It was the most critical time I had
yet experienced in my career as a baseball manager.
And there was more than the usual reason why I must
pull the team out. A chance for a business deal
depended upon the good-will of the stockholders of
the Worcester club. On the outskirts of the
town was a little cottage that I wanted to buy, and
this depended upon the business deal. My whole
future happiness depended upon the little girl I hoped
to install in that cottage.
Coming to the Worcester Eastern League
team, I had found a strong aggregation and an enthusiastic
following. I really had a team with pennant
possibilities. Providence was a strong rival,
but I beat them three straight in the opening series,
set a fast pace, and likewise set Worcester baseball
mad. The Eastern League clubs were pretty evenly
matched; still I continued to hold the lead until misfortune
overtook me.
Gregg smashed an umpire and had to
be laid off. Mullaney got spiked while sliding
and was out of the game. Ashwell sprained his
ankle and Hirsch broke a finger. Radbourne,
my great pitcher, hurt his arm on a cold day and he
could not get up his old speed. Stringer, who
had batted three hundred and seventy-one and led the
league the year before, struck a bad spell and could
not hit a barn door handed up to him.
Then came the slump. The team
suddenly let down; went to pieces; played ball that
would have disgraced an amateur nine. It was
a trying time. Here was a great team, strong
everywhere. A little hard luck had dug up a
slump and now! Day by day the team
dropped in the race. When we reached the second
division the newspapers flayed us. Worcester
would never stand for a second division team.
Baseball admirers, reporters, fans especially
the fans are fickle. The admirers quit, the reporters grilled us, and the
fans, though they stuck to the games with that barnacle-like tenacity peculiar
to them, made life miserable for all of us. I saw the pennant slowly
fading, and the successful season, and the business deal, and the cottage, and
Milly
But when I thought of her I just could
not see failure. Something must be done, but
what? I was at the end of my wits. When
Jersey City beat us that Saturday, eleven to two,
shoving us down to fifth place with only a few percentage
points above the Fall River team, I grew desperate,
and locking my players in the dressing room I went
after them. They had lain down on me and needed
a jar. I told them so straight and flat, and
being bitter, I did not pick and choose my words.
“And fellows,” I concluded,
“you’ve got to brace. A little more
of this and we can’t pull out. I tell you
you’re a championship team. We had that
pennant cinched. A few cuts and sprains and hard
luck and you all quit! You lay down!
I’ve been patient. I’ve plugged for
you. Never a man have I fined or thrown down.
But now I’m at the end of my string.
I’m out to fine you now, and I’ll release
the first man who shows the least yellow. I
play no more substitutes. Crippled or not, you
guys have got to get in the game.”
I waited to catch my breath and expected
some such outburst as managers usually get from criticized
players. But not a word! Then I addressed
some of them personally.
“Gregg, your lay-off ends today.
You play Monday. Mullaney, you’ve drawn
your salary for two weeks with that spiked foot.
If you can’t run on it well, all
right, but I put it up to your good faith. I’ve
played the game and I know it’s hard to run on
a sore foot. But you can do it. Ashwell,
your ankle is lame, I know now, can you
run?”
“Sure I can. I’m
not a quitter. I’m ready to go in,”
replied Ashwell.
“Raddy, how about you?”
I said, turning to my star twirler.
“Connelly, I’ve seen as
fast a team in as bad a rut and yet pull out,”
returned Radbourne. “We’re about due
for the brace. When it comes look
out! As for me, well, my arm isn’t right,
but it’s acting these warm days in a way that
tells me it will be soon. It’s been worked
too hard. Can’t you get another pitcher?
I’m not knocking Herne or Cairns. They’re
good for their turn, but we need a new man to help
out. And he must be a crackerjack if we’re
to get back to the lead.”
“Where on earth can I find such
a pitcher?” I shouted, almost distracted.
“Well, that’s up to you,” replied
Radbourne.
Up to me it certainly was, and I cudgeled
my brains for inspiration. After I had given
up in hopelessness it came in the shape of a notice
I read in one of the papers. It was a brief
mention of an amateur Worcester ball team being shut
out in a game with a Rickettsville nine. Rickettsville
played Sunday ball, which gave me an opportunity to
look them over.
It took some train riding and then
a journey by coach to get to Rickettsville.
