They may say baseball is the same
in the minor leagues that it is in the big leagues,
but any old ball player or manager knows better.
Where the difference comes in, however, is in the greater
excellence and unity of the major players, a speed,
a daring, a finish that can be acquired only in competition
with one another.
I thought of this when I led my party
into Morrisey’s private box in the grand stand
of the Chicago American League grounds. We had
come to see the Rube’s break into fast company.
My great pitcher, Whittaker Hurtle, the Rube, as we
called him, had won the Eastern League Pennant for
me that season, and Morrisey, the Chicago magnate,
had bought him. Milly, my affianced, was with
me, looking as happy as she was pretty, and she was
chaperoned by her mother, Mrs. Nelson.
With me, also, were two veterans of
my team, McCall and Spears, who lived in Chicago,
and who would have traveled a few miles to see the
Rube pitch. And the other member of my party
was Mrs. Hurtle, the Rube’s wife, as saucy and
as sparkling-eyed as when she had been Nan Brown.
Today she wore a new tailor-made gown, new bonnet,
new gloves she said she had decorated herself
in a manner befitting the wife of a major league pitcher.
Morrisey’s box was very comfortable,
and, as I was pleased to note, so situated that we
had a fine view of the field and stands, and yet were
comparatively secluded. The bleachers were filling.
Some of the Chicago players were on the field tossing
and batting balls; the Rube, however, had not yet
appeared.
A moment later a metallic sound was
heard on the stairs leading up into the box.
I knew it for baseball spiked shoes clanking on the
wood.
The Rube, looking enormous in his
uniform, stalked into the box, knocking over two chairs
as he entered. He carried a fielder’s glove
in one huge freckled hand, and a big black bat in the
other.
Nan, with much dignity and a very
manifest pride, introduced him to Mrs. Nelson.
There was a little chatting, and then,
upon the arrival of Manager Morrisey, we men retired
to the back of the box to talk baseball.
Chicago was in fourth place in the
league race, and had a fighting chance to beat Detroit
out for the third position. Philadelphia was
scheduled for that day, and Philadelphia had a great
team. It was leading the race, and almost beyond
all question would land the flag. In truth, only
one more victory was needed to clinch the pennant.
The team had three games to play in Chicago and it
was to wind up the season with three in Washington.
Six games to play and only one imperatively important
to win! But baseball is uncertain, and until
the Philadelphians won that game they would be a band
of fiends.
“Well, Whit, this is where you
break in,” I said. “Now, tip us
straight. You’ve had more than a week’s
rest. How’s that arm?”
“Grand, Con, grand!” replied
the Rube with his frank smile. “I was a
little anxious till I warmed up. But say!
I’ve got more up my sleeve today than I ever
had.”
“That’ll do for me,”
said Morrisey, rubbing his hands. “I’ll
spring something on these swelled Quakers today.
Now, Connelly, give Hurtle one of your old talks the
last one and then I’ll ring the gong.”
I added some words of encouragement,
not forgetting my old ruse to incite the Rube by rousing
his temper. And then, as the gong rang and the
Rube was departing, Nan stepped forward for her say.
There was a little white under the tan on her cheek,
and her eyes had a darkling flash.
“Whit, it’s a magnificent
sight that beautiful green field and the
stands. What a crowd of fans! Why, I never
saw a real baseball crowd before. There are
twenty thousand here. And there’s a difference
in the feeling. It’s sharper new
to me. It’s big league baseball.
Not a soul in that crowd ever heard of you, but, I
believe, tomorrow the whole baseball world will have
heard of you. Mr. Morrisey knows. I saw
it in his face. Captain Spears knows. Connie
knows. I know.”
Then she lifted her face and, pulling
him down within reach, she kissed him. Nan took
her husband’s work in dead earnest; she gloried
in it, and perhaps she had as much to do with making
him a great pitcher as any of us.
The Rube left the box, and I found
a seat between Nan and Milly. The field was
a splendid sight. Those bleachers made me glow
with managerial satisfaction. On the field both
teams pranced and danced and bounced around in practice.
In spite of the absolutely last degree
of egotism manifested by the Philadelphia players,
I could not but admire such a splendid body of men.
“So these are the champions
of last season and of this season, too,” commented
Milly. “I don’t wonder. How
swiftly and cleanly they play! They appear not
to exert themselves, yet they always get the ball in
perfect time. It all reminds me of of
the rhythm of music. And that champion batter
and runner that Lane in center isn’t
he just beautiful? He walks and runs like a
blue-ribbon winner at the horse show. I tell
you one thing, Connie, these Quakers are on dress parade.”
