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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Spalding's Official Baseball Guide - 1913,
+Edited by John B. Foster
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Spalding's Official Baseball Guide - 1913
+
+Editor: John B. Foster
+
+Release Date: October 12, 2003 [eBook #10028]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SPALDING'S OFFICIAL BASEBALL GUIDE
+- 1913***
+
+
+Credit for e-text: The Library of Congress, Joshua Hutchinson, David King,
+and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+SPALDING'S OFFICIAL ATHLETIC LIBRARY
+
+BASEBALL GUIDE
+
+1913
+
+EDITED BY
+
+JOHN B. FOSTER
+
+
+PRICE 10 CENTS
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+AMERICAN SPORTS PUBLISHING CO.,
+21 Warren Street, New York City.
+
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+AMERICA'S NATIONAL GAME
+
+By A. G. SPALDING
+
+PRICE, $2.00 NET
+
+A book of 600 pages, profusely illustrated with over 100 full page
+engravings, and having sixteen forceful cartoons by Homer C. Davenport,
+the famous American artist.
+
+The above work should have a place in every public library in this
+country, as also in the libraries of public schools and private houses.
+
+The author of "America's National Game" is conceded, always, everywhere,
+and by everybody, to have the best equipment of any living writer to
+treat the subject that forms the text of this remarkable volume, viz.,
+the story of the origin, development and evolution of Base Ball, the
+National Game of our country.
+
+Almost from the very inception of the game until the present time--as
+player, manager and magnate--Mr. Spalding has been closely identified
+with its interests. Not infrequently he has been called upon in times of
+emergency to prevent threatened disaster. But for him the National Game
+would have been syndicated and controlled by elements whose interests
+were purely selfish and personal.
+
+The book is a veritable repository of information concerning players,
+clubs and personalities connected with the game in its early days, and
+is written in a most interesting style, interspersed with enlivening
+anecdotes and accounts of events that have not heretofore been
+published.
+
+The response on the part of the press and the public to Mr. Spalding's
+efforts to perpetuate the early history of the National Game has been
+very encouraging and he is in receipt of hundreds of letters and
+notices, a few of which are here given.
+
+ROBERT ADAMSON, New York, writing from the office of Mayor Gaynor,
+says:--"Seeing the Giants play is my principal recreation and I am
+interested in reading everything I can find about the game. I especially
+enjoy what you [Mr. Spalding] have written, because you stand as the
+highest living authority on the game."
+
+BARNEY DREYFUSS, owner of the Pittsburg National League club:--"It does
+honor to author as well as the game. I have enjoyed reading it very
+much."
+
+WALTER CAMP, well known foot ball expert and athlete, says:--"It is
+indeed a remarkable work and one that I have read with a great deal of
+interest."
+
+JOHN B. DAY, formerly President of the New York Nationals:--"Your
+wonderful work will outlast all of us."
+
+W. IRVING SNYDER, formerly of the house of Peck & Snyder:--"I have read
+the book from cover to cover with great interest."
+
+ANDREW PECK, formerly of the celebrated firm of Peck & Snyder:--"All
+base ball fans should read and see how the game was conducted in early
+years."
+
+MELVILLE E. STONE, New York, General Manager Associated Press:--"I find
+it full of valuable information and very interesting. I prize it very
+highly."
+
+GEORGE BARNARD, Chicago:--"Words fail to express my appreciation of the
+book. It carries me back to the early days of base ball and makes me
+feel like a young man again."
+
+CHARLES W. MURPHY, President Chicago National League club:--"The book is
+a very valuable work and will become a part of every base ball library
+in the country."
+
+JOHN F. MORILL, Boston, Mass., old time base ball star.--"I did not
+think it possible for one to become so interested in a book on base
+ball. I do not find anything in it which I can criticise."
+
+RALPH D. PAINE, popular magazine writer and a leading authority on
+college sport:--"I have been reading the book with a great deal of
+interest. 'It fills a long felt want,' and you are a national benefactor
+for writing it."
+
+GEN. FRED FUNSTON, hero of the Philippine war:--"I read the book with a
+great deal of pleasure and was much interested in seeing the account of
+base ball among the Asiatic whalers, which I had written for Harper's
+Round Table so many years ago."
+
+DEWOLF HOPPER, celebrated operatic artist and comedian:--"Apart from the
+splendid history of the evolution of the game, it perpetuates the
+memories of the many men who so gloriously sustained it. It should be
+read by every lover of the sport."
+
+HUGH NICOL, Director of Athletics, Purdue University, Lafayette,
+Ind.:--"No one that has read this book has appreciated it more than I.
+Ever since I have been big enough, I have been in professional base
+ball, and you can imagine how interesting the book is to me."
+
+MRS. BRITTON, owner of the St. Louis Nationals, through her treasurer,
+H.D. Seekamp, writes:--"Mrs. Britton has been very much interested in
+the volume and has read with pleasure a number of chapters, gaining
+valuable information as to the history of the game."
+
+REV. CHARLES H. PARKHURST, D.D., New York:--"Although I am not very much
+of a 'sport,' I nevertheless believe in sports, and just at the present
+time in base ball particularly. Perhaps if all the Giants had an
+opportunity to read the volume before the recent game (with the
+Athletics) they might not have been so grievously outdone."
+
+BRUCE CARTWRIGHT, son of Alexander J. Cartwright, founder of the
+Knickerbocker Base Ball Club, the first organization of ball players in
+existence, writing from his home at Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands,
+says:--"I have read the book with great interest and it is my opinion
+that no better history of base ball could have been written."
+
+GEORGE W. FROST, San Diego, Calif.:--"You and 'Jim' White, George
+Wright, Barnes, McVey, O'Rourke, etc., were little gods to us back there
+in Boston in those days of '74 and '75, and I recall how indignant we
+were when you 'threw us down' for the Chicago contract. The book is
+splendid. I treasure it greatly."
+
+A.J. REACH, Philadelphia, old time professional expert:--"It certainly
+is an interesting revelation of the national game from the time, years
+before it was so dignified, up to the present. Those who have played the
+game, or taken an interest in it in the past, those at present engaged
+in it, together with all who are to engage in it, have a rare treat in
+store."
+
+DR. LUTHER H. GULICK, Russell Sage Foundation:--"Mr. Spalding has been
+the largest factor in guiding the development of the game and thus
+deserves to rank with other great men of the country who have
+contributed to its success. It would have added to the interest of the
+book if Mr. Spalding could have given us more of his own personal
+experiences, hopes and ambitions in connection with the game."
+
+_Pittsburg Press_:--"Historical incidents abound and the book is an
+excellent authority on the famous sport."
+
+_Philadelphia Telegraph_:--"In this book Mr. Spalding has written the
+most complete and authoritative story of base ball yet published."
+
+_New York Herald_:--"If there is anyone in the country competent to
+write a book on base ball it is A.G. Spalding who has been interested in
+the game from its early beginnings."
+
+I.E. Sanborn, Chicago _Tribune_:--"'America's National Game' has been
+added to the _Tribune's_ sporting reference library as an invaluable
+contribution to the literature of the national pastime."
+
+O.C. Reichard, Chicago _Daily News_:--"It is cleverly written and
+presents information and dates of great value to the newspaper man of
+to-day!"
+
+George C. Rice, Chicago _Journal_:--"I have read the book through, and
+take pleasure in stating that it is a complete history of the game from
+the beginning until the present time."
+
+Sherman R. Duffy, Sporting Editor _Chicago Journal_:--"It is a most
+interesting work and one for which there was need. It is the most
+valuable addition to base ball literature that has yet been put out."
+
+Joseph H. Vila, New York _Sun_:--"I have read it carefully and with much
+interest. It is the best piece of base ball literature I have ever seen,
+and I congratulate you on the work."
+
+Tim Murnane, Sporting Editor _Boston Globe_:--"You have given to the
+world a book of inestimable value, a classic in American history; a book
+that should be highly prized in every home library in the country."
+
+Francis C. Richter, Editor _Sporting Life_, Philadelphia:--"From a
+purely literary standpoint, your work is to me amazing. Frankly, I would
+not change a line, for the reason that the story is told in a way to
+grip the reader and hold his interest continually."
+
+_Los Angeles Times_ (editorial):--"Spalding's book has been out six
+months and ninety thousand copies have been sold. We understand there
+will be other editions. America has taken base ball seriously for at
+last two generations, and it is time enough that the fad was given an
+adequate text book."
+
+Caspar Whitney, Editor _Outdoor America_, and one of the leading
+authorities in the world on sport:--"You have made an invaluable
+contribution to the literature of the game, and one none else could have
+made. Moreover, you've done some very interesting writing, which is a
+distinct novelty in such books--too often dull and uninteresting."
+
+_New York World_:--"Albert G. Spalding, who really grew up with the
+sport, has written 'America's National Game,' which he describes as not
+a history, but the simple story of the game as he has come to know it.
+His book, therefore, is full of living interest. It is a volume
+generously illustrated and abounds in personal memories of base ball in
+the making."
+
+_New York Sun_:--"There is a mass of interesting information regarding
+base ball, as might be expected, in Mr. Spalding's 'America's National
+Game.' It is safe to say that before Spalding there was no base ball.
+The book is no record of games and players, but it is historical in a
+broader sense, and the author is able to give his personal decisive
+testimony about many disputed points."
+
+_Evening Telegram_, New York:--"In clear, concise, entertaining,
+narrative style, Albert G. Spalding has contributed in many respects the
+most interesting work pertaining to base ball, the national game, which
+has been written.
+
+"There is so much in it of interest that the temptation not to put it
+down until it is completed is strong within the mind of every person who
+begins to read it. As a historical record it is one of those volumes
+which will go further to straighten some disputed points than all of the
+arguments which could be advanced in good natured disputes which might
+last for months."
+
+_Providence_ (R. I.) _Tribune_:--"The pictures of old time teams players
+and magnates of a bygone era will interest every lover of the game, and
+no doubt start many discussions and recollections among the old timers."
+
+_New York Evening Mail_:--"Were it possible to assemble the grand army
+of base ball fans in convention, their first act probably would be to
+pass a vote of thanks to Mr. A.G. Spalding for his work 'America's
+National Game'."
+
+_Columbus_ (Ohio) _Dispatch_:--"Never before has been put in print so
+much of authentic record of this distinctly national game, and it will
+be long, if ever, until so thoroughly interesting and useful a volume is
+published to cover the same field."
+
+_New Orleans Picayune_:--"The pictures of old time teams, players and
+magnates of a bygone era will interest every lover of the game. Homer
+Davenport, America's great cartoonist, has contributed drawings in his
+inimitable style of various phases of the game."
+
+_Indianapolis Star_:--"From cover to cover, the 542 pages are filled
+with material for 'fanning bees,' which the average 'fan' never before
+encountered. It is an interesting volume for anyone who follows the
+national pastime and a valuable addition to any library."
+
+_Buffalo News_:--"No book on base ball has ever been written that is
+superior to this one by A.G. Spalding. The book is admirably written,
+yet without any frills. Many of the more notable incidents recounted in
+this book are having wide publication by themselves."
+
+_Brooklyn Times_:--"The book is practically a compendium of the salient
+incidents in the evolution of professional base ball. Mr. Spalding is
+pre-eminently fitted to perform this service, his connection with the
+game having been contemporaneous with its development, as player, club
+owner and league director."
+
+_Washington_ (D. C.) _Star_:--"This work appeals with peculiar force to
+the public. Mr. Spalding's name is almost synonymous with base ball. He
+has worked to the end of producing a volume which tells the story of the
+game vividly and accurately. Taken altogether, this is a most valuable
+and entertaining work."
+
+_New York American_:--"One of the best selling books of the season has
+been 'America's National Game,' by A.G. Spalding. The first edition of
+five thousand copies has been sold out (in two months) and a second
+edition of five thousand is now on the press. As a Christmas gift from
+father to son, it is most appropriate."
+
+_Cincinnati Enquirer_:--"As a veteran of the diamond, well qualified to
+do so, Mr. Spalding has committed to print a professional's version of
+the distinctly American game. This well known base ball celebrity has a
+store of familiar anecdotes embracing the entire period of the game as
+now played and the reader will find it most interesting."
+
+_Teacher and Home, New York_:--"Every live father of a live boy will
+want to buy this book. It is said of some of the 'best sellers' that
+they hold one to the end. This book holds the reader with its anecdote,
+its history, its pictures; but it will have no end; for no home--no
+American home--will be complete hereafter without it."
+
+_Buffalo Times_:--"A.G. Spalding, with whose name every American boy is
+familiar, has been prevailed upon to commit to print events which were
+instrumental in guiding the destinies of the National League during the
+trying period of its early days. To write upon base ball in a historical
+manner, and yet not fall into the habit of quoting interminable
+statistics, is a feat that few could accomplish."
+
+_Cincinnati Times-Star_:--"'America's National Game,' A.G. Spalding's
+great book upon the diamond sport, is now upon the market and receiving
+well merited attention. It tells the story as Mr. Spalding saw it, and
+no man has been in position to see more. When 'Al' Spalding, the sinewy
+pitcher of nearly forty years ago, came into the arena, the game was
+young, and through all the changing seasons that have seen it mature
+into full bloom, its closest watcher and strongest friend has been the
+same 'Al' Spalding."
+
+_Cincinnati Time-Star_:--"The book is at once a history, a cyclopaedia
+and a most entertaining volume."
+
+_New York American_:--"'America's National Game' tells for the first
+time the history of the national game of base ball."
+
+_Portland Oregonian_:--"The book is of rare interest and has such
+personal value in the story line that one hardly knows where to begin in
+making quotations from it--all the stories told are so admirable."
+
+JOHN T. NICHOLSON, Principal Public School 186, New York:--"It's a great
+book."
+
+REV. W.A. SUNDAY, Evangelist:--"No one in America is better qualified to
+talk of base ball, from its inception to its present greatness, than
+A.G. Spalding."
+
+WM. L. VEECK and ED. W. SMITH, of the Chicago _American_:--"We have
+found much enjoyment in reading the book, and it is very valuable in our
+work."
+
+W.H. CONANT, Gossamer Rubber Co., Boston, Mass.:--"I have read the book
+with great pleasure and it produced a vivid reminiscence of the striking
+events in base ball, so full of interest to all lovers of the game."
+
+JOSEPH B. MACCABE, Editor East Boston (Mass.) _Argus-Advocate_, and
+ex-President Amateur Athletic Union:--"I want to express my gratitude,
+as a humble follower of manly sport, for the compilation of this
+historic work."
+
+JOHN A. LOWELL, President John A. Lowell Bank Note Company, Boston,
+Mass.:--"I have read the book with great interest and it certainly is a
+valuable compilation of facts relating to the history of base ball, the
+great national game of America. I prize it very highly."
+
+WM. F. GARCELON, Harvard Athletic Association, Cambridge, Mass.:--"I
+think 'America's National Game' is not only intensely interesting but
+most valuable, as giving the history of the game. Better still, my nine
+year old boy is looking forward to the time when he can get it away from
+me."
+
+GUSTAV T. KIRBY, President of the Amateur Athletic Union:--"Not only as
+a historical sketch of this great national game, but also as a technical
+dissertation on base ball as it was and is, this book will not only be
+of interest but of benefit to all of us Americans who are interested in
+sport--and what American is not interested in sport?--and being
+interested in sport, chiefly in base ball."
+
+EVERETT C. BROWN, Chicago, ex-president of the Amateur Athletic Union of
+the United States:--"It is very seldom that any history of any sport or
+anything pertaining to athletics approaches the interest with which one
+reads a popular work of fiction, but I can truthfully say that I have
+read the story of the great national game with as much interest as I
+have read any recent work of fiction."
+
+THOMAS F. GRAHAM, Judge Superior Court, San Francisco:--"'America's
+National Game' contains matter on the origin and development of base
+ball--the greatest game ever devised by man--that will be of the utmost
+interest to the base ball loving people, not only of this, but of every
+English speaking country; and I am sure it will perpetuate the name of
+A.G. Spalding to the end of time."
+
+
+
+
+SPALDING'S OFFICIAL ATHLETIC LIBRARY
+
+SPALDING'S OFFICIAL BASE BALL GUIDE
+
+Thirty-seventh Year
+
+1913
+
+EDITED BY
+
+JOHN B. FOSTER
+
+AMERICAN SPORTS PUBLISHING COMPANY
+21 Warren Street, New York
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+A Remarkable Base Ball Tournament
+
+A World's Series Problem
+
+American League Averages, Official
+
+American League Season of 1912
+
+Base Ball Writers of the South
+
+Base Ball Worth While?
+
+Base Ball Playing Rules, Official
+ Index to Playing
+ Ready Reference Index to
+
+Base Ball Playing Rules, Spalding's Simplified--
+ Ball
+ Ball Ground
+ Balls, Providing
+ Balls, Soiling
+ Base Running Rules
+ Bat, Regulation
+ Batting Rules
+ Benches, Players
+ Coaching Rules
+ Definitions, General
+ Field for Play, Fitness of
+ Field Rules
+ Game, Regulation
+ Gloves and Mitts, Regulation
+ Ground Rules
+ Innings, Choice of
+ Players, Numbers and Position of
+ Players, Substitute
+ Pitching Rules
+ Scoring Rules
+ Scoring of Runs
+ Umpires' Authority
+ Umpires' Duties
+ Uniforms
+
+Club Rosters of 1912, Official
+
+Diagram, Correct, of a Ball Field
+
+Editorial Comment
+
+Elementary School Base Ball Tournament
+
+Introduction
+
+John Tomlinson Brush
+
+National League Season of 1912
+
+National League Averages, Official
+
+National Association of Professional Base Ball Leagues--
+ American Association
+ Appalachian League
+ Blue Grass League
+ Border League
+ Canadian League
+ Central Association
+ Central Kansas League
+ Central League
+ Cotton States League
+ Eastern Association
+ Illinois-Missouri League
+ Indiana-Illinois-Iowa League
+ International League
+ Kentucky-Ind.-Tenn. League
+ Michigan State League
+ "Mink" League
+ New York State League
+ New England League
+ Nebraska State League
+ North Carolina League
+ Northwestern League
+ Ohio and Pennsylvania League
+ Ohio State League
+ Pacific Coast League
+ South Atlantic League
+ Southeastern League
+ Southern Association
+ Southern Michigan Association
+ Texas League
+ Tri-State League
+ Union Association
+ Virginia League
+ Western Canada League
+ Western League
+
+New Faces in the Old League
+
+Notes
+
+Schedules--
+ American League
+ International League
+ National League
+ Northwestern League
+ Southern Michigan
+ Texas League
+
+The Spalding Base Ball Hall of Fame
+
+The World's Series of 1912
+
+The Umpires
+
+NOTICE--To give adequate representation to College and School Base Ball
+Teams, which heretofore has not been possible in the Guide owing to lack
+of room, "Spalding's Official Collegiate Base Ball Annual" will be
+issued in February. It will contain complete college records, pictures
+and information exclusively pertaining to College Base Ball. Price 10
+cents.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+In preparing this issue of SPALDING'S OFFICIAL BASE BALL GUIDE for the
+season of 1913, it has occurred to the Editor that the season of 1912,
+and the period which followed its completion, have been filled, with a
+great deal of unusual and uncommon vicissitude.
+
+In the first place the personnel of the National League, the oldest Base
+Ball organization in the world, has been greatly changed by reason of
+death and purchase of one franchise. New owners have brought new faces
+into the game, and when the National League starts on this year's
+campaign there will be some younger but equally as ambitious men at the
+heads of some of the clubs.
+
+The players have effected an organization. That, too, is an incident of
+interest, for it is well within the memory of the Base Ball "fans" of
+this day what happened when another organization was perfected in the
+past. For this organization it may be said that the members promise that
+it will be their object to bring about better deportment on the part of
+their own associates and that they will work their best for the
+advancement of Base Ball from a professional standpoint. If they do this
+they will be of benefit to the sport. If they work from selfish motives
+it is inevitable that eventually there will be a clash, as there was in
+the past.
+
+The last world's series which was played was the greatest special series
+of games which has been played in the history of the national pastime.
+There may have been single games and there may have been series which
+have attracted their full measure of interest from the Base Ball "fans,"
+but there never has been a special series so filled with thrills and
+excitement as that between the New York and Boston clubs. The GUIDE this
+year enters into the subject thoroughly with photographs and a story of
+the games and feels that the readers will enjoy the account of the
+contests.
+
+Some innovations have been attempted in this number of the GUIDE which
+should interest Base Ball readers. Attention is called to the symposium
+by prominent Base Ball writers which brings up a subject of interest in
+regard to future world's series. There are other special articles,
+including something about the Base Ball writers of the South, who have
+decided to organize a chapter of their own.
+
+The year 1912 was one of progress and advancement on the part of Base
+Ball throughout the world. To-day it not only is stronger than ever as
+America's national game but it is making fast progress in other
+countries because of the attractiveness of the pastime.
+
+The Editor of the GUIDE wishes its thousands of readers an even more
+enjoyable Base Ball year in 1913 than they had in 1912. This publication
+is now one of worldwide circulation, and carries the gospel of Base
+Ball, not only across the Atlantic ocean, but across the Pacific ocean
+as well. One of these days it may be its province to report a series for
+the international championship, and then Base Ball will have become the
+universal game of the world, a place toward which it is rapidly tending.
+
+THE EDITOR.
+
+
+
+
+EDITORIAL COMMENT
+
+BY JOHN B. FOSTER.
+
+
+PROGRESS OF AMERICA'S NATIONAL GAME
+
+Two more nations have been conquered by the national game of the United
+States; a whole race has succumbed to the fascinations of the greatest
+of all outdoor sports. Both France and Sweden have announced their
+intention of organizing Base Ball leagues. That of Sweden is well under
+way. Indeed, they have a club in Stockholm and there are more to follow,
+while the French, who have gradually been awakening to the joys of
+athletic pastime in which they have hitherto chosen to participate in
+other ways, hope to have a new league by the expiration of the present
+summer.
+
+There is no doubt as to their intention to play Base Ball. They are
+making efforts to procure suitable players from the United States to
+coach them and the French promoters of the sport are determined that
+their young men shall be given every opportunity to take advantage of
+the game of which they have heard so much, and have seen so little.
+
+Last year in the GUIDE it was the pleasure of the editor to call
+attention to the fact that the Japanese had so thoroughly grasped Base
+Ball that they were bent on some day playing an American team for the
+international championship. It is not probable that such a series will
+take place within the next five years, but not improbable that it will
+take place within the next decade. When the Japanese learn to bat
+better, and with more effect, they will become more dangerous rivals to
+the peace of mind of the American players. They have grasped the general
+theory of the game amazingly well, and they field well, but they have
+yet to develop some of those good old fashioned "clean up" hitters in
+which the "fans" of the United States revel.
+
+This season it comes to the attention of the editor of the GUIDE that
+more progress has been made in China in regard to Base Ball than in any
+fifty years preceding. True, there was not much Base Ball in the fifty
+years preceding, but now there is. There is a league at Hong Kong. There
+are Base Ball teams at Shanghai and other cities.
+
+Dr. Eliot, former president of Harvard, who recently returned from a
+trip around the world, holds that Base Ball has done more to humanize
+and civilize the Chinese than any influence which has been introduced by
+foreigners, basing his statement on the fact that the introduction of
+the sport among the younger Chinese has exerted a tremendous restraint
+upon their gambling propensities.
+
+It is a rather queer fact that where the civilizations are older in the
+countries of the Occident there is a greater tendency to gamble,
+especially among the young, than there is in the newer America.
+Doubtless this is largely due to the lack of athletic pastime. The young
+of those countries know little or nothing about simple amusements which
+are so popular in the United States, and acquire from their elders their
+knowledge of betting and taking part in games of chance, two evils which
+unquestionably have done much to degrade the race as a whole.
+
+Base Ball has caught the fancy of the younger generation and the boys.
+Once they get a ball and a bat in their hands they are better satisfied
+with them than with all the gambling devices which have been bequeathed
+to them by a long and eminent line of forefathers.
+
+So it would appear that the introduction of the national game of the
+United States into China is likely to exert a humanizing influence which
+shall go further than legislation or sword, and if only the missionaries
+had grasped earlier the wishes and the tendency of the younger element
+of the Chinese population, the country might be further along than it is
+with its progressive movement.
+
+In the Philippine Islands the younger generation simply has gone wild
+over Base Ball. Progress has been noted in the GUIDE from time to time
+of the increase of interest but it is now at such a pitch that the boys
+of the islands, wherever Base Ball has been introduced, simply have
+deserted everything for it. They will play nothing else. The cockfights
+and the gambling games, which were also a part of the amusement of the
+younger men, have been given up. The little fellows who wear not much
+more than a breechclout play Base Ball. They have picked up many of the
+American terms and one of the most amusing of experiences is to stand
+outside the walls of old Manila and hear the little brown boys call:
+"Shoot it over. Line it out," and the like, returning to their native
+language, and jabbering excitedly in Filipino whenever they arrive at
+some point of play in which their command of English fails them.
+
+Twenty years from now a league including cities of the Philippines,
+China and Japan, is by no means out of the question, and it may be that
+the introduction of Base Ball into all three countries will result in a
+better understanding between the peoples and perhaps bring all three
+races to a better frame of mind as relates to their personal ambitions
+and rivalries.
+
+In connection with the widespread influence which Base Ball is having on
+both sides of the world, on the shores of the Pacific Ocean and on those
+of the Atlantic Ocean the editor would like to call attention to the
+theory which has been advanced by Mr. A.G. Spalding, the founder of the
+GUIDE, as to the efficacy of Base Ball for the purpose of training
+athletes, that has a worldwide application.
+
+Mr. Spalding contends that Base Ball has lent no small assistance to the
+athletes of the United States in helping them to win premier honors at
+the Olympic Games since their reintroduction. Mr. Spalding was the first
+American Commissioner to the Olympic Games appointed to that post, the
+honor being conferred upon him in 1900, when the late President McKinley
+gave him his commission to represent the United States at Paris in 1900.
+Mr. Spalding, with his analytical mind has reasoned out a theory which
+is undoubtedly of great accuracy, and which is further corroborated by
+an interview given out in London--strangely enough on the same day that
+Mr. Spalding gave utterance to his ideas in Los Angeles--by Mr. J.E.
+Sullivan, American Commissioner to the Olympic Games at Stockholm last
+year, while returning to the United States after witnessing the triumphs
+of the Americans. Mr. Spalding said:
+
+"I cannot say that I am at all surprised at the result at Stockholm.
+History has been repeating itself in this way ever since the celebration
+of the Olympic games was inaugurated at Athens. America won the victory
+there in 1896; she triumphed again at Paris in 1900; our athletes
+defeated the contestants at St. Louis in 1904; the victory was ours at
+London in 1908, and it was a foregone conclusion that we would win at
+Stockholm.
+
+"But there is food for thought in this uninterrupted succession of
+triumphs. Why do our athletes always win? All other things being equal,
+the contestants in the country holding the event should naturally come
+to the front. Their numbers are always greater than those from any other
+country and the home grounds influence is strong. However, that
+advantage has not in any case prevented American success.
+
+"Therefore there must be a cause. What is it? Measured by scale and
+tape, our athlete's are not so much superior as a class. The theory of
+'more beef' must be discarded. We may not lay claim to having all the
+best trainers of the world. We must look to some other source for
+American prowess.
+
+"I may be a prejudiced judge, but I believe the whole secret of these
+continued successes is to be found to the kind of training that comes
+with the playing of America's national game, and our competitors in
+other lands may never hope to reach the standard of American athletes
+until they learn this lesson and adopt our pastime.
