Friday, April 21, 2023

Week 9 Results (06/07/1920 - 06/13/1920)

Monday, June 7, 1920 

Transactions:

 

Detroit outfielder Ty Cobb was injured (wrenched knee) on 06/06/1920. Cobb injured his knee in a late-inning collision with right fielder Ira Flagstead.

 

New York (NL) shortstop Art Fletcher (Team Finale 06/08/1920) and cash were traded to Philadelphia (NL) for Dave Bancroft (Team Debut 06/08/1920) on 06/07/1920

 

Philadelphia (AL) pitcher Pat Martin made his Major League Finale on 06/06/1920. Martin was later acquired by Buffalo (IL) on 06/09/1920. Philadelphia (AL) pitcher Lyle Bigbee returned to the mound on 06/08/1920

 

Washington pitcher Bill Snyder was injured (?) on 06/06/1920

 

Philadelphia (NL) shortstop Art Fletcher (Team Debut 06/08/1920) and cash were acquired from New York (NL) for shortstop Dave Bancroft (Team Finale 06/06/1920) on 06/07/1920

 

Arnold "Jigger" Statz
Boston (AL) outfielder Arnold Statz (Team Debut 06/12/1920) was claimed on waivers from New York (NL) on 06/07/1920

Chicago (AL) (H) 7 Detroit 1

 

Red Faber (7-5, 1.93) scattered seven hits and held the Cobb-less Tigers to only one run while the White Sox collected sixteen hits against a series of Detroit pitchers. Third baseman Buck Weaver led the charge by going 4-for-5 (.418) and drove in five runs.

 

New York (AL) (H) 1 Philadelphia (AL) 0 (GM 1)

 

Babe Ruth led off the bottom of the second with a homerun (#14) and Jack Quinn (8-2, 1.37) held the A's to only four hits and went all the way for the Game One shutout.

 

New York (AL) (H) 12 Philadelphia (AL) 3 (GM 2)

 

New York hurler Rip Collins (1-0, 1.04) made his first start of the season and acquitted himself well with plenty of run support behind him. Babe Ruth hit another homerun (#15) as part of his 4-for-5 (.391) day that included five RBI's.

 

New York (NL) 5 Brooklyn (H) 3

 

The Giants wasted no time in placing newly acquired shortstop Dave Bancroft into the starting lineup and they were able to continue their dominance over the Robins so far in 1920. New York scored all five of their runs in the fourth as they combined most of their nine hits into this one frame, making a winner of Fred Toney (9-2, 1.89).

 

Tuesday, June 8, 1920

 

Transactions:

 

New York (AL) pitcher Lefty O'Doul was injured (?) on 06/07/1920

 

Boston (NL) infielder Johnny Rawlings (Team Finale 06/04/1920) was sold to Philadelphia (NL)

 

Philadelphia (NL) infielder Johnny Rawlings (Team Debut 06/10/1920) was acquired from Boston (NL)

 

Note: It as a light day yesterday as it was a travel day, the AL east teams moving to the Midwest while in the NL it was the Midwest teams moving eastward.

 

Chicago (AL) (H) 3 Boston (AL) 2

 

Right fielder Harry Hooper tripled and scored in the top of the eighth to give the Red Sox a 2-1 lead, but the White Sox came right back with two runs in the bottom half of the inning to take the lead. Roy Wilkinson (5-4, 4.17) finished the game and took the win over Sad Sam Jones (2-6, 4.11).

 

Cleveland (H) 8 Philadelphia (AL) 5

 

The Indians built up an early 5-1 lead but the A's stormed back with a four-run eighth that tied the score at 5-5. Cleveland came right back with three runs of their own in the bottom of the eighth and Dave Neihaus (3-0, 2.92) picked up the win after finishing with a 1-2-3 ninth. First baseman Doc Johnston, who has been largely missing from the Indians' offense this season, went 3-for-5 on the day and drove in four big runs.

 

Detroit (H) 8 New York (AL) 7

 

Detroit scored three times in the first but by the end of the fifth, it was New York on top by a score of 7-3. The Tigers never quit and scored a few runs to make it close, and then in the bottom of the ninth, they scored three more times to capture the come-from-behind victory. Catcher Eddie Ainsmith stroked a long fly ball to right and center fielder Ira Flagstead was able to arrive home safely, making a winner of Frank Okrie (2-0, 7.59).

