The Vanishing Spit Ball
The Thin Line of Spit Ball Pitchers Still Presents Some of the Foremost
Slab Performers on the Diamond
Comprising an Interview with RED FABER
BASEBALL MAGAZINE September 1922
The spit ball is the vermiform appendix of major league pitching and
like the human organ of that name, has caused a great deal of trouble.
Two years ago a consultation of eminent specialists in the person of the
Rules Committee decided that the patient must be operated upon. The troublesome
appendix must be removed. Hence they decreed that no new comers on the
slab should be permitted to use the spit ball, while those tough old veterans
who had become addicted to the spitter must reform within the season and
quit the nefarious delivery ever after.
At that time the spitter had few friends and many enemies. It was arraigned
under no less than six different counts, as the lawyers say. The critics
claimed first that a spit ball pitcher wasn't a pitcher. Clark Griffith,
himself a pitcher in his prime, made this announcement with much gusto.
It was noted by several mercenary magnates that Clark had no spitball
pitchers on his staff and could afford to be critical. Nevertheless, there
was something in his contention. Some spit ball pitchers at least would
probably never have been successful without the spitter.
Second, the spitter had a demoralizing influence on fielding. This was
partially true. Some spit balls are hard for the fielders to handle and
result in undeserved errors.
Third, the spit ball is it unsanitary. There was much sober sense behind
this criticism. The spit
ball certainly isn't nice from an aesthetic standpoint. But, of course,
there are a number of crude, unrefined details about professional baseball.
Fourth, the spit ball was a violation of the rules which forbade the
pitcher to put any foreign substance on the baseball. Doubtless this rule
could be read to include the spit ball, although some refused to so read
it. In any case the spitter was a suspicious character on the verge of
baseball legality.
Fifth, the spit ball was injurious to the pitcher himself because it
was wearing on the pitching arm. Critics saw in the sudden collapse of
Ed Walsh, the greatest of spit ball pitchers, a general indictment of
the spitter itself.
Sixth, the spit ball being an effective delivery, interfered with batting
and was therefore objectionable. Bear in mind that two years ago baseball
was concerned with improving the quality of batting and multiplying the
number of safe hits. The necessity for such action, of course, has since
that time utterly vanished in such a tempest of slugging as the rule makers
never foresaw.
These in brief were the cardinal sins with which the culprit spit ball
was charged. We shall not attempt to determine at this time to what extent
these charges were justified. Circumstances alter cases and the drastic
decision to abolish the spit ball utterly has been modified by almost
universal consent. The necessity for stimulating batting ceased abruptly.
On the contrary there arose a seeming necessity for stimulating pitching.
Besides a strict enforcement of the original rule would have worked great
hardship on some of baseball's leading twirlers. Such men as Burleigh
Grimes of Brooklyn and Stanley Coveleskie of Cleveland depended upon the
spit ball for much of their effectiveness, had enjoyed useful and successful
careers and without the spit ball would be deprived of their livelihood.
Even the bitterest enemies of the spitter sympathized with the just
protest of these pitchers and joined in the demand that they be allowed
to continue the use of their favorite delivery.
And so the role was amended to permit pitchers who were already spit
ball pitchers, to remain as they were, though it continued in force against
all new comers. Hence it appears that if the rule is not further amended,
and there is no present indication that it will be amended, the spit ball
is dying out of the game and will disappear with the passing of the last
veteran who now uses the famous, but much maligned delivery.
At present there are but six pitchers in the National League and eight
in the American circuit who are eligible to use the spit ball by virtue
of the fact that they were spit ball pitchers before the official ban
went into effect. This thin line of fourteen veterans, not all of them
as a matter of fact in big league service at present, numbers the last
survivors of a once great clan. These pitchers in the National list are
Phil Douglas of the Giants, Burleigh Grimes and Mitchell of Brooklyn,
Fillingim of the Braves and Doak and Goodwin of the Cardinals. In the
American League those exempted were Caldwell, Coveleskie and Sothoron
of Cleveland, Leonard of Detroit when he is in uniform, the aged John
Picus Quinn of the Red Sox, the redoubtable Shocker of the Browns, Allan
Russell, and last, but by no means least, "Red" Faber, the backbone
of Charles Comiskey's pitching staff.
We have said that these veteran hurlers were the last of a once great
clan. We might more accurately state that this clan, though few in numbers,
is still great, out of all proportion to its membership. The last two
seasons have seen the wreck of most great pitching staffs. The number
of efficient hurlers has dwindled to a degree where the manager with any
semblance of a good pitching staff, feels that he has a fine bid for the
pennant. The alarming decline in pitching efficiency after the new rules
went into effect, was even more pronounced than had been the previous
decline in good hitting. In the grand crash of pitching averages and the
riot of base hits, how stood the meagre line of spit ball hurlers? Their
work was indeed, a pleasant resting place for weary eyes. Glance over
that list and see how many pitching aces are included. That will tell
the story.