“Oh, these Quakers hate themselves,
I don’t think!” retorted Nan. Being
a rabid girl-fan it was, of course, impossible for
Nan to speak baseball convictions or gossip without
characteristic baseball slang. “Stuck on
themselves! I never saw the like in my life.
That fellow Lane is so swelled that he can’t
get down off his toes. But he’s a wonder,
I must admit that. They’re a bunch of stars.
Easy, fast, trained they’re machines,
and I’ll bet they’re Indians to fight.
I can see it sticking out all over them. This
will certainly be some game with Whit handing up that
jump ball of his to this gang of champs. But,
Connie, I’ll go you Whit beats them.”
I laughed and refused to gamble.
The gong rang; the crowd seemed to
hum and rustle softly to quiet attention; Umpire McClung
called the names of the batteries; then the familiar
“Play!”
There was the usual applause from
the grand stand and welcome cheers from the bleachers.
The Rube was the last player to go out. Morrisey
was a manager who always played to the stands, and
no doubt he held the Rube back for effect. If
so, he ought to have been gratified. That moment
reminded me of my own team and audience upon the occasion
of the Rube’s debut. It was the same only
here it happened in the big league, before a championship
team and twenty thousand fans.
The roar that went up from the bleachers
might well have scared an unseasoned pitcher out of
his wits. And the Quakers lined up before their
bench and gazed at this newcomer who had the nerve
to walk out there to the box. Cogswell stood
on the coaching line, looked at the Rube and then
held up both arms and turned toward the Chicago bench
as if to ask Morrisey: “Where did you
get that?”
Nan, quick as a flash to catch a point,
leaned over the box-rail and looked at the champions
with fire in her eye. “Oh, you just wait!
wait!” she bit out between her teeth.
Certain it was that there was no one
who knew the Rube as well as I; and I knew beyond
the shadow of a doubt that the hour before me would
see brightening of a great star pitcher on the big
league horizon. It was bound to be a full hour
for me. I had much reason to be grateful to
Whit Hurtle. He had pulled my team out of a rut
and won me the pennant, and the five thousand dollars
I got for his release bought the little cottage on
the hill for Milly and me. Then there was my
pride in having developed him. And all that
I needed to calm me, settle me down into assurance
and keen criticism of the game, was to see the Rube
pitch a few balls with his old incomparable speed and
control.
Berne, first batter for the Quakers,
walked up to the plate. He was another Billy
Hamilton, built like a wedge. I saw him laugh
at the long pitcher.
Whit swayed back, coiled and uncoiled.
Something thin, white, glancing, shot at Berne.
He ducked, escaping the ball by a smaller margin
than appeared good for his confidence. He spoke
low to the Rube, and what he said was probably not
flavored with the milk of friendly sweetness.
“Wild! What’d you
look for?” called out Cogswell scornfully.
“He’s from the woods!”
The Rube swung his enormously long
arm, took an enormous stride toward third base, and
pitched again. It was one of his queer deliveries.
The ball cut the plate.
“Ho! Ho!” yelled the Quakers.
The Rube’s next one was his
out curve. It broke toward the corner of the
plate and would have been a strike had not Berne popped
it up.
Callopy, the second hitter, faced
the Rube, and he, too, after the manner of ball players,
made some remark meant only for the Rube’s ears.
Callopy was a famous waiter. He drove more pitchers
mad with his implacable patience than any hitter in
the league. The first one of the Rube’s
he waited on crossed the in-corner; the second crossed
the out-corner and the third was Rube’s wide,
slow, tantalizing “stitch-ball,” as we
call it, for the reason that it came so slow a batter
could count the stitches. I believe Callopy waited
on that curve, decided to hit it, changed his mind
and waited some more, and finally the ball maddened
him and he had to poke at it, the result being a weak
grounder.
Then the graceful, powerful Lane,
champion batter, champion base runner, stepped to
the plate. How a baseball crowd, any crowd,
anywhere, loves the champion batter! The ovation
Lane received made me wonder, with this impressive
reception in a hostile camp, what could be the manner
of it on his home field? Any boy ball-player
from the lots seeing Lane knock the dirt out of his
spikes and step into position would have known he
was a 400 hitter.
I was curious to see what the Rube
would pitch Lane. It must have been a new and
significant moment for Hurtle. Some pitchers
actually wilt when facing a hitter of Lane’s
reputation. But he, on his baseball side, was
peculiarly unemotional. Undoubtedly he could get
furious, but that only increased his effectiveness.
