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The best candidates for pre-1919 fixed series look to have been 1914 Braves-A's and 1917 Giants-White Sox. McGraw is known to have been close to Arnold Rothstein, and Boston's "Sport" Sullivan who played a supporting role in '19,was said to have fixed a previous series -- '14 looks the most likely there, partly because a Braves win was long-odds. (Chief Bender had a very odd breakdown in I think Game 2.)
Macht also had quite about how George Stallings went about preparing for the Series with mental games, some confrontation & I'm pretty sure some serious advance scouting.
The Braves went 67-19 down the stretch. (looks it up). In that period, the Braves were 41-3-1 when either Bill James or Dick Rudolph started. They had 3 of the 4 World Series starts. They were "only" 13-7-1 when Lefty Tyler started. He started the game Philly almost won in the Series.
I don't see the Braves winning that one as good evidence that it was thrown.
The Braves were a good team, though, although the modern-day Bill James errs in focusing on Stallings's platoons to explain their success. As I've pointed out before, Boston's improvement from 1913 to 1914 was more on defense than on offense - and the main change on defense was the addition of Johnny Evers to the infield. Stallings himself tipped his hat to the defense before the WS, and I think the Chalmers voters, who voted Evers and Maranville 1-2, recognized it as well.
-- MWE
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