 

St. Louis (AL) (H) 6 Washington 4

 

The lead swapped back and forth several times but in the end, Allen Sotheron (1-10, 6.94) finally got a win and defeated Walter Johnson (5-4, 2.70). The Browns feature several power hitters but today's hitting hero was catcher Hank Severeid, who came through with a 3-for-4 game that included a run scored, three big RBI's, and a triple that put them ahead early.

 

St. Louis (NL) 5 Brooklyn (H) 1

 

The Robins are temporarily missing a left fielder, a right fielder, a second baseman, and a first baseman, all of which temporarily puts them in a bad spot. Jesse Haines (6-3, 2.99) held them to only six hits as St. Louis opened an early lead and was never threatened thereafter.

 

Cincinnati 5 New York (NL) (H) 1

 

At this time last week, first-place New York was dueling with second-place Brooklyn, but the Giants held their own in that contest and this week it is the second-place Cincinnati team in town to test the Giants. Both teams ended with eleven hits, but the Reds managed to bunch most of their hits together in a three-run fifth and Ray Fisher (4-3, 4.47) did the rest.

 

Chicago (NL) 5 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 2

 

Pete Alexander (6-8, 2.43) has often pitched in hard luck this season and after left fielder Irish Meusel hit a two-run homerun (#2) in the bottom of the fourth it looked like bad luck might be repeating itself. Not today though as the Cubs tied the score at 2-2 in the fifth and then in the sixth, Alexander made a mad dash home from first on shortstop Zeb Terry's two-out double and was able to give Chicago its first lead of the game.

 

Wednesday, June 9, 1920

 

Transactions:

 

Detroit pitcher Bernie Boland was injured (?) on 06/08/1920

 

Philadelphia (AL) third baseman Joe Dugan was injured (?) on 06/08/1920

 

Chicago (AL) shortstop Swede Risberg was injured (?) on 06/08/1920

 

Chicago (AL) (H) 4 Boston (AL) 3

 

The Red Sox scored a run in the top of the first and the White Sox answered with three in the bottom half of the inning. The Red Sox tied the score at 3-3 when they plated two runs in the top of the fifth, but then the White Sox wasted no time, regaining the lead with a run in the bottom half of the inning. Both teams threatened in the late innings, but Lefty Williams (8-6, 3.34) held on for the win over Bullet Joe Bush (3-7, 4.42).

 

Philadelphia (AL) 4 Cleveland (H) 2

 

The A's errors led to two unearned runs for the Indians, but that was all they could muster as Scott Perry (5-7, 3.18) picked up the tough road win.

 

Detroit (H) 8 New York (AL) 3

 

The Tigers jumped on Herb Thormahlen (2-4, 5.04) for six runs in the bottom of the third and Howard Ehmke (5-4, 3.63) held the Yankees to only five hits and got the win. Ehmke also chipped in with a 3-for-4 day at the plate, scored three runs, and hit two doubles.

 

St. Louis (AL) (H) 1 Washington 0

 

Weak-hitting shortstop Wally Gerber came through with an RBI single in the bottom of the fourth and Urban Shocker (8-2, 2.33) made that slender lead stand up as he held the Senators to two hits and got the tough victory.

 

Pittsburgh 10 Boston (NL) (H) 1

 

The Pirates blew open a close game with six runs in the top of the seventh, all runs unearned. Catcher Walter Schmidt had the big bat as he went 4-for-5, scored two runs, drove in three, and knocked a double, all done in support of his pitcher, Babe Adams (7-3, 0.96).

 

St. Louis (NL) 6 Brooklyn (H) 2

 

The Robins led 2-1 after the first, but soon the Cardinals came back to take the lead and then added some late runs for insurance. Bill Doak (5-6, 2.23) got the win over Jeff Pfeffer (3-5, 2.13).

 

Jimmy Ring
Cincinnati 5 New York (NL) (H) 4

The Reds scored three times in the third and built up a 5-1 lead but required Jimmy Ring (4-4, 5.25) to work his way out of a tough ninth inning to get the win. New York scored a run in the eighth and then two in the ninth before their rally attempt failed, all the while making Cincinnati earn their win.

