Merkle's Boner

Merkle's Boner
Fred Merkle, 1908

Merkle's Boner refers to the notorious baserunning gaffe committed by rookie Fred Merkle of the New York Giants in a game against the Chicago Cubs in 1908. Merkle's failure to advance to second base on what should have been a game-winning hit led instead to a forceout at second and a tie game. The Cubs won the makeup game later, which proved decisive as they beat the Giants by one game to win the National League pennant in 1908. It has been described as "the most controversial game in baseball history."[1]

Contents

Situation

The NL pennant race of 1908 was a three-team fight among the teams that dominated the league in the first decade of the modern era: the Pirates (pennant winners in 1901, '02 and '03), the Giants (winners in '04 and '05), and the Cubs (winners in 1906 and 1907).[2] The teams were clustered close together in the standings all year, with Pittsburgh never more than 2.5 games up or 5 back,[3] the Giants never more than 4.5 up or 6.5 back,[4] and the Cubs never more than 4 games up or 6 games back.[5] When play began on September 23, 1908, the Cubs and Giants were tied for first place (although the Giants had six more games to play, with an 87-50 record as opposed to the Cubs' 90-53), and the Pirates were 1.5 games back with an 88-54 record.[6]

Fred Merkle was nineteen years old in 1908, the youngest player in the National League.[7] He played in only 38 games all year,[8] eleven of which were at first base as the backup for regular Giants first baseman Fred Tenney.[9] On the morning of Sept. 23, Tenney woke up with a case of lumbago, and Giants manager John McGraw penciled Merkle in at first base. It was the first big-league game Merkle ever started.[10]

The game

Future Hall-of-Famer Christy Mathewson started for the Giants; Jack Pfiester started for the Cubs.[11] As was customary at the time, the game had only two umpires: Bob Emslie on the basepaths and Hank O'Day behind the plate.[12]

The Giants were the home team. Mathewson and Pfiester both pitched shutouts through four innings. In the fifth, Cubs shortstop Joe Tinker hit the ball into the outfield, and when right fielder Mike Donlin could not stop it from going past him deep into the cavernous outfield of the Polo Grounds, Tinker circled the bases for an inside-the-park home run that gave Chicago a 1-0 lead. It was the first homer by Tinker and the first homer off of Mathewson since a homer by Tinker on July 17.[13] The Giants tied the score in the sixth when Buck Herzog singled, advanced to second on an error, advanced to third on a sacrifice by Roger Bresnahan and scored on a single by Donlin. The game was still tied 1-1 when the Giants came to bat in the bottom of the ninth.[14]

The boner

Fans on Coogan's Bluff watch Merkle's Boner, Sept. 23, 1908

Pfiester remained on the mound for Chicago. Cy Seymour led off with a groundout to second. Art Devlin singled, putting the winning run on first base with one out. Moose McCormick grounded sharply to second, but Devlin's aggressive slide prevented a double play and allowed McCormick to reach first base safely on a fielder's choice.[15] With two outs and McCormick on first, Fred Merkle came up to bat. Merkle, who only had 47 plate appearances in the entire 1908 season,[8] singled down the right-field line. McCormick, the potential winning run, advanced to third base.[16]

Shortstop Al Bridwell came up to bat next -- two outs, runners on the corners. Bridwell swung at the first pitch from Pfiester, a fastball, and drilled a single into center field. McCormick ran home from third, and the game appeared to be over, a 2-1 Giants victory. Giants fans poured out of the stands and mobbed the field. Merkle, advancing from first base, saw the fans swarming onto the playing field. He turned back to the dugout without ever touching second.[17] Official rule 4.09 states that "A run is not scored if the runner advances to home base during a play in which the third out is made ... by any runner being forced out".[18] However, in 1908, this force-out rule was usually not enforced on walkoff hits.[19][20]

