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Well, You Can’t Blame a Man Who’s Trying ;; :: ;; By “Bud” Fisher
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Tech Prospects Are as Gloomy as a Graveyard
.;-•-> •!•••(■ •!•••:■ •;•••!• *2**4> 1 •l-*4 i
Three Regulars Out of Thirteen Coming Back
By Percy 11. Whiting'.
4 4 IV ING ( 'l*- |»" -- * irutl N;
and t.r tfn’
the Tech tonm in the first
w ok of Srptenib* r.” said < h>a< i;
Ib isman this in<v nlng xx hrn in* k ■ c
for inforina: ion. "oft • i - i v * ’ ■
nativ< s l><»! h ala i ming
“< »n the one hand.” In < ontinu« *l.
“if up toll th( exact truth ami sa\
that onix tlii« • varsity nu n of U-.
y« a are coming bark, what hat
pens" Well, all the boys that un
wavering between T« * h and ’im
other college get him funk and go
to th»- other coll* g<
“On the other hand, if we dodg
the main facts and touch thing u
in a spirit of optimism a -king
that while we have maia gap- to
till, we have some xxoq ■ : r men
to hi) them. x\ * nature ■ * ■
sorry showing. And then the
friends and alumni, xxf. <n fa
milial with this sort of st..i’.'g > •.
public! tx come round and want to
know why the thunilc we haven’t
got a 1 eam.‘ "
"It happ ns this \<ar, though.’
said the Gridiron Wizard, "that our
prospects are so blamed bad > it
w o couldn't hop* to disg uis* i •
fact, and therefore we admit it. i
Heit it is in a nutsh* li
“Tech has three varsity men com
ing back, a couple o c near-varsity
men—and nobody in sight to fill the
gaps.”
Ami. laving th u- Pun* iinl foi i i;.
he ’ *•* lied m.i nx i.u (s.
• • •
I ■S.< \ \ me: c> 011 \ w orld If* |
•t * I Ul' Ii •• ho WPt »• I< :’ i I ded '■-
be n gradual' u >*» tie have a* -
qil '*'*! ,i-’b'. oiiii > ha .• • a* back
to x\ oi k ■ •! In i s h i x ■■ quit.
\ll I . ! .. . o' 11, hit o! ;• <1
ye«.!*.' g• ■ nt. albeit somewhat
ba ter* : 1 i : ■ n’ - <*> "al e.” it
dot sn’t rati i to im • tins, three
w a i iors (• oiin i .mi
] I -uh: man. a gu ’ I. too light.
2 1 <»••!•. i .* nt . x i x much to.*
light
x ■ • . \.* ' A '. i* light under thi ■
\ , s u br-
il you <an i t t i nu *us
ia nd \ou h i\ < > w•» lull a lot
of colleg* io’ : t >p*ind<‘Uts will be
lining it for ' i> m xt montlu xou’ie
xx •!< <>m* to I'.'jt it’s i might v flah
h\ 0 • to Im. d am l<\ - * x n
around *n ♦ •\ • n w hicb w ill be
aide to cope witn <!'•• tremendous
teams that Geoigia an’ Auburn
wid put out thi \* a
‘ ’
T
slather of men woui m*an
little, hut some \’g ■ 1 • i I<< : mt tug
’• But not so wit h I « h
The dickens of o is mit at the
Elate, thex hax.n.: m\ induce
ments to otY*
I s
■
star and asks him to clone to a > 4-
1,. K . the star is : . h to Inuui:.
■ Wh.it s there :■ it I'"' iu<
In fact, titer.- hate been instoii.
ca-*-s when stars hate so mqui-ed
t>f course, they . .n't e\|.eet a
salary, none except y>. . .ars. on. s
Hilt then they'd like h - u. a -lap
Also, they ought to Inn. a J.>b,
They could represent a luun.hy or
a clothing store or something like
that. And of course, they would I
expect a salary for doing that and
would rather not ork f>r :t.
Tech hasn't any such indm e
ments. When a man wants to
know what's In it for him th. I» -
they can tell him .s t> . a s nne
college and that the ciiinat. is sa
luhrions and there I be a banqm t
it. it for the team at the end of the
e.-a-on
< >f i ourse it has ben minor, d that
i-Mtatn plutocratk alumni have at
■4 \ - ■
■ im youtl - through To. Hu j
tin- < l.i-s <»f raw material that
* <> i' h ll«-isHiai> h is had to work
with • ver\ \< ir. the alumni were
blatm d poor scouts.