 

Note: On this date in 1920, Cincinnati center fielder Edd Roush fell asleep in the outfield during a long argument in the infield. Second baseman Heinie Groh had to wake him so play could resume, but the umpire ejected Roush for delaying the game.

 

Chicago (NL) 15 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 5

 

Chicago collected twenty-four hits as they pounded multiple Phillies pitchers for fifteen runs and the easy win. The Cubs scored eight times in the third, with left fielder Dave Robertson contributing both a two-run homerun (#2) and a two-run double. Every Cubs player had at least one hit, including Lefty Tyler who went 2-for-6 and drove in two runs.

 

Thursday, June 10, 1920

 

Transactions:

 

Detroit third baseman Bob Jones was injured (?) on 06/09/1920

 

Philadelphia (NL) second baseman Dots Miller was injured (?) on 06/09/1920

 

Brooklyn first baseman Ed Konetchy returned to play on 06/11/1920

 

Chicago (AL) (H) 3 Boston (AL) 2

 

Both teams were limited to only five hits on the day but the White Sox scored two runs in the fourth and then held off a late Red Sox rally attempt to get the win. Eddie Cicotte (7-2, 3.30) came out victorious over Harry Harper (3-3, 1.87).

 

Cleveland (H) 1 Philadelphia (AL) 0

 

Stan Coveleski (8-4, 2.97) drove in the game's only run when he bounded a single up the middle in the bottom of the fifth. Coveleski only gave up three hits in the game and went all the way for the shutout victory.

 

New York (AL) 3 Detroit (H) 0

 

Frank Okrie (2-1, 5.49) made his first (and only) start of the season today as he was asked to make a spot start to give the Tigers bullpen a breather and he performed quite well, limiting the powerful Yankees to only three runs. Unfortunately for him, Carl Mays (10-1, 1.36) threw a three-hit shutout and became the first player this season to reach ten wins.

 

St. Louis (AL) (H) 2 Washington 1

 

A well-pitched game as Dixie Davis (4-1, 2.45) got the win over Jim Shaw (0-4, 6.40) as both pitchers only gave up six hits on the day. Washington committed three errors on the day and St. Louis was able to capitalize and grab the lead, leaving Davis to do the rest.

 

Pittsburgh 8 Boston NL) (H) 0

 

Left fielder Carson Bigbee returned to the starting lineup after having been limited to occasional pinch-hitting appearances over the past three weeks and today he went 3-for-4 with a walk and he provided a double and two triples to spark the Pirates offense. Wilbur Cooper (9-2, 1.52) threw a four-hit shutout over the hometown Braves.

 

St. Louis (NL) 2 Brooklyn (H) 1 (12)

 

Brooklyn tied the game with a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the eighth, but they couldn't grab the lead and the game soon went into extra innings. In the top of the twelfth Ivy Olson kicked a two-out grounder to short and center fielder Jack Smith scampered home with the eventual game-winner. Ferdie Schupp (2-6, 5.47) pitched a great game and got the complete game victory.

 

Cincinnati 5 New York (NL) (H) 2

 

The Reds won their third game in a row in New York and pulled to within 1.5 games of the first-place Giants. Dutch Ruether (10-3, 1.41) had a great outing and while the Reds offense didn't have any big innings, they did manage to string together several small innings and got the win.

 

Chicago (NL) 7 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 4

 

The Cubs scored three runs in the top of the ninth, two from a two-out two-run double off the bat of left fielder Dave Robertson. Claude Hendrix (5-3, 4.00) went all the way for the win.

 

Friday, June 11, 1920

 

Transactions:

 

Philadelphia (AL) pitcher Eddie Rommel was injured (?) on 06/10/1920

 

Pittsburgh infielder Walter Barbare made his Season Debut on 06/12/1920

 

Chicago (AL) (H) 5 Boston (AL) 0

 

The White Sox took a small lead early but then scored three runs in the bottom of the eighth as a pair of Red Sox errors opened the door to a big inning. Red Faber (8-5, 1.78) picked up the shutout victory and extended Chicago's winning streak to six games.

