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Latest Baseball! News and Gossip of All the Leasrue
Exorbitant Demands for Appear
ance Cause Many Promoters
to Abandon Meets.
By James S. Mitchell.
World's Champion Weight Thrower.
B OSTON, Aug. 30.—In athletics
the £oo*e that laid the golden
egg Is dead, and this prolific
bird of yore passed away nicely and
calmly from overwork. She could no
longer yield appearance money and
prizes to the ambitious athletes, and,
not being of any further use, thought
she would give up the earthly ghost
and flit to the happy hunting ground.
What a disheartening effect the
passing of the goose has had on the
track and field sports this season!
Outside of a couple of big meets of
fered by the New York A. C. and the
Irish-Ameriean A. C., it might easily
rank as the tamest year the Fast has
ever seen in the history of athletlcB.
On the Saturdays and Sundays no
^ crowds of wild-eyed young men have
lt>e*n seen tearing to the local tracks,
full of fire and vim and on edge for
the fray. Instead there has been a
few measly meets, with hungry pro
grams and poor attendance.
Not only have the golden eggs faded
• wav, but the angels that fed the bird
have grown weary of the game. The ;
athletes grew so keen on raking 1n I
the coin that they wanted everything,
while there was nothing left for the
••angels" and the promoters.
B'g Demands by Star*
As a general rule, a first-class per- |
former would demand from $50 to
$100 and a gold watch for his ap
pearance; and when two or three per
meet were paid there wa,s very little
left for the club or association hold
ing the affair.
A promoter who used to run off a
big set of games every year tells an
Interesting story about his last ven
ture. The rent of the park, the cost
of prizes, advertising and the appear
ance money to four star athletes
came to $1,060, and the total of the
gate receipts was $1,081; so, he said,
be reasoned with himself that his la
bor was in vain. The athletes got It
all and his club got nothing.
This year the man's association
gave a picnic and dance, out of which
there was nearly $500 profit. So, he
said, they were through with the ath
letic games
The athletes deplore the poor sea
son themselves and are blaming each
other as being the cause. During the
week a story leaked out about one of
the "regulars" and a man who was a
great stickler for price, especJalh
when it came to traveling out of
town.
A man who was running off a set
of games in a neighboring town of
fered a “star" $5 and his railroad fare.
W’hich was about $2, If he w'ould com
pete in the events. At first the ath
lete w’as inclined to spurn the offer,
but the V’s were so few and far be
tween nowadays that the "star" ac
cepted the offer.
Ireland Unearths Great Runner.
In the international athletic match
recently between Scotland and Ireland
a phenom distance runner was
brought to light in the person of an
eighteen-year-old Irish lad who won
the four-mile run for the Green Isle
The English experts hail him as the
greatest find of the decade.
For the first two miles Flynn, which
Is the youngster’s name, did 9:40.
Very soon afterward the Scotch run
ner, Wallack, gave up, and the Irish
boy finished alone in 21:04 for the
full Journey.
The Englishmen are afraid that
Flynn will he coaxed to America. At
the same meet Shaw', of Dublin Uni
versity, won the 100 yards in a shade
better than 10 seconds, which was
quoted a rattling fine performance.
Track Men in Training.
The New York A. C. squad of track
and field men are In training at
Travers Island, where they will work
till about the first of October Con
trary to report, Jim Wendell will train
for the hurdles, and he will he helped
out In that department by Braun.
Wendell has been summering at
Dak e George and had intended to re
tire permanently, hut the lure of the
track was too much for him and he
had to come hack among the boys for
a while longer.
The Adams brothers and Fiddle
‘-J^rick have planned to get married in
the fall, but for the present they will
train and try and help the Mercury
Foot to win the Metropolitan cham
pionship on September 21.
