Monday, January 14, 2013

More on the "black sox'

I remembered a few names incorrectly, but the villans remain the same.  The entire section on pitcher v. the rest of the position remains the same.  All statements on players v. owners remain the same.  However, I am posting this to correct whatever details I may have in error (I wrote it without reference to spellings, etc.) and even allowed Cincinnatti to take credit for the fix when the honor goes to New York.  In all cases, my opinions are correct, but some of the facts were in error.  None of them affects the opinions.

However, here is another, more carefully researched, article:


Black Sox Scandal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from Comiskey and the black sox trial)
The eight "Chicago Black Sox"
1919 Chicago White Sox team photo
The Black Sox Scandal took place around and during the play of Major League Baseball's 1919 World Series. Eight members of the Chicago White Sox were banned for life from baseball for intentionally losinggames, which allowed the Cincinnati Reds to win the World Series. The conspiracy was the brainchild of White Sox first baseman Arnold "Chick" Gandil, who had longstanding ties to petty underworld figures. He persuaded Joseph "Sport" Sullivan, a friend and professional gambler, that the fix could be pulled off. New York gangster Arnold Rothsteinsupplied the money through his lieutenant Abe Attell, a former featherweight boxing champion.
Gandil enlisted several of his teammates, motivated by a dislike of club owner Charles Comiskey (whose miserliness they resented) to implement the fix; Comiskey had developed a reputation for underpaying his players for years (under the MLB reserve clause, players either had to take the salary they were offered, or couldn't play Major League Baseball, as they were property of the original team, and no other team was allowed to sign them).[1][2][3] All of them were members of a faction on the team that resented the more straight-laced players on the squad, such as second baseman Eddie Collins, a graduate of Columbia College of Columbia University, catcher Ray Schalk, and pitcher Red Faber. By most contemporary accounts, the two factions almost never spoke to each other on or off the field, and the only thing they had in common was a resentment of Comiskey.[4]
Starting pitchers Eddie Cicotte and Claude "Lefty" WilliamsoutfielderOscar "Happy" Felsch, and shortstop Charles "Swede" Risberg were all principally involved with Gandil. Third baseman Buck Weaver attended a meeting where the fix was discussed, but decided not to participate. He was later banned with the others for knowing of the fix but not reporting it.
Although George “Buck” Weaver attended meetings with some of his teammates and the gamblers, he played to the best of his ability during the series. During the series he batted a .324 and he had a box score of 11-34. Those stats were higher than some of his batting averages in his previous years. He had a career batting average of .272 which was also lower than what he batted at the World Series. Weaver was also one of the few players to attend the meetings who didn’t receive any money.
Although he hardly played in the series, utility infielder Fred McMullin got word of the fix and threatened to report the others unless he was in on the payoff. As a small coincidence, McMullin was a former teammate of "Sleepy" Bill Burns, who had a minor role in the fix. Both played for the Los Angeles Angels of the Pacific Coast League.[5]Star outfielder "Shoeless" Joe Jackson was also mentioned as a participant, though his involvement is disputed.
Stories of the Black Sox scandal have usually included Comiskey as a villain, focusing in particular on his intentions regarding a clause in Cicotte's contract that would have paid Cicotte an additional $10,000 bonus for winning 30 games. According to Eliot Asinof's account of the events, Eight Men Out, Cicotte was "rested" for the season's final two weeks after reaching his 29th win, presumably to deny him the bonus. However, the record is perhaps more complex. Cicotte won his 29th game on September 19, had an ineffective start on September 24, and was pulled after a few innings in a tuneup on the season's final day, September 28 (the World Series beginning 3 days later).[6] However, the allegation is probably substantiated in reference to the 1917 season, when Cicotte won 28 games before being benched.

Contents

  [hide

[edit]Series

Even before the Series started on October 2, there were rumors among gamblers that the series was fixed, and a sudden influx of money being bet on Cincinnati caused the odds against them to fall rapidly. These rumors also reached the press box where a number of correspondents, including Hugh Fullerton of the Chicago Herald and Examiner and ex-player and manager Christy Mathewson, resolved to compare notes on any plays and players that they felt were questionable. Despite the rampant rumors, gamblers continued to wager heavily against the White Sox.
However, most fans and observers were taking the series at face value. On October 2, the day of Game One, the Philadelphia Bulletin published a poem which would quickly prove to be ironic:
Still, it really doesn't matter,
After all, who wins the flag.
Good clean sport is what we're after,
And we aim to make our brag
To each near or distant nation
Whereon shines the sporting sun
That of all our games gymnastic
Base ball is the cleanest one!
On the second pitch of the Series, Eddie Cicotte struck Cincinnati leadoff hitter Morrie Rath in the back, delivering a pre-arranged signal confirming the players' willingness to go through with the fix.[7]

