Wednesday, April 18, 2018

A Trip In A Baseball Time Capsule

Thanks to a drive with a World War II veteran named Irwin, I was introduced to a Baseball Time Capsule of sorts, something a baseball fan can appreciate.

It's Red Smith On Baseball a collection of columns by Green Bay-born and raised Walter Wellesley "Red" Smith (Sept. 25, 1905-Jan. 15, 1982). Smith was a sportswriter, a columnist for five decades who influenced a lot of journalists. He started his newspaper career with the Milwaukee Sentinel.

The book carries 167 Smith columns starting in 1941 and carrying on through 1981. It's an interesting walk down the halls of baseball history. And a reflection of society as well. After all, Smith started writing about baseball before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier. He writes a little about the Negro Leagues, but other than Robinson, Larry Doby and the great pitcher Satchel Paige, he doesn't touch on the standout names of that league -- Theodore Roosevelt Radcliffe (better known as Double-Duty after he pitched one game of a championship doubleheader and caught the second) or Josh Gibson or Buck O'Neil.

Granted, as you read his columns from the late 1940s -- Larry Doby has joined Jackie Robinson in the majors -- he does include the terms "colored" and "Negro" to describe these players. Keep in mind this was common for the time. Doesn't make it right, but attitudes needed changing. And unfortunately, continue to need change.

That's the biggest negative. On the plus side, he touches on players like "Losing Pitcher" Mulcahy, as Hugh Mulcahy was known. A pre-WWII thrower with the woeful Philadelphia Phillies, Mulcahy pitched in a then-National League record 56 games in his first season. In the span of two seasons (1938 & 1940) he lost 42 times. But he was a good pitcher saddled with a poor supporting cast. Back then, good players on bad clubs ended up making their money leaving for New York or Chicago or elsewhere. But before Mulcahy could cash in, he was drafted -- and ended up losing his best years to the war.

Other pluses worth noting? Details of re-creating a road game for radio relying on telegraph play-by-play; Hank Greenberg's farewell to baseball; Learning of Babe Ruth's death during a steamship crossing of the Atlantic, and talking about the 53-year-old Ruth's final months; The story of a Lou Gehrig medal, presented by Japan and returned via the Jimmy Doolittle Raid on Tokyo. No kidding...

The list goes on and on from Smith, a storyteller who painted great pictures and told stories in column after column. Recommended reading for the die-hard baseball fan.


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