Thursday, April 30, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/30/1920: Brooklyn Robins Whitewashed at Boston

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #12: Friday, April 30, 1920 - BR
Brooklyn Robins vs. Boston Braves
Braves Field

Braves Hurler Hugh McQuillan Whitewashes Visiting Brooklyn; Robins Cede First Place to Idle Cincinnati Reds.

Opening their second road trip of the season Brooklyn's veteran Jeff Pfeffer pitches well, but on this day the younger less experienced Boston Braves hurler Hugh McQuillan is better.  Making his first start this season Boston's 23-year old right-hander limits the Brooks to just four scattered hits and one walk while fanning three through nine scoreless innings pitched for the win.  Zack Wheat, Hi Myers, Ed Konetchy, and McGuillan's counterpart Jeff Pfeffer are the only Robins to hit safely.  Boston inflicts all their damage during a three run fourth.  Robins shortstop Chuck Ward commits two errors in the game one of which leads to an unearned run, while Braves first baseman Walter Holke and third baseman Tony Boeckel each drive in a run apiece.  Despite a representative performance Brooklyn's Jeff Pfeffer (1-2) is tagged with his second defeat of the season.  His line reads two earned runs on six hits and two walks with four strikeouts through eight innings work.  Alas Jeff receives no run support.  With the loss Brooklyn falls in the standings one-half game behind the now first place Cincinnati Reds.  Zack Wheat has now hit safely in 11 of 12 gamed to begin the season.

  • RECORD: 8-4 (.666)
  • 2nd place; 0.5 GB






BRAVES FIELD




Wednesday, April 29, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/29/1920: Brooklyn Robins Defeat Giants in Rubber Game at Ebbets

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS


100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #11: Thursday, April 29, 1920 - BR
New York Giants vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

Robins Take Rubber Game at Ebbets Field; Starter Clarence Mitchell Whitewashes Giants

Giants   0
Robins  3

Cheered on by 9,000 strong at Ebbets Field the Robins continue their hot start with a 3-0 whitewashing of their rival Giants.  Fielding errors, this time committed by shortstop Art Fletcher and second baseman Larry Doyle, for a second straight game are New York's undoing.  Brooklyn tallies three unearned runs in the first and Robins southpaw Clarence Mitchell takes care of the rest.  Jimmy Johnston, Zack Wheat, and Hi Myers all cross the plate for Brooklyn.  Only Ed Konetchy is credited with a run batted in.  New York starter Fred Toney takes the loss upon yielding three unearned runs on six hits and two walks with one strikeout through six innings pitched.  Robins starter Clarence Mitchell on the other hand tosses a gem limiting the Giants to just five scattered hits and four walks with one strikeout through nine scoreless innings pitched.  The suddenly stingy Mitchell has now allowed but one earned run through his first two starts and 18 innings pitched.  Brooklyn improves to 8-3 and is tied for first place with the Cincinnati Reds.

  • RECORD: 8-3 (.727)
  • 1st place; tied

Sunday, April 26, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/26/1920: Rube Marquard Turns Tables on Giants; Brooklyn Robins Even Series

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS


100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #10: Monday, April 26, 1920 - BR 
New York Giants vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

Rube Marquard Turns in Vintage Performance Against Former Team; Brooklyn Robins Even Series With Giants.
Giants (1-1)   2
Robins (1-1)   4 

Expected to be among this season's first division contenders Giants manager John McGraw knows full well you can't win pennants in April but you can certainly lose them.  Down three games in the standings and facing the unlikely Robins in such early competition for first place, the man they call Little Napoleon today in the second game at Ebbets Field wants no part of his struggling albeit ordinarily capable starter Art Hehf.  Brooklyn knocks the opposing southpaw out of the box before he can record an out.  Third baseman Jimmy Johnston drives home two with a triple, and Zack Wheat and Hi Myers each follow with runs batted in during a four run first inning outburst.  Alas McGraw acts too late.  His early two run lead is now a two run deficit.  But McGraw's regret does not end there.  Brooklyn's starter is former Giants virtuoso Rube Marquard whom turns in a vintage performance against his former club.  A three time 20-plus game winner during his days with Brooklyn's upper Manhattan rival, the 32-year old Marquard on this day limits the Giants to a pair of first inning runs on just three hits and four walks with four strikeouts through nine complete innings for his first win of the season.  None of which strikes Mr. John McGraw as a surprise, for he has seen this all before.  Jimmy Johnston is officially 2 for 4 at the plate with a triple, a run scored, and two runs batted in.  Zack Wheat goes 2 for 4 with a run scored and a run batted in.  Potential heavy rain in the forecast threatens Tuesday's rubber game.

