Monday, July 14, 1930
New York (AL) 9 Chicago (AL) (H) 6 (GM 1)
The White Sox temporarily took a 6-5 lead in the bottom of the seventh when they scored two runs off starter Hank Johnson, but the Yankees answered back with four in the eighth. Lou McEvoy (3-1) made his first appearance in more than a month and went two-plus innings to pick up the win in relief.
New York (AL) 7 Chicago (AL) (H) 6 (10) (GM 2)
The White Sox temporarily took a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the seventh when they scored three runs off starter Red Ruffing (6-7), but as before, the Yankees came back to claim the victory and sweep the doubleheader. This time the Yankees plated one in the ninth to send it to extra innings, and then in the tenth Babe Ruth doubled, Tony Lazzeri tripled him home, and then Lou Gehrig singled home Lazzeri and Ruffing and the Yankees had what they needed.
Note: Carl Reynolds was HBP in the eighth and had to be removed from the game.
Boston (AL) 5 Cleveland (H) 4
Twice the Indians took a two-run lead, and twice the Red Sox tied it back up. In the ninth Charlie Berry led off with a triple and was then successfully squeezed home by Milt Gaston (11-6) to give Boston their first lead of the game. Gaston stayed in to finish the job and got through the ninth untouched.
Note: Boston left fielder Russ Scarritt broke his finger in yesterday's game and will miss the next month. Scarritt hasn't done much stat-wise, but whenever the Red Sox have needed a key hit Scarritt has produced for them.
Billy Rogell |
Detroit (H) 8 Washington 4
Back-to-back triples by John Stone and Mark Koenig got the Tigers off to a fast start as they scored four times in the second. The Tigers continued to score, which was needed as starter George Uhle (12-5) tired towards the end.
Note: The Tigers requested waivers on outfielder Bob Fothergill. Fothergill had some outstanding years for Detroit in the 1920's, but by now was reduced to the occasional pinch-hit opportunity as the Tigers want to rely on their young outfielders. Chances are some other team may step and acquire Fothergill before the week is up (hint, hint). Detroit also farmed out shortstop Billy Rogell to Toronto. Rogell was having a poor season but would be back in 1931 and be part of a solid Detroit infield that would go to the World Series in 1934 and 1935.
Philadelphia (AL) 13 St. Louis (AL) (H) 2
The A's scored at least one run in each of the first six innings and then added a four-spot in the ninth. Mickey Cochrane went 3-for-4 and Al Simmons went 4-for-6 and both ended the game with a .419 batting average. Max Bishop homered as well, his 15th of the season (he only had ten in real life).
Note: A's starter George Earnshaw (10-4) plunked Browns left fielder Red Badgro with a pitch twice in the early innings. Later in the game Browns reliever, Chad Kimsey hit Jimmy Dykes and Kimsey was ejected from the game.
Brooklyn (H) 2 Pittsburgh 0
The first two Robins batters, Johnny Frederick and Neal Finn, both scored in the bottom of the first, and that was all the scoring in this one. Dazzy Vance (10-6) scattered three hits and four walks and got the shut-out.
Tuesday, July 15, 1930
New York (AL) 15 Chicago (AL) (H) 1
Babe Ruth hit a two run homerun in the first and then added a second in the third, and the Yankees were off and running. Ruth ended up 4-for-4 with two homeruns and double and had five RBI's, and was rested after the fifth inning. Ruth now has 30 homeruns and 94 RBI's, but Lou Gehrig is keeping pace with two RBI's in this game, putting him at the 100 mark for the season.
Cleveland (H) 6 Boston (AL) 1
The Red Sox can feel the hot breath of the Yankees on their neck, so perhaps they forgot to care of business today. The first seven Indians reach base against Danny MacFayden (7-9) as Cleveland quickly built a 5-0 lead. Clint Brown (6-9) kept the Boston bats quiet and got the win. Ed Morgan homered (#21) late and bumped his RBI total to 50 for the season.
Washington 10 Detroit (H) 5
The Nationals scored three unearned runs in the first and pounded Tiger starter Waite Hoyt (6-10) pretty soundly all game. The final blow was when Dave Harris hit a grand slam in the top of the sixth to expand the Nationals lead to 10-1. The Tigers did get four in the ninth when Firpo Marberry (14-2) weakened toward the end.