STAR ATHLETES Bringing Up Father
‘KILL’ SPORT BY
GREEDINESS
By George McManus
BASEBALL SALARIES OF
OLD WERE RIDICULOUS
Big League Clubs in Homestretch
•F®*F *!*•*»- +#4* +•+ ■*•••!•
MajorRacesHaveBeenlnteresting
CHICAGO. Aug. 30.—Baseball man
agers and players of a quarter - en-
tury ago nay they drew salaries that
appear ridiculous compared with fab
ulous sums which those of to-day are
»ald to receive, according to figures
gathered by a local sporting writer
“Captain” Adrian C. Anson wa»
said to have received the "princely’
sum of $2,700 for managing the Chi
cago "White Stockings" in 1888. the
year after he had finished the season
with a batting average of .421 Of
this amount $700 represented his
services as acting captain and man
ager of the team
R E. Smith, of Chicago, say* he
possesses the contract. Smith has
also the contracts made by N Fred
Pfeffer and Edward N. Williamson
when they played in the Brotherhoo
Dengue ;n 1889. These two players
were talked of at that time an the
greatest in the game. The Chicago
club paid Williamson $3,000, while
Pfeffer, one of the greatest of all s« <
ond basemen, received only $2,000 an 1
the score card privileges.
A larger salary than any of these
old-time stars was paid to Chari s
Comiskev. present owner of the Chi
cago White Sox. when he jumped to
the Brotherhood League. His con
tract, also held by Smith, called for
$7,000 in 1890. Comi»Voy was thcr
regarded as the dean of fielding first
basemen, although he was not re- •
garbed as good at bat as ADI
By Monty.
N EW YORK, Aug. 30.—See that
date line? "August thirtieth.”
It means that only the home
stretch stage of the baseball season
remains. Glance at the schedule. In
the American League the West hae
had Its last glance at the F7astern
teams. In the National League the
East has had its last look at the
Westerir teams.
Only on* more spell of Interac
tional battling remains. On Septem
ber 9. a week from next Tuesday, th#>
Western clubs of the American trek
eastward and the Eastern clubs of
the National go westward on the last
long road trips of the year.
After being absent until September
23, the tourists skldoo back to their
native heaths, there to finish the cam
paign ,against rivals In their own
sections, with the big wind-up on Oc
tober 5.
It seems hardly a month ago when
the season got under way. Odd how
sverv baseball campaign has a knack
of appearing shorter than its prede
cessor. We take the liberty of pre
suming that other fans are like those
with whom we are in contact, that as
they grow older time files just* that
much faster. In the spring we all
looked forward to the possibility of
two of the closest races In the his
tory of the major leagues. Where are
vour close races now? Gone, absent
departed—wafted away in the heat of
midseason, with the expected run
ners-up so far from the pacemakers
that hope has been abandoned, even
in their home towns.
• • •
S URELY the season just cloving has
not been an uninteresting one.
In many ways it has excelled most of
those that have * >ne before. But It
has proved a great disappointment In
one way. The best part should be
the last. Just as devsert comes after
the soup, entrees and salad. But there
Is little dessert this time, except for
the followers of the Giants and Ath
letics and the moderate number of
broad-minded enthusiasts who enjoy
good baseball whether it is by their
own team or the rival.
• • •
B ACK in April we had laid out be
fore us the greatest little three-
team contest ever offered in the
American League. The Athletics.
Senators and Red Sox were to battle
neck and neck all the way down to
the wire, with the hottest finisher
clutching the pennant. Instead, what
have we?
The Athletics have stewed up the
race and the dash down the final five
weeks of the way will be suns com
petition. Where are the Senators and
Red Sox. They have given way to a
new white hope, the Naps, who. fig
ured by practically nobody to be in
better than fourth or fifth place, have
slashed their wav ahead Of both the
expected contenders into second place
The Senators even have a battle on
for third place, with the White Sox
providing the worry, and the Red Sox
are nowhere, an absolute fixture tn
fifth place unless perchance the Ti
gers should perk up and take that
from them, shoving the Bostonese
down to sixth. World's champions
one year and second divisioners the
next. Truly hard lines for Hub fans.
