![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Ossie Bluege, a fixture for 11 years at third and 32 in his last season as a full-fledged regular, enjoyed a typical year for him, with .261 and 71 runs driven in. On May16 of this season, the Nats introduced for the first time a lefthanded-hitting third baseman who would take over the hot corner and eventually prove himself to be one of the great Washington Senators. His name, Cecil Travis, became known to all serious readers of the sports pages on the morning of May 17, 1933.
In his debut, Travis a lefthanded slap hitter who at this point in his development drove nearly everything to the opposite field, had on the previous day connected for five hits in his first five big-league opportunities. Travis was put out in his final two at-bats in a 12-inning game at Griffith Stadium won by the home side 11-10 over the Indians. Incredibly, Joe Kuhel also rapped out five hits in the same 12-inning game. Travis got into only 17 more games during the course of the regular season, batting .302. In the minors with Chatanooga Lookouts, the Senators' affiliate in the Southern Association, Travis, himself a Southerner from Riverdale, Georgia, posted an ominous .352 bat mark. The 1933 Washington outfield, predictably potent, did not really disappoint, with Goslin, Schulte, and Manush averaging .297, .295, and .336 respectively. Goslin's power numbers, however, did diminish significantly, and he hit just 10 homers and produced 64 runs. On the way to placing second in the league in batting to Jimmie Foxx, who won the triple crown with gigantic figures of 48-163-.356, Manush hit in 33 consecutive games. This established the still-standing team benchmark, which eclipsed the record of 31 games set by Sam Rice in 1924. By the second week of September, this best-ever version of the Washington Senators had opened up a nine-game lead, and the pennant was wrapped up by the end of the third week, against the St Louis Browns. The Senators recorded 99 wins in a year in which they played only 152 games. (It was more common back then to leave some games unplayed at the end of the schedule if those games were to have no bearing on the final standings.) https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696842403 |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
The Yankees were in fact involved in two games fewer than the Senators, but when play stopped the Nats finished seven full games ahead of New York, spelling the end of the heyday of Murderers' Row. While Babe Ruth still hit .301 with 34 homers, his production was down and his career was petering out fast. It would be nearly three years before the Yanks would be able to regroup around a rookie named Joe DiMaggio and once again dominate the American League.
The Senators influenced firsthand New York's demise, and Lady Luck was on their side at crucial times during the season. Back in April, Washington was ahead by three runs when Tony Lazzeri, with Lou Gehrig on second and Dixie Walker on first, launched a bullet which ricocheted off Yankee Stadium's rightfield fence. Gehrig thought Goose Goslin might catch the ball, so he tagged up. The much-faster Walker did not, and so here they both came, one behind the other, barreling toward third. Coach Art Fletcher, confused, couldn't stop one baserunner and not the other. Joe Cronin's relay was on time for Luke Sewell to tag Gehrig out, and then to spin around and tag Walker also. Later in the season, in a game in which the Senators trailed 1-0 in the ninth, with a man on first and two out, Buddy Myer fouled one to the screen which Bill Dickey went back on and caught. Umpire Bill McGowan ruled the ball had grazed the screen, just barely, and Myer had a reprieve. He hit the next pitch out of the park to win the game, one of his four homers of the 1933 campaign. In the final game of the season, coach Nick Altrock was given a chance to become the oldest player to participate in a major-league game up to that time by being allowed to pinch hit. Unsuccessful in the attempt, against Rube Walberg of the A's, Altrock had played at the age of 57 years, 16 days, a record now held by Satchel Paige, who pitched for the Kansas City Athletics in 1965 at the age of 59 years, 2 months, 18 days. Minnie Minoso fell just a few months short of Paige's record when he appeared for the Chicago White Sox in 1980 so that he could become the second player in history to appear in five decades as a player. The first had been Nick Altrock. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696928042 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1696928047 |
#3
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Player #142B: Morris "Moe" Berg. Catcher with the Washington Senators in 1932-1934. 441 hits and 6 home runs in 15 MLB seasons. He debuted with the Brooklyn Robins in 1923. His most productive season was 1929 with the Chicago White Sox as he posted a .323 OBP with 47 RBIs in 384 plate appearances. He finished up with the Boston Red Sox in 1935-1939. His MLB career was statistically mediocre, but he is remembered as a colorful personality. He was a graduate of Princeton University and the Columbia Law School. He spoke several languages and read 10 newspapers a day. He worked as a spy during and after WW2.