+
+"The question, 'When should the training of a child begin?' has been
+wisely answered by the statement that it should antedate his birth. The
+training of Base Ball may not go back quite that far, but it approaches
+the time as nearly as practicable, for America starts training of future
+Olympian winners very early in life. Youngsters not yet big enough to
+attend school begin quickening their eyesight and sharpening their wits
+and strengthening their hands and arms and legs by playing on base ball
+fields ready at hand in the meadows of farms, the commons of villages
+and the parks of cities all over the land. Base ball combines running,
+jumping, throwing and everything that constitutes the athletic events of
+the Olympian games. But above all, it imparts to the player that degree
+of confidence in competition, that indefinable something that enables
+one athlete to win over another who may be his physical equal but who is
+lacking the American spirit begotten of base ball.
+
+"An analysis of the 1912 Olympian games shows that the American showed
+to best advantage in contests where the stress of competition was
+hardest. In the dashes they were supreme; in the hurdles they were in a
+class by themselves, and in the high jump and pole vault there was no
+one worthy of their steel. Whenever quick thinking and acting was
+required, an American was in front. Does not this fact prove that the
+American game of base ball enables the player to determine in the
+fraction of a second what to do to defeat his contestant?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WHAT A SEASON OF BASE BALL COSTS
+
+It may not be out of place to say a few words in regard to the greatly
+increased cost of Base Ball. There are some sensational writers whose
+hobby is to inform the public about the great receipts in Base Ball.
+Usually they exaggerate from twenty-five to thirty-five per cent.
+
+Now as to the expense of Base Ball. Figures at an approximate for the
+National League will be offered. Railroad expenses for mileage alone
+$300,000, including spring training trips. Hotel bills $65,000. Sleeping
+cars and meals en route, $80,000. Salaries to players, $480,000. Total,
+$875,000. Add to this $30,000 for the salaries of umpires and their
+traveling expenses. That makes $905,000.
+
+Now not a penny has been appropriated thus far for the salaries of the
+president of the National League, the secretary and expenditures of the
+office nor for the salaries of the business departments of the various
+clubs, nor for ground rents, taxes and a dozen and one other things, to
+say nothing of that well-known old item "wear and tear."
+
+The receipts of Base Ball barely cover these expenditures. The alleged
+profits of Base Ball mostly are fanciful dreams of those who know
+nothing of the practical side of the sport and are stunned when they are
+made acquainted with the real financial problems which confront club
+owners.
+
+But the money that is contributed to the support of the game almost
+immediately finds its way back into public channels. Less than thirty
+per cent. of Base Ball clubs realize what a business man would call a
+fair return on the amount invested.
+
+A well-known writer on economic topics interviewed owners of Base Ball
+clubs as to their income and outgo. One of the best known of the
+National League men took the writer into his office and spread the cash
+book of the club's business before him.
+
+"You may go through it if you wish," said the owner, "but here is the
+balance for the last day of the year."
+
+It read as follows: Receipts, $250,505; expenditures, $246,447.
+
+"That's answer enough for me," said the writer. "I am through with any
+more essays on the affluence of Base Ball 'magnates.' I think it would
+be better to extend them the hand of charity than the mailed fist."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW ORGANIZATION OF PLAYERS
+
+The formation of an organization on the part of the major league ball
+players during the closing days of the season of 1912 was looked upon
+with some misgivings by those who remember only too well what happened
+when a prior organization of ball players was formed.
+
+In the present instance those foremost in perfecting the organization
+have also been foremost in asserting that the players' organization's
+principal aim is to co-operate with the club owners.
+
+If this object is followed with fidelity and to its ultimate conclusion
+there is no necessity to fear any grave disturbances, but there is a
+dread--that dread which is the fear of the child that has had its hands
+burned by the flame, that a selfish coterie of players might obtain
+control of the organization, set up a policy of unscrupulous defiance
+and destructive opposition and retard for a moment the higher
+development of the game.
+
+There is no organization, either of unscrupulous Base Ball players or
+unscrupulous club owners, which will ever find it possible to destroy
+organized Base Ball. The results that organized Base Ball have brought
+about will never be annihilated although grave injury could be
+temporarily wrought by a force defiant to tie unusual demands made by
+the sport to perpetuate itself successfully.
+
+It is simply out of the question to control Base Ball as one would
+control the affairs of a department store. Base Ball has its commercial
+side, but its commercial side cannot maintain it with success. There
+must be a predominant factor based upon the encouragement that brings
+forth admiration for a high class sport. This factor can only be
+fostered by the ability to maintain not one, but a group of high class
+teams.
+
+Any ball player imbued with the idea that the "stars" should be grouped
+together in the city best able to pay the highest salaries simply is an
+enemy to his career and to those of his fellow players.
+
+Without some handicap to assist in the equalizing of the strength of
+Base Ball nines of the professional leagues there will be no prosperity
+for the leagues or the clubs individually. No better evidence may be
+cited to prove this than the fact, repeatedly demonstrated that in the
+smaller leagues Base Ball enthusiasts in the city best able to pay the
+largest salaries frequently withdraw their support of the team because
+"it wins all the time."
+
+To-day Base Ball, in its professional atmosphere, is nearer an ideal
+sport, a better managed sport, and a more fairly and equitably adjusted
+sport, than it ever has been, which is manifest proof of its superior
+evolution. Had results been otherwise it would have retrograded and
+possibly passed out of existence. Carefully comparing its management
+with that of all other sports in history the Editor of the GUIDE
+believes that it is the best managed sport in the world.
+
+It is true that improvements can be made. It is evident that there are
+still commercialized owners not over capitalized with a spirit of sport.
+It is undeniable that there are ball players not imbued with a high tone
+of the obligations, which they owe to their employers and to the public,
+but it is as certain as the existence of the game that progress has been
+made, and that it has not ceased to move forward.
+
+For that reason players and owners must be guided by a sense of lofty
+ideals and not be led astray by foolish outbursts over trivial
+differences of opinion, easily to be adjusted by the exercise of a
+little common sense.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BASE BALL PLAYED IN SWEDEN
+
+In connection with the subject of "Base Ball For All the World," for
+which the GUIDE expounds and spreads the gospel, the Editor would submit
+a very interesting letter received by him from Sweden. it reads as
+follows:
+
+Westeras, Sweden, Sept. 14, 1912.
+
+To the Editor of the GUIDE:
+
+We hereby have the pleasure of sending you two copies of the rules,
+translated and issued by the Westeras Base Ball Club, into Swedish from
+the Spalding Base Ball Guide.
+
+The work of getting the book out has been somewhat slow on account of
+that the work of translating, proofreading, etc., all had to be done on
+our spare time, but it is done now, and I think we have succeeded pretty
+well, everything considered. The books will be distributed by a
+well-known book firm, Bjork & Boyeson, Stockholm, and will soon be
+available in all the bookstores in Sweden.
+
+We got some advance copies out just in time for the Olympic Games, and I
+had the pleasure of presenting some copies to Commissioner Col.
+Thompson, Manager Halpin and others of the American Olympic Committee.
+
+As you know, so did we have a game of Base Ball at Stockholm with one of
+the Finland teams, and as it may be of some interest to you to know the
+preliminaries to the game, I am writing to relate how it happened.
+
+In trying to arrange for some amusements in the evenings at the Stadium,
+the Olympic Committee wrote us if we would be willing to take part in a
+game of Base Ball at Stadium some evening during the Stadium week. As
+our club this year was in poor condition, on account of some of our best
+players being out on military duties, we hesitated at first, but then
+decided to risk it, knowing very well that whoever we would play
+against, they would not rub in to us too hard. We pointed out to the
+Olympic Committee that it would not be very hard to get a team of Base
+Ball players picked out from the American athletes taking part in the
+contests, but as they would not be prepared for Base Ball, suits and
+other needed articles had to be provided for. We were then told to get
+necessary things ordered, and so we did. We ordered suits from a tailor
+in this town, after a pattern that I got from Spalding's this spring.
+The suits were of gray flannel, with blue trimmings for our team and red
+trimmings for the American. I also ordered bats and gloves, and with the
+things our club already had, we were very well equipped.
+
+The Olympic Committee, Stockholm, then received a letter from the
+Olympic Committee, New York, saying that if a game of Base Ball could be
+arranged for during the Olympian Games, they would bring two teams along
+on the Finland. The Olympic Committee cabled to come along, and sent us
+a copy of Mr. Sullivan's letter. I knew, of course, that if the game
+could be played by two American teams, it would be a much better game
+than if our team took part, and told the Olympic Committee, and wanted
+to withdraw, but as they did not know for sure how it would be, told us
+to go ahead with the arrangements just the same, and so we did, and by
+the time the Finland arrived, everything had been arranged for.
+
+The Olympic Committee has selected the evening, 7 P.M., of the 10th of
+July, for the game, and thought that this would be suitable to the
+Americans, but as some of the players had to take part in the contests,
+Mr. Halpin would not risk them then, so it was finally decided that a
+game should be played the 15th, the Americans to play six innings
+between themselves and then six innings against us.
+
+Well, we had a game at the training grounds. We played six innings, and
+Mr. Halpin was kind enough to let us have a pitcher and catcher from his
+men. The score was 9 to 3, and it could just as well been 9 to 0,
+perhaps. Well, at any rate, it was the first Base Ball game, as far as I
+know, that ever took place in Europe between an American team and a
+European team, with England possibly excepted.
+
+Mr. Halpin said that the Americans were going to play a game the next
+morning between themselves, but that game did not come off. There was
+probably no time for it, as the Finland left Stockholm the same day.
+Very likely the American boys were somewhat disappointed in not being
+able to play between themselves, as anticipated, and perhaps I should
+not have pushed our game ahead, but as long as there was a Base Ball
+team in Sweden, it would have been strange if it had not played, and it
+gave our boys a chance to see how the game should be played, and they
+certainly did take it in. Had the game been played as it was intended
+and advertised, on the 10th in the Stadium, there would very likely have
+been a bigger crowd present, and the game would also have been more
+talked about in the papers, but then we will have to be satisfied as it
+is.
+
+Our club has been practicing all summer, twice a week, and on the 24th
+of August we gave an exhibition game here at Westeras, between two teams
+from our club, the suits made for the Olympic Games coming in very
+handy. I send you herewith a clipping from a local paper describing the
+game, and also a picture of the two teams with myself and the umpire
+included.
+
+At our game here we distributed the "Description of Base Ball," written
+by you and translated into Swedish, and it came of good use. Next year
+we intend to have our teams appear in the nearby cities around here, so
+as to give people a chance to see the game, and it will not be long
+before they will start it in Stockholm, so I think the game is bound to
+be popular here also,
+
+Mr. George Wright, of Boston, was the umpire at the Stockholm games, and
+as he was very kind to us, we would like to send him the picture of the
+club, and hope that you will forward us his address.
+
+I am, for Westeras Base Ball Club,
+
+Yours truly,
+
+EDWIN JOHNSON,
+
+Electrical Engineer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE NEW NATIONAL AGREEMENT
+
+Unlimited satisfaction must be had by all who are connected with Base
+Ball over the greatly improved conditions by which the season of 1913 is
+begun under the new National Agreement. While it perhaps might be
+exaggerated boastfulness to affirm that Base Ball, as a professionally
+organized sport, has attained perfection, it is not out of reason--
+indeed, quite within reason--to observe that Base Ball never had such a
+well balanced and perfect organization as that by which it is regulated
+at the present time.
+
+The principal fact of congratulation lies in the safeguards and
+provisions which have been thrown around the players of the minor
+leagues and in the equitable and just measures which have been agreed
+upon to provide for their future.
+
+As a general rule it may be taken for granted that the players of the
+major leagues can take care of themselves. That is to say, their
+positions, if they are expert in their calling, and conscientious in
+their deportment, really take care of them.
+
+No club owner, unless he is maliciously or foolishly inclined, will
+jeopardize the interests of his team by acting in a wilfully unjust
+manner toward a player who is cheerfully and uprightly offering his
+services. We may hear of occasional exceptions to this condition of
+things, but if these occasional exceptions chance to arise, it is
+inevitably certain that the owner in the long run will suffer to a
+greater degree than the player with whom he deals unfairly.
+
+It is the history of Base Ball that more inequitable treatment has
+arisen by fifty per cent in the minor leagues than has had its origin in
+the major leagues. The reason for this existed almost wholly in the
+inability of Base Ball as a whole to bring the minor league owners to a
+realization of the injury that they might be doing and to extend such
+punishment and insist upon such regulation as were necessary to change
+this undesirable condition.
+
+By the organization of the National Association of Base Ball clubs the
+minor leagues, for the first time in their history, placed themselves in
+a position where they could demand proper enforcement of regulations for
+the government of the sport, and by their alliance with the major league
+clubs, under the articles of the National Agreement, a general working
+basis was effected whereby compliance with rules could be insisted upon.
+
+The result of this admirable condition of affairs is that wisdom and
+equity now rule where there once existed chaos and at times something
+akin to anarchy in sport.
+
+At no time in the history of the game, which is so dear to the hearts of
+the American people, has the general legislative and executive body been
+so well equipped by the adoption of pertinent and virile laws to insist
+upon justice to all concerned as at the present moment.
+
+The new National Agreement is an improvement upon the old and the old
+was a long, long step in advance of anything which had preceded it. The
+mere fact that club owners and leagues were so willing to adopt a system
+better than its predecessor wholly confutes the absurd assertions of the
+radical element that there is no consideration shown for the player.
+
+To the contrary, every consideration has been shown to the player, but
+the latter must not confound with the consideration shown to him the
+idea that his interests are the only interests at stake in Base Ball.
+The man who is willing to furnish the sinews of war has as good standing
+in court as the player who furnishes the base hits and the phenomenal
+catches.
+
+So perfect is the system which is being attempted to be set in force by
+the new National Agreement that the young man who now essays to play
+professional Base Ball may be assured of steady advancement in this
+profession and a generally improving condition if he will be as honest
+by his employer as he expects his employer to be honest by him.
+
+The graduated system of assisting players, step by step, from the least
+important leagues to the most important is the most perfect plan of its
+kind that has ever been devised. There may be flaws in it, but if there
+are they will be remedied, and if modifications are necessary to make it
+more perfect there is no doubt that such modifications will be agreed
+upon.
+
+As proof of what the new National Agreement may do, although it has
+barely had time to be considered, the editor of the GUIDE would submit
+the following for consideration:
+
+Ever since the National Agreement was organized the members have always
+striven to aid the players in their efforts to gain the top rank in the
+great national game. They have had a hard proposition in handling all of
+the cases that have been brought to their attention, but their decisions
+in all cases were absolutely fair and impartial. Then the matter of the
+new agreement occasioned many hours of laborious work on the part of the
+members of the Commission, and when the instrument was finally announced
+it meant that all of the parties to such an agreement were satisfied and
+that there could be no improvement. There was one detail that covered a
+wide field, and that was in the matter of players; drafted by the two
+big leagues and later sent back to the minors. Under the old National
+Agreement it was possible to pick up a player by means of the annual
+draft from one of the Class C leagues and just before the opening of the
+season send him back to the club from whence he came without ever having
+given him a chance to land with a club in some higher organization.
+
+Realizing that such players were not given a chance to advance in the
+Base Ball profession, this matter was thoroughly thrashed out and the
+new ruling under which all of the National Agreement clubs operate was
+adopted. Now it is possible for a player in any of the smaller leagues
+to be drafted by a major league club, and when the latter party does not
+care to retain possession of such a player he is first offered to the
+Class AA clubs. All of these clubs must waive on him before he can be
+dropped farther down in the list, and if such should be the case he
+would then be offered to the Class A clubs. In that way the player,
+although he is not fast enough to remain in the two major leagues, is
+always given a chance to advance, for if any of the clubs in those
+classes higher than that from which he came had grabbed him he was bound
+to receive an increase in salary. That meant that he had his chance to
+advance, and that was the sole purpose of the National Agreement in
+drafting such a rule.
+
+During the past drafting season there were sixty-nine players drafted by
+the two major league clubs, and of that number twenty-seven have already
+been sent back to the minor leagues. The Class AA and A clubs claimed
+all of these twenty-seven, and it is more than likely that there will
+also be many more who will be given trials by the big league clubs
+during the spring training season and who may later be turned back to
+the minors. Of the twenty-seven players thus far sent back seventeen of
+them advanced in their profession, a tribute to the sagacity, wisdom and
+impartiality of the members of the National Commission. The decision, as
+announced by Chairman Herrmann of the National Commission pertaining to
+this return of drafted players, is as follows:
+
+------------|-----------------|----------|-----------|--------------
+ Clubs. | League. | Players. | Drafted | Drafted By
+ | | | From |
+------------|-----------------|----------|-----------|--------------
+Louisville |American Asso. |Stansbury |Louisville |St. Louis N.L.
+Chattanooga |Southern Asso. |Balenti |Chattanooga|St. Louis A.L.
+Sacramento |Pacific Coast |Berghammer|Lincoln |Chicago N.L.
+Sacramento |Pacific Coast |Orr |Sacramento |Phila. A.L.
+Sacramento |Pacific Coast |[1]Young |Harrisburg |New York A.L.
+Sacramento |Pacific Coast |Drohan |Kewanee |Washington.
+Indianapolis|American Asso. |Berghammer|Lincoln |Chicago N.L.
+Indianapolis|American Asso. |Cathers |Scranton |St. Louis N.L.
+Indianapolis|American Asso. |Metz |San Antonio|Boston N.L.
+Indianapolis|American Asso. |Kernan |Oshkosh |Chicago A.L.
+New Orleans |Southern Asso. |Bates |Newp't News|Cleveland.
+New Orleans |Southern Asso. |Wilson |Knoxville |Cleveland.
+New Orleans |Southern Asso. |Betts |San Antonio|Cleveland.
+New Orleans |Southern Asso. |Drohan |Kewanee |Washington.
+New Orleans |Southern Asso. |Williams |Newark, O |Washington.
+Portland |Pacific Coast |Williams |Newark, O |Washington.
+Portland |Pacific Coast |Drohan |Kewanee |Washington.
+Portland |Pacific Coast |Bates. |Newp't News|Cleveland.
+Portland |Pacific Coast |Grubb |Morristown |Cleveland.
+Portland |Pacific Coast |Wilson |Knoxville |Cleveland.
+Portland |Pacific Coast |Betts |San Antonio|Cleveland.
+Milwaukee |American Asso. |Beall |Denver |Cleveland.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |Berghammer|Lincoln |Chicago N.L.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |Miller |Harrisburg |Pittsburgh.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |Booe |Ft. Wayne |Pittsburgh.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |House |Kewanee |Detroit.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |Drohan |Kewanee |Washington.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |Beall |Denver |Cleveland.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |Balenti |Chattanooga|St. Louis A.L.
+St. Paul |American Asso. |Agnew |Vernon |St. Louis A.L.
+Omaha |Western League |Wilson |Knoxville |Cleveland.
+Omaha |Western League |Williams |Newark, O |Washington.
+Omaha |Western League |Betts |San Antonio|Cleveland.
+Omaha |Western League |Drohan |Kewanee |Washington.
+Buffalo |Internat'l League|Schang |Buffalo |Phila. A.L.
+Buffalo |Internat'l League|Dolan |Rochester |Phila. A.L.
+Buffalo |Internat'l League|Cottrell |Scranton |Chicago N.L.
+Buffalo |Internat'l League|Clymer |Minneapolis|Chicago N.L.
+Columbus |American Asso. |Drohan |Kewanee |Washington.
+Rochester |Internat'l League|Dolan |Rochester |Phila. A.L.
+Montreal |Internat'l League|Connelly |Montreal |Washington.
+Toledo |American Asso. |Hernden |[2] |St. Louis.
+Toledo |American Asso. |Stevenson |Oshkosh |St. Louis N.L.
+Toledo |American Asso. |Bates |Newp't News|Cleveland.
+Toledo |American Asso. |Wilson |Knoxville |Cleveland.
+Denver |Western League |Heckinger |Racine |Chicago N.L.
+Denver |Western League |Drohan |Kewanee |Washington.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+1: Subject to investigation as to whether New York American League Club
+has title.
+
+2: Subject to investigation as to whether St. Louis American or National
+League Club has title to this player and how secured.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A WORLD'S SERIES PROBLEM
+
+Much discussion arose after the finish of the last world's series as to
+whether the adjustment of dates had worked satisfactorily. The
+contention was that playing off a tie game on the ground where the game
+had been scheduled might work some inconvenience to "fans" and result in
+an inequitable allotment of dates, simply to conform to custom.
+
+It was asserted that the importance of the series demanded that it be a
+home-and-home affair, dates to alternate regularly, regardless of all
+ties or drawn games. To obtain opinion that is sound and practical the
+Editor of the GUIDE sent forth the following letter:
+
+
+NEW YORK, January 31, 1913.
+
+During the recent world's series it so happened that a tie was played in
+one of the cities, which compelled both teams to remain in that city for
+another date. Before the series was over this arrangement resulted in
+one club having five games on its home grounds and the other club having
+but three games on its home grounds.
+
+It has seemed to some that it is unjust. It is also contended that it is
+unfair to the patrons of the game to schedule a contest and then not
+play in the city specified after some had traveled many miles to see it.
+
+Will you please give the GUIDE your opinion as to whether a change would
+be advisable?
+
+Very truly yours,
+
+JOHN B. FOSTER,
+_Editor Spalding's Official Base Ball Guide._
+
+
+Answers were received to the request for a "symposium of opinion" as
+follows:
+
+
+"So far as having any effect on the chances of the two teams is
+concerned, I don't think having to play more games on one ground than on
+the other makes any material difference. Where cities are sufficiently
+near each other for games to be alternated daily, it would perhaps be
+fairer to spectators to do so, irrespective of ties; yet it seems to me
+that a tie on one grounds should be played off the next day in the same
+city."
+
+W.B. HANNA,
+_New York Sun._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"In my opinion the arrangement on tie games in the post-season contests
+is a poor one. I saw the result of it in the series between the Cubs and
+White Sox last fall. Two tie games were played and the confusion and
+inconvenience it caused the fans was deplorable. It is unjust to the
+followers who support Base Ball. It is also unjust, in a small way, to
+the club which has to play two or more games on its opponent's field.
+Players when away from their home grounds, in a fall series, are more or
+less under a nervous strain. If there was confusion, inconvenience and
+difficulty in a local series as a result of a tie game, the folly of the
+arrangement must appear more absurd when towns like New York and Boston
+are involved. Dates should alternate, tie or not tie."
+
+OSCAR C. REICHOW,
+_Chicago Daily News._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"We are in receipt of your favor of the 31st nlt., and wish to thank you
+for the opportunity presented.
+
+"It is our opinion that a tie game was played and it should be
+considered as a game. Either side had an opportunity to win and any
+advantage that the home club might have had was lost when it failed to
+break the tie.
+
+"It is, therefore, our belief that this game should have been played in
+the other city.
+
+"As to it being unfair to the patrons who had traveled so far to see the
+scheduled contest, there is no doubt that they were afforded a
+sufficient amount of amusement and excitement for their trouble, in
+witnessing a closely played contest."
+
+J. G. T. SPINK,
+_St. Louis Sporting News._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It seems to me that the game should be alternated between the
+contending cities regardless of ties. The tie game gave Boston five
+games on the home grounds, while the Giants had only three. Besides,
+many persons, who traveled to see the games in New York, were
+inconvenienced."
+
+JOHN E. WHEELER,
+_New York Herald._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I think that the scheduled programme should be played through
+irrespective of the results of the respective games, and any extra
+playing or playing-off should be done after the originally set schedule
+is completed."
+
+H. P. BORCHELL,
+_Sports Editor New York Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I believe it would be inadvisable to change the method that now
+prevails. While the situation which arose last season did seem unjust to
+the New York club, I think the very fact that Boston had five games on
+its home grounds, and the Giants but three on their own diamond, was an
+answer to those ill-advised skeptics who are always ready to raise the
+cry of hippodroming.
+
+"That same situation is not likely to again arise for a long time, and I
+believe the rule as it stands is a guarantee to the public of the strict
+honesty of the world's championship contests."
+
+DAMON RUNYON,
+_The New York American._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"A change in the rules regarding world series games would he fairer to
+the patrons of the sport. Here in Chicago this past fall two ties were
+played and, as a result, there was considerable confusion over the
+ticket arrangements. How much more is the case when two cities are
+involved? A condition which allows five games to be played in one city
+and only three in another is scarcely fair to the two teams. By making a
+schedule calling for alternate games in each city, irrespective of ties,
+everybody--fans and players--would get an even break."
+
+MALCOLM MACLEAN,
+_Base Ball Editor Chicago Evening Post._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I think it might be fairer to both world's series contenders to play a
+regular schedule, regardless of the fact that any tie games may arise in
+the series. Under the old system of playing the tie off in the city
+where the tie game is played, it brings about a great deal of confusion.
+Many fans make arrangements to see a game on a certain day and are
+greatly disappointed when the game is played in a different city. Of
+course, the old rule of playing the play-off game on the same grounds as
+the tie game, is fair to both contesting clubs, as it is merely a matter
+of chance where a tie game is played."
+
+FRED. G. LIEB,
+_New York Press._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"The rules regarding the manner of scheduling games for the world's
+series should not be changed. There are times when they apparently work
+a hardship to one team or the followers of one club, but, after all,
+they help to throw the necessary safeguards around the contests. As for
+the argument for not playing off a tie game on the same grounds, thus
+disarranging the dates and inconveniencing the fans, patrons of the
+world's series games are accustomed to this, since bad weather
+frequently cuts into the event and causes postponements.
+
+"In a way it does not appear fair that one club should have the
+privilege of playing five games at home to three games at home for its
+opponents. The rule of playing off a tie game on the same grounds is a
+fixture in Base Ball. As to the other game, this was a question of the
+luck of the toss of the coin.
+
+"The fans have to trust to luck as to the number of games they will see
+in a world's series, this depending upon the number of games played and
+possibly upon the toss for a seventh battle. In 1905 the fans of
+Philadelphia saw only two games in a world's series with New York. In
+1910 only two games were played here in the series with Chicago.
+
+"Any time a club has three games on its own grounds in a series where
+four victories decide the issue either it or its followers have not much
+chance to raise an objection."
+
+WILLIAM G. WEART,
+_The Evening Telegraph._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It was, of course, to the disadvantage of the Giants to be obliged to
+play five of the eight games in the post-season series last fall on the
+grounds of their opponents, but this came as a result of one tie game on
+the Boston grounds and being outlucked on the toss to determine where
+the deciding game should be played. This tie game unquestionably caused
+much inconvenience to patrons because of the change in the schedule made
+necessary because of it.
+
+"It is not clear to me, however, just now these things can be remedied
+without disturbing the balance of an even break for both teams more
+violently than was the case last fall.
+
+"I do not believe there will be another series just like the one of
+1912, and so, in my opinion, an immediate change in the conditions
+governing these series would not be advisable. It is not clear to me
+just what changes could be made. One club or the other is bound to have
+the advantage of an extra game on its own grounds, providing seven games
+are necessary. The championship in nine out of ten contests will be
+decided in seven games or less.
+
+"Then, as to having the games played according to an arbitrarily fixed
+schedule, so as not to inconvenience patrons--that would be out of the
+question, being open to the objection that it would then be possible to
+have every game that figures in the result of the series played on the
+home grounds of one of the contestants. For instance, tie games or
+unfavorable weather which would prevent a game being played in one city,
+would throw all the games to the other city where there might be no tie
+games nor unfavorable weather. That would mean four straight, if it so
+happened that the home team won the games, and the loser would never
+have gotten action on its own grounds. That would be considerably worse
+than five to three.
+
+"So it looks to me as if the patrons would have to take their chances in
+the future as they have in the past."
+
+JAMES C. O'LEABT,
+_Boston Globe._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It seems to me that it would be better to alternate (in case of a tie),
+as a team able to tie its opponent on a hostile field would be entitled
+to consideration for this performance. I am very certain, however, that
+the players of both clubs in the recent world's series were satisfied
+with an arrangement which minimized the amount of traveling they were
+called upon to do.