[edit]Shoeless Joe Jackson

The extent of Joe Jackson's part in the conspiracy remains controversial. Jackson maintained that he was innocent. He had a Series-leading .375 batting average – including the Series' only home run – threw out five baserunners, and handled 30 chances in the outfield with no errors. However, he batted far worse in the five games that the White Sox lost, with a batting average of .286 in those games (although this was still an above-average batting average; the National and American Leagues hit a combined .263 in the 1919 season[8]). Three of his six RBIs came in the losses, including the aforementioned home run, and a double in Game 8 when the Reds had a large lead and the series was all but over. Still, in that game a long foul ball was caught at the fence with runners on second and third, depriving Jackson of a chance to drive in the runners. Statistics also show that in the other games that the White Sox lost, only five of Jackson's at-bats came with a man in scoring position, and he advanced the runners twice.
One play in particular has been subjected to much scrutiny. In the fifth inning of Game 4, with a Cincinnati player on second, Jackson fielded a single hit to left field and threw home. Chick Gandil, another leader of the fix, later admitted to yelling at Cicotte to intercept the throw. The run scored and the White Sox lost the game 2–0.[9]Cicotte, whose guilt is undisputed, made two errors in that fifth inning alone.
Another argument, presented in the book Eight Men Out, is that because Jackson was illiterate, he had little awareness of the seriousness of the plot, and thus he consented to it only when Swede Risberg threatened him and his family.
Years later, all of the implicated players said that Jackson was never present at any of the meetings they had with the gamblers. Lefty Williams, Jackson's roommate, later said that they only brought up Jackson in hopes of giving them more credibility with the gamblers.[7]
Williams, one of the "Eight Men Out," lost three games, a Series record. Dickie Kerr, who was not part of the fix, won both of his starts. Cicotte bore down and won Game 7 of the best-of-9 Series; he was angry that the gamblers were now reneging on their promises, as they claimed that all the money was in the hands of bookies. Sullivan then paid infamous gangster Harry F to threaten to hurt Williams and his family if he didn't lose the last game.[10]

[edit]Fallout

The rumors dogged the White Sox throughout the 1920 season, as they battled the Cleveland Indians for theAmerican League pennant that year, and stories of corruption touched players on other clubs as well. At last, in September 1920, a grand jury was convened to investigate.
Two players, Eddie Cicotte and "Shoeless" Joe Jackson, confessed their participation in the scheme to the Chicago grand jury on September 28, 1920.[11] On the eve of their final season series, the White Sox were in a virtual tie for first place with the Cleveland Indians. The Sox would need to win all 3 of their remaining games and then hope for Cleveland to stumble, as the Indians had more games in hand. Despite the season being on the line, White Sox owner Charles Comiskey suspended the seven White Sox still in the majors (Chick Gandil had conspicuously left the team and was playing semi-pro ball). He said that he had no choice but to suspend them, even though this action likely cost the White Sox any chance of winning that year's American League pennant. The White Sox lost 2 of 3 in their final series against the St. Louis Browns and finished in second place, two games behind Cleveland.
The damage to the sport's reputation led the owners to appoint federal judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis as the first Commissioner of Baseball prior to the start of the 1921 season. With the unprecedented powers granted to him by the owners, and using a precedent that saw Babe BortonHarl MaggertGene Dale, and Bill Rumlerbanned from the Pacific Coast League for match fixing,[12] Landis placed all eight accused players on an "ineligible list", banning them from major and minor league baseball. Comiskey supported Landis by giving the seven who remained under contract to the White Sox their unconditional release.
Infielders Swede Risberg (left) andBuck Weaver during their 1921 trial.
Prior to the trial, key evidence went missing from the Cook CountyCourthouse, including the signed confessions of Cicotte and Jackson, who subsequently recanted their confessions. The players were acquitted. (Some years later, the missing confessions reappeared in the possession of Comiskey's lawyer.)[13]
Player John F. "Shano" Collins is named as the wronged party in the indictments of the key figures in the Black Sox scandal. The indictment claims that by throwing the World Series, the alleged conspirators defrauded him of $1,784.[14]
Landis was not as forgiving, and was quick to quash any prospect that he might re-instate the implicated players. On August 3, 1921, the day after the players were acquitted, the Commissioner issued his own verdict:
Regardless of the verdict of juries, no player who throws a ball game, no player who undertakes or promises to throw a ball game, no player who sits in confidence with a bunch of crooked ballplayers and gamblers, where the ways and means of throwing a game are discussed and does not promptly tell his club about it, will ever play professional baseball.[15]
Landis had not officially described his decision as being "lifetime" or "permanent" suspensions. In the film Eight Men Out Landis (played by John Anderson) is portrayed to have said "no player who throws a ball game... will ever play professional baseball again." however Landis is not contemporarily documented using the word again.Nevertheless, regardless of what Landis' exact words were, following his statement it was universally understood that all eight implicated White Sox would be banned from Major League Baseball for life. Two other players believed to be involved were also banned.
With seven of their best players permanently sidelined, the White Sox crashed into seventh place in 1921 and would not be a factor in a pennant race again until 1936, five years after Comiskey's death. They would not win another American League championship until 1959 (a then-record 40-year gap) nor another World Series until2005, prompting some to comment about a Curse of the Black Sox.
After being banned, Risberg and several other members of the Black Sox tried to organize a three-state barnstorming tour. However, they were forced to cancel those plans after Landis let it be known that anyone who played with or against them would also be banned from baseball for life. They then announced plans to play a regular exhibition game every Sunday in Chicago, but the Chicago City Council threatened to cancel the license of any ballpark that hosted them.[7]
The 10 players not implicated in the gambling scandal, as well as manager Kid Gleason, were each given bonus checks in the amount of $1500 by Charles A. Comiskey in the fall of 1920 — the difference between the winners' and losers' share for participation in the 1919 World Series.[16]

