One day in July our Rochester club,
leader in the Eastern League, had returned to the
hotel after winning a double-header from the Syracuse
club. For some occult reason there was to be
a lay-off next day and then on the following another
double-header. These double-headers we hated
next to exhibition games. Still a lay-off for
twenty-four hours, at that stage of the race, was
a Godsend, and we received the news with exclamations
of pleasure.
After dinner we were all sitting and
smoking comfortably in front of the hotel when our
manager, Merritt, came hurriedly out of the lobby.
It struck me that he appeared a little flustered.
“Say, you fellars,” he
said brusquely. “Pack your suits and be
ready for the bus at seven-thirty.”
For a moment there was a blank, ominous
silence, while we assimilated the meaning of his terse
speech.
“I’ve got a good thing
on for tomorrow,” continued the manager.
“Sixty per cent gate receipts if we win.
That Guelph team is hot stuff, though.”
“Guelph!” exclaimed some
of the players suspiciously. “Where’s
Guelph?”
“It’s in Canada.
We’ll take the night express an’ get there
tomorrow in time for the game. An’ we’ll
hev to hustle.”
Upon Merritt then rained a multiplicity
of excuses. Gillinger was not well, and ought
to have that day’s rest. Snead’s
eyes would profit by a lay-off. Deerfoot Browning
was leading the league in base running, and as his
legs were all bruised and scraped by sliding, a manager
who was not an idiot would have a care of such valuable
runmakers for his team. Lake had “Charley-horse.”
Hathaway’s arm was sore. Bane’s
stomach threatened gastritis. Spike Doran’s
finger needed a chance to heal. I was stale,
and the other players, three pitchers, swore their
arms should be in the hospital.
“Cut it out!” said Merritt,
getting exasperated. “You’d all lay
down on me now, wouldn’t you?
Well, listen to this: McDougal pitched today;
he doesn’t go. Blake works Friday, he doesn’t
go. But the rest of you puffed-up, high-salaried
stiffs pack your grips quick. See? It’ll
cost any fresh fellar fifty for missin’ the train.”
So that was how eleven of the Rochester
team found themselves moodily boarding a Pullman en
route for Buffalo and Canada. We went to bed
early and arose late.
Guelph lay somewhere in the interior
of Canada, and we did not expect to get there until
1 o’clock.
As it turned out, the train was late;
we had to dress hurriedly in the smoking room, pack
our citizen clothes in our grips and leave the train
to go direct to the ball grounds without time for lunch.
It was a tired, dusty-eyed, peevish
crowd of ball players that climbed into a waiting
bus at the little station.
We had never heard of Guelph; we did
not care anything about Rube baseball teams.
Baseball was not play to us; it was the hardest kind
of work, and of all things an exhibition game was an
abomination.
The Guelph players, strapping lads,
met us with every mark of respect and courtesy and
escorted us to the field with a brass band that was
loud in welcome, if not harmonious in tune.
Some 500 men and boys trotted curiously
along with us, for all the world as if the bus were
a circus parade cage filled with striped tigers.
What a rustic, motley crowd massed about in and on
that ball ground. There must have been 10,000.
The audience was strange to us.
The Indians, half-breeds, French-Canadians; the huge,
hulking, bearded farmers or traders, or trappers,
whatever they were, were new to our baseball experience.
The players themselves, however, earned
the largest share of our attention. By the time
they had practiced a few moments we looked at Merritt
and Merritt looked at us.
These long, powerful, big-handed lads
evidently did not know the difference between lacrosse
and baseball; but they were quick as cats on their
feet, and they scooped up the ball in a way wonderful
to see. And throw! it made a professional’s
heart swell just to see them line the ball across
the diamond.
“Lord! what whips these lads
have!” exclaimed Merritt. “Hope we’re
not up against it. If this team should beat us
we wouldn’t draw a handful at Toronto.
We can’t afford to be beaten. Jump around
and cinch the game quick. If we get in a bad
place, I’ll sneak in the ‘rabbit.’”
The “rabbit” was a baseball
similar in appearance to the ordinary league ball;
under its horse-hide cover, however, it was remarkably
different.
An ingenious fan, a friend of Merritt,
had removed the covers from a number of league balls
and sewed them on rubber balls of his own making.