Unfortunately for Fred Merkle, Cubs second baseman Johnny Evers saw an opportunity to have the rule enforced. He shouted to center fielder Solly Hofman, who, amid the chaos caused by thousands of celebrating Giants fans, retrieved the ball and threw it to Evers. According to one account, Joe McGinnity, a Giants pitcher who was coaching first base that day, intercepted the ball and threw it away into the crowd of fans. Evers retrieved the ball—or found a different ball—and touched second base. Umpires Emslie and O'Day hurriedly consulted and O'Day, who saw the play from home plate, ruled that Merkle had not touched second base, and on that basis Emslie ruled him out on a force and O'Day ruled that the run did not score.[21]

The play was immediately controversial. Different newspapers told different stories of who had gotten the ball to Evers and how. Christy Mathewson insisted that "Merkle touched second base. I saw him do it." One newspaper claimed that Cub players physically restrained Merkle from advancing to second. Retelling the story in 1944, Evers insisted that after McGinnity (who wasn't playing in the game) had thrown the ball away, Cubs pitcher Rube Kroh (who also wasn't in the game) retrieved it from a fan and threw it to shortstop Tinker, who threw it to Evers. (By rule, after a fan or a player who was not in the game touched the ball, it should have been ruled dead.) A contemporary account from the Chicago Tribune supports this version.[22] However, eight years prior to that, Evers claimed to have gotten the ball directly from Hofman. Five years after the play, Merkle admitted that he'd left the field without touching second, but only after umpire Emslie assured them that they'd won the game. In 1914 O'Day said that Evers' tag was irrelevant: he'd called the third out after McGinnity interfered with the throw from center field.[23] Future Hall of Fame umpire Bill Klem said Merkle's Boner was "the rottenest decision in the history of baseball"; Klem believed that the force rule was meant to apply to infield hits, not balls hit to the outfield.[24]

Replayed game

O'Day ruled the game over on account of darkness.[25] The game ended a 1-1 tie. National League president Harry Pulliam upheld the ruling. On October 2, Pulliam rejected the Giants' appeal of O'Day's ruling and the Cubs' call for a forfeit victory and again upheld the umpires, declaring the force play on Merkle valid and the game a tie.[26] The Cubs-Giants-Pirates pennant race continued to the final days. The Giants were forced to end the season by playing ten games in seven days due to rainouts.[27] After Merkle's boner, the Giants won 10 of their last 15 games to finish 98-55. The Cubs won eight of their last ten after the Merkle game to also finish 98-55. The Pirates, who beat the Dodgers 2-1 on Sept. 23 to gain a half-game on their rivals, won nine of their last ten to force a makeup game with the Cubs on October 4. The Cubs beat the Pirates 5-2, leaving themselves tied with the Giants and with the Pirates a half-game back of both teams at 98-56, and thus eliminated.

On October 6 the National League Board of Directors agreed with its umpires and with Hank Pulliam, making a final ruling that Merkle had failed to touch second base and that the force rule was correctly applied.[28] This left the Cubs and Giants tied at 98-55 and required a makeup game in order to decide the National League pennant. In order to decide the pennant (and a spot in the World Series), the teams had to replay the tie game on October 8. Mathewson, scheduled to start the game, said "I'm not fit to pitch today. I'm dog tired."[29] The crowd was estimated at forty thousand, the biggest in baseball history at that time.[30] Pfiester pitched for the Cubs again in the rematch,[31] but was removed from the game in the first inning after hitting Tenney, walking Herzog (who was promptly picked off), giving up an RBI double to Donlin, and walking Seymour. Future Hall of Famer Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown entered the game in relief and got out of the jam with only one run allowed.[32] In the Cub third Tinker led off with a triple and scored on a single by Johnny Kling. Evers walked, Frank Schulte followed with an RBI double, and Frank Chance followed with a two-run double.[33] From there Chicago cruised to a 4-2 victory, becoming champions of the National League for the third straight year. New York was left without a title they thought was theirs.

Aftermath

The Cubs went on to win the 1908 World Series, beating Ty Cobb and the Detroit Tigers four games to one. Over a century later, it remains the last championship in Cub franchise history. The Pirates won the 1909 World Series, also against Cobb's Tigers. The Giants then returned to the World Series for 3 straight years, 1911-13, only to lose each year--to the first of Connie Mack's two Philadelphia Athletics dynasties in 1911 and 1913, and the Boston Red Sox in 1912. John McGraw's club would not win another championship until 1921, when they defeated the emerging New York Yankees featuring Babe Ruth 2 consecutive years in the Yankees' first World Series appearances.

