Read The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth Online
Authors: Leigh Montville
The noise from the soldiers at Camp Pike was another argument in the affirmative. They liked, most of all, to see him hit.
Barrow knew his limitations. That made him smart right there. He knew that he wasn’t any kind of a baseball strategist, so he hired someone else to do that part of the job. His first choice, Johnny Evers (of Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance double-play fame), was a bit too intense, riding the players, wanting to win every inning of every game, driving everyone crazy. The second choice, veteran Heinie Wagner, good guy, also didn’t work out. The job fell to 30-year-old Harry Hooper.
Hooper, as the season opened with the Babe pitching a 10–3 win over the Yankees at the Polo Grounds, was on the Babe’s side. Hooper also believed that hitting every day—the way the Babe hit—was more important than pitching every fourth day. He loved the way the Babe swung at a baseball, free and easy, rhythm and power. Hooper had been interested since the first time he ever saw him swing, first year on the team.
“We played an exhibition in some small town out near Brockton,” Hooper said. “Before the game, he took a bunch of balls and went with another guy out to the outfield, and the guy pitched and Babe just started swinging. I remember noticing how well he hit.”
The Babe had a permanent red mark on his chest, something that looked like a woman’s stretch mark, only it was on the chest. The mark was hard to miss in the locker room. Hooper asked him one day how he’d got it.
“Swung too hard,” the Babe said.
Swung too hard? Hooper was on the Babe’s side.
He campaigned often to have Ruth inserted into the lineup. He brought shortstop Everett Scott and Heinie Wagner and other teammates into the argument with Barrow. The Red Sox had edged to the front in the early stage of the pennant race, but had done it with pitching and speed. They needed hitting, especially left-handed hitting. Barrow’s argument always was that he would be “the laughingstock of the league” if he switched his best pitcher into an everyday player. Hooper’s comeback considered the economics of the situation. He had heard a rumor that Barrow now had a $50,000 investment in the team. Did Barrow notice the way people clamored to see the Babe? Did he think they really wanted to see him pitch? More at-bats would equal larger crowds, which would equal more money.
The assault finally worked.
On May 4, the Babe pitched against the Yankees at the Polo Grounds and had a wild afternoon. Yankees manager Miller Huggins decided to attack him with bunts, and he handled 13 chances with two errors. At the plate, he drew revenge. In the seventh inning, after booming a tremendous foul ball and telling umpire Billy Evans, “I’ll hit this [next] one right back and there’ll be no doubt about it,” he homered into the upper deck. The Yankees won, 4–3, but when the game ended, the Babe was sitting on second base after hitting a double.
On May 5, Sunday baseball still illegal in New York, the Red Sox played an exhibition in Clifton, New Jersey. They beat the Doherty Silver Sox, 3–1, and the important part of the day was that the Babe played the last four innings at first base. Dick Hoblitzel, a dentist and the regular first baseman, had injured a finger in the Yankees game. Ruth went hitless in two plate appearances but played well in the field, well enough that he made his major league debut as a position player the next day against the Yankees at first. Barrow had cracked.
A weird heat wave hit New York on May 6. In the 85-degree temperature, which broke a 112-year-old record, patrons were suddenly wearing straw hats. In the fourth inning, Stuffy McInnis on first, Ruth hit what was termed in one account “a saucy home run, high into the attic in the grandstand.” Frazee was in the stands, sitting next to Yankees owner Col. Jake Ruppert, who turned and offered $150,000 for Ruth right there. It was a joke. Frazee laughed. Ruppert laughed. It was a joke to be remembered.
On May 7, the Red Sox had moved down to Washington. Walter Johnson was pitching. Ruth was again at first, this time batting cleanup. In the sixth inning, against the preeminent pitcher in baseball, he whacked a shot over the right-field fence that landed in someone’s victory garden and scared a dog. The feat was so out of the ordinary that a sign said that a local tailor would give a suit of clothes to anyone who hit a ball over that fence. J. V. Fitzgerald of the
Washington Post
declared, “The tailor is going to have to use a lot of cloth to rig out the Babe.” The Babe, once again, had three home runs in three games.