Berg's SABR biography explains how he became a catcher (as does the back of his 1933 Goudey): It was in 1927 with the White Sox that he inadvertently became a catcher. Ray Schalk, manager of the Sox and a reserve catcher, was out with a broken thumb. Buck Crouse was also injured. Then in a game in Boston Harry McCurdy had his hand slashed accidentally by a Boston batter. Schalk was in a panic. Looking up and down the bench, he said, “Can any of you fellows catch?” Moe said he used to think he could. Schalk asked who said Moe couldn’t. Moe’s answer: “My high school coach.” Schalk assured Berg that he’d be obliged if Moe could prove his high school coach wrong. Moe strapped on the so-called tools of ignorance and proved that indeed he could catch. Schalk was so delighted with Berg after the game he hugged and kissed him. There was no turning back. The brightest man in baseball was now wedded to the tools of ignorance. Berg was an excellent defensive catcher. Possessing a strong arm, he could gun down the swiftest baserunners. His hitting left something to be desired. Berg batted only .243 with six home runs lifetime. But his baseball acumen in calling games and his knowledge of the hitters put him in great demand around the league. Moe went on to play for Cleveland, Washington and Boston in the American League until his retirement after the 1939 season. In all he spent fifteen seasons in the majors mainly because of his defensive skills and his knowledge of baseball. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697014951 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697014955 |
#4
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Player #89F: Oswald L. "Ossie" Bluege. Third baseman for the Washington Senators in 1922-1939. 1,751 hits and 43 home runs in 18 MLB seasons. 1935 All-Star. 1924 World Series champion. He played his entire career in Washington. He was best known for his defense, but his best season at the plate was 1928 as he posted a .364 OBP with 78 runs scored and 75 RBIs in 588 plate appearances. He managed the Washington Senators in 1943-1947.
Bluege's SABR biography: The 1933 season was Bluege’s last as a regular. The emergence of Cecil Travis gave Cronin good reason to make the switch. The young Georgian might not be able to field like Bluege, but he could hit like no one’s business. From 1934 through 1941, Travis batted over .300 all but one year, and in that season he hit .292. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697101604 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697101610 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697101614 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697101624 |
#5
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Robert A. "Bob" Boken. Infielder with the Washington Senators in 1933-1934. 113 hits and 6 home runs in 2 MLB seasons. He last played for the the Chicago White Sox in 1934. He was on the Senators roster but did not appear in any of the 1933 World Series games.
In addition to his time in the major leagues, Boken had an extensive minor league career, playing from 1929 to 1947. His lifetime production was notable, amassing 1,787 hits, 149 HRs and 232 RBIs across 1,710 games and 5,969 at bats. He achieved a .299 lifetime average and .452 slugging percentage. Hall of Famer Ralph Kiner, one of the game's premier power hitters, referenced Boken in his HOF induction speech in 1975: "Going back to my early days, I have to mention a fellow by the name of Bob Boken who is the man who got me started playing baseball. And his son was about four years older than I, and he used to pitch to his son across the street and I’d go out in the outfield and shag the balls. This went on for about a year and I finally got a chance to bat, and I realized what a great game this was." This thread will now enjoy a pause: Next expected post -- 1 November. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1697188344 |
#6
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Player #125B: William Clifton "Cliff" Bolton. Catcher for the Washington Senators in 1931, 1933-1936, and 1941. 280 hits and 6 home runs over 7 MLB Seasons. His best season was 1935 as he posted a .399 OBP with 55 RBIs in 435 plate appearances. He also had a .500 OBP in 46 plate appearances coming off the bench in 1933 as Washington won the A.L. pennant.
