February 26

Babe Ruth released

February 26, 1935, the New York Yankees release longtime star outfielder Babe Ruth, freeing him to sign a $20,000 contract with the National League’s Boston Braves. Ruth’s new contract with the Braves also gives him a share of the team’s profits.

In 1934, Ruth had endured one of his worst seasons with the Yankees, at least by his lofty standards, with a .288 batting average, 22 home runs, and 84 RBIs. This season, he will play just only 28 games for the Braves before announcing his retirement on June 2nd at the age of 40.

On May 25, 1935, at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Ruth flashed his greatness one final, glorious time. That afternoon, he hit three home runs; the last one, the first ball ever to be hit completely out of that park! He crushed the ball so convincingly that the Pirate players simply stood and watched it disappear behind the stands. The crowd of 10,000 let loose a mighty roar as the old slugger hobbled around the bases. When he rounded third, the pitcher, Guy Bush, tipped his cap to the Babe, who smiled and saluted back. It was the last home run he would ever hit, number 714. At that point in baseball history, no other player had ever hit even half that many. It was a record that would stand for nearly four decades. See the footage here. A week later, Ruth announced his retirement from baseball. From that time until the day he died, he waited and waited for a call from some team, any team, to become a major league manager. A call that would never come. Smoky Joe Wood details this on the Podcast. 

Babe Ruth is the largest figure in Baseball history, no other name is as synonymous with a sport than Babe Ruth and baseball and for many years Babe Ruth and America. 

Jump over to the blog post on Ruth where we go over his historic career and there is a full library of Babe Ruth audio to enjoy. 

Enjoy!

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Today’s Featured Clip: Babe Ruth on career ambitions 

Game of the day -  1934 All Star Game - Babe Ruth featured

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Trivia:

Name the play Babe Ruth was sold for?  

Hint:  The answer is below

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Born: Rip Collins February 26, 1896 in Weatherford, TX Once described as a pitcher with a million dollars worth of talent and 25 cents worth of enthusiasm, Collins apparently played baseball only to support his real pleasures: hunting and fishing in the off-season, bright lights and parties during the season. He claimed to have become a beer drinker at age six, and his nickname came from a pre-Prohibition brand of whiskey. A four-sport star at Texas A & M, Collins won 14 games as a Yankee rookie in 1920, matched that figure with the Red Sox in 1922, and again with the Tigers in '24. He later became a law enforcement officer in Texas.

Born: February 26, 1933 in Minneapolis, MN Johnny Blanchard savored his position as the Yankees' third-string catcher for most of his career. A defensive liability, he nearly quit in 1960 when Casey Stengel considered activating 40-year-old bullpen coach Jim Hegan to back up Yogi Berra while Elston Howard was injured. Stengel reconsidered, and Blanchard responded in 1961 with adequate defense and a career-best .305, 21 HR season. Blanchard holds the record with ten World Series pinch-hitting appearances.

February 26, 1935, the New York Yankees release longtime star outfielder Babe Ruth, freeing him to sign a $20,000 contract with the National League’s Boston Braves. Ruth’s new contract with the Braves also gives him a share of the team’s profits. In 1934, Ruth had endured one of his worst seasons with the Yankees, at least by his lofty standards, with a .288 batting average, 22 home runs, and 84 RBIs. This season, he will play just only 28 games for the Braves before announcing his retirement on June 2nd at the age of 40. Ruth will hit the final three home runs of his major league career on May 25th against the Pittsburgh Pirates, giving him a total of 714. His last home run will clear the right field grandstand at Forbes Field and will travel an estimated 600 feet.

February 26, 1943 — The Philadelphia Phillies hire Bucky Harris as their manager. It is the fourth major league club Harris has led. He also managed the Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox, not counting two stints – later three – with the Washington Senators. Clark Griffith, Rogers Hornsby, Donnie Bush and Bill McKechnie have also managed four clubs. Harris will compile a record of 38-52 in 92 games before being fired, but will resurface as manager of the 1947 World Champions New York Yankees. He will finish his managing career with Detroit in 1956.

February 26, 1957 -- The New York Giants trade future hall of fame right-hander Hoyt Wilhelm to the St. Louis Cardinals for their former All-Star first baseman/outfielder Whitey Lockman. The knuckleballer will win only one of five decisions for the Cardinals before being selected off waivers by Cleveland in September, and New York's newest infielder will spend two seasons with his old club, hitting .246 in 225 games over that span.

Wilhelm, 34 at the time will go on to pitch until he is 49 years old appearing in 709 games going 99-93 with a 2.29 ERA, he saved 175 games before saves were an official stat.

February 26 , 1987 — The owner of a Houston sports bar begins a campaign to raise $70,000 for Astros slugger Glenn Davis. That’s what separates the Astros and Davis on a one-year contract, according to his agent Gerry Hunsicker. The two sides would eventually agree to meet roughly halfway. Davis is humbled by the public’s show of support but declines taking their money.

February 26, 1991 -- Bill Veeck, the colorful owner of the Browns, Indians and White Sox (twice), and Yankees great Tony Lazzeri are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee.

Quote of the day:

"I stopped telling people stories about how great he was, because I realized no one believed me." — Hall of Fame pitcher and Ruth teammate Waite Hoyt.

MILESTONES

Birthday Boys!

Don Lee, Jack Brohamer, Johnny Blanchard, Johnny Grodzicki, Preacher Roe

Passings.

Ace Adams, Greg Goossen, Joe Kuhel, Ned Garver and Sandy Valdespino

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Trivia Answer:  No No Nanette - Babe Ruth may have become the greatest player in Boston Red Sox history, if not for the greed and short-sightedness of one man. In 1917 the team was purchased by H. Harrison Frazee, a high-living, hard-drinking theatrical producer who loved baseball but loved Broadway more. He saw the Red Sox as a means of financing his theatrical operations, and began selling off all of his best players to Colonel Jacob Ruppert, owner of the New York Yankees, to raise cash for a number of Broadway ventures and to keep the team a float after attendance dropped in 1918 and 1919.

Ruth the prize chip became victim in 1920, when Frazee sold him to Ruppert for $125,000 and the promise of a $300,000 personal loan with which to finance his plays. Fenway Park was put up as security for the loan. The Red Sox have never recovered from the loss of Ruth during the 20’s through through 1990’s. They had won five of the first fifteen World Series, but would not play in another for 28 years, and lost brutal 7 game series in 46, 67,75 and 86, it took a total of 86 years to reverse the curse when the 2004 did so in epic fashion.

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