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1930s SEASON RECAP
The decade of the 1930s began with a Great Depression, 25% unemployment, soup kitchens and bread lines were the norm, and the Dust Bowl ruined farms all over the Great Plains. But, we still had baseball. No matter the conditions, fans could still thrill to the exploits of Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth, Carl Hubbell, Hack Wilson, Jimmie Foxx and Mel Ott, and exciting newcomers Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams. Even as the winds of war swirled in the latter part of the decade, Judge Landis directed us to play on.
EASTERN DIVISION
The Eastern Division was a breathtaking, season-long race between the New York Giants and the 1932 New York Yankees. Bill Terry had just taken over for managerial legend John McGraw but, after a few early-season slipups, the Giants hit their stride. Cy Young winner Carl Hubbell (29-9, 3.37 ERA, 237 K) led from the mound, along with Freddie Fitzsimmons (23-11) and Hal Schumacher (14-8), while the one-two punch of player/manager Terry (.363 AVG, 42 HR, 160 RBI) and Mel Ott (.324 AVG, 41 HR, 131 RBI) powered the offense. Other hitting stars for the G’ints were third baseman Fred Lindstrom (.348 AVG, 24 HR, 104 RBI), Lefty O’Doul (.306 AVG, 22 HR, 88 RBI), and shortstop Travis Jackson (26 HR, 103 RBI). The 1932 Yankees were defending a 1920s World Series win, and the usual suspects, Babe Ruth (.359 AVG, 68 HR, 151 RBI, 156 Runs) and League MVP Lou Gehrig (.371 AVG, 53 HR, 172 RBI, 133 Runs), were on Murderer’s Row. Tony Lazzeri (.282 AVG, 25 HR, 127 RBI)and Earle Combs (.328 AVG, 145 Runs, 26 Triples) were also offensive standouts, and Closer Wilcy Moore (34 Saves, Fireman of the Year) was joined by two 20-game winners, Red Ruffing (22-10, 3.57 ERA) and Lefty Gomez (20-12, 3.46 ERA). New owner Tom Yawkey thought the secret to success for his Boston Red Sox would be buying superstars like Jimmie Foxx (.335 AVG, 64 HR, 184 RBI) , Joe Cronin (.290 AVG, 29 HR, 92 RBI, 125 Runs), and Lefty Grove (16-21, 3.91 ERA) in free agency. His plan failed miserably, but the Red Sox fans found their own enigmatic superstar in Ted Williams, who batted .413 to go along with 46 Home Runs and 108 RBI and a league-leading 159 Runs and 254 Hits. The Philadelphia Phillies were the league’s weak sister, though Dolph Camilli (.290 AVG, 44 HR, 133 RBI), Chuck Klein (.351 AVG, 38 HR, 130 RBI), Freddie Leach (.340 AVG) and Cliff Heathcote (.321 AVG, 108 Runs) performed admirably.
The Yankees came into the Polo Grounds looking to take the division, but the Giants beat them 2 out of three behind Ott and Terry. The final weekend saw the Red Sox give some assistance to the Yankees by blowing out the Giants in the first two games, as the Yanks split with the Phillies in the first two. The Yankees won Game 162 11-6, powered by Ruth and Gehrig homers, and awaited one more Red Sox win to move into a tie with the Giants. The Giants trailed the Red Sox entering the bottom of the 8th by a score of 4-2. Ott doubled, followed by a O’Doul walk and a Jackson single to load the bases. Jimmy Ripple walked to force in Ott, then a Harry Danning infield single tied the score at 4. Tony Cuccinello’s walk scored Jackson with the go-ahead run. Back-to-back singles by Fred Lindstrom and JoJo Moore blew the game open and handed the Giants the Eastern Division crown by one game over the defending champion Yankees.
CENTRAL DIVISION
The 1939 New York Yankees ran away with the Central Division, led by two southpaws, Marius Russo (25-4, League-leading 2.98 ERA) and Nip Winters (21-9, 3.39 ERA), and a bevy of hitters, led by star center fielder Joe DiMaggio (.350 AVG, 36 HR, 141 RBI, 126 Runs) , catcher Bill Dickey (.327 AVG, 56 HR, 145 RBI, 157 Runs), “Twinkletoes” George Selkirk (139 Runs, 37 HR, 87 RBI), Charlie “King Kong” Keller (35 HR, 117 RBI), and second baseman Joe Gordon (33 HR, 121 RBI). The Cleveland Indians finished 12 games off the pace. Hal Trosky (.315 AVG, 54 HR, 174 RBI) was an offensive monster, and Jeff Heath (.332 AVG, 33 HR, 138 RBI), Earl Averill (31 HR, 114 RBI, 107 Runs), and Joe Vosmik (.340 AVG, 45 Doubles, 109 Runs) did well, though the pitching staff was well-worn by October. The Detroit Tigers disappointed, though they mirrored the Indians with their offensive prowess, led by Hank Greenberg (.279 AVG, 54 HR, 141 RBI), Mickey Cochrane (.343 AVG, 24 HR, 113 RBI), Rudy York (.315 AVG, 31 HR, 120 RBI), Charlie Gehringer (.325 AVG, 119 Runs), and Goose Goslin (.387 AVG, 40 HR, 125 RBI). The Washington Senators finished last, though they had 7 starters to bat over .300: Sam Rice (.352 AVG, 94 Runs, 90 RBI), John Stone (.342 AVG), Buddy Myer (.332 AVG, 109 Runs), Cecil Travis (.313 AVG, 85 Runs, 88 RBI), Bing Miller (.312 AVG, 97 Runs, 86 RBI), and Sparky Adams (.310 AVG).
WESTERN DIVISION
The Wild West was a three-team affair until the final few days of the season. The Chicago Cubs boasted 20-game winner Lon Warneke (21-12, 3.98 ERA), hurler Charlie Root (18-8), catcher Gabby Hartnett (29 HR, 136 RBI), left fielder Riggs Stephenson (.342 AVG, 18 HR, 129 RBI), second sacker Billy Herman (.356 AVG, 53 Doubles, 109 RBI), while the Pittsburgh Pirates had their own stars: Ed Brandt (22-12), Carmen Hill (33 Saves), Arky Vaughan (.396 AVG, 37 HR, 116 RBI, 137 Runs), Pie Traynor (.312 AVG, 117 RBI), Paul Waner (.338 AVG, 106 RBI, 102 Runs), and Lloyd Waner (.330 AVG, 102 RBI). The St.Louis Cardinals’ Gas House Gang made opposing offenses dizzy and dazzy, with Dizzy Dean (21-18) and Dazzy Vance (19-17, 3.65 ERA, 322 K) leading the pitching staff. “Ducky” Joe Medwick (.343, 36 HR, 132 RBI) , “Sunny Jim” Bottomley (.321 AVG, 46 HR, 143 RBI), and Ripper Collins (.312 AVG, 41 HR, 145 RBI) carried the offense. The St.Louis Browns were the division doormats. Heinie Manush batted .313 and Rip Collins saved half of their wins, while the Brownies spiraled to the cellar.
