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Rucker Archives
Journal Articles
Christo Von Buffalo: Was He the First Baseball Cartoonist?
When Albert G. Spalding wrote his American National Game in 1911, he hired the well-known cartoonist, Homer C. Davenport, to provide appropriate works of art, and in the front of the book he thanked Mr. Davenport, “to whose genius much of the interest in this volume is due.” Theodore A. Dorgan, who used the nom […]
Ron Hunt, Coco Crisp, and the Normalization of Hit-by-Pitch Statistics
It’s a basic rule that’s familiar to all baseball fans: A batter, when struck by a pitched ball, shall be awarded first base. While some people may dismiss the hit-by-pitch as a relatively minor aspect of the game, a hit batsman can have significant consequences. As an extreme example, the Tommy Byrne pitch that struck […]
The Chicago Green Sox
In 1912, Chicago was under consideration by two upstart baseball leagues. On February 12, John T. Powers’s Columbian League awarded a franchise to Chicago (along with Cleveland, Detroit, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Louisville, Milwaukee, and St. Louis), but the venture failed to materialize due to a lack of money. On April 3, an official announcement was […]
A Conversation in the Umpires Room: Ted Barrett, Chris Conroy, Angel Hernandez, and Pat Hoberg
On July 10-12, 2015, the New York Yankees visited Boston’s Fenway Park for a three-game series. Bill Nowlin sat down and talked with the umpiring crew: Ted Barrett, Chris Conroy, Angel Hernandez, and Pat Hoberg. Conversation in the Umpires Room at Fenway Park on July 11, 2015. Clockwise from top-left: Ted Barrett, Chris Conroy, Angel […]
Replay as an Umpiring Tool
Entrance to Replay Operations Center, New York City. In 1955, a producer on Canadian television used a kinescope to show a replay during a Hockey Night in Canada telecast, the first time anyone had shown a play a second time on television. In the early 1960s, a director for CBS Sports invented a replay […]
Recollections of an International League Season
My first exposure to International League baseball came in Baltimore in 1944 when I was only 7 years old. It was a pennant year for Baltimore. And my dad (early in the season) took me out to old Oriole Park to see the beloved Birds. The hated Syracuse Chiefs provided the opposition in this my […]
1990 Winter Meetings: They Almost Didn’t Happen
Introduction The Winter Meetings of 1990 were held amid a dispute between the major and minor leagues and uncertainty arising from an agreement between the major-league owners and the players union concerning collusion. The minor leagues were mainly asking for additional support for their farm teams from the major-league parent. With respect to the collusion […]
The 1878 Buffalo Bisons: Was It the Greatest Minor League Team of the Game’s Early Years?
This article was originally published in the 1991 SABR convention journal (New York City). In baseball’s modem era there have been many outstanding minor league teams. Coming to mind immediately are the 1937 Newark Bears, the 1934 Los Angeles Angels, the 1925 San Francisco Seals, the 1939-1940 Kansas City Blues, the 1933 Columbus Red […]
The First Great Minor League Club
In the modern era of baseball there have been many great minor league clubs. Those that come immediately to mind are the 1937 Newark Bears, the 1934 Los Angeles Angels, the 1925 San Francisco Seals, the 1939-40 Kansas City Blues, the 1933 Columbus Red Birds, the 1928-31 Rochester Red Wings, and those special minor […]