  • RECORD: 7-3 (.700)
  • 1st place; 0.5 games ahead


Saturday, April 25, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/25/1920: Brooklyn Robins Bow to New York Giants in Return to Ebbets

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS


100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #9: Sunday, April 25, 1920 - BR
New York Giants vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

New York Giants Jesse Barnes Silences Ebbets Field Crowd In Robins Return to Brooklyn.

Giants   5
Robins  2

Star hurler for the Giants Jesse Barnes last season leads the National League with 25 wins.  Picking up where he left off Barnes (2-1) limits the Robins to a pair of late runs on just four hits and three walks with three strikeouts en route to his second straight complete game victory.  The visiting New Yorkers build a 5-0 lead through six innings.  But only two runs are earned as three costly errors are the Robins undoing.  Brooklyn starter Leon Cadore (2-1) is relieved after six innings having yielded all five runs on six hits and two walks with six strikeouts.  Giants first baseman High Pockets Kelly is 1 for 4 with a double and three runs batted in.  Center fielder Bernie Kauff is likewise 1 for 4 with a double, and two runs batted in.  For Brooklyn single runs in the seventh and eighth innings prove too little too late.  Third baseman Jimmy Johnston accounts for half of Brooklyn's hits and runs batted in.  Second baseman Pete Kilduff is 1 for 3 with Brooklyn's only other run batted in.  Zack Wheat is held hitless, his hit streak to begin the season ends at eight.

  • RECORD: 6-3 (.666)
  • 1st place; tied

Buy Me Some Peanuts and COVID-19

From the desk of: BASEBALL HOT DOGS APPLE PIE AND CORONAVIRUS

PANDEMIC
vs.
BASEBALL

Major League Baseball should cancel their season.  It pains me as a fan to utter such words but I just feel it's the right thing to do.  They can not simply circle a day on the calendar and abruptly declare from this day forward it's safe to play.  Safe for whom?  What of the collateral workforce involved with the day-to-day operations and logistics required for producing baseball games?  Do they not realize recovery from this pandemic will be a year's long process not only health-wise, but financially?  They must know that we the proletariat harbor no empathy towards billionaires - certainly not a citizenry which has been under quarantine for roughly six weeks and counting.  During which time people have exhausted short term emergency funds, or are depleting savings.  But let's keep this real, the aforementioned are not the common person's experience.  They're not the person working week to week, check to check, having a tougher go of this.  Too many more people have been furloughed, laid off, or flat out terminated.  Small businesses are folding, Mom-and-Pops are being wiped out, and jobs are being lost by the bunches.  Yet baseball remains hungry as ever (but far from starved) for our discretionary income.  I will not be attending regular games any time soon.  Will you?  Otherwise MLB has one chance to get this right.  May they decide wisely because getting this wrong is way too easy.  Letting common sense rule the day is hard.


Friday, April 24, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/24/1920: Burleigh Grimes Hurls Brooklyn Robins to Victory Over Phillies

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS


100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #8: Saturday, April 24, 1920 - BR
Brooklyn Robins vs. Philadelphia Phillies
Baker Bowl

Robins Take Rubber Game at Baker Bowl

Burleigh Grimes tosses a dandy.  He yields four runs but only one earned, on seven hits and no walks with five strikeouts for his second win in as many starts.  A sudden spate of sloppy fielding initially costs Brooklyn an early lead, but a late rally salvages victory over the Phillies in Saturday's rubber game at the Baker Bowl.  The Brooks jump out to an early 2-0 advantage, that is until surrendering three unearned runs leading to an eventual 3-4 Robins deficit through four.  The fielding charity of third baseman Jimmy Johnston, shortstop Ivy Olson, and backstop Otto Miller each are duly noted by the official scorer.  Undeterred a stalwart Burleigh Grimes whitewashes the Phillies through the game's final five innings.  In turn the Robins plate the game tying run in the sixth, then push across two more runs in the eighth for a 6-4 final margin of victory.  Brooklyn churns out 13 hits, with six going for extra-bases, yet strand eight runners in scoring position.  Recently inserted into the starting lineup Pete Kilduff reaffirms manager Robinson's decision of just a day ago with a 2 for 3 performance at the plate, with two doubles, a run scored, and three runs batted in.  Steady "Big Ed" Konetchy is 2 for 3 with a walk, two doubles, two runs scored, and a run batted in.  Center fielder Hi Myers goes 3 for 5 with a double and two runs scored, and Zack Wheat extends his hitting streak to eight.  Burleigh Grimes caps off a brilliant two-way effort with a single, double, and a run scored.