[edit]Banned players

  • Eddie Cicotte, pitcher, died on May 5, 1969, had the longest life; living to the age of 84. Admitted involvement in the fix.[citation needed]
  • Oscar "Happy" Felsch, center fielder, died on August 17, 1964, at 72.
  • Arnold "Chick" Gandil, first baseman. The leader of the players who were in on the fix. He did not play in the majors in 1920, playing semi-pro ball instead. In a 1956 Sports Illustrated article, he expressed remorse for the scheme, but claimed that the players had actually abandoned it when it became apparent they were going to be watched closely. According to Gandil, the players' numerous errors were a result of fear that they were being watched.[17][18] He died on December 13, 1970, at 82.
  • "Shoeless" Joe Jackson, the star outfielder, one of the best hitters in the game, confessed in sworn grand jury testimony to having accepted $5,000 cash from the gamblers. He later recanted his confession and protested his innocence to no effect until his death on December 5, 1951, at 64; he was the first of the eight banned White Sox players to die. Years later, the other players all said that Jackson had never been involved in any of the meetings with the gamblers, and other evidence has since surfaced that casts doubt on his role.[7]
  • Fred McMullin, utility infielder. McMullin would not have been included in the fix had he not overheard the other players' conversations. He threatened to tell all if not included.[citation needed] His role as team scout may have had more impact on the fix, since he saw minimal playing time in the series. He died on November 20, 1952, at 61.
  • Charles "Swede" Risberg, shortstop. Risberg was Gandil's assistant. The last living player among the Black Sox, he lived on until October 13, 1975, his 81st birthday.
  • George "Buck" Weaver, third baseman. Weaver attended the initial meetings, and while he did not go in on the fix, he knew about it.[19] Landis banished him on this basis, stating "Men associating with crooks and gamblers could expect no leniency." On January 13, 1922, Weaver unsuccessfully applied for reinstatement. Like Jackson, Weaver continued to profess his innocence to successive baseball commissioners to no effect. He died on January 31, 1956, at 65.
  • Claude "Lefty" Williams, pitcher. Went 0–3 with a 6.63 ERA for the series. Only one other pitcher in the entire history of baseball – reliever George Frazier of the 1981 New York Yankees – has ever lost three games in one World Series, although it should be noted that the third game Williams lost was Game Eight - baseball's decision to revert to a best of seven Series in 1922 significantly reduced the opportunity for a pitcher to obtain three decisions in a Series. Williams died on November 4, 1959, at 66.
Also banned was Joe Gedeon, second baseman for the St. Louis Browns. Gedeon placed bets since he learned of the fix from Risberg, a friend of his. He informed Comiskey of the fix after the Series in an effort to gain a reward. He was banned for life by Landis along with the eight White Sox.[20]

