The World Series is Christy Mathewson tossing three shutouts in six days. It's Fred Snodgrass muffing a fly ball. And it's Bill Wambsganss making an unassisted triple play.
The Series is Grover Cleveland Alexander trudging out of the bullpen to strike out Tony Lazzeri. It's Babe Ruth calling his home-run shot. And it's Joe Medwick being showered with debris from irate fans.
The Series is catcher Mickey Owen missing connections with a third strike. It's Enos Slaughter racing home from first base when everyone else in the ballpark assumed he'd hold up at third. And it's Cookie Lavagetto depriving Bill Bevens of no-hit glory.
It's Willie Mays' incredible catch on Vic Wertz. And it's Johnny Podres bringing a championship to Brooklyn at last.
The Series is Don Larsen, the imperfect man, pitching perfectly. It's Bill Mazeroski homering in the bottom of the ninth to win it all. And it's Willie McCovey hitting a last-out line drive just within reach of Bobby Richardson.
It's Bob Gibson striking out 17 batters. It's another Impossible Dream for the Red Sox. It's the fielding of Brooks Robinson and Graig Nettles. It's Carlton Fisk homering off the foul pole.
The Series is Reggie Jackson smacking three first-pitch homers in one game. It's the New York Mets down to their last strike. It's Joe Carter ending things for the Toronto Blue Jays. It's the New York Yankees' return to glory.
And it's all right here. It's the World Series. Don't call it the World Serious. It's much more important than that.
After going at each other viciously for two years, the established National League and fledgling American League buried the hatchet, at least temporarily, in 1903 -- thanks in large part to the owners of the NL's Pittsburgh club and the AL's Boston team.
With their clubs apparently headed toward pennants, Pittsburgh's Barney Dreyfuss and Boston's Henry Killilea agreed during the 1903 season to stage a best-of-nine postseason playoff for the "world championship." The accommodation came in the wake of open hostilities -- punctuated player raids -- that had existed between the National League and American League since the junior's entry on the major-league scene in 1901.
Dreyfuss' Pirates appeared to be stellar representatives for the league, whose history dated to 1876. Pittsburgh had third consecutive pennant in '03. Boston also seemed a worthy competitor in this first modern World Series, having won the AL flag by 14 1/2 games.
In Game 1, Pirates workhorse Deacon Phillippe pitched a six-hitter and right fielder Jimmy Sebring hit the first home run in Series history and drove in four runs as Pittsburgh scored a 7-3 victory. Third baseman Tommy Leach rapped two singles and two triples for the Pirates. Boston evened the Series, though, when Bill Dinneen threw a three-hitter and Patsy Dougherty walloped two homers in a 3-0 triumph.
Phillippe, pressed into heavy duty because of illness and injury to the Pittsburgh pitching staff, came back on just one day of rest to start Game 3. A 25-game winner during the season, Phillippe continued to excel. He allowed only four hits, won 4-2 and, as it turned out, was just getting warmed up. When a travel day and rainout ensued, the Pirates turned to the good Deacon for Game 4 as well. Phillippe met the challenge with a complete-game 54 triumph -- Leach knocked in three of the Pirates' runs, while Honus Wagner and Ginger Beaumont each collected three hits -- and Pittsburgh led Boston, three games to one.
Cy Young, 36 years old but a 28-game winner for the 1903 Red Sox (also known as the Pilgrims, Puritans and Americans), was called upon to cool off the Pirates in Game 5 -- and did just that. Young yielded only six hits and drove in three runs in an 11-2 runaway. The next day, Dinneen was a 6-3 victor in a game that featured four hits, two RBIs and two stolen bases by the losers' Beaumont. After six games, it was the Red Sox 3, Phillippe 3.
Having won each time Phillippe had trudged to the mound, Pittsburgh sent the strong-armed righthander against Boston in Game 7. But this wasn't to be Phillippe's day. Jimmy Collins, the Red Sox's playing manager, and Chick Stahl touched him for first-inning triples and Boston bolted to a 2-0 lead en route to a 7-3 triumph. For the first time, the Red Sox had seized the Series lead. Ahead four games to three, Boston would attempt to nail down the championship on its Huntington Avenue Grounds.
The pitching matchup for Game 8 was a beauty -- Dinneen against, yes, Deacon Phillippe. Working on two days of rest this time, Phillippe battled Dinneen to a scoreless tie through three innings. After Dinneen blanked Pittsburgh again in the fourth, the Red Sox broke through against the Deacon in their half of the inning. Buck Freeman led off with a triple and Freddy Parent reached base on an error (with Freeman holding third). Candy LaChance then sacrificed Parent to second. Hobe Ferris followed with a single, putting Phillippe and the Pirates in a 2-0 hole.
The hole grew deeper two innings later when LaChance stroked a two-out triple and scored on Ferris' single.
Phillippe battled on and would up pitching his fifth complete in the Series, which lasted 13 days. But Dinneen bested him in the climactic Game 8, tossing his second shutout of the Series and notching his third victory. The 3-0 decision was the Red Sox's fourth straight triumph and made the upstart Boston team champion of the First American league-vs. National League World Series.
Dinneen and Young were bellwethers for Boston. Together, they pitched 69 of the 71 innings that Red Sox hurlers totaled in the fall classic. (Tom Hughes lasted two-plus innings as Boston's third-game starter.) Young, appearing in what would prove his only Series, won two of three decisions for Boston and recorded a 1.59 earned-run average.
With Phillippe, Dinneen and Young dominating play, hitters obviously had a tough time. The Red Sox batted .252 while Pittsburgh, despite the presence of NL batting champion Wagner, hit .237. Wagner hit .222 in the Series, managing only one hit in the final four games. And the rival playing managers, third baseman Collins of Boston and left fielder Fred Clarke of Pittsburgh, drove in one run in a combined 70 at-bats.
Pittsburgh's Sebring, besides accounting for the first homer in Series history, also led all regulars with a .367 average.
Perhaps the main thing about the 1903 Series, though, was that it at least cooled tempers between baseball's warring factions. That the upstart American League buried the hatchet squarely in the back of the haughty National League -- and did so with fiendish delight -- was merely a sidelight.
There was no World Series in 1904 because John T. Brush, president of the National League champion New York Giants, refused to allow his team to compete against Boston, the representative of the "inferior" American League.
At least, that's the official reason.
However, the fact that the teams did not meet probably had to do more with Giants manager John McGraw's personal hatred for American League president Ban Johnson than any National League sense of superiority. In the winter, however, Brush proposed the idea for an annual matchup between the league champions.
His about-face spawned the "Brush Rules," a set of guidelines relating to the on-field play and off-field finances of the World Series which exists to this day.
|