  • RECORD: 6-2 (.750)
  • 1st place; 1 game ahead

Thursday, April 23, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/23/1920: Brooklyn Robins Even Series With Phillies

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #7: Friday, April 23, 1920 - BR
Brooklyn Robins vs. Philadelphia Phillies
Baker Bowl

Uncle Robbie's Moves Pay Instant Dividends; Clarence Mitchell Answers Manager's Call With Stellar Effort

All goes according to Wilbert Robinson's plan who tasks journeyman Clarence Mitchell with Friday's spot start at Philadelphia.  The 29-year old southpaw does not disappoint.  Mitchell limits the Phillies to just one run on ten scattered hits and no walks with three strikeouts in a complete nine inning performance.  For their part Philadelphia manufactures their lone run in the sixth when catcher Frank Winthrow scores on shortstop Dave Bancroft's sacrifice fly.  After starting Chuck Ward at shortstop through the season's first six games manager Robinson turns to 27-year old Pete Kilduff (acquired last June from the Cubs).  To accommodate Kilduff at second base, Ivy Olson shifts over to shortstop replacing Ward.  With Uncle Robbie's changes in place the infield commits no errors and convert three double-plays in support of Clarence Mitchell.  Meanwhile Brooklyn musters single runs in the second, third, and eighth innings for a 3-1 final margin of victory.  Kilduff in his first start of the season goes 2 for 4; Big Ed Konetchy drives in his fifth run of the season; Bernie Neis is 2 for 4 with a run batted in; and center fielder Hi Myers is 3 for 4 with one run batted in.  Zack Wheat extends his hit streak to seven with a single along with a walk and a run scored in three trips to the plate.

  • RECORD: 5-2 (.714)
  • 1st place; tied

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/22/1920: Brooklyn Robins Bow to Phillies in First Contest Away From Home

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #6: Thursday, April 22, 1920 - BR
Brooklyn Robins vs. Philadelphia Phillies
Baker Bowl

Robins Open First Road Trip With Loss Against Phillies at Baker Bowl

Brooklyn's first road trip of the season brings them to the City of Brotherly Love.  They open Thursday afternoon's scoring with haste on third baseman Jimmy Johnston's first inning hit plating lead-off hitter Ivy Olson from second base.  However the Phillies quickly tie things up in the second.  In the fourth Philadelphia scores an unearned run for a 2-1 lead.  The Robins answer right back.  Leading off the third inning first baseman Ed Konetchy doubles, and Chuck Ward follows with a walk.  Rowdy Elliott follows with a bunt fielded by Phillies starter Lee Meadows whom throws errantly allowing both Konetchy and Ward to score.  Unfortunately Brooklyn's 3-2 lead is short lived as Philadelphia tallies two more runs in the eighth en route to a 4-3 victory in the first of three games scheduled at Baker Bowl.  Robins hurler Jeff Pfeffer is tagged with his first defeat after yielding four runs (three earned) on eight hits and a walk, with one strikeout through eight innings of work.  His counterpart Lee Meadows surrenders just five hits and strikes out eight Robins in a victorious complete game effort.  Philadelphia right fielder Casey Stengel is 2 for 4 with a double and a run batted in.  Zack Wheat extends his season launching hitting streak to six games with a 1 for 3 day at the plate.

  • RECORD: 4-2 (.666)
  • 2nd place; 1 GB


Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Quarantining With Director/Tumaro Media Founder Phil Maillard on Another Metsian Podcast

From the desk of: HEAD-BUTTING MR. MET

The continuing discussion centering around the 
state of baseball amid the COVID-19 pandemic.


A METSIAN PODCAST
with SAM, RICH, and MIKE

GUEST

ninety-three minutes

 

Monday, April 20, 2020

Bedford and Sullivan Podcast: "The Father of Baseball" A Biography on Henry Chadwick with Author Andrew J. Schiff




Friend and fellow baseball fan Sam Maxwell was kind enough to offer his Bedford and Sullivan Podcast for Monday's commemoration of Henry Chadwick whom passed away in 1908, 112 years ago today.  Our guest was Andrew J. Schiff author of "The Father of Baseball" A Biography of Henry Chadwick.  While the book indeed chronicles Chadwick's life and career, this work also serves as an education into 19th century America and its still burgeoning post-war sensibilities.  One is left wondering how is it that an Englishman in New York City one day decides he will transform a little known game of baseball into America's National Pastime.

thirty-six minutes







ICYMI:


100 Years Ago Today 4/20/1920: Brooklyn Robins Complete Sweep of Boston Braves

From the desk of: FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100the Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #5: Tuesday, April 20, 1920 - BR
Boston Braves vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

Leon Cadore Hurls 11-Inning Gem; Robins Sweep Braves

Starter Leon Cadore outlasts his counterpart Joe Oescher in extra innings as the Brooklyn Robins complete a three game sweep of Boston.  In an otherwise stellar performance the Braves right-hander yields twelve hits and just one walk through ten scoreless innings pitched.  However Cadore is better, if not brilliant.  Making his second start of the season Caddy limits the Braves to just seven hits and no walks with four strikeouts through eleven scoreless innings.  In the home eleventh two of Wilbert Robinson's earlier substitutions step forward.  Leading off catcher Rowdy Elliott hits safely.  Then with two outs center fielder Wally Hood doubles home Elliot all the way from first base for the victory.  Inserted into the clean-up spot Zack Wheat enjoys his fourth multi hit game in the Robins first five contests, going 3 for 4 with a walk.  Brooklyn travels to Philadelphia where the Robins on Thursday will open a three game series against the Phillies at the Baker Bowl.

