THE series ended Tuesday, but I had stayed in Philadelphia an
extra day on the chance of there being some follow-up stuff worth
sending. Nothing had broken loose; so I filed some stuff about
what the Athletics and Giants were going to do with their dough,
and then caught the eight o'clock train for Chicago.
Having passed up supper in order to get my story away and grab
the train, I went to the buffet car right after I'd planted my
grips. I sat down at one of the tables and ordered a sandwich.
Four salesmen were playing rum at the other table and all the
chairs in the car were occupied; so it didn't surprise me when
somebody flopped down in the seat opposite me.
I looked up from my paper and with a little thrill recognized my
companion. Now I've been experting round the country with ball
players so much that it doesn't usually excite me to meet one
face to face, even if he's a star. I can talk with Tyrus without
getting all fussed up. But this particular player had jumped from
obscurity to fame so suddenly and had played such an important
though brief part in the recent argument between the Macks and
McGraws that I couldn't help being a little awed by his
proximity.
It was none other than Grimes, the utility outfielder Connie had
been forced to use in the last game because of the injury to
Joyce--Grimes, whose miraculous catch in the eleventh inning had
robbed Parker of a home run and the Giants of victory, and whose
own homer--a fluky one--had given the Athletics another World's
Championship.
I had met Grimes one day during the spring he was with the Cubs,
but I knew he wouldn't remember me. A ball player never recalls a
reporter's face on less than six introductions or his name on
less than twenty. However, I resolved to speak to him, and had
just mustered sufficient courage to open a conversation when he
saved me the trouble.
"Whose picture have they got there?" he asked, pointing to my
paper.
"What do they say about him? " asked Grimes. "I'll read it to
you," I said:
Speed Parker, McGraw's great third baseman, is ill in a local
hospital with nervous prostration, the result of the strain of
the World's Series, in which he played such a stellar rôle.
Parker is in such a dangerous condition that no one is allowed to
see him. Members of the New York team and fans from Gotham called
at the hospital to-day, but were unable to gain admittance to his
ward. Philadelphians hope he will recover speedily and will
suffer no permanent ill effects from his sickness, for he won
their admiration by his work in the series, though he was on a
rival team. A lucky catch by Grimes, the Athletics' substitute
outfielder, was all that prevented Parker from winning the title
for New York. According to Manager Mack, of the champions, the
series would have been over in four games but for Parker's
wonderful exhibition of nerve and----"
"That'll be a plenty," Grimes interrupted. "And that's just what
you might expect from one o' them doughheaded reporters. If all
the baseball writers was where they belonged they'd have to build
an annex to Matteawan."
I kept my temper with very little effort--it takes more than a
peevish ball player's remarks to insult one of our fraternity;
but I didn't exactly understand his peeve.
"Oh, they can boost him all they want to," said Grimes; "but when
they call that catch lucky and don't mention the fact that Parker
is the luckiest guy in the world, somethin' must be wrong with
'em. Did you see the serious?"
"No," I lied glibly, hoping to draw from him the cause of his
grouch.
"Well," he said, "you sure missed somethin'. They never was a
serious like it before and they won't never be one again. It went
the full seven games and every game was a bear. They was one big
innin' every day and Parker was the big cheese in it. Just as
Connie says, the Ath-a-letics would of cleaned 'em in four games
but for Parker; but it wasn't because he's a great ball
player--it was because he was born with a knife, fork and spoon
in his mouth, and a rabbit's foot hung round his neck.
"You may not know it, but I'm Grimes, the guy that made the lucky
catch. I'm the guy that won the serious with a hit--a home-run
hit; and I'm here to tell you that if I'd had one-tenth o'
Parker's luck they'd of heard about me long before yesterday.
They say my homer was lucky. Maybe it was; but, believe me, it
was time things broke for me. They been breakin' for him all his
life."
"Well," I said, "his luck must have gone back on him if he's in a
hospital with nervous prostration."
"Nervous prostration nothin'," said Grimes. "He's in a hospital
because his face is all out o' shape and he's ashamed to appear
on the street. I don't usually do so much talkin' and I'm ravin'
a little to-night because I've had a couple o' drinks; but----"
"Have another," said I, ringing for the waiter, "and talk some
more."
"I made two hits yesterday," Grimes went on, "but the crowd only
seen one. I busted up the game and the serious with the one they
seen. The one they didn't see was the one I busted up a guy's map
with--and Speed Parker was the guy. That's why he's in a
hospital. He may be able to play ball next year; but I'll bet my
share o' the dough that McGraw won't reco'nize him when he shows
up at Marlin in the spring."
"It come off outside the clubhouse after yesterday's battle," he
said; " and I hit him because he called me a name--a name I won't
stand for from him."
"What did he call you?" I queried, expecting to hear one of the
delicate epithets usually applied by conquered to conqueror on
the diamond.
"But, good Lord!" I remonstrated, "I've heard of ball players
calling each other that, and Lucky Stiff, and Fourleaf Clover,
ever since I was a foot high, and I never knew them to start
fights about it."
"Well," said Grimes, "I might as well give you all the dope; and
then if you don't think I was justified I'll pay your fare from
here to wherever you're goin'. I don't want you to think I'm
kickin' about trifles--or that I'm kickin' at all, for that
matter. I just want to prove to you that he didn't have no
license to pull that Horseshoes stuff on me and that I only give
him what was comin' to him."
"Give us some more o' the same," said Grimes to the passing
waiter. And then he told me about it.
