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  #1  
Old 06-30-2021, 12:22 PM
G1911 G1911 is offline
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Originally Posted by darwinbulldog View Post
On the contrary, their exclusion from the Hall has propped up the prices of their cards to well above what people would otherwise pay for them. They were fine players, but Eddie Collins and Joe Morgan were certainly better.
I think this is a good point. Look at the price gap between Jackson and Speaker. Was Jackson a better player? No, they are very similar bats through their age 32 seasons (when Jackson's career ends) plus Tris was a legendary glove. Look at Cicotte vs. Vic Willis or any other similar pitcher. Gandil far outsells his talent level too. Being the villain appears to do more for one's prices than being the good guy. I'm not sure why; I'd chalk it up to "any name recognition is good" except these guys outsell other famous players (anyone buying Jackson knows Collins well) and HOFers every collector knows.
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  #2  
Old 06-30-2021, 12:29 PM
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Mark17 Mark17 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by G1911 View Post
I think this is a good point. Look at the price gap between Jackson and Speaker. Was Jackson a better player? No, they are very similar bats through their age 32 seasons (when Jackson's career ends) plus Tris was a legendary glove. Look at Cicotte vs. Vic Willis or any other similar pitcher. Gandil far outsells his talent level too. Being the villain appears to do more for one's prices than being the good guy. I'm not sure why; I'd chalk it up to "any name recognition is good" except these guys outsell other famous players (anyone buying Jackson knows Collins well) and HOFers every collector knows.
Look at how popular Hal Chase is, even among many on this forum. The guy was more despicable than any of the Black Sox, or Pete Rose.
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  #3  
Old 06-30-2021, 12:29 PM
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I thought there was pretty good evidence Cobb and Speaker bet at one point.
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  #4  
Old 06-30-2021, 12:46 PM
markf31 markf31 is offline
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Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
I thought there was pretty good evidence Cobb and Speaker bet at one point.
Dutch Leonard produced two letters as evidence of his allegation to the commissioner, one letter written by Cobb to Leonard and another written by Joe Wood to Leonard.

In the Cobb letter, Cobb mentions that they were too late in pulling their money together and that the bookies were no longer interested. "Wood and myself were considerably disappointed in our business proposition, as we had $2,000 to put into it, and the other side quoted us $1,400, and when we finally secured that much money it was about 2 o’clock and they refused to deal with us, as they had men in Chicago to take up the matter with and they had no time."

The Wood letter states that "Cobb did not get up a cent. He told us that and I believed him."

Neither letter mentions Speaker at all. Leonard supposedly testified that Speaker was involved, but Leonard later denied ever naming Speaker.

Last edited by markf31; 06-30-2021 at 12:51 PM.
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  #5  
Old 06-30-2021, 12:48 PM
bbcard1 bbcard1 is offline
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The one huge advantage to letting them both in is that we could stop talking about it ;-).
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  #6  
Old 06-30-2021, 12:48 PM
G1911 G1911 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
I thought there was pretty good evidence Cobb and Speaker bet at one point.
Cobb hated Dutch Leonard, said he was one of the only guys he spiked intentionally, and essentially ended Leonard's career in his managing years. Speaker, an old friend then passed on signing Leonard.

Leonard went to Ban Johnson in 1926 and told him that he, Cobb and Joe Wood had conspired to bet on a game in 1919, and that Speaker had agreed to lose it. The Tigers won. Leonard produced 2 very vague letters from Cobb and Speaker that reference a bet, though what it is on is never fully stated. Johnson summoned Leonard to come answer questions about the allegation, Leonard refused to do so. Kennesaw Mountain Landis then publicly cleared Cobb and Speaker in early 1927, as the only source was a man who was angry at both of them, produced no real evidence, and refused to answer questions.

I believe the SABR bio of Dutch Leonard has a pretty good summation of the affair, from memory.

If they were guilty, they should be treated the same as Jackson and Rose when it comes to honors. I've never seen any real evidence they were guilty, much less a preponderance

Last edited by G1911; 06-30-2021 at 12:49 PM.
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  #7  
Old 06-30-2021, 01:00 PM
ThomasL ThomasL is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth View Post
I thought there was pretty good evidence Cobb and Speaker bet at one point.
A lot of players bet on and threw games...Cobb and Speaker according to HOF writer Fred Lieb the evidence was pretty damnable and listen to Joe Wood's Glory of Their Times interview...pretty damning as well.

Bill Veck in his book The Hustler's Handbook references Harry Grabiner's diary as 1918 World Series and Cubs games being fixed. Also mentions Pete Alexander and Rabbit Maranville as being involved in fixing games. Pete Alexander also friends with 1919 WS fixer Billy Maharg. Other Cubs involved in game fixes were Claude Hendrix and Lee Magee. Cicotte also said they got the idea by hearing the Cubs got money for throwing the 1918 WS.

It is pretty obvious that many players were betting on and throwing games and not being really punished for it (traded off seems to be the move that was made) and the White Sox knew this and thought they could make some easy money.

Landis in 1926/27 in regards to Speaker and Cobb made the comment he would not deal with any more past scandals from the time before he was commissioner basically giving anyone prior to 1920 a free pass...which the 1919 WS would fall into so there is a big hypocrisy there in his ruling with the Black Sox.

Last edited by ThomasL; 06-30-2021 at 01:12 PM.
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  #8  
Old 06-30-2021, 01:18 PM
ThomasL ThomasL is offline
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On a side note...

Speaker and Gandil had very similar life paths prior to breaking into the league...both very rough tough hard nosed guys who cut their baseball teeth in areas that werent very far removed from the Old West. Would have loved to see their on the field fist fight in a game I believe during the 1919 season.
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  #9  
Old 06-30-2021, 01:43 PM
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Rose, Jackson and all the roid squad members should be kept out. Let’s talk about whether Anson’s bust should be removed from the HOF for being the chief reason why the color barrier came about in baseball.
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