Read more
With virtually the same personnel that had won both the National League pennant and the World Series the previous season, the 1926 Pittsburgh Pirates were favored by the majority of preseason prognosticators to capture the pennant for the second year in a row. But they finished in third place, four and a half games behind the St. Louis Cardinals.
That failure has largely been attributed to the alleged dissension caused by the presence of vice president and assistant to the manager Fred Clarke on the Pirate bench and to the ramifications of an attempt by several players to remove him, known as the "ABC Affair." This book chronicles the '26 Pirates, showing that the blame assigned to Clarke has been mostly misplaced and that the reasons for the Bucs' failure were far more complex.
List of contents
Table of ContentsForeword by David C. Ogden
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Setting the Record Straight
One.¿Colorful, Competitive and Consistently Falling Short
Two.¿The Return of Fred Clarke
Three.¿High Expectations, Disappointing Results
Four.¿The ABC Affair
Five.¿What Becomes of the Brokenhearted
Six.¿Making Sense of It All
Key to the Abbreviations Used in the Appendices
Appendix A: Biographical Information for the 1926 Pirates
Appendix B: Offensive Statistics
Appendix C: Pitching Statistics
Appendix D: Fielding Statistics
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the author
Angelo J. Louisa is a researcher, writer, and community educator who lives in Omaha, Nebraska.