth, McGraw and Stengel, despite having passed years ago, are still alive in baseball fans’ hearts.

Joe Guzzardi is a Society for American Baseball Research and Internet Baseball Writers Association member.

October 4, 2022

The Records

I have now seen the big home run records starting with Hank Aaron. I don’t know if the TV was on when Roger Maris hit his 61st home run, but at a year and half old I would not remember it. I did watch Aaron break Babe Ruth‘s career home run record. I saw Mark McGwire break Maris’s single season record. I saw Barry Bonds break both McGwire’s single season record and Aaron’s career record. Now I saw the ball off the bat of Judge break the AL record.

My family is very longed lived. I wonder who will be next?

October 2, 2022

Tying Ruth

Babe Ruth‘s name keeps coming up in the last few weeks, today involving Albert Pujols of the Cardinals. Pujols drove in three runs in the 7-5 Pittsburgh victory, and that ties Babe Ruth for second place all time in RBI.

The 42-year-old Pujols followed with his 23rd home run of the season in the third inning, a 409-foot drive off Roansy Contreras that tied the game at 4. Pujols is fourth on the all-time home run list behind Babe Ruth (714), Hank Aaron (755) and Barry Bonds (762).

He’s also now tied with Ruth for second in RBI (2,214) behind Aaron (2,297).

APNews.com

Those are the only three players to reach 2200 RBI, and no one else has collected at least 2100. Even when Pujols’s averages waned in his time with the Angels, he still managed to drive in runs. That paid off with him finishing his career in the ultra elite.

September 18, 2022

Here Comes the Judge

Aaron Judge of the Yankees just hit his second home run of the game to give New York a 10-4 lead at Milwaukee and bring his season total to 59 HR. The Yankees now own the top four single season AL home run slots, with Roger Maris at 61, Babe Ruth at 60 and 59, and now Judge at 59. The fans in Milwaukee were chanting MVP! MVP! as Judge rounded the bases. He’s now three for four in the game, making a potential triple crown a bit more likely.

Update: Judge comes up with two on and two out in the ninth and lines a two run double to the gap in leftfield. He’s now four for five on the day, batting .316.

Update: Milwaukee did not give up. Down 12-6 in the bottom of the ninth, they load the bases with none out and score two runs. The go down with the bases loaded for a 12-8 final.

Judge now owns a 0.76 probability of hitting at least 62 home runs.

June 28, 2021

Mr. June

Kyle Schwarber hit two more home runs so far tonight to bring his season total to 24 and his June total to 15. That ties him for the second most home run in any June. He’s the seventh player to reach that level. Sammy Sosa set the record with 20 in 1998. Others who hit 15 in May are Jim Thome, Pedro Guerrero, Roger Maris, Bob Johnson, and Babe Ruth. That’s very good company.

June 8, 2021

Beat the Streak Picks

For the past few years Baseball Musings tried to help with playing Beat the Streak. The Day by Day Database keeps track of hit streak of at least five games. In addition, two programs produce top ten lists of players with a high probability of a hit.

Here are the top picks my programs produced for use in Beat the Streak. This post mostly explains the ideas behind the calculations. In addition, this post shows tests on the Neural Network (NN). This post discusses an NN that includes the ballpark. I updated the models, and the results of those tests are here.

Here are the Log5 Method picks:

Lyles is getting hit hard for both average and power this season, allowing a .333 BABIP and 1.62 home runs per nine innings. It’s not surprising that Posey, having a great year at the plate, pops to the top of this list. Castellanos tries to get a new streak going after his long streak ended Sunday.

Here are the NN picks:

  • 0.319, 0.734 — Nick Castellanos batting against Adrian Houser.
  • 0.295, 0.731 — Tim Anderson batting against Robbie Ray.
  • 0.311, 0.723 — Jesse Winker batting against Adrian Houser.
  • 0.328, 0.722 — Buster Posey batting against Jordan Lyles.
  • 0.276, 0.720 — Ketel Marte batting against Chris Bassitt.
  • 0.307, 0.712 — Jean Segura batting against Drew Smyly.
  • 0.306, 0.711 — Donovan Solano batting against Jordan Lyles.
  • 0.275, 0.708 — Xander Bogaerts batting against Framber Valdez.
  • 0.311, 0.706 — Starling Marte batting against Antonio Senzatela.
  • 0.281, 0.698 — Yordan Alvarez batting against Martin Perez.

Castellanos and Winker have a chance to go down as one of the great single season hitting duos. Both have batting averages over .350, OBPs over .410, and slugging averages over .625. They are not Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in 1927, but given how offense fell this season, they are extremely impressive.

Castellanos is the consensus first pick, with Posey the consensus double down pick.

You can follow the NN results on this spreadsheet. I do not guarantee results. Your best pick is going to have about a 25% chance of not getting a hit. Good luck!

May 19, 2021

In the Cards

Get your checkbooks ready for one of the most outstanding baseball card auctions of all time:

Baseball cards these days seem to be at a premium, but the extravagant collection of one Tampa doctor is about to be up for sale. 

But those would-be Target shoppers might want to look elsewhere if they’re worried about paying too much for cards. According to a report from Fox 13 News in Tampa Bay, the collection is valued at more than $20 million with the leading card, a 1933 Babe Ruth Goudey card in good shape, expected to sell at more than $5.2 million. 

SportingNews.com

The collection includes many of the greats from the early days of card collecting.

