Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: 1918 All Work or Fight and No Play

  1. #1
    Mr Magoo RBP's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    60,390
    vCash
    2000
    Mentioned
    185 Post(s)
    Thanks
    78,181
    Thanked 27,731 Times in 15,014 Posts

    History 1918 All Work or Fight and No Play

    As the Great War wears a terrible toll, the U.S. Government presses baseball to do more than its fair share in contributing to the war effort; after a threatened shutdown, the game is allowed to play on and the Boston Red Sox win their last World Series for 86 years.



    The United States of America had been at war for a year, and its citizens were beginning to wonder if baseball was getting its priorities straight.

    A single gunshot had assassinated the Archduke of Austria-Hungary four years earlier, igniting the Great War and plunging Europe into total armed conflict. America had remained neutral on the other side of the Atlantic, but when German U-boats began to indiscriminately strike at ships with Americans on it, the U.S. declared war on Germany—just days before baseball began its 1917 campaign.

    While most minor leagues closed up shop, the majors went forward with their full schedule for 1917. Only a handful of players had been drafted into the military; fewer enlisted. Those who continued to play took part in token military “drills” to show their support for the boys overseas. Owners donated fair amounts of cash to the war effort, and rounded up baseball gear for the soldiers—whenever they had time off from the brutal trench warfare.

    The American public was not enamored. After the 1917 season, the majors were hounded to be more active with the war effort, to make truer sacrifices. The owners listened—a little. They cut down on travel and relocated spring training sites closer to home, reduced the 1918 schedule from 154 games to 140 and, oh yes, trimmed player salaries down with it.

    The owners addressed some of the criticism with more than just cutbacks. They offered that the game’s benefaction to the war effort went beyond bucks and bats; as the national pastime, baseball was keeping stateside spirits and patriotism high.

    Just a month into the 1918 season, the owners found a critic they couldn’t ignore: Provost Marshall General Enoch Crowder, the director of the military draft. He decreed that by July 1, all draft-eligible men employed in “non-essential” occupations must apply for work directly related to the war—or gamble being called into military service.

    Despite pleas for leniency from baseball’s owners, Secretary of War Newton D. Baker agreed with Crowder: Life as a ballplayer was non-essential. Enlist to help stateside, or risk going to the front lines of Europe.

    Baseball was given a reprieve of sorts; the “work or fight” deadline was delayed two months to September 1. And even then, the owners had to furiously lobby for a deadline extension for World Series participants. The government reluctantly gave it to them.

    So while the season would be shortened by another two weeks, it wouldn’t be killed in midstride. But with the vast number of players—an average of 15 per team—drafted or enlisted before the deadline, teams scrambled to replace veteran players with others of lesser quality and experience.

    Who left and who remained shaped up the balance of power in both pennant races.

    The reigning National League champion New York Giants began the season practically intact, and it showed in the standings—leapfrogging out to an 18-1 start to hold first place into June. Then the draft breezed through; the Giants’ pitching roster was decimated. Established starters Jeff Tesreau, Rube Benton and off-season acquisition Jesse Barnes were off to war by the time the Giants dropped well back into second place.

    That left the top spot to be claimed by the Chicago Cubs, who were rendered relatively untouched by the war. Absent from pennant races over the previous five years, the Cubs cleverly prepared for a potential deprivation of talent in 1918 by stocking up on pitching. Even after the biggest of these additions—Pete Alexander, winner of 94 games over the previous three years at Philadelphia—got quickly scooped up by the army in May, the Cubs had enough skilled pitching left to overwhelm the more depleted NL competition.

    Three starters in particular ignited the Cubs—and more importantly, stuck around through Labor Day. Left-handers Hippo Vaughn (1.74) and Lefty Tyler (2.00) furnished the NL’s two best earned run averages. Vaughn also led the league with 22 wins, while Tyler, another off-season addition (from the Boston Braves), chipped in with 19 victories. Claude Hendrix added 20 while losing only seven.

    Chicago’s pitching helped make up for its median output from a virtual no-name offense; the only historical name of note that stuck out was first baseman Fred Merkle, though for more dubious reasons. While Merkle’s bonehead stigma remains storied, he could also brag of having the winning knack wherever he went; he was about to play in his fifth World SeriesMerkle was also a member of NL pennant winners New York (1911-13) and Brooklyn (1916). in eight years.

    Across town at Comiskey Park, the fall of the Chicago White Sox was just as startling as the rise of the Cubs.

    At full strength, most agreed the White Sox remained the best in the American League. But now handicapped like everyone else, the Sox lost most of their star players—while those left behind suffered from off-year performances. Joe Jackson, Eddie Collins, Lefty Williams, Red Faber and Happy Felsch were all eventually scooped away by the military. Eddie Cicotte never heard from the draft board and missed the presence of those who did; after winning 28 the year before, he managed only 12 victories against an AL-high 19 losses. The White Sox crashed to sixth place, ten games under the .500 mark.