+
+"Persons who had seen a five-inning tie game terminated by rain would
+hardly be satisfied. It seems to me that the rule as to alternating ball
+parks should be applied strictly, but only in case the tie game involved
+went nine innings or more."
+
+FRANCIS EATON,
+_Sports Editor Boston Journal._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"To me the feasible thing to do appears to be to insert a clause in
+stipulations covering all short series of a special character, such as
+intercity, inter-league and world's series, making it compulsory for the
+teams to alternate between the cities or grounds of the competing
+clubs."
+
+PURVES T. KNOX,
+_New York Evening Telegram._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Why wouldn't it be a good scheme to toss up for the deciding game only
+in cases where an equal number of games had been played in each city,
+and, in cases where one city had seen more games than the other, to play
+the deciding game in the city which had seen the fewer games?
+
+"I do not believe it advisable to change the commission's rule regarding
+postponed games. The rule now provides that, in case of a postponement,
+the clubs shall remain in the city in which the game was scheduled until
+it is possible to play. If this rule were changed and there happened to
+be a week of bad weather, as in 1911, the teams and many fans might be
+forced to travel back and forth from one town to another for a week
+without participating in or seeing a single game; and it might happen
+some time that the jump would be between St. Louis and Boston."
+
+R. W. LARDNER,
+_Chicago Examiner._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"A change in the rule governing the playing-off of tie games in the
+world's series should be made. The teams ought to appear in each city on
+the dates named in the schedule drawn up before the series starts,
+unless the weather interferes."
+
+WILLIAM H. WRIGHT,
+_New York Tribune._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Drawn games are as unavoidable as rainy days in world's series, but not
+as frequent. They operate the same in their effect on the contest for
+the world's pennant and in causing confusion among the patrons by
+disarranging the schedule. It would be manifestly unjust if, after a
+rain postponement, the competing teams did not remain and play the game
+off before playing elsewhere. That might result in playing all of the
+games in one city. Since drawn games are treated like postponed games in
+the regular season, and are of infrequent occurrence in world's series,
+any other arrangement than the present does not seem advisable. The
+patrons, who should be considered always, would be among the first to
+object if each team did not have an equal show to win. In the last
+series only four games that counted were played in Boston and three in
+New York and if New York had won the toss for the deciding game the
+situation would have been reversed. It would be manifestly fairer to
+play the seventh game if necessary in some neutral city."
+
+L. E. SANBORN,
+_Chicago Tribune._
+
+
+
+
+NEW FACES IN THE OLD LEAGUE
+
+BY JOHN B. FOSTER.
+
+
+Not for some time has there been such a turning over of the leaves of
+history in the National League as during 1912-13, and because of this
+there are many new faces peering out of the album. There have also been
+changes in the minor circuits and one prominent change in the American
+League.
+
+The death of John T. Brush removed from Base Ball a dean of the National
+League. Wise in the lore of the game, a man more of the future than of
+the present, as he always foresaw that which some of his contemporaries
+were less alert in perceiving, it meant no easy task to be his
+successor.
+
+Prior to the death of Mr. Brush there was a great deal of curious and
+some idle speculation as to his ultimate successor in case of decease,
+or, in the event of his retirement because of bodily weariness. One or
+two went so far as to say that upon his death Andrew Freedman would
+return to prominence in Base Ball, because he was the real owner of the
+New York club. Once and for all the writer would like to put the
+personal stamp of absolute denial on the repeated statements made by
+certain individuals in New York and Chicago that Andrew Freedman
+retained the control of the New York club after John T. Brush was
+reported to have purchased it.
+
+Mr. Freedman retained nothing of the kind. Not that Mr. Brush objected
+to him as a partner, but when Mr. Brush purchased the stock he purchased
+the control outright, although he did request Mr. Freedman to hold a few
+shares and not give up his personal interest in Base Ball, for Mr.
+Freedman had a great liking for the game in spite of his stormy career.
+The assertions that Mr. Freedman was the real owner and Mr. Brush the
+nominal owner were made with malicious intent, of which the writer has
+proof, and through a desire, if possible, to combat the popularity and
+the success of the Giants.
+
+This digression has been made to call attention to the fact that while
+rumor was plentiful as to the future control of the Giants Mr. Brush was
+carefully "grooming" a young man--his son-in-law, Mr. H. Hempstead--to
+take his place.
+
+To a few it was known that Mr. Hempstead was acquiring such experience
+and information as would be necessary to assume the control of an
+undertaking which has grown so big as the organization of the Giants in
+New York. The business details of the club have quadrupled and the cares
+and anxieties of the man at the head have increased in proportion.
+
+The Giants, as successful as they have been under the control of John T.
+Brush and John J. McGraw, the men who have been the executive heads in
+both the business and the playing departments of the game, are as
+susceptible to reverses as if they were the lowliest club in the
+organization. It is only by constant and severe application that the
+club's affairs may be kept at the best pitch.
+
+Mr. Hempstead brings to Base Ball the advantage of youth, a keen
+business sagacity developed beyond his years, coolness, a disposition
+that is sunny and not easily ruffled, and a reputation for unvarying
+fairness and the highest type of business and sport ideals. Quite a list
+of qualities, but they are there.
+
+If characteristics of that description fail to maintain the high
+standard of the New York club, then it will be due to the fact that our
+standards of business deportment have turned topsy-turvy.
+
+William H. Locke is the new president and part owner of the Philadelphia
+club. He and Mr. Hempstead are the "junior" presidents of the league.
+There is no necessity for the Editor of the GUIDE to enter into any long
+and fulsome praise as to William H. Locke.
+
+His career speaks for itself and he speaks for himself. A young man of
+the finest attributes, he has brought nothing to the mill of Base Ball
+to grind except that which was the finest and the cleanest grain.
+
+The writer has known Mr. Locke almost, it seems, from boyhood and
+esteems him for his worth, not only as one who has administered the
+affairs of Base Ball with skill and intelligence, but as one who wrote
+of Base Ball with understanding and excellent taste, for it must not be
+forgotten that Mr. Locke is a newspaper graduate into the ranks of the
+great sport the affairs of which fill a little corner of the hearts of
+so many of America's citizens.
+
+Perhaps no young man ever left a newspaper office to become a Base Ball
+president with more good wishes behind him than William H. Locke. He
+served his apprenticeship as secretary of the Pittsburgh club and he
+served it well. He is a high class, delightful young man, every inch of
+him, and Philadelphia will soon become as proud of him as Pittsburgh is
+now.
+
+Still another newspaper writer has been claimed from the desk by the
+National League. He is Herman Nickerson, formerly sporting editor of the
+Boston Journal, who is now the secretary of the Boston National League
+club.
+
+"Nick" is known from one end of the National League circuit to the other
+as one of the most solid and substantial of the writing force, and also
+as one of the most demure and modest. In addition to his great fund of
+information on Base Ball topics he is an author, and "The Sword of
+Bussy," a book which was published during the winter, is even more
+clever than some of the author's best Base Ball yarns, and that is
+saying a great deal in behalf of a man wedded to Base Ball.
+
+Another change in the National League was the selection of Frank M.
+Stevens of New York, as one of the Board of Directors of the New York
+National League club.
+
+This brings into Base Ball one of New York's cleverest and brightest
+young business men, one who is forging so rapidly to the front in
+business circles in the big metropolis that many an older head goes to
+him for advice. Mr. Stevens knows a lot about Base Ball, which is of
+even greater importance in the game, and is not afraid to swing any
+venture that will put with fairness a championship team into the big
+city. He is a son of Harry M. Stevens, whom everybody knows, rich and
+poor alike.
+
+In the American League the death of Mr. Thomas D. Noyes, president of
+the Washington club, a young man who left behind naught but friends,
+left a vacancy in the organization which was filled by the selection of
+Mr. Benjamin S. Minor.
+
+The new president of the club has had practical experience in Base Ball
+and perhaps plenty of it, as almost everybody has had in Washington, but
+he is a wideawake, progressive and ambitious man, who is of just the
+type to keep Base Ball going, now that it has struck its gait in the
+national capital, and the future of the sport looks all the brighter for
+his connection with it.
+
+
+
+
+THE UMPIRES
+
+
+The umpires are always with us, and the umpire problem has been a
+vexation of Base Ball since the beginning of Base Ball time, yet neither
+the umpires, the public, the club owners nor the league officials need
+be discouraged, for it was fully proved in 1912 that umpiring, as a fine
+art, has advanced a step nearer perfection. We may well doubt that
+perfection in its every quality shall ever be achieved, but we may all
+feel sanguine that it is possible to realize better results.
+
+It is true that some men make better umpires than others, exactly as
+some men make better ball players than others, but it is also true that
+if the men who find it the hardest task to become the most expert
+umpires would be given a little more encouragement they might be a
+little more successful.
+
+To the staff of umpires of the National League and the American League
+it is but fair to render a compliment for their work of last season.
+Some of them made mistakes but the general average of work on the part
+of the judges of play was excellent.
+
+There was less tendency on the part of the umpires to render their
+decisions without being in a position to follow the play correctly. They
+were occasionally willing to concede that they might have been wrong
+when an analysis of the play was brought to their attention and they
+were firm in asserting discipline without becoming overheated on their
+own account.
+
+To the mind of the Editor of the GUIDE, in the general light of
+observation, the most serious blunders committed by the umpires in 1912
+were in making decisions before the play took place. This did happen and
+more than once. To illustrate, by an example, the Editor of the GUIDE
+had exhibited to him some photographs taken during 1912 in which a
+player had been "waved out" before he actually had arrived at the base.
+Granting the desire of the umpires to be alert and ready to render
+decisions promptly, it is equally apparent that giving decisions in
+advance of the completion of plays is likely to imbue the spectators
+with an idea that the umpire is either partisan or incompetent.
+
+Young umpires, in their haste to "make good" in the major leagues, are
+apt to overdo rather than fail to be on time.
+
+While it is not a pleasant subject to discuss, it is a fact that some
+umpires had been accustomed to use the very language to players on the
+field that they were presumed in their official capacity as umpires to
+correct. The writer knows of instances where this took place.
+
+It has ever been the policy of the GUIDE to stand for clean and high
+class Base Ball. Twenty per cent. more women attend ball games now than
+did ten years ago. Eighty per cent. more women spectators are likely to
+attend five years from now. To encourage their attendance every effort
+should be made to eliminate all disgraceful conversation on the field.
+Wherever it may be ascertained that an umpire has used profane or vulgar
+language on the field the editor of the GUIDE believes that he should be
+fined and punished as sternly as an offending player.
+
+It is contended that the position of the umpire has been rendered more
+arduous by reason of the world's series. The argument is advanced that
+the players are more intractable, by reason of their eagerness to play
+in the post-season games. That argument would be stronger were it not
+for the fact that some of the worst disturbances emanate from the
+players of the clubs that have no chance to play in the world's series.
+
+As a general rule two good reasons may be advanced for disputes on the
+part of players.
+
+First: Desire to "cover up" the player's own blunder.
+
+Second: General "cussedness."
+
+There are players who make honest objection on the excitement of the
+moment from sheer desire to win, but their lapses from Base Ball
+etiquette are so few and far between that their transgressions usually
+may be forgiven with some grace.
+
+The Editor of the GUIDE would offer one suggestion to league presidents
+and umpires; it is this: whenever two possible plays occur in
+conjunction, instruct the chief umpire always to turn to the spectators
+and inform them which player is out.
+
+For instance, if a player is at bat and another on the bases and two are
+out and an attempt is made to steal second, as the chief umpire calls
+the batter out on strikes the public should be clearly informed that the
+batter is out. If the play looks close at second base the crowd
+frequently believes the runner has been called out and resents it
+accordingly. In line with the same play, when the runner is called out
+and the fourth ball at the same time is called on the batter, the chief
+umpire should turn to the spectators and to the press box and make it
+clearly understood that the batter has been given a base on balls. It
+saves a great deal of annoyance and fault finding.
+
+By the way, although it has been said elsewhere, the Editor of the GUIDE
+would beg the indulgence of repetition by stating that the work of the
+umpires during the world's series of 1912 was one of the finest
+exhibitions of its kind ever seen on a ball field, and somehow it seemed
+as if the players, would they but deport themselves during all series as
+they did during the world's series might find that there are more good
+umpires in the world after all than bad ones.
+
+
+
+
+BASE BALL WRITERS OF THE SOUTH
+
+
+While the Base Ball writers of the cities which comprise the Southern
+Association have no organized membership similar to the Base Ball
+Writers' Association of the major leagues and the organizations which
+are best known as the class AA leagues, they are a clever, hard-working
+group of young men, who have labored in season and out of season, not
+only to build up Base Ball but to build it up on the right lines.
+
+Experience of more than a quarter of a century has most abundantly
+proved that the standard of Base Ball has steadily been elevated. It
+needs no compilation of fact nor any dogmatic assertion on the part of
+the Editor of the GUIDE to attest that fact. It is a present condition
+which speaks for itself. The general tone of the players is far higher
+than it was and there has come into evidence a marked improvement in the
+spirit of the men who own Base Ball clubs. In the earlier history of the
+sport there was a tendency to win by any means that did not actually
+cross the line of dishonesty. Later there came a season when the
+commercial end of the game tended to encroach upon the limits of the
+pastime. This has been repressed in the last two seasons and to-day the
+morale of Base Ball is of a higher type than it ever has been in the
+history of the pastime.
+
+It is a high class sport in the main, managed by high class, men for
+high class purposes.
+
+Going through the early stages of building up a successful league,
+which, by the way, is the severest of all tasks, and even now at
+intervals confronted with changes in the league circuit, the Southern
+writers have steadily been sowing the seeds of high class Base Ball and
+they have seen results prior to this date, for Base Ball has become
+popular and has been handsomely and loyally supported in sections in
+which fifteen years ago it would have been considered impossible to
+achieve such results.
+
+It is true that business reverses and adverse conditions have had at
+times their effect upon Base Ball in the South and possibly may produce
+similar results again, but the admirable offset to this fact is that
+none of these conditions at any time has daunted the spirit and the
+resolution of the young men who have zealously been preaching the cause
+of clean and healthy Base Ball.
+
+Very likely to their zeal, their courage, their tact and their ability
+it is possible to ascribe the increase in good ball players which is
+making itself manifest in the South. More high class and attractive
+athletes are coming from the Southern states in these days than ever was
+the case before. Base Ball is very glad to have them. When a
+representative major league team is made up of players who represent
+every section in the Union, engaged for their skill, it seems as if Base
+Ball has become nearer an ideal and a national pastime than ever before
+in the history of the sport.
+
+To the Southern writers the members of the Base Ball Writers Association
+and those of the organizations patterned on like lines send greeting.
+
+
+
+
+BASE BALL WORTH WHILE?
+
+
+One of the foremost divines in the East who has a deep concern in Base
+Ball and Base Ball players is Rev. Dr. Reisner, pastor of the Grace
+Methodist Episcopal Church, of New York City. Throughout the season he
+attends the games and is greatly interested in the work of the players.
+He knows Base Ball well, and in addition to that he knows the
+environment of Base Ball players and their character and endeavor as
+well as any person in the United States.
+
+It is Dr. Reisner's custom each year to preach a sermon to the Base Ball
+players and their friends in his church in New York, and the building
+always is filled to listen to his discourse. In view of the interest
+which he takes in the national game and because of his excellent
+knowledge as to the general details of the sport, the Editor of the
+GUIDE asked him to say a few words to the ball players of the United
+States through the medium of this publication, and he has graciously
+consented to do so in the following pithy and straightforward talks:
+
+BY THE REV. CHRISTIAN F. REISNER, NEW YORK.
+
+The Bible is the Spalding book of rules for the game of life. James B.
+Sullivan, beloved by all athletes, gave me these rules for athletes:
+"Don't drink, use tobacco or dissipate. Go to bed early and eat
+wholesome food!" The boozer gets out of the game as certainly as the
+bonehead.
+
+I have interviewed scores of the most noted players. Every one had a
+religious training. Many are church members. All avoid old-time
+drinking, as our fathers did smallpox.
+
+Mathewson belongs to the high type now being generally duplicated. He is
+a modern masculine Christian. Base Ball demands brains as well as brawn.
+Minds muddled by licentiousness and liquor are too "leady" for leaders.
+Hotheadedness topples capable players.
+
+I am proud to style scores of Base Ball players, I know, as gentlemen.
+They are optimists. Defect is unrecognized. Team work makes them
+brotherly. Bickerings break a Baseballist. Every member of the team
+gives himself wholly to the game. Jeers are as harmless as cheers.
+
+Every minute he does his best. He sleeps only at night. To do these
+things the player must follow Bible rules. If he keeps it up life's
+success is certain. Governor Tener and Senator Gorman proved it. No
+wonder "Billy" Sunday wrote me "I would not take a million dollars for
+my experience on the ball field."
+
+It taught him how to knock the Devil out of the box.
+
+Base Ball is invaluable to America. It thrills and so rests tired
+nerves. It brings the "shut-in" man into God's healing out-o'-doors.
+While yelling he swallows great draughts of lung-expanding, purifying
+air and forgets the fear of "taking cold."
+
+He is pulled out of self-centeredness, while shouting for another. He
+stands crowd jostling good-naturedly or gets his cussedness squeezed
+out. He chums up with any one with easy comments and so gets out of his
+shell and melts again into a real human.
+
+Base Ball absolutely pulls the brain away from business. It emphasizes
+the value of decency and gives healthy and high toned recreation to
+millions. If kept clean its good-doing cannot be measured. Nothing is
+worth while that does not do that.
+
+
+
+
+THE SPALDING BASE BALL HALL OF FAME
+
+
+(From Spalding's Official Base Ball Record.)
+
+New faces enter into the Spalding Base Ball "Hall of Fame" this year.
+The object of this "Hall of Fame" is not necessarily to portray the very
+top men of each department of the national game, for it frequently
+happens in these days, when players take part in only a few innings now
+and then, that they become entitled to mention in the records, although
+they do not bear the real brunt of the work.
+
+In the "Hall of Fame" will be found the men who might well be termed the
+"regulars." Day in and day out they were on the diamond, or ready to
+take their place on the diamond, if they were not injured.
+
+NATIONAL LEAGUE.
+
+First of all, Daubert has earned his place at first base for the season
+of 1912. Threatening in other years to become one of the group of
+leading players, he performed so well in the season past that there is
+no doubt as to his right.
+
+There is a new player at second base. The regularity with which Egan of
+Cincinnati performed for the Reds earned him a place as the banner
+second baseman.
+
+At third base the honor goes to J.R. Lobert, the third baseman of the
+Philadelphia club. In this particular instance Lobert was crowded, not
+for efficiency, but in the number of games played by Byrne, third
+baseman of Pittsburgh, and Herzog, third baseman of New York. In the
+matter of chances undertaken on the field, Herzog surpassed both Lobert
+and Byrne, but, in justice to Lobert, the honor seems to be fairly
+deserved by him.
+
+John H. Wagner, the brilliant veteran of the Pittsburgh club, fought his
+way to the position of shortstop in 1912. His fielding was better than
+that of his rivals and at times he played the position as only a man of
+his sterling worth can play.
+
+Owing to the fact that the able secretary of the National League, John
+A. Heydler, has compiled two methods of comparing pitchers, the "Hall of
+Fame" in the National League this year will include two faces. They are
+those of Hendrix of the Pittsburgh club and Tesreau of the New York
+club. The former won the greater percentage of games under the old rule
+in vogue of allotting percentage upon victories. Tesreau, however, under
+a new rule which classifies pitchers by earned runs, easily led the
+league. The editor of the RECORD is very much inclined toward Mr.
+Heydler's earned run record; in fact, has suggested a record based upon
+the construction of making every pitcher responsible for runs and
+computing his average upon the percentage of runs for which he is
+responsible. That places Tesreau in the front row, with Mathewson
+second.
+
+There are two catchers who run a close race for the "Hall of Fame" in
+1912. They are Meyers of New York and Gibson of Pittsburgh. Meyers
+caught by far the larger number of games, and, basing the work of
+catcher upon the average chances per game, seems to lead his Pittsburgh
+rival. Both men are sterling performers, and Meyers is an instance of
+the greatest improvement on the part of a catcher of any member of the
+major leagues.
+
+For the position of leading outfielder, all things considered, Carey of
+Pittsburgh is selected for the "Hall of Fame." Not only did he play in
+the greatest number of games of any outfielder, but his general work in
+the outfield was sensational.
+
+For the position of leading batsman the "Hall of Fame" honors Zimmerman,
+the powerful batter of the Chicago club. His work with the bat in 1912
+approached in many ways that of the high class and powerful batters of
+old. He batted steadily, with the exception of one very slight slump,
+and his work as batter undoubtedly was of tremendous assistance to
+Chicago. Zimmerman did not shine alone as the best batter, as he was
+also the leading maker of home runs and the best two-base hitter of the
+season. That gives him a triple honor.
+
+The best three-base hitter of the league was the quiet Wilson of
+Pittsburgh. Though not so high in rank as a batsman as some of his
+contemporaries, there was none in the organization who could equal his
+ability to get to third base on long hits.
+
+Bescher, as in 1911, earned in 1912 the position of leading base runner
+in the National League. He stole more bases than any other player of the
+league, and was also the best run getter--that is to say, scored more
+runs than any other player.
+
+AMERICAN LEAGUE.
+
+First of all comes Gandil for first base. His greater number of games
+played and his steady work at first almost all of the season, as he did
+not join the Washingtons at the beginning of the season, places him in
+the "Hall of Fame" at first base.
+
+Rath is a newcomer to the Chicago club, but by all around good work he
+earned the place at second base. Not so heavy a batter as some of his
+rivals, he covered a great amount of ground for the Chicagos and
+steadied the infield throughout the year.
+
+For the position of shortstop, McBride of Washington is the logical
+selection. Day in and day out he was one of the most reliable shortstops
+in the American League.
+
+At third base John Turner of the Cleveland club retains the honor which
+he earned for himself in 1911, and he is one of the few players who is a
+member of the "Hall of Fame" two years in succession.
+
+In the outfield, for all around work, the place of honor goes to Amos
+Strunk, the young player of the Philadelphia club. He was in center
+field and in left field, and he was a busy young man for most of the
+year.
+
+Pitching at a standard higher than the American League had seen for
+years, Wood of Boston is given the "Hall of Fame" honor as pitcher. His
+average of winning games was very high, and he was compelled to fight
+hard for many of his victories.
+
+The man who caught him seems entitled to be considered the leading
+catcher. He is Cady of Boston, although for hard work Carrigan, also of
+Boston, gives him a close race.
+
+Once more Cobb is the leading batsman of the American League. There was
+none to dispute his right to the title. He was also leading batsman in
+1911 and is another American League player who holds a position in the
+"Hall" two years in succession.
+
+The leading home run batter of the American League was Baker of
+Philadelphia. He earned the same title in 1911. It is a double "Hall of
+Fame" distinction for him.
+
+Jackson of Cleveland enters the "Hall of Fame" by being the leading
+batter for three-base hits.
+
+Speaker of Boston becomes a member of the high honor group by being the
+leading batter of two-base hits.
+
+Lewis of Boston is the leading batter of sacrifice hits.
+
+Collins of Philadelphia was the best run getter.
+
+Last, but by no means least, of all, Milan, the clever outfielder of
+Washington, is the best base stealer of the year, and better than all
+the rest, earns his distinction in joining the "Hall of Fame" by
+establishing a new record of stolen bases.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN TOMLINSON BRUSH
+
+BY JOHN B. FOSTER.
+
+
+John Tomlinson Brush was born in Clintonville, N.Y., on June 15, 1845.
+He died November 26, 1912, near St. Charles, Mo., on his way to
+California from New York, for his health. Left an orphan at the age of
+four years, he went to live at the home of his grandfather, in
+Hopkinton, where he remained until he was seventeen years old. At this
+age he left school and went to Boston, where he obtained a position in a
+clothing establishment, a business with which he was identified up to
+his death. He worked as a clerk in several cities in the East, and
+finally went to Indianapolis in 1875 to open a clothing store. The store
+still occupies the same building, and Mr. Brush continued at the head of
+the business until his death. It was in the early '80s that he first
+became interested in Base Ball in Indianapolis, and he made himself both
+wealthy and famous as a promoter.
+
+In 1863 Mr. Brush enlisted in the First New York Artillery, and served
+as a member of this body until it was discharged, at the close of the
+civil war. He was a charter member of George H. Thomas Post, G.A.R.; a
+thirty-third degree Scottish Rite Mason, and was also prominently
+identified with several social and commercial organizations of
+Indianapolis, notably the Columbia Club, Commercial Club, Board of
+Trade, and the Mannerchor Society. In New York Mr. Brush took up
+membership in the Lambs' Club and the Larchmont Club. For several years
+he made his headquarters at the Lambs' Club.
+
+Mr. Brush is survived by his widow, Mrs. Elsie Lombard Brush, and two
+daughters, Miss Natalie Brush and Mrs. Harry N. Hempstead. His first
+wife, Mrs. Agnes Ewart Brush, died in 1888.
+
+Mr. Brush's career in Base Ball, a sport to which he was devotedly
+attached, and for which he had the highest ideals and aims, began with
+the Indianapolis club of the National League.
+
+It has been somewhat inaccurately stated that he entered Base Ball by
+chance. This was not, strictly speaking, the case. Prior to his first
+immediate association with the national game he was an ardent admirer of
+the sport, although not connected with it in any capacity as owner. He
+was what might be called, with accurate description, a Base Ball "fan"
+in the earlier stages of development.
+
+An opportunity presented itself by which it was possible to procure for
+the city of Indianapolis a franchise in the National League. Mr. Brush
+was quick to perceive the advantages which this might have in an
+advertising way for the city with which he had cast his lot and
+subscribed to the stock.
+
+Like many such adventures in the early history of the sport there came a
+time when the cares and the duties of the club had to be assumed by a
+single individual and it was then that he became actively identified as
+a managing owner, as the duty of caring for the club fell upon his
+shoulders.
+
+From that date, until the date of his death, he was actively interested
+in every detail relating to Base Ball which might pertain to the
+advancement of the sport, and his principal effort in his future
+participation in the game was to see that it advanced on the lines of
+the strictest integrity and in such a manner that its foundation should
+be laid in the rock of permanent success.
+
+Naturally this was bound to bring him into conflict with some who looked
+upon Base Ball as an idle pastime, in which only the present moment was
+to be consulted.
+
+The earliest environment of Base Ball was not wholly of a substantial
+nature. It was a game, intrinsically good of itself, in which the
+hazards had always been against the weak. There was not that
+consideration of equity which would have been for its best interests,
+but this was not entirely the fault of the separate members of the Base
+Ball body, but the result of conditions, in which those whose thought
+was only for the moment, overshadowed the best interests of the pastime.
+
+There was an inequity in regulations governing the sport by which the
+clubs in the smaller cities were forced, against the will of their
+owners, to be the weaker organizations, and possibly this was less due
+to a desire upon the more fortunate and larger clubs to maintain such a
+state of affairs, than to the fact that the organization generally had
+expanded upon lines with little regard to the future.
+
+The first general complaint arose from the players who composed the
+membership of the smaller clubs. They demurred at the fact that they
+were asked to perform equally as well as the players of the clubs in the
+larger cities at smaller salaries. Not that they did not try to do their
+best, for this they stoutly attempted under all conditions. It was the
+effect of a discrimination which was the result of the imperfect
+regulations that existed relative to the management of the game.
+
+This attitude of the players resulted at length in the formation of a
+body known as the Brotherhood. To offset not the Brotherhood, but the
+cause which led to its formation, Mr. Brush devised the famous
+classification plan. Imperfectly understood in what it intended to do
+for the players, it was seized upon as a reason for the revolt of the
+players and the organization of the Brotherhood League.