I mingled with the crowd of talking rustics.
There was only one little “bleachers”
and this was loaded to the danger point with the feminine
adherents of the teams. Most of the crowd centered
alongside and back of the catcher’s box.
I edged in and got a position just behind the stone
that served as home plate.
Hunting up a player in this way was
no new thing to me. I was too wise to make myself
known before I had sized up the merits of my man.
So, before the players came upon the field I amused
myself watching the rustic fans and listening to them.
Then a roar announced the appearance of the Rickettsville
team and their opponents, who wore the name of Spatsburg
on their Canton flannel shirts. The uniforms
of these country amateurs would have put a Philadelphia
Mummer’s parade to the blush, at least for bright
colors. But after one amused glance I got down
to the stern business of the day, and that was to discover
a pitcher, and failing that, baseball talent of any
kind.
Never shall I forget my first glimpse
of the Rickettsville twirler. He was far over
six feet tall and as lean as a fence rail. He
had a great shock of light hair, a sunburned, sharp-featured
face, wide, sloping shoulders, and arms enormously
long. He was about as graceful and had about
as much of a baseball walk as a crippled cow.
“He’s a rube!” I
ejaculated, in disgust and disappointment.
But when I had seen him throw one
ball to his catcher I grew as keen as a fox on a scent.
What speed he had! I got round closer to him
and watched him with sharp, eager eyes. He was
a giant. To be sure, he was lean, rawboned as
a horse, but powerful. What won me at once was
his natural, easy swing. He got the ball away
with scarcely any effort. I wondered what he
could do when he brought the motion of his body into
play.
“Bub, what might be the pitcher’s
name?” I asked of a boy.
“Huh, mister, his name might
be Dennis, but it ain’t. Huh!” replied
this country youngster. Evidently my question
had thrown some implication upon this particular player.
“I reckon you be a stranger
in these parts,” said a pleasant old fellow.
“His name’s Hurtle Whitaker
Hurtle. Whit fer short. He hain’t
lost a gol-darned game this summer. No sir-ee!
Never pitched any before, nuther.”
Hurtle! What a remarkably fitting name!
Rickettsville chose the field and
the game began. Hurtle swung with his easy motion.
The ball shot across like a white bullet. It
was a strike, and so was the next, and the one succeeding.
He could not throw anything but strikes, and it seemed
the Spatsburg players could not make even a foul.
Outside of Hurtle’s work the
game meant little to me. And I was so fascinated
by what I saw in him that I could hardly contain myself.
After the first few innings I no longer tried to.
I yelled with the Rickettsville rooters. The
man was a wonder. A blind baseball manager could
have seen that. He had a straight ball, shoulder
high, level as a stretched string, and fast.
He had a jump ball, which he evidently worked by
putting on a little more steam, and it was the speediest
thing I ever saw in the way of a shoot. He had
a wide-sweeping outcurve, wide as the blade of a mowing
scythe. And he had a drop an unhittable
drop. He did not use it often, for it made his
catcher dig too hard into the dirt. But whenever
he did I glowed all over. Once or twice he used
an underhand motion and sent in a ball that fairly
swooped up. It could not have been hit with a
board. And best of all, dearest to the manager’s
heart, he had control. Every ball he threw went
over the plate. He could not miss it. To
him that plate was as big as a house.
What a find! Already I had visions
of the long-looked-for brace of my team, and of the
pennant, and the little cottage, and the happy light
of a pair of blue eyes. What he meant to me,
that country pitcher Hurtle! He shut out the
Spatsburg team without a run or a hit or even a scratch.
Then I went after him. I collared him and his
manager, and there, surrounded by the gaping players,
I bought him and signed him before any of them knew
exactly what I was about. I did not haggle.
I asked the manager what he wanted and produced the
cash; I asked Hurtle what he wanted, doubled his ridiculously
modest demand, paid him in advance, and got his name
to the contract. Then I breathed a long, deep
breath; the first one for weeks. Something told
me that with Hurtle’s signature in my pocket
I had the Eastern League pennant. Then I invited
all concerned down to the Rickettsville hotel.
We made connections at the railroad
junction and reached Worcester at midnight in time
for a good sleep. I took the silent and backward
pitcher to my hotel. In the morning we had breakfast
together. I showed him about Worcester and then
carried him off to the ball grounds.