December 7, 2020

Seeing 1920

As a follow-up the to This Date in 1920 project, a friend sends along this film of the Yankees playing at the Indians that year:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SN6158XUm9g

The point of the film is to demonstrate how a high speed camera can generate a slow motion film to analyze swings and pitching deliveries. Note that this film is highly edited, and the captions do not always match what actually happened. Some highlights from my friend, who believes the game was played on June 15, 1920:

4:17 announcing the starting lineups


4:24-26 top of 1st?  [maybe also top of 3rd or of 5th] Part of a Wally Pipp plate appearance.  [If it’s the top of the 5th, there should be a runner at 1st, but maybe he’s very close to the base].


8:03-04; 8:17-23.  Ray Chapman triple, bottom of the 5th.  Ignore the intervening nonsense in the caption at 8:05 and what is either staged action or some pre-game action with a throw over the first baseman’s head.  There was another triple hit during the game, but the play-by-play at BBref describes that triple as going to RF, not LF/CF as this one did.


7:42 – 7:45.  Bottom of 5th, Wambsganss groundout, 3B to 1B; Tris Speaker holds at 3rd, and Larry Gardner advances to second.  Ignore the subsequent caption and what is either staged action or pre-game action.  Among other things, note that the second baseman in the first shot after the caption is not moving as he would if this were real and there don’t seem to be other fielders in sight, and in the second shot the second baseman is not even visible.]  It is possible that there was a close play at first, but this film does not represent the real action there.


5:48 -5:55.  Bottom of 7th.  Hannah (C) picks off Wambsganss at 3B.


4:56 – 5:30.  Top of 8th.   Ruth strikes out.  I question whether the 5:31-35 field-level shot is from the same AB, because it seems that the catcher here is throwing the ball long after Ruth has left home plate, but at 5:28, he has thrown it back while Ruth is still in front of the plate, walking to the dugout.


8:24 – 8:31 field-level shot seems like actual game footage, but I can’t narrow it down.  Ruth did not hit a home run that day, despite the coy reference to a “home run swing.”  The scene with the street urchins is obviously staged.


Other interesting things:


With opposing runners at 3rd and facing a 6-2 and then 8-2 deficit, Huggins had the infield in during the bottom of the 5th (even with one out and a runner on first) and the bottom of 7th.


5:42 – is that Ring Lardner?


6:01 – Carl Mays’ delivery (in warm-up)


6:33 – Jack Quinn going to his mouth during his practice (he was a legalized spitball pitcher).  


7:17 – Tris Speaker BP.  I don’t think that I had ever seen film of Speaker.


7:30 – Wally Pipp BP.  Nicely pulled.  He’s bigger than I had imagined him to have been.


1:19 – 1:40.  Young Babe Ruth warming up.


2:40 – rain delay.  It is interesting that the players seem to be helping with the tarp when covering the field, but not when removing it.  [By the way, according to this site, there was rain on June 15:  Cleveland weather history: find weather details for any date since 1871 – cleveland.com ]


I wonder whether this film is the only one showing Ray Chapman playing (as well as some of the others shown here, such as Hannah, the Yankees’ catcher).

Also, at 7:45, maybe the first use of replay to demonstrate an incorrect call by the umpire.

If you stop the film at 6:19, you can see why it was tough to pick up Carl Mays’s delivery. At this point, he is a full extension, ready to swing his right arm forward with the ball. He is crouched down, however, hiding the ball until the last second. This delivery contributed to the death of Ray Chapman.

On the Ruth slow motion swing, note that his back foot comes off the ground. In 2013, The Washington Post made a film comparing Bryce Harper’s swing to Ruth’s, and I believe they used this slow motion footage of Ruth for the comparison.

Enjoy!

November 8, 2020

This Date in 1920

The feces hits the fan on November 8, 1920. Baseball gets the page one, right column headline:

Big Baseball War Is On; 12-Club League Formed; Landis Sought as Head

New York Tribune

The two sides did negotiate. The five American League teams loyal to league president Ban Johnson could not reach an agreement with the eleven other teams, led by National League president John Heydler:

Emissaries from the Johnson camp conferred with the club owners at the joint session of eight National and three American League clubs, but without result. At 2:30 p. m. the joint session issued an ultimatum to the Johnson clubs telling them that they could either come over within an hour and a half and take part in the meeting, which would be governed by a majority vote, or a new league would be formed. Failing to hear from the five American League clubs, the other eleven clubs went ahead with their announced plans.

New York Tribune

Kenesaw Mountain Landis had not made a decision on heading up the proposed tribunal, which would also have minor league representation among the three people chosen.

The remaining AL clubs counter that the players on the three teams bolting belong to the American League, and would be taken over by the remaining clubs. That would include Babe Ruth of the Yankees:

When Colonel Huston, vice-president of the Yankees, was told of this at the Roosevelt Hospital last night he said: “They won’t get anything like as close to Ruth as the Crown Price got to Paris.”*

New York Tribune page one sidebar

*He is referring to Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany, who led troops attacking France during the First World War.

The Evening Public Ledger in Philadelphia provides a better explanation of why the clubs believe the league controls the players:

Here is a section taken from an American League contract:

“The player further agrees that during the term of this contract he will not, except with consent of the American League, engage either during the American League season or at any other time, in any game or exhibition of baseball”

This evidently means that the American League has control of its players.

