Saturday, August 27, 2005

For All the Cubs Fans Out There

While cleaning and packing, I rediscovered a book by Robert J. Morgan entitled Real Stories for the Soul. Please note that this is in no way a plug for this book; it's terrible. Generally speaking it's shallow and the veracity of the stories is questionable. But, there is this really cool one that I would like to share (most of it anyway).

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The 1908 World Series (p 135-36)

The 1908 National League season saw a fierce struggle between the Chicago Cubs and the New York Giants. When they met with thet Pennant on the line, there was a last minute change in the Giant lineup. The Giant's first basemen had a sprained back, and substituting for him was an eager nineteen-year-old named Fred Merkle who was thought to be a rising star in baseball.

The game was tied, adn in the bottom of the ninth, the Giants were at bat. There were two outs, and two men on base. The winning run was on third, and Fred Merkle was on first. The batter hit a single, and the runner on third lumbered home. The Giants had apparently won the game and the pennant. Jubilant Giant fans poured onto the field while Fred Merkle was still on his way to second. Alarmed by the crowd suddenly bearing down on him and convinced the game was over, he ran straight for the clubhouse.

He didn't go all teh way to second base. The Chicago second baseman noticed the [sic.] Merkle hadn't bothered to touch second. If he could get the ball and touch second himself, the winning run would be cancelled by the force-out. First, he had to find the ball.

One of the New York coaches saw what was happening, and he ran for the ball and threw it into the stands. A fan in a brown bowler caught it and started home with his trophy. Two Cubs players chased the man through the mob and tried to take the ball away from him. When he resisted, they knocked him down, grabbed the ball, ran back to the field, and threw it to their second baseman, who, holding the ball, jumped up and down on the bag to make sure the umpire saw what he had done.

As a result, New Yorkd lost the game--and the Pennant--and although Fred Merkle stuck it out for fourteen more years in baseball, he never got over the reputation of being the man responsible for what is still to this day called "Merkle's Boner."

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For all those Cardinal fans out there, it has to make us wonder, did they really win that year? Hmmm. Do ya think we should we tell 'em?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You got the story right (almost). Read into the history like I did, and you will find out that the Cub's Unsung Hero was FLOYD (RUBE) KROH, a rookie that jumped off the bench and retrived the ball for the Cubs. Merkle became famous for screwing up. Kroh is hardly ever heard of. He is burried in New Orleans, without a grave marker. I am part of a group that will correct that oversight. Then, and maybe ONLY THEN, will the Cubs win another series.

irreverance said...

Awesome! Thanks for filling all that in.