With 6 games to play, the Gas House Gang led the Cubs by one game and the Pirates by two games. St.Louis visited Pittsburgh and won 3-2 on two Joe Medwick home runs, while the Cubs were beating the Browns. The Cubs continued on to a sweep of the Browns, while the Pirate bats came alive, drubbing the Cardinals by scores of 7-2 and 10-5. The Cubs now led the Cardinals by one game and the Pirates by two. The Pirates simply stayed in St.Louis, trading the Cardinals for the Browns. Each game was a blowout victory for the Pirates. The Cardinals traveled to Wrigley Field and used two Ripper Collins home runs to beat the Cubs 8-5 and tie them for the West lead with 2 games remaining. The Cubs used a 3-4, 2 RBI day from Stan Hack and adequate pitching from Charlie Root to defeat the Cards 3-2, and creating a one game lead over both the Cardinals and the resurgent Pirates. In Game 162, the Cardinals struck first, as Medwick knocked in run with a single off Lon Warneke. Dizzy Dean took the mound, but, after allowing two baserunners, left a fastball out over the plate, which Gabby Hartnett slammed into Wrigley’s center field bleachers for a 3-run bomb. After that, Ol’ Diz settled down, but so did Warneke, who did not allow the Cardinals to score again, giving the Cubs a 6-1 victory and the Western Division title.
SEMI-FINALS Chicago Cubs and New York Giants
Fresh from winning the Western Division, the Chicago Cubs boarded the long train to New York to face the New York Giants. The Polo Grounds hosted Game 1, a matchup between Carl Hubbell and Bobo Newsom. Designated Hitter Lefty O’Doul was a one-man wrecking crew for Bill Terry’s Giants, tripling and homering to back Hubbell’s complete game 3-1 victory. In Game 2, JoJo Moore struck quickly, homering off 20-game winner Lon Warneke, giving New York a 2-0 lead. A 3rd inning Stan Hack double plated Frank Demaree, but Game 1 hero O’Doul slapped a three-run homer to right field. The Cubs scored a single run when Kiki Cuyler homered, but Tony Cuccinello of the Giants answered to finish the 4th inning. The Cubs pulled to within 6-4 when Lance Richbourgh singled and Billy Jurges doubled. Hubbell then induced a groundball to second baseman Cuccinello, who retired Stan Hack, allowing Richbourgh to score. Hubbell then mishandled Billy Herman’s one-hopper back to the mound and Jurges ran home with the Cubs 4th run. The Giants blew the game open in the bottom of the 7th when Freddie Lindstrom singled, stole second and took third on Gabby Hartnett’s overthrow. JoJo Moore hit a ground ball to short and Jurges attempted to throw Lindstrom out at home, but the throw was a bit high, and Lindstrom was called safe. Bill Terry singled, O’Doul drew a walk, and Travis Jackson strode to the plate with the bases loaded. Pat Malone was called upon to relieve Warneke. However, Jackson singled to left, scoring Moore and Terry. Catcher Harry Danning walked, loading the bases once again. Cuccinello then struck again with a 2-run single, and by the time the 7th was over, the Giants led 11-4. The Giants went on to win 12-5, behind 3-RBI days from O’Doul and Cuccinello.
The Series moved to Wrigley Field, with Game 3 beginning much as the first two contests, as O’Doul singled in Bill Terry in the top of the 1st. Kiki Cuyler doubled in a run in the bottom of the 1st to tie the score. Travis Jackson’s 3rd inning single drove in Mel Ott, but the Cubs answered on Richbourgh’s double in the bottom of the 4th. Charlie Root could not hold the tie for the home fans, however, as he quickly loaded the bases in the top of the 5th, when Terry singled, Ott walked, and O’Doul singled. Root then walked Travis Jackson, giving the Giants a 3-2 lead. Harry Danning’s single gave the Giants another run, making the score 4-2. A Terry RBI single in the 8th ended the scoring, as Hal Schumacher got the complete game victory over the Cubs, 5-2. The Cubs had their backs against the wall in Game 4, and put the ball in the hands of former Giant, Al Nehf. Gabby Hartnett’s home run to center tied the score at 1, and Kiki Cuyler’s sacrifice fly gave the Cubs a 2-1 lead. Bill Terry singled in Mel Ott in the 4th, but the Cubs retook the lead in the bottom of the 4th when Billy Jurges singled to left, scoring Charlie Grimm. With the Cubs leading 3-2, and pitchers Nehf and Harry Gumbert settling down, player/manager Grimm tried to break the game open in the bottom of the 6th. Lance Richbourgh singled, and Grimm called for Jurges to hit and run. Unfortunately, Richbourgh’s late start enabled third baseman to throw to second just ahead of Richbourgh’s slide, forcing him at second. Luckily for Grimm and Richbourgh, Stan Hack hit Gumbert’s next pitch into the center field stands for a 2-run bomb and, two batters later, Cuyler pulled a pitch down the left field line for a home run as well. Nehf then finished the game for the Cubs, and a 6-2 victory enabled them to fight another day. The “other day” would prove to be the next day, and the fight was all New York. Game 5 was a blowout, as the Giants took a 6-0 lead off Bobo Newsom, who couldn’t make it out of the 2nd inning. Led by the middle of their order, the Giants scored 15 runs, as Bill Terry went 4-6 with a home run, Mel Ott batted 4-4 with 4 RBI, and Lefty O’Doul doubled and tripled his way to 5 RBI. Carl Hubbell went the distance grabbing his second win of the series, and the Giants prepared for the World Series following a 15-2 win.
SEMI-FINALS 1932 New York Yankees and 1939 New York Yankees
The other Semi-Final pitted the 1932 New York Yankees against their future selves, the 1939 New York Yankees. Yankee Stadium was the obvious home for this series, and Marius Russo, who won 25 games during the regular season, was called on to pitch for the 39 Yankees, and pitch he did. He allowed only five hits, struck out 11, and was assisted by a 2nd inning offensive uprising. After Bill Dickey had homered in the bottom of the 1st, the 39 Yankees began the 2nd inning with a Joe Gordon walk and a Tommy Henrich single. Red Rolfe’s single scored Gordon, George Selkirk walked, and Phil Rizzuto doubled in Henrich. Dickey then came to the plate again and blasted another Herb Pennock offering to center, for his second home run of the game. Joe DiMaggio’s subsequent home run to center off reliever Shawkey gave the younger Yankees a 7-0 lead, fueled by Dickey’s 2 homers and 4 RBI. The 32 Yankees were baffled by Russo all day, never scoring in a 9-0 blowout. Game 2 began with the 32 Yankees providing a familiar answer to their 39 counterparts---Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. Ruth doubled and Gehrig homered to right, and the 32 Yankees were finally on the board. Offense would not be the story of this game, however. Red Ruffing was pitching for the 32 Yankees, and he was doing it masterfully. Inducing 13 groundouts in the first 7 innings, Ruffing was pitching a no-hitter. Ruffing faced Joe DiMaggio to lead off the 8th, and Joltin’ Joe hit a shot, but it was a line drive right into Frankie Crosetti’s glove. Charlie Keller then tapped back to Ruffing and Joe Gordon flew harmlessly to left, and Ruffing was one inning from a perfect game. In the 9th, Ruffing struck out Tommy Henrich. Red Rolfe then lined a hard shot towards right field, but second baseman Tony Lazzeri speared it out of the air. Now, with a completely hushed Yankee Stadium, Ruffing faced the light-hitting Babe Dahlgren. Dahlgren had grounded out to second twice so Ruffing sought to work him away one more time. He had used two sliders to record Dahlgren’s previous two outs, forcing Dahlgren to slap at two down-and-away pitches. Ruffing, apparently feeling invincible on this beautiful October day, went to an outside fastball. The pitch WAS outside, but it was also up, and Dahlgren got every bit of it. Ending the no-hit hopes for fans and Ruffing’s teammates, Dahlgren’s long home run to center broke up the no-hit bid. Ruffing got Keller to fly out to right, giving the 32 Yankees a 7-1 victory, but all the talk was about Ruffing’s brush with immortality. “To pitch a perfect game, you have to pitch perfectly. I made one bad pitch, but I’m thankful we got back in the win column,” said Ruffing.