Maybe you've heard that me and Speed Parker was raised in the
same town--Ishpeming, Michigan. We was kids together, and though
he done all the devilment I got all the lickin's. When we was
about twelve years old Speed throwed a rotten egg at the teacher
and I got expelled. That made me sick o' schools and I wouldn't
never go to one again, though my ol' man beat me up and the
truant officers threatened to have me hung.
Well, while Speed was learnin' what was the principal products o'
New Hampshire and Texas I was workin' round the freight-house and
drivin' a dray.
We'd both been playin' ball all our lives; and when the town
organized a semi-pro club we got jobs with it. We was to draw two
bucks apiece for each game and they played every Sunday. We
played four games before we got our first pay. They was a hole in
my pants pocket as big as the home plate, but I forgot about it
and put the dough in there. It wasn't there when I got home.
Speed didn't have no hole in his pocket--you can bet on that!
Afterward the club hired a good outfielder and I was canned. They
was huntin' for another third baseman too; but, o' course, they
didn't find none and Speed held his job.
The next year they started the Northern Peninsula League. We
landed with the home team. The league opened in May and blowed up
the third week in June. They paid off all the outsiders first and
then had just money enough left to settle with one of us two
Ishpeming guys. The night they done the payin' I was out to my
uncle's farm, so they settled with Speed and told me I'd have to
wait for mine. I'm still waitin'!
Gene Higgins, who was manager o' the Battle Creek Club, lived in
Houghton, and that winter we goes over and strikes him for a job.
He give it to us and we busted in together two years ago last
spring.
I had a good year down there. I hit over .300 and stole all the
bases in sight. Speed got along good too, and they was several
big-league scouts lookin' us over. The Chicago Cubs bought Speed
outright and four clubs put in a draft for me. Three of
'em--Cleveland and the New York Giants and the Boston
Nationals--needed outfielders bad, and it would of been a pipe
for me to of made good with any of 'em. But who do you think got
me? The same Chicago Cubs; and the only outfielders they had at
that time was Schulte and Leach and Good and Williams and
Stewart, and one or two others.
Well, I didn't figure I was any worse off than Speed. The Cubs
had Zimmerman at third base and it didn't look like they was any
danger of a busher beatin' him out; but Zimmerman goes and breaks
his leg the second day o' the season--that's a year ago last
April--and Speed jumps right in as a regular. Do you think
anything like that could happen to Schulte or Leach, or any o'
them outfielders? No, sir! I wore out my uniform slidin' up and
down the bench and wonderin' whether they'd ship me to Fort Worth
or Siberia.
Now I want to tell you about the miserable luck Speed had right
off the reel. We was playin' at St. Louis. They had a one-run
lead in the eighth, when their pitcher walked Speed with one out.
Saier hits a high fly to centre and Parker starts with the crack
o' the bat. Both coachers was yellin' at him to go back, but he
thought they was two out and he was clear round to third base
when the ball come down. And Oakes muffs it! O' course he scored
and the game was tied up.
Parker come in to the bench like he'd did something wonderful.
"I had a hunch he was goin' to drop the ball," says Speed; and
Hank pretty near falls off the bench.
The next day he come up with one out and the sacks full, and the
score tied in the sixth. He smashes one on the ground straight at
Hauser and it looked like a cinch double play; but just as Hauser
was goin' to grab it the ball hit a rough spot and hopped a mile
over his head. It got between Oakes and Magee and went clear to
the fence. Three guys scored and Speed pulled up at third. The
papers come out and said the game was won by a three-bagger from
the bat o' Parker, the Cubs' sensational kid third baseman. Gosh!
We go home to Chi and are havin' a hot battle with Pittsburgh.
This time Speed's turn come when they was two on and two out, and
Pittsburgh a run to the good--I think it was the eighth innin'.
Cooper gives him a fast one and he hits it straight up in the
air. O' course the runners started goin', but it looked hopeless
because they wasn't no wind or high sky to bother anybody. Mowrey
and Gibson both goes after the ball; and just as Mowrey was set
for the catch Gibson bumps into him and they both fall down. Two
runs scored and Speed got to second. Then what does he do but try
to steal third--with two out too! And Gibson's peg pretty near
hits the left field seats on the fly.
"So is Ty Cobb," says Speed. That's how he hated himself!
First trip to Cincy we run into a couple of old Ishpeming boys.
They took us out one night, and about twelve o'clock I said we'd
have to go back to the hotel or we'd get fined. Speed said I had
cold feet and he stuck with the boys. I went back alone and Hank
caught me comin' in and put a fifty-dollar plaster on me. Speed
stayed out all night long and Hank never knowed it. I says to
myself: "Wait till he gets out there and tries to play ball
without no sleep!" But the game that day was called off on
account o' rain. Can you beat it?
I remember what he got away with the next afternoon the same as
though it happened yesterday. In the second innin' they walked
him with nobody down, and he took a big lead off first base like
he always does. Benton throwed over there three or four times to
scare him back, and the last time he throwed, Hobby hid the ball.
The coacher seen it and told Speed to hold the bag; but he didn't
pay no attention. He started leadin' right off again and Hobby
tried to tag him, but the ball slipped out of his hand and rolled
about a yard away. Parker had plenty o' time to get back; but,
instead o' that, he starts for second. Hobby picked up the ball
and shot it down to Groh--and Groh made a square muff.
Parker slides into the bag safe and then gets up and throws out
his chest like he'd made the greatest play ever. When the ball's
throwed back to Benton, Speed leads off about thirty foot and
stands there in a trance. Clarke signs for a pitch-out and pegs
down to second to nip him. He was caught flatfooted--that is, he
would of been with a decent throw; but Clarke's peg went pretty
near to Latonia. Speed scored and strutted over to receive our
hearty congratulations. Some o' the boys was laughin' and he
thought they was laughin' with him instead of at him.
