NO JOHNSON, NO PROBLEM

Athletics easily take second game from Washington, 8-2

WASHINGTON, April 15, 1910 – “Let’s get ’em tomorrow, boys. That Johnson kid can’t throw ’em everyday.” Surely, that must have been the rallying cry in Philadelphia’s clubhouse after being handcuffed by Washington’s young star on Opening Day.

The Mackmen unloaded on Senators pitchers Doc Reisling and Bob Groom. Connie’s choice to toe the rubber, Chief Bender, shaky in spots, was good enough to keep Jimmy McAleer’s boys at an arms-length away. While the Athletics did damage with the lumber, Washington’s pitchers were let down by some shoddy defense along the way.

Topsy Hartsel led off the game with a booming triple to the left field wall. Rube Oldring immediately followed with a long single to center field – scoring Hartsel. Two batters in, and Mack’s troops already had more runs than yesterday. Fans hadn’t even settled in with their frankfurters and scorecards, and the Athletics were already kicking up a fuss.

With a run in and Oldring on first with nobody out, superstar second baseman Eddie Collins walked to the plate. Swing away? Hardly. Mr. Mack, ever the tactician, wanted Collins to sacrifice Oldring to second. Success. Frank Baker followed by floating a single over shortstop George McBride’s head to give the Athletics an early 2-0 lead. Harry Davis and Danny Murphy ended Reisling’s misery by grounding out to end the inning.

The Senators had the look of a team who meant business in evening up the score in their half of the first inning. Clyde Milan and Germany Schaefer led off with back-to-back singles. Much like Mack, McAleer asked his three-hole hitter to lay down a sacrifice. Unlike Collins, Jack Lelivelt was unable to do the job. He fouled off Bender’s first offering. On the next pitch, Lelivelt bunted through the ball as “Deerfoot” Milan wandered too far off second base. The Athletics’ air-tight defense went to work.

While Milan was trying to get an extra step in trying to reach his next destination, he failed to notice slick-fielding shortstop Jack Barry make a beeline for the second base bag. Without a moment’s hesitation, rifle-armed catcher Paddy Livingston sprang from his crouch and fired the pill to Barry. A perfect strike. Milan never stood a chance. McAleer must have neglected to remind his men that Livingston led the American League in throwing out 56% of potential base stealers last season. Paddy was never shy about showing off that arm. The threat had been averted.

The Athletics got right back to work in the top of the second inning. Sensing that Reisling was not long for this game, McAleer had rail-thin righty Bob Groom warming up. With one out, Livingston slammed the first pitch he saw to the left-center field gap for a three-base hit. Bender promptly followed with a single to right and the Athletics enjoyed a 3-0 cushion. McAleer had seen enough; Reisling was off to the showers. Groom ambled in and negated the rally in quick fashion.

Once again, the Senators had a chance at scoring some runs in their half of the inning. Once again, the Athletics snuffed them out. Doc Gessler led off with a clean single. After Bob Unglaub was retired, McBride doubled to right, sending Gessler to third. Washington was in business with runners at second and third and one out. Gabby Street hit a bounding ball to Baker at third base. Instead of retiring the slow-footed Street at first, Baker went home with his throw where Livingston was waiting with the tag. Groom was retired for the third out and damage was avoided.

The White Elephants posted another tally in their half of the fourth. Murphy led off with a double and Barry followed with a grounder to shortstop. McBride foolishly tried to get Murphy going for third base. In his haste, he bobbled the ball and both runners were safe. With the infield drawn-in, Livingston grounded to McBride who held Murphy at third and started a 6-4-3 twin-killing. Bender grounded to second base where Schaefer fumbled his chance – Murphy scored and Bender was safe at first.

Groom should have been in the dugout at this point. Instead, because of lackadaisical defense, the Athletics kept the pressure on. Hartsel walked, Oldring singled, and just like that, the bases were loaded for Collins. Already up 4-0, the Mackmen were ready to blow the roof off the barn. However, Bender decided to take a nap at third base. Street made a snap throw to third baseman Kid Elberfeld who slapped the tag on the big pitcher to end hostilities.