To my amazement the Rube pitched Lane a little easy
ball, not in any sense like his floater or stitch-ball,
but just a little toss that any youngster might have
tossed. Of all possible balls, Lane was not expecting
such as that, and he let it go. If the nerve
of it amazed me, what did it not do to Lane?
I saw his face go fiery red. The grand stand
murmured; let out one short yelp of pleasure; the
Quaker players chaffed Lane.
The pitch was a strike. I was
gripping my chair now, and for the next pitch I prophesied
the Rube’s wonderful jump ball, which he had
not yet used. He swung long, and at the end
of his swing seemed to jerk tensely. I scarcely
saw the ball. It had marvelous speed. Lane
did not offer to hit it, and it was a strike.
He looked at the Rube, then at Cogswell. That
veteran appeared amused. The bleachers, happy
and surprised to be able to yell at Lane, yelled heartily.
Again I took it upon myself to interpret
the Rube’s pitching mind. He had another
ball that he had not used, a drop, an unhittable drop.
I thought he would use that next. He did, and
though Lane reached it with the bat, the hit was a
feeble one. He had been fooled and the side
was out.
Poole, the best of the Quaker’s
pitching staff, walked out to the slab. He was
a left-hander, and Chicago, having so many players
who batted left-handed, always found a southpaw a
hard nut to crack. Cogswell, field manager and
captain of the Quakers, kicked up the dust around
first base and yelled to his men: “Git
in the game!”
Staats hit Poole’s speed ball
into deep short and was out; Mitchell flew out to
Berne; Rand grounded to second.
While the teams again changed sides
the fans cheered, and then indulged in the first stretch
of the game. I calculated that they would be
stretching their necks presently, trying to keep track
of the Rube’s work. Nan leaned on the
railing absorbed in her own hope and faith. Milly
chattered about this and that, people in the boxes,
and the chances of the game.
My own interest, while it did not
wholly preclude the fortunes of the Chicago players
at the bat, was mostly concerned with the Rube’s
fortunes in the field.
In the Rube’s half inning he
retired Bannister and Blandy on feeble infield grounders,
and worked Cogswell into hitting a wide curve high
in the air.
Poole meant to win for the Quakers
if his good arm and cunning did not fail him, and
his pitching was masterly. McCloskey fanned,
Hutchinson fouled out, Brewster got a short safe fly
just out of reach, and Hoffner hit to second, forcing
Brewster.
With Dugan up for the Quakers in the
third inning, Cogswell and Bannister, from the coaching
lines, began to talk to the Rube. My ears, keen
from long practice, caught some of the remarks in spite
of the noisy bleachers.
“Say, busher, you ’ve
lasted longer’n we expected, but you don’t
know it!”
“Gol darn you city ball tossers!
Now you jest let me alone!”
“We’re comin’ through the rye!”
“My top-heavy rustic friend,
you’ll need an airship presently, when you go
up!”
All the badinage was good-natured,
which was sure proof that the Quakers had not arrived
at anything like real appreciation of the Rube.
They were accustomed to observe the trying out of many
youngsters, of whom ninety-nine out of a hundred failed
to make good.
Dugan chopped at three strikes and
slammed his bat down. Hucker hit a slow fly
to Hoffer. Three men out on five pitched balls!
Cogswell, old war horse that he was, stood a full
moment and watched the Rube as he walked in to the
bench. An idea had penetrated Cogswell’s
brain, and I would have given something to know what
it was. Cogswell was a great baseball general,
and though he had a preference for matured ball-players
he could, when pressed, see the quality in a youngster.
He picked up his mitt and took his position at first
with a gruff word to his players.
Rand for Chicago opened with a hit,
and the bleachers, ready to strike fire, began to
cheer and stamp. When McCloskey, in an attempt
to sacrifice, beat out his bunt the crowd roared.
Rand, being slow on his feet, had not attempted to
make third on the play. Hutchinson sacrificed,
neatly advancing the runners. Then the bleachers
played the long rolling drum of clattering feet with
shrill whistling accompaniment. Brewster batted
a wicked ground ball to Blandy. He dove into
the dust, came up with the ball, and feinting to throw
home he wheeled and shot the ball to Cogswell, who
in turn shot it to the plate to head Rand. Runner
and ball got there apparently together, but Umpire
McClung’s decision went against Rand. It
was fine, fast work, but how the bleachers stormed
at McClung!
“Rob-b-ber!”
Again the head of the Quakers’
formidable list was up. I knew from the way
that Cogswell paced the coaching box that the word
had gone out to look the Rube over seriously.
There were possibilities even in rubes.
