Harvey Frommer / Players Yankees
Remembering Yankee Stadium: Twenties / Thirties / Forties / Fifties / Sixties / Seventies / Eighties / Nineties / 21st Century
Also Read:
All About
Baseball's Greatest team - - the New York Yankees
Barnstorming
Around America with the 1927 New York Yankees
Roll
out the Barrel: The 1927 Yankees
Harvey Frommer on
Sports
NY
Yankees 27 World Champions
A lot of hype and hoopla surrounds
the 2009 World Series especially as it swirls around the Yankees of New York
- - an odds on favorite to win it all.
Win or lose
it - - the Yankees of 2009 are no way the powerhouse the
Yankees of 1927 were.
What happened before the World
Series of 1927 would provide a source of controversy through the ages. The
Waner brothers, Lloyd, Big Poison and Paul, Little
Poison, sent up their baseball cards to Babe Ruth
who was at ease in a manner
of speaking in his room in a hotel in Pittsburgh.
"Why, they're just kids," he said,
"if I was that little, I'd be afraid of getting hurt."
That was the first year the Waners
played together in the Pirate outfield. That was a great thrill for
us, Paul recalled. We even brought Mother and Dad and our sister
to the World Series.
"We won before it even got started, Babe Ruth wrote
later. The first two games
were scheduled for Pittsburghs Forbes Field. Naturally we showed up
a day early and worked out in the strange park.
The Pirates, Ruth recalled, had their workout just before
we went out onto the field. We came out from the clubhouse. Most of the Pirates
had dressed and were sitting in the stands to watch us go through
practice.
Earl Combs hit a shot into the
centerfield stands. Mark Koenig hit a
ball off the right field wall
and one off the left field barrier. Then it was Babe Ruths turn.
The first ball I hit over
the roof of the right field grandstand, the Bammer said. I put
another one into the lower tier. Then I got hold of one and laid it into
the centerfield
bleachers.
"We really put on a show,
Ruth said. Lou and I banged ball after ball into the right field stands.
Bob Meusel and Tony Lazzeri kept hammering balls into the left field
seats.
All
of the games of the 1927 World Series were scheduled for 1:30 P.M starts
except for 2 P.M for a Sunday game. Prices for seats for all games were six
dollars, five dollars, three dollars and one dollar. Four umpires were assigned.
GAME ONE
Outside of Forbes Field scalpers
asked $25 a ticket, a price that was considered extreme gouging, which it
was. The price for a World Series program featuring Miller Huggins and Pittsburgh
manager Owen J. Bush on its cover, sold for 25 cents.
The pitching match up was Yankee
right-handed ace Waite Hoyt against the big horse of the all right-handed
Pirate staff, Ray Kremer, National League ERA leader who had won 19 of 27
decisions. The sloppy, herky-jerky game played in two hours and four minutes
finally ended Yankees 5, Pirates 4.
Grantland Rice in the New York
Herald-Tribune wrote: "It was scramble and rush and hullabaloo and stampede
to look upon a gaudy spectacle which turned out to be one of the dullest
games of the year. If Pittsburgh
couldn't beat the Yankees today, it may be a tough job later
on."
Babe Ruth
shouted: Well, it wont
be long now boys. It wont be long now.
GAME II
Miller Huggins, a gambler, a hunch
player, a manager with six starting
pitchers available to him - tabbed
George Pipgras, the big guy from Minnesota, as a surprise starter for the
second game of the series Thursday, October
6th,
Still using the old, greasy glove,
the one that had stood him in good stead in minor league stops at Atlanta,
St. Paul, Charleston, and more, Pipgras took the mound against the
Pirates.
Vic Aldridge, in his eighth major
league season, a 15-game winner, took the mound for Pittsburgh.
Festive Forbes Field became boo
city in the late innings. Jeers and
catcalls rained down from unhappy
Buc rooters. Others simply expressed
their displeasure with the home teams ineffectiveness by exiting the
ball park. The Bucs lost, 6-2.
I was fast that day,
Pipgras recalled. I didnt throw but three
curves. They kept coming up
there looking for the curve but never got it.
It was called The Worlds
Dullest World Series after just two games! in a New York Herald-Tribune
headline.
GAME III
On
Friday October 7, lines for bleacher seats were up and running at 5 A.M.
- five hours before the gates of Yankee Stadium were scheduled to
open.
There were 60,695 on hand, the
biggest money crowd in the history of the title series, in James R
Harrisons phrase in The New York
Times. There was also the biggest gate ever to that point in time for
a World Series game -
$209,665. Southpaw Herb Pennock,
called the aristocrat of baseball by writer Will Wedge, was unbeaten
in four World Series decisions.
The
Yankees scored in the first inning off Buc right-hander, bespectacled Lee
Meadows. Gehrig poked the ball to the running track in left center field
scoring Combs and Koenig both of whom had singled.
The Squire Pennock set down Pittsburgh
batter after batter. The Bucs were hitless through the seventh inning, an
inning when the Yankees put the game away by scoring six times. The highlight
of the Yankee big inning came when Mike Cvengros, a surname according to
Grantland Rice that you said with a sneeze, relieved Meadows.
A three run shot, Ruths first
home run of the world series,
pushed the Yankee lead to 8-0. It triggered wild cheers for the Colossus
of Clout as he made his way around the bases behind Combs and Koenig.
The screams of one fan captured
the moment: Take off those Pirates uniforms, he bellowed, we
know youre the St. Louis Browns. The Yankees surely manhandled
the Bucs like they treated the Browns. Maybe Worse.
The 8-1 romp placed the Yankees
one win away from becoming the first American League team to sweep a World
Series.
Game
IV
Saturday
October 8th was damp, cloudy like the spirits of the Pirates.
Rain in the morning would hold the announced Yankee
Stadium attendance down to 57,909.
In
the fifth inning, Ruth's second home run of the Series scored
Earle
Combs.
The Yanks led 3-1. The Ruthian
blast, according to James Harrison in The
Times: climbed uphill,
while 60,000 shrieked in ecstasy and turned their eyes on the right field
bleachers.
Desperate, the Pirates, fought back. They tied the score in the seventh. However, that was as far as they got. The Yankees, as everyone seemed to know they would, won the game.
Outside
the Stadium about 3,000 Babe Ruth admirers waited patiently. Many policemen
kept them company, at the ready to ease the Yankee icon to his car, parked
on 157th Street.
The 1927 World Series, quickest
ever played, lasted only 74 hours and 15 minutes and was just the
second four game sweep in World
Series history, the Braves over Athletics in 1914 was the first.
The Pittsburgh offense was held
to a .223 average.
Yankee pitchers combined for an incredible earned run average of only
2.00. Outscoring the Pirates
23-10, the men of Murderers Row trailed a total of only two innings
during the entire series.
The Yankees used only 15 different players, just four
pitchers.
The New York Times
declared on October
12th that it had no argument with those who assert that
these Yankees are the greatest team in more than 50 years of baseball history.
George Herman Ruth once again demonstrated that he is the superman of the
game. . .
(Dodger manager) Uncle Wilbert Robinson put it, 'That guy
ought to be allowed to play only every other day.
The Yankees were the toast of the
town, the champions, not only the best team in baseball in 1927, but they
had strong bragging rights now to the mantle of the best baseball team of
all time.
It was, as Waite Hoyt said, great
to be young and to be a Yankee.
Frommer sports books are available direct from the author - discounted and autographed.
FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a readership in the millions and is housed on Internet search engines for extended periods of time.