  • RECORD: 4-1 (.800)
  • 1st place, tied

Remembering The Father of Baseball: Henry Chadwick



HENRY CHADWICK
1824 ~ 1908


GREEN-WOOD CEMETERY
BROOKLYN



Commemorating Henry Chadwick, the Father of Baseball, Whom Passed Away on This Day 112 Years Ago.

How is it that a transplanted Englishman in New York City one day decides he will transform a little known game of baseball into America's National Pastime?

His pen is truly mightier than the sword, or in this case a baseball bat.  As the game's ultimate propagandist Henry Chadwick's journalistic endeavors influence an entire nation.  The Washington Nationals great tour of the mid 1860's prove his efforts invaluable with respect to growing the game.  Since base-ball's earliest days he wields great influence; serves as its moral compass and greatest proponent; the first dedicated chronicler; the game's first historian; inventor of statistical analysis and the scoring system; and is an esteemed member of the Rules Committee.  In a match between the Atlantics and Red Stockings (1869), Chadwick even authorizes the first ever extra inning contest.

Chadwick believes in science and is agreeable to a certain level of baseball Darwinism.  Once considered in its earliest days the primary allure of baseball matches, DEFENSE as a consideration takes a back seat to the pitcher vs. batter confrontation instigated by the likes of James Creighton, and is again brushed aside in the boxscore in favor of more offensive related information.  But there are more drastic upheavals to come.  A baseball loyalist at heart Henry always seems at first resistive regarding changes, be it due to encroaching  professionalism, the National Association, the American Association, Players League, and even the National League, but ultimately comes around and praises their respective merits.

After spending decades nurturing the game, Chadwick's prestige in the age of baseball as a business comes into conflict with new western powers.  And by the turn of the century Chadwick's prominence is under heavy siege.  Henry Wright and William Hulbert among others, some being his long-time friends, postulate Chadwick is inflicting harm to baseball due to his cries denouncing gambling and alcoholism at games.  

Were they correct?  

The ultimate showdown features Henry Chadwick versus Albert Spalding and the Mills Commission tasked with researching the origins of baseball, plus the underlying matter of American nationalism and strong anti-English sentiment.  Chadwick believes baseball is evolved from the old English game of Rounders.  The well respected John Montgomery Ward theorizes baseball evolved from Old Cat.  His case is sound.  But is Ward right?

In the end, it seems Chadwick's detractors all acknowledged he was indubitably correct and righteous in his historical analysis, admitting as much upon his passing at 84-years of age.

Does Chadwick die a vindicated man?

Author Andrew Schiff discusses it all in his biography of Henry Chadwick, the Father of Baseball.

Sunday, April 19, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/19/1920: Brooklyn Robins Take Second Straight From Boston Braves

From the desk of:  FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #4: Monday, April 19, 1920 - BR
Boston Braves vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

Robins Continue Benefitting From Boston Braves Mistakes; Burleigh Grimes Chalks Up First Victory of Season.

Sabotaged again by poor fielding the suddenly wayward Boston Braves on Monday commit five more errors leading to four unearned runs.  As such they bow to the Robins for a second straight game this time by a 4-2 final score at Ebbets Field.  That makes ten infield errors in two games committed by Boston resulting in eight unearned runs for Brooklyn.  The Braves otherwise sure-handed shortstop Rabbit Maranville in this game accounts for three misplays.  Meanwhile Brooks skipper Wilbert Robinson continues shuffling his backstops, utilizing his third different starter in four games.  Otto Miller does not disappoint, going 2 for 4 with two runs batted in.  Zack Wheat who has now hit safely in each of the Robins first four games is 2 for 4 with a stolen base.  Starting pitcher Burleigh Grimes helps his own cause going 3 for 3 at the plate with a double and a run batted in.  Making his first appearance, the confidant Grimes limits Boston to a pair of runs on eight hits and two walks with three strikeouts over nine complete innings for the victory.  Acquired two season ago in the trade sending Casey Stengel to the Pittsburgh Pirates if you recall Burleigh Grimes led the circuit in 1918 with 40 appearances.  However last season proved troublesome for the right-hander who only made 25 appearances and saw his ERA climb more than a point therefore making this a comeback season of sorts for the 25-year old hurler.  
  • RECORD: 3-1 (.750)
  • 2nd place, 0.5 GB

