Monday, April 20, 2020
The World Series A Brief History Of The October Classic Essays
  The World Series: A Brief History Of The October Classic    The World Series:  A Brief History of the October Classic  In America's favorite pastime, the game of baseball, there is one major goal each  year for every team in the league, and that is to win the World series. For nearly one  hundred years, two teams each year have competed in a best of seven series with the  champion of the American League and the champion of the National League representing  their respective leagues. The New York Yankees have won the most titles by far, with  twenty-five championships, and the St. Louis Cardinals have the second-most with ten.   Many teams have never won the World Series, and with the small income and coverage  of some teams, they may never win a series.   From 1901 to 1902, the American and National leagues were staged in war, and  there was no World Series. The American League was still very young, and many felt  that they could not compete with the powerful teams of the National League. However, a  national championship was not far away. When the Boston Pilgrims of the American  League accepted a challenge from owner Barney Dreyfuss of the National League  Pittsburgh Pirates, the modern World Series was born ( Total World Series-Boston 1).   The Pirates entered the 1903 series heavily favored to win even with injuries to the ace of  the pitching staff, Sam Leever and also to Honus Wagner. The Pirates had also lost  pitcher Ed Doheny to mental illness.   In game one of the series, Cy Young took the mound for the Pilgrims, but was  stunned in the first inning as the Pirates scored four runs and went on to take a 1-0 series  lead. In the game, the Pirates' Jimmy Sebring hit the first home run in World Series  history (Total World Series-Boston 2). After taking a commanding 3-1 series lead, the  tide began to turn on the Pirates. The Pilgrims won the next two games, and in game  seven, Bill Dinneen held the Pirates to four hits as he shut them out for the second time in  the series, giving the Boston Pilgrims the first ever World Series Championship.   The World Series continued to grow popular for the next several years, until 1919,  when members of the Chicago White Sox were rumored to have thrown the Series. In the  bottom of the first inning of game one against the Cincinnati Reds, White Sox pitcher  Eddie Cicotte hit the first batter to face him, a prearranged signal to gamblers that ?the fix  was on? -- that the Sox would throw the Series (Total World Series-White 1). There were  eight members of the Chicago White Sox that were in on the fix, including Cicotte and  outfielder ?Shoeless' Joe Jackson. The White Sox lost the first two games of the series,  thanks in large part to the two starting pitchers who were in on the fix. However, in game  three, the White Sox' Dickie Kerr, who was not in on the fix, pitched a three-hit shutout  to get the Sox back to within one game. After game three, the players who were in on the  fix managed to play poorly enough to lose the Series, and the Cincinnati Reds took home  their tainted title.   In 1927, the New York Yankees won the World Series over the Pittsburgh Pirates  with perhaps the best lineup ever to take the field. With 110 regular season victories and  a 19 game margin over second-place Philadelphia, the Yankees led the American League  in nearly every offensive category. Three Yankees--Earle Combs, Lou Gehrig, and Babe  Ruth--hit over .350, and divided among them league crowns in runs, hits, doubles, triples,  home runs (Ruth's 60), RBI's, and slugging average. The Yankees not only hit: their  pitching staff boasted the league's lowest earned run average ( Total World Series - New  1). The Yankees swept the Pirates out of the series for the first American League sweep  in a World Series and many still consider them to be the best team ever.   The ?Miracle Mets? of 1969 proved that magic could happen in the World Series  as they took home the World Series title with a very young, upstart team. The heavy-  hitting, slick- fielding Orioles, who also boasted the majors' top pitching staff, entered  the Series clear favorites against the New York Mets. But the ?Miracle Mets?, after  losing the opener, polished off Baltimore with four straight wins (Total World  Series-Make 1).   The    
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