(Note: The American League was designated a major league in 1901.)<\/em>\u00a0 Waddell was facing Charles Comiskey\u2019s Chicago White Stockings \u2013 embroiled in a tough race with the Brewers for the American League championship.<\/p>\nLet\u2019s set the stage. On the previous Sunday (August 12), Waddell had tossed a twelve-inning complete game, giving up just one run as Milwaukee topped Kansas City.\u00a0 Four days later, he again went 12-innings \u2013 in a game against the White Sox that ended in a 1-1 tie.\u00a0 Facing the White Sox again on August 19, Waddell went 17 innings in a 2-1 victory in the first game of a twin bill. Manager Connie Mack knew Game Two was critical to the pennant race and so he asked Waddell if he could pitch the second contest as well – promising him three days off to go fishing if he took on the task (knowing time off to play was the way to Waddell\u2019s heart, head \u2026 and arm<\/em>).\u00a0 Waddell agreed to the deal and picked up a 1-0, one-hit win over Chicago \u2013 in a game shortened to five innings so that the Brewers could catch a train.<\/p>\nSo, basically, Waddell threw four complete games (three of them extra innings) and 46 innings in eight days \u2013 including 22 innings in winning both ends of that August 19 doubleheader. \u00a0Waddell finished the 1900 season with Pittsburgh of the National League, where he went 8-13, despite an NL-low 2.37 earned run average.<\/p>\n
Rube Waddell is almost universally recognized as the zaniest player in MLB history \u2013 but he also was one of the best (when he was focused on the game). Waddell was known to: leave a ball game to chase fire engines; miss a game he was scheduled to start because he was fishing or playing marbles with neighborhood kids; bring his outfielders in to sit on the grass and then proceed to fan the side (only in exhibition games of course); wrestle alligators in the off-season; enjoy more than an occasional libation; and (frequently) do battle with owners and managers.\u00a0 Waddell simply was more interested in enjoying life in his own way than in money or professional stability.<\/p>\n
Still, when Waddell set his mind and his heart to it, he could be something pretty special on the mound. \u00a0Thanks to his unpredictability, however, his professional career included stints with five major league clubs (13 seasons) and numerous minor league, independent, semi-pro and barn-storming teams. For BBRT\u2019s Minnesota readers, Waddell was a 20-game winner for the\u00a01911 American Association champion Minneapolis Millers.<\/p>\n
Rube Waddell was born on Friday the 13 of October in 1876 and died on April Fools day 1914. \u00a0There is some symmetry there.<\/strong><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\nHow good was Rube Waddell?\u00a0 In 1902, he joined the Philadelphia Athletics in June \u2013 making his first start on June 26 (with just 86 games left in the season). Waddell proceeded to win 24 games (the league\u2019s second-highest total) against seven losses, with a 2.05 ERA.\u00a0 Despite his shortened season, he led the AL with 210 strikeouts, fifty more than the runner-up (none other than Cy Young). The 6\u20191\u201d, 195-lb. lefty (fugures Waddell would be a southpaw) went on to lead the AL in strikeouts six consecutive seasons (1902-1907) \u2013 by a wide margin. (Note:\u00a0 The Athletics, just two games over the .500 mark when they signed Waddell, finished at 83-53 and won their first American League pennant.<\/em>)<\/p>\nIn 1904, Waddell set a modern (post-1900) MLB record with 349 strikeouts that stood until 1965 (when Sandy Koufax fanned 382). \u00a0\u00a0The next highest total in 1904 went to the Giants\u2019 Jack Chesbro, a full 110 whiffs behind Waddell \u2013 despite pitching 71 2\/3 more innings. That season, Waddell average 8.2 strikeouts per nine innings, at a time when the league average was 3.8.<\/p>\n
Waddell, elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1946, finished with a 193-143, 2.16 stat line.\u00a0 In the four seasons from 1902-1905, pitching for the Philadelphia Athletics, Waddell went 97-52, with a 1.88 earned run average and 1,148 strikeouts (versus 330 walks).\u00a0 In those four peak campaigns, he threw 1,312 innings (an average of 328 innings per season), completed 126 of 145 starts and twirled 22 shutouts.<\/p>\n
For more on Waddell, BBRT suggests: “Rube Waddell: The Zany, Brilliant Life of a Strikeout Artist,”<\/em> by Allan Howard Levy and “Just a Big Kid: The Life and Times of Rube Waddell,”<\/em> by Paul Proia.\u00a0 They are both good reads.<\/p>\nPrimary Resources: Society for American Baseball Research; Baseball-Reference.com; and the above-mentioned books.<\/em><\/p>\n