I thought the whole premise was that he moved the best player in baseball history in order to finance No No Nanette.I mean - the whole premise is he traded/sold Ruth from the WS winning team.
I thought the whole premise was that he moved the best player in baseball history in order to finance No No Nanette.I mean - the whole premise is he traded/sold Ruth from the WS winning team.
Frazee did not sell the Red Sox until August 1, 1923, and he made further trades with the Yankees after selling Ruth.I thought the whole premise was that he moved the best player in baseball history in order to finance No No Nanette.
Thanks, this was an interesting and informative read.Frazee did not sell the Red Sox until August 1, 1923, and he made further trades with the Yankees after selling Ruth.
No, No, Nanette didn't make Broadway until 1925 but was one of the most successful shows of the era.
An article people really should read, which discusses the poor relationship between Frazee and league president, Ban Johnson, WW 1, the collapse of the Red Sox in 1919 (of which Ruth had a part) was published by SABR on Frazee
Thank you for posting. Its recency bias at work but I think Markus Lynn Betts is my favorite baseball player ever just given how he carries himself. What an absolute beast.
Frazee did not sell the Red Sox until August 1, 1923, and he made further trades with the Yankees after selling Ruth.
No, No, Nanette didn't make Broadway until 1925 but was one of the most successful shows of the era.
An article people really should read, which discusses the poor relationship between Frazee and league president, Ban Johnson, WW 1, the collapse of the Red Sox in 1919 (of which Ruth had a part) was published by SABR on Frazee
This was a fascinating, informative article. Historical context is always important. The Sox were cursed, but it was actually the Curse of Tom Yawkey. Thank you for posting the link.An article people really should read, which discusses the poor relationship between Frazee and league president, Ban Johnson, WW 1, the collapse of the Red Sox in 1919 (of which Ruth had a part) was published by SABR on Frazee
Gotta remember that when you post a reply, the post you're replying to is automatically quoted.This was a fascinating, informative article. Historical context is always important. The Sox were cursed, but it was actually the Curse of Tom Yawkey. Thank you for posting the link.
Thanks for posting this. What a great read.Frazee did not sell the Red Sox until August 1, 1923, and he made further trades with the Yankees after selling Ruth.
No, No, Nanette didn't make Broadway until 1925 but was one of the most successful shows of the era.
An article people really should read, which discusses the poor relationship between Frazee and league president, Ban Johnson, WW 1, the collapse of the Red Sox in 1919 (of which Ruth had a part) was published by SABR on Frazee
https://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/majors/2024-batting-leaders.shtmlJomboy: "Mookie Betts, leading MLB in everything." Not entirely true, but close enough.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/4esngtoGmq4