They could not be distinguished from the regular article,
not even by an experienced professional until
they were hit. Then! The fact that after
every bounce one of these rubber balls bounded swifter
and higher had given it the name of the “rabbit.”
Many a game had the “rabbit”
won for us at critical stages. Of course it
was against the rules of the league, and of course
every player in the league knew about it; still, when
it was judiciously and cleverly brought into a close
game, the “rabbit” would be in play, and
very probably over the fence, before the opposing
captain could learn of it, let alone appeal to the
umpire.
“Fellars, look at that guy who’s
goin’ to pitch,” suddenly spoke up one
of the team.
Many as were the country players whom
we seasoned and traveled professionals had run across,
this twirler outclassed them for remarkable appearance.
Moreover, what put an entirely different tinge to
our momentary humor was the discovery that he was as
wild as a March hare and could throw a ball so fast
that it resembled a pea shot from a boy’s air
gun.
Deerfoot led our batting list, and
after the first pitched ball, which he did not see,
and the second, which ticked his shirt as it shot past,
he turned to us with an expression that made us groan
inwardly.
When Deerfoot looked that way it meant
the pitcher was dangerous. Deerfoot made no effort
to swing at the next ball, and was promptly called
out on strikes.
I was second at bat, and went up with
some reluctance. I happened to be leading the
league in both long distance and safe hitting, and
I doted on speed. But having stopped many mean
in-shoots with various parts of my anatomy, I was
rather squeamish about facing backwoods yaps who had
no control.
When I had watched a couple of his
pitches, which the umpire called strikes, I gave him
credit for as much speed as Rusie. These balls
were as straight as a string, singularly without curve,
jump, or variation of any kind. I lined the
next one so hard at the shortstop that it cracked
like a pistol as it struck his hands and whirled him
half off his feet. Still he hung to the ball
and gave opportunity for the first crash of applause.
“Boys, he’s a trifle wild,”
I said to my team-mates, “but he has the most
beautiful ball to hit you ever saw. I don’t
believe he uses a curve, and when we once time that
speed we’ll kill it.”
Next inning, after old man Hathaway
had baffled the Canadians with his wide, tantalizing
curves, my predictions began to be verified.
Snead rapped one high and far to deep right field.
To our infinite surprise, however, the right fielder
ran with fleetness that made our own Deerfoot seem
slow, and he got under the ball and caught it.
Doran sent a sizzling grasscutter
down toward left. The lanky third baseman darted
over, dived down, and, coming up with the ball, exhibited
the power of a throwing arm that made as all green
with envy.
Then, when the catcher chased a foul
fly somewhere back in the crowd and caught it, we
began to take notice.
“Lucky stabs!” said Merritt
cheerfully. “They can’t keep that
up. We’ll drive him to the woods next time.”
But they did keep it up; moreover,
they became more brilliant as the game progressed.
What with Hathaway’s heady pitching we soon
disposed of them when at the bat; our turns, however,
owing to the wonderful fielding of these backwoodsmen,
were also fruitless.
Merritt, with his mind ever on the
slice of gate money coming if we won, began to fidget
and fume and find fault.
“You’re a swell lot of
champions, now, ain’t you?” he observed
between innings.
All baseball players like to bat,
and nothing pleases them so much as base hits; on
the other hand, nothing is quite so painful as to send
out hard liners only to see them caught. And
it seemed as if every man on our team connected with
that lanky twirler’s fast high ball and hit
with the force that made the bat spring only to have
one of these rubes get his big hands upon it.
Considering that we were in no angelic
frame of mind before the game started, and in view
of Merritt’s persistently increasing ill humor,
this failure of ours to hit a ball safely gradually
worked us into a kind of frenzy. From indifference
we passed to determination, and from that to sheer
passionate purpose.
Luck appeared to be turning in the
sixth inning. With one out, Lake hit a beauty
to right. Doran beat an infield grounder and
reached first. Hathaway struck out.
With Browning up and me next, the
situation looked rather precarious for the Canadians.
“Say, Deerfoot,” whispered
Merritt, “dump one down the third-base line.
He’s playin’ deep. It’s a pipe.
Then the bases will be full an’ Reddy’ll
clean up.”
