Continue reading “Major League Baseball History: The Strike Bleeds Into Spring Training”
Major League Baseball History: The Season is Over (September 1994)
On September 14th, 1994, with no progress being made between the owners and players during the first month of the strike, the anticipated bomb detonated over the sport. The kind of explosion that, due to its puissance, would leave a lasting impact on the game for years to come. Bud Selig, who, at this time, was now serving as acting commissioner of MLB, held a news conference at Milwaukee County Stadium to broadcast the sour 411 that everyone knew was coming. For the first time since 1904, there would be no World Series. Carrying out The Fall Classic while countries were clashing? Not an issue. The show went on each year during World War I, even in 1918, when the influenza pandemic stung the nation at a more-than alarming rate. Hosting the sacred event amid The Great Depression? No problem. Though, according to the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library & Museum, Hoover, the President of the United States at the time of the calamity, was warbled with a string of boos from the fans after throwing out the first pitch prior to Game 3 of the 1931 World Series. Years later, when World War II was at its height in terms of mania, the league, despite losing some of its stars to combat, persevered and carried on with the 1943 World Series with a slight scheduling modification due to wartime traveling restrictions.
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Major League Baseball History: Florida Marlins and Colorado Rockies
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Jeremy’s Journal: Pin Collection
Before the world turned digital, physical collectibles were king. As mentioned in a prior post, during childhood, to embody my baseball monomania to perfection, I gathered as much MLB-related possessions as possible. From team hats, trading cards, books, magazines, to posters, action figures, and bobbleheads, if the entity represented baseball in any fashion, you bet I had it.
Jeremy’s Journal: Magical Bobbleheads
Circa 2002. Though I was just 6 years old at the time, my obsession with Major League Baseball was already in full-swing. As my level of consciousness evolved at a high rate with each ensuing sleep, so too did my desire to latch onto anything baseball-related. Along with watching the local Red Sox games every night, and scanning the baseball section in the Boston Globe to keep up with the League Leaders every morning, I would beg my mother to gift me all types of physical objects affiliated with MLB. Trading cards, magazines, books, even the McFarlane brand MLB player action figures. If it had any correlation with my prized sport, I wanted it, and by good fortune, I would receive it. Soon enough, I had binders that were chockfull of cards, a mini library of Matt Christopher’s MLB-player focused biographies, an art-show’s worth of player toys, and a stack of magazines that I could scan through to read about my favorite players.
Major League Baseball History: The Origin of Baseball Work Stoppages
“When you get to the big leagues, you realize it really is a business and things happen that change your views.” – Johnny Bench
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Major League Baseball History: The Gaudy Stats From 1994
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Major League Baseball History: The Most Jam-Packed 40+ HR Club (1996)
Continue reading “Major League Baseball History: The Most Jam-Packed 40+ HR Club (1996)”
Major League Baseball History: The Mick
Major League Baseball History: A Collusion Three-Peat
Continue reading “Major League Baseball History: A Collusion Three-Peat”

