By Ray Shaw
By Ray Shaw
Sunday morning was bleak and wet and though the forecast predicted a questionable day for base ball, the New York Mutual bravely set out on their two hour trip around the horn to meet the Newtown Sandy Hooks at St. Rose Field in Newtown.
The grounds look to be as inhospitable as they had been the same time last year when the Senators were in town to meet the Sandy Hooks at the first annual Oktoberfest but, as the teams arrived and took the field the skies magically cleared to a brilliant sunny day.
As umpire âGeezerâ Shaw called the captains for the bat toss, the Sandy Hooks fielded a makeshift line-up of overhand and rehabilitated veterans. Even though the squad included a number of players who had missed the previous weekâs successes in Smithtown, all had high expectations for the day.
Included on the starting nine was âMudcatâ Albano behind the dish, âMuhlâ Snyder toeing the pitching line, âMister Edwards at third, âMooseâ Margolus at short scout, âDoughboyâ Norwich at second, âBulldogâ Paes at first, âPopsâ and âExpressâ Pendergist in left and center and Brigette Sorensen in right. âCool Papaâ Harmon, â90â Keane and Herlof Sorensen provided support on the boards and in the batting order.
The Mutuals in their bright whites with dark green piping and Old English âMâ arrived with a full compliment of ballists including veteran captains âExpressâ Miklich and âSquidâ Jordan and old stalwarts âYoungbloodâ Hippeli, the brothers Halecky, the brothers Sullivan and âRabbitâ Blair. Jim Wigren from the Waterbury Connors joined the festivities as a special guest and took his place with the visiting squad.
In the first frame the Mutuals jumped out to a one run lead which was quickly followed by a two-run response by the Sandy Hooks on base hits by âPopsâ and âMuhlâ followed by a two run double by âMisterâ Edwards. In the next two innings, the Mutuals added six more runs due to numerous misplayed balls and throwing errors while the Hooks added just three more, helped in a large part by a bases clearing triple by âMuhlâ Snyder in the third.
At this point, it was the Mutualsâ game to lose as they scored multiple runs in every inning of the match save the fourth and seventh. While, at the same time, the battery of âExpressâ Miklich and âYoungbloodâ Hippeli (coming off a extended Achilles tendon rehabilitation) gave a two-man clinic on 1864 base ball techniques with a complete range of hurling deliveries (including Miklichâs fifty-five mile per hour zinger) and acrobatic fielding exhibition behind the plate.
In spite of a fifteen-hit attack (including a three-for-three effort by âCool Papaâ Harmon) and stiffening defense by the home side, the Hooks were unable to penetrate the Mutual defenses through the later parts of the game nor stop the relentless run and gun offense of the visitors.
Highlights of the game included Edwardâs double, Snyderâs tremendous triple to deepest center, Miklichâs inside the park scamper (which was a result of a potential bound out that bounced a good 10 foot in the air over the rightfielderâs head and continued to carom to the far reaches of the park), âPopsâ Pendergist catch of a potential home run at the edge of the babbling brook in left, and the loss of a Pendergist struck game ball which embedded itself deep in the swamp in left ... never to be seen again.
At the end of nine, the totals read 16 for New York and 5 for Newtown Sandy Hook.
Both teams exchanged huzzahs and reconvened at the Sorensen Farm in Palestine for late afternoon conviviality and dinner. It was the perfect way to close a remarkable and most memorable season and all look forward to further meetings and festivities in the future.