In a stage like that Browning was
a man absolutely to depend upon. He placed a
slow bunt in the grass toward third and sprinted for
first. The third baseman fielded the ball, but,
being confused, did not know where to throw it.
“Stick it in your basket,”
yelled Merritt, in a delight that showed how hard
he was pulling for the gate money, and his beaming
smile as he turned to me was inspiring. “Now,
Reddy, it’s up to you! I’m not worrying
about what’s happened so far. I know, with
you at bat in a pinch, it’s all off!”
Merritt’s compliment was pleasing,
but it did not augment my purpose, for that already
had reached the highest mark. Love of hitting,
if no other thing, gave me the thrilling fire to arise
to the opportunity. Selecting my light bat, I
went up and faced the rustic twirler and softly said
things to him.
He delivered the ball, and I could
have yelled aloud, so fast, so straight, so true it
sped toward me. Then I hit it harder than I had
ever hit a ball in my life. The bat sprung, as
if it were whalebone. And the ball took a bullet
course between center and left. So beautiful
a hit was it that I watched as I ran.
Out of the tail of my eye I saw the
center fielder running. When I rounded first
base I got a good look at this fielder, and though
I had seen the greatest outfielders the game ever
produced, I never saw one that covered ground so swiftly
as he.
On the ball soared, and began to drop;
on the fielder sped, and began to disappear over a
little hill back of his position. Then he reached
up with a long arm and marvelously caught the ball
in one hand. He went out of sight as I touched
second base, and the heterogeneous crowd knew about
a great play to make more noise than a herd of charging
buffalo.
In the next half inning our opponents,
by clean drives, scored two runs and we in our turn
again went out ignominiously. When the first
of the eighth came we were desperate and clamored
for the “rabbit.”
“I’ve sneaked it in,”
said Merritt, with a low voice. “Got it
to the umpire on the last passed ball. See,
the pitcher’s got it now. Boys, it’s
all off but the fireworks! Now, break loose!”
A peculiarity about the “rabbit”
was the fact that though it felt as light as the regulation
league ball it could not be thrown with the same speed
and to curve it was an impossibility.
Bane hit the first delivery from our
hoosier stumbling block. The ball struck the
ground and began to bound toward short. With
every bound it went swifter, longer and higher, and
it bounced clear over the shortstop’s head.
Lake chopped one in front of the plate, and it rebounded
from the ground straight up so high that both runners
were safe before it came down.
Doran hit to the pitcher. The
ball caromed his leg, scooted fiendishly at the second
baseman, and tried to run up all over him like a tame
squirrel. Bases full!
Hathaway got a safe fly over the infield
and two runs tallied. The pitcher, in spite
of the help of the umpire, could not locate the plate
for Balknap, and gave him a base on balls. Bases
full again!
Deerfoot slammed a hot liner straight
at the second baseman, which, striking squarely in
his hands, recoiled as sharply as if it had struck
a wall. Doran scored, and still the bases were
filled.
The laboring pitcher began to get
rattled; he could not find his usual speed; he knew
it, but evidently could not account for it.
When I came to bat, indications were
not wanting that the Canadian team would soon be up
in the air. The long pitcher delivered the “rabbit,”
and got it low down by my knees, which was an unfortunate
thing for him. I swung on that one, and trotted
round the bases behind the runners while the center
and left fielders chased the ball.
Gillinger weighed nearly two hundred
pounds, and he got all his weight under the “rabbit.”
It went so high that we could scarcely see it.
All the infielders rushed in, and after staggering
around, with heads bent back, one of them, the shortstop,
managed to get under it. The “rabbit”
bounded forty feet out of his hands!
When Snead’s grounder nearly
tore the third baseman’s leg off; when Bane’s
hit proved as elusive as a flitting shadow; when Lake’s
liner knocked the pitcher flat, and Doran’s
fly leaped high out of the center fielder’s
glove then those earnest, simple, country
ballplayers realized something was wrong. But
they imagined it was in themselves, and after a short
spell of rattles, they steadied up and tried harder
than ever. The motions they went through trying
to stop that jumping jackrabbit of a ball were ludicrous
in the extreme.