All of which explains why Te<h
doesn’t have an\ brilliant pr* |>
school slats at an\ time and why
most " f tin- r«*jil pl ivers were men
who vi’C’ developed out of real
students b\ a • out h of y<*ars hard
w i k «»n llm scrub team.
Which leads us ip to considering
w h.'t n n <’oaeh Heisman w ill have
’ till those b< foi emiuitloned gaps.
♦ • *
down Imre's about th*
off* Hng.
Hutton \ mat vai itx man last
>eai. Too light cmi none too fast.
<’l«-\er little plaxer with plenty of
int< lligem e, but no hrillianw of
pet sot •- .■ nc< \\ ill b< tried »»ut at
* nd or quartei
Fax M6ntague— 'I’lils man has
been lhi cc \i,i r at Tech ind has
played corking good baseball. He
his pl ived in class games only. Is
a grand athlete, weighs 172, is tol-
* tabl\ last though no whirlwind,
t’oach Heilman believes that by
about Thank nixing Im will have
this nian «l< \ eloped into a player
and Im will be graduated n*\i
-»• ihu
Colley—H< s<rubbe<l last yeir
I- 1 v ’ •<; ithh t» and a gnat g.vm
nast. but knows little football as
'»'l lb weighs hut Uhl. but has
a tine ftainc and max be built up
in weight Ile \x ill lie tried al end.
Reifsneider This man has plax -
'd sonm class hall ami made his
mnr.k theia He had a brother who
"•'s ’inarl* rback at Annapolis a
few years ago. This lad is too light
I 1 : hui should grab a place.
McDonald—’This is a Dp( a m
mam (‘oach Heisman is relying on
“ini to take plate as
p intci on the team Ileis a plax -
ei of vast prominence. He is cer
tain of a position on the ( leven
Logan—’This lad hails from S.i
--' »nn th. lit is the fastest man in
NEWS FROM RINGSIDE,
' "ung Dyson. who is known as the
mi weight champion of New England,
returned to this eountr, after
i sue. essful lour of Europe Dyson had
Hirer tights in dear England and it took
ess than three rounds to stoie each
i his opponents awn, The little lighter
■' been taking on weight recentl, and
now |ilans to graduate Into the light
weight class.
• ♦ *
Hughe) Rodden and Larry Lund) are
• 1 ■ e.l to box ten rounds at the Real
Athletic club In Brooklyn today
• • •
Vanced < step
f.’itiiiv the featherweight chant-
I’ a t. w night: ago bx knocking
•■it I’miimx Houck n the sixth round of
ten-round bout in New
York
• ♦ •
I d lit McGoort) will not quit training
after his tight with Dave Smith In New
York tonight, but will do light work to
p,rr|i in condition for his scheduled tight
with Leo Houek m Boston September 17.
• • •
<’harlie Miller and Jim Flynn have
irained hard and are in the best of con
dition for their ‘JO-round strap at Sun
Francisco today according to advices
i roin the eoast Flynn knows a defeat at
ihe hands of the former inotorman would
• can rum tor him, while Miller knows a
. - ■ ■ n wou hit
much publicltx and t < higher position in
heavy weigh 1 dh
• • •
Joe Sherman, whose voice will e\er
have a huskx ring as a result of the.
■ has set up rtf la te tha t he la a a
and bettei than Joe Mandot. max
I hax»- bis ambitious voting hopes n pped
. n c bud todax when he metis Harry
Trendall in Memphis Much interest is
■ enti 'a -i -«n this tight because Trendall
wmi ;i ’.ewspape 1 decision frmv Mandot
in S’. I.Huis some time back
• » •
Hurry Singe! . Geergt Ik << I’i'Wt. s
J sparring partner, is billed to hght Art
; Magirl in Sprinetu hl mdax
• • •
i Failure to train properlx ’.ost Ra\ Tetn
:l ♦ »• .! •■ ■ w ' ’ !• ■la• •. • V. • ‘ -1. at V n -
m| »g ’Max I rank Mulkern. managei
t'd T» mple. looked Ihix over and on timi
ng him to be u n.».»r ei-nditmn. -ent
i ‘ • <b ' a wr. hat his fightet would
i
Aiaj Bruiuon and Hdti> Brcuei ha\u
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1912.
Tech BI’T he w eighs only 135
pounds. If speed can win a place
under the mxx rules this man xvlll
land, (’oach Heisman figures that,
under the new rules, no team can
succ* d winch hasn't six speedy
mem But they should have weight,
too.