St. Louis (AL) (H) 6 Philadelphia (AL) 5
The Browns scored first and slowly built a 6-2 lead, and they needed every one of those runs as the A's finally broke through against George Blaeholder (5-3) with three runs in the eighth, but Blaeholder held them off the rest of the way to get the complete game victory.
Boston (NL) (H) 4 Chicago (NL) 3
The Cubs put up two in the second, but the Braves put up three in the third and Fred Frankhouse (1-4) held off the powerful Cubs offense to pick up the win. The Cubs hit into two double plays and the Braves hit into three.
Brooklyn (H) 6 Pittsburgh 4
The Pirates scored four times in the top of the first, but Watty Clark (11-4) settled down after that and waited for his teammates to battle back into the game. Ike Boone hit two solo homeruns, his first of the season, and Glenn Wright added a two-run shot and the Robins had their come-from-behind victory.
Cincinnati 1 New York (NL) (H) 0
Cincinnati starter Ray Kolp (7-3) only allowed two Giants hits and outdueled Carl Hubbell (10-6) to claim a Reds win. Catcher Clyde Sukeforth drove home the game's only run on a seventh-inning sacrifice fly.
St. Louis (NL) 4 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 3
Jim Bottomley drove home Chick Hafey in the ninth to put the Cardinals ahead for good and Burleigh Grimes (7-6) got the complete-game victory.
Notes: Cardinals center fielder Taylor Douthit took a pitch off the elbow and was removed from the game in the third. Phillies starter Snipe Hansen complained of arm issues in the sixth and was pulled from the game. Phillies shortstop Tommy Thevenow took a pitch off the ribs in the seventh and he too had to be removed from the game.
Wednesday, July 16, 1930
Philadelphia (AL) 4 Chicago (AL) (H) 1
In a battle of aces, Lefty Grove (18-2) bested Ted Lyons (9-11), but the White Sox fought to the final out. With the score tied 1-1 the A's finally took the lead in the seventh, and then a Jimmie Foxx two-run homerun (#17) in the ninth gave the A's some breathing room. Chicago now has an eight-game losing streak.
Cleveland (H) 7 Washington 3 (GM 1)
Ed Morgan hit a two-run homerun (#22) in the first and Charlie Jamieson hit a two-run homerun (#1) in the second and the Indians and Jake Miller (3-5) held on to win game one of the doubleheader. Miller allowed 14 hits but gave up zero walks in the winning effort.
Cleveland (H) 13 Washington 6 (GM 2)
The Nationals started off by scoring two in the top of the first, but the Indians answered with four in the bottom half of the first, and then added six more in the second. Milt Shoffner (3-1) gave up 15 hits and six walks, but the Nationals couldn't bunch them together today and the Indians took both ends of the doubleheader. Ed Morgan went 3-for-5 with a double and five RBI's.
Russ Scarritt |
Detroit (H) 1 Boston (AL) 0 (11)
Earl Whitehill (6-7) and Jack Russell (8-11) have had some bad outings this year, but not today. Today was a scoreless duel until the bottom of the eleventh. Whitehill argued to be allowed to bat in the eleventh, proceeded to single, and then scored on a Roy Johnson double for the win.
St. Louis (AL) (H) 4 New York (AL) 0
Yankees starter Ed Wells (2-8) pitched well, but Lefty Stewart (14-4) was better. The Browns scored three times in the second and Fred Schulte hit a solo homerun (#2) later for a little insurance.
Pittsburgh 19 Boston (NL) (H) 2 (GM 1)
The score was tied at 2-2 after four innings, then Pittsburgh scored nine times in the fifth and then added five more in the sixth. Every Pirate had a hit and scored, and six different Pirates had three hits on the day. Lead-off man Ira Flagstead went 4-for-7, and Adam Comorosky got his 17th triple.
Pittsburgh 13 Boston (NL) (H) 8 (GM 2)
The Pittsburgh onslaught continued in game two as well. Third baseman Pie Traynor went 5-for-5 and drove in five runs to lead the offense, and Heinie Meine (4-5) didn’t pitch appreciably well but went all the way for the victory. Boston right fielder Lance Richbourg went 4-for-5 with three doubles. Wally Berger had three hits in both games, all singles.
