New York Tribune, May 20, 1913:
Read More...[Heinie] Zimmerman is said to have been incensed by [Cubs owner Charles] Murphy’s statement…that Zimmerman would be able to play when he could get his hat on with a shoehorn, charging Heinie with having a swelled head.
This afternoon Zimmerman told [Johnny] Evers that he would not play, as he was ill. They then had a redhot argument, in which Zimmerman declared that he was tired of carrying the entire Chicago team on his shoulders…Evers informed Zimmerman that he ...
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1. Neutral Milk Dotel (Dan Lee) posted on March 07, 2013 at 07:17 AM # hit 0 | hit 0The backup middle infielder is...you guessed it, Joe Carter, who once played two innings at second base because I guess Pat Corrales had gone off his meds or something.
C: Red Wilson
1B: Ed Bouchee
2B: Jeff Kent
3B: Tex Wisterzil
SS: The Other Keith Miller
LF: Joe Carter
CF: Jimmie Hall
RF: Jeff Burroughs
SP: J.R. Richard
SP: Ed Willett
SP: Doc Scanlan
SP: Dave Danforth
SP: Jack Armstrong
RP: Mike Armstrong
Okay, sure, I can understand how you could run out of middle infielders, but it seems like once the rosters expand you'd want to have a spare 2B/SS hanging out on a "break glass in case of emergency" sort of basis. But this was the "Estate of Steve O'Neill" era of Tribe ownership, when the ghost of a dead man owned the team. Made it a bit tougher to get expenses approved.
Fan: Me
Happy birthday Andrew.
Re: Carter and Jacoby, it was more based on the on-base situation than batter handedness, though it still makes no sense to me.
Here's the seventh inning:
Carter starts the inning at second and stays there through both right-handed and left-handed batters until there's a man on first.
Well, sure, that makes sense - Jacoby would probably be better at the pivot on a double play. And even if there's no double play, you wouldn't want Joe Carter to get spiked trying to tag out a guy who's trying to steal second.
Except that there were two outs when Jacoby moved to second. And the guy on first was Dave Kingman, whose footspeed was glacial on a good day. And it was late in a 7-3 game. Nobody's stealing anything in the seventh inning of a 7-3 game in September between two bad teams.
Once there was nobody on first, Carter goes back to second base, where he finishes the game.
So I have absolutely no idea what Corrales was doing. I can't find a contemporary newspaper recap of the game online for free - if anyone can track one down, I'd love to read it.
Are there any other abandoned former minor league ballparks out there that are slowly falling apart?
Although its state of disrepair when the Allentown Ambassadors still existed was similar to its state now. Wotta dump!
EDIT: they have. check out this (good) site for what i was thinking of: link
Happy Birthday to Andrew and Mike as well.
Let's see ... the Welland Pirates and St Catharines Blue Jays fields still look nice. So does the home of the Watertown Indians, though the stands are gone. I guess most of the cities that only had one ballpark are still using it for a college summer league team (Oneonta, Little Falls, etc).
Here's an interesting one - War Memorial Stadium in Buffalo.
They still play high school and college games there. I suspect that's why a lot of the ballparks in former minor league towns are still decent.
edit: Coke to Crispix for his comment about why these stadiums still look okay.
I can't find an address for the old stadium in Thetford Mines. That one is probably a supermarket now.
In the 1980s, when the full stadium was still standing, it was the home park of the New York Knights in "The Natural." The film makers had looked long and hard for a stadium that could stand in for a 1930s style major-league park before they found that old warhorse.
The ones in Chattanooga and Rockford are still used. Ned Skeldon Stadium in Toledo is neither used nor abandoned. The outline of the field seems to be fenced off? I don't quite understand.
They forgot the Kingdome.
Adrian Brown was a 48th round pick of the Pirates in 1992, and of such little concern that he was loaned to Lethbridge of the Pioneer League (which had no affiliation). You have to admire a guy who starts at that point and ends up with 1272 plate appearances in the majors.
I might play the first batch of games tonight, but also might play them tomorrow. Not sure.
What IS that thing the pointer is pointing to? A pony enclosure? The site of the annual show dog obstacle course?
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