Ghostsoldier
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,410
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- Starke, Florida, USA
Rob
View attachment 83444
Rob...
Do you know why the World Series is called the World Series if only American Teams play?
Short and to the point!Because, in 1903, Americans believed they *were* the World.
Because, in 1903, Americans believed they *were* the World....
A couple of my replica hats; the Black Sox being a particular historical interest to me, here's the 1917 and 1920 style WS caps, along with a vintage catcher's mitt...I also have some 30s, 40s and 50s Yankees style hats, and several other gloves.
Rob
Mmmmmmm, unwrapped hot dogs slowly poaching in a Sterno steamer. Some things never change.
I was deeply shocked to discover, last time I was at Fenway, that after more than a century they no longer serve Gulden's Mustard. It's Gold's now, and while it's OK, it lacks the grainy pungence of Gulden's, which is a necessary complement to the dirty-water funk.
(To be fair, if you get a weenie under the stands, it comes off a roller grill. Only the roving vendors still have the steam boxes.)
Because, in 1903, Americans believed they *were* the World.
Before the "World's Series" was instituted, there were other post-season showcases, usually pitting the National League champion against that of the rival American Association, or, after the AA collapsed, against the second-place team in the NL.
The "Dauvray Cup Series" was promoted starting in 1887 by a publicity-oriented actress named Helen Dauvray, who happened to be married to John Montgomery Ward of the New York Giants. To win the Cup, the champions of the NL and the AA played a post-season series with the winner to retain the Cup until the following season. After Dauvray and Ward broke up, the idea of a Cup series was abandoned until a businessman named William Temple produced the "Temple Cup," which carried on the same idea thru the 1897 season.
The Temple Cup survives today in the Hall of Fame, but the Dauvray Cup hasn't been seen in public since 1893. Someone, somewhere, has an impressive and important baseball artifact buried in their attic.