As the 1919 World Series scandal simmered throughout the 1920 season, tight pennant races drove attendance to new peaks and presaged a decade of general prosperity for baseball. Babe Ruth shattered his own home-run record and, buoyed by a booming economy, professional sports enjoyed what sportswriters termed a “Golden Age of Sports.” Throughout the tumultuous 1920s, Major League Baseball remained a mixture of competition and cooperation. Teams could improve by player trades, buying Minor League stars, or signing untried youths. Players and owners had their usual contentious relationship, with owners maintaining considerable control over their players. Owners adjusted the game so that the 1920s witnessed a surge in slugging and a diminution in base stealing, and they provided a better ballpark experience by both improving their stadiums and minimizing disruptions by rowdy fans. However, they hesitated to adapt to new technologies such as radio, electrical lighting, and air travel. The Major Leagues remained an enclave for white people, while African Americans toiled in the newly established Negro Leagues, where salaries and profits were skimpy. By analyzing the economic and financial aspects of Major League Baseball, The Age of Ruth and Landis shows how baseball during the 1920s experienced both strife and prosperity, innovation and conservatism. With figures such as the incomparable Babe Ruth, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, Rogers Hornsby, Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, Tris Speaker, and Eddie Collins, the decade featured an exciting brand of livelier baseball, new stadiums, and overall stability.
When in New York City, he would go to Donahue's in Wayne, New Jersey, about 30 miles away. The reason a remote spot to relax at was necessary, given both his celebrity and his apparent willingness to please was exemplified in his advice ...
“He had white hair at an early age,” Landis said. “He picked up the nickname [Squire] and never gave it up. It really fit his personality.” The commissioner and young Landis's father, Frederick, who served as a US congressman, ...
In Double Plays and Double Crosses: The Black Sox and Baseball in 1920, Don Zminda tells the story of an unforgettable team and an unforgettable year in baseball and American history.
George Herman "Babe" Ruth is widely regarded as the most recognized American sports icon. In 1902 at age 7 disheartened parents abruptly delivered him to an "orphanage." Called incorrigible" his...
Ruth Suspended , Fined by Landis ( 1921 ) source : The Sporting News , December 15 , 1921 In the early twentieth century baseball players often supplemented their meager salaries by forming their own teams and touring ...
David Surdam and Michael Haupert, The Age of Ruth and Landis: The Economics of Baseball During the Roaring Twenties (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2018), 280–281. 24. White, Creating the National Pastime, 58. 25.
... immortalized in Franklin P. Adams's poem: These are the saddest of possible words— Tinker to Evers to Chance. ... It is also significant that they were voted into the Hall of Fame as a unit, not individually; and, ...
While he did get hefty in his later years , there were many times when he could " steal you a base " over his career . He even teamed up with Lou Gehrig on double steals , sometimes with a steal of home .
Ruth also did his best friend among sportswriters a bad turn . Bill Slocum knew how Ruth felt but kept quiet , and now Ruth had given Williams a scoop . Ruth had no sense of press - agentry at all . After the conversation with Williams ...
Cap Anson, no delicate orchid, called them the “Cleveland hoodlums.” Journeyman infielder Joe Quinn told a Cleveland reporter—only half in jest—“it used to be that a player always saw that his insurance papers were right before coming ...