Doak was last year, not only the leading pitcher on the fighting Cardinal
Club, but he had positively the best record of any pitcher In the National
League. Burleigh Grimes all last season was the backbone of the Brooklyn
defense and one of the most effective, all?around slab performers in a
baseball uniform. We could hardly call Douglas McGraw's ace, but he was
a tremendously effective pitcher as his World's Series' record amply proves.
Urban Shocker was and is the foundation of the Browns' hurling staff and
the corner stone of the Browns' pennant hopes. Coveleskie may be slipping,
but he has been for several seasons the leading pitcher on the powerful
Cleveland Club. The other pitchers on the list are all at least average,
if not better than average in quality. While Urban Faber was undoubtedly
the pitching sensation of 1921.
Last season Faber was with a club that competed all year with the Athletics
for a place in the cellar. Had it not been for Faber's good right arm,
the White Sox might well have finished him. Every one knows what a handicap
to a pitcher is a losing club, and yet last season with the White Sox,
Faber won more games than any other pitcher in baseball with two exceptions
and these exceptions were Carl Mays, with the pennant?wining Yankees behind
him and Urban Shocker of the powerful Brown machine. Furthermore, Faber's
average in earned runs was the best in either league.
Faber not unnaturally defends the spit ball and as his remarks convey
much sober sense, we give them as nearly as possible as he gave them to
us recently, in the club house, while the trainer was wrapping hot towels
around his injured ankle. IncidentaIly in these remarks the eminent Mr.
Faber takes a shot at some of the stock arguments against the spit ball
mentioned above.
"They say the spitter is bad for a pitcher's arm. This is not true.
I can prove it by my own experience. I never used a spitter in my life
until I was obliged to by a kind of necessity because I had nearly ruined
my arm throwing curves. That was when I was in the minor leagues, and
I can remember how sore my arm was from curved ball pitching. The spit
ball may be a little harder on a pitcher's arm than throwing a straight,
fast ball. But certainly it is not half as bad as throwing a curve. The
curve causes a continual grind at the elbow and in many cases permanently
shortens a pitcher's arm. Some kinds of slow ball are also very hard for
a pitcher's arm. But these deliveries are not only legal but are encouraged.
"I am getting old as pitchers go, but I could throw spitters all
day, and why not? A spitter has to be thrown moderately fast and the ball
slips away from under the two front fingers of the pitching hand and sails
up to the batter rotating very slowly. Then it breaks down and to one
side. What is there unnatural about that or hard on the arm? I have been
using a spit ball for some years and I have never been able to discover.
They say it is unsanitary. Well I won't argue about that. I never wet
the ball but merely the ends of the first two fingers on my right hand.
The whole theory of the spit ball is to let the ball slide away from a
smooth surface. Wetting the fingers gives this smooth surface. By the
time the ball has traveled through the air, met the bat and been driven
to some infielder it is perfectly dry. No infielder needs to make an error
on such a ball. Of course, I can't say that some spit baII pitchers haven't
misused the privilege. But they didn't need to and that disposes of the
myth that the spitter causes a lot of errors by infielders. It may have
done so, but it didn't need to, properly handled. A spit ball pitcher
always chews something. It's an odd thing, but I have had to experiment
with things to chew. Some spit ball pitchers use slippery elm. Slippery
elm doesn't work with me. It's too slippery and I can't control the ball.
I have tried chewing gum. But that wasn't quite slippery enough. So I
have had to fall back on the good old custom, now much abused, of chewing
tobacco. Tobacco juice fills the bill. And I don't chew it because I like
it either. In fact, I never chew except when I am pitching. But it seems
to be an indispensable part of my business like a mason's trowel or a
carpenter's hammer.
"Of course I depend a great deal on the spit ball. But I do not
use spitters exclusively. I throw a lot of fast balls and some curves.
There are batters in this league who seem to like spitters. They have
solved the problem of hitting under where the ball looks to be and meeting
it as it breaks. There are batters that I wouldn't give a spitter to in
a pinch, I would feed them a curve. For all that a spit ball is a good
friend to the pitcher who knows how to use it and, in my opinion, deserves
a better fate than to be read out of baseball when the last of the present
pitching crop goes to the minors. Some of us are getting old and won't
last much longer. There'll come a day not far off either, unless they
change the rule, when the spit ball will be unknown In the major leagues.
That won't affect me directly because I shall be laid on the shelf by
that time. But I think it's a mistake to abolish the spit ball.
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