Harp
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
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- Chicago, IL US
Gret photos guys!
...any piks of Leo Durocher's brass knuckles?
...any piks of Leo Durocher's brass knuckles?
View attachment 84074
"Buy now" this card and we'll included
this neat item that we are sure you will
treasure for a lifetime".
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(Compliments from the "BFM")
I would have liked to have prosecuted Durocher for that felonious assault.
Both Durocher and Cobb were a bit distaff to normal, callous beyond cruelty.
One strory that Stump indisputably didn't make up was the one about Cobb going into the stands in New York and beating up a fan who turned out to be an amputee. It happend on May 15, 1912 at Hilltop Park, the victim was a man named Claude Lucker, who had lost a hand in a factory accident, and Cobb drew a ten day suspension for the assault from league president Ban Johnson. The Tigers protested the suspension by staging a wildcat strike, refusing to play the scheduled May 15th game against the Athletics. Tiger management refused to forfeit the game, however, and at the last minute recruited a team of random amateurs from Philadelphia sandlots, suited them up, and sent them out to play. The A's pounded this "team," 24 to 2.
It didn't end there -- the Tigers refused to play the next game, as well, and this time management couldn't find any willing "substitute players," nor was Connie Mack willing to have his team participate in any such a farce as the previous day's game had been. With neither team willing to play, the game had to be cancelled. The entire Tiger team was then suspended and fined $50 for each day they refused to play -- which finally broke the strike.
Cobb wasn't the blood-soaked fiend he's often portrayed as, but he was no angel, either.
I grabbed three Armour hot dogs downstairs a few minutes ago because of this thread.