It was in the ninth, though, that he got by with one o' the worst
I ever seen. The Reds was a run behind and Marsans was on third
base with two out. Hobby, I think it was, hit one on the ground
right at Speed and he picked it up clean. The crowd all got up
and started for the exits. Marsans run toward the plate in the
faint hope that the peg to first would be wild. All of a sudden
the boys on the Cincy bench begun yellin' at him to slide, and he
done so. He was way past the plate when Speed's throw got to
Archer. The bonehead had shot the ball home instead o' to first
base, thinkin' they was only one down. We was all crazy,
believin' his nut play had let 'em tie it up; but he comes
tearin' in, tellin' Archer to tag Marsans. So Jim walks over and
tags the Cuban, who was brushin' off his uniform.
"You're out!"says Klem. "You never touched the plate."
I guess Marsans knowed the umps was right because he didn't make
much of a holler. But Speed sure got a pannin' in the club-house.
"I suppose you knowed he was goin' to miss the plate!" says Hank
sarcastic as he could.
Everybody on the club roasted him, but it didn't do no good.
Well, you know what happened to me. I only got into one game with
the Cubs--one afternoon when Leach was sick. We was playin' the
Boston bunch and Tyler was workin' against us. I always had
trouble with lefthanders and this was one of his good days. I
couldn't see what he throwed up there. I got one foul durin' the
afternoon's entertainment; and the wind was blowin' a
hundred-mile gale, so that the best outfielder in the world
couldn't judge a fly ball. That Boston bunch must of hit fifty of
'em and they all come to my field.
If I caught any I've forgot about it. Couple o' days after that I
got notice o' my release to Indianapolis.
Parker kept right on all season doin' the blamnedest things you
ever heard of and gettin' by with 'em. One o' the boys told me
about it later. If they was playin' a double-header in St. Louis,
with the thermometer at 130 degrees, he'd get put out by the umps
in the first innin' o' the first game. If he started to steal the
catcher'd drop the pitch or somebody'd muff the throw. If he hit
a pop fly the sun'd get in somebody's eyes. If he took a swell
third strike with the bases full the umps would call it a ball.
If he cut first base by twenty feet the umps would be readin' the
mornin' paper.
Zimmerman's leg mended, so that he was all right by June; and
then Saier got sick and they tried Speed at first base. He'd
never saw the bag before; but things kept on breakin' for him and
he played it like a house afire. The Cubs copped the pennant and
Speed got in on the big dough, besides playin' a whale of a game
through the whole serious.
Speed and me both went back to Ishpeming to spend the
winter--though the Lord knows it ain't no winter resort. Our
homes was there; and besides, in my case, they was a certain girl
livin' in the old burg.
Parker, o' course, was the hero and the swell guy when we got
home. He'd been in the World's Serious and had plenty o' dough in
his kick. I come home with nothin' but my suitcase and a
hard-luck story, which I kept to myself. I hadn't even went good
enough in Indianapolis to be sure of a job there again.
That fall--last fall--an uncle o' Speed's died over in the Soo
and left him ten thousand bucks. I had an uncle down in the Lower
Peninsula who was worth five times that much--but he had good
health!
This girl I spoke about was the prettiest thing I ever see. I'd
went with her in the old days, and when I blew back I found she
was still strong for me. They wasn't a great deal o' variety in
Ishpeming for a girl to pick from. Her and I went to the dance
every Saturday night and to church Sunday nights. I called on her
Wednesday evenin's, besides takin' her to all the shows that come
along--rotten as the most o' them was.
I never knowed Speed was makin' a play for this doll till along
last Feb'uary. The minute I seen what was up I got busy. I took
her out sleigh-ridin' and kept her out in the cold till she'd
promised to marry me. We set the date for this fall--I figured
I'd know better where I was at by that time.
Well, we didn't make no secret o' bein' engaged; down in the
poolroom one night Speed come up and congratulated me. He says:
"You got a swell girl, Dick! I wouldn't mind bein' in your place.
You're mighty lucky to cop her out--you old Horseshoes, you!"
"Horseshoes!" I says. "You got a fine license to call anybody
Horseshoes! I suppose you ain't never had no luck?"
I was feelin' too good about grabbin' the girl to get sore at the
time; but when I got to thinkin' about it a few minutes afterward
it made me mad clear through. What right did that bird have to
talk about me bein' lucky?
Speed was playin' freeze-out at a table near the door, and when I
started home some o' the boys with him says:
"Shut up, you lucky stiff!" I says. "If you wasn't so dam' lucky
you'd be sweepin' the streets." Then I walks on out.
I was too busy with the girl to see much o' Speed after that. He
left home about the middle o' the month to go to Tampa with the
Cubs. I got notice from Indianapolis that I was sold to
Baltimore. I didn't care much about goin' there and I wasn't
anxious to leave home under the circumstances, so I didn't report
till late.
When I read in the papers along in April that Speed had been
traded to Boston for a couple o' pitchers I thought: "Gee! He
must of lost his rabbit's foot!" Because, even if the Cubs didn't
cop again, they'd have a city serious with the White Sox and get
a bunch o' dough that way. And they wasn't no chance in the world
for the Boston Club to get nothin' but their salaries.
It wasn't another month, though, till Shafer, o' the Giants, quit
baseball and McGraw was up against it for a third baseman. Next
thing I knowed Speed was traded to New York and was with another
winner--for they never was out o' first place all season.