+
+At heart it was the idea of Mr. Brush so to equalize salaries that the
+players of all clubs should be reimbursed in an equitable manner. As
+always had been the case, and probably always is likely to be, the
+players who received the larger salaries were in no mood to share with
+their weaker brothers any excess margin of pay which they thought that
+they had justly earned, and it was not a difficult matter for them to
+obtain the consent of players who might really have benefited by the
+plan to co-operate with them on the basis of comradeship.
+
+The motives of Mr. Brush were thoroughly misconstrued by some, and, if
+grasped by others, they were disregarded, because they conflicted with
+their immediate temporary prosperity.
+
+The dead Base Ball organizer had looked further ahead than his time. His
+plan was born under the best of intentions, but it unfortunately
+devolved upon the theory that players would be willing to share alike
+for their common good. Later in life, through another and unquestionably
+even better method, he succeeded in bringing forth a plan which attained
+the very end for which he sought in the '80s, but in the second resort,
+by a far more efficacious method.
+
+The Brotherhood League came into existence and rivaled the National
+League. The players of the National League and the American Association
+deserted to join the Brotherhood League, upon a platform that promised
+Utopia in Base Ball. Unquestionably it was the idea of the general
+Brotherhood organization that the National League would abandon the
+fight and succumb, but the National League owners were built of sterner
+stuff.
+
+They fought back resolutely and hard and while for a time they were
+combated by a fickle opinion, based upon sentiment, it developed within
+two months that the public had learned thoroughly the reasons for the
+organization of the new league and declined to lend it that support
+which had been predicted and expected.
+
+Meanwhile, Base Ball had received a setback greater than any which had
+befallen the sport in an organized sense from a professional standpoint.
+
+The Brotherhood League was a pronounced and emphatic failure. This is
+not the verdict of personal opinion, but a record which is indelibly
+impressed upon Base Ball history.
+
+It was the theory of the Brotherhood League that it, in part, should be
+governed by representative players, but the players would not be
+governed by players. Discipline relaxed, teams did pretty much as they
+pleased, and the public remained away from the games. It may be added
+with truth that the National League games were not much better
+patronized, but that was due to the prevalent apathy in Base Ball
+affairs throughout the United States.
+
+When the Brotherhood League was formed and withdrew so many players from
+the National League the latter organization undertook to strengthen
+itself where it could and when Brooklyn and Cincinnati applied for
+membership in the circuit both were admitted.
+
+The New York National League club had lost many of its players and, upon
+the substitution of Cincinnati for Indianapolis in the National League
+circuit, procured from Mr. Brush many players of note, among them Rusie,
+Glasscock, Buckley, Bassett and Denny.
+
+Relative to the withdrawal of Indianapolis from the circuit it may be
+said that Mr. Brush flatly refused to give up his club, asserting
+stoutly that he was perfectly able to continue the fight, but when he
+felt that the exigencies of the occasion demanded that Cincinnati become
+a member, he agreed to give up the franchise, providing that he be
+permitted to retain his membership in the National League, and transfer
+such of his players as New York desired to the latter city. It has been
+alleged that he demanded an exorbitant price from New York for the
+transfer of the players.
+
+This is untrue. He asked the price of his franchise, the value of his
+players, and the worth of giving up a Base Ball year in a city in which
+there was to be no conflicting club and, as he had expressed full
+confidence in his ability to make a winning fight for the National
+League, it was agreed that his rights to be considered could not be
+overlooked. To retain his National League membership he accepted stock
+in the New York club.
+
+Toward the close of the Base Ball season the Brotherhood League dealt
+what it believed to be a death blow to the National League by the
+purchase of the Cincinnati franchise. It proved to be a boomerang, for
+before the first day of January, 1891, the Brotherhood League had passed
+out of existence. The backers of the organization, tired of the general
+conduct of the sport, were only too willing to come to an acceptable
+agreement and retire.
+
+A.G. Spalding, John T. Brush, Frank De Hass Robison, Charles H. Byrne
+and A.H. Soden were prominent members of the National League to bringing
+this result about. Of these, Mr. Spalding and Mr. Soden survive, but
+have retired from active participation in Base Ball affairs.
+
+It was through this settlement, resulting upon the Base Ball war, that
+Mr. Brush's activities were turned toward Cincinnati. The National
+League had a franchise in that city, but no one to operate it. Mr. Brush
+agreed to take up the franchise and attempt to operate and rebuild that
+club. That, however, is a detail which relates purely to the continuance
+of a major league circuit.
+
+The next most noticeable achievement in Mr. Brush's Base Ball career
+and, to the mind of more than one, the greatest successful undertaking
+in the history of the game, was a complete revolution in the
+distribution of financial returns. By his success in effecting this Mr.
+Brush brought about the very purpose which he had sought to attain by
+his classification plan.
+
+But the method was better, for the instruments of this readjustment of
+conditions were the owners and not the players. Briefly, it was the
+following:
+
+There was still war in Base Ball between the American Association and
+the National League. Recognizing that the best method to bring about a
+cessation of this war was to effect an amalgamation of the conflicting
+forces Mr. Brush sought, with the assistance of others, to weld both
+leagues into one. He was aided in this task, though indirectly, because
+A.G. Spalding was actively out of Base Ball, by that gentleman, Frank De
+Hass Robison, Christopher Von der Abe, and Francis C. Richter, editor of
+"Sporting Life" of Philadelphia. The writer also essayed in the task in
+an advisory capacity.
+
+The amalgamation was brought about, though not without some opposition;
+indeed, much opposition. It was conceded at that time that a twelve-club
+league, which was the object sought, was cumbersome and unwieldy, but
+there was no other plan of possible accomplishment which suggested
+itself.
+
+But the principal consideration and the result accomplished in this
+consolidation of leagues was that all gate receipts should be divided,
+share and share alike, so far as general admissions were concerned.
+
+That was the greatest and most far-reaching achievement in the history
+of Base Ball. Prior to that time the principle of a fixed guarantee for
+each game played had given each home club a stupendous bulk of the sums
+paid by the public toward the maintenance of the sport. The inevitable
+outcome of such an arrangement was that the clubs in the larger cities
+completely overshadowed the clubs in the smaller cities.
+
+The teams in the cities of less population were expected to try to place
+rival organizations on the field that would equal in playing strength
+those of New York, Boston and Chicago, but they were unable to do so
+unless their owners were willing to go on year after year with large
+deficits staring them in the face.
+
+When Mr. Brush and his associates succeeded in placing Base Ball upon a
+plane of absolute fairness, so far as the proper distribution of the
+returns of the sport could be made between clubs, Base Ball began to
+prosper, and, for the first time in all its history, the owners of
+so-called smaller clubs felt that they could go forward and try to rival
+their bigger fellows with equally strong combinations.
+
+More than that, and which to the ball player is most important of all,
+it "jumped" the salaries of the players in the smaller clubs until they
+were on equal terms with their fellow players in the larger clubs, so
+that Mr. Brush helped to accomplish by this plan the very aim which he
+had at heart when he proposed the classification plan--a just, impartial
+and equal reimbursement to every player in the game, so far as the
+finances of each club would permit--and without that bane to all
+players, a salary limit.
+
+Thus, while it is always probable that some players may receive more
+than others, based upon their preponderance of skill, it is now a fact
+that two-thirds of the major league ball players of the present day owe
+their handsome salaries to the system which John T. Brush so earnestly
+urged and for which he fought against odds which would have daunted a
+man with less fixity of purpose.
+
+Having brought forth this new condition in Base Ball, which was so just
+that its results almost immediately began to make themselves manifest,
+the owner of the Cincinnati club devoted his time and his energies to
+the endeavor to place a championship club in Cincinnati. He never was
+successful in that purpose, although his ill fortune was no greater than
+that of his predecessors.
+
+The time came that Mr. Brush learned that the New York Base Ball Club
+could be purchased. He obtained the stock necessary to make him owner of
+the New York organization from Mr. Andrew Freedman, but before he did so
+another Base Ball war had begun between the National League and the
+American League, a disagreement starting from the simplest of causes,
+but which, like many another such disagreement, resulted in the most
+damaging of conditions to the prosperity of the pastime.
+
+As had been the case in the prior war brought about by the organization
+of the Brotherhood League, Mr. Brush fought staunchly for his rights.
+Prominent National League players were taken by the American League
+clubs, and this brought retaliation.
+
+At length the National League opened negotiations to obtain certain
+American League players and succeeded in doing so. Among these were the
+manager of the Baltimore club, John J. McGraw, who felt that he was
+acting perfectly within his rights in joining the New York National
+League club. Directly upon his acceptance of the management of the New
+York club Mr. Brush became its owner and the era of prosperity was
+inaugurated in New York, which was soon enjoyed by every club throughout
+the United States.
+
+In its first year under the new management the team was not in condition
+to make a good fight, but the next year it was ready and since then has
+won four National League championships and one World's Championship.
+
+In the spring of 1911, at the very dawn of the National League season,
+the grand stand of the New York National League club burned to the
+ground. A man less determined would have been overcome by such a blow.
+Nothing daunted and while the flames were not yet quenched, Mr. Brush
+sent for engineers to devise plans for the magnificent stadium which
+bears his name and which, on the Polo Grounds in New York, is one of the
+greatest and the most massive monument to professional Base Ball in the
+world.
+
+In connection with this wonderful new edifice of steel and stone, which
+is one of the wonders of the new world, it is appropriate to add that
+two world's series have been played on the field of the Polo Grounds
+since it has been erected.
+
+The rules for these world's series were formulated and adopted upon the
+suggestion and by the advice of Mr. Brush and since a regular world's
+series season has been a feature of Base Ball the national game has
+progressed with even greater strides than was the case in the past.
+
+At a meeting of the National League the following resolutions were
+adopted:
+
+ _Whereas_, The death of Mr. John T. Brush, president of the New York
+ National League Base Ball Club, comes as a sad blow to organized
+ professional Base Ball and particularly to us, his associates in the
+ National League.
+
+ As the dean of organized professional Base Ball, his wise counsel, his
+ unerring judgment, his fighting qualities and withal his eminent
+ fairness and integrity in all matters pertaining to the welfare of the
+ national game will be surely missed.
+
+ He was a citizen of sterling worth, of high moral standards and of
+ correct business principles, and his death is not only a grievous loss
+ to us, but to the community at large as well. Be it, therefore,
+
+ _Resolved_, That the members of the National League of Professional
+ Base Ball Clubs, in session to-day, express their profound grief at
+ the loss of their friend, associate and counsellor and extend to the
+ members of his bereaved family their sincere sympathy in the great
+ loss which they have sustained by his death. Be it further
+
+ _Resolved_, That a copy of these resolutions be spread on the records
+ of the league.
+
+In connection with the death of Mr. Brush, Ben Johnson, president of the
+American League, said: "Mr. Brush was a power in Base Ball. He will be
+missed as much in the American League as in the National League."
+
+More than three hundred friends, relatives, business acquaintances,
+lodge brothers and Base Ball associates attended the funeral of Mr.
+Brush, on Friday, November 29, at St. Paul's Episcopal Church,
+Indianapolis. Fifty or more of Mr. Brush's Base Ball associates and
+acquaintances, principally from the East, were present.
+
+The service was conducted by the Rev. Lewis Brown, rector of St. Paul's,
+and was followed by a Scottish Rite ceremony in charge of William Geake,
+Sr., of Fort Wayne, acting thrice potent master, and official head of
+the thirty-third degree in Indiana. The Scottish Rite delegation
+numbered more than 150. There were also in attendance fifty Knights
+Templars of Rapier Commandery, under the leadership of Eminent Commander
+E.J. Scoonover.
+
+The Grand Army of the Republic, the Indianapolis Commercial Club and a
+number of local and out-of-town clubs and social organizations of which
+Mr. Brush was a member also were represented.
+
+The Episcopal service was given impressively. The Rev. Dr. Brown, in
+reviewing the life of Mr. Brush, spoke of him as one of the remarkable
+men of America, who, in his youth, gave no promise of being in later
+life a national figure. In the course of his remarks Dr. Brown said:
+
+"The death of John Tomlinson Brush removes from our midst one of the
+most remarkable men of our generation. His life was that of a typical
+American. He began in the most unpretentious manner and died a figure of
+national importance.
+
+"He went through the Civil War so quietly that the fact was unknown to
+some of his most intimate friends. He was mustered out with honor and
+entered the business world in Indianapolis. His labors here put him at
+the forefront for sagacity, squareness, honorable treatment and
+generosity.
+
+"His love of sport made him a patron of the national game. In a
+perfectly natural way, he went from manager of the local team to
+proprietor of the New York Giants. He was a Bismarck in plan and a
+Napoleon in execution. His aim was pre-eminence and he won place by the
+consent of all. The recent spectacular outpouring of people and colossal
+financial exhibit in the struggle for the pennant between New York and
+Boston were but the legitimate outcome of his marvelous skill.
+
+"He was an early member of the Masonic fraternity. He took his Blue
+Lodge degree in his native town and to demonstrate his attachment he
+never removed his membership. Where he had been raised to the sublime
+degree of a master there he wished to keep his affiliation always.
+
+"He became a Knight Templar in Rapier Commandery and was one of its past
+eminent commanders. He was a member of the Scottish Rite bodies in the
+Valley of Indianapolis in the early days and performed his work with a
+ritual perfection unsurpassed. He received the thirty-third and last
+degree as a merited honor for proficiency and zeal.
+
+"The conspicuous feature of his life was its indomitable purpose."
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S SERIES OF 1912
+
+BY JOHN B. FOSTER.
+
+
+No individual, whether player, manager, owner, critic or spectator, who
+went through the world's series of 1912 ever will forget it. There never
+was another like it. Years may elapse before there shall be a similar
+series and it may be that the next to come will be equally sensational,
+perhaps more so.
+
+Viewed from the very strict standpoint that all Base Ball games should
+be played without mistake or blunder this world's series may be said to
+have been inartistic, but it is only the hypercritical theorist who
+would take such a cold-blooded view of the series.
+
+From the lofty perch of the "bleacherite" it was a series crammed with
+thrills and gulps, cheers and gasps, pity and hysteria, dejection and
+wild exultation, recrimination and adoration, excuse and condemnation,
+and therefore it was what may cheerfully be called "ripping good" Base
+Ball.
+
+There were plays on the field which simply lifted the spectators out of
+their seats in frenzy. There were others which caused them to wish to
+sink through the hard floor of the stand in humiliation. There were
+stops in which fielders seemed to stretch like india rubber and others
+in which they shriveled like parchment which has been dried. There were
+catches of fly balls which were superhuman and muffs of fly balls which
+were "superawful."
+
+There were beautiful long hits, which threatened to change the outcome
+of games and some of them did. There were opportunities for other
+beautiful long hits which were not made.
+
+No ingenuity of stage preparation, no prearranged plot of man, no
+cunningly devised theory of a world's series could have originated a
+finale equal to that of the eighth and decisive contest. Apparently on
+the verge of losing the series after the Saturday game in Boston the
+Giants had gamely fought their way to a tie with Boston, and it was one
+of the pluckiest and gamest fights ever seen in a similar series, and
+just as the golden apple seemed about to drop into the hands of the New
+York players they missed it because Dame Fortune rudely jostled them
+aside.
+
+As a matter of fact the New York players were champions of the world for
+nine and one half innings, for they led Boston when the first half of
+the extra inning of the final game was played. Within the next six
+minutes they had lost all the advantage which they had gained.
+
+It was a combination of bad fielding and lack of fielding which cost the
+New York team its title. And if only Mathewson had not given Yerkes a
+base on balls in the tenth inning the game might not have been won, even
+with the fielding blunders, but Mathewson was pitching with all the
+desperation and the cunning which he could muster to fool the batter and
+failed to do so.
+
+Such sudden and complete reversal on the part of the mental demeanor of
+spectators was never before seen on a ball field in a world's series.
+The Boston enthusiasts had given up and were willing to concede the
+championship to New York. In the twinkling of an eye there was a muffed
+fly, a wonderful catch by the same player who muffed the
+ball--Snodgrass--a base on balls to Yerkes, a missed chance to retire
+Speaker easily on a foul fly, then a base hit by Speaker to right field,
+on which Engel scored, another base on balls to Lewis and then the long
+sacrifice fly to right field by Gardner, which sent Yerkes over the
+plate with the winning run.
+
+Before entering upon a description of the games it is appropriate to say
+that the umpiring in this series was as near perfection as it could be.
+It was by far the best of any since the series had been inaugurated. The
+umpires were William Klem and Charles Rigler of the National League and
+Frank O'Loughlin and William Evans of the American League.
+
+FIRST GAME
+New York, Oct. 8, 1912.
+Boston 4, New York 3.
+Hits--Off Wood 8; off Tesreau 5; Crandall 1.
+Struck out--Wood 11; Tesreau 4; Crandall 2.
+Bases on balls--Wood 2; Tesreau 4.
+Attendance 35,722.
+
+In the description of the games of the world's series only those innings
+will be touched upon in which there were men on bases. Tesreau pitched
+the opening game for New York and the first man to bat for Boston was
+Hooper. Tesreau gave him a base on balls. The next three batters were
+retired in succession. Devore and Doyle, the first two batters for New
+York, were retired and Snodgrass hit cleanly to center field, the first
+base hit in the series. Murray was given a base on balls, but Merkle
+flied to short. In the second inning the Bostons started as bravely as
+they had in the first, as Gardner, the first batter, was safe on
+Fletcher's fumble. Stahl batted to Tesreau and Gardner was forced out.
+Wagner was given a base on balls, after Stahl had been thrown out trying
+to steal second, and Cady flied to Murray.
+
+The Bostons started with a man on base in the third. Wood was given a
+base on balls by Tesreau and Hooper sacrificed. Doyle threw Yerkes out
+and Speaker was given a base on balls, but Lewis died easily on a weak
+fly to short.
+
+In New York's half of this inning the Giants scored twice. Tesreau,
+first at bat, struck out. Devore was given a base on balls and Doyle
+batted wickedly to left field for two bases. Snodgrass was fooled into
+striking out, but Murray smashed the ball to center field for a single,
+and sent two men over the rubber, Murray was caught at second trying to
+get around the bases while Doyle was going home.
+
+With one out Herzog hit safely in the fourth inning, but did not score.
+In the fifth, with two out, Doyle batted safely, but failed to score. In
+the sixth the Bostons made their first runs on Speaker's triple to left
+field and Lewis' out. If Snodgrass, in making a desperate effort to
+catch the fly, had permitted the ball to go to Devore the chances are
+that Speaker's hit would have resulted in an out, so that New York lost
+on the play.
+
+Snodgrass was safe in the sixth on Wagner's fumble, but was doubled off
+first when Murray drove a line hit straight to Stahl. The seventh was
+the undoing of the Giants. With one out Wagner batted safely to center
+field. Cady followed with another hit to the same place. Wood batted to
+Doyle, who made a beautiful stop, but with a double play in hand, was
+overbalanced and unable to complete it. That cost New York three runs,
+although it was unavoidable. Cady was forced out, but Hooper hit to
+right field for two bases sending Wagner and Wood home. Yerkes followed
+with a clean hit to left field for a base and won the first game for
+Boston with that hit.
+
+In New York's half of the inning, with one out, Meyers was hit by a
+pitched ball, but no damage was done other than to Meyers' feelings. In
+the ninth Wagner batted Crandall for a two-base hit, Crandall having
+been substituted for Tesreau in the eighth inning, as McCormick had
+batted for Tesreau in the seventh. Cady made a sacrifice, but the next
+two batters were easily retired.
+
+Then began the exciting finish, and if the Giants had made but a single
+more they probably would have begun the series with a victory instead of
+a defeat. With one out Merkle batted the ball over second base for a
+single and the spectators, who had started toward the exits, halted.
+Herzog followed with a slow low fly to right field, which fell safely.
+Meyers crashed into the ball for a two-bagger that struck the wall in
+right field and the crowd began to believe that Wood had gone up in
+"smoke."
+
+The Boston players encouraged him with all their best vocal efforts, and
+when Fletcher came to the plate Wood was using all the speed with which
+he was possessed. It was evident that Fletcher's sole desire was to bat
+the ball safely to right field, for if he did so, both of the runners
+could cross the plate and the Giants would win. Twice he met the ball,
+and both times it sailed in the right direction, but with no result, as
+it was foul. Then he struck out. Crandall, perhaps one of the best pinch
+hitters in the major leagues, also struck out, and the Boston
+enthusiasts who were present fell back in their chairs from sheer
+exhaustion, but when they had recovered, with their band leading them,
+marched across the field and cheered Mayor Fitzgerald of Boston, who was
+present as a spectator of the contest in company with Mayor Gaynor of
+New York. Governor Foss of Massachusetts was also present at the opening
+of the game. Klem umpired behind the bat in this game.
+
+SECOND GAME
+Boston, Oct. 9, 1912.
+New York 6. Boston 6 (eleven innings).
+Hits--Off Collins 9, off Hall 2; Mathewson 10.
+Struck out--Collins 5, Bedient 1; Mathewson 4
+Bases on balls--Hall 4, Bedient 1.
+Attendance 30,148.
+
+In the second game of the series, which was played October 9 at Boston,
+Mathewson pitched for the New York team and Collins, Hall and Bedient
+for Boston. The game resulted in a tie, 6 to 6, at the end of the
+eleventh inning, being called on account of darkness by Umpire
+O'Loughlin, who was acting behind the plate. This contest was remarkable
+more for the misplays of the New York players, which gave the Bostons a
+chance to save themselves from defeat, than for any undue familiarity
+with the pitching of Mathewson. It was the universal opinion of
+partisans of both teams that Mathewson deserved to win because he
+outpitched his opponents. The weather was fair and the ground in
+excellent condition. In the first inning Snodgrass began with a clean
+two-base hit into the left field seats but neither Doyle, Becker nor
+Murray was able to help him across the plate. A run scored in that
+inning, with such a fine start, would probably have won the game for the
+Giants.
+
+In Boston's half Hooper hit safely to center field and stole second
+base. Yerkes batted a line drive to Fletcher, and had the New York
+shortstop held the ball, which was not difficult to catch, Hooper could
+easily have been doubled at second, but Fletcher muffed it. Speaker hit
+safely toward third base, filling the bases. Lewis batted to Herzog, who
+made a fine play on the ball and caught Hooper at the plate. This should
+have been the third out and would have retired Boston without a run.
+Gardner was put out by a combination play on the part of Mathewson,
+Doyle and Merkle, scoring Yerkes, and Stahl came through with a hard
+line hit for a base, which scored Speaker and Lewis. The inning netted
+Boston three runs, which were not earned.
+
+With one out in the second inning Herzog batted for three bases to
+center field and scored on Meyers' single. Fletcher flied out and
+Mathewson forced Meyers out. Hooper got a two-base hit in the same
+inning, but two were out at the time and Fletcher easily threw out
+Yerkes, who was the next batter.
+
+In the fourth inning Murray began with a clean three-base hit to center
+field. Merkle fouled out to the third baseman, but Herzog's long fly to
+Speaker was an excellent sacrifice and Murray scored. Meyers again hit
+for a single, but was left on the bases. The Bostons got this run back
+in the last half of the fifth. With one out Hooper hit to center field
+for a base, his third hit in succession against Mathewson. Yerkes batted
+a three-bagger out of the reach of Snodgrass and Hooper scored. Murray
+batted safely in the sixth, with one out, but died trying to steal
+second, Carrigan catching for Boston. In the Boston's half of the sixth
+Lewis began with a single and got as far as third base, but could not
+score.
+
+The Giants started bravely in the seventh when Herzog hit the ball for a
+base and stole second. There were three chances to get him home, but
+Meyers, who had been hitting Collins hard, failed to make a single and
+Fletcher and Mathewson were both retired.
+
+In the eighth the New York players made one of the game rallies for
+which they became famed all through the series and went ahead of their
+rivals. Snodgrass was the first batter and lifted an easy fly to Lewis.
+The Boston player got directly under the ball and made a square muff of
+it. Doyle followed along with a sharp hit to center field for a base and
+although he was forced out by Becker, the latter drove the ball hard.
+Murray came through with a long two-bagger to left center and Snodgrass
+and Becker scored. That tied the score and also put an end to Collins'
+work in the box; Stahl took him out and substituted Hall. Merkle fouled
+weakly to the catcher, but Herzog caught the ball on the nose and hit
+sharp and clean to center field for two bases, sending Murray home with
+the run which put the Giants in the lead. Another base hit would have
+won for New York, but Meyers perished on a hard hit to Wagner, which was
+fielded to first ahead of the batter.
+
+Unfortunately for New York, with two out in the last half of the inning
+Lewis batted the ball to left field for two bases. Murray made a
+desperate effort to get it. He tumbled backward over the fence into the
+bleachers and for a few moments there were some who thought that he had
+been seriously injured. Gardner followed with a single to center and
+Stahl hit to right for a base, but Wagner struck out and the Bostons
+were down with only a run.
+
+In the ninth Hall gave a remarkable exhibition. Fletcher and Mathewson
+were retired in succession. Then Snodgrass, Doyle and Becker were given
+bases on balls, filling the bags. It seemed certain that a run might
+score, and perhaps one would have scored had it not been for an
+excellent stop by Wagner. Murray hit the ball at him like a shot, but he
+got it and retired Becker at second.
+
+The Giants took the lead in the tenth and once more it appeared as if
+the game would be theirs. Merkle began with a long three-base hit to
+center field. Herzog batted to Wagner and Merkle played safe, refusing
+to try to score while the batter was being put out at first. Meyers was
+given a base on balls and Shafer ran for him. Fletcher lifted a long fly
+to left field and Merkle scored from third. Mathewson could not advance
+the runners and died on an infield fly. Yerkes was the first batter for
+the Bostons and was retired at first base. Speaker hit to deep center
+field. There were some scorers who gave the batter but three bases on
+the hit, insisting that Wilson, who was then catching for New York,
+should have got the throw to the plate and retired the batter. In any
+event Wilson missed the ball and Speaker scored. Lewis followed with a
+two-bagger, which would have scored Speaker if the latter had not tried
+to run home, so Wilson's failure to retrieve the throw became more
+conspicuous. Other scorers gave Speaker a clean home run and it is not
+far out of the way to say that he deserved the benefit of the doubt.
+
+Neither team scored in the eleventh inning, although Snodgrass was hit
+by a pitched ball. He was the first batter. He tried to steal second,
+but failed to make it.
+
+This contest was conspicuous because of the wonderfully good fielding of
+Doyle and Wagner. The former made two stops along the right field line
+which seemed to be not far from superhuman. Wagner killed at least two
+safe hits over second base for New York and both of the plays were of
+the greatest benefit to the Boston team.
+
+THIRD GAME.
+Boston, Oct. 10, 1912.
+New York 2; Boston 1.
+Hits--Off Marquard 7; O'Brien 6, Bedient 1.
+Struck out--Marquard 6, O'Brien 3.
+Bases on balls--Marquard 1; O'Brien 3.
+Attendance 34,624.
+
+Because of the tie game the teams remained over in Boston and played on
+the following day, October 10. The pitchers were Marquard for New York
+and O'Brien and Bedient for Boston. Marquard pitched one of the best
+games of his career and not a run was made against him until the ninth
+inning. By far the most notable play of the game on the field was made
+by Devore in the ninth inning, when he ran for more than thirty feet and
+caught an almost impossible fly ball which had been batted by Cady. Had
+he missed it the Bostons might have scored two runs and won. Devore
+began the first inning with a base hit, but was out trying to steal
+second. The next two batters were retired. In the second inning Murray
+batted the ball to center field for two bases. Merkle's clever sacrifice
+put him on third and Herzog's sacrifice fly sent him over the rubber.
+Lewis began the inning for Boston with a safe hit, but could not advance
+further than second.