[edit]Black Sox

Although many believe the Black Sox name to be related to the dark and corrupt nature of the conspiracy, the term "Black Sox" may already have existed before the fix. There is a story that the name "Black Sox" derived from parsimonious owner Charles Comiskey's refusal to pay for the players' uniforms to be laundered, instead insisting that the players themselves pay for the cleaning. As the story goes, the players refused and subsequent games saw the White Sox play in progressively filthier uniforms as dust, sweat and grime collected on the white, woolen uniforms until they took on a much darker shade. Comiskey then had the uniforms washed and deducted the laundry bill from the players' salaries.[21]
On the other hand, Eliot Asinof in his book Eight Men Out makes no such connection, mentioning the filthy uniforms early on but referring to the term "Black Sox" only in connection with the scandal.

[edit]Popular culture

  • Eliot Asinof's book Eight Men Out: The Black Sox and the 1919 World Series is the best-known history of the scandal. Director John Sayles' 1988 film based on Asinof's book is a dramatization of the scandal, focusing largely on Buck Weaver as the one banned player who did not take any money. The 1952 novel The Natural and its 1984 filmed dramatization of the same name were inspired significantly by the events of the scandal.
  • W. P. Kinsella's novel Shoeless Joe is the story of an Iowa farmer who builds a baseball field in his cornfield after hearing a mysterious voice. Later, Shoeless Joe Jackson and other members of the Black Sox come to play on his field. The novel was adapted into the 1989 hit film Field of Dreams. Joe Jackson plays a central role in inspiring protagonist Ray Kinsella to reconcile with his past.
  • Harry Stein's novel Hoopla, alternatingly co-narrated by Buck Weaver and Luther Pond, a fictitious New York Daily News columnist, attempts to view the Black Sox Scandal from Weaver's perspective.
  • Brendan Boyd's novel Blue Ruin: A Novel of the 1919 World Series offers a first-person narrative of the event from the perspective of Sport Sullivan, a Boston gambler involved in fixing the series.
  • In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby, a minor character named Meyer Wolfsheim was said to have helped in the Black Sox scandal, though this is purely fictional. In explanatory notes accompanying the novel's 75th anniversary edition, editor Matthew Bruccoli describes the character as being directly based onArnold Rothstein.
  • In Dan Gutman's novel Shoeless Joe & Me, the protagonist, Joe, goes back in time to try to prevent Shoeless Joe from being banned for life.
  • In the film The Godfather Part II, the fictional gangster Hyman Roth alludes to the scandal when he says, "I've loved baseball ever since Arnold Rothstein fixed the World Series in 1919."
  • The HBO series Boardwalk Empire highlights Arnold Rothstein's involvement in the scandal.
  • The television series Friday the 13th: The Series featured an episode titled "The Mephisto Ring" about a cursed 1919 World Series ring that killed whoever wore it, allowing its owner to view the future outcome of a sporting event in return for supplying it with victims. The curse was due to the association the ring had with 'past evil', a nod to the gambling syndicate responsible for the scandal.
  • The History Channel's Pawn Stars had bought a baseball that was signed from 2 members of the scandal for $900.

[edit]See also

[edit]References

  1. ^ Morris, Peter. "The Reserve Clause." A Game of Inches: the Stories behind the Innovations That Shaped Baseball. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2010. Print.
  2. ^ "The Ballplayers – Charlie Comiskey". BaseballLibrary.com. Retrieved December 19, 2011.
  3. ^ http://www.1919blacksox.com/participants.htm
  4. ^ "The White Sox at". 1919blacksox.com. Retrieved August 6, 2009.
  5. ^ http://www.1919blacksox.com/mcmullin2.htm
  6. ^ "Cicotte's 29 Wins in 1919". Thediamondangle.com. September 19, 1919. Retrieved August 6, 2009.
  7. a b c d Purdy, Dennis (2006). The Team-by-Team Encyclopedia of Major League Baseball. New York City:WorkmanISBN 0-7611-3943-5.
  8. ^ "League Year-by-Year Batting"Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved April 6, 2010.
  9. ^ Arnold "Chick" Gandil (as told to Melvin Durslag), "This is My Story of the Black Sox Series," Sports Illustrated, September 17, 1956
  10. ^ Famous American Trials: The Black Sox Trial 1921. ND. NP. Feb. 5, 2011. http://www.law.umkc.edu
  11. ^ "Chicotte Tells What His Orders Were in Series". Minnesota Daily Star: p. 5. September 29, 1920.
  12. ^ Lamb, Bill. "Gene Dale"Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved January 10, 2013.
  13. ^ Eight Men Out. pp. 289–291.
  14. ^ Doug Linder (July 5, 1921). "indictpartic". Law.umkc.edu. Retrieved August 6, 2009.
  15. ^ "The Chicago Black Sox banned from baseball". ESPN. November 19, 2003. Retrieved January 11, 2011.
  16. ^ "Honest White Sox Get $1,500 Apiece for 1919 Loses". Minnesota Daily Star: p. 5. October 5, 1920.
  17. ^ Ginsburg, Daniel. "The Baseball Biography Project Chick Gandil". BIOPROJ.SABR.ORG. Retrieved February 2, 2009.
  18. ^ Gandil, Arnold (Chick). This is My Story of the Black Sox SeriesSports Illustrated, September 17, 1956.
  19. ^ Linder, Douglas. "Famous American Trials"The Black Sox Trial: An Account. Retrieved March 29, 2011.
  20. ^ "The Baseball Biography Project". Bioproj.Sabr.Org. Retrieved August 6, 2009.
  21. ^ Burns, Ken (Director) (1994). [[1] Baseball: Inning 3] (PBS Television miniseries). PBS.