Saturday, April 18, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/18/1920: Brooklyn Robins Take Series Opener From Boston Braves

From the desk of:  FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #3: Sunday, April 18, 1920 - BR
Boston Braves vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

Robins Open Series With 9-3 Victory Over Visiting Boston Braves

Boston, who just two days ago expertly whitewashed John McGraw's Giants at the Polo Grounds, today crossed the East River span into Brooklyn where they promptly fall behind 0-4 after just three innings of play at Ebbets Field.  Looking to rebound from Thursday's loss against Philadelphia, the Robins rough-up Braves starter Dick Rudolph for six runs on seven hits and one walk through six.  Three more Robins cross the plate in the eighth as Brooklyn goes on to post a 9-3 victory over the Braves whom commit five fielding errors resulting in four unearned runs.  Getting the start behind the plate Rowdy Elliott is Brooklyn's big man on campus going 3 for 4 with a run scored and four runs batted in, and right fielder Bernie Neis connects on the Robins first home run of the season.  Shortstop Chuck Ward is 2 for 3 with a run scored and one run batted in.  Zack Wheat goes 2 for 4 with two runs scored.  On the bump Brooklyn veteran starter Jeff Pfeffer goes the distance yielding three runs, two earned, on eight hits and one walk with two strikeouts for the victory.

  • RECORD: 2-1 (.666)
  • 3rd place; 1 GB


Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Remembering Base Ball's First Superstar: Jim Creighton



b. April 15, 1841
d. October 18, 1862

Jim Creighton: third from left.


Jim Creighton at 18-years of age began his career in 1859 playing for the Brooklyn Niagaras and the Brooklyn Star Club.  From 1860 until his untimely death on Oct. 18, 1862, Crieghton most famously pitched for the Brooklyn Excelsiors.  He was the star attraction during the Excelsiors famous barnstorming tour of 1860 through western New York, Canada, and the mid-Atlantic states.  He was an instigator of the pitcher versus batter confrontation.  Rather than assist and serve the batter he challenged the opposition with an unaccommodating speed pitch, thus helping change the whole dynamic of the game.  Tragically a match on Oct. 14, 1862, against the Unions of Morrisania (Bronx) turned out being his last.  It is during this match that he is believed to have sustained fatal internal injuries.  He passed away four days later.  Born on April 15, 1841, he was a mere 21-years old.  So respected was Creighton that his team mates and members from throughout the circuit mourned and buried him at Green-Wood Cemetery with a granite pillar topped by a marble baseball dedicated in his honor.  It also serves as one of the first ever monuments commemorating baseball.






100 Years Ago Today 4/15/1920: Philadelphia Phillies Hand Brooklyn Robins First Defeat

From the desk of:  FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100th Anniversary
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 National League Champions

Game #2: Thursday, April, 15, 1920 - BR
Philadelphia Phillies vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

Robins Comeback Falls Short; Phillies Gain Opening Day Series Split at Ebbets

Starting for Philadelphia, former New York Giant and Brooklyn utilitarian right-hander George Smith whitewashes the Robins through the first seven innings of Thursday afternoon's contest at Ebbets Field.  Meanwhile the Phillies have their way with 32-year old veteran Rube Marquard, taking a 5-0 lead and knocking him out of the box after five.  Brooklyn's efforts are exacerbated by four fielding errors resulting in four unearned runs for Philadelphia.  Trailing 7-0 entering the bottom of the eighth, the Robins storm back with six runs to close within one.  However, the Phillies would secure victory in the top of the ninth when center fielder Cy Williams connects for a home run off Brooklyn reliever Johnny Miljus.  Brooklyn plates a run in the bottom of the frame, but nothing more.  Rube Marquard takes the loss allowing five runs, only three earned, on seven hits and no walks, with four strikeouts.  Each of Brooklyn's four infielders are charged with an error.  At the plate first baseman Ed Konetchy is 2 for 5 with a run batted in.  Second baseman and leadoff hitter Ivy Olson goes 4 for 5 with a double and run scored.  Shortstop Chuck Ward is 1 for 3 with a run batted in, and third baseman Jimmy Johnston is 1 for 3 with two runs scored.  Left fielder Zack Wheat goes 1 for 3 with two runs batted in.  Former Brooklyn Robin Casey Stengel is hitless in five trips to the plate.


