Grover Alexander coasts to a 9 – 4 win over the Cubs as Gavvy Cravath bangs two homers to lead the Phils’ offense.
Grover Alexander coasts to a 9 – 4 win over the Cubs as Gavvy Cravath bangs two homers to lead the Phils’ offense.
Grover Alexander coasts to a 9 – 4 win over the Cubs as Gavvy Cravath bangs two homers to lead the Phils’ offense.
After losing the opening game to Boston, 3 – 2, the last-place Reds come back in the second game to break the longest losing streak in the club’s history (and third longest in the National League) and tying the 20th Century mark of the 1906 Boston Beaneaters at 19 straight. Charles “King” Lear wins his only game of the year and pitches his only shutout ever, 3 – 0. The Reds wait till the 9th to score their three runs.
1914 – The White Sox score in the 4th inning on a Walter Johnson wild pitch, one of four that Johnson uncorks in the game. But he strikes out 12 batters in 13 innings as the Nats finally break through against Chicago’s Red Faber for a 6 – 1 win. The record book gives Johnson all four wild pitches in the 4th inning, but it appears that Eddie Collins, who opened with a single, stole 2nd and advanced on a grounder to 3rd, scored the Pale Hose’s only tally on a just one wild pitch.
Ed Lafitte pitches a 6 – 2 no-hitter for the Brooklyn Tip-Tops (Federal League) over the Kansas City Packers. Wildness costs him the two runs. He will lead the FL with 127 walks.
Before the Phils-Cards game, Grover Cleveland Alexander is presented with a check for $1,000 for winning 25 games. Alex proceeds to win his 25th, allowing just two hits while fanning 11.
On September 16, 1914, 23-year-old Roger Peckinpaugh becomes the youngest manager in major league history. The New York Yankees name Peckinpaugh, their starting shortstop, as manager, to replace Frank Chance as the skipper of the team. During his 20-game tenure as the player-manager, the young infielder will finish the season with a 10-10 record…
1914 – Cleveland’s Nap Lajoie strokes his 3,000th hit, a single off Detroit’s Pug Cavet, joining Honus Wagner and Cap Anson as the only players to reach that mark.
The Giants edge the Phillies, 3 – 2, but the Quakers jump on Christy Mathewson for seven runs on seven hits in three innings, and win 10 – 6.
After being ejected for swearing, Johnny Evers claims he was talking to the ball and not to umpire Mal Eason, but the Braves’ shortstop is still suspended for three days.
Yankee SS Roger Peckinpaugh, 23, replaces Frank Chance and becomes the all-time youngest manager, and the 7th in the club’s 12-year existence. He will win 9 of 17 games and will manage next at Cleveland in 1928.
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