Marker noting the location of West Side Grounds (1893-1915) |
Early October 2016 found me in
the Chicago area. With my commitments finished at a conference, I put on my
1914 Cubs logo t-shirt and went in search of the location of West Side Grounds,
the last (and, thus far, only) stadium to host a World Series championship for
the Cubs. In the process I toured the city from the perspective of a Cubs fan
and relived many of my own nostalgic memories.
Only a small sign indicates
where a stadium once stood over a century ago. I sat down for a few minutes in
the beautiful courtyard of the UIC medical campus. It was a peaceful place;
there were very few people around that late-morning Saturday. It was a perfect
blue sky, untouched by clouds, and there was a cool breeze with the temperature
in the upper fifties. I imagined a time, almost 108 years to the day, when the
Cubs last won the World Series. The 1908 Series between the Cubs and the Detroit
Tigers featured five future hall of famers. With an absence of motion pictures,
and a Cubs team that is favored to make it deep into the 2016 playoffs, it is
tempting to think about what that championship would have looked like. I spent
some time trying to recreate in my mind and imagining those October days at
West Side Grounds. While sitting there, I jotted a few notes and had a quiet
reflection. Three people walked by during the twenty minutes or so that I was
there. Each moved from one building to another, and smiled an acknowledgment.
Did they know the real reason for my visit, or were they simply engaging in
what they thought was a professional courtesy?
Where center field once was... |
The Cubs won the series four
games to one, splitting the two games played at West Side Grounds on October 11
and 12. During the October 11 game (game 2 of the series), the Cubs broke a
scoreless tie on the bottom of the eighth when Joe Tinker hit a two-run homer.
The Cubs would go one to score four more runs in the inning and won the game in
an hour and a half. The next day, Detroit beat the Cubs by a score 8-3. During
the game, future Detroit hall of famer, Ty Cobb hit three singles and a double.
He had two stolen bases, and was thrown out trying to steal home in the ninth
inning.
I sat on a bench, which I
estimated to be somewhere in left-center field based on where the sign
indicating the centerfield entrance was located. If my guess was correct, it
would have been near where Jimmy Sheckard would have played. Across the field,
at first base, player/manager and future Hall of Famer, Frank Chance would play
for several seasons. He would go on to coach and play for the Chicago Whales of
the Federal League, the first occupants of Weeghman Field, later known as
Wrigley Field. But Chance is more famous for anchoring the double play combination
with Evers and Tinker. The combination of Tinkers, Ever and Chance was the
bedevilment of early twentieth century National League teams. Famously, in 1910
as the Cubs approached yet another World Series appearance, New York columnist
Franklin Pierce Adams penned the poem, “Baseball’s Sad Lexicon.” The poem would
be published in the New York Evening Mail,
12 July 1910.
“Three Finger” Mordecai Brown
did not appear at West Side Grounds during the 1908 World Series. Brown, who
had been injured in a farm accident as an adolescent, was the star pitcher of
the team. He would go on to play for the Chicago Whales, with Frank Chance
during the 1915 season at Weeghman Field.
We often forget how much
baseball has shaped our language. “Hitting a home run,” or to do really well,
is not an idiom known outside of North America. It is also used as a euphemism
for sexual intercourse as well. The idiom, “out in left field,” a term which
means “crazy” or completely unexpected and one that was often used by my
father, originated at West Side Grounds. By today’s standards, the West Side
was oddly shaped with an exaggerated outfield wall. Beyond the left field wall,
a home for the mentally ill patients once stood. One account noted that the patients
would often yell at the fans causing much consternation.
Ron Santo outside Wrigley |
I am increasingly ambivalent
about my feelings toward major league baseball. Much of the joy of the game has
given way to marketing and hype. The changes in the Cubs, the organization and
even beloved Wrigley have contributed to my ambivalence. Some of these changes are
and were unavoidable. The death of Ron Santo, famous third baseman and later
beloved radio announcer, was difficult. His life-long battle with diabetes was
an inspiration to many and hits close to my family. It is difficult to replace him
for loyal listeners like myself. His enthusiasm, optimism and exasperation are
sorely missed. As the Cubs continue to do well, I think how he would have been
in the booth and on the field with the guys. There is my own sense of nostalgia
as well. When I see a game these days I note that Kris Bryant is wearing Mark
Grace’s number; Jon Lester is wearing Kerry Wood’s. As the Cubs creep
inevitably closer to ending the long drought of World Series Championships,
after all “anyone can have a bad century,” I remember many of the players I
wish had had an opportunity to play for the team in the World Series.
Harry outside the bleacher entrance at Sheffield and Waveland |
I think back to the death of
Harry Caray and his closing words on his final broadcast on WGN: “Next year
maybe will be the year we all have been waiting for forever.” Caray was a primary
reason for becoming a Cubs fan. I would often tune into Cubs broadcast in the
afternoon after coming home from school, just to hear what he had to say. Harry
was famous for leading the Wrigley Field faithful in his rendition of “Take Me
Out to the Ballpark,” seemingly inevitably, followed up with him shouting:
“Let’s get some runs!” Even today, every once in a while, I find a clip of
Harry singing just to give myself a lift. One of the most memorable renditions
did not occur at Wrigley, but across town when Harry was announcing for the
White Sox in 1979. He tried to calm a rowdy crowd who had stormed the field in
the aftermath of the Disco Demolition Night promotion. In vain, Harry sang while the crowd
started fires and began to tear the stadium apart. Watching replays of the
event, Harry’s effort never fails to make me laugh, albeit with a little
embarrassment for him.
After all these years, it is
still a thrill to see Wrigley from the Addison L station, even as the area
becomes increasingly gentrified. One of the great things about Wrigley was that
it was in the midst of a neighborhood. I remember watching Cubs games in high
school and college wishing I could stand out on Waveland Avenue to shag home
run balls as they left the park. Yes, I too would have thrown balls from
opposing players back. Many of the buildings on Addison, across the street from
the stadium, have been demolished to make way for luxury apartments. The changes
seem too much. I wanted the Cubs to win the World Series based on the city that
prided itself on hard work. Increasingly baseball seems more willing to sell
anything to make a buck. History and identity is lost. Yet, my love of the game’s
history and the social impact of the game remains. While there is a temptation
to look away, I just can’t.
Two weeks to the day after my
visit to West Side Grounds (and Wrigley), the Cubs met the Los Angeles Dodgers
in the decisive game 6 of the National League Championship Series. The game was
never in doubt, but watching there was a worry that the Cubs could implode at
any minute. They did not. As the game moved to the ninth inning, it became
increasingly clear that North Siders would appear in the first World Series in
seventy-one years.
As the game ended, I received texts
and phone calls from friends. I pictured myself with a rueful smile on my face
as I watched the celebration, thankful that no one was pointlessly talking
over the traditional playing of Steve Goodwin’s, “Go, Cubs, Go.” I held my
composure, thinking about Goodwin who died in 1984, sitting alone surveying the
stadium and its fans. Then, Joe Buck noted that there were probably a lot of
Cubs fans who were thinking about their parents, grandparents, and loved ones
who were no longer here to witness this. I broke down and cried.
For me there is a great irony to this
season: 2016 was the first summer in thirty years that I did not attend a major
league game. As I was contemplating this, what little superstition I do have
surfaced: If that was all it took for the Cubs to make it to the World Series…
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