Tuesday, April 14, 2020

100 Years Ago Today 4/14/1920: Brooklyn Robins Rout Phillies in Season Opener at Ebbets Field

From the desk of:  FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS

100th ANNIVERSAY
BROOKLYN ROBINS
1920 NATIONAL LEAGUE CHAMPIONS

GAME #1: Wednesday, April 14, 1920 - BR
Philadelphia Phillies vs. Brooklyn Robins
Ebbets Field

ROBINS OPEN REGULAR SEASON WITH VICTORY OVER PHILADELPHIA 

The Robins score early and often en route to a commanding 9-2 Opening Day victory over the Philadelphia Phillies at Ebbets Field.  First baseman Big Ed Konetchy and left fielder Zack Wheat join together for five runs batted in and starter Leon Cadore takes care of the rest.

Konetchy opens the scoring in the second with a base hit to left scoring center fielder Hi Myers from second base.  With the bases jammed and one out in the fourth Zack Wheat singles home two runs.  Big Ed then singles up the middle plating two more as the Robins build a 5-0 lead.  The Robins add another in the sixth on Hi Myers' leadoff triple and a successful suicide squeeze executed by shortstop Chuck Ward.

Phillies starter Eppa Rixey helps his own cause in the top of the seventh with a run batted in to break up Leon Cadore's shutout bid.  However Cadore answers with a run batted in of his own during a three run eighth for the Robins.  On the mound Leon Cadore yields two earned runs on eight hits and no walks with two strikeouts through nine innings for the victory.

  • The Robins opening day lineup averages 30-years of age.  National League veteran Ed Konetchy, 33-years old, enters his second season with the Robins.  Zack Wheat now 32-years old enters his twelfth season with Brooklyn.  After winning the batting title in 1918, last season he fails to keep his average above the .300 mark.  Looking to rebound Wheat opens the 1920 season going 2 for 4 with two runs batted in.  Meanwhile Hi Myers who turns 31-years old later this month is coming off a 1919 regular season in which he leads the senior circuit with 14 triples, 73 runs batted in, a .436 slugging average, and 223 total bases.



Sunday, April 12, 2020

Pondering an Uncertain Future on Another Metsian Podcast

From the desk of:  HEAD-BUTTING MR. MET

RETIRED NUMBERS DEBATE

A METSIAN PODCAST
with SAM, RICH, and MIKE




SOCIAL DISTRACTION
The 2020 Season ~ What 2020 Season
Sid Fernandez ~ Rafael Montero ~ Duaner Sanchez ~ Tug McGraw
Jeff McNeil ~ Tommie Agee ~ Rusty Staub ~ Benny Agbayani
Keith Hernandez ~ Gary Carter ~ David Wright
The 2019 Season ~ The North American Championship
Jackie Robinson and so much more.



Wednesday, April 08, 2020

Talking Brooklyn Ballparks on the Bedford & Sullivan Podcast

From the desk of:  FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS



Sam Maxwell Production

sixty-five minutes




Ebbets Field ~ Washington Park ~ Dexter Park ~ Eastern Park
Union Grounds ~ Capitoline Grounds ~ Brooklyn Tip Tops


Monday, April 06, 2020

Another Metsian Podcast Quarantine Special: Fending Off Spring Fever with John Pielli

From the desk of:  HEAD-BUTTING MR. MET

MORE SOCIAL DISTRACTION

A METSIAN PODCAST
with SAM, RICH, and MIKE


GUEST

sixty-five minutes



#coronavirus
MLB
The 2020 Season 
Ron Darling ~ Kevin Kobel ~ Tom Seaver ~ Walt Terrell
and so much more!


Sunday, April 05, 2020

N.Y. Mets: Dream Rotation Gone Wrong

From the desk of: HEAD-BUTTING MR. MET

THE FIVE HURLERS OF THE METROPOLIS
The Dominant Rotation That Never Was

Matt Harvey ~ Zack Wheeler ~ Jacob deGrom ~ Noah Syndergaard ~ Steven Matz

2012 - Harvey
2013 - Harvey; Wheeler
2014 - Harvey; Wheeler; deGrom
2015 - Harvey; Wheeler; deGrom; Syndergaard; Matz
2016 - Harvey; Wheeler; deGrom; Syndergaard; Matz
2017 - Harvey; Wheeler; deGrom; Syndergaard; Matz
2018 - Harvey; Wheeler; deGrom; Syndergaard; Matz
2019 - Harvey; Wheeler; deGrom; Syndergaard; Matz
2020 - Harvey; Wheeler; deGrom; Syndergaard; Matz


There was a three year window (2015-2017) earmarked for greatness.  Unfortunately it never materialized.  Injuries first and foremost would prevent the Mets from unleashing a full-on assault upon the National League East.  Otherwise there's something to be said for the Mets front office failing to seize the moment.  In fairness, the team won a National League flag in 2015 and qualified for a Wild Card playoff the year after.  Even then, Zack Wheeler missed two full seasons, and Syndergaard one.  In 2017 Syndergaard and Matz would only make 20 starts combined.  Without a reliable number two, Jacob deGrom has essentially been a one man gang.  We fans are left lamenting over what could have been ...