I was gettin' along all right at Baltimore and Dunnie liked me;
so I felt like I had somethin' more than just a one-year
job--somethin' I could get married on. It was all framed that the
weddin' was comin' off as soon as this season was over; so you
can believe I was pullin' for October to hurry up and come.
One day in August, two months ago, Dunnie come in the club-house
and handed me the news.
"Rube Oldring's busted his leg," he says, "and he's out for the
rest o' the season. Connie's got a youngster named Joyce that he
can stick in there, but he's got to have an extra outfielder.
He's made me a good proposition for you and I'm goin' to let you
go. It'll be pretty soft for yQu, because they got the pennant
cinched and they'll cut you in on the big money."
"Yes," I says; "and when they're through with me they'll ship me
to Hellangone, and I'll be draggin' down about seventy-five bucks
a month next year."
"Nothin' like that," says Dunnie. "If he don't want you next
season he's got to ask for waivers; and if you get out o' the big
league you come right back here. That's all framed."
So that's how I come to get with the Ath-a-letics. Connie give me
a nice, comf'table seat in one corner o' the bench and I had the
pleasure o' watchin' a real ball club perform once every
afternoon and sometimes twice.
Connie told me that as soon as they had the flag cinched he was
goin' to lay off some o' his regulars and I'd get a chance to
play.
Well, they cinched it the fourth day o' September and our next
engagement was with Washin'ton on Labor Day. We had two games and
I was in both of 'em. And I broke in with my usual lovely luck,
because the pitchers I was ast to face was Boehling, a nasty
lefthander, and this guy Johnson.
The mornin' game was Boebling's and he wasn't no worse than some
o' the rest of his kind. I only whiffed once and would of had a
triple if Milan hadn't run from here to New Orleans and stole one
off me.
I'm not boastin' about my first experience with Johnson though.
They can't never tell me he throws them balls with his arm. He's
got a gun concealed about his person and he shoots 'em up there.
I was leadin' off in Murphy's place and the game was a little
delayed in startin', because I'd watched the big guy warm up and
wasn't in no hurry to get to that plate. Before I left the bench
Connie says:
Don't try to take no healthy swing. Just meet 'em and you'll get
a long better."
So I tried to just meet the first one he throwed; but when I
stuck out my bat Henry was throwin' the pill back to Johnson.
Then I thought Maybe if I start swingin' now at the second one
I'll hit the third one. So I let the second one come over and the
umps guessed it was another strike, though I'll bet a thousand
bucks he couldn't see it no more'n I could.
While Johnson was still windin' up to pitch again I started to
swing--and the big cuss crosses me with a slow one. I lunged at
it twice and missed it both times, and the force o' my wallop
throwed me clean back to the bench. The Ath-a-letics was all
laughin' at me and I laughed too, because I was glad that much of
it was over.
McInnes gets a base hit off him in the second innin' and I ast
him how he done it.
"He's a friend o' mine," says Jack, "and he lets up when he
pitches to me."
I made up my mind right there that if I was goin' to be in the
league next year I'd go out and visit Johnson this winter and get
acquainted.
I wished before the day was over that I was hittin' in the
catcher's place, because the fellers down near the tail-end of
the battin' order only had to face him three times. He fanned me
on three pitched balls again in the third, and when I come up in
the sixth he scared me to death by pretty near beanin' me with
the first one.
"Be careful!" says Henry. "He's gettin' pretty wild and he's
liable to knock you away from your uniform."
"Sure!" says Henry. "Do you want to see his curve?"
"Yes," I says, knowin' the hook couldn't be no worse'n the fast
one.
So he give me three hooks in succession and I missed 'em all; but
I felt more comf'table than when I was duckin' his fast ball. In
the ninth he hit my bat with a curve and the ball went on the
ground to McBride. He booted it, but throwed me out easy--because
I was so surprised at not havin' whiffed that I forgot to run!
Well, I went along like that for the rest o' the season, runnin'
up against the best pitchers in the league and not exactly
murderin' 'em. Everything I tried went wrong, and I was smart
enough to know that if anything had depended on the games I
wouldn't of been in there for two minutes. Joyce and Strunk and
Murphy wasn't jealous o' me a bit; but they was glad to take
turns restin', and I didn't care much how I went so long as I was
sure of a job next year.
I'd wrote to the girl a couple o' times askin' her to set the
exact date for our weddin'; but she hadn't paid no attention. She
said she was glad I was with the Ath-a-letics, but she thought
the Giants was goin' to beat us. I might of suspected from that
that somethin' was wrong, because not even a girl would pick the
Giants to trim that bunch of ourn. Finally, the day before the
serious started, I sent her a kind o' sassy letter sayin' I
guessed it was up to me to name the day, and askin' whether
October twentieth was all right. I told her to wire me yes or no.
I'd been readin' the dope about Speed all season, and I knowed
he'd had a whale of a year and that his luck was right with him;
but I never dreamed a man could have the Lord on his side as
strong as Speed did in that World's Serious! I might as well tell
you all the dope, so long as you wasn't there.
The first game was on our grounds and Connie give us a talkin' to
in the clubhouse beforehand.
"The shorter this serious is," he says, "the better for us. If
it's a long serious we're goin' to have trouble, because McGraw's
got five pitchers he can work and we've got about three; so I
want you boys to go at 'em from the jump and play 'em off their
feet. Don't take things easy, because it ain't goin' to be no
snap. Just because we've licked 'em before ain't no sign we'll do
it this time."
Then he calls me to one side and ast me what I knowed about
Parker.
"You was with the Cubs when he was, wasn't you?" he says.