Thomasson This man was near
ly a regular last year. He was used
<|iiite a bit at end after Elmer was
hurt and Sanchez was >hoved in
at lackh*. He has played on the
scrub team for several years and
is a fair in in. He xxeighs, however,
only 155 pounds.
Clements—He was a scrub last
\tar and has played good class,
ball. Like all the rest, he is too
light.
♦ ♦ *
’ ESTh >.\ Isn’t that lay-out
X; enough to make all loyal 'Tech
men throw up their hats and give
thi'D loud groins? Ansxver: Yes,
it is.
And then some
If you look it over you will note
two things, txvo direful things:
1 The Tech team of 1912 will be
absolutely devoid of stars —as star
less as a rainx night.
2 That there isn't an.x xx eight
a n x xx here.
T’his year’s football calls for a
lot of fast men and a lot of heavy
men. Tech has neither.
There isn’t a man xx ho can ad
xance the ball. Patterson is gone.
<roiee has dcserte*!. 'They were the
only notables last year And they
are gone.
In their place ar. a lot of light,
earnest. determined. intelligent
young men. who will be most ex
cellently drilled in the science of
football according to Heisman.
They will knoxx a lot about the
game before the season is over, and
thex xx ill be able to play xvcll, ac
cording to their physical ability.
But a winner? Well, not against
Sewanee Auburn and Georgia—not
unless there are miracles xvorked.
been matched bx the St. Louis A <’ of
St. Louis, to bix ten rounds in that city
September t Brewer and Bronson met
recent lx and the former gave the Hoosier
lad quite an argument
» ♦ •
The Pilgrim A <’ of Boston has wired
Packyy McFarland an offer of $5,000 to
box Jack Britton twelve rounds in that
citx some time In the near future.
HEMPHILL'S SUSPENSION
ANNOUNCED IN BULLETIN’
I'HlriGii. Sept, President t’hiv-
Ington. of tin Amertean association, to
day announced the following contracts
and releases since August 10:
Contracts.
Ry < oluinbus John A Kinibell.
By Indianapolis Ar, her E Riley.
Walker Wentz Wilbur Cha dt Brown
Keene
Isy Kansas I'it) Lee Tannehill. K :
Al. Mears. New York
B) Louis) ill, ,'lmrli- A aiianding
llani, Rob.ri E (’lemons, Gu) Hedger.
L 15 Laudertnilk
15, Milw auke. A Braun
15, Minneapolis Janies <’ Delehanty
i (19121. Jam,- I’ De’ehant, 119131 W
! I Leltx ll
B) St Paul Raymond R Thomas.
1 <>. orge i' I'uerk.
B) Ti ledo It II Miildleton, El it • t
Re'eases.
Im’i.iiiao"a- Sprimut. . Blown
; K. ■ n.
K.nns.i< i ’it, ; . |>.|: i s t, xas
i. lisville to Chicago Xati inais Gro
ver Lowdertnilk and F've) Tone,
Toledo to (':<■)•.land. Eiedt’a h.
I New < irleans. Abb ': Mil's.
Suspensions.
' o'umbus < ’ha> > If. niphill. Hur,
| Billi-.rd
11l il. 1.ai.0 R n \>h. Ilf. ll.'l
l.ouisvill. Lewis I • milk
,1 >■ alike, Jaims I. .n, Bu< • j
JOE AGLER BEST
IN LEAGUE.SAYS
scum
■XT ASHVILLE. TENN, Sept. 2.
. \\ hile the < ’Packers were
playing in the Dell during
tile early part of last week Nash
ville fans were noticeably im
pressed with the work of Joe Ag
ler, who was seen here for the first
time since the Cubs came through
on thei spring training trip The
Atlanta first sacker’s fielding was
l he sensation of the series of four
games, and it is the general opin
ion here that he will make a good
man for Clark Griffith at Wash
ington next season, if he can pick
up a little in his hitting.
tine of Aglet’s chief admirers is
Manager Hill Schwartz of the
Nashville team. The Nashville
leader played against Agler in the
<>. & P. league several years ago,
when Joe was Just getting his start
in the world, and believes him to
be one of the greatest fielding first
sackers in the country.
"If Agler could hit .300 or better,
he would be the most sensational
first baseman in the world." said
Manager Schwartz, after the At
lanta series "There is no greater
fielding initial sacker in the busi
ness, unless it be Hal Chase, and I
am not sure that the Yankee star
lias anything on tills youngster.
Agler can reach balls that other
players would find impossible, be
cause of his unusual ability to field
as well with one hand as with both.
