The Beckett Blog


The Curse of Fred Merkle? **Guest Blogger**

Every baseball card we accumulate weaves a different story into the fabric of our collections. One of my favorites isn’t about a favorite player, or team, it’s about a swatch of baseball history. Fred Merkle’s 1911 T205 (gold border) tells a story unlike any other card.

Fred Merkle was yesterday’s Bill Buckner long before John McNamara and Bob Stanley put on a pair of spikes. If not for Fred Merkle’s “boner play” (as it was referred to at the time) Chicago Cubs fans would be drinking to a 101 year World Series drought.

The Cubs and NY Giants were in a classic National League pennant race as the humid summer season started to cool to the fall classic. The Cubs (of Tinkers-Evers-Chance fame) had been to the last two World Series. The Giants were led by the brilliant and loud John McGraw and the calm and collected Christy Mathewson.

In a late September game at the Polo Grounds, the Giants and the visiting Cubs were tied 1-1 going into the bottom of the 9th inning. With two outs and a runner on first, rookie first basemen Fred Merkle slugged a base hit to advance the runner to 3rd base. The next batter, Al Bridwell, followed with another single that brought the winning run home and giving the NY Giants an important win late in the season.

The Polo Grounds drama that unfolded featured players racing to centerfield clubhouses, NY fans storming the baseball stage and Johnny Evers, the Cubs second basemen, standing alone at second base waiting for Fred Merkle to advance from first. However, Merkle never ran to second because the run had scored. Unfortunately for him, the baseball rules state that runners must advance to the next base when forced or any run that scores on the play does not count. It’s a rule that would be forever celebrated in Chicago and forever haunt a 19-year-old rookie from Toledo, Ohio.

It’s unclear how Evers collected a baseball in the sea of chaos that swirled around him. Some historians say Johnny Evers wrestled the ball from a fan, others say he grabbed a different baseball from the dugout, either way, he convinced umpire Hank O’Day that he was in possession of the baseball. O’Day, who would later manage the Cubs, ripped the hearts out of NY fans by calling Merkle out at second base and taking the game winning run off the scoreboard. While Fred Merkle and the Giants were celebrating in the Polo Grounds locker room, O’Day changed history, altered a career and ruled the game a tie.

The Cubs and Giants ended the regular season tied for first place. The Cubs won a one-game playoff and went on to defeat the Detroit Tigers in the 1908 World Series. They haven’t won since.

Is Fred Merkle the real curse of the Cubs and not the famous “Billy Goat Curse?” http://baseball.suite101.com/article.cfm/the_cubs_fred_merkle_curse

Was Merkle unfairly branded a scapegoat? Keith Olberman has been on a fight to restore his tarnished reputation. http://www.thecolumnists.com/isaacs/isaacs74.html

My favorite reference to this event is in Frank Deford’s “The Old Ball Game.” This is a must read for anyone who enjoys baseball history. Deford feeds you the emotions and pulls you into the minds of the players as this event unfolds.

http://www.amazon.com/Old-Ball-Game-Mathewson-Baseball/dp/0871138859

Collecting Fred Merkle cards is less about statistics and more about history. Merkle went on to have a solid baseball career playing with the Giants, Brooklyn Robins, Chicago Cubs and NY Yankees. Unfortunately he’s most known for this play and unfairly blamed by NY fans for not reaching the 1908 World Series.

You can collect these Fred Merkle cards for about the same price of some of the fancy, high-end, glossy card packs that are now on card store shelves.

· 1911 T205 (gold border)

· 1909 T206 Sweet Caporal

· 1911 T206

· 1911 T3 Turkey Red (throwing)

James Jeansonne runs SportsLocker, one of the great hobby blogs on the ‘net today….

8 Comments so far
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if i remember correctly, i think keith olberman’s ebay ID has the name “merkle” in it. i know he is a big collector of cards.

Comment by rosschrisman2003

The NYT obit for Fred Snodgrass read: “Fred Carlisle Snodgrass, who muffed an easy fly that helped to cost the NY Giants the 1912 World Series died today at the age of 86.”
He could have become King of France but he would only be remembered for dropping that damn ball.
Maybe Merkle thought of this. He’s buried with his parents in Daytona Beach. The headstone only reads his parents names. Maybe ole Fred had the last laugh.
Fred Merkle was the first T206 I ever owned back when I was 13. Of all the cards that have passed through my hands, that card is still in my collection.

Comment by Andy Broome

Wow, Andy, despite the horrible and vicious abuse you take from your coworkers, maybe you really are a vintage expert!!

I didn’t even know what a T206 was when I was 13.

Comment by ejahnke

There’s a cool sports bar in Chicago: http://www.merkleschicago.com/
Their email subcriber list is called “The bonehead.”

Comment by JRJ

How come his card says he’s on the New York Nationals and the Giants? I may be missing something because I’ve only been around during the San Francisco Giants era but can someone please explain?

Comment by IVSPORT

I think (but I’m not positive) the “Nationals” at the bottom represents that the Giants were the National League team in New York. For example, some St. Louis T-205 Cards say Cardnials at the top and “St. Louis Nationals” at the bottom as way to differentiate them from the American League St. Louis Browns.

Comment by JRJ

Well, IVSPORT, before the Giants moved to San Fran (much to the dimay of fans in the Polo Grounds) the Giants were in NY.
Actually, the Dodgers and the Giants both moved the same year to the West Coast.
There are still fans in Flatbush that are upset about the move.
The Nationals name is in reference to the league. Same as New York Americans meant the New York Yankees, the New York Nationals referenced the New York Giants.
I think this answered your question.

Comment by Andy Broome

Happy Fred Merkle Day!
Is it ironic that the 100 yrs later the Cubs are playing in New York against a team that used to play at the Polo Grounds?!

Comment by JRJ




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