Game 3 saw the teams simply trade dugouts. Lou Gehrig hit a sacrifice fly to center in the bottom of the 1st, scoring Earle Combs. Pitcher Lefty Gomez had been watching Ruffing’s masterpiece, and was spinning one of his own. He took a no-hitter into the top of the 6th inning, and recorded two quick ground outs. Phil Rizzuto doubled to center, however, ending Gomez’s no-hitter. Dickey grounded out to end the inning, with the 32 Yankees still leading 2-0. Joe DiMaggio led off the top of the 7th with a home run. The 39 Yankees had gone 15 innings scoring only 2 runs, with only 3 hits. The bats of the upstarts finally awoke in the top of the 9th, as DiMaggio singled and Charlie Keller walked off of closer Wilcy Moore. Joe Gordon then took Moore’s first pitch to Yankee Stadium’s left center field graveyard, scoring both DiMaggio and Keller and staking the 39 Yankees to a 3-2 lead. Henrich’s single then scored Gordon, and the game moved to the bottom of the 9th with the 39 Yankees leading the 32 Yankees 4-2. 39 Yankees starter Steve Sundra began the bottom of the 9th, but quickly got into trouble. Gehrig doubled to right field and Crosetti flew out to right with Gehrig advancing to third. Joe Sewell then walked, but Sundra got third baseman Pete Suder to pop up to short. With two outs, Gehrig and Sewell represented the tying runs on first and third. Fielder Jones singled to left, with Gehrig scoring and Sewell moving to third. Closer Johnny Murphy entered the game to face catcher Pat Collins. Collins hit a gapper to right center field, easily scoring Sewell with the tying run. As Fielder Jones rounded the bases with the winning run, the Yankee Clipper smoothly strode to the ball and uncorked a bullet from his deadly right arm. His beautiful, one-bounce throw gave Dickey all the time he needed to apply the tag, eliminating Fielder at the plate, leaving the game as a 4-4 tie. In the top of the 10th, Rizzuto hit a one out single to left, and Bill Dickey came to the plate. He was unable to muster any of his Game1 heroics, and instead grounded hard to Gehrig, who fired on to first, with Crosetti’s return throw nestling into Wilcy Moore’s glove ahead of Dickey for a double play. In the bottom of the 10th, Murphy got Earle Combs to ground out to short stop. Babe Ruth came to the plate. After one outside fastball, Ruth, the former pitcher, realized Murphy was going to work him away to stay away from the short porch in right. Ruth waited, and then exploded on Murphy’s outside fastball, sending the sphere into orbit. The home run landed somewhere in the deep recesses of the center field bleachers, and the 32 Yankees had an emotional, draining 5-4 victory. Ruth said, “Those boys are good, especially that center fielder, but we are the Yankees. They may become the Yankees, but they can’t do anything more than we already done done. Pass me a hot dog….”.
Game 4 began with Bill Dickey and Lou Gehrig continuing their RBI competition. Dickey homered to center off Johnny Allen in the top of the 1st, while Gehrig singled in Ruth in the bottom of the 1st off of Bump Hadley. Both pitchers then threw 5 innings of shutout ball. In the bottom of the 7th, however, Hadley ran into trouble. Tony Lazzeri singled to left, and Gehrig singled to center. Light-hitting shortstop Frankie Crosetti came to the plate and, surprisingly, doubles to center, scoring Lazzeri. Don Brennan entered the game in relief, but Joe Sewell greeted him with a suicide squeeze that scored Gehrig from third. An 8th inning Lazzeri triple scored Earle Combs, and Wilcy Moore closed out the 9th for the save in the 4-1 32 Yankee win. The series had been a hard-fought and exciting contest, but the big brothers led their little brothers 3 games to 1 going into Game 5. Danny MacFayden took the mound for the 32 Yankees, but a Joe DiMaggio singled scored George Selkirk with the first run of the game in the top of the 1st inning. In the top of the 4th, Tommy Henrich singled and George Selkirk was walked intentionally to face Phil Rizzuto. Rizzuto slapped a single to center, which Earle Combs overran. Both runners scored and Rizzuto wound up on third base. Dickey then grounded out, but the play apparently lit a fire under the 32 Yankees. Murderer’s Row woke up and introduced itself to Wes Ferrell. Combs singled to right, and Ruth doubled to center. Tony Lazzeri hit a hot grounder to short, which Rizzuto dove for, but the Scooter couldn’t get up in time to make a play. Combs scored and Ruth moved to third. Gehrig then hit a long fly to center, scoring Ruth, making the score 3-2. Joe Sewell then tied the game with a double, scoring Lazzeri. Pete Suder singled weakly to center, and Sewell held up at third. Fielder Jones then singled to center, giving the 32 Yankees a 4-3 lead as Sewell crossed the plate. Pat Collins’ RBI single gave the Yankees one more run, and they led 5-3 after 4 innings. Wilcy Moore was called upon to hold the lead in the top of the 7th. He did reasonably well, but the top of the 9th began with a Selkirk single. Rizzuto then popped out to center. Moore never gave Dickey anything good to hit, walking him, and bringing Joe DiMaggio up as the go-ahead run. With a 1-1 count, Moore fooled DiMaggio, jamming him and forcing a pop up along the railing down the third base line. Frankie Crosetti flew to the spot, reached into the stands and denied DiMaggio another chance to hit by making a circus catch. Charlie Keller then flew out to right, and the 32 Yankees had bettered their chronological progeny 4 games to 1.