And here is another angle. Players under contract with either league cannot leave their league unless unanimous permission is given by all of the clubs. This is called “asking waivers” and we read about it nearly every day.

If Connie Mack wanted to get rid of Scott Perry and send him to a minor league club, he would notify the president of the league. The president then would notify the other clubs, and if one wanted Perry, he would be sent there.

This waive proposition will be the stumbling block. Because it has been rigidly enforced and observed by the clubs for years, custom probably has made it legal.

Evening Public Ledger.

The “New National League” also announces the aim of ending gambling:

“it is hoped and believed by the members of the New National League that the high character of the chairman of the board of control, and those to be elected as associate members, will be a sufficient guaranty to the baseball loving public that the national game will be conducted on the high plane which public interests and public morality demand. It is thought that with the aid of a board of control of the character indicated, laws will be enacted which will forever stamp out gambling in connection with baseball.

New York Tribune

Page two also contains a recap of the three previous baseball wars, one of which included Ban Johnson helping to bring the American League into existence.

Both side now head to Kansas City to try to win over the minor leagues.

October 4, 2020

This Date in 1920

October 4th, 1920 served as the travel day for the Cleveland Indians who head to Brooklyn to meet the Dodgers in the 1920 World Series.

The Indians dominated on both sides of the ball, leading the AL in runs per game a 5.56, while finishing with the second lowest runs allowed per game at 4.18. The Indians posted both a high team batting average and an extremely high OBP, .303 and .376. They did not hit a ton of home runs, but led the AL in doubles and finished second in triples. On the pitching side, they struck out 3.2 batters per nine inning, and that led the league. They were also good at limiting walks.

No team in the NL came close to matching the Indians offense. Brooklyn finished third in the NL with 4.26 runs scored per game. Like the Indians, the Dodgers were a high doubles and triples offense, but were near the bottom of the league in walks. The Dodgers did not steal much compared to other teams in the NL, but still attempted 150 steals. They were caught 80 times.

Where the Dodgers shone was pitching. They allowed just 3.42 runs per game, best in the NL. They struck out 3.5 batters per nine innings, also leading the league.

The American League game shifted to higher power on offense in 1920, something the NL did not do. The question is, will the great Brooklyn rotation be able to reign in the Indians?

Cleveland is favored to win the series 5 to 6.

Babe Ruth starts a barnstorming tour against what we now know as Negro League teams. On this day, he faced the Bacharach Giants and their ace, Dick “Cannonball” Redding.

The man known as “Cannonball” performed masterfully, pitching a shutout into the seventh, when the Babe pleased the crowd by clouting a solo homer. Meanwhile, the Giants hit Mays hard, tallying eight runs before Ruth relieved him. The final score was 9 to 4.

OurGame.mlblogs.com

Ruth would continue the tour through most of October, then head to Cuba.

On the front page, a story notes that Charles Comiskey, owner of the White Sox, sent $1,500 to each of his honest players from the 1919 pennant winner:

“As one of the honest ball players of the Chicago White Sox of 1919, I feel that you are deprived of the winner’s share of the world’s series receipts though no fault of yours,” Comiskey’s letters to the players said. “I do not intend that you, as an honest ball player, should be penalized for your honesty or by reason of the dishonesty of others, and therefore take pleasure in handing you $15,000, being the difference between the winner’s and the loser’s share.”

New York Tribune
October 3, 2020

This Date in 1920

The final day of the regular season, October 3, 1920, sees all seven scheduled games played to completion. The Phillies beat the Giants in New York 4-1 for the low scoring game of the day. In St. Louis, the offenses of the White Sox and Browns have a field day as the home team takes the contest 16-7 for the high scoring game of the day.

Baby Doll Jacobson of the Browns posts the best offensive game of the day. He goes four for five with a triple and five RBI as he pounds a depleted White Sox staff. Jacobson finishes second in the AL with 126 RBI, trailing Babe Ruth who drove in 135 runs. George Sisler got to pitch for the Brown in the blowout.

On the pitching side, George Smith of the Phillies win best pitched game of the day. He holds the Giants to four hits and one walk while striking out eight. He does not allow a long-ball on the day, but finishes tied for the NL lead in most home runs allowed with ten.

Sisler could have sat out the day to keep his batting average above .400, but instead posts a three for five day to end the season with a .407 mark. Tris Speaker of the Indians finishes second at .388. Babe Ruth of the Yankees finishes fourth in the batting race, but takes first in OBP with a .529 mark, and first in slugging percentage at .847. In the NL, Rogers Hornsby of the Cardinals finishes first in all three averages with a .370/.430/.559 slash line.

Bob Shakey of the Yankees takes home the AL ERA title at 2.45, while Pete Alexander of the Cubs wins the NL crown with a 1.96 ERA.

The World Series starts Oct. 5 in Brooklyn.

October 1, 2020

This Date in 1920

Seven of the nine games scheduled in the major leagues on October 1, 1920, play to a decision, including a doubleheader in Detroit against Cleveland. The Dodgers and Giants play two at the Polo Grounds as well. The Cubs beat the Cardinals 3-2 in seventeen innings for the low scoring game of the day (almost two games). The Senators beat the Athletics in Philadelphia 13-3 at the high end of scoring.

Earl Smith of the Browns and High Pockets Kelly of the Giants tie for best offensive game of the day honors. Smith posts a two for four day, hitting a triple and a home run while driving in two runs. The Browns beat a depleted White Sox squad 8-6. Kelly goes two for three with a home run and a walk in game two of the NYC twin bill. The teams split the games, each winning by a score of 4-3. Kelly leads the NL in RBI with 94.

