1856.20: Difference between revisions
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|Headline=100 to 98 Round Ball Game Played, After Sticky Rule Negotiations | |Headline=100 to 98 Round Ball Game Played, After Sticky Rule Negotiations | ||
|Year=1856 | |Year=1856 | ||
| | |Salience=2 | ||
|Location=New England | |Location=New England | ||
|Game=Base Ball | |Game=Base Ball |
Revision as of 10:18, 3 August 2012
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100 to 98 Round Ball Game Played, After Sticky Rule Negotiations
Salience | Noteworthy |
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Location | New EnglandNew England |
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Game | Base BallBase Ball |
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Text | "EXCITING GAME OF BASE BALL. - The second trial game of Base Ball took place on the Boston Common, Wednesday morning, May 14th, between the Olympics and the Green Mountain Boys. The game was one hundred ins, and after three hours of exciting and hard playing, it was won by the Olympics, merely by two, the Green Mountain Boys counting 98 tallies. . . . The above match was witnessed by a very large assemblage, who seemed to take a great interest in it." Albert S. Flye, "Exciting Game of Base Ball," New York Clipper Volume 4, number 5 (May 25, 1856), page 35. Facsimile provided by Craig Waff, September 2008. The article also prints a letter protesting the rules for a prior game between the same teams. The Olympics explained that were compelled to play a game in which their thrower stood 40 feet from the "knocker" while their opponent's thrower stood at 20 feet. In addition, the Green Mountain catcher [sic] moved around laterally, and a special six-strike rule was imposed that confounded the Olympics. It appears that this game followed an all-out-side-out rule. The reporter said the Olympics found these conditions "unfair, and not according to the proper rules of playing Round or Base Ball." Note: does this article imply that previously, base ball on the Common was relatively rare? The Daily Atlas on May 15 briefly mentioned the game, noting "There was a large crowd of spectators, although the flowers and birds of springs, and a wheelbarrow race at the same time . . . tended to draw off attention." A week later, the Boston Post reported that the Green Mountain Boys took the next contest, "the Olympics making 84 rounds to the G.M. Boys 119." |
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