    Another strong AL contender, the Boston Red Sox, initially looked too depleted to be a serious threat as well. Player-manager Jack Barry was gone before season’s start, as was left fielder Duffy Lewis—perhaps Boston’s best everyday hitter since the controversial departure of Tris Speaker two years earlier.

    Former International League president Ed Barrow replaced Barry as manager and looked around for someone to fill Lewis’ shoes in the outfield. Right fielder Harry Hooper suggested to Barrow that he deal forth an ace from the mound: Babe Ruth.

    The 23-year-old southpaw had flowered into one of the AL’s best pitchers of recent years, and moreover showed tantalizing promise at the plate. Ruth not only hit as well as the everyday players, but showed unlimited power; in his first three full years at Boston, Ruth averaged a home run every 39 at-bats—while it took 457 for his teammates to eke one out.

    Hesitant at first, Barrow slowly began to play Ruth routinely in the outfield, crossing his fingers that Ruth would deliver while the rest of his young, talented staff wouldn’t get swept into the service.

    Barrow’s hopes paid off on both accounts, and the Red Sox survived a close pennant race with Cleveland to join the Cubs in the World Series. Ruth became the only Red Sox player to bat .300; his 11 round-trippersRuth had two other home runs reduced to triples because they were each hit in extra innings with a man on first base—and since the rules of the time decreed that only the winning run could be acknowledged, Ruth could only be given three bases. earned him his first of many, many home run titles; and his slugging percentage, at .555, easily outdistanced all other major leaguers. On the mound, Carl Mays (21-13), Sad Sam Jones (16-5) and Bullet Joe Bush (15-15) did stick around to give the Sox superior pitching. Ruth even managed to leave the outfield and take the mound 20 times in 1918—winning 13, losing seven, and producing a strong 2.21 ERA.

    Although the career of Ruth, the pitcher, was rapidly drawing to a close—bowing to Ruth, the Sultan of Swat—the World Series would provide him a last great hurrah on the mound.

    Ruth started Game One and silenced the Cubs with a six-hit, 1-0 shutout, setting the tone for a very low-scoring Series. After the teams split the next two games, Ruth came back to the mound for Game Four and continued his scoreless mastery, finally succumbing to a two-run rally by the Cubs in the eighth inning. It ended a streak in which Ruth had shut down opponents in World Series play for 29.2 straight inningsWhitey Ford would surpass Ruth’s consecutive scoreless inning mark in 1961—the same year Roger Maris eclipsed his season home run record.; in spite of all of the staggering feats of sluggery that lay ahead for Ruth, he would always consider this milestone to be the proudest of his career.

    With Ruth and the Red Sox winning 3-2, Game Five prepared to be played at Boston. But trouble was brewing.

    The National Commission, the governing body of organized baseball, had earlier authored a new rule in which second, third and fourth place teams would share in the World Series earnings, siphoning away money once awarded solely to those playing in the Series. It would have helped had the owners told the players; they didn’t. Once Red Sox and Cub players found out, they were so outraged that they refused to take the field for Game Five.

    AL president Ban Johnson, in a less-than-sober state, entered the clubhouses and lowered his booming voice upon the players to put their trivial differences in perspective; why cause a stir over a few hundred bucks when Americans were dying in Europe? The players, without entirely endorsing Johnson’s state of being, nevertheless got his point and carried onThe payout to players in the 1918 World Series would be the lowest ever: $1,102 for the Red Sox, $671 for the Cubs. with Game Five an hour later than scheduled.

    The Red Sox would eventually win the Series in six games—their fourth championship in seven years.

    And their last for nearly a century.

    A stark, melancholy contrast was indeed drawn between players striking for more World Series shares and those fighting the Great War. While many players performing stateside duties were accused of receiving preferential treatment, others in Europe clearly were not. Pete Alexander—the game’s best pitcher of the day—served the front lines of France and suffered from shellshock, loss of hearing, and developed symptoms of epilepsy that later would drive him toward alcohol abuse. Ty Cobb and Christy Mathewson were part of a gas defense drill gone horribly wrong; Cobb escaped unharmed, but Mathewson inhaled a fair amount of poison gas. He gradually deteriorated and died of tuberculosis seven years later at the age of 45.

    Five men with major league experience died in battle, including Eddie Grant, a veteran NL infielder.

    Rumor abounded that if war continued into 1919, the majors would cease operations completely. It became a moot point when Germany formally surrendered on November 11, 1918, ending the Great War—a.k.a., World War I.