Jessie Haines of the the Cardinals takes the loss against the Cubs but wins best pitched game of the day. He pitches 16 1/3 innings, allowing ten hits and four walks while striking out eight. He gives up three runs, but only two earned, for a game score of 97. Three of the hits Haines allowed came in the bottom of the 17th, all three singles. Pete Alexander gets the complete game, seventeen-inning win, but allows 16 hits for a game score of 94.

George Sisler of the Browns, now a cinch to win the batting title, goes two for four to raise his batting average to .406. Tris Speaker of the Indians goes two for eight in the doubleheader to lower his BA to .386.

The Indians split their doubleheader with the Tigers. Detroit wins 5-4 in ten innings in game one, while the Indians win 10-3 in eight innings in game two, the game called due to darkness. With the White Sox losing, Cleveland clinches a tie for the AL flag. Their magic number drops to one.

One of the postponements comes in Pittsburgh, which already scheduled a doubleheader for Saturday. At that time in Pennsylvania, Sunday baseball was not allowed, so the Pirates scheduled a tripleheader for Saturday:

The Pittsburgh and Cincinnati National League clubs will play three games here to-morrow, according to an announcement by officials of the home club to-night. The first game will begin at noon, and fans will be permitted to witness the three game for one admission price.

New York Tribune

Also on the sports page is a report of at least the second auto accident of the year involving Babe Ruth. Ruth was unhurt, but his $12,000 car suffered a lot of damage.

The White Sox scandal continues to dominate page one and page two, but it now seems that people are trying to get publicity by hitching on to the story. The New York District Attorney wants to go after the gamblers in his city that bet on the games. The Giants are accused of throwing the 1919 pennant to the Reds. There’s more of an investigation to the roles of Hal Chase and Lee Magee. A bill to make throwing games a federal crime is introduced in Congress. It’s the first draft of history.

September 29, 2020

This Date in 1920

All five scheduled games play to completion on September 29, 1920. Four of those games occur in two doubleheaders, the Phillies at the Braves and the Yankees at the Athletics. The Braves beat the Phillies 1-0 in their first game for the low scoring game of the day. The Yankees down the Athletics 9-4 in eleven inning in game two for the high scoring game of the day.

It turns out that’s the last game of the season for New York. While there are four days left in the regular season, the AL teams in Boston and New York are through. I don’t know the reason, but I suspect the Yankees sharing the Polo Grounds with the Giants forced them into an unfavorable schedule.

Tillie Walker of the Athletics posts nearly identical games in the doubleheader sweep by the Yankees. He goes two for three with a home run in each game, driving in a run in each game. In game two, he walks twice (one intentional) and scores one run. That’s the best game of the day. In game one, he walked once and scored two runs. That’s the second best game of the day.

The third best game of the day goes to Babe Ruth. After hitting his 54th and final home run of 1920 in game one, he ends his historic season going three for five with a double in game two. Ruth leads the AL in runs, home runs, RBI, walks, OBP, and Slugging Pct.

The best pitched game of the day goes to Joe Oeschger of the Braves for his game one shutout. He allowed seven hits and one walk while striking out four batters. Oeschger pitches a good year for a poor team, finishing 15-13 with a 3.38 ERA for a team that won just 61 games.

George Sisler of the Browns and Tris Speaker of the Indians go head-to-head one last time, although the batting title is fairly well settled. Sisler posts a one for five day to lower his BA to .405, while Speaker goes three for five to raise his second place BA to .388.

The Indians win that game 10-2, and that eliminates the Yankees from competition for the pennant. It also drops the idle White Sox 1 1/2 games back and reduces Cleveland’s magic number to three.

The White Sox scandal still takes the top spot on the front page. Two gamblers are indicted, but there names are not released. More players confess to the plot. There is also a story about an investigation into whether the Dodgers were approached about throwing the 1920 World Series.

September 27, 2020

This Date in 1920

Eight of the nine games scheduled in the major leagues play to completion on September 27, 1920, including two doubleheaders. The Red Sox beat the Senators in game two of their twin bill for a sweep, and the White Sox beat the Tigers 2-0, both representing the low scoring games of the day. The Cardinals defeat the Cubs 16-1 in Chicago for the highest scoring game of the day. There are a number of low scores in the schedule, and this is one of seven days on the season that result in games averaging less than six runs a game (minimum six games played).

The day contains two major stories. The first involves the Giants splitting a doubleheader with the Braves at the Polo Grounds. New York loses game two 3-2, and that means the idle Dodgers win the pennant. The Dodgers go to the World Series for the second time in five seasons. It would be 21 years before they returned.

The second story appears on the front page and details the events of the 1919 White Sox throwing the World Series.

In Philadelphia the complete story of the most gigantic sporting swindle in the history of America was unfolded. Billy Maharg, former boxer and well known sporting figure of this city, said tonight that he and Bill Burns the former Washington, White Sox and Philly southpaw, were the pioneers in the conspiracy that resulted in eight members of the Chicago American League team “throwing” games in last year’s world’s series to Cincinnati.

New York Tribune

Maharg says that Eddie Cicotte made the offer to toss the games for $100,000. This is the first time we hear that it was the idea of the players, not gamblers.