Chicago (NL) 5 Brooklyn (H) 4 (GM 1)
All eyes in baseball are watching this series. The Robins have built their lead back up to eight games over the Cubs, and the Cubs would like to whittle that lead back down. Game one was back and forth, with the score tied at 4-4 after eight. Kiki Cuyler led off the ninth with a single, stole second, went to third on a fly ball, and then scored on a squeeze bunt by Riggs Stephenson. Pat Malone (12-5) got the complete game victory for the Cubs.
Note: In the eighth, the Robins were convinced they had picked Gabby Hartnett off second base, but the umpire said otherwise and shortstop Glenn Wright was ejected for arguing too vociferously.
Chicago (NL) 5 Brooklyn (H) 0 (GM 2)
Charlie Root (11-3) scattered four hits and shutout the Robins to give the Cubs the doubleheader sweep. Root also homered, as did Kiki Cuyler and Gabby Hartnett (his second of the day).
New York (NL) (H) 2 Cincinnati 1
A pitcher's duel broke out unexpectedly. Red Lucas and Tiny Chaplin took a 0-0 game into the seventh when the Reds finally scored when Harry Heilmann doubled home Tony Cuccinello. In the bottom of the seventh Mel Ott hit a two run homerun to give the Giants the lead, and Chaplin did the rest.
Philadelphia (NL) (H) 4 St. Louis (NL) 3 (10)
The Cardinals were hoping to move up on first place Brooklyn but couldn’t get past the last place Phillies. Lefty O'Doul went 3-for-5 with a homerun, but it was his single in the tenth that drove home Denny Sothern with the game winner.
Thursday, July 17, 1930
Philadelphia (AL) 3 Chicago (AL) (H) 0
The White Sox woes continued as Roy Mahaffey (7-3) and the A's gave them their ninth consecutive loss. Tommy Thomas (3-9) actually pitched a good game for the White Sox, but with no run support, it was to no avail.
Washington 10 Cleveland (H) 7
Willis Hudlin (2-14) and the Indians were handling the Nationals just fine and had a 6-3 lead heading into the eighth, but then Washington started rolling. Hudlin could not get the third out and when the smoke cleared Washington had scored seven times in the eighth.
Boston (AL) 22 Detroit 8
Boston knew they were at risk of falling out of fourth place and fifth place Detroit was eager to move up into Boston's spot, so Hod Lisenbee (8-6) took over this game and Boston was safe in fourth for another day. Not only did Lisenbee go all the way for the victory, he went 5-for-6 with four RBI's and three runs scored. Bill Sweeney went 3-for-7 with two homeruns and six RBI's and Earl Webb went 4-for-6 with two homeruns and five RBI's. The Red Sox had 28 hits on the day.
New York (AL) 3 St. Louis (AL) (H) 0
George Pipgras (11-6) allowed only one hit and the Yankees winning ways have continued. Lou Gehrig hit a two-run homerun (#26) in the sixth to give the Yankees their lead and Pipgras did the rest.
Boston (NL) (H) 6 Pittsburgh 5 (13)
Wally Berger hit a two-run homerun (#19) in the first to get the Braves off to an early lead, and the Boston lead lasted until the eighth when Pie Traynor hit a two run homerun of his own to put the Pirates ahead 4-3. In the bottom of the ninth second baseman Freddie Maguire singled home Jimmy Welsh to tie the score to send the game into extra innings. Nobody scored in the tenth or the eleventh, both teams scored once in the twelfth, and in the bottom of the thirteenth Welsh tripled to start off the inning and was squeezed home for the game-winner by catcher Al Spohrer.
Chicago (NL) 2 Brooklyn (H) 0 (14)
Cubs starter Bud Teachout (6-4) didn’t allow a hit until the eleventh inning, but if he had been pitching a no-hitter until that point that leads to the conclusion that the Cubs hadn't likely scored either, which was true. Brooklyn added a second hit in the twelfth, but the scoreless tie was finally broken in the fourteenth when Charlie Grimm doubled home Woody English and Kiki Cuyler, and Teachout then stayed in to finish the job.
St. Louis (NL) 5 New York (NL) (H) 3
The Giants led 3-1 heading into the seventh but with pitcher Syl Johnson (7-8) coming to bat two runners on-base the Cardinals elected to send up pinch-hitter George Puccinelli, making his major league debut. Puccinnelli proceeded to bury one in the upper deck, the Cardinals had their lead and shut down the Giants from there to take the first game of the series.