[edit]Sources

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Baseball's Hall of Fame


THE ABSURD TIMES






Illustrations: Chuck Comisky, owner of the White Sox and revered member of Baseball's Hall of Fame.

I have to start out by saying that I can't imagine this being translated into any other language, and this leaves out some readers, and will be fairly unintelligible to those who live in other countries whose language is English, former British colonies and prison camps such as Australia and Ireland. So, half the audience is gone. Not only does it use words peculiar to America, but is about a uniquely American subject, baseball, that has a reverence here shared only in Japan where they, in the words of Casey Stengel, try to “play baseball with short fingers.”



Before I tell you about it, let me relate what I heard recently. Someone said he got the Mayan 2013 calendar in the mail – 13 sheets of blank paper. So, onward!



It also proves the point that Americans have no memory at all and reinforces Gore Vidal's appellation of The United States of Amnesia.



The point is that the baseball writers met this year to decide who gets elected to the Cooperstown Hall of Fame, enshrined in the memory of this wonderful and pure American pass-time. A baseball writer is someone who, by definition, has no sense of history, no sense of the facts, and never any any ability to throw or hit a baseball properly and who probably got the shit beaten outtake themselves by people who could play baseball as they were growing up as kids. If they ever did play, they were the kid who always got picked last.



So we need to look at this pure sport, the one the sportwriters decided no body was worthy of mention, including people like Barry Bonds with more home runs in his lifetime than anyone else, ever, and Roger Clemens, a fat slob who, nevertheless, knew how to throw a baseball better and faster than almost anyone else of his time. Sammy Soza and a few other were also excluded. Why were they excluded? Because they may have used steroids! How evil! In this pure sport with such a hallowed history of purity and honesty, we certainly can not allow someone who may have used drugs to play.



Lets look at that history.



We needn't go all the way back except to mention that there is one Baseball record that will never be broken: Cy Young's 511 lifetime wins. Think of it, it would take 25 years of winning 20 games and even then you would be 11 short.



We can start with the first big scandal, the so-called “Black-Sox” of 1919 who threw the world series. Several players were banned from the game for life, including the famous “Shoeless” Joe Jackson (who did wear shoes) who hardly knew what the hell was going on. Well, yes, they did throw the series, but the story of what really happened is hardly known – even the movie “9 Men Out” that has the great and late Studs Terkel in it tells only most of the story.



The White Sox were owned by big Chuck Comisky who also owned most of the south side of Chicago and its judicial system. This mobster who was ahead of his time had a contract with the star pitcher Ed Cicotte that had a bonus clause of $10,000 in it if he won 30 games. When he won his 29th, sometime in late July or early August, Comisky called the manager in and told him not to let him start until the season was over. He did not want to pay the money owed to a peasant and indentured servant. In fact, he cheated every single player on his team, a team that was by far the best of its time.  I should also point out that Comisky did play professional baseball himself, unlike our current owners.



One of those players had a brain, a first baseman by the name of Hal Chase. Cicotte, since he was a pitcher also had a brain. The two of them worked out a scheme involving a few of the other players to get money clearly due them from Comisky but get it from gamblers from Cincinnati, a town best known for WKRP, a television show of the early 80s. There was no proof against them, and one, Joe Jackson, was one of the players with the highest batting average during the series. Some sports writer made up a story about a poor little orphan chile who spoke up as Joe left the court room, “Say it isn't so, Joe.” Well, the truth is, Joe was taken out of the building trough a back door, no one knew he was leaving, it was midnight, and the story was pure bullshit, like most crap about the game.