+
+In the third Fletcher started with a base on balls and was sacrificed to
+second, but was unable to score. In the fourth, with one out, Speaker
+batted safely, but was forced out at second. Gardner flied to Murray.
+
+In the fifth Herzog began with a two-base hit to left field. Meyers died
+at first, but Fletcher hit safely to right field and Herzog scored.
+Fletcher stole second and Marquard was given a base on balls. Devore
+forced him out and stole second and Doyle followed with another base on
+balls. A long hit would have made the game easy for New York and
+Snodgrass tried to get the ball into the bleachers, but Lewis caught it.
+Stahl began the Bostons' half of the fifth with a hit, but was out by
+ten feet trying to steal second.
+
+In the sixth, with two out, Yerkes hit safely, but Speaker fouled out.
+In the seventh, with two out, Stahl batted the ball to left field for
+two bases, but Wagner flied to Devore.
+
+In the eighth the Giants looked dangerous again. Devore began with a
+base-hit to left field. Doyle flied to Lewis. Snodgrass hit safely to
+left field and Murray flied to Lewis. Merkle batted the ball very hard,
+but Wagner made a good stop and caught Snodgrass at second. With two out
+Hooper got a base on balls for Boston, but it did Boston no good.
+
+In the ninth Herzog was hit by a pitched ball and Meyers swung solidly
+to center for a single, after Herzog had died trying to steal. Fletcher
+lined to Speaker and Meyers was doubled. In Boston's half, with one out,
+Lewis batted to right field for a base. Gardner hit to the same place
+for two bases and Lewis scored Boston's only run. Stahl rapped a
+grounder to Marquard, who threw Gardner out at third. Wagner should have
+been an easy out, and the game would have been over if Merkle had not
+dropped a throw to first base. Wagner stole second, no attention being
+paid to him, and then Devore made his wonderfully good catch of Cady's
+hard drive and the Giants had won their first game in the series.
+
+Marquard outpitched both of his Boston rivals and in only two innings
+were the Bostons able to get the first man on the bases.
+
+FOURTH GAME.
+New York, Oct. 11, 1912.
+Boston 3, New York 1.
+Hits--Off Wood 9; off Tesreau 5, Ames 3.
+Struck out--Wood 8; Tesreau 5.
+Bases on balls--Ames 1, Tesreau 2.
+Attendance 36,502.
+
+The fourth game of the series was played in New York on the following
+day. For most of the forenoon it looked as if there would be no game
+because of rain. Toward noon it cleared up slightly and although the
+ground was a little soft it was decided to play, in view of the fact
+that so many spectators had come a long distance to witness the contest.
+The soft ground was in favor of the Boston players, for the ball was
+batted very hard by New York most of the afternoon, but the diamond held
+and the infielders were able to get a good grasp on grounders which
+would ordinarily have been very difficult to handle. Tesreau pitched for
+New York and Wood for Boston, as was the case in the opening game of the
+series. Hooper, who batted with much success on the Polo Grounds, began
+with a single to center and although Yerkes was safe on Meyers' wild
+throw the Giants got out of a bad predicament handily because of the
+excellent stops which were made by Fletcher of hits by Speaker and
+Lewis. With one out in New York's half of the inning Doyle batted
+safely, but Snodgrass forced him out.
+
+Gardner began the second inning with a three-base hit to right field and
+scored on a wild pitch. The next three batters were retired in order.
+With one out for New York, Merkle singled and stole second, but was not
+helped to get home.
+
+The third was started by a single by Wood and Hooper was given a base on
+balls. Yerkes bunted and Tesreau whipped the ball to third base ahead of
+Wood. Doyle and Fletcher made two fine stops and Speaker and Lewis were
+retired.
+
+Boston added another run in the fourth inning, being assisted by
+Tesreau's wildness. Gardner, who batted first, was given a base on
+balls. Stahl forced him out at second. Then Stahl stole second, to the
+immediate surprise of the Boston players and the chagrin of the New York
+catcher. Wagner's out at first helped him along and when Cady pushed a
+weak single to center field, just out of the reach of the players, Stahl
+scored. Wood was retired by Murray.
+
+With one out in the fifth Yerkes batted for a base, but was thrown out
+at second on Speaker's grounder and Speaker died trying to steal. New
+York had one out in the same inning, when Herzog hit safely, but neither
+Meyers nor Fletcher could help him.
+
+In the sixth the New York players began with a rush. Tesreau, the first
+batter, hit for a base. Devore followed with another single. Doyle with
+a "clean up" could have won for the Giants, but he lifted a high fly to
+Yerkes. Snodgrass batted to Yerkes, who made an extraordinarily good
+stop and threw Devore out at second. Murray forced Snodgrass at second
+and all. New York's early advantage went for naught.
+
+In the seventh the Giants scored their only run. After Merkle had struck
+out, Herzog batted for a base. Meyers lifted a terrific line drive to
+center field, but Speaker got under the ball. Fletcher hit hard and safe
+to right field for two bases and Herzog scored. McCormick batted for a
+base, but Fletcher, trying to score on the ball, was thrown out at the
+plate by Yerkes.
+
+In the eighth, with two out, Snodgrass was safe on Wagner's fumble.
+Murray rapped a single to left field but Merkle struck out. With two out
+for Boston Speaker batted a double to left field and was left. Ames
+pitched in the eighth for New York. In the ninth the Giants were scored
+upon again when Gardner hit for a single to center field. Stahl
+sacrificed, Wagner was given a base on balls and Cady forced Wagner,
+while Gardner was scoring.
+
+FIFTH GAME.
+Boston, Oct. 12. 1912.
+Boston 2; New York 1.
+Hits--Off Mathewson 5; Bedient 3.
+Struck out--Mathewson 2; Bedient 4.
+Bases on balls--Bedient 3.
+Attendance 34,683.
+
+The game was played on Saturday with Mathewson in the box for New York
+and Bedient for Boston. As was the case in the former game pitched by
+Mathewson in Boston, the verdict was general that perfect support would
+have won the contest for him, even though the score was but 2 to 1 in
+favor of Boston. Devore received a base on balls in the first inning and
+after Doyle was out on a long fly to right was forced out by Snodgrass
+in a double play. By the way this game was played under very adverse
+conditions so far as the weather was concerned. It was cold and gloomy.
+Hooper, the first Boston batter, as usual, began with his single to
+center field. Yerkes flied out to shortstop. Speaker hit safely and
+Lewis batted to Herzog, who made a beautiful stop on third, and touched
+the base ahead of Hooper. Gardner struck out.
+
+In the second inning Murray started off with a base on balls and the
+next three batters were retired in succession. With one out for Boston,
+Wagner batted safely to right field. The next two men were retired
+without reaching first.
+
+With one out in the third, Mathewson batted a single to center field and
+Devore followed with a base on balls, but Bedient got the next two
+batters.
+
+The third was the inning which broke the backs of the Giants. Hooper
+batted the ball to left center for three bases. Yerkes followed with a
+triple to center and Hooper scored. Speaker contributed with a ground
+hit, which Doyle should have got, but fumbled. Had he recovered the ball
+Boston would have made but one run in the inning. As it was, Yerkes
+scored on the misplay and that run lost the game for the Giants. The
+next two batters were retired and for the remainder of the contest
+Boston never had a man on first base, Mathewson pitching marvelous ball,
+by far the best game of the series, as it should easily have been a one
+run contest with not a base on balls nor a wild pitch.
+
+In the seventh inning Merkle began with a two-base hit to left field
+Herzog flied out to Wagner. Meyers flied out, but McCormick who batted
+for Fletcher, made a hit and Merkle scored. That spurt gave the Giants
+their sole run and they returned to New York that night with the series
+three to one against them.
+
+SIXTH GAME.
+New York, Oct. 14, 1912
+New York 5; Boston 2.
+Hits--Off Marquard 7; O'Brien 6, Collins 5.
+Struck out--Marquard 3; O'Brien 1, Collins 1.
+Bases on balls--Marquard 1.
+Attendance 30,622.
+
+With a Sunday in which to rest the series was resumed in New York on
+Monday, October 14. Marquard pitched for the Giants and O'Brien for the
+Bostons. Rest seemed to have recuperated the New York players more than
+their opponents. In the first inning of the game the Giants scored five
+runs and the contest was never in doubt after that. O'Brien made a
+costly balk in the first inning and the Boston players generally seemed
+to be less energetic and less confident than would have been expected
+from a team which had but one game to win to make the championship
+assured.
+
+The first inning really settled the outcome of the contest. After the
+Giants had made five runs Boston played through the other eight innings
+perfunctorily. The crowd of Boston enthusiasts, which had come to New
+York to see the finishing touches put on the Giants, was bitterly
+disappointed, while the New York enthusiasts, not over hopeful on
+account of the disposition of the Giants to blunder badly at vital
+moments, were at least in a much better frame of mind because of the
+rally by their team.
+
+Hooper was first at bat and as usual hit for a base. He was caught
+napping off first. Yerkes was easily retired. Speaker was given a base
+on balls and Lewis flied out.
+
+In New York's half Devore was retired at first. Doyle hit safely to
+center field. He stole second after Snodgrass struck out. Murray batted
+a single to left field and Doyle went to third. O'Brien made a palpable
+balk and Doyle scored from third, Murray going to second. Merkle banged
+a hard double to right field, Herzog followed with a double to left
+field, Meyers singled to left field, and actually stole second under the
+noses of the Boston players. Fletcher singled to right field and Meyers
+scored the fifth run of the inning; the other men who had crossed the
+plate being Doyle, Murray, Merkle and Herzog.
+
+In Boston's half of the second inning the Boston players scored twice
+and that was all they made in the game. Gardner was safe at first on
+Marquard's wild throw; Stahl singled to center. The next two batters
+were easily retired, but Engle, who batted for O'Brien, hit to left
+field for two bases, Devore missing the ball by pushing it away from him
+as he was running into it, and Gardner and Stahl scored.
+
+Boston began the third inning and the fourth inning with singles, but
+the runners failed to get around. In the eighth, with one out, Yerkes
+made a single, but was unable to score.
+
+With one out in the third for New York, Murray singled to right field,
+but was out trying to stretch the hit. Merkle hit for a base to left
+field and was out trying to steal.
+
+In the fourth, with one out, Meyers batted to left field for three
+bases, but was unable to score. These latter hits were made against
+Collins, who had taken O'Brien's place in the box.
+
+Devore began the fifth with a hit, but Doyle flied to short, and Devore
+was doubled off first in a play from right field. Collins continued to
+be effective in the next three innings, but the mischief had been done,
+so far as Boston was concerned, and the Red Sox simply did not have a
+rally in them.
+
+The teams again took a special train for Boston after the game and the
+remainder of the cavalcade followed over at midnight.
+
+SEVENTH GAME.
+Boston, Oct. 15, 1912.
+New York 11; Boston 4.
+Hits--Off Tesreau 9; Wood 7, Hall 9.
+Struck-out--Tesreau 6; Hall 1.
+Bases on balls--Hall 5; Tesreau 5.
+Attendance 32,630.
+
+The seventh game was played on Fenway Park, with Wood pitching for
+Boston and Tesreau for the Giants. Wood pitched for one inning and was
+hammered in every direction by the New York players, who ran riot on the
+field. They simply overwhelmed Boston and this contest, more than any
+other in the series, was so "one sided" as to be devoid of interest,
+except to the New York fans, who were eager to see the Giants win the
+championship. Devore, the first batter, hit safely to left field. Doyle
+rapped a single to center. Devore and Doyle made a double steal and that
+began the fireworks. Snodgrass pushed a double to right field. Murray's
+hit was a sacrifice. Merkle singled to center field. Herzog batted to
+Wood and Merkle was run down between second and third. Meyers singled to
+left field, Fletcher doubled to right field, and Tesreau made his first
+hit of the series, a single to left field. That counted all told six
+runs for the Giants and Tesreau added cruelty to the sufferings of the
+Red Sox by trying to steal second base and almost making it.
+
+In the second inning Gardner made a home run. Hall took the place of
+Wood in the box for Boston and Devore was given a base on balls. He
+stole second and Doyle got a base on balls. Devore was caught napping,
+but Snodgrass singled to right, scoring Doyle. The two next batters were
+retired.
+
+In the third Hall was safe on Fletcher's wild throw and Hooper singled
+but neither scored. Herzog and Meyers began with singles for New York,
+but neither of them got home. With one out in the fourth, Gardner was
+hit by a pitched ball and Stahl singled to left field. Neither of these
+players scored.
+
+In the fifth Hall began with a two-bagger to left. Hooper was given a
+base on balls and was forced out by Yerkes. Speaker was given a base on
+balls. The next two batters were retired, leaving Hall on third. There
+were two out for New York when Meyers made his third single, but he
+failed to get home.
+
+With one out in the sixth for Boston Wagner hit safely, but Cady was
+easily retired. Hall was given a base on balls, but Hooper struck out,
+ending the inning. In New York's half, with one out, Devore was given a
+base on balls. Doyle batted the ball over the fence in right field for a
+home run and Devore scored ahead of him.
+
+In Boston's half of the seventh, with one out, Speaker singled to
+center. Lewis batted to left field for two bases. That put Speaker on
+third. While Fletcher was getting Gardner out of the way, Speaker scored
+and Lewis reached home on Doyle's fumble of Stahl's grounder. In New
+York's half of this inning Merkle began with a single to center. Herzog
+flied to left field. Meyers made his fourth single of the afternoon, but
+Fletcher flied to right field. Tesreau hit to right for a base and
+Merkle scored.
+
+In the eighth Doyle muffed Cady's fly. Hall singled to right. Hooper's
+sacrifice fly gave Cady a run, Doyle began for New York with a single,
+but the next three batters were retired in order.
+
+In the ninth Herzog began with a base on balls. Wilson, who was
+catching, singled to center. He was doubled up with Fletcher on a long
+fly hit. Herzog, however, eventually scored his run, which was the
+seventh of the game for New York.
+
+In this contest the Giants ran bases with such daring that they had the
+Boston players confused and uncertain. Cady did not know whether to
+throw the ball or hold it, and the general exhibition of speed on the
+bases which was made by New York was characteristic of the team's dash
+in the race for the championship of the National League, and a system
+which the Boston players could not fathom.
+
+EIGHTH GAME.
+Boston, Oct. 16, 1912.
+Boston 3; New York 2 (ten innings.)
+Hits--Off Bedient 6, Wood 3; Mathewson 8.
+Struck out--Bedient 2, Wood 2; Mathewson 4.
+Bases on balls--Bedient 3, Wood 1; Mathewson 5.
+Attendance 16,970.
+
+On the following day, before the smallest crowd of the series, the final
+game was played in Boston. Many Boston fans, disgruntled at the manner
+in which some of them had been seated, deliberately remained away. The
+air was cold and bleak and in addition to all the rest the enthusiasts
+of Boston had given up the fight. Which merely goes to show the
+uncertainty of Base Ball. The New York players unquestionably had the
+championship won for nine and one half innings of the final game and
+then, by the simplest of errors, overturned all of the good which they
+had accomplished in their wonderful rally of the two days preceding.
+After outplaying the Bostons in a manner which showed some thing of the
+caliber of the teams when both were going at top speed, the New York
+team stopped short. As one wit dryly put it: "Boston did not win the
+championship, but New York lost it."
+
+Mathewson pitched for New York and Bedient for Boston until the end of
+the seventh inning.
+
+With two out for the Giants in the first Snodgrass was given a base on
+balls, but Murray was retired. Two were out for Boston when Speaker hit
+for a single to right field, but Lewis struck out. Again in the second
+two were out for New York when Meyers was safe on Speaker's muff.
+Fletcher singled over second, but Mathewson flied out.
+
+Hooper began the third with a base hit, but was left. Devore started for
+New York with a base on balls. Doyle and Snodgrass were out in
+succession, Devore advancing, and then Murray doubled to center field
+and Devore scored. In the fourth Herzog started with a two-bagger and if
+the ground rule had not been changed he would have had an easy triple,
+and ultimately a run, which would have changed all the outcome of the
+game. As it was, he did not score. In the fifth Devore began with a
+single and was out stealing second after Doyle had flied out and Hooper
+had made the most wonderful catch of the series, reaching over the right
+field fence to get the ball with his bare band. Snodgrass singled and
+Murray fouled out.
+
+In the sixth Meyers received a base on balls with two out but did not
+score. With one out Yerkes singled to right field and Speaker got a base
+on balls but no run followed.
+
+In the seventh Mathewson began with a single and was forced out by
+Devore, who was left on bases while two batters were retired. For
+Boston, with one out, Stahl hit safely to center field. It was a pop
+fly, which fell between three men, Fletcher, Murray and Snodgrass.
+Wagner was given a base on balls and Cady was an easy out. Henriksen,
+batting for Bedient, with two strikes against him, drove the ball on a
+line toward third base. In fact, it hit third base. It bounded so far
+back that Stahl scored the tieing run of the game.
+
+No runs were scored by either team in the eighth or the ninth innings.
+In the tenth, with one out, Murray lined a double to left field and
+scored on Merkle's hard single over second. That put the Giants in the
+lead, with Merkle on second. Herzog struck out and Wood threw out
+Meyers. The ball had been batted so hard by Meyers to Wood that it
+crippled the pitcher's hand and compelled him to cease playing. It was
+fortunate for Boston that the hit kept low. So much speed had been put
+into it by the stalwart Indian catcher that had the ball got into the
+outfield it would have gone to the fence. It was the undoing of Wood,
+but it really led to the victory of Boston.
+
+Engle batted for Wood in the tenth. He rapped a long fly to center field
+which was perfectly played by Snodgrass, but the center fielder dropped
+the ball. Engle went to second base.
+
+On top of his simple muff Snodgrass made a magnificent catch of Hooper's
+fly, which seemed to be good for three bases. Mathewson bent every
+energy to strike out Yerkes, but the batter would not go after the wide
+curves which were being served to him by the New York pitcher and
+finally was given a base on balls.
+
+Speaker hit the first ball pitched for an easy foul which should have
+been caught by Merkle. The ball dropped between Merkle, Meyers and
+Mathewson. As was afterward proved the capture of this foul would have
+saved the championship for the Giants.
+
+Speaker, with another life, singled to right and Engle scored the tieing
+run. The Giants still had a chance, but a feeble one, for Yerkes was on
+third, with but one out. Gardner flied to Devore. The New York
+outfielder caught the ball and made a game effort to stop the flying
+Yerkes at the plate, but failed to do so, and the game was over and the
+series belonged to Boston.
+
+Yet so keen had been the struggle, so great the excitement, so wonderful
+the rally of the New York club after having once given the series away,
+that it was the opinion generally that the defeated were as great in
+defeat as the victors were great in victory.
+
+The scores of the games are as follows:
+
+FIRST GAME.
+
+BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E. NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Hooper, r.f. 3 1 1 1 0 0 Devore, l.f. 3 1 0 0 0 0
+Yerkes, 2b 4 0 1 0 1 0 Doyle, 2b 4 1 2 2 7 0
+Speaker, c.f 3 1 1 0 1 0 Snodgrass, c.f. 4 0 1 2 0 0
+Lewis, l.f. 4 0 0 2 0 0 Murray, r.f. 3 0 1 1 0 0
+Gardner, 3b 4 0 0 1 1 0 Merkle, 1b 3 1 1 12 0 0
+Stahl, 1b 4 0 0 6 1 0 Herzog, 3b 4 0 2 1 1 0
+Wagner, ss 3 1 2 5 3 1 Meyers, c 3 0 1 6 1 0
+Cady, c 3 0 1 11 1 0 Fletcher, ss 4 0 0 3 1 1
+Wood, p 3 1 0 1 1 0 Tesreau, p 2 0 0 0 2 0
+ McCormick[1] 1 0 0 0 0 0
+ Crandall, p 1 0 0 0 1 0
+ Becker[2] 0 0 0 0 0 0
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 31 4 6 27 9 1 Totals 33 3 8 27 13 1
+
+1: McCormick batted for Tesreau in the seventh inning.
+2: Becker ran for Meyers in ninth inning.
+
+Boston 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0-4
+New York 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-3
+
+Sacrifice hits--Hooper, Cady. Two-base hits--Hooper, Wagner, Doyle.
+Three-base hit--Speaker. Double play--Stahl and Wood. Pitching
+record--Off Tesreau, 5 hits and 4 runs in 25 times at bat in 7 innings;
+off Crandall, 1 hit, 0 runs in 6 times at bat in 2 innings. Struck
+out--By Wood 11, Devore, Snodgrass, Merkle, Herzog, Meyers, Fletcher 3,
+Tesreau 2, Crandall; by Tesreau 4, Hooper, Speaker, Stahl, Gardner; by
+Crandall 2, Stahl, Gardner. Bases on balls--By Wood 2, Devore, Murray;
+by Tesreau 4, Hooper, Speaker, Wagner, Wood. First base on
+errors--Boston 1, New York 1. Fumbles--Wagner, Fletcher. Hit by pitched
+ball--By Wood, Meyers. Left on bases--Boston 6, New York 6.
+Umpires--Klem and Evans; field umpires--Rigler and O'Loughlin.
+Scorers--Richter and Spink. Time of game--2.10. Weather--Clear and warm.
+
+SECOND GAME.
+
+NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E. BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Snodgrass, l.f-r.f 4 1 1 0 0 0 Hooper, r.f. 5 1 3 3 0 0
+Doyle, 2b 5 0 1 2 5 0 Yerkes, 2b 5 1 1 3 4 0
+Becker, c.f. 4 1 0 0 1 0 Speaker, c.f. 5 2 2 2 0 0
+Murray, r.f-l.f 5 2 3 3 0 0 Lewis, l.f. 5 2 2 2 0 1
+Merkle, 1b 5 1 1 19 0 1 Gardner, 3b 4 0 0 2 0 0
+Herzog, 3b 4 1 3 2 4 0 Stahl, 1b 5 2 2 10 0 0
+Meyers, c 4 0 2 5 0 0 Wagner, ss 5 0 0 5 5 5
+Fletcher, ss 4 0 0 1 3 3 Carrigan, c 5 0 0 6 4 0
+McCormick[1] 0 0 0 0 0 0 Collins, p 3 0 0 0 1 0
+Mathewson, p 5 0 0 1 6 0 Hall, p 1 0 0 0 0 0
+Shafer[2], ss 0 0 0 0 3 0 Bedient, p 1 0 0 0 0 0
+Wilson[3], c 0 0 0 0 1 1
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 40 6 11 33 23 5 Totals 44 6 10 33 14 1
+
+1: McCormick batted for Fletcher in tenth inning. 2: Shafer ran for
+Meyers in tenth inning and succeeded Fletcher as shortstop in same
+inning. 3: Wilson succeeded Meyers as catcher in tenth inning.
+
+New York 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 0-6
+Boston 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0-8
+
+Left on bases--New York 9, Boston 6. First base on errors--New York 1,
+Boston 3. Two-base hits--Snodgrass, Murray, Herzog, Lewis 2, Hooper.
+Three-base hits--Murray, Merkle. Herzog, Yerkes, Speaker. Stolen
+bases--Snodgrass, Herzog, Hooper 2, Stahl. Sacrifice hit--Gardner.
+Sacrifice flies--Herzog, McCormick. Double play--Fletcher and Herzog.
+Pitching record--Off Collins, 9 hits and 3 runs in 30 times at bat in
+7-1/3 innings; off Hall, 2 hits and 3 runs in 9 times at bat in 2-2/3
+innings; off Bedient, no hits or runs in 1 time at bat in 1 inning.
+Struck out--By Mathewson 4, Stahl, Collins 2, Wagner; by Collins 6,
+Doyle, Merkle, Mathewson 2, Snodgrass; by Bedient 1, Doyle. Bases on
+balls--By Hall 4, Snodgrass, Doyle, Becker, Meyers; by Bedient 1,
+Becker. Fumbles--Fletcher 2. Muffed flies--Fletcher, Lewis. Muffed foul
+fly--Merkle. Muffed thrown ball--Wilson. Hit by pitcher--By Bedient,
+Snodgrass. Umpires--O'Loughlin and Rigler; field umpires--Klem and
+Evans. Scorers--Richter and Spink. Time of game--2.38. Weather--Cool and
+cloudy.
+
+THIRD GAME.
+
+NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E. BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Devore, 1.f. 4 0 2 2 0 0 Hooper, r.f. 3 0 0 1 0 0
+Doyle, 2b 3 0 0 3 1 0 Yerkes, 2b 4 0 1 3 1 0
+Snodgrass, c.f. 4 0 1 0 0 0 Speaker, c.f. 4 0 1 3 1 0
+Murray, l.f. 4 1 1 5 0 0 Lewis, l.f. 4 1 2 4 0 0
+Merkle, 1b 3 0 0 5 0 1 Gardner, 3b 3 0 1 0 2 0
+Herzog, 3b 2 1 1 1 3 0 Stahl, 1b 4 0 2 11 1 0
+Meyers, c 4 0 1 8 1 0 Wagner, ss 4 0 0 1 3 0
+Fletcher, ss 3 0 1 3 2 0 Carrigan, c 2 0 0 3 1 0
+Marquard, p 1 0 0 0 2 0 Engle[1] 1 0 0 0 0 0
+ O'Brien, p 2 0 0 1 5 0
+ Ball[2] 1 0 0 0 0 0
+ Cady, c 1 0 0 0 1 0
+ Bedient, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
+ Henriksen[3] 0 0 0 0 0 0
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 28 2 7 27 9 1 Totals 31 1 7 27 15 0
+
+1: Engle batted for Carrigan in eighth inning. 2: Ball batted for
+O'Brien in eighth inning. 3: Henriksen ran for Stahl in ninth inning.
+
+New York 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0-2
+Boston 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-1
+
+Left on bases--New York 6, Boston 7. First base on errors--Boston 1.
+Two-base hits--Murray, Herzog, Stahl, Gardner. Stolen bases--Devore,
+Fletcher, Wagner. Sacrifice hits--Merkle, Marquard, Gardner. Sacrifice
+fly--Herzog. Double play--Speaker and Stahl. Pitching record--Off
+O'Brien, 6 hints and 2 runs in 26 times at bat in 8 innings; off
+Bedient, 1 hit and 0 runs in 2 times at bat in 1 inning. Struck out--By
+Marquard 6, Hooper, Yerkes, Wagner, O'Brien 2, Ball; by O'Brien 3,
+Devore, Merkle, Meyers. Bases on balls--O'Brien 3, Fletcher, Doyle,
+Marquard; by Marquard 1, Hooper. Muffed thrown ball--Merkle. Hit by
+pitcher--By Bedient, Herzog. Umpires--Evans and Klem; field umpires--
+O'Loughlin and Rigler. Scorers--Richter and Spink. Time of game--2.16.
+Weather--Clear and cool.
+
+FOURTH GAME.
+
+BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E. NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Hooper, r.f. 4 0 1 1 0 0 Devore, l.f. 4 0 1 0 0 0
+Yerkes, 2b 3 0 1 2 5 0 Doyle, 2b 4 0 1 4 1 0
+Speaker, c.f. 4 0 1 2 0 0 Snodgrass, c.f. 4 0 0 2 0 0
+Lewis, l.f. 4 0 0 1 0 0 Murray, r.f. 4 0 1 3 0 0
+Gardner, 3b 3 2 2 0 2 0 Merkle, 1b 4 0 1 8 0 0
+Stahl, 1b 3 1 0 9 0 0 Herzog, 3b 4 1 2 2 1 0
+Wagner, ss 3 0 0 2 3 1 Meyers, c 4 0 0 5 1 1
+Cady, c 4 0 1 10 0 0 Fletcher, ss 4 0 1 3 6 0
+Wood, p 4 0 2 0 2 0 Tesreau, p 2 0 1 0 2 0
+ McCormick[1] 1 0 1 0 0 0
+ Ames, p 0 0 0 0 1 0
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 32 3 8 27 12 1 Totals 35 1 9 27 12 1
+
+1: McCormick batted for Tesreau in seventh inning.