The Athletics salted the game away, for all intents and purposes, in the top of the sixth inning. Barry led off with a base on balls. Livingston tried to sacrifice but popped out to first baseman Bob Unglaub who made a stellar, running catch. Bender singled, sending Barry to third. Hartsel followed with a long double, scoring both men. Hartsel took third as the ball escaped from Street’s mitt on the throw home. Oldring followed with a sacrifice fly to center field and just like that, it was 7-0.

The visitors added another run in the ninth. Collins singled, stole second, and scored on Murphy’s two-out double. The Senators avoided being white-washed in the bottom half. Gessler received a free pass with one out and came around to score on Unglaub’s double to left. McBride followed with a triple to left field scoring another run. McBride got greedy, however, and decided for the four-bagger of the inside-the-park variety. He didn’t take into account Hartsel’s arm. Topsy made an accurate throw to Livingston who tagged the avaricious McBride. Street ended the affair by grounding meekly to Baker.

Connie Mack was elated after the game, “We looked a whole lot better today, didn’t we?” Indeed they did. Although, not having to face the “Weiser Wonder” certainly helped.

The box is as follows:

NOTES:

  • The rubber game against Washington is at 4 o’clock this afternoon.
  • Jack Coombs (Athletics) and Dixie Walker (Senators) are the expected starters today.
  • The Mackmen will take the train back to Philadelphia this evening and rest on Sunday before opening the home season against New York on Monday.

A PRESIDENTIAL OPENER

Athletics one-hit by Walter Johnson on Opening Day, 3-0

WASHINGTON, April 14, 1910 – As far as Opening Day’s go, this one was stupendous. The American League’s tenth season was kicked off in presidential fashion on a glorious spring day in the nation’s capital this afternoon.

President Taft, Vice President Sherman, a host of dignitaries, and over 14,000 rabid rooters squeezed into cramped American League Park for the lid-lifter of the 1910 championship season. Early this morning, Washington club president Thomas Noyes arrived at the White House with a gift for the president – baseball season pass number one! President Taft, a rabid baseball fan, was delighted.

The president eschewed a private box above the grandstand; instead, opting for a box seat in the front row for himself and his party. Prior to the start of the game, Noyes summoned Athletics manager Connie Mack and Senators manager Jimmy McAleer to formally greet the president. After the managers exchanged pleasantries with the president, umpire Billy Evans arrived at the presidential box (next to the first base dugout) with a gleaming Reach baseball. Evans presented the ball to Mrs. Taft while President Taft was removing his gloves.

The Senators took the field and waited for the ceremonial first pitch. Standing at home plate, Washington catcher Gabby Street awaited the ball from the president. On Evans’s signal, President Taft decided that the pitcher starts the game. He enthusiastically hurled the sphere to pitcher Walter Johnson on the fly. Taft’s toss was a bit low but caught by Johnson before it hit the earth. With that, the 1910 season commenced.

As Johnson completed his warm up tosses the overflow crowd waited nervously – the largest crowd in Washington baseball history. The grandstand was overflowing, fans sat in the aisles, a few thousand loyalists were roped off in the far reaches of the spacious outfield. Ground rules were so that any ball hit into the roped off crowd was a ground rule double. Finally, at quarter of four in the afternoon, umpire Evans bellowed, “Play ball!”

Philadelphia’s aging lead off man, left fielder Topsy Hartsel, grounded sharply to third baseman Kid Elberfeld. Johnson followed by retiring Rube Oldring and Eddie Collins on weak grounders for his first of five 1-2-3 innings. Philadelphia’s ace lefty Eddie Plank was not as lucky.