RISE AND FALL OF THE DARK KNIGHT

On July 26, 2012, a 23-year old Matt Harvey makes his major league debut against the Diamondbacks at Arizona.  He throws 5.1 scoreless innings, allowing three hits and three walks, while striking out eleven en route to his first career victory.  Five starts later he strikes out nine Colorado Rockies through six innings at Citi Field.  Three starts later, he strikes out ten Washington Nationals through five innings in front of a now rabid New York fan base.  And just like that, the Dark Knight is born.  The following season Harvey is named the National League's starting pitcher in the 2013 All-Star Game held at Citi Field.  Otherwise he makes 26 regular season starts, posting a 9-5 record with a 2.27 ERA and 0.931 WHiP, while fanning 191 batters over 178.1 innings pitched.  The Dark Knight finishes fourth in the Cy Young voting but not before his sophomore campaign comes to an abrupt end when in late August he is diagnosed with a partial tear of the UCL in his right elbow.  He misses the entire 2014 season rehabilitating from Tommy John surgery.  Then in what appears to be a promising return to form Harvey helps the Mets win a division title and capture the 2015 National League flag.  He posts a 13-8 record and 2.71 ERA with 188 strikeouts through 189.1 innings pitched.  However his superhero powers prove fleeting.  Midway through the 2016 season Harvey is diagnosed with thoracic outlet syndrome which requires season ending surgery.  In 2017 the clearly ailing Dark Knight is suspended by the Mets for violation of team rules.  Said another way, he is suspected of blowing off work after a supposed night of partying.  But that winds up being the least of his troubles.  By June Harvey is back on the injured list with a stress fracture in his right shoulder bone requiring yet more surgery.  Finally on May 18, 2018, Matt Harvey is traded to the Cincinnati Reds.  And just like that, the Dark Knight era ends in Flushing.

WHEELIN' DOWN I-95

On June 18, 2013, Zack Wheeler joins Matt Harvey in the Mets rotation.  He finishes his rookie season with a 3.42 ERA in 100 innings pitched.  The next season he posts an 11-11 record and 3.54 ERA, with 187 strikeouts in 185.1 innings pitched.  Unfortunately like Harvey health is not Wheeler's ally.  He misses all of 2015 and 2016 while recovering from both Tommy John surgery and a flexor strain.  Although he returns to the mound in 2017 his efforts are still beset with injury.  Wheeler is twice placed on the injured list and finishes his comeback season with a 5.21 ERA through 86.1 innings pitched.  On Sept. 26, 2019, Wheeler throws his last pitch as a member of the New York Mets at Citi Field.  Seven years after his acquisition from the San Francisco Giants the club allows him to simply walk away.  Although Wheeler last March made it very clear to all that he welcomed free agency and that the organization would need to meet his price, I was hoping against hope the Mets would re-sign him.  The Mets let the regular season play out and apparently were dissatisfied with his performance.  Granted, Zack posted a somewhat unsightly 3.96 ERA and 1.259 WHiP through 195.1 innings pitched.  But despite turning 30-years old this coming May, I believe Wheeler's arm is finally sound and that his best days are still ahead.  Over the last two seasons he's made 60 starts with 374 strikeouts through 377.2 innings pitched.  Fangraphs had his 2018 velocity pegged at 95-mph, while last year's velocity remained steady at 96-mph.  Be that as it may the Mets make him no offer.  Wheeler winds up signing with Philadelphia for $118 million over five seasons.  The general manager within me would have been agreeable negotiating a $100 million package.  However I would have tried chewing him down from the other $18 million.  I'm inclined to believe Wheeler and his agent just to stay in New York would have agreed to a five year $105 million dollar deal.  Lastly, Zack Wheeler I feel is better than any available replacement sans Gerrit Cole.  Simply put, the acquisitions of Rick Porcello and Michael Wacha have yet to sway my opinion regarding the starting rotation having been weakened.

TOTAL deGROMINATION

Jacob deGrom joins Zack Wheeler in the starting rotation on May 15, 2014, at Citi Field.  Alas, Matt Harvey is out recovering from Tommy John surgery.  Jacob knows a thing or two about that.  As a minor leaguer back in 2010 he too suffers the seemingly obligatory partial tear of the UCL and misses the entire 2011 season.  Now two months shy of his 32nd birthday, the seventh year Met is a back-to-back Cy Young award winner, par excellence.  Rookie of the Year; an ERA title; a strikeout title; tying the MLB record with 25 straight starts allowing three or fewer runs; we are witnessing modern day elite.  Problem is when Matt Harvey comes back in 2015 the Mets lose Zack Wheeler for two seasons.  Then in 2017 with both Harvey and Wheeler back on the active roster, Noah Syndergaard is effectively lost for the season.