Cliff Bolton was a catcher who played several years in the big leagues, most notably hitting .410 in 33 games for the 1933 Washington Senators who won 99 games and went to the 1933 World Series. The only three catchers used that year by the Senators were Luke Sewell, Moe Berg, and Bolton. Bolton also hit .304 with 11 triples in 1935, a year in which he appeared in 110 games. His 11 triples were 8th in the league. One source says that after his 1933 season, he held out for more money, and Moe Berg was given the catcher's job. Berg was released in midseason, and Bolton ended up playing 42 games. Eddie Phillips had 53 games at catcher, and Luke Sewell played 50 games. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1698915214 |
#7
|
||||
|
||||
![]()
Player #127B: Robert J. "Bobby" Burke. Pitcher for the Washington Senators in 1927-1935. 38 wins and 5 saves in 10 MLB seasons. In 1931, he pitched a no-hitter against Boston at Griffith Stadium. He was the last Washington pitcher to pitch a no-hitter until Jordan Zimmerman in 2014. His best season was 1934 as he posted a 8-8 record with a 3.21 ERA on 168 innings pitched. He ended his career with the Philadelphia Athletics in 1937.
Burke's SABR biography covers his less-than-stellar contributions to Washington's 1933 pennant: A holdout in 1932, Burke reported late to spring training. Sportswriter Harold C. Burr reported that team owner Clark Griffith as well as skipper Johnson had grown tired of Burke’s inconsistencies. Nonetheless the 25-year-old started off well, tossing a complete-game five-hitter with no walks to defeat the Red Sox, 4-3, in his season debut, on April 20. With two outs in the ninth inning, Burke (a career .194 hitter with 54 hits) slashed the game-winning single to drive in Ossie Bluege. In his next start, Burke issued a career-high 12 free passes to the New York Yankees, yet somehow managed to surrender just one earned run in a 6⅔-inning no-decision. He was erratic and often roughed up in his occasional starts. Burke’s big-league career seemed to be at a crossroad after a disastrous relief appearance on August 5 (seven runs in 4⅔ innings). “[Burke] is about washed up after six years in Washington regalia,” wrote Denman Thompson. Burke was optioned to Chattanooga in the Southern Association; however, he complained of a sore arm, did not pitch for the Lookouts, and was ultimately placed on the voluntarily retired list. Burke was reinstated in the offseason, but his future with the club remained murky under first-year player-manager Joe Cronin. Coming off a dismal (1932) season (5.14 ERA in 91 innings), Burke was playing for his career. Thompson reported excitedly that Burke was “one of the most pleasant surprises” at Washington’s spring training in Biloxi, Mississippi. Once described as a “lobby sitter, his interests in the game negligible,” Burke seemed, according to Harold C. Burr, “refreshed,” while Thompson noted a different “attitude.” Unfortunately, Burke’s arm and shoulder pain returned by the end of camp. He was sent to Selma, Alabama, for medical treatment, and also trained with Chattanooga before returning to Washington for the start of the season. In limited action, Burke went 4-3 with a 3.23 ERA in 64 innings for the surprising pennant-winning Senators, who won a franchise-record 99 games. Burke did not pitch in Washington’s World Series loss to the New York Giants in five games. Shamelessly pumping Washington baseball images in fine forums everywhere. Burke is second from left in the final image. https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1699003694 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1699003705 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1699003709 https://www.net54baseball.com/attach...1&d=1699003714 |
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
WTB: Washington-related baseball memorabilia | Runscott | Baseball Memorabilia B/S/T | 4 | 05-23-2014 04:18 PM |
WTB: Specific Claudell Washington, U.L. Washington, Garth Iorg and Johnny Grubb Cards | EGreenwood | 1950 to 1959 Baseball cards- B/S/T | 0 | 12-07-2012 09:27 PM |
1920's washington senators baseball cap | bryson22 | Baseball Memorabilia B/S/T | 1 | 12-30-2010 08:21 PM |
The Oregon-Washington Baseball League??? | slidekellyslide | Net54baseball Sports (Primarily) Vintage Memorabilia Forum incl. Game Used | 7 | 06-12-2009 06:55 PM |
Baseball cabinet - Washington Senators? | Archive | Net54baseball Sports (Primarily) Vintage Memorabilia Forum incl. Game Used | 1 | 06-18-2008 01:33 PM |