Red Legs and Black Sox: Edd Roush and the Untold Story of the 1919 World Series Review

Red Legs and Black Sox: Edd Roush and the Untold Story of the 1919 World Series
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Red Legs and Black Sox: Edd Roush and the Untold Story of the 1919 World Series ReviewRed Legs and Black Sox:
Edd Roush and the Untold Story of the 1919 World Series
Susan Dellinger, PhD
Emmis Books 2006

Reviewed by David J. Fletcher, MD

Fresh in the wake of the White Sox winning the 2005 World Series and overcoming the curse of the 1919 Black Sox comes a new book that looks at that fateful 1919 World Series from the perspective of a star player from the team that won the tainted crown.

Red Legs and Black Sox Edd Roush and the Untold Story of the 1919 World Series (Emmis Books 2006) is authored by Susan Dellinger, PhD. This book is about the life and times of Edd Roush, the ambidextrous Hall of Fame center-fielder from the Cincinnati Redlegs.

Roush, who inducted into the Hall of Fame, in 1962 along side Jackie Robinson and Bob Feller, was the last living player from the 1919 World Series until his death in 1988. In fact, in 1987 six months before his death, Roush visited the set in Covington, Kentucky of the movie version Eliot Asinof's Eight Men Out (8M0) and met with 8MO director John Sayles. Edd (with his colorful two Ds in his first name) Roush was also a principle reference source for Asinof in the early `60s when he wrote 8MO

Dr. Dellinger, who happens to be the granddaughter of Roush, adds tremendous details to the story previously told in pieces before by Lawrence S. Ritter in his The Glory of His Times (McMillan 1966) and in Eugene Murdoch's oral baseball history.

The slick-fielding Roush and two-time batting National League batting champion, lived for the rest of his 95 years with the specter of a tainted World Championship even though he told anyone that would listen that Reds were a better ball team and that they would have beaten the White Sox even if they had not thrown the 1919 World Series. (Ironically, Roush's own major league career started with a cup of coffee with the Chicago White Sox in 1913.)

Dellinger continues and expands on the story line first laid down in David Pietrusza's Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius Who Fixed the World Series (Carroll & Graf 2005) about the complex webs of deceit that the gamblers who infiltrated both the White Sox and Reds players. She adds more to knock the conventional myth that the 1919 Black Sox scandal was baseball's single sin. She adds to the newly uncovered story that St. Louis gambler Kid Becker first planned the fixing of the World Series in 1918 between the Cubs and Red Sox played at the Sox Park because Comiskey Park held more fans than Weeghman Park (now known as Wrigley Field). Becker, who was killed in April 1919, had his brilliant fix plan picked up by Carl Zork and a cartel of St. Louis and Des Moines small time gamblers, who are relegated to minor roles in his history of the Black Sox scandal but were really the master fixers never given the real credit they deserve.

The story also expands on the belief that the Reds may have intentionally lost Game Six and Game Seven of the 1919 World Series because possibly two of their pitchers may been reached (Dutch Ruether the loser of Game 6 in the Sox won 5-4 in 10 innings was believed to have been reached by the gamblers and who also sued Eliot Asinof in 1962 for writing in Eight Men Out that he been drinking before Game 1 of the 1919 World Series).

The book outlines Roush's theory that the White Sox were playing to win after Game 1. This theory is developed with Roush's story of Jimmy Widmeyer, the "Million Dollar Newsboy" who ran a newsstand at the Walnut and 5th in Cincinnati. Widmeyer, who was alerted about a possible fix, rented room 712 of the Sinton Hotel, the room next to Black Sox stars Ed Cicotte and Happy Felsch. Widmeyer "with his ear pressed against the wall with a water glass" overhead arguments between White Sox players and the gamblers, presumably Abe Attell, about getting their pay-off for tanking Game one of the 1919 World Series.

The craziness of the gambling activities in and about the Cincinnati Hotels around Game 1 and Game 2 are particularly insightful in the missing links of the Black Sox story and correspond to the trial testimony that Sleepy Bill Burns late gave in the 1924 Milwaukee trial of Joe Jackson versus Charles Comiskey

One charming aspect of the book is the emergence of Roush's fiery personality and his going-his-own shrew negotiating style exemplified with his jump in 1914 to the newly-formed Federal Leagues where he starred for two years with the Indianapolis Hoosiers and the Newark Pepper and also he was a year-long salary hold-out in 1930. This probably explains his life-long steadfast view that the '19 Reds were the champs fix or no fix.

To add new nuggets of knowledge to the Black Sox scandal, Dr. Dellinger was able to take advantage of newly discovered documents in the Baseball Hall of Fame Library from the American League co-founder Ban Johnson papers. It was Johnson's feud with White Sox owner Charles Comiskey that fueled the prosecution of Comiskey's 8 prized indentured servant investments in the 1921 Black Sox trial after the three September 1920 Grand Jury confessions of Ed Cicotte, Joe Jackson, and Lefty Williams mysteriously disappeared. Dellinger particularly cites the detective work of Calvin Grimm, first hired by Johnson to investigate a possible World Series fix on the morning of Game 2 on 10/2/19.

The book provides the unique viewpoint that is missing in most film and literature about the Black Sox scandal-that of the victor who has to explain for a lifetime why he was a real champion, a viewpoint also passionately argued in William A Cook's The 1919 World Series: What Really Happened (McFarland & Company 2003)

The most haunting story is of Roush's close encounter with an unnamed St. Louis gambler whom he spoke to in August 1928. Roush had suffered an abdominal injury and was hospitalized in St. John's hospital in St. Louis and this gambler who also hospitalized, told Roush: "It was fixed all right. It started here in the little ole' St. Louie. A fellow name of Zork came up with the idea, but the money came from New York, from Rothstein."

It is this story about baseball's cover up (now the subject of another new book on the Black Sox entitled The Burying of the Black Sox-How Baseball's Cover-Up of the 1919 World Series Fix Almost Succeeded Potomac Books 2006 by Gene Carney) that is most fascinating and provides a new perspective on how the baseball magnates tried their best to keep the fixing of the 1919 World Series a secret and relegated to the dustbins of history.

My only major criticism with Dellinger's book is that future editions need to have an index.

The illustrations are a joy and nearly all new for Black Sox related publications.
The best illustration is the newly discovered picture of gambler Abe Attell grinning with a cigar in his mouth behind the Reds starting line-up before Game 1 on October 1, 1919. The photo creates a JFK s conspiracy-nior film-Oliver Stone moment.

A lot of the story of Red Legs and Black Sox begins where Eight Men Out ends. It is must read for any baseball fan or history buff who wants to learn more about baseball's darkest moment and how one proud man Edd Roush lived the rest of his life with the taint of the Black Sox.

Finally, I must add as a White Sox fan that had to wait 88 years for another World Championship I disagree with Dellinger's ever-running theme that the Reds would have won anyway. I will always believe that believe that Joe Jackson, Buck Weaver and all the rest would have beaten Edd Roush's Reds if Ed Cicotte hadn't done it for the wife and kiddies by plunking Morrie Rath on the back with the second pitch to tip off to the gamblers that the fix was on, especially if pitcher Red Faber who had won three games in 1917 World Series had not gotten sick with the Spanish Flu, the 1918 version of Avian influenza, that prevented him from pitching in the 1919 World Series.


David J. Fletcher MD
President, Chicago Baseball Museum
dfletcher@chicagobaseballmuseum.org
Director "The Black Sox-85 Years Later"
Chicago Historical Society October 2004
Red Legs and Black Sox: Edd Roush and the Untold Story of the 1919 World Series Overview

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