Clyde Milan lead off by popping out to third baseman Frank Baker. Next up was captain Germany Schaefer who walloped the ball into the center field crowd – the ball ending up on the porch of the clubhouse. Under normal conditions, his smash would have been a home run, however, under yesterday’s ground rules, it was only good for two bases. Jack Lelivelt followed by sailing the second pitch he saw from “Gettysburg Eddie” into the right-center field crowd for another ground rule double – scoring Schaefer and giving the Senators a 1-0 lead. Plank escaped without any further damage.

Johnson and Plank traded goose eggs into the fifth inning. Anytime the throng in the cramped enclosure became quiet, the brass band struck up a tune to liven up the atmosphere; such as, “A Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight.” The Washingtonians finally got to Plank again in the fifth inning. This time it was Johnson who took matters into his own hands.

Johnson smashed a Plank offering against the center field fence for a two-base hit. Milan tried to bunt Johnson to third, but with his speed, “Deerfoot” beat out an infield single putting runners at the corners with nobody out. Schaefer came through once again, lining a double to right – scoring Johnson and placing Milan at third. Lelivelt lofted a sacrifice fly to right fielder Danny Murphy – scoring Milan. Schaefer tried to take third but was gunned down by Murphy’s perfect strike to third baseman Frank Baker. Elberfeld singled but was thrown out by catcher Ira Thomas trying to steal second.

Faced with a 3-0 deficit, and Johnson having allowed nary a hit, the Mackmen faced an uphill battle. Johnson was unable to control his curve ball throughout the course of the game; unable to throw it for strikes. The Athletics knew he would have to rely exclusively on his fastball – and rely on it, he did. His blazing speed was too hot to handle. Weak out after weak out. Finally, thanks to the wall of humanity in the outfield, the Athletics were given an opening.

Having retired Oldring and Collins on weak outs to begin the top of the seventh inning, Johnson got Baker to loft a can of corn in the direction of Doc Gessler in right field. As Gessler drifted toward the spot, he tripped over a young fan, sitting just in front of the rope, reading a newspaper. The ball dropped. Gessler and the ball having arrived at the same time, Baker was credited with a ground rule double – the Athletics’ first hit of the game. Harry Davis popped meekly to second baseman Schaefer to squelch any hopes of a rally.

The Senators nursed the 3-0 lead to the top of the ninth inning. Having pitched no more than three innings per game during spring training, Johnson was tiring – and now he was in trouble. Hartsel led off with a four-pitch walk. As Johnson fell behind Oldring three balls and no strikes, the local rooters began to squirm. Manager McAleer was in a quandry. If Oldring gets on, stars Collins, Baker, and Davis would follow.

Johnson buckled down and came back to fan Oldring for his ninth strikeout. The big ace fell behind Collins before coaxing him to slap a bounding ball to shortstop George McBride who fired to Schaefer – forcing Hartsel at second. The belligerents were hardly done. Baker followed with a walk, and with runners at first and second, Johnson uncorked a wild pitch putting two into scoring position for the heavy-hitting Davis.

Again, Johnson had trouble finding the plate. He fell behind Davis three balls. Finally, with the count three balls and two strikes, and the fans with lumps in their throats, Davis slashed the pill at first baseman Bob Unglaub. Unglaub smothered the ball, gathered himself, and raced to the bag to beat Davis – securing the victory for Washington. The hometown fans could finally exhale – victory was theirs!

The first fan, President Taft, stayed for the entire game. Transfixed as the rest of the massive throng – hanging on every pitch. As he poured out of the grounds with his party and Secret Service detail, the president exclaimed, “Johnson is a bully pitcher!” Bully indeed. No runs, nine strikeouts, one “scratch” hit, and not a single Athletic reached second base until the eighth inning.

After the game, Connie Mack expressed disappointment at the missed opportunity to at least tie the score in the final frame. Gessler expressed his dismay at not being able to corral Baker’s fly in the seventh inning. He felt that he had cost Johnson an Opening Day no-hitter. Johnson and Gessler chatted about the play at the Dewey Hotel last night.

Gessler was still smarting, “Walter, I’m awfully sorry I could not get that fly, for I wanted you to let them down without a hit, but I couldn’t make it because I fell.”