Cliff Heathcote of the Cardinals and Charlie Jamieson of the Indians tie for best offensive game of the day with Baseball Musings Game Scores of 80. Heathcode posts a five for five day with a double, while Jamieson goes four for five with a double and a home run. Both batters drive in three runs. The Indians win 8-4 in St. Louis against the Browns.

On the pitching side, Harry Harper of the Red Sox is one of three pitchers to throw a six-hit shutout on the day. His game two victory is the best of the three, however, as he strikes out thirteen batters while walking four. It’s the second highest K total in a game this season, bested only by Urban Shocker‘s 14 on July 13, 1920.

The Indians at the Browns features the top two hitters in the AL battling for the batting title. Tris Speaker of the Indians posts a two for four day to raise his BA to .386, but George Sisler of the Browns goes three for four to raise his BA to .406.

A note here on statistics. Sisler now leads the AL with 247 hits, although the news story credits him with 248. Stats were not kept as well in those days. The record for hits in a season at that point was 248 by Ty Cobb in 1911, so Sisler is on the verge of breaking that record.

The Yankees keep pace with Cleveland and Chicago, defeating the Athletics 3-0 in Philadelphia. Babe Ruth homers twice to bring his season total to 53. The Yankees are on the edge of elimination, however. The Indians lead the White Sox by 1/2 games, and the Yankees by three. The Indians magic number stands at five, with two to eliminate the Yankees.

September 26, 2020

This Date in 1920

The major leagues scheduled and played six games on September 26, 1920. The Dodgers beat the Giants 4-2 in the low scoring game of the day, as Brooklyn clinches a tie for the NL pennant. Across town the Yankees beat the Senators 9-5 as the Polo Grounds sees the most runs on the day.

Aaron Ward leads the Yankees charge as he posts a three for four day with two home runs and a walk. According to the news story, the second of the two homers stayed inside the park. Ward becomes the fourth player on the Yankees to reach double digits in homers. Ward, Bob Meusel, and Wally Pipp total 31 homer to the 51 hit by Babe Ruth.

It’s appropriate that the Yankees played well that day, as it is also the anniversary of the birth of my father, a life-long Yankees fan. I had hoped to be celebrating his 100th birthday, but it took a once in a century pandemic, featuring SARS-CoV-2, to bring him down. His birth took place in Foggia, Italy. The family recorded his birth immediately, but his twin brother Nicky appeared too weak to survive. Two days later he doing better, so their dates of recording are days apart, which caused some confusion later in life.

He came to the United States in 1929. He parents moved here early in the twentieth century, but returned to the home country in the teens. My grandfather could make more money in the US and returned in the early 1920s, but it took awhile to bring the rest of the family over. Dad attended Lou Gehrig day, a fact that he didn’t bother to tell me until about 20 years ago. Sometimes when I’m looking at the day’s baseball schedule, I think, “I have to call dad and tell him when the Yankees are playing.” Here is his obituary.

Rube Marquard of the Dodgers gets the win against the Giants and earns best pitched game of the day. He allows two unearned runs on five hits and two walks, striking out five. Marquard pitched well against the Giants in 1920, going 4-1 with a 2.74 ERA through this game.

With seven game left, George Sisler of the Browns puts a tight hold in the AL Batting title. He goes three for five to raise his BA to .404. Meanwhile, in the same game, Tris Speaker of the Indians goes one for four to lower his batting average to .385, nineteen points back.

The Indians win that game 7-5 to stay in first place. The White Sox beat the Tigers 8-1 to stay 1/2 games back. Chicago is up one in the totally unimportant win column. The Yankees remain three games back. Cleveland’s magic number drops to six.

The scandal involving the White Sox continues to grow. Once again the story sits on the front page. President of the National League John Heydler announces he started investigating the the fix of the Word Series after game one, when Chicago manager Kid Gleason and owner Charles Comiskey approached the head of the NL. Comiskey did not get along with American League president Ban Johnson, which is why they spoke with Heydler. Heydler found evidence, gave it to Johnson, but Johnson was not enthused with the investigation.

Back on the sports page, Reds Manager Pat Moran scoffs at the idea that the White Sox threw games.

“We defeated the White Sox fairly and squarely last year and I challenge anybody to prove otherwise. To my mind all of these reports regarding the fixing of certain members of the White Sox are pure bunk.

New York Tribune

He would be proven wrong. There is also a story there about betting in Boston, where a betting ring put a lot of money on the Reds when they were a 2 to 8 shot.

September 24, 2020

This Date in 1920

Seven of the eight major league games scheduled for September 24, 1920 play to completion. The host Indians beat the White Sox 2-0 in a important AL pennant game. That stands as the low score of the day. The Tigers beat the Browns in Detroit 16-8, the high scoring game of the day.

Scandal puts baseball on the front page of the paper as the grand jury foreman announces that they have the name of the World Series fixer.

H.H. Brigham, foreman of the Cook County Grand Jury investigating alleged baseball gambling, to-night told newspaper men that the name of the man who “fixed” the 1919 world’s series for Cincinnati to win had been given to the grand jury. This man, Brigham stated, acted as a representative of a ring of gamblers, who offered Chicago White Sox players money to throw games to the Cincinnati Reds.

New York Tribune

The story continues on the sports page with Rube Benton explaining that he heard that White Sox players Eddie Cicotte, Claude Williams, Chick Gandil, and Hap Felsch were among the players that took money. It also, for the first time, names the players whose world series checks were held up by Charles Comiskey. They were the four mentioned above plus Buck Weaver, Charles Risberg, Joe Jackson, and Fred McMullin.

