On Sunday, June 23, 1935, not more than two miles from where I presently live, the Bay Parkway Dukes split games of a doubleheader with the New York Black Yankees at Erasmus Field, McDonald Avenue at the Avenue M station along the Culver Line.
GAME ONE - Bay Parkway starter Al Morris limits the Yankees to just one run on eight hits and two walks with seven strikeouts for the win. Second baseman Henry Spearman leads the visitors with four hits, including a double in four at-bats. Catcher Bob Clarke is the only other Yankee with multiple hits. Left fielder Crush Holloway and shortstop Walter Cannady account for the Yankees' other two hits. But the New York Black Yankees leave nine men on base. Starter Barney Brown yields two runs on just four hits and four walks with seven strikeouts in a hard-luck loss. Both teams traded runs in the first inning, Spearman scoring for the Yankees and Goldstein for the Dukes. The score remains unchanged through the fifth. However, in the home sixth, Yankees' first baseman Dave Thomas drops a throw from third baseman Bill Riggins allowing Mac Posnack to score the game's decisive run.
GAME TWO - The Dukes twice hold the lead, each time relinquishing it to the Yankees, who finally pull away with single runs in the sixth and eighth innings en route to a tightly contested 6-5 victory and a split of Sunday's twin bill at Erasmus Field. The Yankees' pitching duties are shared by Connie Rector and Terris McDuffie joining together to win. They allow nine hits, with four going for extra bases, including a triple by Dukes' second baseman, Rodrigues. McDuffie walks one and strikeouts out four, and Rector walks one and hits a batter. Making up for his game one misplay, first baseman Dave Thomas leads the Yankees with a double, triple, and two runs scored. Center fielder Thad Christopher also goes 2 for 5 with a double and a run scored.
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