Major League Baseball Gambling Scandals

Gambling

Baseball slowly rid itself of gambling until the last big scandal hit in the name of Rose. Gambling has been a part of baseball ever since the start and will continue to tarnish the game whenever it is brought up. Baseball has been through lots of adversity throughout the years. The online sports betting websites that we recommend for Major League Baseball betting offer all of the wagering variations that you would find at a traditional bookmaker. In fact, they sometimes post lines on propositions that are not available at many brick-and-mortar locations.

Louisville Grays
Information
LeagueNational League
LocationLouisville, Kentucky
BallparkLouisville Baseball Park
Year founded1876
Year folded1877
Colors
OwnershipWalter Newman Haldeman
& Charles Chase
ManagementJack Chapman
Uniforms

Home

The Louisville Grays were a 19th-century United States baseball team and charter member of the National League, based in Louisville, Kentucky. They played two seasons, 1876 and 1877, and compiled a record of 65–61. Their home games were at the Louisville Baseball Park. The Grays were owned by businessman Walter Newman Haldeman, owner and publisher of the Louisville Courier-Journal newspaper.

Overview[edit]

1876 Louisville Grays team

The Grays were undone by Major League Baseball's first gambling scandal. The team was in first place in August 1877, then suddenly lost seven games and tied one against the Boston Red Stockings and Hartford Dark Blues. Boston ended up winning the pennant, seven games ahead of the second-place Grays. A Courier-Journal story questioning the team's conduct was written by John Haldeman, the owner's son.[1]

Team president Charles Chase received two anonymous telegrams. One noted that gamblers were favoring the less talented Hartford team in an upcoming series. The second telegram predicted Louisville would throw the next game versus Hartford on August 21. The Grays committed a number of suspicious errors and lost that game 7–0. League president William Hulbert investigated and ordered players to authorize Western Union to release all telegrams sent or received during the 1877 season. All players complied except shortstopBill Craver, the team's captain.

The telegrams indicated that pitcherJim Devlin, left fielderGeorge Hall, and utility player Al Nichols intentionally lost games in exchange for money. No direct evidence was found implicating Craver. All four were banned from baseball for life, Craver for refusing to comply with the investigation.

Devlin pitched every inning for the 1877 Grays, leading the league in games and innings pitched. Hall played every inning in left field; he was a good batter, the 1876 home run 'champion' with five. The original St. Louis Brown Stockings had signed Devlin and Hall for 1878 and went out of business with the Grays after the investigation.[2]

League

Major League Baseball Schedule

See also[edit]

League

References[edit]

Major League Baseball

  1. ^http://www.davidpietrusza.com/1877.html
  2. ^Cash 38-54
  • Cash, Jon David. Before They Were Cardinals: Major-League Baseball in Nineteenth-Century St. Louis. 2002, U. of Missouri Press.
  • Cook, William. The Louisville Grays Scandal of 1877. 2005, paperback, McFarland and Co.
  • Ginsburg, Daniel. The Fix Is In: A History of Baseball Gambling and Game Fixing Scandals. 2004, paperback, McFarland and Co.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louisville Grays.
  • Team index at Baseball Reference
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