The White Sox did not have a monopoly on baseball scandal that day, however. For the second time this season, Giants manager John McGraw sees a friend injured in front of his house, and this time McGraw is accused of causing the injuries. This also makes the front page.

Meanwhile batters and pitchers performed. Babe Ruth of the Yankees earns best offensive game of the day in game two of their doubleheader against Washington at the Polo Grounds. Ruth homered in game one, a 3-1 win by Washington. That home run gives Ruth fifty for the season, reaching another milestone that fans a year earlier had thought impossible. In game two, he posts a four for four game, once again homering in the first inning, and doubling and scoring the winning run in the ninth as the Yankees take the game 2-1. Ruth also leads the AL in Runs, RBI, Walks, OBP, and slugging percentage.

Duster Mails of Cleveland continues his hot pitching down the stretch, earning the shutout against the White Sox for best pitched game of the day. He allowed just three hits, although he walks five batter. He also strikes out six. Mails is now 6-0 in seven September appearances with a 1.72 ERA. He certainly was not mailing it in.

The Indians win extends their lead to 1 1/2 games over the White Sox, with Cleveland’s magic number down to seven. The Yankees lose half a game and are now three games back. Due to the Yankees being down five in the loss column, Cleveland’s magic number against them is just five.

The NL race does not change as both the Dodgers and Giants have the day off. They play head-to-head tomorrow with the Dodgers five games up. A win by the Dodgers in that game clinches a tie for the NL pennant.

George Sisler of the Browns posts a three for five day to put his league leading BA at .404. He now has the batting title in a firm grasp as Tris Speaker goes 0 for 4 to drop to .389. The big question now is can Sisler maintain a .400 BA? The Browns have 12 games left.

September 18, 2020

This Date in 1920

All nine scheduled game play to completion on September 18, 1920, including a doubleheader split between the Cardinals and the Braves. Game two, won by the Braves 5-3 ties for the lowest scoring game of the day with the 7-1 by the Browns over the Athletics. At the high end, the White Sox beat the faltering Yankees 15-9 in Chicago. At 13.67 runs per game, this is the third highest scoring day of the season. Three of the last five days wound up in the top six and offense takes control in the middle of September.

Happy Felsch of the White Sox takes home the best offensive game of the day trophy. He goes four for four with a double, triple, four runs scored and three RBI. Felsch had a great season against the Yankees, hitting .378/.402/.656. In twenty two games he collected 34 hits, 15 for extra bases. The news story notes a crown of 43,000, the largest crowd to see a game in Chicago. Part of that was the importance of the game, but part no doubt was to see if Babe Ruth would hit home run 50. He did not.

The one well pitched game of the day belongs to Bill Bayne of the Browns. He pitches a complete game four-hitter, allowing one run and two walks. He also struck out three and hit two batters. At seasonal age 21, the 1920 season would prove to be Bayne’s best. It was his only year producing an ERA under 4.00 (3.70). His 1.3 rWAR was also the high point for him in a season.

George Sisler of the Browns gave Bayne some support as he goes three for four with a triple to raise his batting average to .402. That leads Tris Speaker of the Indians by 11 points. Speaker goes 1 for 2 in the Cleveland 7-5 win over Washington, putting Speaker at .391.

Cleveland and Chicago winning means the Indians stay in first place, and the White Sox remain 1 1/2 games out, but now in second place. The Yankees drop to third place, two games back of Cleveland.

In the NL, the Reds stop their slide with an 11-5 win over the Dodgers. The Giants gain a game on the leaders as well with an 8-7 win over the Pirates. New York is five games behind Brooklyn with the Reds six back. The Dodgers magic number is eight against the Reds, seven against the Giants, however.

September 13, 2020

This Date in 1920

The major leagues see action in all nine scheduled games on September 13, 1920, including a doubleheader in Brooklyn against the Cubs. The Braves beat the Pirates 3-0 in Boston for the low scoring games of the day. The White Sox beat the Senators 15-6, the twenty one runs the most scored in a game on this date.

Eddie Collins of the White Sox wins best offensive game of the day in that high scoring contest. He reaches base six times in six plate appearances, with three singles and three walks. Collins finishes the game with a .429 OBP, fifth among the AL league leaders.

Collins, who attended Columbia, used his intellect to study the game and get a lot out of a small frame. He also exhibited cockiness about his higher social status and smarts, often rubbing teammates and opponents the wrong way. Collins captained the 1919 White Sox, and his comments on that team might be the earliest reference to how teams overrate chemistry:

 “From the moment I arrived at training camp from service, I could see that something was amiss. We may have had our troubles in other years, but in 1919 we were a club that pulled apart rather than together. There were frequent arguments and open hostility. All the things you think – and are taught to believe – are vital to the success of any athletic organization were missing from it, and yet it was the greatest collection of players ever assembled, I would say.”

SABR.org

The author of that biographical article notes that Collins should have had the smarts to defuse the situation, or at least smell a rat. That did not happen.

Jack Scott of the Braves pitches the best game of the day. He allows just three hits and no walks in the shutout, striking out three batters. Scott breaks a month-long slump that saw him go 0-7 in nine appearances with a 4.71 ERA. He allowed 70 hits in 57 1/3 innings.