Finally, through a foul, a short fly,
and a scratch hit to first, they retired the side
and we went into the field with the score 14 to 2 in
our favor.
But Merritt had not found it possible
to get the “rabbit” out of play!
We spent a fatefully anxious few moments
squabbling with the umpire and captain over the “rabbit.”
At the idea of letting those herculean railsplitters
have a chance to hit the rubber ball we felt our blood
run cold.
“But this ball has a rip in
it,” blustered Gillinger. He lied atrociously.
A microscope could not have discovered as much as
a scratch in that smooth leather.
“Sure it has,” supplemented
Merritt, in the suave tones of a stage villain.
“We’re used to playing with good balls.”
“Why did you ring this one in
on us?” asked the captain. “We never
threw out this ball. We want a chance to hit
it.”
That was just the one thing we did
not want them to have. But fate played against
us.
“Get up on your toes, now an’
dust,” said Merritt. “Take your
medicine, you lazy sit-in-front-of-the-hotel stiffs!
Think of pay day!”
Not improbably we all entertained
the identical thought that old man Hathaway was the
last pitcher under the sun calculated to be effective
with the “rabbit.” He never relied
on speed; in fact, Merritt often scornfully accused
him of being unable to break a pane of glass; he used
principally what we called floaters and a change of
pace. Both styles were absolutely impractical
with the “rabbit.”
“It’s comin’ to
us, all right, all right!” yelled Deerfoot to
me, across the intervening grass. I was of the
opinion that it did not take any genius to make Deerfoot’s
ominous prophecy.
Old man Hathaway gazed at Merritt
on the bench as if he wished the manager could hear
what he was calling him and then at his fellow-players
as if both to warn and beseech them. Then he pitched
the “rabbit.”
Crack!
The big lumbering Canadian rapped
the ball at Crab Bane. I did not see it, because
it went so fast, but I gathered from Crab’s actions
that it must have been hit in his direction.
At any rate, one of his legs flopped out sidewise
as if it had been suddenly jerked, and he fell in
a heap. The ball, a veritable “rabbit”
in its wild jumps, headed on for Deerfoot, who contrived
to stop it with his knees.
The next batter resembled the first
one, and the hit likewise, only it leaped wickedly
at Doran and went through his hands as if they had
been paper. The third man batted up a very high
fly to Gillinger. He clutched at it with his
huge shovel hands, but he could not hold it.
The way he pounced upon the ball, dug it out of the
grass, and hurled it at Hathaway, showed his anger.
Obviously Hathaway had to stop the
throw, for he could not get out of the road, and he
spoke to his captain in what I knew were no complimentary
terms.
Thus began retribution. Those
husky lads continued to hammer the “rabbit”
at the infielders and as it bounced harder at every
bounce so they batted harder at every bat.
Another singular feature about the
“rabbit” was the seeming impossibility
for professionals to hold it. Their familiarity
with it, their understanding of its vagaries and inconsistencies,
their mortal dread made fielding it a much more difficult
thing than for their opponents.
By way of variety, the lambasting
Canadians commenced to lambast a few over the hills
and far away, which chased Deerfoot and me until our
tongues lolled out.
Every time a run crossed the plate
the motley crowd howled, roared, danced and threw
up their hats. The members of the batting team
pranced up and down the side lines, giving a splendid
imitation of cannibals celebrating the occasion of
a feast.
Once Snead stooped down to trap the
“rabbit,” and it slipped through his legs,
for which his comrades jeered him unmercifully.
Then a brawny batter sent up a tremendously high
fly between short and third.
“You take it!” yelled Gillinger to Bane.
“You take it!” replied
the Crab, and actually walked backward. That
ball went a mile high. The sky was hazy, gray,
the most perplexing in which to judge a fly ball.
An ordinary fly gave trouble enough in the gauging.
Gillinger wandered around under the
ball for what seemed an age. It dropped as swiftly
as a rocket shoots upward. Gillinger went forward
in a circle, then sidestepped, and threw up his broad
hands. He misjudged the ball, and it hit him
fairly on the head and bounced almost to where Doran
stood at second.
Our big captain wilted. Time
was called. But Gillinger, when he came to,
refused to leave the game and went back to third with
a lump on his head as large as a goose egg.
