Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The 1919 Chicago Black Sox Scandal
Episode Date: May 5, 2022In October 1919, the champions of the National League, the Cincinnati Reds, faced the champions of the American League, the Chicago White Sox in the World Series. While Cincinnati won the champions...hip on the field five games to three, the series will be forever remembered because of the events surrounding it. Even a hundred years later, it remains one of the most significant events in American professional sports. Learn more about the 1919 Chicago Black Sox scandal and how it almost destroyed the game of baseball on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://podfollow.com/everythingeverywhere/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast." or "Everything Everywhere is part of the Airwave Media podcast network Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In October 1919, the champions of the National League, the Cincinnati Reds,
faced the champions of the American League, the Chicago White Sox, in the World Series.
While Cincinnati won the championship on the field, five games to three,
the series will forever be remembered because of the events surrounding it.
Even a hundred years later, it remains one of the most significant events in American
professional sports history.
Learn more about the 1919 Chicago Black Sox scandal and how it almost destroyed the game of
baseball on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
if your perceptions about the past were wrong.
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story
that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
In case you're not a sports fan or know nothing about the sport of baseball,
this story really doesn't have anything to do with sports per se.
It does involve athletes in a sporting event, but that isn't the real story.
The story is one of economics, greed, and crime.
To understand what happened, you need to know the state of baseball in the early 20th century.
Baseball began as a professional sport in 1869 with the establishment of the Cincinnati Reds.
This step, from amateur to professional, was a big step, but it didn't mean that the men playing baseball for money were making very much at it.
Over the years, baseball grew and more professional teams were created.
Different leagues appeared and died.
Eventually, there were two major baseball leagues, the American League and the National League.
And in 1903, they eventually agreed that the winner of each league would meet in an annual championship dubbed the World Series.
Despite bigger stadiums and crowds, baseball still wasn't a huge moneymaker for most players.
If you were a major league baseball player, you still probably needed to get a job during the off season.
Now, the owner of the Chicago White Sox was Charles Kamiski.
Kamiski was a former player, and actually one of the leaders in a player revolt that took place in 1890.
In 1894, he purchased a team in Sioux City, Iowa named the Sioux City Cornhuskers.
He moved the team to St. Paul, Minnesota, where it was renamed the St. Paul Saints,
and then moved the team again to Chicago to join the new American League.
He renamed the team the Chicago White Sox.
The White Sox under Kamisky were reasonably successful.
They won the American League five times in 1900, 1901, 1906, 1917, and 19191919.
and they won the World Series in 1906 and most recently just two years earlier in 1917.
So the Chicago White Sox were doing pretty well, and in 1919 they did very well.
However, there was a thing in baseball at the time known as the Reserve Clause.
The Reserve Clause basically prevented any baseball player from playing for any other baseball team
if they didn't come to terms with the team that signed them.
If their contract expired, the team that signed them still retained their rights.
In fact, it was the elimination of the Reserve Clause in 1910.
that was largely responsible for the explosion in player salaries that came after.
Charles Kamisky had a reputation for being very cheap.
He was perceived as not paying his players very well,
even though later analysis showed that he was about average for a team owner of that period.
Regardless, the players didn't like him.
On the team, there were two groups of players.
One was a group of straight-laced players,
and the other was a group of, how shall I say, more morally flexible players.
The two groups from all accounts didn't particularly like each other
and kept to themselves, but baseball is a team sport that doesn't require a lot of cooperation,
and they did have one thing in common. Neither of them liked Comisky. It was in this atmosphere
of player resentment and low salaries that the events of September and October 1919 took place.
Gamblers and mobsters always floated around the periphery of major league teams at that period.
Low wages of players made them easy targets for betters who wanted to fix games, or who at least
wanted to get inside information. However, fixing an entire series,
of games requires more than just one or two players. You really need to get a whole bunch of players
involved, otherwise it just wouldn't work. The idea for fixing the World Series was hatched between
the White Sox First Baseman, Arnold Chick-Gandle, and a Boston gambler by the name of Joseph Sport
Sullivan. Both of them knew that they had to get other players on board, so on September 21st,
they held a meeting at the Ansonia Hotel in New York City. There were a small group of players
in this meeting who heard the pitch from Gandal and Sullivan. In addition to Gandal, the initial players
who were in on the fix where the pitchers Eddie C. Cot and Claude Leifton,
shortstop Charles Swede-Riseberg, and outfielder Oscar Happy Flesh.
Third baseman Buck Weaver attended the initial meeting, but didn't take any money and refused
to take part. The deal was that Sullivan would give them a total of $100,000, which back in 1919 was
worth about $1.6 million. One of the bench players, an infielder named Fred McMullen,
was added to the plot when he overheard the scheme and threatened to turn them in if he
didn't get a cut. The final player they allegedly approached was the star player on the team
and arguably one of the greatest baseball players of all time, Shulis Joe Jackson. More on him in a bit.
Sullivan began working with organized crime figures around the country to raise money for the fix,
including the New York City crime boss, Arnold Rothstein. The fix of the World Series quickly
became a very poorly kept secret in the underworld. The White Sox were initially three-to-one
favorites over the Reds, but a sudden flood of money on Cincinnati to win quickly and
dramatically shifted the odds. The scheme got a lucky break when the starting pitcher for
for Game 1, Red Faber, came down with the flu. Faber wasn't in on the plot, so the pitchers for the
first two games were Eddie Seacott and Lefty Williams, both of whom were part of the conspiracy.