The Tigers held a 2-1 lead over the Yankees in the top of the sixth inning when Babe Ruth unleashed his 49th home run, a two-run shot that proved to be the winning runs. The Yankees take the game 4-2. Ruth is now one home run from blowing away the third level fans did not believe they would ever see.

George Sisler of the Browns goes three for six as Boston beats St. Louis 5-4 in fourteen innings. That keeps Sisler at the top of the AL batting race and raises his average to .395. Tris Speaker of the Indians posts a 1-4 day and falls further behind Sisler to .392. Speaker returned from his illness after the death of Ray Chapman on Aug. 23. Since then, Speaker is hitting .338, Sisler .337.

The Indians win Speaker’s game, beating the Athletics 3-2. With New York and the White Sox also winning, the strange AL standings remain the same, with Cleveland in first place with the highest winning percentage, but 1/2 games behind the Yankees. The White Sox remain in third place one game behind Cleveland and 1 1/2 games behind the Yankees.

In the National League, the Dodgers sweep the doubleheader against the Cubs 7-3, 7-2, to extend their win streak to ten games. The Phillies beat the Reds 6-2, while the Giants down the Cardinals 7-0. Brooklyn now leads both teams by five games, but the Reds are in second place due to a better winning percentage. Brooklyn’s magic number drops to 14.

September 10, 2020

This Date in 1920

Six of the eight scheduled games in the major leagues saw action on September 10, 1920, including a double header in Detroit. The Tigers beat the Athletics 4-0 in the first game for the low scoring game of the day. The Dodgers, playing in Brooklyn, down the Cardinals 9-8 in eleven innings for the high scoring game of the day.

The Dodgers had to come back twice in that contest. Down 5-3 in the ninth, Ray Schmandt comes to the plate and singles in one run, then Ivy Olson repeats the sequence to tie the game. The Cardinals then score three times in the top of the eleventh inning to take an 8-5 lead. The Dodgers use two outs to score two runs after the first two batters reach. Then Bernie Neis beats out an slow roller for a single. Zach Wheat singles, and goes to third on an error by the rightfielder Joe Schultz (the ball went past him) that allows Neis to tie the game. Hi Myers singles for the walk-off win.

Myers also picks up the best offensive game of the day. He goes three for five with a triple and three RBI. His twenty triples ranks first among the NL leaders. He is also second in doubles.

Doc Ayers of the Tigers takes home the best pitched game of the day for the game one shutout. He holds Philadelphia to four this and three walks, striking out three. Ayers was in a big of a slump, with a 4.46 ERA in his previous six appearances. The Tigers win two as they win the second game 5-2.

Tris Speaker of the Indians loses ground to the idle George Sisler of the Browns in the AL batting race. Speaker goes one for four to drop his average to .391, now four points behind Sisler.

The Yankees defeat the Indians 6-1 in Cleveland to gain back the game lost the previous day. Babe Ruth hits home run 48, which fails to awe the Cleveland crowd. The White Sox down the Red Sox 5-3 winning on a double steal in the eighth inning. Cleveland and Chicago are now even in games back, but the Indians lead by percentage points. The Yankees are 1/2 games back, and the race for the AL flag is about as tight as it can be. The massive tie scenario would be in full effect.

In the NL, the Reds and Giants are idle, so Brooklyn extends their lead to one game over the Reds and three games over the Giants.

The sports page, linked above, notes that the Chicago Cubs players and officials received subpoenas to testify in a baseball gambling investigation. The next transformative moment of the season is just around the corner.

September 9, 2020

This Date in 1920

Nine of the ten scheduled major league games play to completion on September 9, 1920, including two doubleheaders. The Senators beat the Browns 2-1 in game two of their doubleheader for the low scoring game of the day and the sweep. The Braves beat the Reds 11-7 in games two of their twin bill for the high scoring game.

Doc Johnston of the Indians takes home best offensive game of the day in the 10-4 win over the Yankees. The home team first baseman goes four for five with two triples, one fifth of his triples total for the season. Stan Coveleski wins his twentieth game of the season. Babe Ruth extends his home run record to 47.

Jim Shaw of the Senators pitches game two and win best pitched game of the day. He allows five hits, two walks, and one run while striking out six. Shaw led the majors in 1919 with 45 games and 306 2/3 innings. That seasonal age 25 season was worth 6.4 rWAR. His era jumps from 2.73 in 1919 to 4.27 in 1920, and his major league career was over afther 40 1/3 innings in 1921. According to his bio, the ban on trick pitches in 1920 might have led to his downfall.

In the AL batting race, Tris Speaker of the Indians has a good day, but George Sisler of the Browns has a great day. Speaker goes one for two to raise his batting average to .393. Sisler, however, goes five for seven to raise his BA to .395, first among the league leaders.

The Indians win keeps them ahead of the White Sox in the AL pennant race, Chicago beating Boston 6-5. Chicago sits one game back, while the Yankees drop to 1 1/2 games back.

In the NL, The Dodgers beat the Cardinals 4-2, while the Reds split a double header with the Braves. The Cubs beat the Giants 3-2. That leaves Brooklyn in first place, 1/2 game ahead of the Reds and 2 1/2 games ahead of New York.

September 5, 2020

Edge of a Record

Mike Trout hit career home run 299 Friday night, tying Tim Salmon for the Angels team home run record. The Angels are one of seven franchises with a player career home run record below 300. At the bottom sits the Padres at 163 (Nate Colbert). The Diamondbacks, Mets, Rays, Marlins, and Expos/Nationals make up the rest of the list. I suspect Fernando Tatis, Jr. might get the Padres out of the cellar.

