![]() ![]() Common sense had to tell you the competition wasn't as good as it was before, but as a player, you don't notice that sort of thing at all. Louis Dispatch Marty Marion said, "We scared 'em that year. Louis World Series? Did you know it was the second Series (the first was during the 1922 World Series) completely played in the same ballpark?ĭuring an interview with the St. He failed to accomplish that mark, but did finish with 105 victories making the Cardinals franchise the first National League team with three consecutive 100-win seasons.ĭid you know that this was the first and only all-St. ![]() It was the eighth appearance in nineteen seasons for the World Champions, while it was the first (and last) Fall Classic in the Browns' 52-year history.Ĭardinals manager Billy Southworth openly stated during the regular season that he wanted to break the record for wins in a season by a team. For Game 6, it was Max Lanier and Ted Wilks (who both had seventeen wins and shared a 2.65 ERA), that wrote the final chapter to the Brown's "Cinderella season" with a 3-1 victory that wrapped up the Cardinals' second Series title in three years. In the Cardinals' 1942-1943-1944 stranglehold on the National League championship, Cooper had won sixty-five games and thrown twenty-three shutouts. The following day, Cooper, who was coming off of a twenty-two-win season, beat Galehouse with a seven-hit, 2-0 shutout. Stan Musial finished the job with a two-run homer for the 5-1 win. Sig Jakucki, the thirty-five-year-old who had won thirteen games for the '44 Browns after being away from baseball for five years, lasted only three innings in Game 4, a contest in which Cards lefthander Harry Brecheen, (16-5 in the regular season) kept the American Leaguers off stride. With the Americans ahead two games to one, the more experienced Nationals proceeded to show what it takes to play in the big show. The underdogs prevailed again in Game 3 as Jack Kramer pitched a seven-hitter and struck out ten batters on the way to a 6-2 Brown's triumph. ![]() Ken O'Dea came up big as well with a run-scoring pinch single in the eleventh for the 3-2 victory. The Cards answered back in Game 2 with Blix Donnelly's stellar relief pitching that tallied no runs, two hits and seven strikeouts in four innings. Unfortunately, the blast would prove to be the Browns' only homer in World Series history. Denny Galehouse out-pitched Series vet, Mort Cooper and George McQuinn hit a clutch, fourth-inning, two-run homer that decided Game 1. Perhaps as an answer to the lack of pre-game respect they had received in the papers, Luke Sewell's American League titleists came out swinging against their heavily favored rivals for the 2-1 opening victory. Surprisingly, it was the eight-time National League champion Cardinals who were tenants of the American League's downtrodden Browns in Sportsman's Park which would be the venue for the entire contest. Louis before them, the "Gateway City" was electrified with the excitement of what was billed as the "St. In making off with their third straight National League pennant (leading by 14½ games over Pittsburgh), manager Billy Southworth's Cardinals had won one-hundred five games and ran their three-year victory total to three-hundred sixteen. Across town, the other Major League team from St. Louis to finish one game ahead of the Tigers in the American League. The victory, combined with Detroit's loss to Washington, enabled St. With outfielder Chet Laabs drilling two final-day homers, the Browns beat the defending champion New York Yankees. On the mound, the Browns boasted Nelson Potter and Jack Kramer who combined for a mediocre thirty-six victories. 301), one man with twenty home runs, shortstop Vern Stephens (who hit exactly twenty) and one player over the eighty-five runs batted in mark, Stephens, who knocked in one-hundred nine runs. 300 hitter in outfielder Mike Kreevich (who barely made it at. The top team in the American League was the St. Many of the games' best players were called away for tours of duty and the result was a seriously depleted pool of talent. The ongoing war between the Allies and Axis powers certainly had an impact on Major League Baseball, but never like it did in 1944. ![]()
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