1924 Colored World Series

1924 Colored World Series
Teams123*4567*8910Games
Kansas City Monarchs 60633643355
Hilldale Club 211645532504
* indicates extra innings
Location:Philadelphia: Baker Bowl (1,2)
Baltimore: Maryland Baseball Park (3,4)
Kansas City: Muehlebach Field (5,6,7)
Chicago: Schorling Park (8,9,10)
Format:Best-of-nine
Managers:Kansas City: José Méndez
Hilldale: Frank Warfield
Dates:October 3–20
Hall of Famers: Kansas City: José Méndez (mgr.), Bullet Rogan,
Hilldale: Judy Johnson, Biz Mackey,
Louis Santop
 Negro World Series1925 > 

The 1924 Colored World Series was a best-of-nine match-up between the Negro National League champion Kansas City Monarchs and the Eastern Colored League champion Hilldale. In a ten-game series, the Monarchs narrowly defeated Hilldale 5 games to 4, with one tie game. It was the first World Series between the respective champions of the NNL and ECL. It was the second year of existence for the ECL, but no agreement could be reached in 1923 for a post-season series, owing primarily to unresolved disputes between the leagues. Five members of the Baseball Hall of Fame participated in the series: Biz Mackey, Judy Johnson, and Louis Santop played for Hilldale, while Bullet Rogan and José Méndez played for the Monarchs. In addition, Monarchs owner J. L. Wilkinson was also inducted into the Hall.

Series summary

GameScoreDateBallparkAttendance
1Kansas City 6 Hilldale 2October 3, 1924 (Friday)Baker Bowl, Philadelphia5,366
2Kansas City 0 Hilldale 11October 4, 1924 (Saturday)Baker Bowl, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 8,661
3Kansas City 6 Hilldale 6 (13 innings)October 5, 1924 (Sunday)Maryland Baseball Park, Baltimore5,503
4Kansas City 3 Hilldale 4October 6, 1924 (Monday)Maryland Baseball Park, Baltimore, Maryland  584
5Hilldale 5 Kansas City 3October 11, 1924 (Saturday)Muehlebach Park, Kansas City, Missouri3,891
6Hilldale 5 Kansas City 6October 12, 1924 (Sunday)Muehlebach Park, Kansas City, Missouri8,885
7Hilldale 3 Kansas City 4 (12 innings)October 14, 1924 (Tuesday) Muehlebach Park, Kansas City, Missouri 2,539
8Hilldale 2 Kansas City 3October 18, 1924 (Saturday)Schorling Park, Chicago2,608
9Hilldale 5 Kansas City 3October 19, 1924 (Sunday)Schorling Park, Chicago6,271
10Hilldale 0 Kansas City 5October 20, 1924 (Monday) Schorling Park, Chicago1,549
Hilldale and the Monarchs line up at Muehlebach Park.

The Games

Game One

October 3, 1924, at Baker Bowl in Philadelphia

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Kansas City 000 005 001 660
Hilldale 000 000 002 286
W: Bullet Rogan (1-0)  L: Phil Cockrell (0-1)
HRs: none
Umpires: McBride, Freeman, Coolan, and McDevitt
Rogan pitched an 8-hitter, holding Hilldale scoreless until two out in the ninth. Warfield's bases-loaded error in the sixth allowed the Monarchs to score two, and aided by Cockrell's three errors in the same inning, opened up a five-run inning for the Monarchs. Phil Cockrell, who lost this first game of the series, later umpired in Game Four of the 1942 Colored World Series.
Hilldale did not use its own ballpark, Hilldale Park, but instead used Baker Bowl, home field of the Philadelphia Phillies, for the first two games, owing to its larger capacity.

Game Two

October 4, 1924, at Baker Bowl in Philadelphia

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Kansas City 000 000 000 042
Hilldale 522 002 000 11152
W: Nip Winters (1-0)  L: Bill McCall (0-1)
HRs: none
Umpires: McDevitt, McBride, Freeman, and Doolan
Bill McCall could not get through the first inning, facing only three men and recording no outs before Bill "Plunk" Drake came in to relieve. Drake did not fare much better, lasting only 1⅔ innings himself. Hilldale led 9-0 by the end of the third.
Nip Winters shut out the normally high-scoring Monarchs on four singles.

Game Three

October 5, 1924, at Maryland Baseball Park in Baltimore

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 R H E
Kansas City 002 200 001 0010 685
Hilldale 001 030 001 0010 6101
HRs: KC Newt Joseph (1)
Umpires: Freeman, Dolan, McDevitt, and McBride
The Monarchs took a one-run lead into the bottom of the ninth and again into the bottom of the twelfth, but were unable to put Hilldale away. William Bell pitched 12 innings for no decision; he played the thirteenth inning in right field, as Rogan came in from center field to pitch the thirteenth inning. Monarch fielding errors in the fifth and ninth innings allowed Hilldale to stay in the game. Biz Mackey received three intentional walks during the game. The game was called on account of darkness after thirteen innings.
This game was played at Maryland Park, home park of the Baltimore Black Sox, on account of Pennsylvania's blue laws, which did not allow professional baseball games on Sundays.