At the top of the list are the Braves with 733 (Henry Aaron), the Yankees with 659 (Babe Ruth) and the Giants with 646 (Willie Mays).

Fourth on the list sits the Senators/Twins, where Harmon Killebrew hit 559 home runs. He is a bit of an underappreciated slugger. Like Aaron, he was consistently great (he led the AL in home runs six times) but never hit at least 50 in a season. He is immortalized, however, as the profile on the MLB logo looks like him.

September 4, 2020

This Date in 1920

All ten scheduled major league games played to completion on Sept 4, 1920, and the Giants and Phillies finished a protested game from earlier in the season. In the scheduled game, the Giants beat the Phillies in New York 1-0, the low scoring game of the day. At the high end, the Indians defeated the Tigers 12-3.

George Sisler of the Browns takes home best offensive game of the day, in game one of the doubleheader between the Browns and the White Sox in Chicago. Sisler goes four for five with two triples in the 6-5, 10 inning St. Louis win. Sisler also posts the best overall day, going six for nine to raise his batting average to .398 to lead the league. Tris Speaker goes two for five, but stays at .393, in second place. The Browns and White Sox split, while the Indians beat the Tigers 12-3.

Special mention goes to Babe Ruth, who hits a home run in each game of the Yankees doubleheader in Boston, split by the teams. Those are home runs 45 and 46, and at the time, it was considered breaking a record.

Ruth last season broke Buck Freeman‘s major league record of twenty-five home runs in a season by driving out twenty-nine. This, however, was not a world’s record, for Perry Werden, playing with Minneapolis, then in the Western League, made forty-five four-base hits in 1895.

New York Tribune

Werden was quite the character, playing dirty, harassing umpires, and giving reporters humorous quotes. It also demonstrates how baseball was still evolving, where the difference between major and minor league teams was not as great as it is now.

Best pitched game of the day goes to Eric Erickson of Washington, who takes a loss in extra-innings. He pitches 12 2/3 innings, allowing just six hits. He allows five runs, all unearned, while walking five and striking out seven for a game score of 84. Howie Shanks, the Washington third baseman, made three errors in the 5-4 loss. Erickson gave up 40 unearned runs on the season.

In the AL pennant race, the Indians extend their lead by 1/2 game against the Yankees and White Sox. New York is in second place 1/2 game back, Chicago one game back.

In the NL pennant race, Brooklyn joins the Giants in throwing a shutout, the Dodgers beating the Braves 10-0. The Cardinals beat the Reds 4-2. Brooklyn moves into first place, 1/2 game ahead of the Reds, with the Giants two games back.

September 3, 2020

Three on a Match

The Braves set a record as Marcell Ozuna and Adam Duvall each hit three home runs in back-to-back games.

Duvall and Ozuna were the first teammates with three-homer performances in back-to-back games, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

ESPN.com

Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig did it on consecutive days, but those days involved doubleheaders. so it did not happen in consecutive games. Still, that’s a pretty good pair to beat.

Duvall’s was the sixth three-home run performance of the season. The 2019 season produced 22 games in which a player hit a least three home runs in a game, tying a record set in 2001. This year’s pace would beat that. In fact, in the 30 team era (since 1998), 2007, 2008, and 2014 produced less than six such feats.

September 3, 2020

This Date in 1920

All eight scheduled major league games played to completion on September 3, 1920. The Tigers defeated the first place Indians 1-0 for the low scoring game of the day. At the high end, the Senators pounded the Athletics in Philadelphia 14-5.

That high scoring game produced a tie for best offensive game of the day. Joe Judge and Braggo Roth, the Washington lead-off and cleanup hitters respectively, both going four for five with a triple. Judge scored four runs while Roth drove in five. For Judge it’s his 12th triple of the season, tying him for third place in the AL among the league leaders.

On the pitching side, Burleigh Grimes of the Dodgers takes home best pitched game of the day. He twirls a four-hit shutout as Brooklyn wins at home, 6-0 over Philadelphia. Grimes walks one and strikes out four to run his record to 19-9. He stand fifth in complete games (22), fifth in shutouts (4), and third in wins.

The news story of that game notes that the crowd numbered 5,000, which the reporter said was impressive. A transit strike made it difficult to reach the stadium, so the 5,000 who showed were rather intrepid.

In the AL batting race, Tris Speaker of the Indians went 0 for 3 to drop his batting average to .393. With George Sisler going one for four, the two batting title hopefuls are now tied for the league lead.

The Yankees beat the Red Sox 5-3 in Boston to move into a virtual tie with the Indians for first place in the American League. The Indians remain two up in the loss column, giving them the better winning percentage. The Browns beat the White Sox 2-1, and Chicago remains 1/2 game out of first place. In the Yankees game, Babe Ruth returns to action after a seven game absence due to a bug bite that needed surgery.

The National League saw the Giants beat the Braves 7-2 thanks to shoddy fielding by Boston, and the Reds downed the Cardinals 12-5. That leaves the standings unchanged, Cincinnati leading Brooklyn by 1/2 game, the Giants by 2 1/2 games. The Pirates run seems to be over as they lose to the Cubs 4-2 in 13 innings, and Pittsburgh sits 6 1/2 games out of first.