NOBODY’S PERFECT: The Story Behind Baseball’s First Perfect Game

NOBODY’S PERFECT: The Story Behind Baseball’s First Perfect Game



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 Perfect Games Photo Gallery
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I’ve seen the photo of the skinny,19th-century ballplayer in the funny-looking uniform before, but now I know who he is. Thanks to Paul Doyle’s interesting essay today, we learn about the first Perfect Game in baseball history and the pre-med student who threw it.

By the way, check out the photo gallery to see pics of all 23 pitchers of “Perfect Games”! -GL

NOBODY’S PERFECT:

The Story Behind Baseball’s First Perfect Game

These last few baseball seasons have been puzzling to long-time baseball fans who have been barraged by analytical terms such as launch angles, exit velocities, spin rates, and other terms that warm the heart of physics majors, if not baseball fans.

The resulting acceptance of these theories of “winning baseball” has been exacerbated by the short season of 2020 and the lack of offense and the almost record-breaking number of no-hitters thrown by pitchers in the early stages of the 2021 season. With six being thrown through the middle of May, a once rare feat has almost become mundane. Someone uttered after the sixth that it would take a perfect game to catch the baseball aficionado’s attention.

After all, there have only been 23 of them thrown in the 145-year history of the game, while there have been a total of 311 no-hitters including this year (288 non-perfect).

With the anniversary of the first perfect game coming up on the horizon on June 12th, it’s a good time to reflect on the first one thrown in a major league game by Lee Richmond in 1880 in Worcester, Massachusetts.

It is interesting in researching this event that the term “perfect game” was not a part of the vernacular until far into the future. We also know that the pre-modern era of the game that existed was a far different version. There was no pitcher’s mound that existed. Pitchers threw from a “box” that was only 45 feet from the batter (it would be changed to 50 feet the following year and stay that way until 1893 when the box changed to a mound and the distance to 60 feet that became 60 feet, 6 inches because of an incorrect measurement).

However, the game that day was played at Worcester’s home field, Driving Park, which was located on the grounds of the city’s Agricultural Fairgrounds. Richmond at the time was a student at Brown University in Providence, RI, who usually commuted to the Worcester Ruby Legs home games by train. He needed the salary to help pay for his tuition at Brown. He was one of the highest-paid in the league at $2,400.

In a recent article in the Boston Globe, Kevin Dupont revealed that Richmond, who was about to graduate from Brown, attended an all-night celebration with his classmates the night before. In fact, it appears that Richmond played a baseball game at 5  o’clock that morning as part of the celebration, and according to Dupont, “…turning in at approximately 6:30 AM. After a brief snooze, he was up to catch the 11:30 train to Worcester, and by dusk, he was in the baseball history books.”

The southpaw hurler had a 32-32 record with the Worcester club that year. He started 66 games for the Ruby Legs, pitched in 8 others in relief with a mind-boggling 590 2/3 innings in that campaign. The team played a total of 83 games that year.

 As to the game, it was a crisp 1:26 minute contest, with a seven-minute rain delay thrown in for good measure. Worcester scored the game’s only run which was helped by a double error on Cleveland’s usually stellar second baseman Fred “Sureshot” Dunlap.

This game, like many no-hitters, was saved by a defensive gem. Cleveland’s clean-up hitter, Phillips, slapped a line shot to right field that apparently was the end of the no-hitter. Worcester right fielder Lon Knight charged and threw to first base to get Phillips for the out.

While the game got press coverage from the local paper describing it as a “wonderful shut out” and “the best baseball game on record”, the term “perfect game” did not get introduced that day. Richmond himself described his feat as “No-Hit, No-Run, No-Man-Reach First game.” (You could tell he was a pre-med student, not a future marketing major).  In fact, five days later, another perfect game was thrown by John Montgomery Ward for Providence.

The Worcester Ruby Legs were gone after the 1882 season. The grounds of the old Worcester Agricultural Fairgrounds were used to build a campus for the private Becker College many years later. Richmond was done himself in 1883, finishing with a 75-100 record to become a doctor.  There would be no more “No-Hit, No-Run, No-Man-Reach-First” games until the modern era when Cy Young threw one in 1904 and  Addie Joss threw one for Cleveland against Washington on October 2, 1908.

It wasn’t until the following January when a story in the Washington Post quoted the great Chicago White Sox pitcher Big Ed Walsh congratulating Addie Joss for pitching a “perfect game” that the term entered into the unique baseball vernacular.

So, as we continue to ponder today’s game and we see concerns that seem perpetual, we also see that the game, like life, goes in circles. This season Worcester got another professional baseball team as the AAA Pawtucket Red Sox (next door to Providence) moved into a modern, spanking new ballpark. Meanwhile, Becker College,  the grounds where their predecessors played, closed its doors due to financial reasons, just as Worcester played its first game in the new stadium just a little over a mile away.