THOR'S HAMMER YIELDS TO TOMMY JOHN

Noah Syndergaard is going under the blade.  That's right ... Tommy John surgery.  Who didn't see this coming?  A throw-in pitcher as part of the R.A. Dickey/Travis d'Arnaud trade, Syndergaard joins the Mets rotation on May 12, 2015, at Chicago's Wrigley Field.  He makes 24 starts for the National League champs, posting a 3.24 ERA and 166 strikeouts through 150 innings pitched.  He's since been his own worst enemy.  An unsupervised and ruinous workout regimen following the 2016 regular season ends in utter folly.  A torn lat muscle in his arm limits him in 2017 to just seven starts.  When Noah returns in 2018, Matt Harvey is traded signifying the rotation's first permanent casualty.  Then there's the matter of last season, easily Syndergaard's worst.  I'll say it again, the man lacks craftsmanship.  Now this ...

MATZ IN THE MIDDLE

The Mets enter the 2020 season (as if...) with only Jacob deGrom and Steven Matz in the fold.  They've been a constant in the rotation for five seasons now.  Like Syndergaard, Steven Matz debuts in 2015 but only makes six starts.  He joins the rotation in earnest in 2016 posting a 9-8 record and 3.40 ERA through 22 starts.  But arm ailments compromise his 2017 season to the tune of a 6.08 ERA through just 13 starts.  That being said, he presently stands as the only pitcher discussed here to not yet undergo Tommy John surgery.  As the rotation's lone left-hander, Matz is coming off back-to-back seasons with 30 starts.  I think most would agree when I say his biggest problem has always been between the ears.  Therefore the hope for Matz who turns 29-years old in May and entering his physical prime is that he grows into a more composed, mature, and polished hurler.



Thursday, April 02, 2020

Gil Hodges: Remembering the Quiet Man

From the desks of:
FINGERPRINTS OF THE BUMS  &  HEAD-BUTTING MR. MET




Dodgers Triangle, Staten Island




According to baseballhall.org, the BBWAA Rules for Election, Article Five reads:

Voting shall be based upon player's record, playing ability, integrity, sportsmanship, character, and contributions to the team(s) on which the player played.

Based on the Hall's own criteria, it is unfathomable to me how Gil Hodges is continually denied enshrinement into baseball's Hall of Fame.  The highest percentage of votes he ever received by the BBWAA was 63.4% in 1983, his final year on the writer's ballot.  However, the former Veterans Committee in my opinion is/was far more negligent than writers whom perhaps did not cover his playing career in their collective refusal to pass him through.

Included in my own personal criteria for election into Baseball's Hall of Fame is being among the dominant players at both their respective position and the game as a whole for a ten year portion of a player's career, at least.

By all accounts, Gil Hodges qualifies as a Hall of Famer.  His statistical record reads as such:  Baseball-Reference.com

There are 25 first baseman enshrined at Cooperstown; Hodges ranks 11th among them with 370 home runs.  For twelve seasons spanning 1948-1959, Hodges led all first basemen in home runs, RBI, extra-base hits, and OPS.  For the decade of the 1950s, he ranked second overall in the National League in home runs and RBI.  From 1949 through 1959, Hodges slashed .280/.367/.507, while averaging 30 home runs and 101 RBI per season.  He exceeded 20 home runs in eleven consecutive seasons; hit at least 30 home runs six times, and hit forty or more home runs twice.  He exceeded 100 RBI in seven straight seasons.  Upon his retirement, Gil Hodges ranked 11th on the all-time home run list, and third among right-hand batters.  Moreover, he helped the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers win seven National League pennants, and two World Series championships.  And it was Gil who triumphantly delivered Brooklyn's only two runs in Game Seven of the 1955 World Series against the Yankees.  Starting with 1957, he won baseball's first three newly minted Golden Glove Awards for defensive excellence at first base.

His career with the Dodgers which began in 1943 ended after the 1961 season.  In 1962 Gil returned to the city which still adored him unconditionally.  He played 54 games for the expansion New York Metropolitan baseball club, then retired in 1963 after just 11 games.  Five years later he would become their manager.  In his second season, the New York Mets would become World Series champions.
  • His four year record managing the Mets: 339-309 (.523)

Gil suffers a heart attack shortly before start of the 1972 season.  On April, 2, he passes away at 47-years of age.  He rests peacefully at Holy Cross Cemetery in Brooklyn.

The Hall of Fame's Golden Era Committee reconvenes in 2020.  When they do, this epic injustice must finally be corrected.


MCU Park, Coney Island


HOLY CROSS CEMETERY
BROOKLYN