 

Cleveland (H) 4 Philadelphia (AL) 1

 

The Indians had ten hits and eight walks but managed to squander multiple opportunities to take the lead. Finally, with the bases loaded in the bottom of the fifth, A's shortstop Chick Galloway kicked a likely double play ball and the Indians were eventually able to score three runs. Jim Bagby (8-5, 2.67) cruised to an easy home win from there.

 

New York (AL) 6 Detroit (H) 2

 

The Yankees scored single runs in the second, third, and fourth innings and then put up a three-spot in the fifth to give Rip Collins (2-0, 1.37) and nice lead. Babe Ruth had a 4-for-4 day (.397), scored three runs, drove in two, and hit homerun (#16) to spark the New York offense.

 

Washington 10 St. Louis (AL) (H) 7

 

The wind was blowing out at Sportsman Park today. First baseman George Sisler (#4) and center fielder Baby Doll Jacobson (#3) hit back-to-back solo homeruns in the first, and then Sisler added a second homerun (#5) in the fourth. In between those homeruns, center fielder Sam Rice hit a two-run homerun (#2) in the third, and catcher Patsy Gharrity slugged a two-run homerun (#2) in the fourth, and then later in the game pitcher Eric Erickson (6-2, 3.77) helped cement his win with a homerun (#1) of his own.

 

Pittsburgh 4 Boston (NL) (H) 2

 

The Pirates are going to need a pitcher besides Babe Adams and Wilbur Cooper to have a good season if they are going to make a run for the pennant and today Earl Hamilton (3-2, 3.07) gave a strong performance in a win over the Braves. Right fielder Billy Southworth went 3-for-4 (.393) and drove in three runs to spark the Pittsburgh offense.

 

Jack Fournier
Brooklyn (H) 13 St. Louis (NL) 9 (Cycle!)

The Cardinals scored four runs in the top of the fourth to tie the score at 5-5, but then the Robins came right back with a six-run bottom of the fourth to take an 11-5 lead. With both started having proved to be ineffective, both bullpens were able to calm the chaos and Brooklyn held on for the win. Sherry Smith (3-1, 3.86) got the win when he was bailed out by his offense, although he did contribute a three-run triple in the second to get Brooklyn its early lead. First baseman Ed Konetchy was back in the lineup for the first time in two weeks and joined in the fun with a 3-for-4 day and three RBI's.

 

The big news of the day was that St. Louis first baseman Jack Fournier had a 5-for-5 day (.370), scored two runs, drove in five runs, and hit for the cycle, the first cycle of the season.

 

New York (NL) (H) 4 Cincinnati 0

 

Fred Toney (10-2, 1.73) threw a two-hit shutout and ended the Reds' eight-game winning streak, and it also boosted the Giants NL lead back up to 2.5 games. New York grabbed the lead with a three-run fifth, all three runs scoring after there were two outs in the inning, and Toney did the rest.

 

Chicago (NL) 4 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 2

 

An error by right fielder Casey Stengel put the visitors up 3-2 in the top of the fourth and Speed Martin (3-5, 5.11) outdueled Lee Meadows (2-6, 4.95) the rest of the way to pick up the win.

 

Saturday, June 12, 1920

 

Transactions:

 

New York (NL) catcher Mike Gonzalez returned to play on 06/13/1920

 

Washington 6 Chicago (AL) (H) 2

 

The Senators ended their series in Chicago by breaking a scoreless tie with six runs in the sixth, all runs being unearned, and all scoring after two outs. Walter Johnson (6-4, 2.62) got the win but was still fuming he had given up two runs to the White Sox in the bottom of the seventh.

 

New York (AL) 5 Cleveland (H) 3

 

Right fielder Babe Ruth hit a two-run homerun (#17) in the top of the sixth to give New York its first lead of the game. Jack Quinn (9-2, 1.43), with some ninth-inning help from Carl Mays, got the win.

 

Detroit (H) 3 Philadelphia (AL) 1

 

A's hurler Rollie Naylor (4-10, 3.36) only made one mistake today and right fielder Harry Heilmann walloped it for a two-out three-run homerun (#1) in the bottom of the first. Hooks Dauss (4-5, 2.80), bolstered by an early 3-0 lead, went all the way for the win.