+
+Boston 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1-3
+New York 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0-1
+
+Left on bases--Boston 7, New York 7. First base on errors--Boston 1, New
+York 1. Two-base hits--Speaker, Fletcher. Three-base hit--Gardner.
+Stolen bases--Stahl, Merkle. Sacrifice hits--Yerkes, Stahl. Double
+play--Fletcher and Merkle. Pitching record--Off Tesreau, 5 hits and 2
+runs in 24 times at bat in 7 innings; off Ames, 3 hits and 1 run in 8
+times at bat in 2 innings. Struck out--By Wood 8, Devore, Snodgrass.
+Murray 2, Merkle 2, Meyers, Tesreau; by Tesreau 5, Lewis, Stahl, Wagner,
+Cady 2. Bases on balls--By Tesreau 2, Hooper, Gardner; by Ames 1,
+Wagner. Fumble--Wagner. Wild throw--Meyers. Wild pitch--Tesreau.
+Umpires--Rigler and O'Loughlin; field umpires--Evans and Klem. Scorers--
+Richter and Spink. Time of game--2.06. Weather--Cool and cloudy, and
+ground heavy.
+
+FIFTH GAME.
+
+BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E. NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Hooper, r.f. 4 l 2 4 0 0 Devore, l.f. 2 0 0 0 0 0
+Yerkes, 2b 4 1 1 3 3 0 Doyle, 2b 4 0 0 0 3 1
+Speaker, c.f. 3 0 1 3 0 0 Snodgrass, c.f. 4 0 0 2 0 0
+Lewis, l.f. 3 0 0 1 0 0 Murray, r.f. 3 0 0 0 1 0
+Gardner, 3b 3 0 0 3 2 1 Merkle, 1b 4 1 1 15 0 0
+Stahl, 1b 3 0 0 7 0 0 Herzog, 3b 4 0 0 2 3 0
+Wagner, ss 3 0 1 1 1 0 Meyers, c 3 0 1 2 0 0
+Cady, c 3 0 0 5 0 0 Fletcher, ss 2 0 0 2 2 0
+Bedient, p 3 0 0 0 0 0 McCormick[1] 1 0 0 0 0 0
+ Shafer[2], ss 0 0 0 1 1 0
+ Mathewson, p 3 0 1 0 3 0
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 29 2 5 27 6 1 Totals 30 1 3 24 13 1
+
+1: McCormick batted for Fletcher in seventh inning. 2: Shafer ran for
+McCormick in seventh inning and then played shortstop.
+
+Boston 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 X--2
+New York 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0--1
+
+Left on bases--New York 5, Boston 3. First base on errors--New York 1,
+Boston 1. Two-base hit--Merkle. Three-base hits--Hooper, Yerkes. Double
+play--Wagner, Yerkes and Stahl. Struck out--By Mathewson 2, Gardner,
+Wagner; by Bedient 4, Devore, Snodgrass, Merkle, Mathewson. Bases on
+balls--By Bedient 3, Devore 2, Murray. Fumbles--Doyle, Gardner.
+Umpires--O'Loughlin and Rigler; field umpires--Klem and Evans.
+Scorers--Richter and Spink. Time of game--1.43. Weather--Warm and
+cloudy.
+
+SIXTH GAME.
+
+NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E. BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Devore, l.f. 4 0 1 2 0 1 Hooper, r.f. 4 0 1 2 2 0
+Doyle, 2b 4 1 1 1 1 0 Yerkes, 2b 4 0 2 3 1 1
+Snodgrass, c.f. 4 0 1 6 0 0 Speaker, c.f. 3 0 0 5 0 0
+Murray, r.f. 3 1 2 7 0 0 Lewis, l.f. 4 0 0 0 0 0
+Merkle, 1b 3 1 2 4 1 0 Gardner, 3b 4 1 0 0 1 0
+Herzog, 3b 3 1 1 1 1 0 Stahl, 1b 4 1 2 8 0 0
+Meyers, c 3 1 2 6 0 0 Wagner, 3b 4 0 0 3 0 0
+Fletcher, ss 3 0 1 0 2 0 Cady, c 3 0 1 3 2 1
+Marquard, p 3 0 0 0 2 1 O'Brien, p 0 0 0 0 1 0
+ Engle[1] 1 0 1 0 0 0
+ Collins, p 2 0 0 0 2 0
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 30 5 11 27 7 2 Totals 33 2 7 24 9 2
+
+1: Engle batted for O'Brien in second inning.
+
+New York 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 X--5
+Boston 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0--2
+
+Left on bases--Boston 5, New York 1. First base on errors--Boston 1.
+Two-base hits--Engle, Merkle, Herzog. Three-base hit--Meyers. Stolen
+bases--Speaker, Doyle, Herzog, Meyers. Double plays--Fletcher, Doyle and
+Merkle; Hooper and Stahl. Pitching record--Off O'Brien, 6 hits and 5
+runs in 8 times at bat in 1 inning; off Collins, 5 hits and 0 runs in 22
+times at bat in 7 innings. Struck out--By Marquard 3, Wagner, Gardner,
+Stahl; by O'Brien 1, Snodgrass; by Collins 1, Devore. Base on balls--By
+Marquard, Speaker. Fumble--Devore. Wild throw--Marquard. Muffed foul
+fly--Cady. Balk--O'Brien. Wild throw--Yerkes. Time of game--1.58.
+Umpires--Klem and Evans; field umpires--O'Loughlin and Rigler.
+Scorers--Richter and Spink. Weather--Warm and cloudy.
+
+SEVENTH GAME.
+
+NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E. BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Devore, r.f. 4 2 1 3 1 1 Hooper, r.h. 3 0 1 1 1 0
+Doyle, 2b 4 3 3 2 3 2 Yerkes, 2b 4 0 0 1 4 0
+Snodgrass, c.f. 5 1 2 1 0 0 Speaker, c.f. 4 1 1 4 0 1
+Murray, l.f. 4 0 0 1 0 0 Lewis, l.f. 4 1 1 3 0 0
+Merkle, 1b 5 1 2 10 0 1 Gardner, 3b 4 1 1 2 0 1
+Herzog, 3b 4 2 1 0 2 0 Stahl, 1b 5 0 1 11 1 0
+Meyers, c 4 1 3 6 0 0 Wagner, ss 5 0 1 4 4 0
+Wilson, c[1] 1 0 1 2 0 0 Cady, c 4 1 0 1 2 0
+Fletcher, ss 5 1 1 2 4 0 Wood, p 0 0 0 0 1 0
+Tesreau, p 4 0 2 0 6 0 Happ, p 3 0 3 0 5 1
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 40 11 16 27 16 4 Totals 36 4 9 27 18 3
+
+1: Wilson relieved Meyers in eighth inning.
+
+New York 6 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 1--11
+Boston 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0-- 4
+
+Left on bases--New York 8, Boston 12. First base on errors--Boston 1.
+Stolen bases--Devore 2, Doyle. Sacrifice hit--Murray. Sacrifice
+fly--Hooper. Two-base hits--Snodgrass, Hall, Lewis. Home runs--Doyle,
+Gardner. Double plays--Devore and Meyers; Speaker, unassisted. Pitching
+record--Off Wood, 7 hits and 6 runs in 8 times at bat in 1 inning; off
+Hall, 9 hits and 5 runs in 32 times at bat in 8 innings. Struck out--By
+Tesreau 6, Hooper 2, Yerkes, Gardner, Wagner, Cady; by Hall 1, Herzog.
+Bases on balls--By Tesreau 5, Hooper, Yerkes, Speaker, Lewis, Hall; by
+Hall 5, Devore 2, Doyle, Herzog, Tesreau. Fumbles--Doyle, Devore. Muffed
+thrown ball--Gardner. Wild throws--Merkle, Hall, Speaker. Muffed
+fly--Doyle. Wild pitches--Tesreau 2. Hit by pitched ball--By Tesreau,
+Gardner. Time of game--2.21. Umpires--Evans and Klem; field
+umpires--O'Loughlin and Rigler. Scorers--Richter and Spink.
+Weather--Cold and windy.
+
+EIGHTH GAME.
+
+BOSTON. AB. R. H. P. A. E. NEW YORK. AB. R. H. P. A. E.
+Hooper, r.f. 5 0 0 3 0 0 Devore, r.f. 3 1 1 3 1 0
+Yerkes, 2b 4 1 1 0 3 0 Doyle, 2b 5 0 0 1 5 1
+Speaker, c.f. 4 0 2 2 0 1 Snodgrass, c.f. 4 0 1 4 1 1
+Lewis, l.f. 4 0 0 1 0 0 Murray, l.f. 5 1 2 3 0 0
+Gardner, 3b 3 0 1 1 4 2 Merkle, 1b 5 0 1 10 0 0
+Stahl, 1b 4 1 2 15 0 1 Herzog, 3b 5 0 2 2 1 0
+Wagner, ss 3 0 1 3 5 1 Meyers, c 3 0 0 4 1 0
+Cady, c 4 0 0 5 3 0 Fletcher, ss 3 0 1 2 3 0
+Bedient, p 2 0 0 0 1 0 McCormick[1] 1 0 0 0 0 0
+Henriksen[2] 1 0 1 0 0 0 Mathewson, p 4 0 1 0 3 0
+Wood, p 0 0 0 0 2 0 Shafer[3], ss 0 0 0 0 0 0
+Engle[4] 1 1 0 0 0 0
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+Totals 35 3 8 30 18 5 Totals 38 2 9*29 15 2
+
+*: Two out in tenth inning when winning run was scored.
+
+1: McCormick batted for Fletcher in ninth inning. 2: Henriksen batted
+for Bedient in seventh inning. 3: Shafer player shortstop in tenth
+inning. 4: Engle batted for Wood in tenth inning.
+
+Boston 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2--3
+New York 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1--2
+
+Left on bases--New York 11, Boston 9. First base on errors--New York 1,
+Boston 1. Two-base hits--Murray 2, Herzog, Gardner, Stahl, Henriksen.
+Sacrifice hit--Meyers. Sacrifice fly--Gardner. Stolen base--Devore.
+Pitching record--Off Bedient, 6 hits and 1 run in 26 times at bat in 7
+innings; off Wood, 3 hits and 1 run in 12 times at bat in 3 innings.
+Struck out--By Mathewson 4, Yerkes, Speaker, Lewis, Stahl; by Bedient 2,
+Merkle, Fletcher; by Wood 2, Mathewson, Herzog. Bases on balls--By
+Mathewson 5, Yerkes, Speaker, Lewis, Gardner, Wagner; by Bedient 3,
+Devore, Snodgrass, Meyers; by Wood 1, Devore. Muffed fly--Snodgrass.
+Muffed foul fly--Stahl. Muffed thrown balls--Doyle, Wagner, Gardner.
+Fumbles--Speaker, Gardner. Time of game--2.39. Umpires--O'Loughlin and
+Rigler; field umpires--Klem and Evans. Scorers--Richter and Spink.
+Weather--Clear and cold.
+
+THE COMPOSITE SCORE.
+
+Following is a composite score of the eight games played, thus
+arranged to show at a glance the total work in every department:
+
+BOSTON.
+
+ G. AB. R. H. SB. SH. PO. A. E.
+Hooper........................ 8 31 3 9 2 2 16 3 ..
+Yerkes........................ 8 32 3 8 .. 1 15 22 1
+Speaker....................... 8 30 4 9 1 .. 21 2 2
+Lewis......................... 8 32 4 5 .. .. 14 .. 1
+Gardner....................... 8 28 4 5 .. 3 9 12 4
+Stahl......................... 8 32 3 9 2 1 77 3 1
+Wagner........................ 8 30 1 5 1 .. 24 24 3
+Cady.......................... 7 22 1 3 .. 1 35 9 1
+Wood.......................... 4 7 1 2 .. .. 1 6 ..
+Carrigan...................... 2 7 .. .. .. .. 9 5 ..
+Collins....................... 2 5 .. .. .. .. .. 3 ..
+Hall.......................... 2 4 .. 3 .. .. .. 5 1
+Bedient....................... 4 6 .. .. .. .. .. 1 ..
+[1]Engle...................... 3 3 1 1 .. .. .. .. ..
+O'Brien....................... 2 2 .. .. .. .. 1 6 ..
+[2]Ball....................... 1 1 .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
+[3]Henriksen.................. 2 1 .. 1 .. .. .. .. ..
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+ 273 25 60 6 8 222 101 14
+
+NEW YORK.
+
+ G. AB. R. H. SB. SH. PO. A. E.
+Devore........................ 7 24 4 6 4 .. 10 2 2
+Doyle......................... 8 33 5 8 2 .. 15 26 4
+Snodgrass..................... 8 33 2 7 1 .. 17 1 1
+Murray........................ 8 31 5 10 .. 1 23 1 ..
+Merkle........................ 8 33 5 9 1 1 83 1 3
+Herzog........................ 8 30 6 12 2 2 11 16 ..
+[4]Becker..................... 2 4 1 .. .. .. .. 1 ..
+Meyers........................ 8 28 2 10 1 1 42 4 1
+Fletcher...................... 8 28 1 5 1 .. 16 23 4
+Wilson........................ 3 1 .. 1 .. .. 2 1 1
+Shafer........................ 3 .. .. .. .. .. 1 4 ..
+Tesreau....................... 3 8 .. 3 .. .. .. 10 ..
+[5]McCormick.................. 5 4 .. 1 .. 1 .. .. ..
+Crandall...................... 1 1 .. .. .. .. .. 1 ..
+Mathewson..................... 3 12 .. 2 .. .. 2 12 ..
+Marquard...................... 2 4 .. .. .. 1 .. 4 1
+Ames.......................... 1 .. .. .. .. .. .. 1 ..
+ --- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+ 274 31 74 12 7[6]22l 108 17
+
+1: Engle batted for Carrigan in eighth inning of third game; for O'Brien
+in second inning of sixth game, and for Wood in tenth inning of eighth
+game.
+
+2: Ball batted for O'Brien in eighth inning of third game.
+
+3: Henriksen ran for Stahl in ninth inning of third game; and batted for
+Bedient in seventh inning of eighth game.
+
+4: McCormick batted for Tesreau in seventh inning of first game; for
+Fletcher in tenth inning of second game; for Tesreau in seventh inning
+of fourth game; for Fletcher in seventh inning of fifth game; and for
+Fletcher in ninth inning of eighth game.
+
+5: Becker ran for Meyers in ninth inning of first game.
+
+6: Two out in tenth inning of eighth game when winning run scored.
+
+ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Tl.
+Boston 3 4 2 1 1 1 6 2 2 3 0--25
+New York 11 3 3 1 1 2 3 3 2 2 0--31
+
+Left on bases--Boston 55, New York 53.
+
+Two-base hits--Boston: Lewis 3, Gardner 2, Stahl 2, Hooper 2, Henriksen
+1, Hall 1, Engle 1, Speaker 1, Wagner 1; total 14. New York: Murray 4,
+Herzog 4, Snodgrass 2, Merkle 2, Fletcher 1, Doyle 1; total 14.
+
+Three-base hits--Boston: Speaker 2, Yerkes 2, Gardner 1, Hooper 1; total
+6. New York: Murray 1, Merkle 1, Herzog 1, Meyers 1; total 4.
+
+Home runs--Boston: Gardner 1. New York: Doyle 1.
+
+Double plays--For Boston: Stahl and Wood 1; Speaker and Stahl 1; Wagner,
+Yerkes and Stahl 1; Hooper and Stahl 1; Speaker 1 (unassisted). For New
+York: Fletcher and Herzog 1; Fletcher and Merkle 1; Fletcher, Doyle and
+Merkle 1; Devore and Meyers 1.
+
+Struck out by Boston pitchers--By Wood: Merkle 3, Tesreau 3, Fletcher 3,
+Devore 2, Snodgrass 2, Herzog 2, Meyers 2, Murray 2, Crandall 1,
+Mathewson 1, total 21. By Collins: Doyle 1, Merkle 1, Snodgrass 1,
+Devore 1, Mathewson 2; total 6. By Bedient: Doyle 1, Devore 1, Snodgrass
+1, Mathewson 1, Fletcher 1, Merkle 2; total 7. By O'Brien: Devore 1,
+Merkle 1, Meyers 1, Snodgrass 1; total 4. By Hall: Herzog 1; total 1.
+Grand total 39.
+
+Struck out by New York pitchers--By Tesreau: Hooper 3, Cady 3, Stahl 2,
+Gardner 2, Wagner 2. Speaker 1, Yerkes 1, Lewis 1; total 15. By
+Mathewson: Stahl 2, Collins 2, Wagner 2, Gardner 1, Yerkes 1, Speaker 1,
+Lewis 1; total 10. By Marquard: Wagner 2, O'Brien 2, Hooper 1, Yerkes 1,
+Ball 1, Gardner 1, Stahl 1; total 9. By Crandall: Stahl 1, Gardner 1;
+total 2. Grand total 36.
+
+Bases on balls off Boston pitchers--Off Wood: Devore 2, Murray 1; total
+3. Off Hall: Doyle 2, Devore 2, Snodgrass 1, Becker 1. Meyers 1, Tesreau
+1, Herzog 1; total 9. Off Bedient: Devore 3, Becker 1, Murray 1,
+Snodgrass 1, Meyers 1; total 7. Off O'Brien: Fletcher 1, Doyle 1.
+Marquard 1; total 3. Grand total 22.
+
+Bases on balls off New York pitchers--Off Tesreau: Hooper 3, Speaker 2,
+Wagner 1, Wood 1, Gardner 1, Yerkes 1, Lewis 1, Hall 1: total 11. Off
+Marquard: Hooper 1, Speaker 1; total 2. Off Ames: Wagner 1; total 1. Off
+Mathewson: Yerkes 1, Speaker 1, Lewis 1, Gardner 1, Wagner 1; total 6.
+Grand total 19.
+
+Relief pitchers' records--Off Tesreau, 5 hits, 4 runs, in 25 times at
+bat in 7 innings; off Crandall, 1 hit, 0 runs, in 6 times at bat in 2
+innings in game of October 8. Off Collins, 9 hits. 3 runs, in 30 times
+at bat in 7-1/3 innings: off Hall, 2 hits, 3 runs, in 9 times at bat in
+2-2/3 innings; off Bedient, 0 hits, 0 runs, in 1 time at bat in 1
+inning, in game of October 9; off O'Brien, 6 hits, 2 runs, in 26 times
+at bat in 8 innings; off Bedient, 1 hit, 0 runs, in 2 times at bat in 1
+inning, in game of October 10. Off Tesreau, 5 hits, 2 runs, in 24 times
+at bat in 7 innings; off Ames, 3 hits, 1 run, in 8 times at bat in 2
+innings, in game of October 11. Off O'Brien, 8 hits, 5 runs, in 8 times
+at bat in 1 inning; off Collins, 5 hits, 0 runs, in 22 times at bat in 7
+innings, in game of October 14. Off Wood, 7 hits, 6 runs, in 8 times at
+bat in 1 inning; off Hall, 9 hits. 5 rung, in 32 times at bat in 8
+innings, in game of October 15. Off Bedient, 6 hits, 1 run, in 26 times
+at bat in 7 innings; off Wood, 3 hits, 1 runs, in 12 times at bat in 3
+innings, in game of October 16.
+
+Wild pitches--Tesreau 3.
+
+Balk--O'Brien 1.
+
+Muffed fly Balls--Fletcher 1, Lewis 1. Doyle 1, Snodgrass 1; total 4.
+
+Muffed foul fly--Merkle 1, Cady 1, Stahl 1; total 3.
+
+Muffed thrown balls--Wilson 1, Merkle 1, Gardner 2, Doyle 1, Wagner 1;
+total 6.
+
+Wild throws--Meyers 1, Marquard 1, Yerkes 1, Merkle 1, Hall 1, Speaker
+1; total 6.
+
+Fumbles--Wagner 2, Fletcher 3, Doyle 2, Gardner 2, Devore 2, Speaker 1;
+total 12.
+
+First base on errors--Boston 11, New York 5.
+
+Sacrifice flies--Herzog 2, McCormick 1, Hooper 1, Gardner 1; total 5.
+
+Hit by pitcher--By Bedient: Snodgrass 1, Herzog 1. By Wood: Meyers. By
+Tesreau: Gardner.
+
+Umpires--Evans and O'Loughlin, of the American League; Klem and Rigler,
+of the National League.
+
+Official scorers--Francis C. Richter of Philadelphia, and J. Taylor
+Spink of St. Louis, all games.
+
+Average time--2.13 7-8.
+
+Average attendance--3l,505.
+
+Weather--Clear and cool.
+
+INDIVIDUAL BATTING AVERAGES.
+
+Following are the official batting averages of all players participating
+in the World's Championship Series of 1912. They show that New York
+clearly outhit Boston. The team average of the Giants was 50 points
+higher than that of Boston. The Boston team had only four batters in the
+.300 class, while New York had five. Of the men who played all through
+the series, Herzog was high with .400. The figures are:
+
+INDIVIDUAL BOSTON BATTING.
+
+ G. AB. R. H. SB. SH. PC.
+Henriksen 2 1 -- 1 -- -- 1000
+Hall 2 4 -- 3 -- -- .750
+Engle 3 3 1 1 -- -- .333
+Speaker 8 30 4 9 1 -- .300
+Hooper 8 31 3 9 2 2 .290
+Wood 4 7 1 2 -- -- .286
+Stahl 8 32 3 9 2 1 .281
+Yerkes 8 32 3 8 -- 1 .250
+Gardner 8 28 4 5 -- 3 .179
+Wagner 8 30 1 5 1 -- .167
+Lewis 8 32 4 5 -- -- .156
+Cady 7 22 1 3 -- 1 .136
+Carrigan 2 7 -- -- -- -- .000
+Collins 2 5 -- -- -- -- .000
+Bedient 4 6 -- -- -- -- .000
+O'Brien 2 2 -- -- -- -- .000
+Ball 1 1 -- -- -- -- .000
+
+INDIVIDUAL NEW YORK BATTING.
+
+ G. AB. R. H. SB. SH. PC.
+Wilson 2 1 -- 1 -- -- 1000
+Herzog 8 30 6 12 2 2 .400
+Tesreau 3 8 -- 3 -- -- .375
+Meyers 8 28 2 10 1 1 .357
+Murray 8 31 5 10 -- 1 .323
+Merkle 8 33 5 9 1 1 .273
+Devore 7 24 4 6 4 -- .250
+McCormick 5 4 -- 1 -- 1 .250
+Doyle 8 33 5 8 2 -- .242
+Snodgrass 8 33 2 7 1 -- .212
+Fletcher 8 28 1 5 1 -- .179
+Mathewson 3 12 -- 2 -- -- .167
+Becker 2 4 1 -- -- -- .000
+Shafer 3 -- -- -- -- -- .000
+Crandall 1 1 -- -- -- -- .000
+Marquard 2 4 -- -- -- -- .000
+Ames 1 -- -- -- -- -- .000
+
+Team batting average: New York, .270; Boston, .220.
+
+INDIVIDUAL FIELDING AVERAGES.
+
+The individual and team fielding averages show Boston leading by a
+slight margin of .958 to .951. The figures follow:
+
+ CATCHERS.
+ G. PO. A. PB. E. PC. | G. PO. A. PB. E. PC.
+Carrigan 2 9 5 1000|Cady 7 35 9 1 .978
+Meyers 8 42 4 1 .979|Wilson 2 2 1 1 .750
+
+ PITCHERS.
+ G. PO. A. E. PC. | G. PO. A. E. PC.
+Tesreau 3 10 1000|Collins 2 3 1000
+Crandall 1 1 1000|Bedient 4 1 1000
+Mathewson 4 1 12 1000|O'Brien 2 1 6 1000
+Wood 4 1 6 1000|Hall 2 5 1 .833
+Ames 1 1 1000|Marquard 2 4 1 .800
+
+ FIRST BASEMEN.
+Stahl 8 77 3 1 .988|Merkle 8 83 1 3 .966
+
+ SECOND BASEMEN.
+Yerkes 8 15 22 1 .974|Doyle 8 15 26 4 .911
+
+ SHORTSTOPS.
+Shafer 3 1 4 1000|Fletcher 8 16 23 4 .907
+Wagner 8 24 24 3 .941
+
+ THIRD BASEMEN.
+Herzog 8 11 16 1000|Gardner 8 9 12 4 .840
+
+ OUTFIELDERS.
+Murray 8 23 1 1000|Lewis 8 14 1 .933
+Becker 1 1 1000|Speaker 8 21 2 2 .920
+Hooper 8 16 3 1000|Devore 7 10 2 2 .857
+Snodgrass 8 17 1 1 .947|
+
+Team fielding average: Boston, .958; New York, .951.
+
+THE PITCHERS' RECORDS.
+
+The pitching averages show Marquad and Bedient the only pitchers with
+clean records. Marquad won two games and did not meet defeat, and
+Bedient won one without a defeat. Wood won three and lost one. Following
+are the figures:
+
+ G. W. L. T. TO. PC. H. BB. HB. SO. IP. AB.
+
+Bedient 4 1 1 1 1000 10 7 2 7 17 59
+Marquard 2 2 1000 14 2 9 18 66
+Wood 4 3 1 1 .750 27 3 1 21 22 88
+Tesreau 3 1 2 2 .333 19 11 1 15 23 85
+Collins 2 1 1 .000 14 6 14-1/3 52
+Hall 2 1 1 .000 11 9 1 10-2/3 41
+Mathewson 3 2 1 .000 23 5 10 29-2/3 108
+Ames 1 .000 3 1 2 8
+Crandall 1 .000 1 2 2 6
+O'Brien 2 2 2 .000 12 3 4 9 34
+
+Wild pitches--Tesreau 3.
+
+Wiltse, Ames, Hall and Crandall did not pitch a full game and are
+charged with neither defeat nor victory. Tesreau pitched first 7 innings
+of first game and is charged with defeat. Crandall finished game.
+Collins pitched first 7-1/3 innings of second game, Hall followed for
+2-2/3 innings and Bedient for 1 inning, but as game was tie no one has
+defeat or victory charged against him. O'Brien pitched 8 innings of
+third game and is charged with defeat. Bedient pitched in the last
+inning. In fourth game Tesreau pitched first 7 innings and is marked
+with defeat. Ames finished the game. In sixth game O'Brien pitched only
+1 inning, but lost the game. Collins completed the game. Wood pitched
+only one inning of seventh game and is charged with a defeat. Hall
+pitched the last 8 innings. Bedient pitched first 7 innings of eighth
+game and retired to permit Henriksen to bat for him with New York
+leading. Boston then tied score and Wood, who succeeded Bedient, finally
+won out in the tenth inning, Wood getting credit for game.
+
+FINANCIAL RESULT.
+
+The attendance and receipts of the 1912 World's Championship Series were
+the highest of any series ever played, excelling even the receipts of
+the 1911 Athletic-Giant series, which reached proportions of such
+magnitude that it was thought they would not soon be exceeded, or even
+equaled. In the 1911 Athletic-Giant series the total attendance was
+179,851 paid; the receipts, $342,364; each club's share, $90,108.72;
+National Commission's share, $34,236.25; the players' share for four
+days, $127,910.61; each player's share on the Athletic team, $3,654.58;
+and each player's share on the New York team, $2,436.30. For purposes of
+comparison we give the official statement of the 1911 World's Series:
+
+ Attendance. Receipts.