“That’s alright, Doc,” Johnson responded, “We won, didn’t we? Well, that is good enough.” Good enough, indeed.

NOTES:

  • Vice President Sherman occupied a box behind the third base dugout. When Athletics third baseman Frank Baker hit a screaming foul in the fourth inning, the ball missed the vice president’s head by inches. The ball struck Charles Bennett, secretary of the United States Senate in the head. Bennett was not seriously injured.
  • Athletics pitcher Eddie Plank stole second base in the third inning without a throw from Senators catcher Gabby Street. Street thought that umpire Billy Evans had called Topsy Hartsel out on strikes for the third out. Hartsel struck out on the very next pitch.
  • Star Athletics second baseman Eddie Collins made the defensive play of the game when he robbed Kid Elberfeld of a hit in the third inning. He smothered Elberfeld’s hard chopper in the hole and threw him out while sprawled on the infield.
  • This was the final Opening Day in American League Park history. The Senators will have a brand new, concrete and steel ballpark ready for the 1911 season.

MACKMEN OFF FOR WASHINGTON

APRIL 14, 1910 – The sun is shining, the flannels are starched and pressed, the ushers and tickets takers have taken their place, and the field has been carefully manicured.

Connie Mack and his Philadelphia Athletics head off for Washington this morning – on the 8:30 AM train from Broad Street Station – to officially lift the lid on the 1910 season. A large group of local fans is expected to join them on the excursion. The Mackmen are expected to arrive at Union Station around noon, head over to the Arlington Hotel for lunch, before being whisked away to American League Park.

Waiting for them will be 22-year old flamethrower Walter Johnson and the rest of new manager Jimmy McAleer’s Senators. While the Senators finished dead last in the American League in 1909 – losing 110 games – the young Johnson is a formidable foe.

Mack believes that his club is a legitimate pennant contender after a strong 1909 campaign. The Mackmen gave the three-time defending American League champion Detroit Tigers a run for their money – staying close until the final week of the regular season. Mack believes there is no reason that his club cannot build on last season and contend for the World Series. After a strong showing at spring training in Atlanta, Mack’s boys are out to prove that they are the cream of the crop in the American League.

Connie’s bunch is a healthy mix of young stars and seasoned veterans. A stellar starting lineup and a stacked bench. The lineup for today’s opener is as follows:

  • Topsy Hartsel, LF
  • Rube Oldring, CF
  • Eddie Collins, 2B
  • Frank Baker, 3B
  • Harry Davis, 1B
  • Danny Murphy, RF
  • Jack Barry, SS
  • Ira Thomas, C
  • Eddie Plank, Chief Bender, or Jack Coombs, P

Mack still hasn’t publicly stated who will be his Opening Day starter. It’s likely to be Plank. If so, Thomas will do the catching. Michael “Doc” Powers, Plank’s personal catcher died tragically last April, so Thomas has taken on that duty. Thomas would also catch Bender this afternoon. Should Mack choose “Colby Jack” Coombs to toe the rubber, Paddy Livingston will get the nod behind the plate.

The Athletics will start the season with 21 men on their active roster. The pitching staff will consist of right-handed pitchers Jack Coombs, Chief Bender, Jimmy Dygert, and Cy Morgan. The left-handed variety will be Eddie Plank, Harry Krause, and Tommy Atkins. Ira Thomas, Paddy Livingston, and Jack Lapp will do the catching. Harry Davis, Eddie Collins, Jack Barry, Frank Baker, Stuffy McInnis, and Morrie Rath will work the infield. Rube Oldring, Danny Murphy, Topsy Hartsel, Heinie Heitmuller, and Amos Strunk will patrol Shibe Park’s spacious outfield.

This being Washington, of course, plenty of dignitaries will be in attendance. The most prominent being Vice President James Sherman, who is expected to toss the ceremonial first ball to Walter Johnson. The weather forecast could not be more splendid – sunny skies and a high temperature approaching 70 degrees. First pitch is scheduled for 3:45 PM.