    Major league owners had already done what they could to recoup their losses from the war-shortened campaign of 1918. When the season ended on September 1, they released all players as free agents—and then with a wink and a nod to one another, signed them back to the same teams for the 1919 season, in effect saving $200,000 in player salaries they otherwise would have had to pay. When the ballplayers returned to life as normal, they fumed over the lost wages. A few suedTwo-time NL batting champion Jake Daubert was the most publicized of those who sued; he got his “back pay” in an out-of-court settlement, but was promptly traded from Brooklyn to Cincinnati. and got their money, but most were afraid to do so, fearing they’d be blacklisted.

    The seeds of discontent had been sown among ballplayers everywhere.

    It would come back to haunt the owners in blindsiding fashion.
    I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.

  2. #2
    Mr Magoo RBP's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    60,390
    vCash
    2000
    Mentioned
    185 Post(s)
    Thanks
    78,181
    Thanked 27,731 Times in 15,014 Posts
    I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.

  3. #3
    Shelter Dweller lost in melb.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Down Under
    Posts
    23,780
    vCash
    7596
    Mentioned
    18 Post(s)
    Thanks
    18,686
    Thanked 7,561 Times in 5,212 Posts
    For the reading challenged can you explain this? Pretend I'm muddy

  4. The Following User Says Thank You to lost in melb. For This Useful Post:

    RBP (04-06-2020)

  5. #4
    Take Box B DemonGeminiX's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Bum Fuck Egypt, East Jabip
    Posts
    64,807
    vCash
    27021
    Mentioned
    25 Post(s)
    Thanks
    45,043
    Thanked 16,893 Times in 11,968 Posts
    There's parallels with what happened in the USA around WW1 with what's going on today in the USA with the coronavirus. The article doesn't list them, but they're as plain as day if you choose to read for yourself.


    Warning: The posts of this forum member may contain trigger language which may be considered offensive to some.

    Music was better when ugly people were allowed to make it.

  6. The Following User Says Thank You to DemonGeminiX For This Useful Post:

    RBP (04-06-2020)

  7. #5
    Mr Magoo RBP's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    60,390
    vCash
    2000
    Mentioned
    185 Post(s)
    Thanks
    78,181
    Thanked 27,731 Times in 15,014 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by DemonGeminiX View Post
    There's parallels with what happened in the USA around WW1 with what's going on today in the USA with the coronavirus. The article doesn't list them, but they're as plain as day if you choose to read for yourself.
    Yes. And the simple fact that while CNN runs articles about how face masks were mandatory in 1918, "what's changed?" they ask sarcastically.

    At the height of a World War and the massive Spanish Flu outbreak, makeshift hospitals, troops getting scourged by the virus plus bullets, you know what we had? A nearly complete baseball series and a World Series.

    The Red Sox beat the Cubs 4 game to 2, by the way.

    So indeed, what's changed?
    I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.

  8. #6
    Shelter Dweller lost in melb.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Down Under
    Posts
    23,780
    vCash
    7596
    Mentioned
    18 Post(s)
    Thanks
    18,686
    Thanked 7,561 Times in 5,212 Posts
    Oh, they kept the sports going Ww1

    I don't know what has happened recently in the US, sportswise but they kept our AFL going for a while, just with no spectators. But eventually they shut the whole thing down
    Last edited by lost in melb.; 04-06-2020 at 11:10 PM.

  9. #7
    Basement Dweller Godfather's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Vancouver
    Posts
    16,821
    vCash
    13129
    Mentioned
    28 Post(s)
    Thanks
    4,306
    Thanked 6,771 Times in 4,010 Posts
    Interesting fact about hockey during this time: They tried to have the 1919 Stanley Cup Final during the Spanish Influenza. Joe Hall, one of the toughest hockey players of his time, collapsed in game 5 and died of the Spanish flu shortly after. Several other players fell ill. No Stanley Cup winner was awarded that year.

    I hope we've learned from the 17-50 million dead during the Spanish Flu and a century of research and experience in public healthy since then.

  10. The Following User Says Thank You to Godfather For This Useful Post:

    lost in melb. (04-06-2020)

  11. #8
    Shelter Dweller lost in melb.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Down Under
    Posts
    23,780
    vCash
    7596
    Mentioned
    18 Post(s)
    Thanks
    18,686
    Thanked 7,561 Times in 5,212 Posts
    It's hard time for sports people, particularly if you need indoor equipment. My hat goes off to human ingenuity, though...

    Canadian swimmer Amélie Kretz





    https://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.5521751

  12. The Following User Says Thank You to lost in melb. For This Useful Post:

    RBP (04-08-2020)

  13. #9
    Basement Dweller Godfather's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Vancouver
    Posts
    16,821
    vCash
    13129
    Mentioned
    28 Post(s)
    Thanks
    4,306
    Thanked 6,771 Times in 4,010 Posts
    Looks like baseball might be back soon! I'll watch professional shuffle board at this point frankly


    https://www.barstoolsports.com/blog/...-as-next-month

  14. The Following User Says Thank You to Godfather For This Useful Post:

    RBP (04-08-2020)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •