Hey, this is Steve White, the host of this day in sports history.
Steve WhiteThe situation in western North Carolina continues to be dire for so many who lost everything.
Steve WhiteThose who still have a home may be without power or access to cleaner running water for several more weeks.
Steve WhiteSome are trapped by washed out roads.
Steve WhiteCommunication has been severed.
Steve WhiteSo consider a donation to the western North Carolina Red Cross or another local charity that's doing work to help those affected by the storm.
Steve WhiteI've put some links in the show notes if you would like a few suggestions.
Steve WhiteThanks.
Steve WhiteAnd now heres todays episode.
Steve WhiteIts October 9 and this is this day in sports history.
Steve WhiteA brief journey around what happened in sports history on this day.
Steve WhiteAnd lets start in 1999 when a fake script nearly flipped the script in the Red river rivalry Mike Leitch is one of the all time great guys of college sports.
Steve WhiteUnfortunately, we lost him in December 2022, but he left quite a legacy during his time as a head coach and as an assistant coach through the years.
Steve WhiteSo Leitch was the first year offensive coordinator for Oklahoma under first year headman Bob Stoops.
Steve WhiteBack in 99, the Sooners had taken a long ride on the struggle bus, going six consecutive seasons with a losing record.
Steve WhiteThey entered the annual Red river rivalry game as a huge underdog.
Steve WhiteTexas was not setting college football on fire either, with a four two record, but they were ranked 23rd in the country at this point.
Steve WhiteSo Leitch was, in his words, looking to get Texas to squander as many plays as they can.
Steve WhiteIn his preparation for the game that week, he had an idea that would have made general Eisenhower and the Allies happy back in World War Two Europe.
Steve WhiteHe devised a decoy script with dummy plays to see how honest Texas was.
Steve WhiteThe next part of the plan happened on game day, and it involved tight end Trent Smith intentionally dropping the dummy script but making it look like he'd accidentally dropped it and was unaware a Texas grad assistant was the pigeon in this scenario.
Steve WhiteAnd the hope was that he would be enticed to check out what the player had dropped, pick it up, and take it back to the Longhorn coaches.
Steve WhiteAnd that's exactly what happened.
Steve WhiteIt wound up in defensive coordinator Glenn Reese's hands, and he was licking his chops at the idea of knowing what Oklahoma was going to run.
Steve WhiteOf course, that's exactly what Leitch wanted.
Steve WhiteAnd the subterfuge worked for a bit, enough for the sooner's to score fairly easily in building a 17 to nothing advantage.
Steve WhiteAt that point, Reese knew something was amiss and he tossed the script into the trash after reorganizing and getting back to their original game plan, the Longhorns got their offense rolling and they ended up winning the game 38 to 28.
Steve White20 years later, when ESPN's Tom Rinaldi did a piece about the fake game script, the brilliant spycraft of Mike Leitch finally came to light.
Steve WhiteHow about another strange one from this day?
Steve WhiteBack in 1934, it was game seven of the World Series between the St.
Steve WhiteLouis Cardinals and the Detroit Tigers.
Steve WhiteCardinal Joe Ducky Medwick slapped one down the line and then hustled around the base paths, sliding hard into third.
Steve WhiteWell, mostly he slid hard into Tiger.
Steve WhiteThird baseman Marv Owen.
Steve WhiteOwen took umbrage at that, and he started throwing punches at Medwick.
Steve WhiteAnd then Ducky unleashed a couple of jabs as well.
Steve WhiteIt was finally quieted down on the field, with Medwick's RBI triple making it an eight to nothing game in favor of the Cardinals.
Steve WhiteThe half inning ended and Medwick jogged out to left field to play some defense.
Steve WhiteBut the Detroit fans were still very upset about the hard slide, and so they started throwing bottles and then some produce came out of the stands aimed at Ducky.
Steve WhiteThere were oranges and some bananas thrown at him.
Steve WhiteThere are even some stories of cabbage being thrown at him.
Steve WhiteWho brings cabbage to the ballpark?
Steve WhiteWhat are you making slaw at some point, anyway?
Steve WhiteFruit, veggies, bottles and whatever else Tiger fans happen to stuff it in their bags and walk into the ballpark.
Steve WhiteThat day, they were throwing them at Ducky Medwick.
Steve WhiteCommissioner Ford frick, who was in the stands, ordered Medwick off the field for his own safety.
Steve WhiteAnd it's the only time a commissioner of baseball has thrown a player out of a game.
Steve WhiteThe Cardinals won the game easily, eleven to nothing, and they wrapped up their World Series championship.
Steve WhiteAnd who knows, maybe they celebrated with a few oranges and some cabbage.
Steve WhiteOn this day in 1996, a young kid became a hero to New York Yankees fans.
Steve WhiteThis was game one of the ALCS between the Baltimore Orioles and the Yankees.
Steve WhiteThe game was played at Yankee Stadium, and in the 8th inning the Orioles were up or run.
Steve WhiteDerek Jeter came to the plate hoping to do some damage with his bat, and he did, with a little bit of help from twelve year old Jeffrey Meyer.
Steve WhiteCheater ripped one to right, but he didn't quite get enough of it.
Steve WhiteTony Tarasco backed up to the wall, ready to corral it when Meyer reached over so slightly and he snagged it.
Steve WhiteTarasco was immediately furious, and umpire Richie Garcia was working the right field line for the playoff series, and he had a great look at it, and he still called it a home run.
Steve WhiteGarcia should have called fan interference, and Jeter would have been out watching the replays again after nearly 30 years.
Steve WhiteIt is so obvious.
Steve WhiteAnd yet there was no instant replay.
Steve WhiteSo the call stood on Garcia's home run call.
Steve WhiteThe Yankees tied the game with that home run and then went on to win the game in extra innings.
Steve WhiteThe kid became an instant Bronx hero, exchanging high fives with all of those around him.
Steve WhiteThe Yankees went on to win the ALCS in five games and then became world champs again when they beat the Atlanta Braves in the World Series.
Steve WhiteAlso on this day in 1919, the Chicago White Sox lost ten five to the Cincinnati Reds in game eight of what was then a best of nine World Series.
Steve WhiteIronically, Major League Baseball had gone to the best of nine series to take advantage of its popularity and to make a little bit more money off the players.
Steve WhiteIt would be that way for only three years before going back to a best of seven.
Steve WhiteBut of course, what this series is known for is what happened before the series even began, and then for what happened to those involved.
Steve WhiteTwo years later, rumors of their being a fix began swirling days before the series even started.
Steve WhiteBack on October 1, the word was that White Sox players were in the pocket of gamblers.
Steve WhiteIt's long been rumored that New York mobster Arnold Rothstein was the man at the top of this whole thing, but it's never been proven.
Steve WhiteBut there was an element of gambling involved, and the rumors only got stronger when Chicago starter Eddie Sickott plunked the first batter in game one as the supposed signal to the gambling syndicate that the fix was in and all had been agreed to.
Steve WhiteMidway through, the gamblers apparently welched on some of the payments, and the White Sox players called it off and started of playing to win.
Steve WhiteBut they came up short on this day.
Steve WhiteSo after the series ended, the rumors only grew louder.
Steve WhiteSeveral sports writers did some digging and reported on it.
Steve WhiteMost famously, Hugh Fullerton wrote an article for the New York Evening World titled, is big league baseball being run for gamblers with players in the deal?
Steve WhiteBut the controversy began to calm down and was mostly forgotten until the following August.
Steve WhiteA game between the Chicago Cubs and the Philadelphia Phillies was thought to have been fixed, and a grand jury was brought in to investigate.
Steve WhiteThe evidence began to uncover what had happened ten months before in the World Series.
Steve WhiteMajor league owners also brought in Kennesaw Mountain Landis to become the first commissioner of baseball.
Steve WhiteAnd despite the grand jury returning a verdict of not guilty in June 1921, Landis banned eight players for life because of their involvement with the Black Sox scandal.
Steve WhiteAnd time now for today's nothing to do with sports fun fact.
Steve WhiteThe first product ever sold on QVC when it launched in November 1986 was a shower radio.
Steve WhiteIt cost $11.25 and they sold $7,500 worth of them.
Steve WhiteThat's all I've got for you today.
Steve WhiteThanks for checking out this episode.
Steve WhiteAnd once again, if you would like to help the folks affected by Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina, I have put some links in the show notes.
Steve WhiteI hope you come back tomorrow for another edition of this day in sports history.