+First game, New York................ 38,281 $77,359.00
+Second game, Philadelphia........... 26,286 42,962.50
+Third game, New York................ 37,216 75,593.00
+Fourth game, Philadelphia........... 24,355 40,957.00
+Fifth game, New York................ 33,228 69.384.00
+Sixth game, Philadelphia............ 20,485 36,109.00
+ --------- -------------
+Totals ............................ 179,851 $342,364.50
+
+
+Each club's share................................ $90,108.72
+National Commission's share....................... 34,236.25
+Players' share for four games................ 127,910.61
+
+
+Herewith is given the official attendance and receipts of the Giant-Red
+Sox world's Series of 1912, together with the division of the receipts,
+as announced by the National Commission. The players shared only in the
+first four games, divided 60 percent, to the winning team and 40 per
+cent, to the losing team.
+
+ Attendance. Receipts.
+First game, New York................ 35,722 $75,127.00
+Second game, Boston................. 30,148 58,369.00
+Third game, Boston.................. 34,624 63,142.00
+Fourth game, New York............... 36,502 76,644.00
+Fifth game, Boston.................. 34,683 63,201.00
+Sixth game, New York................ 30,622 66,654.00
+Seventh game, Boston................ 32,630 57,004.00
+Eighth game, Boston ................ 16,970 30,308.00
+ --------- -------------
+Totals............................. 251,901 $490,449.00
+
+
+Each club's share............................... $146,915.91
+National Commission's share....................... 49,044.90
+Players' share for four games.................... 147,572.28
+
+
+
+
+NATIONAL LEAGUE SEASON OF 1912
+
+BY JOHN B. FOSTER.
+
+
+Spurts of energy on the part of different clubs, unexpected ill fortune
+on the part of others, and marked variations of form, which ranged from
+the leaders almost to the lowliest teams of the second division,
+injected spasmodic moments of excited interest into the National League
+race for 1912 and marked it by more vicissitudes than any of its
+immediate predecessors.
+
+By careful analysis it is not a difficult matter to ascertain why the
+New Yorks won. Their speed as a run-getting machine was much superior to
+that of any of their opponents. Every factor of Base Ball which can be
+studied demonstrates that fact. They led the National League in batting
+and they led it in base running. They were keenly alive to the
+opportunities which were offered to them to win games. Indeed, their
+fall from the high standard which they had set prior to the Fourth of
+July was quite wholly due to the fact that they failed to take advantage
+of the situations daily, as they had earlier in the season, and their
+return to that winning form later in the season, which assured them of
+the championship, was equally due to the fact that they had regained
+their ability to make the one run which was necessary to win. That,
+after all, is the vital essential of Base Ball. To earn the winning run,
+not by hook or crook, but to earn it by excelling opponents through
+superior play in a department where the opponents are weak, is the story
+of capturing a pennant.
+
+They were dangerous men to be permitted to get on bases, and their
+dearest and most bitter enemies on the ball field, with marked candor,
+confessed that such was the case. Opposing leaders admitted that when
+two or three of the New York players were started toward home plate one
+or two of them were likely to cross the plate and that, too, when one
+run might tie the score and two runs might win the game.
+
+While there were some who were quite sanguine before the beginning of
+the season that the Giants would win the championship, there were others
+who were convinced that they would have a hard time to hold their title,
+and after the season was over both factions were fairly well satisfied
+with their preliminary forecast.
+
+The runaway race which New York made up to the Fourth of July gave
+abundant satisfaction to those who said they would win, and the setback
+which the team received after the Fourth of July until the latter part
+of August afforded solace to those who were certain in their own minds
+that the New Yorks would have much trouble to repeat their victory of
+1911.
+
+It must not be forgotten, too, that the New York team had the benefit of
+excellent pitching throughout the year. In the new record for pitchers,
+which has been established this season by Secretary Heydler of the
+National League, and which in part was the outcome of the agitation in
+the GUIDE for a new method of records, in which the various Base Ball
+critics of the major league cities so ably contributed their opinions,
+Tesreau leads all the pitchers in the matter of runs which were earned
+from his delivery. Mathewson is second, Ames is fifth, Marquard seventh
+and Wiltse and Crandall lower, and while both the latter were hit freely
+in games in which they were occasionally substituted for others, they
+pitched admirably in games which they won on their own account.
+
+In the opinion of the writer this new method, which has been put into
+usage by Secretary Heydler, is far superior to anything which has been
+offered in years as a valuable record of the actual work of pitchers. It
+holds the pitcher responsible for every run which is made from his
+delivery. It does not hold him responsible for any runs which may have
+been made after the opportunity has been offered to retire the side, nor
+does it hold him responsible for runs which are the result of the
+fielding errors of his fellow players. On the other hand, if he gives
+bases on balls, if he is batted for base hits, if he makes balks, and if
+he makes wild pitches, he must stand for his blunders and have all such
+runs charged against him as earned runs.
+
+Nothing proves more conclusively the strength of this manner of
+compiling pitchers' records than that Rucker, by the old system, dropped
+to twenty-eighth place in the list of National League pitchers, finished
+third in the earned run computation, showing that if he had been given
+proper support he probably would have been one of the topmost pitchers
+of the league, even on the basis of percentage of games won, which is
+more vainglorious than absolutely truthful.
+
+The Giants are to be commended for playing clean, sportsmanlike Base
+Ball. There were less than a half dozen instances in which they came
+into conflict with the umpires. The president of the National League
+complimented Manager McGraw in public upon the excellent conduct of his
+team upon the field and the players deserved the approbation of the
+league's chief executive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The general work of the Pittsburgh team throughout the year was good. It
+must have been good to have enabled the players to finish second in the
+championship contest, but the team, speaking in the broadest sense,
+seemed to be just good enough not to win the championship. As one man
+dryly but graphically put it: "Pittsburgh makes me think of a wedding
+cake without the frosting."
+
+Fred. Clarke, manager of the team, adhered resolutely to his
+determination not to play. It was not for the reason that the impulse to
+play did not seize upon him more than once, but he had formed a
+conviction, or, at least, he seemed to have formed one, that it would be
+better for the organization if the younger blood were permitted to make
+the fight. It was the opinion of more than one that Clarke incorrectly
+estimated his own ball playing ability, in other words, that he was a
+better ball player than he credited himself with being.
+
+As batters the Pittsburghs were successful. As fielders they were
+superior to the team that won the championship. As run-getters they were
+not the equal of the Giants. In brief, fewer opportunities were accepted
+to make runs by a much larger percentage than was the case with the New
+York club, which can easily be verified by a careful study of the scores
+of the two teams as they opposed one another, and as they played against
+the other clubs of the league.
+
+It took more driving power to get the Pittsburgh players around the
+bases than it did those of New York. In tight games, where the advantage
+of a single run meant victory, the greater speed of the New York players
+could actually be measured by yards in the difference of results.
+Naturally it was not always easy for the Pittsburgh enthusiasts to see
+why a team, which assuredly fielded better than the champions and batted
+almost equally as well, could not gain an advantage over its rivals, but
+the inability of Pittsburgh Base Ball patrons to comprehend the lack of
+success on the part of their team existed in the fact that they had but
+few opportunities, comparatively speaking, to watch the New York players
+and found it difficult to grasp the true import of that one great factor
+of speed, which had been so insistently demanded by the New York manager
+of the men who were under his guidance.
+
+Pittsburgh had an excellent pitching staff. Even better results would
+have been obtained from it if Adams had been in better physical
+condition. An ailing arm bothered him. While he fell below the standard
+of other years, one splendid young pitcher rapidly developed in Hendrix,
+and Robinson, a left-hander, with practically no major league
+experience, pushed his way to a commanding position in the work which he
+did.
+
+Until the Giants made their last visit to Pittsburgh in the month of
+August the western team threatened to come through with a finish, which
+would give them a chance to swing into first place during the month of
+September, but the series between New York and Pittsburgh turned the
+scale against the latter.
+
+Fired with the knowledge that they were at the turning point in the race
+the New York players battled desperately with their rivals on
+Pittsburgh's home field and won. Even the Pittsburgh players were filled
+with admiration for the foe whom they had met, and while they were not
+in the mood to accept defeat with equanimity, they did accept it
+graciously and congratulated the victors as they left Pittsburgh after
+playing the last game of the season which had been scheduled between
+them on Forbes Field.
+
+First base had long bothered Clarke. Frequent experiments had been made
+to obtain a first baseman, who could play with accuracy on the field and
+bat to the standard of the team generally. Clarke transferred Miller
+from second base to first and the change worked well. More graceful and
+more accurate first basemen have been developed than Miller, but in his
+first year of play at the bag he steadied the team perceptibly and
+unquestionably gave confidence to the other men.
+
+But making a first baseman out of Miller took away a second baseman and
+second base gave Clarke more or less concern all of the season. At that,
+Pittsburgh was not so poorly off in second base play as some other of
+the teams of the senior circuit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two important factors contributed to the success of the Chicagos in
+1912. For a few days they threatened to assume the leadership of the
+National League. With the opportunity almost within their grasp the
+machine, which had been patched for the moment, fell to pieces, and the
+Cubs, brought to a climax in their work by all the personal magnetism
+and the driving power of which Chance was capable, were exhausted by
+their strongest effort. The courage and the wish were there, but the
+team lacked the playing strength.
+
+To return to the factors which contributed to the club's success. They
+were the restoration to health of Evers, and a complete change in the
+manner of playing second base, added to the consistent and powerful
+batting of Zimmerman. The latter led the league in batting and
+repeatedly pulled his club through close contests by the forceful manner
+in which he met the ball with men on bases.
+
+A third contributing force, though less continuous, was the brief spurt
+which was made by the Chicago pitchers in the middle of the season. They
+were strongest at the moment that the New York team was playing its
+poorest game, and their temporary success assisted in pushing the
+Chicagos somewhat rapidly toward the top of the league. They were not
+resourceful enough nor strong enough to maintain their average of
+victories and finished the season somewhat as they had begun.
+
+The most of Chicago's success began to date from the early part of July,
+when Lavender, pitching for the Cubs, won from Marquard of the Giants,
+who, to that time, had nineteen successive victories to his credit.
+Chicago continued to win, and the New York team made a very poor trip
+through the west.
+
+Lavender's physical strength held up well for a month and then it became
+quite evident that he had pitched himself out. Then was the time that
+the Chicagos could have used to good advantage two and certainly one
+steady and reliable pitcher, who had been through the fire of winning
+pennants and would not be disturbed by the importance which attached to
+games in which his club was for the moment the runner-up in the
+championship race.
+
+Chicago managed to hold its own fairly well against the New York team.
+Indeed, the Cubs beat the New Yorks on the series for the season, but
+there were other clubs, Pittsburgh, St. Louis and Cincinnati, which won
+from Chicago when victories were most needed by the Cubs, and their hope
+to capture the pennant deserted them as they were making their last trip
+through the east.
+
+The race was not without its bright side for Chicago. Even if the Cubs
+did finish third for the first time since Chance had been manager of the
+organization, it was a welcome sight to see Evers apparently in as good
+form as ever and Zimmerman so strong with the bat that the leadership of
+the batters finally returned to Chicago after it had been absent for
+years.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cincinnati, under the management of Henry O'Day, finished fourth in the
+race. It was by no means a weak showing for the new manager, in view of
+the team which he was compelled to handle. Until the New York club
+played its first series in Cincinnati, which began May 18, the Reds were
+booming along at the top of the league, apparently with no intention
+that they might ever drop back. It was New York that won three out of
+the five games played and took the lead in the race, and when that
+happened Cincinnati never was in front again.
+
+To the other managers, who had been watching the work of the Cincinnatis
+it was apparent that sooner or later the break would have to come for
+the reason that, as the season progressed, better pitching would have to
+be faced by the Cincinnati club, while it was doubtful whether the
+Cincinnati pitchers could do any better than they were doing. The
+manager seemed to have known this, for when the break did come and the
+Reds began to totter, he said in reference to their downfall that no
+team could be expected to win with only ordinary pitching to assist it.
+
+In this manner Cincinnati played through the middle of the season always
+just a little behind most of its opponents. As the latter days of the
+year began to dawn the Reds began to improve and not the least of which
+was in the better work of the pitchers.
+
+They did well enough to beat Philadelphia for fourth place, and while
+O'Day did not have the satisfaction of finding his first year as a
+manager generous enough to him to make him the runner-up for the
+championship team, he actually put his club in the first division, which
+is something in which many managers have failed and some of them
+managers of long experience.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Misfortune and ill luck always attaches itself in a minor degree to
+every team which engages in a championship contest, but most assuredly
+Philadelphia had more of its share of reverses through accidents to
+players and illness than any team of the National League. Yet the
+Philadelphias were courageous players from whom little complaint was
+heard. They took their misfortunes with what grace they could and played
+ball with what success they could achieve, whether they had their best
+team in the field or their poorest.
+
+Strangely enough they played an important part in the results of the
+race. Frequently they defeated the Chicagos, all too frequently for the
+comfort of the Chicago Base Ball enthusiasts, and when the loss of a
+game or two by the Philadelphias to the Chicagos might have turned the
+race temporarily one way or the other, the Philadelphias, with decided
+conviction, refused to lose.
+
+It may not be necessary to call attention to the fact of absolute
+fairness in the contests for championships in the various leagues which
+comprise Base Ball in its organized form. The day has passed when the
+Base Ball enthusiast permits his mind to dwell much upon that sort of
+thing, if ever he did. But if it were necessary to advance an argument
+as to the integrity of the sport and the high class of the men who are
+engaged in the summer season in playing professional Base Ball, there
+could be nothing better to prove that the price of victory is the one
+great consideration, greater than the fact of Philadelphia's success
+against a team which was a strong contender against that which finally
+won the championship.
+
+As much as Philadelphia desired that New York should be beaten, for
+there was no love lost between the teams in a ball playing way, the
+fighting spirit and the predominant desire to add to the column of
+victories as many games as possible brought forth the best efforts of
+the team of ill fortune against Chicago and struck telling blows against
+Chicago's success at the most timely moments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As a whole the St. Louis team did not play as well in 1912 as it did in
+the preceding year. There was some bad luck for St. Louis as well as
+Philadelphia. The players did not get started as well as they had in the
+previous two years. Their spring training was more or less disastrous,
+for they were one of the clubs to run into the most contrary of spring
+weather.
+
+Perhaps the worst trouble which the St. Louis team had, take the season
+through from beginning to finish, was in regard to the pitchers. There
+were two or three young men on the team who seemed at the close of the
+season of 1911 to be likely to develop into high class pitchers in 1912.
+They pitched well in 1912 at intervals. One day it seemed as if they at
+last had struck their stride and the next they faltered and their
+unsteadiness gave their opponents the advantage which they sought.
+
+Perhaps, if the St. Louis team had been a little stronger to batting it
+would have rated higher among the organization of the National League.
+Several games were lost which would have been taken into camp by a
+better display at bat. In fielding the team was much stronger and the
+success of the infield, combined with some excellent outfield work now
+and then, frequently held the team up in close battles, but when the
+pitchers faltered on the path the fielders were not able to bear the
+force of the attack.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For three seasons in succession Brooklyn seems to have been fated to
+start the season with bad luck and misfortune. The spring training trip
+did not bring to Brooklyn all that had been expected owing to the
+inclement weather.
+
+When the team began the season at Washington Park a tremendous crowd
+filled the stands. Long before it was time for the game to begin the
+spectators became unruly and swarmed over the field. It was impossible
+for the ground police to do anything with the excited enthusiasts and at
+last the city police were asked to assist. They tried to clear the
+field, but only succeeded in driving the crowd from the infield.
+Spectators were so thick in the outfield that they crowded upon the
+bases and prevented the players from doing their best. For that matter
+the outfielders could not do much of anything.
+
+A ground rule of two bases into the crowd was established, and the New
+York players, who were the opponents of Brooklyn, took advantage of it
+to drive the ball with all their force, trusting that it would sail over
+the heads of the fielders and drop into the crowd. They were so
+successful that they made a record for two-base hits and Brooklyn was
+overwhelmed.
+
+This unfortunate beginning appeared to depress the Brooklyn team. The
+players recovered slightly, but had barely got into their stride again
+when accidents to the men began to happen. Some of them became ill, and
+the manager was put to his wits end to get a team on the field which
+should make a good showing.
+
+Fighting against these odds Brooklyn made the best record that it could.
+As the season warmed into the hotter months the infield had to be
+rearranged. There was disappointment in the playing of some of the
+infielders. It was also necessary to reconstruct the outfield. Unable to
+get all of the men whom he would have desired the manager continued to
+experiment and his experiments brought forth good fruit, for
+unquestionably the excellent work of Moran, who played both right field
+and center field for Brooklyn, was a great help to the pitchers. By the
+time that the Base Ball playing year was almost concluded Brooklyn had
+so far recovered that it was able to place a better nine on the diamond
+than had been the case all of the year.
+
+Boston never was expected to be a championship organization. The
+material was not there for a championship organization, but Boston did
+play better ball than in 1911 and that is to the credit of players,
+manager and owner. The club had changed hands, but the new owner had not
+been able to readjust all of the positions to suit him. He put the best
+nine possible in the field with what he had. Never threatening to become
+a championship winning team Boston played steadily with what strength it
+possessed and always a little better than in 1911, so that the year
+could not fairly be considered unsuccessful at its finish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Going back to the beginning of the year and looking over the contest for
+the National League championship of 1912, it is not uninteresting,
+indeed it is of much interest to call attention to the remarkably odd
+record which was made by New York to win the pennant. In that record
+stands the story of the fight, with striking shifts from week to week.
+
+The first game played by the Giants was against Brooklyn, as has been
+related, and it was won by New York and that, by the way, was the game
+in which Marquard began his admirable record as a pitcher for the
+season.
+
+The Giants lost the next three games. Two of them were to Brooklyn and
+one to Boston, and the players of the New York team began to wonder a
+little as to what had happened to them.
+
+Then New York won nine straight games from the eastern clubs, being
+stopped finally by Philadelphia on the Polo Grounds. But that defeat did
+not check them. They started on another winning spurt and played
+throughout the west without a defeat until they arrived in Cincinnati.
+This total of victories was nine. All of the games on the schedule were
+not played because of inclement weather.
+
+Cincinnati won twice from New York and then the Giants turned the tables
+on the Reds, who had been leading the league. They threw them out of the
+lead, which they never regained, and won another succession of nine
+victories. That made three times consecutively that they had won a total
+of twenty-seven games in groups of nine, assuredly an unusual result.
+
+Losing one game they again entered the winning class. This time they won
+six games in succession. Then they lost a game. After this single defeat
+they won but three games. Their charm of games in blocks of nine had
+deserted them. They were beaten twice after winning three, and
+Pittsburgh was the team.
+
+Then they won another single game and immediately after that victory
+lost to Brooklyn. But that was the last defeat for a long time. Well
+into the race, with their condition excellent, and playing better ball
+than they had played since their wonderful spurt of the month of
+September in 1911, they won sixteen games in succession.
+
+The morning of the Fourth of July dawned hot and sultry. The air was
+thick and muggy and without life. The Giants were scheduled to play two
+games that day with Brooklyn, the first in the morning and the second in
+the afternoon. If they won both of them they would tie a former record,
+which had been made by the New York team, for consecutive victories.
+
+Perhaps it may have been reaction after the long strain of winning or it
+may have been an uncommonly good streak of batting on the part of
+Brooklyn. Surely Brooklyn batted well enough, as the morning game went
+to the latter team by the score of 10 to 4. In the afternoon Brooklyn
+again beat the Giants by the score of 5 to 2. Wiltse pitched for New
+York and Stack for Brooklyn.
+
+The New York team went to Chicago and won twice. Then it lost. The
+fourth game was won from Chicago and then the Giants lost two in
+succession.
+
+They won one game and immediately after that lost four in succession.
+Chicago began to have visions of winning the pennant.
+
+From Chicago the Giants went to Pittsburgh, stood firm in a series of
+three games, winning two and losing one. Their next call was at
+Cincinnati and beginning with that series they got back to form a trifle
+and won five games in succession.
+
+Returning home they were beaten on the Polo Grounds three games in
+succession by Chicago. After that New York settled into a winning stride
+again and won six games in succession. Pittsburgh came to the Polo
+Grounds and stopped the winning streak of the champions by defeating
+them three times in succession. That was a hard jolt for any team to
+stand. Yet the Giants rallied and won the test game of the Pittsburgh
+series.
+
+It was but a momentary pause, for after another victory St. Louis beat
+New York. The Giants won another game and the next day lost to St.
+Louis. That finished the home games for New York and the team started
+west, facing a desperate fight. They lost the first game to Chicago, won
+the next and lost the third. Going from Chicago to St. Louis they won
+three games in succession, returning to Chicago, lost a postponed game
+with the Cubs.
+
+From Chicago their path led them to Pittsburgh where they lost the first
+contest. Then they made the stand of the season when they beat the
+Pittsburghs four games in succession.
+
+Cincinnati turned the tables on the Giants to the consternation of the
+New York fans and won twice, when it seemed as if the Giants were about
+to start on a career which would safely land the championship. The
+Giants returned home and beat Brooklyn in the first game and lost the
+second. They won the next two and then lost again. The championship was
+still in abeyance. Again they won and then lost to Philadelphia.
+
+Here came another test in a Philadelphia series at Philadelphia which
+contained postponed games, and once more rallying with all their might,
+won four games and lost the last of this series of five.
+
+Following that they won three games and then lost to St. Louis. They won
+three times in succession and then lost four games to Chicago and
+Cincinnati, but all of this time Chicago was gradually falling away
+because it was necessary that the Cubs should continue to win successive
+victories if they were to beat New York for the championship.
+
+The Giants atoned for the four defeats at the hands of Chicago and
+Cincinnati by winning the next four games in succession, and while this
+did not actually settle the championship, that is, the definite
+championship game had not been played, the race was practically over and
+all that was left to fight for in the National League was second place,
+in which Chicago and Pittsburgh were most interested. The pitching staff
+of the Chicagos had worn out under the strain and the Cubs were beaten
+out by Pittsburgh.
+
+The semi-monthly standing of the race by percentages follows:
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON APRIL 30.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+Cincinnati 10 3 .769 Pittsburgh 5 7 .417
+New York 8 3 .727 Philadelphia 4 6 .400
+Boston 6 6 .500 St. Louis 5 8 .385
+Chicago 5 7 .417 Brooklyn 4 7 .364
+
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON MAY 15.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 18 4 .810 St. Louis 10 16 .385
+Cincinnati 19 5 .792 Boston 9 15 .375
+Chicago 12 12 .500 Philadelphia 7 13 .350
+Pittsburgh 9 12 .429 Brooklyn 7 14 .333
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON MAY 31.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 28 7 .800 St. Louis 20 22 .455
+Cincinnati 23 17 .675 Philadelphia .14 19 .426
+Chicago 19 17 .628 Brooklyn 12 22 .353
+Pittsburgh 18 17 .514 Boston 13 26 .333
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JUNE 15.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 37 10 .787 Philadelphia 20 24 .455
+Pittsburgh 27 20 .574 St. Louis 23 31 .426
+Chicago 26 21 .563 Brooklyn 16 30 .348
+Cincinnati 25 23 .553 Boston 16 35 .314
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JUNE 30.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 50 11 .820 Philadelphia 24 33 .421
+Pittsburgh 37 25 .597 Brooklyn 24 36 .400
+Chicago 34 26 .567 St. Louis 27 42 .391
+Cincinnati 35 32 .522 Boston 20 46 .303
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JULY 15.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 58 19 .753 Philadelphia 34 38 .472
+Chicago 47 28 .627 St. Louis 34 49 .410
+Pittsburgh 45 31 .592 Brooklyn 30 48 .385
+Cincinnati 41 39 .513 Boston 22 59 .272
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JULY 31.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 67 24 .736 Cincinnati 45 49 .479
+Chicago 57 34 .626 St. Louis 41 55 .427
+Pittsburgh 52 37 .684 Brooklyn 35 59 .372
+Philadelphia 45 43 .511 Boston 25 66 .275
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON AUGUST 15.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 73 30 .709 Cincinnati 50 58 .463
+Chicago 69 36 .657 St. Louis 47 60 .439
+Pittsburgh 65 40 .619 Brooklyn 39 69 .361
+Philadelphia 50 54 .481 Boston 28 76 .269
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON AUGUST 31.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 82 36 .695 Cincinnati 57 65 .467
+Chicago 79 42 .653 St. Louis 53 59 .434
+Pittsburgh 71 50 .587 Brooklyn 44 76 .367
+Philadelphia 59 60 .496 Boston 37 84 .306
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON SEPTEMBER 15
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 95 40 .704 Philadelphia 63 70 .474
+Chicago 83 61 .619 St. Louis 57 80 .416
+Pittsburgh 82 53 .607 Brooklyn 50 85 .370
+Cincinnati 68 68 .500 Boston 42 93 .311
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON SEPTEMBER 30
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC. Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+New York 101 45 .692 Philadelphia 70 77 .476
+Pittsburgh 91 57 .615 St. Louis 62 88 .413
+Chicago 89 68 .605 Brooklyn 57 91 .385
+Cincinnati 74 76 .493 Boston 42 100 .324
+
+STANDING OF CLUBS AT CLOSE OF SEASON.
+
+ Club. N.Y. Pitts. Chi. Cin. Phil. St.L. Bkln. Bos. Won. PC.
+New York -- 12 9 16 17 15 16 18 103 .682
+Pittsburgh 8 -- 13 11 14 15 14 18 92 .616
+Chicago 13 8 -- 11 10 15 17 17 91 .607
+Cincinnati 6 11 10 -- 8 13 16 11 75 .490
+Philadelphia 5 8 10 14 -- 11 13 12 73 .480
+St. Louis 7 7 7 9 11 -- 10 12 63 .412
+Brooklyn 6 8 5 6 9 11 -- 13 58 .379
+Boston 3 4 6 11 10 10 9 -- 52 .340
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+ Lost 48 58 59 78 79 90 95 101
+
+The Chicago-Pittsburgh game at Chicago, October 2, was protested by the
+Pittsburgh club and thrown out of the records, taking a victory from the
+Chicago club and a defeat from the Pittsburgh club.
+
+
+
+
+AMERICAN LEAGUE SEASON OF 1912
+
+BY IRVING E. SANBORN, CHICAGO.
+
+
+Pre-season predictions in Base Ball do not carry much weight
+individually, but when many minds, looking at the game from different
+angles, agree on the main points there usually is good reason behind
+such near unanimity. Outside of Boston it is doubtful if any experienced
+critic of Base Ball in the country expected the Red Sox to be converted
+from a second division team into pennant winners in one short season. If
+such expectancy existed in Boston it was partially a case of the wish
+fathering the thought. The majority of men believed the machine with
+which Connie Mack had achieved two league and two world's championships
+was good for at least one more American League pennant. That expectation
+was based on the comparative youth of the important cogs in the Athletic
+machine. Yet this dope went all wrong. The Athletics were beaten out by
+two teams which were in the second division in 1911, one of them as low
+as seventh place.
+
+The reason for these form reversals were several. The Boston and
+Washington teams improved magically in new hands, while the Athletics
+went back a bit, partly because of too much prosperity and partly
+because of adversity. Having come from behind in 1911 and made a winning
+from a wretched start, the Mackmen apparently thought they could do it
+again and delayed starting their fight until it was too late. The loss
+of the services of Dan Murphy for more than half of the season also was
+a prime factor.
+
+The White Sox were the season's sensations both ways and for a time kept
+everybody guessing by their whirlwind start under new management. They
+walked over every opponent they tackled for the first few weeks, then
+began to slip and it required herculean efforts to keep them in the
+first division at the finish. The Chicago team always was a puzzle to
+all parties to the race, including itself.
+
+From the outset there was almost no hope for the other four teams in the
+league. Cleveland and Detroit occasionally broke into the upper circles
+for a day or two in the early weeks of the season, but not far enough to
+rouse any false anticipations among their supporters. St. Louis and New
+York quickly gravitated to the lower strata and remained there, the
+Yankees finally losing out in their battle with the Browns to keep out
+of last place.