Chuck Comisky and his fellow owners had all the morality of the Board of Directors of AIG who are suing the Government for bailing them out with billions of our dollars and manners that would make his successor, Al Capone, look like a cross between Cary Grant and a choir boy.



They had a slavish old man called “Mountain” Landis, a stick of a coward, to “save the games” as commissioner, banished them for life. So how do we hear about this?



Did you know that the announcers were owned by the owners of the team? Remember Harry Cary who used to guzzle beer like water from a wine glass would shout and cry all along and was barely kept aware of what was going on by another announcer named Jack Buck? The team was owned by Auggie Busch, a gnome like creature straight from the first act of Wagner's Das Reingold, and a pure fascist. The family fired Harry after he felt up the wife of one of the Busch family members and he went on St. Louis television drinking from a can of Schlitz. He later moved to Chicago, the Sox and then the Cubs.



There were time when no body was elected to this venerable Hall of Fame, like 1949 and 1950, but those years, well, take it as a fact that there were no worthwhile candidates. Just look back at some of the most hapless Cubs teams of the 50s, the team the songwriter Steve Goodman (The City of New Orleans) called the “doormat of the National league”. Those teams were owned by Wrigley who sold chewing gum. They had a sportscaster named Harry Creighton who sold Hamms beer and drank it on camera and by the seventh inning of a double header could not even tell what city he was in.



The only sportscaster of any reputation was Bob Elson of the Chicago White Sox who was most known for reminiscing about Luke Appling during the 60s and who had no idea of what the score was at any given time, or at least kept it secret from radio listeners. He is most remembered by imitations of him by Bob Ueker, yes, the announcer in the movie “Major League,” who imitates Elson in the movie several times.



Yes, this is the game we know as the pure symbol of what it is to be an American. The great Babe Ruth hit more home runs in one season than the rest of the league combined, and drank more beer had laid more women in one night than the rest of the team in a year. Ah yes, the “Babe”!


Now for a long time, the “Babe” held the single season record of 60 home runs. When Roger Maris broke that record, the season had been lengthened, out of greed, to 161 games. The commissioner thus put an asterisk after Maris' record recording that fact. It was dropped eventually. (The Commissioner could use an asterisk, I suppose, and thus molify some of the purists in the case of the “steroid era”.)



Maris, meanwhile, was traded away by the same Yankees to the Kansas City Athletics, now in Oakland. The teams he now played against did not know of his physical problems and thus threw curve balls at him because it is much easier to hit a home run off a fasst ball than a curve. The fact was, the curve, because it is slower, was about the only pitch he could hit at the time.



And who can forget Ty Cobb? Most stolen bases, right? And the biggest, most vile racist ever to play the game, a guy who used to file his spikes sharp to cut up players on the other team as he slid into them. He was the real Georgia Peach if ever there was one. I am not sure, but I doubt whether in his entire career he hit as many home runs as Babe Ruth did in any one of many seasons.



Pete Rose is a person you probably wouldn't like, even if he was on your team, but he did set lifetime records. He was banned from baseball for life because he gambled. Heavens help us! An evil gambler in this pure pass time.



Pitchers, of course, account for most of the imagination and brains on a team. Even the “Babe,” considered “colorful,” did not get that way because he played right field. Nope, he started as a pitcher and held some pitching records that lasted for decades.



“Lefty” Gomez, undoubtedly the best hitter on his team, is in the Hall of fame as a pitcher. He is also known for not showing up at practice until some alligator wrestler in Florida (spring training) showed up at the ballpark complaining that Lefty was stealing his act, wrestling alligators himself and drawing bigger crowds.



Jim Bouton wrote a book called Ball Four revealing what his teammates, the New York Yankees, were really like. How they reacted can be inferred by the title of his second book, I'm Glad You Didn't Take it Personally, or words to that effect.



The great Bill “Spaceman Lee,” who called the strike-zone “Cartesian Co-Ordinates,” used to negotiate his contract with the owner of the Red Sox while sitting in the Zen Lotus position.



“Dizzy” Dean used to call newspapers and give their writers “exclusive” leaks, all different on the same story. “That way, they all got their scoop,” sayz Diz. He'd predict how many games he and his brother would win and then do it, having to win 31 games one year to make it come true. When he pitched against Babe Ruth, he threw very easy pitches to hit. When asked why, he said he had never seen the great Babe Ruth hit a home run.