 

Boston (AL) 6 St. Louis (AL) (H) 2

 

The Red Sox blew open a tight game with three runs in the top of the ninth, giving Sad Sam Jones (3-6, 3.87) the win over Allen Sothoron (1-11, 6.85).

 

Chicago (NL) 6 Boston (NL) (H) 0

 

The Cubs extended the Braves' losing streak to nine games as Pete Alexander (7-8, 2.28) held the hometown team to only two hits in the game and went all the way for the to-hit shutout. Boston committed three errors in the game, often finding themselves their own worst enemy. Chicago put their stamp on this game when they scored three runs in the top of the ninth, third baseman Charlie Deal's two-run single being the big hit.

 

Brooklyn (H) 1 Cincinnati 0

 

Left fielder Zack Wheat had Brooklyn's only hit, a triple in the fourth inning, and he soon scored Brooklyn's only run on a sacrifice fly. It wasn't much, but it was enough for Al Mamaux (3-3, 2.88) who only allowed the Reds three hits and got the win over Dolf Luque (4-1, 1.41).

 

St. Louis (NL) 4 New York (NL) (H) 3 (12)

 

New York scored three times in the bottom of the second and it looked for a long time like that lead would last, but St. Louis finally responded with a two-run ninth to tie the score at 3-3 and it was off to extra innings. Cardinals' catcher Verne Clemons stroked a solo homerun (#3) in the top of the twelfth and Bill Sherdel (4-2, 4.04) held off a belated New York rally in the bottom of the inning to pick up the win.

 

Pittsburgh 8 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 7

 

The Phillies put together several multi-run innings and led 7-2 after the eighth, but then the Pirates suddenly came alive as they scored six times in the top of the ninth and took an 8-7 lead. Hal Carlson (2-7, 5.54) didn't pitch well but got the win, with Elmer Ponder coming in to close out the ninth.

 

Sunday, June 13, 1920

 

Transactions:

 

Chicago (AL) infielder Hervey McClellan was injured (?) on 06/12/1920

 

New York (NL) second baseman Frankie Frisch returned to play on 06/14/1920

 

New York (AL) outfielder Sammy Vick returned to play on 06/14/1920

 

Chicago (AL) (H) 2 Washington 0

 

The White Sox scored two runs in the bottom of the fourth and Lefty Williams (9-6, 3.10) held the visiting Senators to only three hits and went all the way for the shutout victory. Harry Courtney (2-3, 4.14) was the hard-luck loser.

 

New York (NL) 6 Cleveland (H) 3

 

The Yankees led 3-1 after the fifth but the Indians slowly came back by scoring single runs in the sixth and seventh to tie the score at 3-3. Left fielder Babe Ruth got the lead back when he doubled home first baseman Wally Pipp in the top of the ninth and then New York added two more runs before the inning was over and Bob Shawkey (9-4, 1.79) closed things out for the win.

 

Philadelphia (AL) 2 Detroit (H) 1

 

The A's scored a run in the top of the first and then added a second run in the top of the sixth and Scott Perry (6-7, 3.00) had enough to squeak out a victory over the Tigers in Detroit.

 

Baby Doll Jacobson
St. Louis (AL) (H) 4 Boston (AL) 1

Urban Shocker (9-2, 2.15) continued his strong season as he went all the way for the win, limiting the Red Sox to six hits on the day. Left fielder Baby Doll Jacobson slapped a two-run single in the bottom of the first and the Browns never looked back.

 

Brooklyn (H) 4 Cincinnati 2

 

The Robins led 4-1 after the fifth as they didn't have any big innings, but they did put together multiple scoring innings to take an early lead. Rube Marquard (3-3, 4.01) held off the Reds offense and got the win over Jimmy Ring (4-5, 5.24).

 

New York (NL) (H) 10 St. Louis (NL) 4

 

St. Louis kicked their offense into gear with three runs in the top of the eighth to tie the score at 4-4, only to see New York do the same by scoring six times in the bottom of the inning. Jesse Barnes (7-3, 2.19) not only got the win but also had a 2-for-4 day at the plate and drove in two runs.



 

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