Swats Swacina was considered a
star because of his ability to stop
badly thrown balls with but one
hand, but he can not compare with
Agler Jn this department. Agler
combines all of the ability of a
shortstop on ground balls and has
an unusually good whip. Anything
that comes within his reach is as
good as dead as far as the batter
is concerned.”
Hill Schwartz, being a first base
man himself, knows what It takes
to make up a star at this position.
Last season he led all of the first
sackers of this league and also the
American and National leagues in
fielding, but seems destined to
yield the palm to Agler this season.
Red Sox and Giants
Dusting Other Teams
Entering the Stretch
NEW YORK, sept 2. With eight
games scheduled in each big league to
da\ the final month of baseball was
put into full swing with all indications
favoring the Giants as the pennant
w mnei s in the National league and the
Ro-ton Red Sox in the American.
The final drive opened with Boston
'•!< von full games ahead of Washing
ton and thirteen games ahead of Phil
adelphia The Giants rested on a five
gam. margin with Chicago, the only
set ions contender, second. *
New A ork tans took hope from news
.from St. Louis that Jimmy Archer, one
jot the hot backstops of the Cubs, had
finjuied himself in yesterday’s game.
But while form indicated N. w York
and Boston to be th* winners in their
respective leagues, a freak break could
<till upset all calculations during the
present month.
It Boston should break even in its
r. maining 3o games, the team would
It s ’ th a record o{ 102 vietorh s and
i 52 defeats, a record which would make
j a victory a practical certainty I'nder
'tteh conditions. Washington would
■ pave to win -’*> out of tile remaining 2x
gam. s and the Athletics would be com
piled to win in out of their remaining
I 31 gam* s
T. •' present week .an make or break
" 'l;mts I'he.v hav. ten games in
'six Ms S. \en in Philadelphia on four
eessivt days In 1908 th* Phi
the Giants out of the pennant, and
Chore ma.* be another t'oveleski" hid-
I .!• n 'on- white >n Dooins aggregation.
.I' br* sing even, th* Giants would
.lose the season with 1«0 vtc'ori. s m<l
.'•■loiuo .could bate to win 22 of tint:
tv.' ..i ng 32 gam. s.
Murray's Come-Back Proves He Is a Game Player
4-«4* •{•••I* +•+ +••!•
His Brilliant Work Has Landed Giants on Top
By W. J. Mcßeth.
01 TEIELDER JACK MURRAY
of the Giants is a bright ex
ample of what pluek and de
termination will do in the face of
severest hostility. Murray is today
one of the idols of the Polo
ground. He is by far the best out
fielder of his team and one of the
very most valuable men working
for McGraw. At the beginning of
the present season "Red Jack" was
a dead one in the estimation of the
"bugs" The enthusiasts were rid
ing his neck, rough-shod, crying
lustily for his scalp. And all be
cause the fiery thatched young
tight gardener had fallen down in
tile world's series with the Ath
letics.
In the lamentable world's series
of last fall Murray was little worse
than any of his fellows. In fact,
if the Giants had won out, he would
have been accorded a big hero. But
defeat was embittered by the
| FODDER FOR FANS~~|
Jack Prill has been sold by Cincin- .
nati to Buffalo. Jack only wriggled
into the Red records onee and that was
with a winning game. So he quits wdth
a pitching average of 1.000
* * •
Artie Hofnian and Barney Dreyfuss
have made up their financial difficulties
and Artie is playing now' and then for
the Pirates.
Ham Hyatt and Marty O'Toole, of the
Pittsburg team, took part in a golf tour
nament while they were al Cincinnati.
• * •
The world’s record for stolen bases
got u sickening wallop when they hashed
the figures made by ollie Nicholson, of
the Salem. Ind., club, of the Erankfort
Blue Grass league Ollie purloined 108 in
115 games.
• • •
"Life is just one ‘crucial series’ after
another." The Giants.
* * «
The Yankees won 13 out of 18 on their
last home slay, which shows a slight im
provement.
• • •
The way the .Jacksonville team
worked for the pennant in the Sally
league was a proof of the innate square
noss of baseball. The Jacksonville team
won the pennant in the first half of the
season. If they had won it in the second
half there would have been no post-sea
son games, and the .Jacksonville players
would have been cut out of quite a hunch
of extra money. Despite this they plugged
along manfully and played as hard as any
club for the second half pennant.