Not all the players with intelligence and imagination were pitchers, but it certainly was a big factor in their success.


Baseball was a game that was allowed to use a “reserve clause” that keep the players as indentured servants for life! They could either accept the owners' terms or quit the game. That was it.



When the Supreme Court ruled against them for the first time during the 80s, the 1980s, “Catfish Hunter” was immediately given a salary of one million dollars. Before that, it was peanuts. That was the first time I thought maybe I should have signed the contract, but time would not have been on my side anyway.



Today, the media still remains in the pocket of the owners, thugs who blackmail cities with threats to relocate and are billionaires. The press has fans upset at the players when they strike (after all, some make millions), but never think about how much money someone who can afford to pay those salaries has.



Wrigley of the Cubs used to keep a player until he got too good to pay and then sell him, usually to the St. Louis Cardinals, for a profit.



So, Cooperstown, Hall of Fame, know it for what it is, not what some pimply simpleton would have you believe.



Don't get me started on American Football, the game of brain injuries for profit.
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Saturday, January 12, 2013

Attempt to Smear Russia Using Syria -- Your Tax Dollars at Work






http://nsnbc.me/2013/01/12/syria-false-flag-designed-to-discredit-russia/

Syria: False Flag designed to discredit Russia.

Christof Lehmann (nsnbc). According to an unnamed Russian military diplomat some of the allies behind the “Syrian Opposition” are in the planning stages of a false flag operation which has been designed for the purpose of discrediting the reputation of Russia as an honest broker in the Syrian crisis.

On Friday, 11 January 2012 the Russian military diplomat stated that the involved parties are in the process of recruiting Russian, Ukrainian and Belorussian mercenaries who are supposed to take part in the operation.
The mercenaries would then be deployed to locations in Turkey and Jordan where large-scale scenes, supposed to represent destroyed Syrian villages have long been built for training purposes.
The false Russian mercenaries would then engage in mock fire fights with supposed fighters of the Free Syrian Army and be captured. The captured “actors” are then supposed to be interviewed on camera while admitting that they had been deployed from Russia to “support the Syrian Regime”.
The supposed “confessions of the Russian mercenaries” would then be supposed to be aired on international mainstream media such as CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera and others with the intention to discredit Russia and its diplomatic role with regard to solving the crisis in Syria.
The planned false flag should create the backdrop for a diplomatic row and justify regime change and eventually a military intervention by NATO forces. The false flag is most likely also designed to discredit eventual initiatives toward the deployment of UN Blue Chapcas under supervision of the CSTO.
Christof Lehmann – 12.01.2013 – nsnbc
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Friday, January 04, 2013

Honoring Carlos Latuff


THE ABSURD TIMES

AN AWARD FOR CARLOS LATUFF!







Illustration: A cartoon courtesy of Carlos Latuff on the obvious which is what makes it so funny!




Perhaps the best political cartoonist, certainly the best on international affairs, is Carlos Latuff. He has always been on the side of the persecuted, the oppressed, the victims. It may be for this reason that he has been awarded as the Third Most Anti-Semitic in the world. The list makes no mention of Noam Chomsky or any other prominent critics of the oppression of Zionism against the Palestinians, but does place Carlos as number three, just below the Muslim Brotherhood and the Iranian regime. Hm, so we have the head of Egypt, the head of Iran, and then Calos Latuff!

I am telling you, I am not making this up. Here is the complete top ten:

Courtesy of the Simon Weisenthal Center:

1. Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood.

2. The Iranian Regime.

3. Brazilian Cartoonist, Carlos LaTuff.

4. The Soccer Fans of Europe.

5. "Svoboda", the Ukraine's Freedom Party

6. Greece's "Golden Dawn" Party.

7. Hungary's Far-Right party, "Jobbik"

8. Norway, for honoring promoter of Anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.

9. Jacob Augstein, Anti-Semitic Media Hack.

    10. 'Calypso Louie' Farrakhan, for ratcheting up his Jew hatin' in 2012.

He beat out all the soccer (football) fans of Europe! That constitutes millions! I have never counted them, but I'm sure there are over several million.

He beat out the Ukranian Freedom Party. Who? Say what?



In fact, the only other name I recognize easily is Louis Farrakhan, and I really don't have much to say about him. I do think he is funny at times and that his obsession with numerology was weird when I heard it, but never saw him as a threat.



Anyway, we here at the Absurd Times just want to take this opportunity to congratulate Carlos and his recognition!



Being on this list is akin to being on Nixon's enemies list – many felt mortified at being left out.