Philadelphia (NL) (H) 5 Cincinnati 4
Phillies third baseman Pinky Whitney continued his RBI burst and he drove home two in the third to get the Phillies their initial lead and then drove in two more in the seventh to put the Phillies ahead to stay. Ray Benge (5-5) gave way to Harry Smythe who got the two-inning save, but not without some excitement. With one out and the bases loaded Smythe induced Joe Stripp into hitting into a game-ending double play.
Note: Earlier in the game Stripp had been thrown out stealing twice, but both times the throw was dropped and he was declared safe at second, although he remained credited with a caught stealing.
Friday, July 18, 1930
Philadelphia (AL) 8 Chicago (AL) (H) 7
The A's quickly powered up a 7-3 led and George Earnshaw (11-4) appeared to be cruising towards an easy victory, but the White Sox rallied to make it close. Twice the White Sox had the tying run thrown at the plate, and the A's finally had to call upon the services of Lefty Grove to come in and nail down the victory.
Note: Max Bishop drew a walk in each of his first five plate appearances. Then he struck out in his last one.
Cleveland (H) 5 Washington 4
The Indians continue their bedevilment of the Nationals and the Nationals took the lead with a two-run Sam Rice homerun in the top of the first, but Cleveland came right back with two of their own in the bottom half of the first. Washington again plated two, this time in the third, and it looked like Ad Liska, making his first appearance in three weeks, might have what he needed in this one. The Indians persisted by scoring one in the fifth to make it close, one in the sixth to tie it, and then another one in the seventh to take the lead. Mel Harder (6-7) went all the way for the win.
Detroit (H) 2 Boston (AL) 1
Red Sox starter Milt Gaston (11-7) only allowed two hits today, but the second one was a two-out two-run double to Dale Alexander. Vic Sorrell (9-8) held off a late Boston rally and got the complete game victory.
New York (AL) 8 St. Louis (AL) (H) 2
Babe Ruth had sat out the previous two games but got off to a fast start today. In the first he singled, stole second, and scored on a Tony Lazzeri single. In the third, he hit a three-run homerun (#31), and the Yankees and Roy Sherid (6-3) won in a walk.
Pittsburgh 10 Boston (NL) (H) 8
The Pirates moved off to a 9-2 lead after the top of the fourth, but the Braves broke through for five in the fourth and it was neck and neck all the way to the end. Lloyd Waner and his brother Paul combined to go 6-for-8 with two walks and six runs scored.
Chicago (NL) 13 Brooklyn (H) 6
Brooklyn scored one in the first to take a quick 1-0 lead, but Gabby Hartnett hit a three-run homerun (#19) in the second and then Kiki Cuyler hit a two run homerun in the third and the Cubs had soon a 6-1 lead. Babe Herman hit a two-run homerun to close the lead a little, but then the Cubs scored seven times in the sixth to blow it wide open and take their fourth in a row from first place Brooklyn.
St. Louis (NL) 10 New York (NL) (H) 5
Chick Hafey hit a two-run double in the first and St. Louis continued to score from there, including a four-run seventh, and Bill Hallahan (7-9), shaky as ever, got the win. Hallahan surrendered three solo homeruns, but without a flurry of walks around them (and with a big lead), they were rendered harmless.
Note: Frankie Frisch hit homerun #12 - he only had ten in the real 1930.
Philadelphia (NL) (H) 5 Cincinnati 3
Chuck Klein had three RBI's on the day, the last two coming on a seventh-inning homerun (#16) that gave the Phillies the lead that they never relinquished. Les Sweetland (4-9) picked up the win in relief, and Hap Collard collected a two-inning save.
Saturday, July 19, 1930
Philadelphia (AL) 23 Chicago (AL) (H) 3
The A's swept their four-game series in Chicago as they absolutely pounded the White Sox in game #4. The A's had a six-run third and a seven-run sixth and by games end every player in the starting lineup had at least two hits, scored a run, and drove in a run. The A's ended up with 27 hits and eight walks, plus the White Sox had two errors, three wild pitches … you name it, everything went wrong for Chicago today. Jimmie Foxx went 5-for-7 with a double and homerun (#18) and drove in seven (82 RBI's for the season) and Al Simmons also went 5-for-7 with a homerun (#15).
