Milwaukee Sentinel, June 19, 1913:
As the indirect result of being hit in the head by a pitched ball during a game years ago, Earl Davenport, who played with Pittsburg in the National League in 1892, Wednesday was sentenced to serve three years in San Quentin prison for passing fictitious checks.
Before he was sentenced, Davenport told Judge Willis that he had been irresponsible ever since he was “beaned” during a baseball game. He asked the court to arrange for an operation on his skull.
He ...
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1. Matt Chico's Bail Bonds (Dan Lee) posted on December 10, 2012 at 09:20 AM # hit 0 | hit 0C: Jim Stephens
1B: Art Griggs
2B: Dalton Jones
3B: Jimmy Johnston
SS: Ike Caveney
LF: Luis Polonia
CF: Frank Shugart
RF: Roy Carlyle
SP: Steve Renko
SP: Joe Mays
SP: Bob Priddy
SP: Bob Black
SP: John Sowders
RP: Paul Assenmacher
RP: Dan Wheeler
RP: Mel Rojas
Manager: Doc Edwards
Fun Names: Bots Nekola, Pretzel Pezzullo
Also, a baseball historical item notes that baseball owners approved of two big rules changes 40 years ago today. Can you guess what either one was before clicking on the link?
DH obviously.
DH and saves...and I can honestly say I answered that question without clicking the link!
The DH wasn't officially adopted in the AL for another month after the original vote, actually. At the time there was no provision for league-specific playing rules, and the NL was opposed to the DH. Bowie Kuhn and a faction of AL owners were also pushing for interleague play. At a meeting of the owners in Chicago in early January, the NL agreed to allow the AL to adopt the DH individually, which they then did officially on an 8-4 vote.
-- MWE
It's been around for a long time and has always functioned in more or less the same way; the current incarnation has been around since 1959. In addition to Clemente, The Pirates acquired Dale Long in Rule 5 before the 1951 season, and Roy Face before the 1953 season. It was originally established - along with the Bonus Baby rule that required teams to keep players who received bonuses of at least $4000 on the major league roster for two full seasons - immediately after WWII as a way to prevent rich franchises from gobbling up players and stashing them in the minors.
-- MWE
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