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#1
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Tris Speaker was also a rodeo cowboy. He originally threw right handed, but taught himself to throw lefty after he broke his arm by being thrown from his horse as a kid.
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John Hat.cher |
#2
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Johnny Kling was a world champion billiards champion, while another T206-era catcher, Boss Schmidt, wrestled bears ...
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#3
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Pertaining Schmidt, supposedly he was the only player that Cobb was not willing to go to fists with....
Last edited by CMIZ5290; 12-24-2013 at 03:51 PM. |
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#5
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I read somewhere that Cobb did go at it with Schmidt. They moved the furniture in a hotel room and locked the door. Cobb got his ass kicked in a major way. Wish I remember where I read about that
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I would love to read this also, the hunt is on!
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Life's Grand, Denny Walsh |
#7
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Not sure if this is the same fight ( think I might have read it in The Glory Of Their Times although I don't recall it from the audio CD). Either way, IIRC, some of the Tigers were down in Georgia and one of the players didn't like the way Cobb treated a black man. Cobb and the player went at it and Cobb got licked. (Feel free to add or correct this).
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#8
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Last edited by howard38; 09-11-2020 at 07:20 PM. |
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#10
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He was accomplished, but I don't think he won any championships playing pool.
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$co++ Forre$+ |
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Regards, Richard. |
#12
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![]() ![]() He only held the Title for 5 weeks, losing it the very next month to Thomas A. Hueston, 653 to 800. He did not win a single 200 ball night. Last edited by Bocabirdman; 12-26-2013 at 02:59 PM. |
#13
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Mike, great info on Kling, and one more tidbit...unless I am mistaken, the player that Kling beat, Charles Weston, is pictured in the T218 set as a billiards player.
Brian Last edited by brianp-beme; 12-26-2013 at 01:51 PM. |
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Shaughnessy graduated Notre Dame and played BB and FB. His Major League career was very brief with Washington and the A's.
He went on to be GM of the Montreal Royals; and, then Frank became President of the International League (1936-1960). He was inducted into three Canadian HOF's (Football, Baseball, and McGill University Sports) ![]() ![]() TED Z __________________________________________________ _________________________________ LOOKING for this T206 guy to complete my EXCLUSIVE 12 red HINDU sub-set (12 subjects) SHECKARD (glove) . |
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$co++ Forre$+ |
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#17
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Awesome Stuff Gentleman!
I believe that we've just scratched the surface of these men who played a game in which has given us all, in some way, Grand Memories... Steve & Ted, Do you guys have a favorite Movie that Donlin performed in? Did he ever work along side any of the greats? Maybe Erroll Flynn? I know that I can Google his work, However, Only you guys can answer that question personally! John, So Speaker rode bulls... and He was a Real Cowboy!? Very Interesting... Yeah, Thorpe was somewhat of special human being... when it came to playing anything physical, He Always Excelled!
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Life's Grand, Denny Walsh |
#18
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Honus Wagner was a great basketball player.
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#19
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Really... Hmmm, Wags had enormous hands... I bet with his leaping ability, he could easily jam! I guess back then during the turn of the century, jamming wasn't really part of how they played the game, so it wasn't a "WoW" factor.
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Life's Grand, Denny Walsh |
#20
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Of course, they followed it with 15 minutes of Dr J. ![]() Sort of a taunt for a roomful of kids who couldn't reach the rim without a ladder. Many of the players then also worked at some sort of trade, farming, construction, stuff like that. Steve B |
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Last edited by howard38; 09-10-2020 at 05:14 PM. |
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Al Demaree was quite the cartoonist for the Sporting News. He also had his hand is desiging a few card sets like the '38 Goudeys and Signal Oil cards.
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#23
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From 1917 to 1935, Mike Donlin was featured in 66 movies. Two of the most notable Silent Screen ones that come to mind are The General (1926..with Buster Keaton) and Slide, Kelly, Slide (1927). TED Z . |
#24
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Including a couple post deadball era players:
George J. Burns-pool player Lew Fonseca-singer Nick Altrock-clown entertainer Wes Ferrell-had Hollywood screen test. Last edited by Brian Van Horn; 12-21-2013 at 09:14 PM. |
#25
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In 1908 Wagner heard during Spring Training that Hot Springs High wanted to start basketball. Every afternoon he taught the team how to play and when he returned to Pittsburgh he shipped the team shoes and uniforms.
The next year Walter Johnson was in town for the baths and he joined Wagner on the court. There is a plaque on our Historic Baseball Trail honoring their court deeds! |
#26
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Doc White was a singer/songwriter. He also was a dentist who worked on the teeth of many of the dead all era players.
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#27
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![]() Marty McHale was a journeyman pitcher who played from 1910 to 1916 for the Boston Red Sox (in two stints), Jersey City (International League), New York Yankees and Cleveland Indians. Most of all, he seemed to have fun. He formed a singing quartette while with the Sox in 1910, moonlighted in vaudeville while pitching for the Yankees (either in 1913 or 1914, and later), and even jumped into the newly-born film "industry" during the teens when his baseball career drew to a close. He later went on to become a newspaper reporter and a stockbroker. He was considered such a good prospect for the mediocre Yanks, that he pitched in the 1914 season opener -- a picture of which is above. Variety dubbed him the "Baseball Caruso" (with other reviewers referring to his Irish Tenor as the "Irish Thrush" and Babe Ruth, himself, canonizing McHale as the "best goddamn singer I ever heard"). Playing for Boston in 1910, McHale was a co-founder of the Red Sox Quartett, showcasing the talents of "Mart" McHale (1st Tenor), Tom "Buck" O'Brien (2nd Tenor and fellow Sox pitcher), Hugh Bradley (Baritone and outfielder), and Sox second baseman Larry Gardner. Bill Lyons replaced Gardner in the act in 1911, becoming Basso, with the Red Sox signing him to a professional baseball contract to keep the Quartette solely comprised of Sox players! When McHale joined the rival Yankees in 1913, the group quietly disbanded. McHale remained in show business when he moved to New York and moonlighted in vaudeville. Interestingly, despite his business card mention of Yankees manager and future HOFer, Frank Chance, McHale joined forces not with a fellow Yankee but with a New York Giant. Together with famed Giants outfielder, "Turkey" Mike Donlin, Mchale established a highly successful act entitled "Right Off The Bat." After ending his undistinguished baseball career with Boston and Cleveland in 1916, McHale leapt into the film business (as did Donlin), as can be seen from this letter shown below. In it, McHale implores Cleveland star Tris Speaker (to whom he refers as "Spoke") to join himself, Donlin and Tigers regular, Germany Schaeffer for appearances to promote an early movie after the close of the 1917 baseball season. This letter was typed on the back of letterhead from the All Star Feature Corporation of New York. Also in 1917, McHale joined the army and served as Lieutenant in the 22nd Regiment of Engineers during World War I. Post-War, McHale became a journalist for the New York Evening Sun, often covering baseball. By 1920 he moved on to become a stockbroker, eventually launching his own brokerage house, M.J. McHale Company Investments and Securities of New York. After more than 50 years at the helm of his own firm (and seven in retirement), McHale died in 1979 at the age of 90. Robert S Last edited by VintageBall; 12-22-2013 at 05:56 AM. |
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