* • •
The Highlanders did not play a morn
ing game today because they did not
want to conflict with the Idibor day pa
rath They play the double-header at
the Holo grounds this afternoon
• • *
Allen, of Brooklyn, recently made six
hits out of twenty-eight trips to the
I plate, and only one of the swats was a
[ single
Some of the men passed up at various
times by the Browns were Jackson,
t Northern, Griggs, Killifer and Corriden.
If the\ had them all now the Browns
would be almost a ball club
• • •
s Charlie Schmidt, former Detroit catch
t er. now with Providence, is out with a
? challenge to fight any ball player for
the pugilistic championship of the na
tional game Larry McLean is thinking
1 of taking him on.
• • •
Outfielder Zinn, who was nearly a
- Cracker this spring, refused to go to
Rochester when ordered there by Wolver
ton. He was. therefore, suspended, ami
Ered Smith, from Brockton, was sent in
bis place
♦ * •
i Roger Bresnahan hasn’t made but one
bad trade since he has been in baseball
; Here’s the list. Traded Bx rue to Pitts
. burg for Barbeau and Storke; traded
, Beebe and Storke to Cincinnati for Hug
-1 gins. Oakes and Corriden: traded Charles
1 to Cincinnati for Mow rex ; claimed Evans
from New York via waiver; drafted Haus
s er from Dubuque; purchased Wingo from
; Greenwood. S C . for SSOO.
• New Orleans papers sax that Rudy
Summers, the pitcher sold bx Nashville to
Brooklyn and later sold b> Brooklyn to
1 Chicago, is a victim of tuberculosis. If
s tins is true. Murphx is partly paid back
for turning the txvo invalids. Hofman and
Cole, oxer to Pittsburg
An investigation is being conducted by
, Han Johnson of the recent suspension of
] Morris Rath, of the White Sox. by I’m
pire Westervelt Westervelt claims that
Rath assaulted him Rath claims that
he didn’’ even i t •w whv he was put out
s . <'f ’he gam- Tie other Whit* Sox are
■ willing to make affidavit that Rath was
not exon nea~ the sc«*ne of the encoun
j '• "■ i begin- T- look is though. Wes-
, ?orv“lt ooesn’i knoxx WH<> hit him
\- r<qdh>g to Ci;arlex Dry*ieii’s- e.-srn-
- in
thought that Murray had failed to
get a single hit in the six games
played. He didn’t fail to make an
error, and that's where the rub
came in. To make it worse for
"Red Jack," he was up any number
of times in the pinch; that brought
out his sticking weakness all the
stronger.
Had to Hustle in Spring.
It was freely hinted after the
worlds series that McGraw would
cut adrift from Murray and, In
deed. Jack himself expected the ax
even after the club assembled for
spring practice at Marlin. Instead
of sulking, however, he got out and
hustled all the harder against the
youngsters who were trying to
break into his preserves. If Mc-
Graw had entertained any idea of
sacrificing "Red," the notion was
soon lost. Murray proved one of
his best men right from the start
of the year.
it is doubtful if there Is any bet
ter thrower than Jack in organized
. receipt of a postal card from a laundry
asking why he doesn’t have his uniform
washed. John wrote back and said the
season closed October 6.
• • •
Steve Evans says the new athletes with
the Cardinals use a gallon of ink per
day writing picture cards to their folks.
This is important if true.
• • •
No excursion was run from Birming
ham for the Mobile game Sunday. This
was because of an agreement between
the railroads and the large manufactur
ers. In years past Sunday excursions
would run out with thousands of laborers
and run back with a handful. As a re
sult. industrial plants were crippled
Hence the agreement—and no excursion
• ♦ •
Tom Dorhan is some pitcher He
works for Kewanee, of the Central asso
ciation—and he works hard. His last
game was a no-hit no-run affair, with
Hannibal as the victim He has won
fourteen straight, and twenty-two out of
the last twentv-three.
• • •
Roger Bresnahan is trying to get the
national commission to put the kibosh on
women in baseball. He says skirts have
no place in the business end of the game.
There's one ball player on the Chinese
university team that is barnstorming
through America. His name is Ayau, and
he's a shortstop They say he looks like
a laundryman and players like a Wag
ner Several big league clubs are after
him.
Here's How Crackers
Are. Hitting the Ball
Right Up to Date
These averages include all games
played to date:
Player— g . ab. r. h. p. c.