"Yes," I says; "and he's the luckiest stiff you ever seen! If he
got stewed and fell in the gutter he'd catch a fish."
"I don't like to hear a good ball player called lucky," says
Connie. "He must have a lot of ability or McGraw wouldn't use him
regular. And he's been hittin' about .340 and played a hang-up
game at third base. That can't be all luck."
"Wait till you see him," I says; "and if you don't say he's the
luckiest guy in the world you can sell me to the Boston Bloomer
Girls. He's so lucky," I says, "that if they traded him to the
St. Louis Browns they'd have the pennant cinched by the Fourth o'
July."
And I'll bet Connie was willin' to agree with me before it was
over.
Well, the Chief worked against the Big Rube in that game. We beat
'em, but they give us a battle and it was Parker that made it
close. We'd gone along nothin' and nothin' till the seventh, and
then Rube walks Collins and Baker lifts one over that little old
wall. You'd think by this time them New York pitchers would know
better than to give that guy anything he can hit.
In their part o' the ninth the Chief still had 'em shut out and
two down, and the crowd was goin' home; but Doyle gets hit in the
sleeve with a pitched ball and it's Speed's turn. He hits a foul
pretty near straight up, but Schang misjudges it. Then he lifts
another one and this time McInnes drops it. He'd ought to of been
out twice. The Chief tries to make him hit at a bad one then,
because he'd got him two strikes and nothin'. He hit at it all
right--kissed it for three bases between Strunk and Joyce! And it
was a wild pitch that he hit. Doyle scores, o' course, and the
bugs suddenly decide not to go home just yet. I fully expected to
see him steal home and get away with it, but Murray cut into the
first ball and lined out to Barry.
Plank beat Matty two to one the next day in New York, and again
Speed and his rabbit's foot give us an awful argument. Matty
wasn't so good as usual and we really ought to of beat him bad.
Two different times Strunk was on second waitin' for any kind o'
wallop, and both times Barry cracked 'em down the third-base line
like a shot. Speed stopped the first one with his stomach and
extricated the pill just in time to nail Barry at first base and
retire the side. The next time he throwed his glove in front of
his face in self-defense and the ball stuck in it.
In the sixth innin' Schang was on third base and Plank on first,
and two down, and Murphy combed an awful one to Speed's left. He
didn't have time to stoop over and he just stuck out his foot.
The ball hit it and caromed in two hops right into Doyle's hands
on second base before Plank got there. Then in the seventh Speed
bunts one and Baker trips and falls goin' after it or he'd of
threw him out a mile. They was two gone; so Speed steals second,
and, o' course, Schang has to make a bad peg right at that time
and lets him go to third. Then Collins boots one on Murray and
they've got a run. But it didn't do 'em no good, because Collins
and Baker and McInnes come up in the ninth and walloped 'em where
Parker couldn't reach 'em.
Comin' back to Philly on the train that night, I says to Connie:
"He's lucky, all right," says Connie smilin'; "but we won't hold
it against him if he don't beat us with it."
"It ain't too late," I says. "He ain't pulled his real stuff
yet."
The whole bunch was talkin' about him and his luck, and sayin' it
was about time for things to break against him. I warned 'em that
they wasn't no chance--that it was permanent with him.
Bush and Tesreau hooked up next day and neither o' them had much
stuff. Everybody was hittin' and it looked like anybody's game
right up to the ninth. Speed had got on every time he come
up--the wind blowin' his fly balls away from the outfielders and
the infielders bootin' when he hit 'em on the ground.
When the ninth started the score was seven apiece. Connie and
McGraw both had their whole pitchin' staffs warmin' up. The crowd
was wild, because they'd been all kinds of action. They wasn't no
danger of anybody's leavin' their seats before this game was
over.
Well, Bescher is walked to start with and Connie's about ready to
give Bush one hook; but Doyle pops out tryin' to bunt. Then Speed
gets two strikes and two balls, and it looked to me like the next
one was right over the heart; but Connolly calls it a ball and
gives him another chance. He whales the groove ball to the fence
in left center and gets round to third on it, while Bescher
scores. Right then Bush comes out and the Chief goes in. He
whiffs Murray and has two strikes on Merkle when Speed makes a
break for home--and, o' course, that was the one ball Schang
dropped in the whole serious!
They had a two-run lead on us then and it looked like a cinch for
them to hold it, because the minute Tesreau showed a sign o'
weakenin' McGraw was sure to holler for Matty or the Rube. But
you know how quick that bunch of ourn can make a two-run lead
look sick. Before McGraw could get Jeff out o' there we had two
on the bases.
Then Rube comes in and fills 'em up by walkin' Joyce. It was
Eddie's turn to wallop and if he didn't do nothin' we had Baker
comin' up next. This time Collins saved Baker the trouble and
whanged one clear to the woods. Everybody scored but him--and he
could of, too, if it'd been necessary.
In the clubhouse the boys naturally felt pretty good. We'd copped
three in a row and it looked like we'd make it four straight,
because we had the Chief to send back at 'em the followin' day.
"Your friend Parker is lucky," the boys says to me, "but it don't
look like he could stop us now."
I felt the same way and was consultin' the time-tables to see
whether I could get a train out o' New York for the West next
evenin'. But do you think Speed's luck was ready to quit? Not
yet! And it's a wonder we didn't all go nuts durin' the next few
days. If words could kill, Speed would of died a thousand times.
And I wish he had!