Cleveland (H) 3 Washington 0 (GM 1)
Cleveland had already taken 3-of-4 from Washington in this series, including a doubleheader sweep, and the two have another doubleheader today. The Nationals brought up Carl Fischer (0-1) to start today's in his major league debut and outfielder Heinie Manush, who has missed the previous ten games, was made available to pinch-hit today. Cleveland infielder Johnny Burnett also missed the last ten games and was back in the lineup today, and catcher Joe Sprinz made his major league debut in this game. Catcher Luke Sewell isn't ready to return from his broken finger yet, and Glenn Myatt has caught every day so far during his absence.
In game one, Fischer actually pitched quite well, the only Indians runs coming on a two-run single in the fourth by Earl Averill. Wes Ferrell (13-8) was on his game though and only allowed three hits.
Washington 7 Cleveland (H) 2 (GM 2)
Firpo Marberry (15-2) righted the Nationals ship today with a complete game victory, holding the Indians to only three hits. Lead-off man Sam West went 3-for-4 with a double and a triple and scored two runs to spark the offense. Ed Morgan hit a solo homerun in the ninth (#24).
Detroit (H) 4 Boston (AL) 1
In another pitcher's duel George Uhle (13-5) came out on top over Danny MacFayden (7-10). The Tigers didn't put up much offense, but it was enough to give Uhle an early lead and then he did the rest. The Tigers have now climbed past the Red Sox for fourth place in the AL pennant race.
New York (AL) 19 St. Louis (AL) (H) 7
At the end of four, the score was tied 6-6. Babe Ruth had already hit two homeruns (#32, #33) and driven in five of the Yankees runs at this point, but it was then that the Yankees exploded for ten runs in the fifth to put the game out of reach. Only nine of the runs scored by the Yankees on the day were earned - First baseman Earl McNeely had three errors, two during the fateful fifth inning. Lou Gehrig had two RBI's on the day, giving him 106 for the season, just ahead of Ruth, who now has 103. The Browns have now fallen past Cleveland into the seventh spot in the AL pennant race.
Pittsburgh 6 Boston (NL) (H) 2
In his short time back Lloyd Waner already has a twelve game hitting streak, is hitting .405, and has provided a spark to the Pirates offense. Erv Brame (4-7) throttled the Braves offense today as the Paul Waner and his brother Lloyd went 5-for-10 with three runs scored. The Pirates definitely have fifth place Cincinnati in their sites.
Brooklyn (H) 6 Chicago (NL) 3
Kiki Cuyler hit a solo homerun (#9) in the top of the eighth to give the Cubs a 3-2 lead and the hope of sweeping all five games in Brooklyn, but in the bottom of the eighth Babe Herman regained the lead for Brooklyn with a two-run homerun (#17) and Dazzy Vance (11-6) held on to salvage game five. Gabby Hartnett hit a solo homerun (#20) earlier in the game, giving him four homeruns over the five games in Brooklyn this week.
St. Louis (NL) 5 New York (NL) (H) 3 (GM 1)
The Cardinals led 3-0 after the second inning and Jesse Haines (12-3) worked through several dangerous innings to claim the win. Bill Terry was ejected in the second 9nnings for arguing a strike call and was replaced at first by Andy Reese. Reese then proceeded to hit a two run homerun in his next at-bat, which was most of the Giant's offense today.
St. Louis (NL) 6 New York (NL) (H) 3 (GM) 2
When Travis Jackson put the Giants ahead 3-2 in the bottom of the seventh with a solo homerun the Giants were confident they would earn a split in the doubleheader, especially since Carl Hubbell (10-7) was on the mound and pitching well. The Cardinals opened the ninth with consecutive doubles to knock Hubbell out of the box and then added two more doubles before the inning was over to take a 6-3 lead and to sweep both games on the day.
Note: Shanty Hogan took a pitch off the elbow in the third and had to be pulled from the game.
Cincinnati 10 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 1 (GM 1)
Now that the Phillies have made it out of last place they would like to stay there, but today was Larry Benton's (5-9) day as he didn't allow a run until the ninth. A Harry Heilmann two-run homerun was the big hit a five-run fifth for the Reds, and Joe Stripp went 3-for-5 with three RBI's.