I had ordered morning practice, and
as morning practice is not conducive to the cheerfulness
of ball players, I wanted to reach the dressing room
a little late. When we arrived, all the players
had dressed and were out on the field. I had
some difficulty in fitting Hurtle with a uniform,
and when I did get him dressed he resembled a two-legged
giraffe decked out in white shirt, gray trousers and
maroon stockings.
Spears, my veteran first baseman and
captain of the team, was the first to see us.
“Sufferin’ umpires!”
yelled Spears. “Here, you Micks!
Look at this Con’s got with him!”
What a yell burst from that sore and
disgruntled bunch of ball tossers! My players
were a grouchy set in practice anyway, and today they
were in their meanest mood.
“Hey, beanpole!”
“Get on to the stilts!”
“Con, where did you find that?”
I cut short their chaffing with a sharp order for
batting practice.
“Regular line-up, now no monkey
biz,” I went on. “Take two cracks
and a bunt. Here, Hurtle,” I said, drawing
him toward the pitcher’s box, “don’t
pay any attention to their talk. That’s
only the fun of ball players. Go in now and
practice a little. Lam a few over.”
Hurtle’s big freckled hands
closed nervously over the ball. I thought it
best not to say more to him, for he had a rather wild
look. I remembered my own stage fright upon
my first appearance in fast company. Besides
I knew what my amiable players would say to him.
I had a secret hope and belief that presently they
would yell upon the other side of the fence.
McCall, my speedy little left fielder,
led off at bat. He was full of ginger, chipper
as a squirrel, sarcastic as only a tried ball player
can be.
“Put ’em over, Slats,
put ’em over,” he called, viciously swinging
his ash.
Hurtle stood stiff and awkward in
the box and seemed to be rolling something in his
mouth. Then he moved his arm. We all saw
the ball dart down straight that is, all
of us except McCall, because if he had seen it he
might have jumped out of the way. Crack!
The ball hit him on the shin.
McCall shrieked. We all groaned.
That crack hurt all of us. Any baseball player
knows how it hurts to be hit on the shinbone.
McCall waved his bat madly.
“Rube! Rube! Rube!” he yelled.
Then and there Hurtle got the name
that was to cling to him all his baseball days.
McCall went back to the plate, red
in the face, mad as a hornet, and he sidestepped every
time Rube pitched a ball. He never even ticked
one and retired in disgust, limping and swearing.
Ashwell was next. He did not show much alacrity.
On Rube’s first pitch down went Ashwell flat
in the dust. The ball whipped the hair of his
head. Rube was wild and I began to get worried.
Ashwell hit a couple of measly punks, but when he
assayed a bunt the gang yelled derisively at him.
“What’s he got?”
The old familiar cry of batters when facing a new
pitcher!
Stringer went up, bold and formidable.
That was what made him the great hitter he was.
He loved to bat; he would have faced anybody; he
would have faced even a cannon. New curves were
a fascination to him. And speed for him, in his
own words, was “apple pie.” In this
instance, surprise was in store for Stringer.
Rube shot up the straight one, then the wide curve,
then the drop. Stringer missed them all, struck
out, fell down ignominiously. It was the first
time he had fanned that season and he looked dazed.
We had to haul him away.
I called off the practice, somewhat
worried about Rube’s showing, and undecided
whether or not to try him in the game that day.
So I went to Radbourne, who had quietly watched Rube
while on the field. Raddy was an old pitcher
and had seen the rise of a hundred stars. I told
him about the game at Rickettsville and what I thought
of Rube, and frankly asked his opinion.
“Con, you’ve made the
find of your life,” said Raddy, quietly and
deliberately.
This from Radbourne was not only comforting;
it was relief, hope, assurance. I avoided Spears,
for it would hardly be possible for him to regard
the Rube favorably, and I kept under cover until time
to show up at the grounds.
Buffalo was on the ticket for that
afternoon, and the Bisons were leading the race and
playing in topnotch form. I went into the dressing
room while the players were changing suits, because
there was a little unpleasantness that I wanted to
spring on them before we got on the field.
“Boys,” I said, curtly,
“Hurtle works today. Cut loose, now, and
back him up.”