They wasn't no record-breakin' crowd out when we got to the Polo
Grounds. I guess the New York bugs was pretty well discouraged
and the bettin' was eight to five that we'd cop that battle and
finish it. The Chief was the only guy that warmed up for us and
McGraw didn't have no choice but to use Matty, with the whole
thing dependin' on this game.
They went along like the two swell pitchers they was till Speed's
innin', which in this battle was the eighth. Nobody scored, and
it didn't look like they was ever goin' to till Murphy starts off
that round with a perfect bunt and Joyce sacrifices him to
second. All Matty had to do then was to get rid o' Collins and
Baker--and that's about as easy as sellin' silk socks to an
Eskimo.
He didn't give Eddie nothin' he wanted to hit, though; and
finally he slaps one on the ground to Doyle. Larry made the play
to first base and Murphy moved to third. We all figured Matty'd
walk Baker then, and he done it. Connie sends Baker down to
second on the first pitch to McInnes, but Meyers don't pay no
attention to him--they was playin' for McInnes and wasn't takin'
no chances o' throwin' the ball away.
Well, the count goes to three and two on McInnes and Matty comes
with a curve--he's got some curve too; but Jack happened to meet
it and--Blooie! Down the left foul line where he always hits! I
never seen a ball hit so hard in my life. No infielder in the
world could of stopped it. But I'll give you a thousand bucks if
that ball didn't go kerplunk right into the third bag and stop as
dead as George Washington! It was child's play for Speed to pick
it up and heave it over to Merkle before Jack got there. If
anybody else had been playin' third base the bag would of ducked
out o' the way o' that wallop; but even the bases themselves was
helpin' him out.
The two runs we ought to of had on Jack's smash would of been
just enough to beat 'em, because they got the only run o' the
game in their half--or, I should say, the Lord give it to 'em.
Doyle'd been throwed out and up come Parker, smilin'. The minute
I seen him smile I felt like somethin' was comin' off and I made
the remark on the bench.
Well, the Chief pitched one right at him and he tried to duck.
The ball hit his bat and went on a line between Jack and Eddie.
Speed didn't know he'd hit it till the guys on the bench wised
him up. Then he just had time to get to first base. They tried
the hit-and-run on the second ball and Murray lifts a high fly
that Murphy didn't have to move for. Collins pulled the old bluff
about the ball bein' on the ground and Barry yells, "Go on! Go
on!" like he was the coacher. Speed fell for it and didn't know
where the ball was no more'n a rabbit; he just run his fool head
off and we was gettin' all ready to laugh when the ball come down
and Murphy dropped it!
If Parker had stuck near first base, like he ought to of done, he
couldn't of got no farther'n second; but with the start he got he
was pretty near third when Murphy made the muff, and it was a
cinch for him to score. The next two guys was easy outs; so they
wouldn't of had a run except for Speed's boner. We couldn't do
nothin' in the ninth and we was licked.
Well, that was a tough one to lose; but we figured that Matty was
through and we'd wind it up the next day, as we had Plank ready
to send back at 'em. We wasn't afraid o' the Rube, because he
hadn't never bothered Collins and Baker much.
The two lefthanders come together just like everybody'd doped it
and it was about even up to the eighth. Plank had been goin'
great and, though the score was two and two, they'd got their two
on boots and we'd hit ourn in. We went after Rube in our part o'
the eighth and knocked him out. Demaree stopped us after we'd
scored two more.
"It's all over but the shoutin'!" says Davis on the bench.
"Yes," I says, "unless that seventh son of a seventh son gets up
there again."
He did, and he come up after they'd filled the bases with a boot,
a base hit and a walk with two out. I says to Davis:
"If I was Plank I'd pass him and give 'em one run."
"That wouldn't be no baseball," says Davis--"not with Murray
comin' up."
Well, it mayn't of been no baseball, but it couldn't of turned
out worse if they'd did it that way. Speed took a healthy at the
first ball; but it was a hook and he caught it on the handle,
right up near his hands. It started outside the first-base line
like a foul and then changed its mind and rolled in. Schang run
away from the plate, because it looked like it was up to him to
make the play. He picked the ball up and had to make the peg in a
hurry.
His throw hit Speed right on top o' the head and bounded off like
it had struck a cement sidewalk. It went clear over to the seats
and before McInnes could get it three guys had scored and Speed
was on third base. He was left there, but that didn't make no
difference. We was licked again and for the first time the gang
really begun to get scared.
We went over to New York Sunday afternoon and we didn't do no
singin' on the way. Some o' the fellers tried to laugh, but it
hurt 'em. Connie sent us to bed early, but I don't believe none
o' the bunch got much sleep--I know I didn't; I was worryin' too
much about the serious and also about the girl, who hadn't sent
me no telegram like I'd ast her to. Monday mornin' I wired her
askin' what was the matter and tellin' her I was gettin' tired of
her foolishness. O' course I didn't make it so strong as
that--but the telegram cost me a dollar and forty cents.
Connie had the choice o' two pitchers for the sixth game. He
could use Bush, who'd been slammed round pretty hard last time
out, or the Chief, who'd only had two days' rest. The rest of
'em--outside o' Plank--had a epidemic o' sore arms. Connie
finally picked Bush, so's he could have the Chief in reserve in
case we had to play a seventh game. McGraw started Big Jeff and
we went at it.
It wasn't like the last time these two guys had hooked up. This
time they both had somethin', and for eight innin's runs was as
scarce as Chinese policemen. They'd been chances to score on both
sides, but the big guy and Bush was both tight in the pinches.
The crowd was plumb nuts and yelled like Indians every time a fly
ball was caught or a strike called. They'd of got their money's
worth if they hadn't been no ninth; but, believe me, that was
some round!
