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THIS DAY IN HISTORY>>1921 "BLACK SOX" BASEBALL SCANDAL

  Author:  47296  Category:(History) Created:(7/5/2006 6:05:00 AM)
This post has been Viewed (1442 times)

After Judge Hugo Friend denies a motion to quash the indictments against the major league baseball players accused of throwing the 1919 World Series, a trial begins with jury selection. The Chicago White Sox players, including stars Shoeless Joe Jackson, Buck Weaver, and Eddie Cicotte, subsequently became known as the "Black Sox" after the scandal was revealed.

The White Sox, who were heavily favored at the start of the World Series, had been seriously underpaid and mistreated by owner Charles Comiskey. The conspiracy to fix the games was most likely initiated by New York gambler Arnold Rothstein, who used this discontent to his advantage: Through intermediaries, he offered relatively small sums of money for the players to lose some of the games intentionally. The scandal came to light when the gamblers did not pay the players as promised, thinking that they had no recourse. But when the players openly complained, the story became public and authorities were forced to prosecute them.

The trial against the players was actually just for show. Not so surprisingly, after a tacit agreement whereby the players assented not to denigrate major league baseball or Comiskey in return for an acquittal, the signed confessions from some of the players mysteriously disappeared from police custody.

The jury acquitted all of the accused players and then celebrated with them at a nearby restaurant. But the height of the hypocrisy surrounding the entire matter came when Shoeless Joe was forced to sue Comiskey for unpaid salary. During this trial, Comiskey's lawyers suddenly produced the confessions that had disappeared during the criminal trial, with no explanation as to how they had been obtained.

Arnold Rothstein never even faced trial, and Comiskey hoped to go back to business as usual. However, all did not end well for everyone. Other baseball owners, hoping to remove any hint that the games were illegitimate, hired Judge Kennisaw Mountain Landis to be the new commissioner of baseball. Landis was a hard-liner (and also a virulent racist-he prevented blacks from playing in the major leagues during his reign into the 1940s) who then permanently barred the implicated Black Sox players from baseball.

Landis' decision has come under considerable criticism for its unfairness to a few of the players. Buck Weaver, by all accounts, had refused to take any money offered by the gamblers. He was purportedly banned from baseball for refusing to turn his teammates in. And although Shoeless Joe Jackson probably accepted some money, his statistics show that he never truly participated in throwing the games-he had the best batting average of either team in the series.

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Replies:      
Date: 7/5/2006 7:36:00 AM  From Authorid: 62849    Ooohhhh, I was talking about this the other day with some friends, and I told them the judge (Landis, but I couldn't remember his name at the time) was hired as the commissioner and then turned around and banned the Black Sox players. They looked at me like I was nuts. LOL.  
Date: 7/5/2006 7:45:00 AM  From Authorid: 27534    Shook the baseball world for sure...  
Date: 7/5/2006 7:48:00 AM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 47296    There were a lot of bad decisions over this scandal, but at the same time, it revealed the corruption among the team owners in not wanting to pay their players. Landis probably did more to hurt baseball during his time as comissioner as he did to help it.  
Date: 7/5/2006 9:04:00 AM  From Authorid: 3321    Weren't they the Black Sox and then the White Sox? I don't know, I'm a Cubs fan...but my boyfriend is a Sox fan...we're a Chicago Romeo and Juliet story! hahahaha  
Date: 7/5/2006 10:26:00 AM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 47296    They were the White Sox, but the palyers involved in the allegations became known as the Black Sox, supposedly for giving baseball a black eye.  

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