Back Into the Dead Ball Era We Go! 1917 World Series: Heine Zimmerman Chases Speedy Eddie Collins Across Home Plate!

Back Into the Dead Ball Era We Go! 1917 World Series: Heine Zimmerman Chases Speedy Eddie Collins Across Home Plate!



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“Back Into the Dead Ball Era We Go!”

1917 World Series: Heine Zimmerman Chases Speedy Eddie Collins Across Home Plate!”




“Who the hell was I supposed to throw to, Bill Klem?” –Heine Zimmerman, commenting about one of the most controversial plays in World Series history.

…Read on to see what it was!

Our tour through Memorable World Series Moments stops today in 1917. In the featured photo, we see the 1917 White Sox outfield: Nemo Leibold, “Clean” Eddie Murphy, John “Shano” Collins, “Shoeless” Joe Jackson, and Hap Felsch.

In this memorable World Series, played from October 6-15, the White Sox beat the Giants four games to two. The Series was played against the backdrop of World War I, which dominated the American landscape that year and the next. The White Sox were managed by Pants Rowland, making his only post-season appearance; while the Giants were led by the indomitable John McGraw, who had recently won pennants in 1911, ‘12, and ‘13, but had lost all three World Series. They were looking for their first World Series championship since 1905.

A strong White Sox team had finished the 1917 season with a 100–54 record (.649), a club record for wins that still stands; while the Giants went 98-56 (.636). The Series featured a total of six Hall-of-Famers: White Sox Eddie Collins, Red Faber, and Ray Schalk; Giants John McGraw, plus umpires Bill Klem and Billy Evans.

Eddie Collins was the hitting star, batting .409 over the six games, while Eddie Cicotte and Red Faber combined to pitch 50 out of 52 innings for the White Sox. The great athlete Jim Thorpe made his only World Series “appearance” during Game Five, where he was listed in the lineup as starting in right field, but for his turn at-bat in the top of the first inning, he was replaced by Dave Robertson.

The first two games were played at Chicago’s Comiskey Park. The Sox won both games, behind complete-game efforts from Eddie Cicotte and Red Faber. In New York for Game Three, Cicotte again threw a complete game, but the Sox were shut out 2-0 by Giants’ starter Rube Benton. In Game Four, the Sox were again shut out, 5–0, this time by Ferdie Schupp. The Series was even at two games apiece heading back to Chicago.

Reb Russell started Game Five, but only faced three batters before being lifted for Cicotte. Going into the bottom of the seventh, the Sox were down 5–2, but they rallied to score three in the seventh and three in the eighth to win 8–5. Faber pitched the final two innings for the win.

The two teams were back in New York for Game Six, played on October 15. The Sox took an early 3–0 lead and on the strength of another complete-game performance from Faber (his third of the Series) hung on to win 4–2 and clinched the World Series championship.

But the sixth and final game included one of the most famous plays in World Series history: a controversial rundown in which Giants’ third baseman Heinie Zimmerman engaged in a futile foot race with the speedy Hall-of-Famer Eddie Collins toward an unprotected home plate. Collins scored what turned out to be the Series-winning run. Here’s the setting:

In the fourth inning, with Collins on third and Shoeless Joe Jackson on first, Hap Felsch hit a bouncer back to the mound. Giants’ pitcher Rube Benton spun and threw to Zimmerman, hoping to catch Collins off the bag.

Meanwhile, Giants’ catcher Bill Rariden had run up the third-base line anticipating a rundown, expecting pitcher Benton or first baseman Walter Holke to cover the plate. However, neither of them budged and the plate was left unprotected! The crafty Collins, one of the fastest runners in the game, sized up the situation immediately and took off for the plate. This left  Zimmerman no choice but to chase Collins as he scurried down the basepath toward the vacated plate. Zimmerman was seen in hot pursuit helplessly pawing the ball in the air in a futile and desperate attempt to tag Collins as he scampered home and easily scored the decisive run. 

The New York media blamed Zimmerman for losing the game, and he was added to the list of previous Giants’ World Series goats, which included Fred Merkle and Fred Snodgrass. McGraw, however, put the blame on Benton and Holke for failing to cover the plate.

Conventional wisdom had it that Collins was much faster than Zimmerman, and he had no chance to catch Collins. But that wasn’t completely true. Zimmerman was also known for his speed with 175 career stolen bases. Existing photos show that Zimmerman was only a step or two behind Collins, who slid across the plate as Zimmerman vaulted over him (see photo gallery).  A known shady character, did Zimmerman purposely hold back?

Two years before the Black Sox scandal, Zimmerman found himself having to publicly deny purposely allowing the run to score, and that he had “thrown” the game. A famous quote often attributed to Zimmerman, but actually invented by writer Ring Lardner some years later, was that when asked about the incident, Zimmerman replied:

“Who the hell was I supposed to throw to, Bill Klem?”

Zimmerman played 13 seasons in the majors (1907-1919) with the Cubs (1907-’16) and the Giants ((1916-’19). He hit .295 with 58 home runs and 796 RBIs. His best year was 1912 when he led the National League in batting average (.372), hits (207), doubles (41), home runs (14), RBIs (104), slugging (.571), and total bases (318). He was a member of two World Series championships (1907-’08) with the Cubs.