I had to grab a bat and pound on the
wall to stop the uproar.
“Did you mutts hear what I said?
Well, it goes. Not a word, now. I’m
handling this team. We’re in bad, I know,
but it’s my judgment to pitch Hurtle, rube or
no rube, and it’s up to you to back us.
That’s the baseball of it.”
Grumbling and muttering, they passed
out of the dressing room. I knew ball players.
If Hurtle should happen to show good form they would
turn in a flash. Rube tagged reluctantly in their
rear. He looked like a man in a trance.
I wanted to speak encouragingly to him, but Raddy
told me to keep quiet.
It was inspiring to see my team practice
that afternoon. There had come a subtle change.
I foresaw one of those baseball climaxes that can
be felt and seen, but not explained. Whether
it was a hint of the hoped-for brace, or only another
flash of form before the final let-down, I had no
means to tell. But I was on edge.
Carter, the umpire, called out the
batteries, and I sent my team into the field.
When that long, lanky, awkward rustic started for
the pitcher’s box, I thought the bleachers would
make him drop in his tracks. The fans were sore
on any one those days, and a new pitcher was bound
to hear from them.
“Where! Oh, where! Oh, where!”
“Connelly’s found another dead one!”
“Scarecrow!”
“Look at his pants!”
“Pad his legs!”
Then the inning began, and things
happened. Rube had marvelous speed, but he could
not find the plate. He threw the ball the second
he got it; he hit men, walked men, and fell all over
himself trying to field bunts. The crowd stormed
and railed and hissed. The Bisons pranced round
the bases and yelled like Indians. Finally they
retired with eight runs.
Eight runs! Enough to win two
games! I could not have told how it happened.
I was sick and all but crushed. Still I had
a blind, dogged faith in the big rustic. I believed
he had not got started right. It was a trying
situation. I called Spears and Raddy to my side
and talked fast.
“It’s all off now.
Let the dinged rube take his medicine,” growled
Spears.
“Don’t take him out,”
said Raddy. “He’s not shown at all
what’s in him. The blamed hayseed is up
in the air. He’s crazy. He doesn’t
know what he’s doing. I tell you, Con,
he may be scared to death, but he’s dead in
earnest.”
Suddenly I recalled the advice of
the pleasant old fellow at Rickettsville.
“Spears, you’re the captain,”
I said, sharply. “Go after the rube.
Wake him up. Tell him he can’t pitch.
Call him ‘Pogie!’ That’s a name
that stirs him up.”
“Well, I’ll be dinged!
He looks it,” replied Spears. “Here,
Rube, get off the bench. Come here.”
Rube lurched toward us. He seemed
to be walking in his sleep. His breast was laboring
and he was dripping with sweat.
“Who ever told you that you
could pitch?” asked Spears genially. He
was master at baseball ridicule. I had never
yet seen the youngster who could stand his badinage.
He said a few things, then wound up with: “Come
now, you cross between a hayrack and a wagon tongue,
get sore and do something. Pitch if you can.
Show us! Do you hear, you tow-headed Pogie!”
Rube jumped as if he had been struck.
His face flamed red and his little eyes turned black.
He shoved his big fist under Capt. Spears’
nose.
“Mister, I’ll lick you
fer thet after the game! And I’ll
show you dog-goned well how I can pitch.”
“Good!” exclaimed Raddy;
and I echoed his word. Then I went to the bench
and turned my attention to the game. Some one
told me that McCall had made a couple of fouls, and
after waiting for two strikes and three balls had
struck out. Ashwell had beat out a bunt in his
old swift style, and Stringer was walking up to the
plate on the moment. It was interesting, even
in a losing game, to see Stringer go to bat.
We all watched him, as we had been watching him for
weeks, expecting him to break his slump with one of
the drives that had made him famous. Stringer
stood to the left side of the plate, and I could see
the bulge of his closely locked jaw. He swung
on the first pitched ball. With the solid rap
we all rose to watch that hit. The ball lined
first, then soared and did not begin to drop till
it was far beyond the right-field fence. For
an instant we were all still, so were the bleachers.
Stringer had broken his slump with the longest drive
ever made on the grounds. The crowd cheered
as he trotted around the bases behind Ashwell.
Two runs.
“Con, how’d you like that
drive?” he asked me, with a bright gleam in
his eyes.