On May 8, he doubled. On May 9, pitching his regular turn, he went 5-for-5 with a triple, three doubles, and a single. He seemed to be involved in everything in the game, a 4–3 loss. He was even thrown out at third attempting to steal. He hit in ten straight games before he was stopped.
Harry Hooper, uh-huh, could spot a good hitter.
The war shuffled all the baseball cards again at the end of the month. A ruling called “work or fight” came down from the office of Secretary of War Newton Baker and Provost Marshal Gen. Enoch Crowder on May 23. It declared that all men of draft age must either be in the military or employed by some war-related industry by July 1. A fast reading said that July 1 would be the end of the baseball season. Eighty percent of the 330 players in the game were between 21 and 31 years old, the draft limits.
Store clerks, waiters, bartenders, elevator operators, many salesmen, and employees at places of amusement all were affected. Their employers quickly said that business would continue as usual, with older workers and women taking the vacated positions. (One Park Avenue hotel announced that it would hire “Negroes” to fill the void.) Baseball obviously did not have the same options. (Although the “Negro” option would have been interesting.) Baseball would die.
“Everything must be done to win this war,” National League president John Tener said. “And if baseball is a sport as classified in this new order, and not a business in which there is a great investment of money, then baseball will not be behind other interests in contributing its part toward winning the war. If baseball is nonessential…there is a possibility that our ball parks will have to be closed and the season be brought to an end.”
No mention of the players was made in the order, though they seemed to be covered in a section listing nonessential occupations that specified “Persons, including ushers and other attendants, engaged in and occupied in and in connection with, games, sports and amusements, excepting actual performers in legitimate concerts, operas or theatrical performances.” Actors and opera singers were exempted; ballplayers were not.
The War Department said that a ruling on ballplayers couldn’t be made until one of them was drafted and appealed the decision to his local board. The owners’ hope was that the board in this test case would rule that a ballplayer was the same as an actor, exempt. Failing that, the owners hoped the War Department would give baseball an overall exemption to finish the season.
Ruth’s draft status was class 4: married, head of household. That was why he hadn’t been called already. He said little about the war and seemed to follow along with whatever the other players were doing. They joined the Massachusetts Home Guard, the backup to the activated National Guard. He joined too. They drilled in close order in a team competition set up by league president Ban Johnson, an attempt to give the game a patriotic shine. The Babe drilled too.
The ballplayers were in a predicament. The line between athletic hero and slacker had become a tightrope. A false move—look at boxer Jack Dempsey, criticized as a draft dodger—could drop a famous man into a swamp. Even the ballplayers who had gone into the service or to the shipyards were not exempt. Most of them were still playing baseball, only in different uniforms and for less money. Was it a contribution to the war effort to pitch for a shipyard? More and more fans were thinking that it was not.
The unsettled season was now even more unsettled. On each team, more players headed toward defense-related jobs or enlisted or were drafted. Dutch Leonard, having a good season for the Red Sox, soon left for the Fore River Shipyard in Quincy. Outfielder Fred Thomas enlisted. The rest of the players simply kept playing and waited for the next edict to roll out of Washington.
Ruth was not in the lineup when the work-or-fight ruling came down. He was sick. On May 19, a Sunday, a day off, he and Helen went to Revere Beach, the oldest public beach in the country, a Boston version of Coney Island. He had not been feeling well for the last week and now felt terrible. He had fever, chills, a 104-degree temperature. He had the flu.
In another two months that diagnosis would be a life-and-death proposition, another gift of the war, as the misnamed Spanish influenza came from the German trenches to the Allied trenches, back to the United States to become the most serious epidemic in the country’s history. Before the end of the year, it would kill over 600,000 people in the United States, with Boston and Massachusetts hit hard. The flu for the U.S. troops would be more deadly than the war.
With the Babe—and this might have been the same strain of flu, simply not given a name yet—it simply was the flu. He appeared at Fenway the next day, Monday, his day to pitch, but Barrow looked at him and sent him straight to the trainer. The trainer treated him with silver nitrate, which at the time was used to coat a flu victim’s throat. The trainer, alas, used too much silver nitrate. The Babe’s larynx became swollen, a condition known as acute edema, and he started choking and collapsed. Barrow, hearing the commotion, grabbed him and took him to a nearby druggist, who administered an antidote to silver nitrate. The Babe then was rushed to Massachusetts General Hospital, where he stayed for the next week surrounded by flowers and comforted by Helen. Barrow fired the trainer.