WORLD SERIES New York Giants and 1932 New York Yankees
The World Series was another New York affair, with the 1932 Yankees facing the New York Giants. Carl Hubbell was the Giants’ ace, but he was treated rather rudely by the Yankees in Game 1. Lou Gehrig, in particular, was Hubbell’s nemesis. Gehrig homered to right in the bottom of the 1st, and then repeated the feat in the bottom of the 3rd. Gehrig’s two home runs gave the Yankees a 5-0 lead, and Johnny Allen pitched well enough, as the Bronx Bombers won Game 1 7-1. Game 2 was Red Ruffing’s first opportunity to pitch since his one-hitter in Game 2 of the Semi-Finals. He faced Freddie Fitzsimmons. Tony Cuccinello’s single and Freddie Lindstrom’s sacrifice fly gave the Giants 2-0 lead and proved that Ruffing wasn’t the same on this day. In the top of the 4th, Tony Lazzeri singled, Gehrig doubled, and Frankie Crosetti hit a sacrifice fly to center, scoring Lazzeri. Joe Sewell then singled in Gehrig, tying the game at 2. Travis Jackson doubled in Mel Ott in the 6th inning, and Jackson’s home run in the 9th put the game out of reach, as the Giants beat Ruffing and the Yankees 5-2.
Game 3 moved the Series 3/4 of a mile across the Harlem River, from the Polo Grounds to the Bronx. Roy Parmelee and Lefty Gomez both pitched well, only surrendering single runs in the 6th, as Travis Jackson hit an RBI double and Tony Lazzeri homered to center for the Yankees. In the top of the 8th, Jackson doubled again, and Freddie Lindstrom’s double to center gave the Giants a 2-1 lead over Gomez. Parmelee was still dazzling the Yankees when he began the 9th inning. Joe Sewell hit a ground ball to second, but Tony Cuccinello bobbled it, allowing Sewell to reach first on the error. Pete Suder then doubled to center, but, since there were no outs, Sewell was held at third. Fielder Jones fooled the Giants and Parmelee by laying down a bunt toward first base and scoring Sewell on the suicide squeeze. Parmelee retired Collins and Combs to end the inning, but the game was tied 2-2. Gomez continued into the 10th, but allowed singles to JoJo Moore and Mel Ott, bringing Lindstrom to bat with two on and two out. The Yankees called on Wilcy Moore, who enticed Lindstrom in to a fly out to center. In the bottom of the 10th, Parmelee got Ruth to fly to right for the first out. Tony Lazzeri walked, but then, when he attempted a steal of second, Danning overthrew the bag, and Lazzeri took third. Inexplicably, Bill Terry didn’t call for Lou Gehrig to be walked, Gehrig singled to center, and the celebration was on. Terry refused comment after the game. Game 4 was never close. Herb Pennock and Wilcy Moore combined to hold the Giants to one run, while Joe Sewell and Pat Collins homered, and Tony Lazzeri went 4-5. There was some trepidation in Yankee Stadium, however, as slugger Babe Ruth twisted his ankle running the bases in the 1st inning. His availability for the rest of the Series was unknown.
Game 5 began with Carl Hubbell on the mound and Babe Ruth on the bench. Both these events would be telling, as Hubbell pitched around a Lou Gehrig home run to hold the “Swat”-less Bombers to 2 runs. Lefty O’Doul doubled in JoJo Moore and Mel Ott in the top of the 1st, and O’Doul, Travis Jackson and Harry Danning all knocked in runs in the top of the 3rd, and the score was 8 to nothing before the Yankees finally scored in the bottom of the 6th. The Giants went on to win 8-2, and prepared to go back to the Polo Grounds needing to win both games. Asked about his availability for Game 6, Ruth said, “Have you seen how spindly my ankles are? They have a lot to hold up. But I guarantee you, if for some reason my boys don’t win the title in Game 6, I’ll be back for Game 7. Ask those Giants fans how swell I hit in the Polo Grounds. They remember.”
Game 6 began with Giants starter Freddie Fitzsimmons making it through the top of the 1st inning unscathed, despite a two-out walk to Tony Lazzeri. The Giants struck first against Yankee starter Red Ruffing when, after two quick outs, Bill Terry singled and Mel Ott drew a walk. Lefty O’Doul singled sharply to right, scoring Terry. Travis Jackson’s grounder to second was misplayed by Lazzeri, allowing Ott to score the Giants’ second run of the day. After loading the bases by walking Jimmy Ripple, Ruffing retired the side by forcing Harry Danning to ground out to third. The Yankees did not wait long to answer. In the top of the 3rd, Fielder Jones drew a walk. Next up, Ruth’s replacement, Buddy Hassett, doubled to center. Jones held up at third, but scored soon thereafter when Danning allowed a passed ball to roll to the screen. Earle Combs then doubled to center, scoring Hassett with the tying run. Lazzeri singled through the hole into left, but the hit wasn’t deep enough to score Combs. Lou Gehrig struck out, but Fitzsimmons walked Frankie Crosetti to load the bases. Joe Sewell came to the plate and, on a 1-2 pitch from Ruffing, hit a high lazy fly down the right field line. Right fielder Jimmy Ripple moved quickly to the wall, but Sewell’s fly ball landed 2 rows behind him, just inside the foul pole, not more than 305 feet from home plate. The Yankees had taken a 6-2 lead, and all without input from Gehrig, who struck out, and Ruth, who was unable to play in Game 6. The Giants loaded the bases in the bottom of the 3rd, but, once again, Danning made the last out of the inning, popping out to right. In the top of the 6th, Earle Combs grounded to Tony Cuccinello, but Cuccinello bobbled the ball, allowing Combs to reach first on the error. One batter later, Lazzeri doubled to center, scoring Combs, and Gehrig drove Lazzeri in with a sacrifice fly to center. The Giants made an attempt to come back against Ruffing in the bottom of the 7th. JoJo Moore homered to center, and Bill Terry followed him with a home run to right. Ruffing retired Ott and Travis Jackson, however, and the Yankees led 8-4 going into the 8th inning. Ruffing, who had come within one pitch of a perfect game in the Semi-Finals, entered the 9th with a chance to bring another title to the New York Yankees. Freddie Lindstrom singled to center to start the inning, but JoJo Moore followed with a fly out to center. Bill Terry hit a shot to Gehrig at first, but the Iron Horse speared it, made a sharp throw to Crosetti, and shuffled back to first in time to take Crosetti’s return throw in time to complete the double play. Quoted afterward, Ruffing said, “I really wanted that perfect game, but being the one on the mound when your team wins a World Series, there is nothing better than that.”
WORLD CHAMPION 1932 New York Yankees
League Awards
MVP-Lou Gehrig, 1932 Yankees
CY Young Award-Carl Hubbell, Giants
Fireman Award-Wilcy Moore, 1932 Yankees
League Leaders
Batting Average-Ted Williams, Red Sox .413
Home Runs-Babe Ruth, 1932 Yankees 68 HR
RBI-Jimmie Foxx, Red Sox 184 RBI
Runs- Ted Williams, Red Sox 159 Runs
Hits- Ted Williams, Red Sox 254 Hits
Doubles- Joe DiMaggio, 1939 Yankees 64 2B
Triples-Earle Combs, 1932 Yankees 26 3B
Stolen Bases-Cliff Heathcote, Phillies 28 SB
Hit Streak-Joe Vosmik, Indians 38 games
Pitching Leaders
Wins-Carl Hubbell, Giants 29-9
Saves-Wilcy Moore, 1932 Yankees 34 Saves
Strikeouts-Dazzy Vance, Dodgers 322 K
ERA-Marius Russo, 1939 Yankees 2.98 ERA
The decade of the 1930s began with a Great Depression, 25% unemployment, soup kitchens and bread lines were the norm, and the Dust Bowl ruined farms all over the Great Plains. But, we still had baseball. No matter the conditions, fans could still thrill to the exploits of Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth, Carl Hubbell, Hack Wilson, Jimmie Foxx and Mel Ott, and exciting newcomers Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams. Even as the winds of war swirled in the latter part of the decade, Judge Landis directed us to play on.