“O-h-! a beaut!”
I replied, incoherently. The players on the bench
were all as glad as I was. Henley flew out to
left. Mullaney smashed a two-bagger to right.
Then Gregg hit safely, but Mullaney, in trying to
score on the play, was out at the plate.
Four hits! I tell you fellows, somethings coming
off, said Raddy. Now, if only Rube
What a difference there was in that
long rustic! He stalked into the box, unmindful
of the hooting crowd and grimly faced Schultz, the
first batter up for the Bisons. This time Rube
was deliberate. And where he had not swung before
he now got his body and arm into full motion.
The ball came in like a glint of light. Schultz
looked surprised. The umpire called “Strike!”
“Wow!” yelled the Buffalo
coacher. Rube sped up the sidewheeler and Schultz
reached wide to meet it and failed. The third
was the lightning drop, straight over the plate.
The batter poked weakly at it. Then Carl struck
out and Manning following, did likewise. Three
of the best hitters in the Eastern retired on nine
strikes! That was no fluke. I knew what
it meant, and I sat there hugging myself with the
hum of something joyous in my ears.
Gregg had a glow on his sweaty face.
“Oh, but say, boys, take a tip from me!
The Rube’s a world beater! Raddy knew
it; he sized up that swing, and now I know it.
Get wise, you its!”
When old Spears pasted a single through
shortstop, the Buffalo manager took Clary out of the
box and put in Vane, their best pitcher. Bogart
advanced the runner to second, but was thrown out on
the play. Then Rube came up. He swung
a huge bat and loomed over the Bison’s twirler.
Rube had the look of a hitter. He seemed to be
holding himself back from walking right into the ball.
And he hit one high and far away. The fast Carl
could not get under it, though he made a valiant effort.
Spears scored and Rube’s long strides carried
him to third. The cold crowd in the stands came
to life; even the sore bleachers opened up. McCall
dumped a slow teaser down the line, a hit that would
easily have scored Rube, but he ran a little way,
then stopped, tried to get back, and was easily touched
out. Ashwell’s hard chance gave the Bison’s
shortstop an error, and Stringer came up with two men
on bases. Stringer hit a foul over the right-field
fence and the crowd howled. Then he hit a hard
long drive straight into the centerfielder’s
hands.
“Con, I don’t know what
to think, but ding me if we ain’t hittin’
the ball,” said Spears. Then to his players:
“A little more of that and we’re back
in our old shape. All in a minute at
’em now! Rube, you dinged old Pogie, pitch!”
Rube toed the rubber, wrapped his
long brown fingers round the ball, stepped out as
he swung and zing! That inning he
unloosed a few more kinks in his arm and he tried
some new balls upon the Bisons. But whatever
he used and wherever he put them the result was the
same they cut the plate and the Bisons
were powerless.
That inning marked the change in my
team. They had come hack. The hoodoo had
vanished. The championship Worcester team was
itself again.
The Bisons were fighting, too, but
Rube had them helpless. When they did hit a
ball one of my infielders snapped it up. No chances
went to the outfield. I sat there listening
to my men, and reveled in a moment that I had long
prayed for.
“Now you’re pitching some,
Rube. Another strike! Get him a board!”
called Ashwell.
“Ding ’em, Rube, ding ’em!”
came from Capt. Spears.
“Speed? Oh-no!” yelled Bogart at
third base.
“It’s all off, Rube! It’s
all off all off!”
So, with the wonderful pitching of
an angry rube, the Worcester team came into its own
again. I sat through it all without another word;
without giving a signal. In a way I realized
the awakening of the bleachers, and heard the pound
of feet and the crash, but it was the spirit of my
team that thrilled me. Next to that the work
of my new find absorbed me. I gloated over his
easy, deceiving swing. I rose out of my seat
when he threw that straight fast ball, swift as a
bullet, true as a plumb line. And when those
hard-hitting, sure bunting Bisons chopped in vain
at the wonderful drop, I choked back a wild yell.
For Rube meant the world to me that day.
In the eighth the score was 8 to 6.
The Bisons had one scratch hit to their credit, but
not a runner had got beyond first base. Again
Rube held them safely, one man striking out, another
fouling out, and the third going out on a little fly.