Berne carefully stepped into the batter’s
box, as if he wanted to be certain to the breadth
of a hair how close he was to the plate. He was
there this time to watch the Rube pitch, to work him
out, to see what was what. He crouched low,
and it would have been extremely hard to guess what
he was up to. His great play, however, was his
ability to dump the ball and beat out the throw to
first. It developed presently, that this was
now his intention and that the Rube knew it and pitched
him the one ball which is almost impossible to bunt a
high incurve, over the inside corner. There was
no mistaking the Rube’s magnificent control.
True as a plumb line he shot up the ball once,
twice, and Berne fouled both two strikes.
Grudgingly he waited on the next, but it, too, was
over the corner, and Berne went out on strikes.
The great crowd did not, of course, grasp the finesse
of the play, but Berne had struck out that
was enough for them.
Callopy, the famous spiker, who had
put many a player out of the game for weeks at a time,
strode into the batter’s place, and he, too,
was not at the moment making any funny remarks.
The Rube delivered a ball that all but hit Callopy
fair on the head. It was the second narrow escape
for him, and the roar he let out showed how he resented
being threatened with a little of his own medicine.
As might have been expected, and very likely as the
Rube intended, Callopy hit the next ball, a sweeping
curve, up over the infield.
I was trying to see all the intricate
details of the motive and action on the field, and
it was not easy to watch several players at once.
But while Berne and Callopy were having their troubles
with the Rube, I kept the tail of my eye on Cogswell.
He was prowling up and down the third-base line.
He was missing no signs, no indications,
no probabilities, no possibilities. But he was
in doubt. Like a hawk he was watching the Rube,
and, as well, the crafty batters. The inning
might not tell the truth as to the Rube’s luck,
though it would test his control. The Rube’s
speed and curves, without any head work, would have
made him a pitcher of no mean ability, but was this
remarkable placing of balls just accident? That
was the question.
When Berne walked to the bench I distinctly
heard him say: “Come out of it, you dubs.
I say you can’t work him or wait him.
He’s peggin’ ’em out of a gun!”
Several of the Quakers were standing
out from the bench, all intent on the Rube.
He had stirred them up. First it was humor; then
ridicule, curiosity, suspicion, doubt. And I
knew it would grow to wonder and certainty, then fierce
attack from both tongues and bats, and lastly for
ball players are generous unstinted admiration.
Somehow, not only the first climaxes
of a game but the decisions, the convictions, the
reputations of pitchers and fielders evolve around
the great hitter. Plain it was that the vast
throng of spectators, eager to believe in a new find,
wild to welcome a new star, yet loath to trust to
their own impulsive judgments, held themselves in check
until once more the great Lane had faced the Rube.
The field grew tolerably quiet just
then. The Rube did not exert himself.
The critical stage had no concern for him. He
pitched Lane a high curve, over the plate, but in
close, a ball meant to be hit and a ball hard to hit
safely. Lane knew that as well as any hitter
in the world, so he let two of the curves go by two
strikes. Again the Rube relentlessly gave him
the same ball; and Lane, hitting viciously, spitefully,
because he did not want to hit that kind of a ball,
sent up a fly that Rand easily captured.
“Oh, I don’t know!
Pretty fair, I guess!” yelled a tenor-voiced
fan; and he struck the key-note. And the bleachers
rose to their feet and gave the Rube the rousing cheer
of the brotherhood of fans.
Hoffer walked to first on a base on
balls. Sweeney advanced him. The Rube sent
up a giant fly to Callopy. Then Staats hit safely,
scoring the first run of the game. Hoffer crossed
the plate amid vociferous applause. Mitchell
ended the inning with a fly to Blandy.
What a change had come over the spirit
of that Quaker aggregation! It was something
to make a man thrill with admiration and, if he happened
to favor Chicago, to fire all his fighting blood.
The players poured upon the Rube a continuous stream
of scathing abuse. They would have made a raging
devil of a mild-mannered clergyman. Some of them
were skilled in caustic wit, most of them were possessed
of forked tongues; and Cogswell, he of a thousand
baseball battles, had a genius for inflaming anyone
he tormented. This was mostly beyond the ken
of the audience, and behind the back of the umpire,
but it was perfectly plain to me. The Quakers
were trying to rattle the Rube, a trick of the game
as fair for one side as for the other. I sat
there tight in my seat, grimly glorying in the way
the Rube refused to be disturbed. But the lion
in him was rampant. Fortunately, it was his strange
gift to pitch better the angrier he got; and the more
the Quakers flayed him, the more he let himself out
to their crushing humiliation.