Manager of the world’s champion*
one year and out of baseball entirely
*he next—poor Jake Stahl!
• * *
AST your eye upon the Pirates—
that crestfallen band of Bucca
neers that had hoped to \ run the
Giants ragged. It probably Is safe
to say that there were more persons
who picked the Pirates to win the
National League gonfalon than the»*e
were who thought the Giants would
triumph. Yet third is the best that
the Pirates can possibly get now, and
the Cubs may beat them out of that.
Again in the National we have that
grand old institution—the dark horse
—springing into view in the shape jf
the Phillies, who have wrenched off
second niche when hardly anyona
conslderd them in talking of the race
before it got under way.
An unusual condition exists among
the fans of the American League cir-
cuit. Those of every city are dis
gruntled at the showing of their home
teams, odd as this may seem. It would
be expected that somebody would bs
satisfied, but not so. The Athletics'
rabid followers had expected to see
their favorites make a tremendous
walkover of the race, with a margin
of probably fifteen or twenty fu’l
games over the next club at this time.
It’s funny how great things are de
manded of Connie Mack Just because
he and his team, taken together, rep
resent enough combined strength L
win a few' more games in a season
than any rival. But only three weeks
ago they were talking in Philadelphia
of the possibility that the Mackmen
would win 112 games this season anl
break the record. They couldn’t do
that now' even tf they should win
every remaining game.
Though the Naps had been figured
only as outsiders by fans in other
cities, Clevelanders spoke of their
pennant chant es with alacrity, and |
when they got up there near thei
Quakers they said, "It’s all over now;
the Naps will breeze in.” Just at 11
time when they seemed likely to make i
trouble for the Athletics, the Naps J
failed at the psychological moment |
and will have to accept second place.
Chicago fans feel about the same to
ward the White Sox. The attitude of
Hub fans toward the Red 3ox Is emv
to imagine, and as for the other tail-
enders—St. Louis. New' York and De
troit—it is the same old story of
false hopes gqne to wreck.
* • •
I N the National League the fans tha*
are w r ell satisfied with their clubs
are those who follow the Giants, the
Phillies and the Boston Braves, who
under Stallings have fought out of the
cellar Into a place where thev have a
chance to beat out Brooklyn for the
leadership of the second division. The
Dodgers have had a discouraging mi 1-
season after an encouraging star;,
and will have to w'ait for next year,
when Bill Dahlen will give way as
manager to Harry Smith, of Newark.
Pittsburg. Cincinnati ami St. Louis
are the other teams that have carrW 1
the hopes of their admirers up ..Salt
Creek The Cubs loct so much pop
ularity through letting Chance and
Tinker go that t hlcaao fans did not
even want them to do as well as thev
have done, so there is no disappoint
ment In Cubland.
TIGERS TO
SPURT IN 1814
Manager of Washington Team
Expects Coveleskie To Be Big
Help to Jennings Next Year.
7 ATHLETES FOR HARVARD.
BOSTON, Aug. 30.—Harvard’s ath
letic forces will get much material
from Groton School this fall. No les.s
than seyen athletes from that Insti
tution intend to probing their scho
lastic dutiesi at Harvard.
CATCHER IN POLITICAL GAME.
PHILADELPHIA, Aug 30.—It was
announced to-day that Ira H. Thomas,
catcher of the Athletics, after helping
the Athletics to win their fifth pen
nant. will enter the race for civic hon
ors as common Councilman from the
Thirty-eighth Ward.
EVANSVILLE TO GET HOMER.
EVANSVILLE. IND., Aug. 30.—
The Evansville Central League base
ball team has an option on First
Baseman Homer of the Henderson
Ky., team of the Kitty League, and
is expected to close the deal in a few
days.
DOWNEY LOANED TO COLONELS
INDIANAPOLIS, IND., Aug. 30.—
Tom Downey, inflelder, was sold by
the local* American Association man
agement to-day to Louisville under
an optional agreement and will join
the Colonels for the remainder of th*
season.