Harbison, ss69 242 27 68 ’’SI
Bailey. Ifi 2 :t 429 7R 120 280
Alperman. 2b 12.1 463 61 129 279
Agler. lb 59 197 54 53 .> 69
t'allahan, es . 82 311 2!' 8" "'.H
' ; , ra , , ’ aln ' >' 58 179 17 44 246
McElveen. 3b ..128 462 50 107 -’33
Becker, pl 5 35 2 7200
Reynolds, e 20 62 2 12 I’M
Wolfe, utility ... 14 38 5 7 184
£ ht ? n ' I' 61 n 10 J 56
Brady, p 22 69 2 11 .159
Lyons, rs 25 78 3 7 0'«0
Johnson, p 7 14 n ; 974
Waldorf, p 9 23 (I 1 1143
HORSE RACES AT THE ROCK.
I HOMASrtiN, GA.. Sept. 2. —ln or
der to better advertise their town, the
citizens of The Rock, in the northern
part of Epson county, have organized a
trotting association and will hold free
fot -all races. They have a magnificent
half-mile track and on September will
have an all-day racing event, with a
Ing free barbi < tie. • »ver 40 entries have
been listed and large purses offered for
the winners.
RACE AT ELGIN NEXT YEAR.
EI.GIN. ILL. Sept Preliminar'
plans for road ra< s ot et th< E- i
j .mrs. to in hei<l in tugust, 1912. have
n completed Tht Chicago Auto
mobile club has already signed a con
tract with the Elgin Road Ra . asso
ciation igreoinc to take charge of the
meet next year. Thi race promoters
art jubilant oter the last da-, of the
r. cent meet, whith brought out the
bigges: crowd ev r seen at a race here.
A
baseball. The American league has
some wonders—Hooper, Speaker
and Lewis, of the Red Sox. have
deadly arms one and all; Ty Cobb
is possessed of a good wing, and
so is Joe Birmingham, of the Naps.
Maybe some of these can return
the ball to the plate from a deep
field as quickly as "Red Jack,” but
not one of them will make as many
accurate pegs in ten trials.
His deadly accuracy has made
Murray the terror of all opposing
base runners. Even fast men hes
itate about going from first to third
on a hit-and-run play if the nec
essary bingle goes into Murray's
yard. Still fewer will attempt to
score from second on a hit to right,
while a sacrifice fly in Jack's ter
ritory has to be about twice as
long as to any other section of the
pasture. The uncanny accuracy of
Murray's wing is responsible for
this. He can whistle the ball with
rifle bullet velocity from almost any
part of his playing territory right
to the plate, more than nine times
out of ten. This Murray has proven
to the satisfaction of all his op
ponents, and now they give him a
wide berth.
Is a Hard Luck Player
Murray is a good, game fellow.
He has proven as much this season.
Anybody under the hammers of the
bleachers who can go out and make
the fans doff their sky-pieces in
admiration has to be possessed of
great gatneness as well as great
merit. Proably the best way to
explain "Red’s” former shortcom
ings is to refer to him as a hard
luck player. When he hit safely
invariably there would be no one
on the sacks. When he fanned the
bases were generally full. When
he booted one It let in a run or
two; usually they were the fatal
runs that decided the pastime.
But this year is a new page in
Murray's history. He apparently
has outlived the little idiosyncra
sies of the past. He has been on
of the main cogs of McGraw'
champion pacemaker, and if a sec
ond pennant is unfurled at th
Brush stadium, no one will hav
had a greater part in bringing it t<
New York. Murray is playing tht
game of his life. He is one of the
best pinch hitters on the team. He
is one of the best base runners.
Both defensively and offensively he
has had more spectacular achieve
ments than any other Giant. This
season he has won more games for
his club and lost fewer than any
of his fellows, in short, he has
generally been at his best in the
pinch.
On the Job in Pinch.
The most beautiful part of Mur
ray's work this year is that lie is
supreme in emergencies. No out
fielder has cut down more runners
at the plate. No gardener has in
stilled more respect on the part of
base runners in the matter of tak
ing chances of advancing on long
flies. No fielder has taken more des
perate chances when the game
hung in the balance. It takes
nerve to play for what appears
an almost impossible out when a
failure at that out means a long
hit. But “Red” has never hesi
tated about accepting the greater
responsibility. He has lost some
games bv taking long chances in
stead of playing safety, but for
every game he has blown he has
saved several. The fans appreciate
this fact.
Murray kept the Giants in the
thick of the tight when his asso
ciates were stale and almost ready
to give up the ghost. H*s sensa
tional work against the Cubs saved
tiie Giants from complete annihi
lation in the last series in Chi
cago. Had he gone the way of the
rest of McGraw's slipping legion,
nothing could have prevented the
final Hip through the west devel
oping into an utter rout.