The innings swiftly passed to the
eighth with Chicago failing to score again, with Philadelphia
failing to score at all. One scratch hit and
a single, gifts to the weak end of the batting list,
were all the lank pitcher allowed them. Long
since the bleachers had crowned the Rube. He
was theirs and they were his; and their voices had
the peculiar strangled hoarseness due to over-exertion.
The grand stand, slower to understand and approve,
arrived later; but it got there about the seventh,
and ladies’ gloves and men’s hats were
sacrificed.
In the eighth the Quakers reluctantly
yielded their meed of praise, showing it by a cessation
of their savage wordy attacks on the Rube. It
was a kind of sullen respect, wrung from the bosom
of great foes.
Then the ninth inning was at hand.
As the sides changed I remembered to look at the
feminine group in our box. Milly was in a most
beautiful glow of happiness and excitement. Nan
sat rigid, leaning over the rail, her face white and
drawn, and she kept saying in a low voice: “Will
it never end? Will it never end?” Mrs.
Nelson stared wearily.
It was the Quakers’ last stand.
They faced it as a team that had won many a game
in the ninth with two men out. Dugan could do
nothing with the Rube’s unhittable drop, for
a drop curve was his weakness, and he struck out.
Hucker hit to Hoffer, who fumbled, making the first
error of the game. Poole dumped the ball, as
evidently the Rube desired, for he handed up a straight
one, but the bunt rolled teasingly and the Rube, being
big and tall, failed to field it in time.
Suddenly the whole field grew quiet.
For the first time Cogswell’s coaching was
clearly heard.
“One out! Take a lead!
Take a lead! Go through this time. Go
through!”
Could it be possible, I wondered,
that after such a wonderful exhibition of pitching
the Rube would lose out in the ninth?
There were two Quakers on base, one
out, and two of the best hitters in the league on
deck, with a chance of Lane getting up.
“Oh! Oh! Oh!” moaned Nan.
I put my hand on hers. “Don’t
quit, Nan. You’ll never forgive yourself
if you quit. Take it from me, Whit will pull
out of this hole!”
What a hole that was for the Rube
on the day of his break into fast company! I
measured it by his remarkable deliberation. He
took a long time to get ready to pitch to Berne, and
when he let drive it was as if he had been trifling
all before in that game. I could think of no
way to figure it except that when the ball left him
there was scarcely any appreciable interval of time
before it cracked in Sweeney’s mitt. It
was the Rube’s drop, which I believed unhittable.
Berne let it go by, shaking his head as McClung called
it a strike. Another followed, which Berne chopped
at vainly. Then with the same upheaval of his
giant frame, the same flinging of long arms and lunging
forward, the Rube delivered a third drop. And
Berne failed to hit it.
The voiceless bleachers stamped on
the benches and the grand stand likewise thundered.
Callopy showed his craft by stepping
back and lining Rube’s high pitch to left.
Hoffer leaped across and plunged down, getting his
gloved hand in front of the ball. The hit was
safe, but Hoffer’s valiant effort saved a tie
score.
Lane up! Three men on bases! Two out!
Not improbably there were many thousand
spectators of that thrilling moment who pitied the
Rube for the fate which placed Lane at the bat then.
But I was not one of them. Nevertheless my throat
was clogged, my mouth dry, and my ears full of bells.
I could have done something terrible to Hurtle for
his deliberation, yet I knew he was proving himself
what I had always tried to train him to be.
Then he swung, stepped out, and threw
his body with the ball. This was his rarely
used pitch, his last resort, his fast rise ball that
jumped up a little at the plate. Lane struck
under it. How significant on the instant to
see old Cogswell’s hands go up! Again the
Rube pitched, and this time Lane watched the ball
go by. Two strikes!
That whole audience leaped to its
feet, whispering, yelling, screaming, roaring, bawling.
The Rube received the ball from Sweeney
and quick as lightning he sped it plateward.
The great Lane struck out! The game was over Chicago,
1; Philadelphia, 0.
In that whirling moment when the crowd
went mad and Milly was hugging me, and Nan pounding
holes in my hat, I had a queer sort of blankness,
a section of time when my sensations were deadlocked.
“Oh! Connie, look!”
cried Nan. I saw Lane and Cogswell warmly shaking
hands with the Rube. Then the hungry clamoring
fans tumbled upon the field and swarmed about the
players.
Whereupon Nan kissed me and Milly,
and then kissed Mrs. Nelson. In that radiant
moment Nan was all sweetness.
“It is the Rube’s break into fast company,”
she said.