Cincinnati 15 Philadelphia (NL) (H) 8 (GM 2)
The score was tied 4-4 after the second inning was completed, but the Reds just kept scoring, leading 9-4 after the fourth and 15-4 after the seventh. The Phillies put up a four-spot in the seventh, but it was too little too late. Harry Heilmann went 3-for 5 with a double and two homeruns (#9, #10) and picked up six RBI's for the game.
Sunday, July 20, 1930
Chicago (AL) (H) 5 Boston (AL) 3 (GM 1)
Light-hitting Irv Jeffries hit a pinch-hit two-run homerun in the bottom of the seventh to give the White Sox their first lead of the game, and Ted Lyons (10-11) took it from there. This ended the White Sox eleven game losing streak.
Note: I screwed up. I intended to put in Jeffries as a pinch-runner. Instead, I had him replace the batter in the lineup, and once I clicked OK it was too late. OK, fine, so I let him hit anyway, and he hit the fateful homerun. Maybe I'm a genius.
Boston (AL) 9 Chicago (AL) (H) 5 (GM 2)
The Red Sox put up a four-run third and then a three-run sixth to walk away with a doubleheader split in Chicago. George Smith (1-3) made his second (and final) start of the year and got the win, but had to be pulled from the game in the sixth when his shoulder stiffened up. Milt Gaston came off the bench to close out the final few innings and pick up the save.
Cleveland (H) 19 New York (AL) 14
The Indians had already scored four in the first when Babe Ruth muffed what should have been the third out and Cleveland starter Milt Shoffner (4-1) promptly deposited the next pitch into the bleacher seats for w three-run homerun and the rout was on. Earl Averill then added a three-run homerun in the second inning to really blow it open. Shoffner later added a triple to his work for the day. With a thirteen run lead the Indians wanted Shoffner to finish the game but he tired in the ninth - Earle Combs hit a three-run pinch-hit homerun and then Babe Ruth hit a three-run homerun (#34, 107 RBI's) and Shoffner was sent to the showers. Lou Gehrig then hit a two-run homerun (#28, 108 RBI's), all in all, an eight-run inning, which got the Yankees to within five.
Philadelphia (AL) 21 Detroit (H) 0
The A's led 3-0 after the fifth inning, but Lefty Grove (19-2) seem to have thing well in hand. Bing Miller and Jimmy Dykes hit back-to-back homeruns in the sixth, and then Al Simmons hit a three-run homerun and the rout was on. Simmons added another three-run homerun (#17) in the eighth, and ended up with eight RBI's on the day (81 for the season). Then the A's scored nine times in the ninth to make the rout complete. Max Bishop went 3-for-4 with three walks, two doubles, a three-run triple, and scored five runs on the day.
Washington 5 St. Louis (AL) (H) 3
General Crowder (7-10) went all the way to allow the Nationals bullpen to rest and picked up two hits on the day himself. First baseman Art Shires went 3-for-5 with a homerun and two RBI's to spark the Nationals offense.
Cincinnati 6 Boston (NL) (H) 2 (11) (GM 1)
A nail-biter that went into extra innings tied at 2-2, the Reds scored four times in the eleventh to take game one. Red Lucas (10-6) went all the way to get the win.
Boston (NL) (H) 6 Cincinnati 1 (GM 2)
Tom Zachary (4-9) mastered the Reds in game two and went all the way for the win. The Reds didn't score until the eighth inning, by which time Zachary and the Braves had things well in hand.
Note: In the first Wally Berger drove in the first run of the game with a double, but limped into second and was removed as a precaution. In the seventh Joe Stripp and Clyde Sukeforth got tangled going after a pop foul near the stands and both had to come out of the game. In the eighth Earl Clark ran into the outfield wall chasing a fly ball and was replaced.
St. Louis (NL) 9 Brooklyn (H) 5
For Brooklyn it is out of the frying pan and into the fire. After the Cubs took 4-of-5 the red hot Cardinals came to town and promptly took game one of the series. Flint Rhem (3-1) kept the Robins bats quiet until the Cardinals had built up a 9-1 lead. Catcher Gus Mancuso, batting in the eighth spot, went 3-for-5 and picked up three crucial RBI's.
New York (NL) (H) 8 Chicago (NL) 1
The Cubs moved across town from Ebbets Field to the Polo Grounds and the Giants and Freddie Fitzsimmons (10-5) took game one of the series. Freddy Leach went 4-for-5 and scored three runs and Bill Terry went 4-for-5 and drove in two.
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