Need Three Referees Japanese Collegians
To Determine Winner Adopt Rugby Football
Promoter McIntosh Offers Scheme to Pacific Coast Pastime Is Added to
Decide Master in Boxing
Bouts.
Hugh McIntosh, formerly the lead
ing boxing promoter in Australia, Is
strongly opposed to the referee sys
tem which is in vogue in both Amer
ica and Europe.
According to McIntosh^* one man
can not see more than half of the
point* scored in a boxing match be
cause of the human limitations which
prevent him from seeing from dif
ferent angles what two men are doing.
The custom of having three men
give their decisions at the close of a
match, each unknown to the other,
and have a fourth man act as a teller,
is McIntosh’s idea-
Curriculum of Sports at
Keio University.
STANFORD, CAL., Aug. 30.—Rug
by football is tile latest addition to
the curriculum of sports which have
been adopted by the colleges in Ja
pan. according to the members of the
Stanford University baseball team,
which has returned from a tour of
the Orient.
Louis Cass, varsity Rugby captain
last s?as >n. was enltefed to coach the
players of Keio University during the
stay of the Cardinal nine in Tokio.
According to the Stanford boys the
sons of the chrysanthemum empire
are remarkably fast in following the
ball and are adept in passing and
dodging, but have not yet learned
much of the fine points of the game.
♦
D ETROIT., Aug. 30—Leave it to
Mr. C. Griffith, manager of the
Washington team, to break in
to the public prints with something
new.
Not that said Mr. C. Griffith is a
publicity-seeking pest, or anything
like that, but ideas just naturally |
gravitate to him. He was the person j
who saved money for other American ;
League managers and club owners by i
refusing to pay fabulous sums for
sensational minor leaguers, and he I
molded the Nationals into a pennant j
contender in a spring’s training trip, i
Now. with the close of the major
league season nearly two months dis- ,
tant and the winner of the pennant
not yet settled that is to say. settled
beyond argument—Griffith comes out ;
with the statement that Washington, i
Philadelphia and Detroit look like t
the active contenders for the 1914
pennant.
• * *
C GRIFFITH’S disposition would not J
* permit that he count the Nation- ;
als out of the running, the tenants of
his head would not allow him to
place the Athletics in the second di
vision. and his baseball sense leads
him to believe that Jennings will have
a dangerous aggregation of players
next season.
"The Detroit team has shown a vast
amount of improvement in the past
two or three months," said Clark re
cently. "In the spring it was a hope
less aggregation of players. But Jen
nings has whipped the men into line
and he will give us a fight next year.
He has two fine young pitchers in
Hall and I>auss. Dauss is one of the
best-looking young pitchers to come
into the American League in years.
Dubuo is also a fine pitcher, although
he seems to have hud an off year.
Veach is a slugging outfielder, and
the Detroit infield, as it stands, is a |
fine one.
• • *
uANE man C Griffith is figuring;
V-' on how to beat Detroit next .
year.” •
Griffith says that Coveleskie. the (
big left-hander, purchased from the 1
Chattanooga club, has a lot of natural |
ability, and that it is quite possible
that Detroit has picked up a star per
former.
Coveleskie w'rs with Griffith in Cin
cinnati, but was shunted on to the
minors. He lacked experience.
The Washington players were con
siderably surprised a few day ago to
"learn that George McBride would
succeed Bill Carrigan as manager of
the Boston Bed Sox." And, inciden
tally, McBride was more surprised
than any.
• • •
KCrCH a story is so idle that it’s
^ silly." declared McBride, before
the team left here. "I do not know'
where it originated and I can only
say that the subject has never been
broached to me. In the first place I
do not care for the position, and, sec
ondly. I w’ould not take it if it was
offered to me.
"President McAleer. of the Boston
club, is a good friend—that’s all.”
"Boston would have to pay a pretty
price to get McBride," declared Grif
fith. "George is one of the most val
uable players in the major le ue. It
is my opinion that the yarn was man
ufactured."
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