Zimmerman was eventually banned from baseball for life by Judge Landis due to various accusations of corruption. Eddie Collins, one of the best second basemen the game has ever seen, went on to have a Hall-of-Fame career. Two years later, the White Sox won another pennant; but, as we all know, this time they experienced an entirely different outcome in the Fall Classic, and became known as the “Black Sox.”

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Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from 1917 World Series Wikipedia page.

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I'm a baseball historian who also enjoys writing. My forte is identifying ballplayers in old photos, and my special interest is the Dead Ball Era.

17 Comments

  1. Wayne Tietz · May 2, 2020 Reply

    2005 was the first World Championship since 1917. I’ve been a lifelong White Sox fan. Taking 88 years to win another Championship tells alot about the lousy ownerships the franchise has had.

  2. Sean Green · May 2, 2020 Reply

    I have read that a lot of the great New York Giants teams were great during the regular

    season, but during the playoffs and World Series games they would commit mental and

    physical errors in crucial times. (Merkle not touching second base in 1908, Snodgrass

    dropping a fly ball in 1912, Zimmerman chasing Collins home in 1917.)

    • Gary Livacari · May 2, 2020 Reply

      Excellent points, although the Merkle blunder was during the regular season (and I don’t blame Merkle, but that’s a discussion for another day). The Giants under McGraw lost WS in 1911, 1912, 1913, 1917, 1923, and 1924. Their wins came in 1905, 1921, and 1922.

  3. Wayne Tietz · May 2, 2020 Reply

    Gary; I live in the Chicagoland area and have been a White Sox season ticket holder for years. I have a very large White Sox memorabilia collection which has been featured in Sport Collectors Digest and Sports Collectors Dailey.

    • James Montemurro · May 2, 2020 Reply

      Gary Peters will ALWAYS be my favorite Chisox. Durable, reliable & smart lefty hurler and boy, could he hit too!

    • Gary Livacari · May 2, 2020 Reply

      Glad to hear it Wayne. I live in Park Ridge. I’m a life-long Cub fan, but I’m one of those weird guys that likes the White Sox too. As a matter of fact, with the Cubs going to that goofy new station, I’ve been telling friends that I’m not forking out money for it, and I’ll be happy to just watch White Sox games this year. Plus I think the White Sox have a great team put together. If only we can get the season up and running…Will look forward to hearing more about your collection. -Best, Gary

  4. Paul Doyle · May 2, 2020 Reply

    Billy Pierce gets my vote for favorite White Sox pitcher.

    Too young to remember Ted Lyons, but always puzzled as to how he and Harold Baines broke into the HOF when the alarm system apparently was on the fritz…😁

  5. Paul Doyle · May 2, 2020 Reply

    Jim,
    I’d switch him and Minnie Minoso for Lyons and Baines at the Hall of Fame.

    Pierce’s numbers are deceiving. He pitched against Whitey Ford 14 times between 1955-1960. His overall record against the Yankees was 25-37 during their dynasty years, which you can imagine if he had a little more success would have made his case better.

    He also pitched two terrific games against the Yankees in the ‘62 Series, splitting the games, but would have won both if the Yankees didn’t rally for 3 runs in the ninth in his first game and squeezed out a win.

    • James Montemurro · May 3, 2020 Reply

      I would agree with you Paul. Minoso and Pierce had more of an impact on the game. I was eight years old in ’59 and a young Dodger fan (saw my first game the year before at the LA Coliseum). To this day I still can’t understand why Al Lopez didn’t start Pierce in any games. He pitched 4 innings in relief – no earned runs. I wrote to both Lopez & Pierce in the ’80’s and I wish I asked them why.

  6. Bill Schaefer · May 3, 2020 Reply

    Just back from Mystic Island. Love those pictures, Gary.
    Zimmerman definitely got a bum rap and that’s a great line by Ring Lardner. Here’s another one by Lardner: “He looked at me as if I were a side dish he didn’t order.”
    Lardner also wrote “Champion,” turned into the movie that catapulted Kirk Douglas into superstardom in 1949. So well done by Kirk, Ruth Roman, Paul Stewart, Arthur Kennedy.
    They say Lardner felt betrayed by the Black Sox scandal and never wrote about baseball in the same way after 1919. “Eight Men Out” was one of the better baseball movies, I thought.
    BTW, starting in 1917, Ty Cobb won three straight batting titles: .383, .382, .384. How consistent can you get?
    Best,
    Bill

  7. Paul Doyle · May 4, 2020 Reply

    Jim,
    I am the same age as you. I was 8 watching the 1959 WS. It was the first year that I really started to become passionate about the game. Even though I was aware of Ted Williams and the Red Sox and fell in love with Mickey Mantle a couple of years prior, it wasn’t until the summer of 1959 that I really started to follow baseball.

    I remember how poor Al Smith got soaked unintentionally with a cup of beer dropped by a fan as Smith went back after a fly ball.

    How Larry Sherry was the MVP of the Series; the massive crowds at the Colliseum. The Sox had future HOF’s Luis Aparicio, Nellie Fox , Al Lopez, Early Wynn; The Dodgers had Walter Alston , Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale and Duke Snider getting ready to board the Cooperstown Express.

    Sorry to turn a story on the 1917 Series into a reminiscence on a team and Series 42 years into the future; but baseball will do that to ‘ya.

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