Crash! Crash! Crash!
Crash! The bleachers were making up for many
games in which they could not express their riotous
feelings.
“It’s a cinch we’ll
win!” yelled a fan with a voice. Rube was
the first man up in our half of the ninth and his
big bat lammed the first ball safe over second base.
The crowd, hungry for victory, got to their feet
and stayed upon their feet, calling, cheering for runs.
It was the moment for me to get in the game, and
I leaped up, strung like a wire, and white hot with
inspiration. I sent Spears to the coaching box
with orders to make Rube run on the first ball.
I gripped McCall with hands that made him wince.
Then I dropped back on the bench spent
and panting. It was only a game, yet it meant
so much! Little McCall was dark as a thunder
cloud, and his fiery eyes snapped. He was the
fastest man in the league, and could have bunted an
arrow from a bow. The foxy Bison third baseman
edged in. Mac feinted to bunt toward him then
turned his bat inward and dumped a teasing curving
ball down the first base line. Rube ran as if
in seven-league boots. Mac’s short legs
twinkled; he went like the wind; he leaped into first
base with his long slide, and beat the throw.
The stands and bleachers seemed to
be tumbling down. For a moment the air was full
of deafening sound. Then came the pause, the
dying away of clatter and roar, the close waiting,
suspended quiet. Spears’ clear voice,
as he coached Rube, in its keen note seemed inevitable
of another run.
Ashwell took his stand. He was
another left-hand hitter, and against a right-hand
pitcher, in such circumstances as these, the most dangerous
of men. Vane knew it. Ellis, the Bison
captain knew it, as showed plainly in his signal to
catch Rube at second. But Spears’ warning
held or frightened Rube on the bag.
Vane wasted a ball, then another.
Ashwell could not be coaxed. Wearily Vane swung;
the shortstop raced out to get in line for a possible
hit through the wide space to his right, and the second
baseman got on his toes as both base runners started.
Crack! The old story of the
hit and run game! Ashwell’s hit crossed
sharply where a moment before the shortstop had been
standing. With gigantic strides Rube rounded
the corner and scored. McCall flitted through
second, and diving into third with a cloud of dust,
got the umpire’s decision. When Stringer
hurried up with Mac on third and Ash on first the
whole field seemed racked in a deafening storm.
Again it subsided quickly. The hopes of the
Worcester fans had been crushed too often of late
for them to be fearless.
But I had no fear. I only wanted
the suspense ended. I was like a man clamped
in a vise. Stringer stood motionless. Mac
bent low with the sprinters’ stoop; Ash watched
the pitcher’s arm and slowly edged off first.
Stringer waited for one strike and two balls, then
he hit the next. It hugged the first base line,
bounced fiercely past the bag and skipped over the
grass to bump hard into the fence. McCall romped
home, and lame Ashwell beat any run he ever made to
the plate. Rolling, swelling, crashing roar of
frenzied feet could not down the high piercing sustained
yell of the fans. It was great. Three weeks
of submerged bottled baseball joy exploded in one
mad outburst! The fans, too, had come into their
own again.
We scored no more. But the Bisons
were beaten. Their spirit was broken.
This did not make the Rube let up in their last half
inning. Grim and pale he faced them. At
every long step and swing he tossed his shock of light
hair. At the end he was even stronger than at
the beginning. He still had the glancing, floating
airy quality that baseball players call speed.
And he struck out the last three batters.
In the tumult that burst over my ears
I sat staring at the dots on my score card.
Fourteen strike outs! one scratch hit! No base
on balls since the first inning! That told the
story which deadened senses doubted. There was
a roar in my ears. Some one was pounding me.
As I struggled to get into the dressing room the
crowd mobbed me. But I did not hear what they
yelled. I had a kind of misty veil before my eyes,
in which I saw that lanky Rube magnified into a glorious
figure. I saw the pennant waving, and the gleam
of a white cottage through the trees, and a trim figure
waiting at the gate. Then I rolled into the dressing
room.
Somehow it seemed strange to me.
Most of the players were stretched out in peculiar
convulsions. Old Spears sat with drooping head.
Then a wild flaming-eyed giant swooped upon me.
With a voice of thunder he announced:
“I’m a-goin’ to lick you, too!”
After that we never called him any name except Rube.