Thu May 14, 2020 7:00 pm
Bruce, I would hope it’s not arbitrary. Here’s a list of rules changes from the 1870s-1894;
Various Rules Changes to Baseball in latter half of 19th Century:
--1867-1887 Batter could request a High or Low ball from the Pitcher (Ross Barnes, Pete Browning, Tip O'Neil, King Kelly, Dan Brouthers cards all come from this era)
--1877 The Fair-Foul hit (bunt) was outlawed. Ross Barnes batting average dropped from .429 in 1876 to .272 in 1877. To those who say he was ill in 1877, he also played full seasons in 1879 and 1881 at ages 29 and 31, batting .266 and .271, respectively.
--1880 8 balls constituted a Base on Balls, no wonder pitchers from that era had few walks
--1884 6 balls constituted a Base on Balls
--1884 The Ban on Overhand Pitching was lifted (Tommy Bond, George Bradley, Guy Hecker, Will White, Larry Corcoran, Candy Cummings, Frank Hankinson, and John F. Coleman cards in ATG all pitched underhanded) And that underhand pitching was a toss, not a fast-pitch softball windup. Until 1884, they were playing slow pitch softball...............
--1885-1893 One side of the Bat was allowed to be flat
--1887 5 balls constituted a Base on Balls
--1887 Walks were counted as HITS---11 hitters batted over .400 that year (Tip O’Neil and Pete Browning in ATG)
--1889 4 balls constituted a Base on Balls
--1893 Pitching distance increased from 50 feet to 60’6”
The game has made minor changes to the rules since then, but for the most part the rules have been fairly consistent.
I feel the same way about Ross Barnes as I do about Charlie Sweeney.
I’m perfectly fine with someone thinking differently than I do. I just think my argument is valid as well. If others don’t like it, that’s fine. Doesn’t make it not true that there was great upheaval in the rules until around 1894.