On the second pitch of the first game, Eddie Seacott hit the Reds leadoff hitter, Morrie
Rath. This was the signal to the gamblers that the players were going to go through with the plan.
The fix was such a poorly kept secret that during game one, it was already being discussed in the press box,
and writers were already on the lookout for plays which seemed suspicious.
The White Sox lost their first two games with their two crooked pitchers.
They won game three and then lost games four and five.
And I should note that the World Series at this time was a best of nine series,
not a best of seven series as it is today.
Now, according to the original agreement,
the players were supposed to receive $20,000 after every loss,
so they would have the full $100,000 after the loss of the fifth game.
However, by the time they were down four to one,
they hadn't been paid what they were owed.
The players then wanted to renege on the deal
and proceeded to win the next two games to bring the series to four to three
going into Game 8.
At this point, some of the players started getting threats
against their families from mobsters.
And in Game 8, Williams was the starter,
and the Reds ended up winning 10 to 5,
clinching their very first World Series.
The rumors of the World Series being fixed
kept circulating after it was over.
A writer by the name of Hugh Fullerton wrote an article
for the New York Evening World titled,
Is Big League Baseball being run for gamblers
with players in the deal?
However, for the most part,
the powers that be in baseball were happy to ignore the rumors
and just let the issue rest.
The event which broke the dam on the story
occurred in August of 1920,
when evidence of a fixed regular season game
between the Chicago Cubs and the Philadelphia Phillies
came to light. A grand jury
was convened to investigate gambling and baseball,
and their attention soon turned
to the 1919 World Series.
As the end of September 19th,
1920 rolled around, the White Sox were once again in contention for the American League title.
They were in a race with the Cleveland Indians, and if they won their last three games, they could win the American League again.
However, on September 28th, Eddie Seacott testified to the grand jury that he received money for throwing the World Series.
After this, the floodgates opened, and more players and gamblers confessed.
Kamiski suspended all of the remaining seven players who were still on the team, which resulted in the White Sox losing two of their next three games,
and coming in second in the American League.
Gandil, the ringleader of the whole thing,
had been sent to the minor leagues by this point.
Kamiski also gave each of the ten players who didn't take a bribe $1,500,
which was the difference between the winners and losers' bonus from the World Series.
The players who took bribes were all put on trial in July of 1921.
The funny thing was, all of their signed confessions for the grand jury
disappeared while in police custody, as well as much of the other evidence that was collected.
All eight players who were put on trial were found not guilty after just three hours of deliberation.
However, the legal aspect of this case wasn't what has had a lasting impact.
Prior to the 1921 season, the Major League Baseball owners hired someone to serve as a commissioner for all of baseball.
He would be responsible for the rules of the game and for cleaning it up to protect the game's public image.
His name was Kennesaw Mountain Landis.
One of his very first acts as commissioner was to ban all eight players who,
received money or knew about the deal for life.
They were ineligible not just to play baseball,
but they couldn't even attend a professional baseball game as a spectator.
For the most part, seven of the men who were banned were middling ball players at best.
But one of them, Joe Jackson, was great,
and his role in the scheme has always been in doubt.
If he tried to throw the series, he did a horrible job.
He hit the only home run in the World Series.
He batted 375, which was the highest for any regular player in the series.
He had 12 hits, which stood as a World Series record for 50 years.
He had 30 chances in the outfield, throwing out five runners, and had zero errors.
Moreover, as great of a player as Shulis Joe Jackson was, he was illiterate, and he wasn't very smart.
Also, he was never in on the initial meeting, and all of the implicated players admitted that they only brought his name up to make the deal seem more impressive to the betters.
Jackson admitted to taking $5,000, but it was said it was given to him without any conditions.
Collectively, the Eight Men Band became known as the Black Sox.
They became the subject of popular movies such as Eight Men Out and Field of Dreams,
and it even had a mention in the novel The Great Gatsby.
There is an apocryphal story which is attributed to a child who walked up to Joe Jackson outside the courthouse
and asked him,
Say it ain't so, Joe.
This has now become a popular phrase used whenever heroes let you down.
After suspending many of their best players, the White Sox sunk to seventh place and didn't win another World Series until 2005.
It became known as the curse of the Black Sox.
The scandal and the discovery of other regular season games which were fixed threatened the integrity and popularity of baseball.
One of the things that saved it was the incredible popularity of a single player by the name of Babe Ruth.
Schulist Joe Jackson died in 1951, still banned from baseball.
despite having the third highest career batting average in baseball history,
his ban extends to today, resulting in him not being eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast.
The executive producer is Darcy Adams.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener First Born over at Apple Podcasts in the United States.
They write,
Well researched and informative.
The best way for me to review Everything Everywhere Daily is to share my
experience listening to this pod one morning after a tough one-hour workout. Feeling tired and muttering
under my breath, I played the episode about the 1904 Olympic marathon. Somewhere in between the
descriptions of the Cuban man who paid his own way and planned to run the marathon in street
clothes, and the mix of alleged performance enhancers given to the eventual winner, I concluded that
my one-hour workout had been a walk in the park. To learn everything not to do when running or
staging a marathon, listen to that episode. Thanks, firstborn. Indeed, the 19-hour
The 1904 Olympic Marathon was probably the worst event in Olympic and probably athletic history.
Even extreme events today don't try to actively poison you.
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