Thank you Carlos for fighting the good fight!
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Thursday, January 03, 2013

On NSNBC -- Actual Facts in the Media



THE ABSURD TIMES

    The following is sent out by one of the few truly independent publications left in this country.  Yes, we have freedom of speech, but money seems to make all the difference.  This is actually one of the few places left that prints facts suppressed by the Corporate Media.

    Christof Lehmann is a serious and scrupulous publisher and deserves all the support you can give him.  And I mean, he is serious, even though I do know that he has a sense of humor.

    He is so good that Wordpress, I take it, censored his blog.  This is amazing.  It was over Gaddafi and Libya.  I did not know of this publication at the time, so I used sources on social media that were trustworthy to learn facts.

    Now here at the Absurd Times we have a difficult time remaining serious.  From time to time, we do express our outrage, publish facts that are not known, and often try to anger people.

    The trouble is, the people we would like to get angry see through all that and find it funny.  In fact, one way you can tell that we often report the truth is that it is funny, even absurd, because that is the type of world we are living in -- Absurd!

    We have gotten some pretty ridiculous comments, but they fade away.  Really, it was our goal to get banned, blackballed, but we just never generated the audience.

    Until one day, we published our article Gaddafi and History.   Nothing happened here at blogspot.com, but the article about Gaddafi *was* attacked by Facebook as offensive.  That made our day.  It really did.  We tried to repost it, and got a note that there have been objections because it was offensive.  We were thrilled!  We even wrote about it, thanking those who were so outraged at those facts for objecting!  And then we republished it on Facebook from another direction.  No reaction.  Nada.  People these days just do not have the courage of their misconceptions!

    Well, anyway, here is the announcement of the new location along with the appropriate links.

    And we wish them the greatest of success! 

  



Dear nsnbc subscriber.

I want to use the opportunity to wish you a happy, healthy and hopefully more peaceful year 2013. Beside that I want to give you important information about developments at nsnbc and ask you to help us raise minimum 10.000 USD for 2013 to become more efficient at breaking the embargo on truth.

nsnbc - from blog to media collective and to collectively driven daily newspaper.

New Domain to Secure nsnbc against Censorship.

During the last days of 2012 nsnbc moved from a .wordpress.com domain to a .me domain at www.nsnbc.me . 
The move was made to secure that wordpress cannot suddenly close nsnbc such as it happened with the Stop NATO wordpress blog in 2011, during the NATO attack on Libya. But this is not enough. We need to entirely move away from a wordpress format and to a professional media software to secure that you can receive nsnbc every day, and in an improved format. Depending on your donations we will transform nsnbc into a daily online newspaper with high quality news, analysis, opinion and more.

Media Collective - Media by the people for the people.

Some of nsnbc´s most frequent contributors will become co-editors. Other frequent contributors will during 2013 get the possibility to directly upload articles to nsnbc. 
That, combined with a new software platform later in 2013, will allow us to develop into an actual online newspaper. nsnbc wants to bring you daily, high quality news, analysis, opinion, on a wide range of issues and from throughout the world.

Why ? Because Unless we take up the competition with the mainstream media who reach millions every day,  we will continue to be lagging behind - repairing the damage which propaganda and disinformation of corporate and state funded mainstream media has done - rather than being proactive by informing the masses with high quality, independent material. We count on your support because you know that you can count on nsnbc.

I will try my best to keep nsnbc subscriptions free of charge,-  but that requires that you show us your support and appreciation by making a donation now, and to continue making modest donations every once in a while. nsnbc subscribers will therefore receive one monthly e-mail in which I will inform you about latest developments. If enough donations are made, I am considering to add additional features for those who made a donation - such as receiving a personal monthly briefing from one of the editors.

If we shall take up the struggle against war propaganda and disinformation we absolutely depend on your donation. Regardless how small your donation may be, your donation is appreciated and it will help. Some of you live in nations where many earn less than a dollar per day - I hope that some of our more privileged subscribers will make an extra donation to cover for you. If you are economically privileged we would off course also appreciate greater donations. In the monly e-mails you will also receive information about how much nsnbc has received in donations. So far nsnbc has received 50 USD in 2013.

It was me who donated the 50 USD so nsnbc could move to our new domain atwww.nsnbc.me . We still need at least  9.950 USD to reach our minimum goal for 2013 to move to a censorship secured and high quality media format. I count on your support.

Christof Lehmann

YOU CAN MAKE A DONATION BY BANK TRANSFER OR PAYPAL at: http://nsnbc.me/donations/