Every one of his teammates was sorry,
yet every one howled in glee. To be hit on the
head was the unpardonable sin for a professional.
Old man Hathaway gradually lost what
little speed he had, and with it his nerve.
Every time he pitched the “rabbit” he dodged.
That was about the funniest and strangest thing ever
seen on a ball field. Yet it had an element
of tragedy.
Hathaway’s expert contortions
saved his head and body on divers occasions, but presently
a low bounder glanced off the grass and manifested
an affinity for his leg.
We all knew from the crack and the
way the pitcher went down that the “rabbit”
had put him out of the game. The umpire called
time, and Merritt came running on the diamond.
“Hard luck, old man,”
said the manager. “That’ll make a
green and yellow spot all right. Boys, we’re
still two runs to the good. There’s one
out, an’ we can win yet. Deerfoot, you’re
as badly crippled as Hathaway. The bench for
yours. Hooker will go to center, an’ I’ll
pitch.”
Merritt’s idea did not strike
us as a bad one. He could pitch, and he always
kept his arm in prime condition. We welcomed
him into the fray for two reasons because
he might win the game, and because he might be overtaken
by the baseball Nemesis.
While Merritt was putting on Hathaway’s
baseball shoes, some of us endeavored to get the “rabbit”
away from the umpire, but he was too wise.
Merritt received the innocent-looking
ball with a look of mingled disgust and fear, and
he summarily ordered us to our positions.
Not far had we gone, however, when
we were electrified by the umpire’s sharp words:
“Naw! Naw, you don’t.
I saw you change the ball I gave you fer one
in your pocket! Naw! You don’t come
enny of your American dodges on us! Gimmee thet
ball, an’ you use the other, or I’ll stop
the game.”
Wherewith the shrewd umpire took the ball from Merritts hand
and fished the rabbit from his pocket. Our thwarted manager stuttered
his wrath. Y-you be-be-wh-whiskered y-yap! Ill g-g-give
What dire threat he had in mind never
materialized, for he became speechless. He glowered
upon the cool little umpire, and then turned grandly
toward the plate.
It may have been imagination, yet
I made sure Merritt seemed to shrink and grow smaller
before he pitched a ball. For one thing the plate
was uphill from the pitcher’s box, and then
the fellow standing there loomed up like a hill and
swung a bat that would have served as a wagon tongue.
No wonder Merritt evinced nervousness. Presently
he whirled and delivered the ball.
Bing!
A dark streak and a white puff of
dust over second base showed how safe that hit was.
By dint of manful body work, Hooker contrived to stop
the “rabbit” in mid-center. Another
run scored. Human nature was proof against this
temptation, and Merritt’s players tendered him
manifold congratulations and dissertations.
“Grand, you old skinflint, grand!”
“There was a two-dollar bill
stickin’ on thet hit. Why didn’t
you stop it?”
“Say, Merritt, what little brains
you’ve got will presently be ridin’ on
the ‘rabbit.’”
“You will chase up these exhibition games!”
“Take your medicine now. Ha! Ha!
Ha!”
After these merciless taunts, and
particularly after the next slashing hit that tied
the score, Merritt looked appreciably smaller and humbler.
He threw up another ball, and actually shied as it
neared the plate.
The giant who was waiting to slug
it evidently thought better of his eagerness as far
as that pitch was concerned, for he let it go by.
Merritt got the next ball higher.
With a mighty swing, the batsman hit a terrific liner
right at the pitcher.
Quick as lightning, Merritt wheeled,
and the ball struck him with the sound of two boards
brought heavily together with a smack.
Merritt did not fall; he melted to
the ground and writhed while the runners scored with
more tallies than they needed to win.
What did we care! Justice had
been done us, and we were unutterably happy.
Crabe Bane stood on his head; Gillinger began a war
dance; old man Hathaway hobbled out to the side lines
and whooped like an Indian; Snead rolled over and
over in the grass. All of us broke out into
typical expressions of baseball frenzy, and individual
ones illustrating our particular moods.
Merritt got up and made a dive for
the ball. With face positively flaming he flung
it far beyond the merry crowd, over into a swamp.
Then he limped for the bench. Which throw ended
the most memorable game ever recorded to the credit
of the “rabbit.”