EASTERN DIVISION
The Eastern Division was a breathtaking, season-long race between the New York Giants and the 1932 New York Yankees. Bill Terry had just taken over for managerial legend John McGraw but, after a few early-season slipups, the Giants hit their stride. Cy Young winner Carl Hubbell (29-9, 3.37 ERA, 237 K) led from the mound, along with Freddie Fitzsimmons (23-11) and Hal Schumacher (14-8), while the one-two punch of player/manager Terry (.363 AVG, 42 HR, 160 RBI) and Mel Ott (.324 AVG, 41 HR, 131 RBI) powered the offense. Other hitting stars for the G’ints were third baseman Fred Lindstrom (.348 AVG, 24 HR, 104 RBI), Lefty O’Doul (.306 AVG, 22 HR, 88 RBI), and shortstop Travis Jackson (26 HR, 103 RBI). The 1932 Yankees were defending a 1920s World Series win, and the usual suspects, Babe Ruth (.359 AVG, 68 HR, 151 RBI, 156 Runs) and League MVP Lou Gehrig (.371 AVG, 53 HR, 172 RBI, 133 Runs), were on Murderer’s Row. Tony Lazzeri (.282 AVG, 25 HR, 127 RBI)and Earle Combs (.328 AVG, 145 Runs, 26 Triples) were also offensive standouts, and Closer Wilcy Moore (34 Saves, Fireman of the Year) was joined by two 20-game winners, Red Ruffing (22-10, 3.57 ERA) and Lefty Gomez (20-12, 3.46 ERA). New owner Tom Yawkey thought the secret to success for his Boston Red Sox would be buying superstars like Jimmie Foxx (.335 AVG, 64 HR, 184 RBI) , Joe Cronin (.290 AVG, 29 HR, 92 RBI, 125 Runs), and Lefty Grove (16-21, 3.91 ERA) in free agency. His plan failed miserably, but the Red Sox fans found their own enigmatic superstar in Ted Williams, who batted .413 to go along with 46 Home Runs and 108 RBI and a league-leading 159 Runs and 254 Hits. The Philadelphia Phillies were the league’s weak sister, though Dolph Camilli (.290 AVG, 44 HR, 133 RBI), Chuck Klein (.351 AVG, 38 HR, 130 RBI), Freddie Leach (.340 AVG) and Cliff Heathcote (.321 AVG, 108 Runs) performed admirably.
The Yankees came into the Polo Grounds looking to take the division, but the Giants beat them 2 out of three behind Ott and Terry. The final weekend saw the Red Sox give some assistance to the Yankees by blowing out the Giants in the first two games, as the Yanks split with the Phillies in the first two. The Yankees won Game 162 11-6, powered by Ruth and Gehrig homers, and awaited one more Red Sox win to move into a tie with the Giants. The Giants trailed the Red Sox entering the bottom of the 8th by a score of 4-2. Ott doubled, followed by a O’Doul walk and a Jackson single to load the bases. Jimmy Ripple walked to force in Ott, then a Harry Danning infield single tied the score at 4. Tony Cuccinello’s walk scored Jackson with the go-ahead run. Back-to-back singles by Fred Lindstrom and JoJo Moore blew the game open and handed the Giants the Eastern Division crown by one game over the defending champion Yankees.
CENTRAL DIVISION
The 1939 New York Yankees ran away with the Central Division, led by two southpaws, Marius Russo (25-4, League-leading 2.98 ERA) and Nip Winters (21-9, 3.39 ERA), and a bevy of hitters, led by star center fielder Joe DiMaggio (.350 AVG, 36 HR, 141 RBI, 126 Runs) , catcher Bill Dickey (.327 AVG, 56 HR, 145 RBI, 157 Runs), “Twinkletoes” George Selkirk (139 Runs, 37 HR, 87 RBI), Charlie “King Kong” Keller (35 HR, 117 RBI), and second baseman Joe Gordon (33 HR, 121 RBI). The Cleveland Indians finished 12 games off the pace. Hal Trosky (.315 AVG, 54 HR, 174 RBI) was an offensive monster, and Jeff Heath (.332 AVG, 33 HR, 138 RBI), Earl Averill (31 HR, 114 RBI, 107 Runs), and Joe Vosmik (.340 AVG, 45 Doubles, 109 Runs) did well, though the pitching staff was well-worn by October. The Detroit Tigers disappointed, though they mirrored the Indians with their offensive prowess, led by Hank Greenberg (.279 AVG, 54 HR, 141 RBI), Mickey Cochrane (.343 AVG, 24 HR, 113 RBI), Rudy York (.315 AVG, 31 HR, 120 RBI), Charlie Gehringer (.325 AVG, 119 Runs), and Goose Goslin (.387 AVG, 40 HR, 125 RBI). The Washington Senators finished last, though they had 7 starters to bat over .300: Sam Rice (.352 AVG, 94 Runs, 90 RBI), John Stone (.342 AVG), Buddy Myer (.332 AVG, 109 Runs), Cecil Travis (.313 AVG, 85 Runs, 88 RBI), Bing Miller (.312 AVG, 97 Runs, 86 RBI), and Sparky Adams (.310 AVG).
WESTERN DIVISION
The Wild West was a three-team affair until the final few days of the season. The Chicago Cubs boasted 20-game winner Lon Warneke (21-12, 3.98 ERA), hurler Charlie Root (18-8), catcher Gabby Hartnett (29 HR, 136 RBI), left fielder Riggs Stephenson (.342 AVG, 18 HR, 129 RBI), second sacker Billy Herman (.356 AVG, 53 Doubles, 109 RBI), while the Pittsburgh Pirates had their own stars: Ed Brandt (22-12), Carmen Hill (33 Saves), Arky Vaughan (.396 AVG, 37 HR, 116 RBI, 137 Runs), Pie Traynor (.312 AVG, 117 RBI), Paul Waner (.338 AVG, 106 RBI, 102 Runs), and Lloyd Waner (.330 AVG, 102 RBI). The St.Louis Cardinals’ Gas House Gang made opposing offenses dizzy and dazzy, with Dizzy Dean (21-18) and Dazzy Vance (19-17, 3.65 ERA, 322 K) leading the pitching staff. “Ducky” Joe Medwick (.343, 36 HR, 132 RBI) , “Sunny Jim” Bottomley (.321 AVG, 46 HR, 143 RBI), and Ripper Collins (.312 AVG, 41 HR, 145 RBI) carried the offense. The St.Louis Browns were the division doormats. Heinie Manush batted .313 and Rip Collins saved half of their wins, while the Brownies spiraled to the cellar.