Paul Doyle 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Memories and Dreams; Spring 2010; Boston Globe; Kevin Dupont; May 9,2021 article.

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.

9 Comments

  1. Dave Bancroft · June 1, 2021 Reply

    I’ve got a great “almost” story regarding seeing a perfect game. In 1988, my dad’s navy shipmates were having their annual reunion in Cincinnati. We both attended as a father and son trip. As part of the festivities, we took in 3 ball games at Riverfront Stadium. Wed and Thurs, the Reds played the Astros. Nolan Ryan pitched on Wed, the only time I got to see him in person. I believe the Reds won on Thurs, then came the Fri night game. It was a wet, soggy day, and it was doubtful the game would be played at all. There was a two and a half hour rain delay to start the game and my dad and I left after about two hours of waiting it out. The next morning in the hotel, I heard my dad go, “Oh, no!” I asked what was the matter and he said, “You’re not going to believe this!” He had ESPN on the television and only then did I find out that Tom Browning had pitched a perfect game after the delay. I was bummed out at missing it, but that’s the way the ball bounces. I believe I actually have the Ryan game ticket stub somewhere, but the perfect game ticket is long gone.

  2. Paul Doyle · June 1, 2021 Reply

    Nice story, Dave.
    I took a bus trip on Memorial Day in 2003 to Yankee Stadium to see Roger Clemens win his 300th career game against the Red Sox.
    Or at least I thought I was! It was raining all the way down on the four hour trip. Once we got there, it was still raining, but they opened the gates. We sat for two and a half hours waiting and finally the game started. We thought that someone was looking down on us, but with a biblical slant to make us pay penance for the trip to the promised land. Alas, Clemens got hit hard and the Sox won going away. Being a Sox fan, it was a consolation, but it wasn’t history!
    After the game, he walked back to the bus parked on the Grand Concourse. As we were approaching about a quarter mile away, we heard noises that we thought were firecrackers. We then heard sirens as we boarded the bus. Waiting for all to board took at least 20 minutes. As the bus pulled away, about 500 feet up the street, we saw what the commotion was about. A drive-by shooting! Two bodies were slumped over the dashboard with a side window broken.
    There was no no- hitter in that case either. In fact, someone hit a “double” in that “game”. We weren’t in NH anymore, Toto!

    In 2005, I was in Chicago for a business trip. The group had already had tickets to see the Cubs one night. We were excited that Greg Maddox was going for career strikeout mark of 3,000.

    Same thing. As game time approached, the heavens opened up. We waited almost two hours for the game to start. This time, we struck gold as Maddox reached to magic mark and surpassed it.

    Two days later, our meetings got over late morning. The Cubs were playing a day game. I rushed backed to the hotel, checked out and left my bags at the front desk and scooted to Wrigley in time for the game. It was also the day that I got the only foul ball in attending over 500 MLB games. I still have the ticket stubs for all three games plus the ball!

  3. Bill Schaefer · June 1, 2021 Reply

    Dave and Paul,
    You guys are the soggiest bloggers in captivity. All that rain you had to endure just for the love of the game!
    Amazing stories–that’s a tough one, Dave, missing the Browning perfect game after that long wait. Congrats on the foul ball and seeing Maddox reach his milestone, Paul. And a unique and interesting essay, also.
    Today marks the anniversary of Johan Santana’s no-hitter against St. Loo on June 1, 2012. The only one in Mets history. Even though it’s a bit tainted with the Beltran drive kicking up a particle of chalk. He deserved it, though.

    • Paul Doyle · June 1, 2021 Reply

      Bill,
      I am easily brainwashed. All I have to do is tilt my head sideways during a rain delay.

      If it wasn’t for Jimmy Qualls and Leron Lee, Tom Terrific would have had two.

      Almost a coincidence-Johann Strauss died on June 3rd. Maybe it had something to do with Beltran’s hit waltzing around the foul line.

  4. Bill Schaefer · June 2, 2021 Reply

    Funny line about being brainwashed, Paul!
    The Jimmy Qualls heartbreak still lingers. Seaver threw him an off speed pitch that Qualls served into left center. Had TT stuck with heat, the no-no is in the books.

  5. Bill Schaefer · June 2, 2021 Reply

    Just a thought, if I may. Some (including Terry Collins) believe the strain of the extra pitches Santana delivered to capture his no-hitter ended his career. Not so:
    (1) Johan felt great after the game.
    (2) a few days later he threw his best bullpen of the year.
    (3) You could look it up–Santana was slightly more effective in subsequent starts, after the game, than he was before the historic feat.
    (4) The shoulder difficulties were going to flare up again regardless…he had numerous inherent problems.
    Collins should not feel guilty.

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