On Decoration Day, 11 days after Ruth became ill, he pinch-hit at Fenway. Three days later he returned to the lineup in Detroit as a pitcher and…he hit a home run.
The next day, playing center field…he hit a home run.
The next day, center field again…he hit a home run.
The next day…he hit a home run.
Four home runs in four games broke his own record. The lasting effect of his illness would be a raspy voice from the irritation of the silver nitrate. He always would complain of that. The immediate effects of the illness seemed minimal.
The work-or-fight rule went into effect on July 1, and draft boards around the country slowly began to reclassify baseball players. Speculation in the
Globe
named Ruth and Amos Strunk as the two most vulnerable Red Sox. In Washington, 28-year-old catcher Eddie Ainsmith became the test, appealing his reclassification to the office of Secretary Baker. All of baseball awaited the decision, uncertainty everywhere, attendance down for a season that might end tomorrow.
Amid the uncertainty, the Babe was caught in a second uncertain bind. Barrow, with the defections and turmoil, wanted him to pitch. The Red Sox had dropped out of first place, and the Babe’s home run barrage had quieted down after the four home runs. Barrow thought his star’s pitching would help the team more now than his hitting. The Babe, alas, didn’t want to pitch anymore.
He and Barrow went through a daily, contentious dance. The Babe claimed his wrist was hurt and he couldn’t pitch. Barrow didn’t believe him. Back and forth the argument went. The Babe, almost as if it were part of his case, started to hit again, whacking out homers number 10 and 11, the last one in the tenth inning against Walter Johnson over that same tailor’s sign in right field in Washington on June 30. (No mention of another free suit.) He was now on a pace to do great things at the plate. Less than half the season had been completed, and he seemed a sure bet at least to break the American League home run record of 16 set by Socks Seybold in 1902. No one in 15 years had hit more than 12.
Barrow didn’t seem to care. He still was looking for a pitcher. The day after Ruth’s 11th home run, a Monday, the Red Sox had an off-day in Washington. Ruth went to Baltimore to visit his father and friends. He was late arriving back in Washington Tuesday afternoon, reaching the dugout only an hour before the concluding game of the series with the Senators. Barrow was not happy. Ruth was not happy.
“Say, isn’t that Barrow there in the dugout?” asked a relocated friend from Sudbury who saw Ruth before the game.
“Yeah, that’s the goddamned old shitpot,” replied the Babe.
In the game, Ruth made an error and then struck out. Barrow made a comment about swinging at the first pitch, “a bum play.” Ruth made a comment in return that involved punching Barrow in the nose. Barrow said that comment would cost $500. Ruth said that it wouldn’t, because he had quit the team. He unbuttoned his uniform and wound up watching the last three innings with his friend from Sudbury in the stands.
By the next morning, the Red Sox were in Philadelphia for a series against the A’s and Ruth was back in Baltimore, signing a contract to play with the Chester, Pennsylvania, shipyard. He, like other stars in the game, had been receiving offers from shipyards and other military-related companies (all with baseball teams) for the entire season. The news did not land well with Barrow and Harry Frazee. They sputtered about lawsuits and injunctions and the next day sent Heinie Wagner back to Baltimore to try to convince their man to return.
The convincing wasn’t hard. Ruth already had talked with reporters at his father’s bar and sounded ready to return. The anger had softened.
“I was mad as a March hare,” he said, “and told Barrow then and there that I was through with him and his team. I know I was too mad to control myself, but suiting the action to the word, I did leave the team and came home….
“I am all right and willing and ready to get back to playing. But I do not want to be fighting and fought with all the time.”
He and Wagner showed up in Philadelphia at two o’clock in the morning of July 4. The Red Sox had a doubleheader with the A’s at Shibe Park. Ruth did not play in the first game. Barrow would not speak to him or even acknowledge that he existed, and Ruth started taking his uniform off between games and declared that he was leaving again and for good. Hooper and other teammates convinced him to stay. They also convinced Barrow to talk with him.