With 6 games to play, the Gas House Gang led the Cubs by one game and the Pirates by two games. St.Louis visited Pittsburgh and won 3-2 on two Joe Medwick home runs, while the Cubs were beating the Browns. The Cubs continued on to a sweep of the Browns, while the Pirate bats came alive, drubbing the Cardinals by scores of 7-2 and 10-5. The Cubs now led the Cardinals by one game and the Pirates by two. The Pirates simply stayed in St.Louis, trading the Cardinals for the Browns. Each game was a blowout victory for the Pirates. The Cardinals traveled to Wrigley Field and used two Ripper Collins home runs to beat the Cubs 8-5 and tie them for the West lead with 2 games remaining. The Cubs used a 3-4, 2 RBI day from Stan Hack and adequate pitching from Charlie Root to defeat the Cards 3-2, and creating a one game lead over both the Cardinals and the resurgent Pirates. In Game 162, the Cardinals struck first, as Medwick knocked in run with a single off Lon Warneke. Dizzy Dean took the mound, but, after allowing two baserunners, left a fastball out over the plate, which Gabby Hartnett slammed into Wrigley’s center field bleachers for a 3-run bomb. After that, Ol’ Diz settled down, but so did Warneke, who did not allow the Cardinals to score again, giving the Cubs a 6-1 victory and the Western Division title.
SEMI-FINALS Chicago Cubs and New York Giants
Fresh from winning the Western Division, the Chicago Cubs boarded the long train to New York to face the New York Giants. The Polo Grounds hosted Game 1, a matchup between Carl Hubbell and Bobo Newsom. Designated Hitter Lefty O’Doul was a one-man wrecking crew for Bill Terry’s Giants, tripling and homering to back Hubbell’s complete game 3-1 victory. In Game 2, JoJo Moore struck quickly, homering off 20-game winner Lon Warneke, giving New York a 2-0 lead. A 3rd inning Stan Hack double plated Frank Demaree, but Game 1 hero O’Doul slapped a three-run homer to right field. The Cubs scored a single run when Kiki Cuyler homered, but Tony Cuccinello of the Giants answered to finish the 4th inning. The Cubs pulled to within 6-4 when Lance Richbourgh singled and Billy Jurges doubled. Hubbell then induced a groundball to second baseman Cuccinello, who retired Stan Hack, allowing Richbourgh to score. Hubbell then mishandled Billy Herman’s one-hopper back to the mound and Jurges ran home with the Cubs 4th run. The Giants blew the game open in the bottom of the 7th when Freddie Lindstrom singled, stole second and took third on Gabby Hartnett’s overthrow. JoJo Moore hit a ground ball to short and Jurges attempted to throw Lindstrom out at home, but the throw was a bit high, and Lindstrom was called safe. Bill Terry singled, O’Doul drew a walk, and Travis Jackson strode to the plate with the bases loaded. Pat Malone was called upon to relieve Warneke. However, Jackson singled to left, scoring Moore and Terry. Catcher Harry Danning walked, loading the bases once again. Cuccinello then struck again with a 2-run single, and by the time the 7th was over, the Giants led 11-4. The Giants went on to win 12-5, behind 3-RBI days from O’Doul and Cuccinello.
The Series moved to Wrigley Field, with Game 3 beginning much as the first two contests, as O’Doul singled in Bill Terry in the top of the 1st. Kiki Cuyler doubled in a run in the bottom of the 1st to tie the score. Travis Jackson’s 3rd inning single drove in Mel Ott, but the Cubs answered on Richbourgh’s double in the bottom of the 4th. Charlie Root could not hold the tie for the home fans, however, as he quickly loaded the bases in the top of the 5th, when Terry singled, Ott walked, and O’Doul singled. Root then walked Travis Jackson, giving the Giants a 3-2 lead. Harry Danning’s single gave the Giants another run, making the score 4-2. A Terry RBI single in the 8th ended the scoring, as Hal Schumacher got the complete game victory over the Cubs, 5-2. The Cubs had their backs against the wall in Game 4, and put the ball in the hands of former Giant, Al Nehf. Gabby Hartnett’s home run to center tied the score at 1, and Kiki Cuyler’s sacrifice fly gave the Cubs a 2-1 lead. Bill Terry singled in Mel Ott in the 4th, but the Cubs retook the lead in the bottom of the 4th when Billy Jurges singled to left, scoring Charlie Grimm. With the Cubs leading 3-2, and pitchers Nehf and Harry Gumbert settling down, player/manager Grimm tried to break the game open in the bottom of the 6th. Lance Richbourgh singled, and Grimm called for Jurges to hit and run. Unfortunately, Richbourgh’s late start enabled third baseman to throw to second just ahead of Richbourgh’s slide, forcing him at second. Luckily for Grimm and Richbourgh, Stan Hack hit Gumbert’s next pitch into the center field stands for a 2-run bomb and, two batters later, Cuyler pulled a pitch down the left field line for a home run as well. Nehf then finished the game for the Cubs, and a 6-2 victory enabled them to fight another day. The “other day” would prove to be the next day, and the fight was all New York. Game 5 was a blowout, as the Giants took a 6-0 lead off Bobo Newsom, who couldn’t make it out of the 2nd inning. Led by the middle of their order, the Giants scored 15 runs, as Bill Terry went 4-6 with a home run, Mel Ott batted 4-4 with 4 RBI, and Lefty O’Doul doubled and tripled his way to 5 RBI. Carl Hubbell went the distance grabbing his second win of the series, and the Giants prepared for the World Series following a 15-2 win.
SEMI-FINALS 1932 New York Yankees and 1939 New York Yankees
The other Semi-Final pitted the 1932 New York Yankees against their future selves, the 1939 New York Yankees. Yankee Stadium was the obvious home for this series, and Marius Russo, who won 25 games during the regular season, was called on to pitch for the 39 Yankees, and pitch he did. He allowed only five hits, struck out 11, and was assisted by a 2nd inning offensive uprising. After Bill Dickey had homered in the bottom of the 1st, the 39 Yankees began the 2nd inning with a Joe Gordon walk and a Tommy Henrich single. Red Rolfe’s single scored Gordon, George Selkirk walked, and Phil Rizzuto doubled in Henrich. Dickey then came to the plate again and blasted another Herb Pennock offering to center, for his second home run of the game. Joe DiMaggio’s subsequent home run to center off reliever Shawkey gave the younger Yankees a 7-0 lead, fueled by Dickey’s 2 homers and 4 RBI. The 32 Yankees were baffled by Russo all day, never scoring in a 9-0 blowout. Game 2 began with the 32 Yankees providing a familiar answer to their 39 counterparts---Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. Ruth doubled and Gehrig homered to right, and the 32 Yankees were finally on the board. Offense would not be the story of this game, however. Red Ruffing was pitching for the 32 Yankees, and he was doing it masterfully. Inducing 13 groundouts in the first 7 innings, Ruffing was pitching a no-hitter. Ruffing faced Joe DiMaggio to lead off the 8th, and Joltin’ Joe hit a shot, but it was a line drive right into Frankie Crosetti’s glove. Charlie Keller then tapped back to Ruffing and Joe Gordon flew harmlessly to left, and Ruffing was one inning from a perfect game. In the 9th, Ruffing struck out Tommy Henrich. Red Rolfe then lined a hard shot towards right field, but second baseman Tony Lazzeri speared it out of the air. Now, with a completely hushed Yankee Stadium, Ruffing faced the light-hitting Babe Dahlgren. Dahlgren had grounded out to second twice so Ruffing sought to work him away one more time. He had used two sliders to record Dahlgren’s previous two outs, forcing Dahlgren to slap at two down-and-away pitches. Ruffing, apparently feeling invincible on this beautiful October day, went to an outside fastball. The pitch WAS outside, but it was also up, and Dahlgren got every bit of it. Ending the no-hit hopes for fans and Ruffing’s teammates, Dahlgren’s long home run to center broke up the no-hit bid. Ruffing got Keller to fly out to right, giving the 32 Yankees a 7-1 victory, but all the talk was about Ruffing’s brush with immortality. “To pitch a perfect game, you have to pitch perfectly. I made one bad pitch, but I’m thankful we got back in the win column,” said Ruffing.
