The Big Hitter Of The 50’s Decade, Musial
April 2, 2012 by Andrés Pascual · 2 Comments
During the decade of the 1950s occurred what american baseball analysts named a “rise of the hitters”. Running the racial integration, joined organized baseball with all the figures of importance included the Caribbean, guaranteeing the presence in major league baseball of sluggers as Mays, Aaron, Banks, Minoso, Clemente or Frank Robinson who, along with Williams, […]
Multiple Hitting Streaks
November 30, 2011 by Tom Ruane · Leave a Comment
While writing another article, I noticed that on April 18, 1931, Freddie Lindstrom and Mel Ott both extended long hitting streaks at the Baker Bowl, Lindstrom hitting in his 36th straight game there and Ott in his 29th straight. Of course, a hitting streak in a specific ball park is a rather obscure record and […]
Gambling on the 1917 White Sox-Giants World Series
May 19, 2011 by Arne Christensen · Leave a Comment
The recent New York Times article about speculation that the Cubs threw the 1918 World Series to the Red Sox brings up the broader issue of how deeply major league baseball was corrupted by gambling and a money culture in the 1910s. A while ago I looked up how the Chicago Tribune covered the end […]
Cardinals Keep Destroying Hope
September 1, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
I wonder if any of his old friends in Cincinnati have called Adam Dunn and said thanks for the help. Since his home run on Saturday, the Cards have scored a total of two runs in 31 innings. Â Since that moment, this team his hitting .152 against staffs that are on second-division teams. Â Since that […]