Game Four

October 6, 1924, at Maryland Baseball Park in Baltimore

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Kansas City 201 000 000 384
Hilldale 003 000 001 441
W: Rube Currie (1-0)  L: Cliff Bell (0-1)
HRs: none
Umpires: Freeman, Dolan, McDevitt, and McBride

After yesterday's tie game, another game was rescheduled for the following day. Before a sparse weekday crowd, former Monarch Rube Currie relieved Red Ryan with one out in the third and the Monarchs leading 3-0, and shut them out the rest of the game. Hilldale tied the game in the third on two base hits, a walk, and three steals, including Otto Briggs’ steal of home. Two walks and two errors helped score Hilldale's winning run with none out in the ninth.

Game Five

October 11, 1924, Muehlebach Park, Kansas City

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Hilldale 000 100 004 5101
Kansas City 200 000 000 244
W: Nip Winters (2-0)  L: Bullet Rogan (1-1)  
HRs: Hilldale Judy Johnson
Umpires: McGrew, Anderson, Costello, and Goeckel
Judy Johnson's three-run inside-the-park home run with one out in the ninth shocked the crowd into silence and provided the difference in the game. A controversial umpire call and three defensive misplays helped set the table for Johnson's heroics. Until the fatal ninth, the game had been a classic pitchers duel between staff aces Winters and Rogan. Winters finished the game with a flourish, retiring 25 of the last 26 men he faced. Hilldale had a 3-1 lead in games.
Rube Foster had originally scheduled games Five, Six and Seven for his own ballpark, but Kansas City ownership and fans strenuously objected to losing such lucrative dates, and Foster relented.

Game Six

October 12, 1924, at Muehelbach Park in Kansas City

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Hilldale 202 001 000 5110
Kansas City 400 100 01 6121
W: William Bell (1-0)  L: Hosley "Scrip" Lee (0-1)  
HRs: none
Umpires: Anderson, Costello, Goeckel, and McGrew
Phil Cockrell started the game for Hilldale, but was driven from the mound in the first inning, allowing four runs. Scrip Lee pitched the remainder of the game, but tired in the eighth when the Monarchs scored the tie-breaking run.

Game Seven

October 14, 1924, at Muehlebach Field in Kansas City

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 R H E
Hilldale 020 000 001 000 371
Kansas City 000 200 010 001 4111
W: José Méndez (1-0)  L: Nip Winters (2-1)  
HRs: none
Umpires: Costello, Goeckel, McGrew, and Anderson
Nip Winters pitched twelve innings and took the loss, while Méndez pitched brilliantly in relief for the win. Newt Joseph stole home in the fourth inning to start the Monarchs’ scoring. Bullet Rogan did not hit the ball out of the infield, but still managed to get three hits, score one run, and drive in the winning tally in the twelfth inning.

Game Eight

October 18, 1924, at Schorling Park in Chicago

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Hilldale 000 001 100 291
Kansas City 000 000 003 390
W: Bullet Rogan (2-1)  L: Rube Currie (1-1)  
HRs: none
Umpires: Goeckel, Moore, McGrew, and Costello
In one of Negro League baseball's legendary games, the Monarchs rallied for three runs in the ninth to stun Hilldale. Because of an injury to shortstop Jake Stephens some weeks before and to get maximum offensive output from his lineup, Hilldale manager Warfield moved regular third baseman Judy Johnson to short, moved catcher-short stop Mackey to third, and installed aging backup receiver Louis Santop as the regular catcher. With three players playing out of position at critical defensive positions, Warfield's moves came back to haunt him in the ninth when Mackey and Johnson both missed key plays, and when Santop dropped Frank Duncan's foul popup, Duncan lined a single past Mackey that scored the tying and winning runs.
Also legendary was the vicious verbal assault that Warfield launched against Santop following the loss, laying blame for the loss squarely at Santop's feet. Santop and others were already in tears in their locker room following the game, and it is one of Blackball's legends that Santop never recovered from the humiliation of Warfield's tirade.

Game Nine

October 19, 1924, at Schorling Park in Chicago

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Hilldale 000 020 012 5134
Kansas City 020 000 010 385
W: Nip Winters (3-1)  L: William "Plunk" Drake (0-1)  
HRs: none
Umpires: McGrew, Costello, Goeckel, and Moore
Starting and completing his fourth game of the series, Nip Winters won for the third time to tie the series. William Bell started for Kansas City, but was shelled with none out in the fifth inning when Hilldale tied the score 2-2. Drake pitched creditably until tiring in the ninth, when Hilldale scored two to win. The Series was now tied for the third time.

Game Ten

October 20, 1924, at Schorling Park in Chicago

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Hilldale 000 000 000 030
Kansas City 000 000 05 560
W: José Méndez (2-0)  L: Scrip Lee (0-2)  
HRs: none
Umpires: Costello, Goeckel, Moore, and Conlin
Although still weak from surgery before the series and advised by a doctor not to exert himself, Méndez had already pitched 10 innings of relief in the first nine games, and upon the advice of Rube Foster named himself to start the final game. Game Ten became part of his legend. He matched Hilldale starter Scrip Lee zero for zero for seven full innings until Lee tired in the bottom of the eighth. Lee changed from his normal submarine delivery to an overhand style in that inning, and the Monarchs scored five runs off of him, including one by Méndez himself. When Hilldale went out in the ninth, the Monarchs had won the first Colored World Series.
Lee, the losing pitcher in the Series finale, later umpired the opening game of the 1942 Colored World Series.

Sources

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