+
+Five American League teams started the season under new managers. One of
+the three which began the race under leaders retained from the previous
+year changed horses in mid-stream. Jake Stahl, Harry Wolverton, Clark
+Griffith, Harry Davis and James Callahan were the new faces in the
+managerial gallery. Some of them were not exactly new to the job but
+were in new jobs. Of these Stahl, Griffith and Callahan proved
+successful leaders and the first named became the hero of a world's
+championship team when the last ball of the series was caught. Davis
+resigned during the season and was succeeded by Joe Birmingham, who
+almost duplicated the feat of George Stovall in 1911, putting new life
+into the Cleveland team and starting a spurt which made the race for
+position interesting. Wolverton stuck the season out in spite of
+handicaps that would have discouraged anybody, then handed in his
+resignation. Wallace, who started the year at the helm again in St.
+Louis, cheerfully handed over the management to Stovall, who had been
+transplanted into the Mound City in the hope of making Davis' task
+easier in Cleveland. Stovall made the Browns a hard team to beat and had
+the mild satisfaction of hoisting them out of the cellar which they had
+occupied for the better part of three seasons.
+
+An unpleasant feature of the season, but one which had beneficial
+results, was the strike of the Detroit players, entailing the staging of
+a farcical game in Philadelphia between the Athletics and a team of
+semi-professionals. This incident grew out of an attack on a New York
+spectator by Ty Cobb while in uniform and the immediate suspension of
+the player for an indefinite period.
+
+The prompt and unyielding stand taken by President Johnson against the
+action of the Detroit players and the diplomatic efforts of President
+Navin of that club averted serious or extended trouble and undoubtedly
+furnished a warning against any similar act in the near future. Another,
+excellent result was the effort made by club owners to prevent the abuse
+of the right of free speech by that small element of the game's
+patronage which finds its greatest joy in abusing the players, secure in
+the knowledge that it is practically protected from personal injury in
+retaliation.
+
+In the development of new players of note the league enjoyed an average
+season, and a considerable amount of new blood was injected into the
+game in the persons of players who made good without attracting freakish
+attention. The rise of the Washington team from seventh to second place
+brought its youngsters into the limelight prominently, and of these
+Foster and Moeller were commended highly. Gandil, who had his second
+tryout in fast company, plugged the hole at first base which had worried
+Washington managers for some time. Shanks also made a reputation for
+himself as a fielder. These men were helped somewhat by the showing of
+their team, but the case of Gandil would have been notable In any
+company. His first advent into the majors with the White Sox showed him
+to be an exceedingly promising player, but for some reason his work fell
+off until he was discarded into the International League. There he
+quickly recovered his stride and, when he did come back shortly after
+the season opened last spring, he demonstrated that he had the ability
+to hit consistently and proved a tower of strength to Griffith's team.
+
+Baumgardner of the St. Louis Browns was an example of a youngster making
+good in spite of comparatively poor company. His pitching record with a
+team which finished in seventh place stamps him as one of the best, if
+not the best, of the slab finds of the year. Jean Dubuc of Detroit was
+another find of rare value and still another was Buck O'Brien of Boston,
+but these had the advantage over Baumgardner of getting better support
+both in the field and at bat. O'Brien in particular was fortunate to
+break in with a championship team.
+
+The White Sox introduced three youngsters who made good and promise to
+keep on doing so. Two of them, George Weaver and Morris Rath, started
+the season with Chicago and the third, Baker Borton, joined the team
+late in the summer. Still later Kay Schalk started in to make what looks
+like a name for himself as a catcher.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No better illustration of the slight difference between a pennant
+winning machine and a losing team in the American League has occurred
+recently than the Boston Red Sox furnished last year. It did not differ
+materially from the team of 1910 which compelled the use of the nickname
+"Speed Boys." Jake Stahl was a member of that team, and except for the
+absence of Stahl in 1911, the champions of 1912 were composed of
+practically the same men who finished in the second division only the
+year before. But for the showing of 1910 the whole credit for last
+season's transformation might be attributed to Manager Stahl. Much of it
+unquestionably is his by right, and there is no intent here to deprive
+him of any of the high honors he achieved.
+
+To Stahl's arrangement of his infield probably is due much of the
+improvement in the team. The outfield trio of wonderful performers did
+not perform any more wonders last year than in the previous season, but
+what had been holes on the infield were plugged tightly. Many looked
+askance when Larry Gardner, supposedly a second baseman, was assigned to
+third, but the results more than justified the move, and it made room at
+second for Yerkes, a player who had proved only mediocre on the other
+side of the diamond. This switch and the return of Stahl, who is a grand
+mark to throw at on first base, gave the infield the same dash and
+confidence as the outfield possessed, and the addition of some pitching
+strength in Bedient and O'Brien did the rest. It is the ability to
+discover just the right combination that differentiates the real manager
+from the semi-failure.
+
+The Red Sox were in the race from the start, but they were eclipsed for
+a time by the White Sox. In spite of that the Bostonians never faltered
+but kept up a mighty consistent gait all the way and wore down all
+competitors before the finish. Stahl's men never were lower than second
+place in the race with the exception of three days early in May. when
+Washington poked its nose in front of the Red Sox and started after the
+White Sox, only to be driven back into third place by the men of
+Callahan themselves. For more than a week in April Boston was in the
+lead. Then Chicago went out and established a lead so long that it
+lasted until near the middle of June. Boston attended strictly to its
+knitting, however. Without stopping in their steady stride, the Red Sox
+hung on, waiting for the Callahans to slump. When their chance came in
+June the Bostonians jumped into the lead--June 10 was the exact
+date--and never thereafter did they take any team's dust.
+
+By the Fourth of July Boston had a lead of seven games over the
+Athletics. The Red Sox kept right along at their even gait and a month
+later were leading by the same margin over Washington, which had
+displaced the former champions. On September 1 Boston's lead was
+thirteen games, but it was not until September 18 that the American
+League pennant was actually cinched beyond the possibility of losing it.
+
+All season Stahl's men were known as a lucky ball team. Delving into the
+files for the dope, revealed the fact that the newspaper reports of
+about every third game they played on the average contained some
+reference to "Boston's luck." This does not detract anything from their
+glory. No team ever won a major league pennant unless it was lucky. No
+team ever had as steady a run of luck as Boston enjoyed in 1912, unless
+that team made a lot of its own luck by persistently hammering away when
+luck was against it and keeping ever on the alert to take advantage of
+an opening.
+
+That is the explanation of the unusual consistency that marked the work
+of the Red Sox all season and the fact they did not experience a serious
+slump. In the first month of the season they won twelve games and lost
+eight. The second month of the race was their poorest one--the nearest
+they came to a slump. In that month they won eight and lost ten games.
+In the third month Boston won twenty-three and lost seven games. The
+fourth month saw them win twenty games and lose eight and in the fifth
+month their record was twenty victories and five defeats. In the final
+stages of the race the Red Sox were not under as strong pressure from
+behind and naturally did not travel as fast after sighting the wire, but
+the figures produced explain why Boston won the pennant. It started well
+and kept going faster until there was no longer need for speed. The
+annexation of the world's championship in a record breaking world's
+series with the New York Giants was a fitting climax to their season's
+achievement.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Clark Griffith stalked through the west on his first invasion of
+the season with a team of youngsters, some of them practically unknown,
+and declared he was going after the pennant, everybody laughed or wanted
+to. A few weeks later everybody who had laughed was sorry, and those who
+only wanted to laugh were glad they didn't. For Griffith kept his men
+keyed up to the fighting pitch during the greater part of the season,
+and when they did start slumping in September, he made a slight switch
+on his infield, applied the brakes and started them going up again. The
+result was that Washington finished second for the first time in its
+major league history, winning that position in the closing days of the
+race after a bitter tussle with the passing world's champions.
+
+The acquisition of Gandil from Montreal plugged a hole at first base
+which had defied the efforts of several predecessors to stop and it
+helped make a brilliant infield, for it gave the youngsters something
+they were not afraid to throw at. In giving credit for the work of
+Griffith's infield, the inclination is to overestimate the worth of the
+new stars. But there was a tower of strength at short in George McBride,
+who has been playing steadily and consistently at that position for
+several seasons without being given one-tenth the credit his work has
+merited.
+
+The Washington team at one time or another occupied every position in
+the race except the first and last. The Senators were in seventh place
+for a few days in the opening weeks of the season, but not anywhere
+nearly as long as they were in second place later on. They climbed out
+of the second division by rapid stages and after May 1 they were driven
+back into it only once during the rest of the year. That was for three
+days in the beginning of June. In the meantime they had knocked Boston
+out of second place for a short while in May and, most of the way, had
+enjoyed a close fight with Philadelphia for third and fourth spots. Near
+the middle of June, after the Red Sox had ousted their White namesakes
+from first place, the Senators also passed Chicago and started after
+Boston. But the youngsters were not yet hardened to the strain and soon
+fell back to third and fourth. On July 5 Washington went into second
+place and held onto it, with the exception of three days, for a period
+of two months. September brought a slump and Griffith's men surrendered
+the runner-up position to the Athletics for about two weeks, then came
+back and took it away from the Mackmen at the end.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What happened to the world's champion Athletics the public did not
+really know until after the middle of the season. Then the suspensions
+of Chief Bender and Rube Oldring blazoned the fact that Manager Mack's
+splendid system of handling a Base Ball team by moral suasion had fallen
+down in the face of overconfidence and too much prosperity. Few people
+saw any reason for changing their belief in the prowess of the Athletics
+during the first half of the season, because they were in as good
+position most of the time as they had been the year previous at the same
+stage of the race. They were expected to make the same strong finish
+that swept everything before it in 1911. Not until the second half of
+the season was well under way did the adherents of the Mackmen give up
+the battle.
+
+Philadelphia's sterling young infield seemed to stand up all right all
+the year, but the outfield and the slab staff gave Connie Mack sleepless
+nights. When Dan Murphy was injured in Chicago in June it was discovered
+what he had meant to the team. Dan was what the final punch is to a
+boxing star. His timely batting was missed in knocking out opponents,
+and the injury kept him out all the rest of the season. The strain which
+Jack Coombs gave his side in the world's series of 1911 proved more
+serious and lasting than was expected, and if Eddie Plank had not come
+back into grand form it would have been a tougher season than it was for
+the Athletics.
+
+The Mackmen made a bad beginning for champions, and on May 1 were in the
+second division. During all of May and part of June they climbed into
+the first division and fell out of it with great regularity. Not until
+near the middle of June did the Athletics gain a strangle hold on the
+upper half of the league standing, from that time on they kept above the
+.500 mark, and toward the end of June they met the White Sox coming
+back. There was a short scuffle during the early part of July among the
+Athletics, Senators and White Sox for the possession of the position
+next to Boston. Then Chicago was pushed back, leaving Philadelphia and
+Washington to fight it out the rest of the way. Trimming the Phillies
+four out of five games in their city series did not lessen the gloom of
+the Athletics.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The White Sox by their meteoric career demonstrated the value of good
+condition at the start. Although the Chicagoans experienced tough
+weather in Texas last spring they fared better than any of the other
+teams in their league, and that fact, combined with the readiness with
+which youth gets into playing trim, enabled the White Sox to walk
+through the early weeks of their schedule with an ease that astonished
+everybody. Even prophets who were friendly to them had expected no such
+showing. So fast did the Callahans travel that on May 3 they had lost
+only four games, having won thirteen in that time. But Boston was
+hanging on persistently. Chicago's margin over the Red Sox varied from
+four to five and a half games; during May, on the fourteenth of that
+month the White Sox had won twenty-one games and lost only five, giving
+them the percentage of .808. During part of this time they were on their
+first invasion of the east. May 18 saw the Chicago men five and a half
+games in the lead and their constituents were dreaming of another
+world's pennant almost every night.
+
+Even the doubters were beginning to believe Manager Callahan had found
+the right combination. Just then came the awakening. The luck which had
+been coming their way began breaking against them with remarkable
+persistency. Plays that had won game after game went wrong and youth was
+not resourceful enough to offset the breaks. The White Sox began to fall
+away fast in percentage, but managed to cling to the lead until June 10.
+Boston passed them right there and the Chicagoans kept on going.
+
+By mid-season Manager Callahan was fighting to keep his men in the first
+division and their slump did not end until they landed in fifth place
+for a couple of days in August. Then in desperation Callahan began
+switching his line-up and by herculean effort--and the help of Ed
+Walsh--climbed back into the upper quartet and stuck there to the
+finish. It was a desperate remedy to take Harry Lord off third base,
+where he had played during most of his professional career, and try to
+convert him into an outfielder, a position in which he had had no
+experience at all. But Lord was too good an offensive player to take out
+of the game, in spite of his slump at third base, and he was willing to
+try the outfield. Results justified the move. Lord learned outfielding
+rapidly, and Zeider proved that third base was his natural position. The
+acquisition of Borton for first base enabled Callahan to put Collins in
+the outfield, and the White Sox in reality were a stronger team when
+they finished than when they started their runaway race in April. With
+one more reliable pitcher to take his turn regularly on the slab all
+season the White Sox would have kept in the race. Callahan's men made up
+for some of the disappointment they produced by beating the Cubs in a
+nine-game post-season series, after the Cubs had won three victories.
+Two of the nine games were drawn and one other went into extra innings,
+making a more extended combat than the world's series.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cleveland's 1912 experience was almost identical with that of 1911, even
+to swapping managers in mid-season. Harry Davis, for years first
+lieutenant to Connie Mack, took the management or the Naps under a
+severe handicap. He succeeded a temporary manager, George Stovall, who
+had made good in the latter half of the previous season, but who could
+not be retained without abrogating a previous agreement with Davis. The
+public did not take kindly to the situation when the Naps failed to get
+into the fight, and the new management had a pitching staff of
+youngsters with out much of a catching staff to help them out when in
+trouble.
+
+The Cleveland team never was prominent in the race after the first
+fortnight, although it retained a respectable position at the top of the
+second division, with an occasional journey into the first division
+during the first month or six weeks. In the middle of June the Naps
+dropped back into sixth place, below Detroit, for a while, then took a
+brace and reclaimed the leadership of the second squad for part of July.
+Midway in August found Cleveland apparently anchored in sixth spot and,
+with the consent of the Cleveland club owners, Manager Davis resigned
+his position.
+
+The management was given to Joe Birmingham, who took hold of it with
+enthusiasm but without experience, just as Stovall did the previous
+year. He infused new life into the team, shook it up a bit, and improved
+its playing so much that Cleveland passed Detroit before the end of the
+race, and was threatening to knock Chicago out of fourth place at one
+time. This would have happened but for the brace of the White Sox.
+Profiting by previous experience the club owners did not look around for
+a permanent manager until they saw what Birmingham could do, and in
+consequence were in position to offer him the leadership of the Naps for
+the season of 1913.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What was left to Manager Jennings from the great Detroit team that had
+won three straight pennants was slowing up, with the exception of Tyrus
+Cobb, who has yet to reach the meridian of his career, and the Georgian
+got into trouble fairly early in the season, with the result that he was
+suspended for a considerable period. That and the strike of the Tigers
+in Philadelphia threw a monkey-wrench into the machinery, resulting in a
+tangle which Jennings was unable to straighten out all the season. There
+was a problem at first base which he had a hard time solving. The break
+in Del Gainor's wrist the season before had not mended as it should have
+done, and he was unable to play the position regularly. Moriarty was
+pressed into service there and did good work in an unfamiliar position;
+then the infield was shifted several times without marked benefit.
+Donovan, who had always been of great help on the slab in hot weather,
+was not equal to the task of another year and was made manager of the
+Providence team. Jean Dubuc was the only one of the young pitchers who
+proved a star, but his work kept the Tigers from being a lot more
+disappointing proposition than they were.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+St. Louis and New York were outclassed from the start. Two weeks after
+the season opened it was apparent they were doomed to fight it out for
+the last round on the ladder. That the Browns finally escaped the cellar
+in the closing days of the race was due largely to the efforts of
+Stovall, who was made manager to succeed Wallace near the middle of the
+season.
+
+As early as the first of May it was seen the Browns and Yankees were
+destined to trail. The New York team quickly gravitated to the bottom.
+It started without the services of Catcher Eddie Sweeney, who held out
+for a larger salary, and it had a manager at the helm who was
+inexperienced in major league leadership. Not until April 24 did New
+York win a game and in that time it had lost seven straight,
+postponements accounting for the rest of the time.
+
+St. Louis got a little better start and for a while was inclined to
+dispute sixth place with Detroit, but on May 1 the Browns found only New
+York between them and the basement. In the middle of May the Yankees
+passed St. Louis and ran seventh in the race until July. 4. But accident
+and injury, and the loss of Cree, shot the Yankees to pieces. For nearly
+six weeks, however, it was a battle royal between New York and St. Louis
+to escape the last hole, but in the middle of August the Yankees again
+established their superiority, retaining seventh place until after the
+middle of September. In the homestretch the new blood given Stovall
+enabled him to pull his men out of the last notch just before the
+schedule ran out. This feat was soon forgotten in the defeat of the
+Browns by the Cardinals in their post-prandial series for the
+championship of the Mound City.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The year was not prolific of freak or record-breaking performances in
+the American League. Walter Johnson of Washington, and Joe Wood of
+Boston were credited with sixteen straight victories, which raised the
+American League record in that respect from fourteen straight, formerly
+held by Jack Chesbro of the Yankees. Mullin of Detroit and Hamilton of
+St. Louis added their names to the list of hurlers who have held
+opponents without a safe hit in nine innings. Mullin performed his
+hitless feat against St. Louis and Hamilton retaliated by holding
+Detroit without a safety. The number of games in which pitchers escaped
+with less than four hits against them was smaller than usual, however.
+There were only seventy-eight shut-out games recorded last season by
+comparison with the American League's record of 145.
+
+The longest game of the younger league's season lasted nineteen innings,
+Washington defeating Philadelphia in that combat 5 to 4, and it was
+played late in September when the two teams were scrapping for second
+place. The American League record for overtime is twenty-four innings,
+held by Philadelphia and Boston. There were a lot of slugging games in
+1912, but not as many as during the season of 1911. Philadelphia piled
+up the highest total, 25, in eight innings, but it was made against the
+semi-professional team which wore Detroit uniforms on the day the Tigers
+struck. The highest genuine total of hits was twenty-three, made by the
+Athletics against New York pitchers. The Athletics also run up the
+highest score of the league's season when they compounded twenty-four
+runs against Detroit In May.
+
+The semi-monthly standing of the race by percentages follows:
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON MAY 1.
+ Club. Won. Lost. PC.
+ Chicago 11 4 .733
+ Boston 9 5 .643
+ Washington 8 6 .615
+ Cleveland 7 6 .538
+ Athletics 7 7 .600
+ Detroit 6 10 .375
+ St. Louis 5 9 .357
+ New York 3 10 .231
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON MAY 15.
+
+ Chicago 21 6 .778
+ Boston 16 8 .667
+ Washington 12 12 .500
+ Cleveland 11 11 .500
+ Detroit 13 14 .481
+ Athletics 10 12 .466
+ New York 6 15 .286
+ St. Louis 6 17 .261
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JUNE 1.
+
+ Chicago 29 12 .707
+ Boston 25 14 .641
+ Detroit 21 20 .512
+ Athletics 17 17 .500
+ Cleveland 18 19 .486
+ Washington 19 21 .476
+ New York 12 23 .343
+ St. Louis 12 27 .308
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JUNE 15.
+
+ Boston 33 19 .635
+ Chicago 33 21 .611
+ Washington 33 21 .611
+ Athletics 27 21 .563
+ Detroit 26 29 .473
+ Cleveland 23 28 .451
+ New York 17 31 .364
+ St. Louis 15 37 .288
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JULY 1.
+
+ Boston 47 21 .691
+ Athletics 39 25 .609
+ Chicago 38 28 .576
+ Washington 37 31 .551
+ Cleveland 33 38 .492
+ Detroit 33 36 .478
+ New York 18 44 .290
+ St. Louis 18 45 .288
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON JULY 15.
+
+ Boston 56 26 .683
+ Washington 60 33 .602
+ Athletics 46 36 .668
+ Chicago 44 35 .567
+ Cleveland 42 42 .500
+ Detroit 40 43 .488
+ New York 22 53 .298
+ St. Louis 22 56 .282
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON AUGUST 1.
+
+ Boston 67 31 .684
+ Washington 61 37 .622
+ Athletics 55 41 .573
+ Chicago 49 36 .516
+ Detroit 48 42 .485
+ Cleveland 45 43 .464
+ New York 31 53 .333
+ St. Louis 30 56 .312
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON AUGUST 15.
+
+ Boston 76 34 .691
+ Athletics 66 43 .606
+ Washington 67 44 .604
+ Chicago 54 55 .495
+ Detroit 55 58 .487
+ Cleveland 51 59 .464
+ New York 36 73 .327
+ St. Louis 36 74 .321
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON SEPTEMBER 1.
+
+ Boston 87 37 .702
+ Washington 77 49 .611
+ Athletics 73 50 .593
+ Chicago 62 61 .504
+ Detroit 57 70 .449
+ Cleveland 54 71 .432
+ New York 45 78 .366
+ St. Louis 43 82 .344
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON SEPTEMBER 15.
+
+ Boston 97 39 .713
+ Athletics 81 56 .591
+ Washington 82 57 .590
+ Chicago 67 69 .493
+ Detroit 64 75 .461
+ Cleveland 62 75 .453
+ New York 48 88 .353
+ St. Louis 47 89 .346
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS ON OCTOBER 1.
+
+ Boston 103 48 .691
+ Washington 89 60 .567
+ Athletics 89 60 .567
+ Chicago 74 76 .493
+ Cleveland 72 77 .483
+ Detroit 69 80 .463
+ St. Louis 52 98 .347
+ New York 49 100 .329
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS AT CLOSE OF SEASON
+
+ Bos. Wash. Ath. Chic. Clev. Det. S.L. N.Y. Won PC
+ Boston -- 12 15 16 11 15 17 19 105 .691
+ Washington 10 -- 7 13 18 14 14 15 91 .599
+ Athletics 7 18 -- 10 14 13 16 17 99 .592
+ Chicago 6 9 12 -- 11 14 13 13 78 .506
+ Cleveland 11 4 8 11 -- 13 15 13 75 .490
+ Detroit 6 8 9 8 9 -- 13 16 69 .451
+ St. Louis 5 8 6 9 7 9 -- 9 58 .344
+ New York 3 7 5 9 8 6 13 -- 50 .329
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
+ Lost 47 61 62 76 78 84 101 102
+
+ NATIONAL LEAGUE
+
+ STANDING OF CLUBS AT CLOSE OF SEASON.
+
+ N.Y. Pitts.Chi. Cin. Phil.St.L. Bkln. Bos. Won. PC.
+
+New York -- 12 9 16 17 15 16 18 103 .682
+Pittsburgh 8 -- 13 11 14 15 14 18 93 .616
+Chicago 13 8 -- 11 10 15 17 17 91 .607
+Cincinnati 6 11 10 -- 8 13 16 11 75 .498
+Philadelphia 5 8 10 14 -- 11 13 12 73 .480
+St. Louis 7 7 7 9 11 -- 10 12 63 .412
+Brooklyn 6 8 5 6 9 11 -- 13 58 .379
+Boston 3 4 6 11 10 10 9 -- 52 .340
+ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ----
+Lost 48 58 59 78 79 90 95 101
+
+The Chicago-Pittsburgh game at Chicago, October 2, was protested by the
+Pittsburgh club and thrown out of the records, taking a victory from the
+Chicago club and a defeat from the Pittsburgh club.
+
+CHAMPIONSHIP WINNERS IN PREVIOUS YEARS.
+
+1871- Athletics .759 | 1885- Chicago .770 | 1899- Brooklyn .682
+1872- Boston .830 | 1886- Chicago .726 | 1900- Brooklyn .603
+1873- Boston .729 | 1887- Detroit .637 | 1901- Pittsburgh .647
+1874- Boston .717 | 1888- New York .641 | 1902- Pittsburgh .741
+1875- Boston .899 | 1889- New York .659 | 1903- Pittsburgh .650
+1876- Chicago .788 | 1890- Brooklyn .667 | 1904- New York .693
+1877- Boston .646 | 1891- Boston .630 | 1905- New York .668
+1878- Boston .683 | 1892- Boston .680 | 1906- Chicago .765
+1879- Providence .702 | 1893- Boston .667 | 1907- Chicago .704
+1880- Chicago .798 | 1894- Baltimore .695 | 1908- Chicago .643
+1881- Chicago .667 | 1895- Baltimore .669 | 1909- Pittsburgh .724
+1882- Chicago .655 | 1896- Baltimore .698 | 1910- Chicago .676
+1883- Boston .643 | 1897- Boston .795 | 1911- New York .647
+1884- Providence .750 | 1898- Boston .685 |
+
+INDIVIDUAL BATTING.
+
+Following are the Official Batting Averages of National League players
+who participated in any manner in at least fifteen championship games
+during the season of 1912:
+
+Name and Club G. A.B. R. H. T.B. 2B 3B HR SH SB PC
+Zimmerman, Chicago 145 557 95 207 318 41 14 14 18 23 .372
+Meyers, New York 126 371 60 133 177 16 5 6 9 8 .358
+Sweeney, Boston 153 593 84 204 264 81 13 1 33 27 .344
+Evers, Chicago 143 478 73 163 211 23 11 1 14 16 .341
+Bresnaban, St. Louis 48 108 8 36 50 7 2 1 -- 4 .333
+McCormick, New York 42 39 4 13 19 4 1 -- -- 1 .333
+Doyle, New York 143 558 98 184 263 33 8 10 13 36 .330
+Kuisely, Cincinnati 21 67 10 22 35 7 8 -- 1 3 .328
+Lobert, Philadelphia 65 257 37 84 112 12 5 2 10 13 .327
+Wiltse, New York 28 46 5 15 17 2 -- -- 1 1 .326
+Wagner, Pittsburgh 145 558 91 181 277 36 20 7 11 26 .324
+Hendrix, Pittsburgh 46 121 25 39 64 10 6 1 2 1 .322
+Kirke, Boston 103 359 53 115 146 11 4 4 9 7 .320
+Kelly, Pittsburgh 48 132 20 42 52 3 2 1 7 8 .318
+Marsans, Cincinnati 110 416 59 132 168 19 7 1 9 35 .317
+Kling, Boston 81 252 26 80 102 10 3 2 7 8 .317
+Donlin, Pittsburgh 77 244 27 77 108 9 8 2 10 8 .316
+Stengel, Brooklyn 17 57 9 38 22 1 -- 1 1 5 .316
+Paskert, Philadelphia 145 540 102 170 221 38 5 1 11 35 .315
+Konetchy, St. Louis 143 538 81 169 245 26 13 8 17 35 .314
+Crandall, New York 50 80 9 25 25 6 2 -- 3 -- .313
+Titus,
+ Philadelphia-Boston 141 502 99 155 224 32 11 5 15 11 .309
+Merkle, New York 129 479 82 148 215 22 6 11 8 37 .309
+Daubert, Brooklyn 145 559 81 173 232 19 16 3 14 39 .308
+
+W. Miller, Chicago 86 241 45 74 93 11 4 -- 8 11 .307
+S. Magee, Phila 132 464 79 142 203 25 9 6 29 30 .306
+Wheat, Brooklyn 123 453 70 138 204 28 7 8 7 16 .305
+Huggins, St. Louis 120 431 82 131 154 15 4 -- 11 35 .304
+Carey, Pittsburgh 150 587 114 177 231 23 8 5 37 45 .302
+Edington, Pittsburgh 15 53 4 16 20 -- 2 -- 3 -- .302
+Simon, Pittsburgh 42 113 10 34 38 2 1 -- -- 1 .301
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SPALDING'S OFFICIAL BASEBALL GUIDE -
+1913***
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