The New York Times game story for Sept. 23, 1908 blamed the loss on "Censurable stupidity on the part of player Merkle".[34] For the rest of his life he would live with the nickname of "Bonehead".[35] Merkle replaced Tenney as the full-time Giants first baseman in 1910 and was a regular for the Giants, Dodgers and Cubs for another ten years. He played in five World Series, all for the losing team.[36] Bitter over the events of the Merkle's Boner game, Merkle avoided baseball after his playing career finally ended in 1926. When he finally appeared at a Giants old-timers' game in 1950, he got a standing ovation.[35]

References

Inline citations
  1. ^ Murphy, p. 421
  2. ^ Baseball Reference all-time NL win table
  3. ^ 1908 Pirates page
  4. ^ 1908 Giants page
  5. ^ 1908 Cubs
  6. ^ NL Standings after Sept. 22, 1908
  7. ^ Vaccaro, Mike (2009). The First Fall Classic (E-book ed.). Doubleday. p. 232. ISBN 9780385532181. 
  8. ^ a b 1908 Giants stats page
  9. ^ 1908 Giants fielding stats
  10. ^ Murphy, p. 431
  11. ^ Box score for game
  12. ^ Murphy, pp. 425-6
  13. ^ Murphy, p. 433
  14. ^ Murphy, p. 434
  15. ^ Murphy, p. 435
  16. ^ Murphy, p. 437
  17. ^ Murphy, p. 439
  18. ^ MLB Official Rules, Section 4
  19. ^ Sherman, Ed (September 23, 2008). "100-year Anniversary of 'Merkle’s Boner'". Chicago Tribune: p. 5. http://archives.chicagotribune.com/2008/sep/22/sports/chi-080922-chicago-cubs-merkles-boner. Retrieved 2009-07-30. 
  20. ^ Murphy, p. 446
  21. ^ Murphy, pp. 439-441
  22. ^ Macht, Norman. "Scoring the Merkle Play". The Inside Game 8 (4): 6. http://www.sabr.org/cmsFiles/Files/theinsidegame-volume8no4.pdf. 
  23. ^ Murphy, pp. 442-444
  24. ^ Murphy, p. 447
  25. ^ Murphy, p. 450
  26. ^ Murphy, p. 561
  27. ^ Murphy, p. 543
  28. ^ Murphy, p. 584
  29. ^ Murphy, p. 591
  30. ^ Murphy, p. 601
  31. ^ Murphy, p. 608
  32. ^ Murphy, pp. 609-610
  33. ^ Murphy, 612-614
  34. ^ "A Boner Buries The Giants". New York Times. September 23, 1908. http://www.nytimes.com/packages/html/sports/year_in_sports/09.23.html. 
  35. ^ a b Sherman, Ed (Sept. 23, 2008). "Sadly, one play defined Merkle's career". ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/print?id=3604289&type=story. 
  36. ^ Fred Merkle stat page
Bibliography
  • Murphy, Cait (2008). Crazy '08 (E-book ed.). Harper Collins. ISBN 9780061578298. 

Further reading

  • Anderson, David W. (2000). More Than Merkle: A History of the Best and Most Exciting Baseball Season in Human History. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-803-21056-6.
  • Cameron, Mike. (2010). Public Bonehead, Private Hero: The Real Legacy of Baseball's Fred Merkle. Crystal Lake, Illinois: Sporting Chance Press. ISBN 0-981-93421-8.
  • Fleming, G.H. (1981). The Unforgettable Season: The Most Exciting & Calamitous Pennant Race of All Time. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston. ISBN 0-030-56221-X.
  • Murphy, Cait. (2007). Crazy '08: How a Cast of Cranks, Rogues, Boneheads, and Magnates Created the Greatest Year in Baseball History. New York: Harper Collins/Smithsonian Books. ISBN 0-060-88937-3.

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