- 1895 - 2B Bill Webb was born in Chicago. His show time consisted of five big league games for the 1917 Pirates, going 3-for-15 as a 22-year-old. His late season Bucco try out had its up-and-downs. Webb was 0-fer in his first four games, but in his last go, he went 3-for-4 with a run scored as the Bucs beat Boston, 2–0, at Forbes Field. Webb did have a long minor league career, playing 14 seasons and went on to become a baseball lifer. He managed in the minors and then coached third base for the White Sox under Jimmy Dykes for five years before becoming their farm director, a position he held until he had a fatal heart attack at the age of 47.
- 1902 - LHP Ralph Erickson (his middle name was Lief) was born in DuBois, Iowa. He went to Idaho State and toiled in the Class C Idaho-Utah League before the Bucs brought him to Pittsburgh in September, 1929. He lasted until mid-summer of 1930, getting into eight games with a 1-0/8.40 slash. Ralph was a workhorse starter on the farm after that trial and pitched through the 1934 season. He then went to Arizona and worked in the mining industry, which apparently agreed with him - he was MLB’s oldest living player until he passed away in 2002 at the ripe old age of 100. Erickson did have his moment in the sun: He tossed a no hitter in 1933 while pitching for Shreveport of the Texas League. He won the game, 2-0, against Houston, beating none other than Dizzy Dean.
Ed Doheny - via Vermont Historical Society |
- 1903 - Ed Doheny surrendered just four singles as the Pirates won at Philadelphia 4-3 in 10 innings to run their winning streak to 15 games. Hans Wagner had three hits while Ginger Beaumont and Fred Clarke each had a pair; Doheney helped his own cause by scoring twice. It would end later in the day as the Phils took the nitecap of the Baker Bowl twinbill by a 5-1 tally.
- 1912 - The Pirates swept a DH from the Cards by 10-4 and 19-3 scores, banging out 35 hits over the course of the day at Robinson Field. Max Carey (he had six hits during the affair) and Chief Wilson hit grand slams (Wilson’s was thought to be the longest ball ever hit at Robison, clearing the park), and rookie Stump Edington came close, being thrown out at home after clearing the bases with a triple. The Bucs put up a 10 spot in the seventh inning of the nitecap. Claude Hendrix and King Cole were the winning pitchers. The Pittsburgh Press wrote “The Pirates slugged their way to a double victory… There appeared to be absolutely no style of pitching that the Corsairs could not solve.”
- 1913 - What had been a tight pitching duel through nine innings turned into a laugher in the 10th when the Pirates erupted for eight runs against three St. Louis Cardinal relievers to take home a 9-1 win at Robison Field. The Bucs had five hitters with a pair of knocks (and all in a row, batting 7-8-9-1-2 in the order), including pitcher Marty O’Toole who scattered eight hits for the complete game win. The eight-run margin in extra innings is the largest bonus baseball spread in Pirates history.
- 1918 - 1B Jake Beckley passed away in Kansas City. He spent 20 years in MLB, and during his first nine campaigns (1888-96), he wore Pittsburgh colors as an Allegheny, Burgher and Pirate. He hit over .300 for six of those nine seasons. During his six-team career, he batted .308 with a .361 OBP, scored 1,600 runs and chased home 1,575 teammates.
Elmer Yde 1924 - photo Conlon Collection/Getty |
- 1924 - Pitcher Emil Yde's bases-loaded double tied the score in the ninth inning and in the 14th, the Pittsburgh southpaw's two-run triple beat the Cubs at Forbes Field, 8-7. Beside the two hits and five RBI, Yde hurled 10-1/3 innings of one-run ball in relief to earn the win.
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