They was one out when Barry hit one through the box for a base.
Schang walked, and it was Bush's turn. Connie told him to bunt,
but he whiffed in the attempt. Then Murphy comes up and
walks--and the bases are choked. Young Joyce had been pie for
Tesreau all day or else McGraw might of changed pitchers right
there. Anyway he left Big Jeff in and he beaned Joyce with a fast
one. It sounded like a tire blowin' out. Joyce falls over in a
heap and we chase out there, thinkin' he's dead; but he ain't,
and pretty soon he gets up and walks down to first base. Tesreau
had forced in a run and again we begun to count the winner's end.
Matty comes in to prevent further damage and Collins flies the
side out.
"Hold 'em now! Work hard!" we says to young Bush, and he walks
out there just as cool as though he was goin' to hit fungoes.
McGraw sends up a pinch hitter for Matty and Bush whiffed him.
Then Bescher flied out. I was prayin' that Doyle would end it,
because Speed's turn come after his'n; so I pretty near fell dead
when Larry hit safe.
Speed had his old smile and even more chest than usual when he
come up there, swingin' five or six bats. He didn't wait for
Doyle to try and steal, or nothin'. He lit into the first ball,
though Bush was tryin' to waste it. I seen the ball go high in
the air toward left field, and then I picked up my glove and got
ready to beat it for the gate. But when I looked out to see if
Joyce was set, what do you think I seen? He was lyin' flat on the
ground! That blow on the head had got him just as Bush was
pitchin' to Speed. He'd flopped over and didn't no more know what
was goin' on than if he'd croaked.
Well, everybody else seen it at the same time; but it was too
late. Strunk made a run for the ball, but they wasn't no chance
for him to get near it. It hit the ground about ten feet back o'
where Joyce was lyin' and bounded way over to the end o' the foul
line. You don't have to be told that Doyle and Parker both scored
and the serious was tied up.
We carried Joyce to the clubhouse and after a while he come to.
He cried when he found out what had happened. We cheered him up
all we could, but he was a pretty sick guy. The trainer said he'd
be all right, though, for the final game.
They tossed up a coin to see where they'd play the seventh battle
and our club won the toss; so we went back to Philly that night
and cussed Parker clear across New Jersey. I was so sore I kicked
the stuffin' out o' my seat.
You probably heard about the excitement in the burg yesterday
mornin'. The demand for tickets was somethin' fierce and some of
'em sold for as high as twenty-five bucks apiece. Our club hadn't
been lookin' for no seventh game and they was some tall hustlin'
done round that old ball park.
I started out to the grounds early and bought some New York
papers to read on the car. They was a big story that Speed
Parker, the Giants' hero, was goin' to be married a week after
the end o' the serious. It didn't give the name o' the girl,
sayin' Speed had refused to tell it. I figured she must be some
dame he'd met round the circuit somewheres.
They was another story by one o' them smart baseball reporters
sayin' that Parker, on his way up to the plate, had saw that
Joyce was about ready to faint and had hit the fly ball to left
field on purpose. Can you beat it?
I was goin' to show that to the boys in the clubhouse, but the
minute I blowed in there I got some news that made me forget
about everything else. Joyce was very sick and they'd took him to
a hospital. It was up to me to play!
Connie come over and ast me whether I'd ever hit against Matty. I
told him I hadn't, but I'd saw enough of him to know he wasn't no
worse'n Johnson. He told me he was goin' to let me hit second--in
Joyce's place--because he didn't want to bust up the rest of his
combination. He also told me to take my orders from Strunk about
where to play for the batters.
"Where shall I play for Parker?" I says, tryin' to joke and
pretend I wasn't scared to death.
"I wisht I could tell you," says Connie. "I guess the only thing
to do when he comes up is to get down on your knees and pray."
The rest o' the bunch slapped me on the back and give me all the
encouragement they could. The place was jammed when we went out
on the field. They may of been bigger crowds before, but they
never was packed together so tight. I doubt whether they was even
room enough left for Falkenberg to sit down.
The afternoon papers had printed the stuff about Joyce bein' out
of it, so the bugs was wise that I was goin' to play. They
watched me pretty close in battin' practice and give me a hand
whenever I managed to hit one hard. When I was out catchin'
fungoes the guys in the bleachers cheered me and told me they was
with me; but I don't mind tellin' you that I was as nervous as a
bride.
They wasn't no need for the announcers to tip the crowd off to
the pitchers. Everybody in the United States and Cuba knowed that
the Chief'd work for us and Matty for them. The Chief didn't have
no trouble with 'em in the first innin'. Even from where I stood
I could see that he had a lot o' stuff. Bescher and Doyle popped
out and Speed whiffed.
Well, I started out makin' good, with reverse English, in our
part. Fletcher booted Murphy's ground ball and I was sent up to
sacrifice. I done a complete job of it--sacrificin' not only
myself but Murphy with a pop fly that Matty didn't have to move
for. That spoiled whatever chance we had o' gettin' the jump on
'em; but the boys didn't bawl me for it.
"That's all right, old boy. You're all right! " they said on the
bench--if they'd had a gun they'd of shot me.
I didn't drop no fly balls in the first six innin's--because none
was hit out my way. The Chief was so good that they wasn't
hittin' nothin' out o' the infield. And we wasn't doin' nothin'
with Matty, either. I led off in the fourth and fouled the first
one. I didn't molest the other two. But if Connie and the gang
talked about me they done it internally. I come up again--with
Murphy on third base and two gone in the sixth, and done my
little whiffin' specialty. And still the only people that panned
me was the thirty thousand that had paid for the privilege!
