Pittsburgh Gazette Times, May 24, 1913:
Excessive use of the spitball has injured Ed Walsh’s digestion and has thus affected his condition, so that he has not yet reached his best form of this year, according to Dr. James H. Blair, club physician of the Chicago Americans, in a report made today on the pitcher’s condition.
...
According to the doctor saliva needed for Walsh’s digestion has been used on the ball, but with care the pitcher may be in his old time form in a month.
Obviously the ...
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1. Neutral Milk Dotel (Dan Lee) posted on December 06, 2012 at 07:35 AM # hit 0 | hit 0C: Gus Niarhos
1B: Tony Horton
2B: Tony Lazzeri
3B: Stan Hack
SS/Manager: Larry Bowa
LF: Gary Ward
CF: Lance Blankenship
RF: Larry Sheets
SP: Kevin Appier
SP: Jose Contreras
SP: Steve Bedrosian
SP: Mike Parrott
SP: Kevin Campbell
RP: Jason Bulger
Umpire: Jocko Conlan
Tragically Short Career: Jay Dahl
Fun Names: Tun Berger, Turkey Tyson
I love looking over the birthday teams every morning, thanks for posting them.
As a fan and a baseball history buff, the "what if" story of Horton is depressing and bothersome. As a human being, I hope his post-baseball life has made him a happier person than baseball did.
And thanks! I enjoy compiling them and hope people enjoy seeing them.
Maybe last year he had the flu all year, or some sort of curse that had been passed to him by Derek Jeter and has now been passed to somebody else, and he's better now or something.
Incidentally, bb-ref lists his throwing arm as "unknown," but his Wikipedia page shows two photos of him with the ball in his right hand. Given the rarity of lefties in those days, it would have been noteworthy if Creighton had been left-handed.
I don't know, they're pretty much the same team they were when he joined. Minus Ibanez, Victorino, and Werth. Plus Cliff Lee.
Last year they weren't contenders because of extended DL stints of various players including one Roy Halladay. Lee, Hamels, Papelbon were all really good. This wasn't the 2004 Mariners. Then everyone came back, and in August/September/October they were 35-24 even without Pence and Victorino, and they finished with a .500 record.
From his point of view I'd think he wants to take one more crack at it hoping for better luck with injuries. And Halladay himself had the worst ERA on the team of anyone with more than 33 innings, so he needs to prove he's back.
Interestingly, Covington actually had a pro baseball team then -- briefly. Per wiki:
Now, that's fine writin'!
1890 Cleveland Spiders third baseman Will Smalley died a few months after his 20th birthday in 1891. His bio in the BR Bullpen says he was the 2nd youngest major leaguer to die.
I actually wrote the Wiki article on Dahl and extensively updated Smalley's. Both fascinating (if sad) stories...
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