<\/a>The definitive look at the improbable MLB career of Charles “Victory” Faust.<\/p><\/div>\n
Faust, indeed, also proved a good luck charm for the New York squad \u2013 some speculated just by keeping the team happy and \u201cloose.\u201d\u00a0 One thing is clear, his conviction that he and the Giants were headed for greatness was unshakeable \u2013 and perhaps contagious. As Gabriel Schechter author of the book \u201cVictory Faust \u2013 The Rube Who Save McGraw\u2019s Giants\u201d<\/strong> reports, as the season went on, the team went 36-2 when Faust was with them and just 3-7 when he wasn\u2019t. (A bit of explanation on at least some those absences: Faust became so popular in New York that he was offered a job on vaudeville, telling stories, duplicating his windup and imitating the stars of the game. In his first three days in show business, the Giants went without a win, and Faust returned to his team and what he saw as his true destiny.)\u00a0\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\nStill Faust was not satisfied and kept badgering McGraw to give him a chance to toe the rubber in a game.<\/p>\n
On October 5, the Giants clinched the pennant, but they still had a week\u2019s worth of meaningless games until the fortune teller-predicted and Faust-promised World Series.\u00a0 And, Faust was still driven to appear on the mound.\u00a0 He had not \u2013 as predicted \u2013 \u201cpitched\u201d the Giants to success.\u00a0 He was about to get his wish.<\/p>\n
On October 7, McGraw relented to Faust\u2019s consistent badgering and brought him in to pitch the ninth inning of a game in which the Giants trailed the Boston Rustlers (Braves) 4-2.\u00a0 Faust, throwing fat pitches out of his exaggerated windmill-style\u00a0 windup actually managed to get out of the inning giving up just one run on one-hit (a double) and a sacrifice fly.<\/p>\n
In the bottom of the ninth, the Giants made the final out with Faust on deck. But Faust, still showing his unbridled (perhaps slightly off-kilter) enthusiasm took his place in the batters\u2019 box and refused to leave the field.\u00a0 And then a strange thing happened.\u00a0 The Boston players \u201cplayed\u201d along, stayed on the field and pitched to Faust. When he tapped a ball to the infield, the Boston players mishandled each throw and tag attempt until finally retiring a clumsily sliding (but surely smiling) Faust about ten feet from home plate. \u00a0Although the at bat didn\u2019t count, Faust had made his (and the fortune-teller’s) dream come true \u2013 he had pitched in a major league game.\u00a0 But he wasn\u2019t done yet.<\/p>\n
On October 12, in the final inning of the Giants\u2019 final regular season game, with New York trailing the Brooklyn Superbas (Dodgers) 5-1, Faust pitched again \u2013 notching a scoreless frame.\u00a0 This time, he came to the plate when it counted\u00a0 And, like their Boston counterparts, the Brooklyn squad played along. Apparently believing there was little chance the awkward Faust could be counted on to hit the ball, Brooklyn pitcher Eddie Dent \u201cdented\u201d Faust with a pitch. Faust then, being largely ignored (or, perhaps, even encouraged) by the Brooklyn team, stole second and third base before scoring on a groundout. \u00a0Quite an end to the season, and the World Series was ahead.\u00a0 It was also quite the end to Faust\u2019s major league career.<\/p>\n
Despite Faust\u2019s presence, the Giants lost the World Series to the Philadelphia Athletics four games to two \u2013 and McGraw seemed to lose interest in the New York\u2019s good luck charm.<\/p>\n
The Giants did not invite Faust back in 1912 \u2013 but, no surprise, he showed up anyway.\u00a0 And, in a tribute to persistence, was again allowed to provide pre-game hijinks at the Polo Grounds (the team declined to pay his travel expenses for away games that season).\u00a0 Although the Giants (who would have expected otherwise) got off to a 54-11 start, McGraw had tired of Faust\u2019s continued badgering about the opportunity to take the mound – and Faust was convinced to leave the team in mid-season.<\/p>\n
The Giants won more than 80 percent of the games they played while Faust was with the team.<\/strong><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\nFaust moved back to Kansas, then California (perhaps, looking for Lulu) and eventually to Seattle (near one of his brothers) still insisting he would make it back to help the Giants win another pennant. It was not meant to be.\u00a0 In December of 1914, Faust was committed to an Oregon mental hospital, where he was diagnosed with dementia and (after several weeks of treatment) released in his brother\u2019s care.\u00a0 Faust died June 18, 1915 (at age 34) of tuberculosis. \u00a0Often described a \u201cdelusional,\u201d the fact is Charles \u201cVictory\u201d Faust made it to the big leagues and did earn a pair of turns on the mound for a pennant winning club.\u00a0 In doing so, he carved a spot for himself as one of the more memorable characters in baseball history – and realized a dream that lives in most baseball fans’ hearts.<\/p>\n
In 1915, the year Charles \u201cVictory\u201d Faust passed away, the New York Giants finished last in the National League \u2013 their first last-place finish since 1900. It would, in fact, be their only last place finish between 1900 and 1943.<\/strong><\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\nCharles \u201cVictory\u2019 Faust \u2013 MLB Record<\/strong><\/p>\nPitching:<\/strong><\/p>\nGames \u2026 2.\u00a0 W-L \u2026 0-0.\u00a0 Innings pitched \u2026 2.\u00a0 Hits \u2026 2. Earned runs \u2026 1. ERA \u2026 4.50.<\/p>\n
Hitting<\/strong><\/p>\nPlate appearances \u2026 1.\u00a0 At Bats \u2026 0.\u00a0 Hits \u2026 0.\u00a0 Walks \u2026 o.\u00a0 Hit By Pitch \u2026 1. Stolen bases \u2026 2. Runs scored \u2026 1.\u00a0 RBI \u2026 0.<\/p>\n
A final note:\u00a0 You can probably file this one under #HowTheGameHasChanged.\u00a0 There will never be another player like Charles “Victory” Faust.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nPrimary Resources;\u00a0 Charlie Faust<\/strong> \u2013 Society for American Baseball Research Biography, by Gabriel Schechter; Searching for Victory \u2013 The Story of Charles Victor(y) Faust<\/strong>, by Thomas S, Busch, Society for American Baseball Research, Research Journals Archives; Baseball-Reference.com<\/strong>; The Glory of Their Times<\/strong>, by Lawrence S. Ritter, McMillian and Company (1966).<\/em><\/p>\n