My first fieldin' chance come in the seventh. You'd of thought
that I'd of had my nerve back by that time; but I was just as
scared as though I'd never saw a crowd before. It was just as
well that they was two out when Merkle hit one to me. I staggered
under it and finally it hit me on the shoulder. Merkle got to
second, but the Chief whiffed the next guy. I was gave some cross
looks on the bench and I shouldn't of blamed the fellers if
they'd cut loose with some language; but they didn't.
They's no use in me tellin' you about none o' the rest of
it--except what happened just before the start o' the eleventh
and durin' that innin', which was sure the big one o' yesterday's
pastime--both for Speed and yours sincerely.
The scoreboard was still a row o' ciphers and Speed'd had only a
fair amount o' luck. He'd made a scratch base hit and robbed our
bunch of a couple o' real ones with impossible stops.
When Schang flied out and wound up our tenth I was leanin'
against the end of our bench. I heard my name spoke, and I turned
round and seen a boy at the door.
"Better not open it till after the game," says Connie.
"Oh, no; it ain't no bad news," I said, for I figured it was an
answer from the girl. So I opened it up and read it on the way to
my position. It said:
"Forgive me, Dick--and forgive Speed too. Letter follows."
Well, sir, I ain't no baby, but for a minute I just wanted to sit
down and bawl. And then, all of a sudden, I got so mad I couldn't
see. I run right into Baker as he was pickin' up his glove. Then
I give him a shove and called him some name, and him and Barry
both looked at me like I was crazy--and I was. When I got out in
left field I stepped on my own foot and spiked it. I just had to
hurt somebody.
As I remember it the Chief fanned the first two of 'em. Then
Doyle catches one just right and lams it up against the fence
back o' Murphy. The ball caromed round some and Doyle got all the
way to third base. Next thing I seen was Speed struttin' up to
the plate. I run clear in from my position.
"Kill him!" I says to the Chief. "Hit him in the head and kill
him, and I'll go to jail for it!"
"Are you off your nut?" says the Chief. "Go out there and play
ball--and quit ravin'."
Barry and Baker led me away and give me a shove out toward left.
Then I heard the crack o' the bat and I seen the ball comin' a
mile a minute. It was headed between Strunk and I and looked like
it would go out o' the park. I don't remember runnin' or nothin'
about it till I run into the concrete wall head first. They told
me afterward and all the papers said that it was the greatest
catch ever seen. And I never knowed I'd caught the ball!
Some o' the managers have said my head was pretty hard, but it
wasn't as hard as that concrete. I was pretty near out, but they
tell me I walked to the bench like I wasn't hurt at all. They
also tell me that the crowd was a bunch o' ravin' maniacs and was
throwin' money at me. I guess the ground-keeper'll get it.
The boys on the bench was all talkin' at once and slappin' me on
the back, but I didn't know what it was about. Somebody told me
pretty soon that it was my turn to hit and I picked up the first
bat I come to and starts for the plate. McInnes come runnin'
after me and ast me whether I didn't want my own bat. I cussed
him and told him to mind his own business.
I didn't know it at the time, but I found out afterward that they
was two out. The bases was empty. I'll tell you just what I had
in my mind: I wasn't thinkin' about the ball game; I was
determined that I was goin' to get to third base and give that
guy my spikes. If I didn't hit one worth three bases, or if I
didn't hit one at all, I was goin' to run till I got round to
where Speed was, and then slide into him and cut him to pieces!
Right now I can't tell you whether I hit a fast ball, or a slow
ball, or a hook, or a fader--but I hit somethin'. It went over
Bescher's head like a shot and then took a crazy bound. It must
of struck a rock or a pop bottle, because it hopped clear over
the fence and landed in the bleachers.
Mind you, I learned this afterward. At the time I just knowed I'd
hit one somewheres and I starts round the bases. I speeded up
when I got near third and took a runnin' jump at a guy I thought
was Parker. I missed him and sprawled all over the bag. Then, all
of a sudden, I come to my senses. All the Ath-a-letics was out
there to run home with me and it was one o' them I'd tried to
cut. Speed had left the field. The boys picked me up and seen to
it that I went on and touched the plate. Then I was carried into
the clubhouse by the crazy bugs.
Well, they had a celebration in there and it was a long time
before I got a chance to change my clothes. The boys made a big
fuss over me. They told me they'd intended to give me five
hundred bucks for my divvy, but now I was goin' to get a full
share.
"Parker ain't the only lucky guy!" says one of 'em. "But even if
that ball hadn't of took that crazy hop you'd of had a triple."
A triple! That's just what I'd wanted; and he called me lucky for
not gettin' it!
The Giants was dressin' in the other part o' the clubhouse; and
when I finally come out there was Speed, standin' waitin' for
some o' the others. He seen me comin' and he smiled. " Hello,
Horseshoes!"he says.
He won't smile no more for a while--it'll hurt too much. And if
any girl wants him when she sees him now--with his nose over
shakin' hands with his ear, and his jaw a couple o' feet
foul--she's welcome to him. They won't be no contest!
"I'll buy a drink anyway," said he. "You've been a good
listener--and I had to get it off my chest."
"Maybe they'll have to postpone the wedding," I said.
"No," said Grimes. "The weddin' will take place the day after
tomorrow--and I'll bat for Mr. Parker. Did you think I was goin'
to let him get away with it?"
"I'm goin' back to the Ath-a-letics," he said. "And I'm goin' to
hire somebody to call me 'Horseshoes!' before every game--because
I can sure play that old baseball when I'm mad."