Game 3 saw the teams simply trade dugouts. Lou Gehrig hit a sacrifice fly to center in the bottom of the 1st, scoring Earle Combs. Pitcher Lefty Gomez had been watching Ruffing’s masterpiece, and was spinning one of his own. He took a no-hitter into the top of the 6th inning, and recorded two quick ground outs. Phil Rizzuto doubled to center, however, ending Gomez’s no-hitter. Dickey grounded out to end the inning, with the 32 Yankees still leading 2-0. Joe DiMaggio led off the top of the 7th with a home run. The 39 Yankees had gone 15 innings scoring only 2 runs, with only 3 hits. The bats of the upstarts finally awoke in the top of the 9th, as DiMaggio singled and Charlie Keller walked off of closer Wilcy Moore. Joe Gordon then took Moore’s first pitch to Yankee Stadium’s left center field graveyard, scoring both DiMaggio and Keller and staking the 39 Yankees to a 3-2 lead. Henrich’s single then scored Gordon, and the game moved to the bottom of the 9th with the 39 Yankees leading the 32 Yankees 4-2. 39 Yankees starter Steve Sundra began the bottom of the 9th, but quickly got into trouble. Gehrig doubled to right field and Crosetti flew out to right with Gehrig advancing to third. Joe Sewell then walked, but Sundra got third baseman Pete Suder to pop up to short. With two outs, Gehrig and Sewell represented the tying runs on first and third. Fielder Jones singled to left, with Gehrig scoring and Sewell moving to third. Closer Johnny Murphy entered the game to face catcher Pat Collins. Collins hit a gapper to right center field, easily scoring Sewell with the tying run. As Fielder Jones rounded the bases with the winning run, the Yankee Clipper smoothly strode to the ball and uncorked a bullet from his deadly right arm. His beautiful, one-bounce throw gave Dickey all the time he needed to apply the tag, eliminating Fielder at the plate, leaving the game as a 4-4 tie. In the top of the 10th, Rizzuto hit a one out single to left, and Bill Dickey came to the plate. He was unable to muster any of his Game1 heroics, and instead grounded hard to Gehrig, who fired on to first, with Crosetti’s return throw nestling into Wilcy Moore’s glove ahead of Dickey for a double play. In the bottom of the 10th, Murphy got Earle Combs to ground out to short stop. Babe Ruth came to the plate. After one outside fastball, Ruth, the former pitcher, realized Murphy was going to work him away to stay away from the short porch in right. Ruth waited, and then exploded on Murphy’s outside fastball, sending the sphere into orbit. The home run landed somewhere in the deep recesses of the center field bleachers, and the 32 Yankees had an emotional, draining 5-4 victory. Ruth said, “Those boys are good, especially that center fielder, but we are the Yankees. They may become the Yankees, but they can’t do anything more than we already done done. Pass me a hot dog….”.
Game 4 began with Bill Dickey and Lou Gehrig continuing their RBI competition. Dickey homered to center off Johnny Allen in the top of the 1st, while Gehrig singled in Ruth in the bottom of the 1st off of Bump Hadley. Both pitchers then threw 5 innings of shutout ball. In the bottom of the 7th, however, Hadley ran into trouble. Tony Lazzeri singled to left, and Gehrig singled to center. Light-hitting shortstop Frankie Crosetti came to the plate and, surprisingly, doubles to center, scoring Lazzeri. Don Brennan entered the game in relief, but Joe Sewell greeted him with a suicide squeeze that scored Gehrig from third. An 8th inning Lazzeri triple scored Earle Combs, and Wilcy Moore closed out the 9th for the save in the 4-1 32 Yankee win. The series had been a hard-fought and exciting contest, but the big brothers led their little brothers 3 games to 1 going into Game 5. Danny MacFayden took the mound for the 32 Yankees, but a Joe DiMaggio singled scored George Selkirk with the first run of the game in the top of the 1st inning. In the top of the 4th, Tommy Henrich singled and George Selkirk was walked intentionally to face Phil Rizzuto. Rizzuto slapped a single to center, which Earle Combs overran. Both runners scored and Rizzuto wound up on third base. Dickey then grounded out, but the play apparently lit a fire under the 32 Yankees. Murderer’s Row woke up and introduced itself to Wes Ferrell. Combs singled to right, and Ruth doubled to center. Tony Lazzeri hit a hot grounder to short, which Rizzuto dove for, but the Scooter couldn’t get up in time to make a play. Combs scored and Ruth moved to third. Gehrig then hit a long fly to center, scoring Ruth, making the score 3-2. Joe Sewell then tied the game with a double, scoring Lazzeri. Pete Suder singled weakly to center, and Sewell held up at third. Fielder Jones then singled to center, giving the 32 Yankees a 4-3 lead as Sewell crossed the plate. Pat Collins’ RBI single gave the Yankees one more run, and they led 5-3 after 4 innings. Wilcy Moore was called upon to hold the lead in the top of the 7th. He did reasonably well, but the top of the 9th began with a Selkirk single. Rizzuto then popped out to center. Moore never gave Dickey anything good to hit, walking him, and bringing Joe DiMaggio up as the go-ahead run. With a 1-1 count, Moore fooled DiMaggio, jamming him and forcing a pop up along the railing down the third base line. Frankie Crosetti flew to the spot, reached into the stands and denied DiMaggio another chance to hit by making a circus catch. Charlie Keller then flew out to right, and the 32 Yankees had bettered their chronological progeny 4 games to 1.
WORLD SERIES New York Giants and 1932 New York Yankees
The World Series was another New York affair, with the 1932 Yankees facing the New York Giants. Carl Hubbell was the Giants’ ace, but he was treated rather rudely by the Yankees in Game 1. Lou Gehrig, in particular, was Hubbell’s nemesis. Gehrig homered to right in the bottom of the 1st, and then repeated the feat in the bottom of the 3rd. Gehrig’s two home runs gave the Yankees a 5-0 lead, and Johnny Allen pitched well enough, as the Bronx Bombers won Game 1 7-1. Game 2 was Red Ruffing’s first opportunity to pitch since his one-hitter in Game 2 of the Semi-Finals. He faced Freddie Fitzsimmons. Tony Cuccinello’s single and Freddie Lindstrom’s sacrifice fly gave the Giants 2-0 lead and proved that Ruffing wasn’t the same on this day. In the top of the 4th, Tony Lazzeri singled, Gehrig doubled, and Frankie Crosetti hit a sacrifice fly to center, scoring Lazzeri. Joe Sewell then singled in Gehrig, tying the game at 2. Travis Jackson doubled in Mel Ott in the 6th inning, and Jackson’s home run in the 9th put the game out of reach, as the Giants beat Ruffing and the Yankees 5-2.
Game 3 moved the Series 3/4 of a mile across the Harlem River, from the Polo Grounds to the Bronx. Roy Parmelee and Lefty Gomez both pitched well, only surrendering single runs in the 6th, as Travis Jackson hit an RBI double and Tony Lazzeri homered to center for the Yankees. In the top of the 8th, Jackson doubled again, and Freddie Lindstrom’s double to center gave the Giants a 2-1 lead over Gomez. Parmelee was still dazzling the Yankees when he began the 9th inning. Joe Sewell hit a ground ball to second, but Tony Cuccinello bobbled it, allowing Sewell to reach first on the error. Pete Suder then doubled to center, but, since there were no outs, Sewell was held at third. Fielder Jones fooled the Giants and Parmelee by laying down a bunt toward first base and scoring Sewell on the suicide squeeze. Parmelee retired Collins and Combs to end the inning, but the game was tied 2-2. Gomez continued into the 10th, but allowed singles to JoJo Moore and Mel Ott, bringing Lindstrom to bat with two on and two out. The Yankees called on Wilcy Moore, who enticed Lindstrom in to a fly out to center. In the bottom of the 10th, Parmelee got Ruth to fly to right for the first out. Tony Lazzeri walked, but then, when he attempted a steal of second, Danning overthrew the bag, and Lazzeri took third. Inexplicably, Bill Terry didn’t call for Lou Gehrig to be walked, Gehrig singled to center, and the celebration was on. Terry refused comment after the game. Game 4 was never close. Herb Pennock and Wilcy Moore combined to hold the Giants to one run, while Joe Sewell and Pat Collins homered, and Tony Lazzeri went 4-5. There was some trepidation in Yankee Stadium, however, as slugger Babe Ruth twisted his ankle running the bases in the 1st inning. His availability for the rest of the Series was unknown.
Game 5 began with Carl Hubbell on the mound and Babe Ruth on the bench. Both these events would be telling, as Hubbell pitched around a Lou Gehrig home run to hold the “Swat”-less Bombers to 2 runs. Lefty O’Doul doubled in JoJo Moore and Mel Ott in the top of the 1st, and O’Doul, Travis Jackson and Harry Danning all knocked in runs in the top of the 3rd, and the score was 8 to nothing before the Yankees finally scored in the bottom of the 6th. The Giants went on to win 8-2, and prepared to go back to the Polo Grounds needing to win both games. Asked about his availability for Game 6, Ruth said, “Have you seen how spindly my ankles are? They have a lot to hold up. But I guarantee you, if for some reason my boys don’t win the title in Game 6, I’ll be back for Game 7. Ask those Giants fans how swell I hit in the Polo Grounds. They remember.”
Game 6 began with Giants starter Freddie Fitzsimmons making it through the top of the 1st inning unscathed, despite a two-out walk to Tony Lazzeri. The Giants struck first against Yankee starter Red Ruffing when, after two quick outs, Bill Terry singled and Mel Ott drew a walk. Lefty O’Doul singled sharply to right, scoring Terry. Travis Jackson’s grounder to second was misplayed by Lazzeri, allowing Ott to score the Giants’ second run of the day. After loading the bases by walking Jimmy Ripple, Ruffing retired the side by forcing Harry Danning to ground out to third. The Yankees did not wait long to answer. In the top of the 3rd, Fielder Jones drew a walk. Next up, Ruth’s replacement, Buddy Hassett, doubled to center. Jones held up at third, but scored soon thereafter when Danning allowed a passed ball to roll to the screen. Earle Combs then doubled to center, scoring Hassett with the tying run. Lazzeri singled through the hole into left, but the hit wasn’t deep enough to score Combs. Lou Gehrig struck out, but Fitzsimmons walked Frankie Crosetti to load the bases. Joe Sewell came to the plate and, on a 1-2 pitch from Ruffing, hit a high lazy fly down the right field line. Right fielder Jimmy Ripple moved quickly to the wall, but Sewell’s fly ball landed 2 rows behind him, just inside the foul pole, not more than 305 feet from home plate. The Yankees had taken a 6-2 lead, and all without input from Gehrig, who struck out, and Ruth, who was unable to play in Game 6. The Giants loaded the bases in the bottom of the 3rd, but, once again, Danning made the last out of the inning, popping out to right. In the top of the 6th, Earle Combs grounded to Tony Cuccinello, but Cuccinello bobbled the ball, allowing Combs to reach first on the error. One batter later, Lazzeri doubled to center, scoring Combs, and Gehrig drove Lazzeri in with a sacrifice fly to center. The Giants made an attempt to come back against Ruffing in the bottom of the 7th. JoJo Moore homered to center, and Bill Terry followed him with a home run to right. Ruffing retired Ott and Travis Jackson, however, and the Yankees led 8-4 going into the 8th inning. Ruffing, who had come within one pitch of a perfect game in the Semi-Finals, entered the 9th with a chance to bring another title to the New York Yankees. Freddie Lindstrom singled to center to start the inning, but JoJo Moore followed with a fly out to center. Bill Terry hit a shot to Gehrig at first, but the Iron Horse speared it, made a sharp throw to Crosetti, and shuffled back to first in time to take Crosetti’s return throw in time to complete the double play. Quoted afterward, Ruffing said, “I really wanted that perfect game, but being the one on the mound when your team wins a World Series, there is nothing better than that.”
WORLD CHAMPION 1932 New York Yankees
League Awards
MVP-Lou Gehrig, 1932 Yankees
CY Young Award-Carl Hubbell, Giants
Fireman Award-Wilcy Moore, 1932 Yankees
League Leaders
Batting Average-Ted Williams, Red Sox .413
Home Runs-Babe Ruth, 1932 Yankees 68 HR
RBI-Jimmie Foxx, Red Sox 184 RBI
Runs- Ted Williams, Red Sox 159 Runs
Hits- Ted Williams, Red Sox 254 Hits
Doubles- Joe DiMaggio, 1939 Yankees 64 2B
Triples-Earle Combs, 1932 Yankees 26 3B
Stolen Bases-Cliff Heathcote, Phillies 28 SB
Hit Streak-Joe Vosmik, Indians 38 games
Pitching Leaders
Wins-Carl Hubbell, Giants 29-9
Saves-Wilcy Moore, 1932 Yankees 34 Saves
Strikeouts-Dazzy Vance, Dodgers 322 K
ERA-Marius Russo, 1939 Yankees 2.98 ERA
Last edited by andycummings65 on Fri Nov 30, 2012 10:26 pm, edited 15 times in total.