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Newtown, Conn.
Any suggestion that baseball is not a game of inches nor that
contemporary vintage base ball isn't a valuable laboratory for
the early baseball historians to understand The Game's evolution
need only study the exploits of the Sandy Hooks over the past
seven days to see how a matter of inches likely changed our National
Pastime, forever.
Only a week prior, the Newtown Sandy Hooks with great skill
and determination successfully prevailed over the Essex Nine
in an '1861' match in Massachusetts and seven days hence relinquished
their newfound confidence and knack in an '1876' match against
their old nemesis, the Hartford Senators.
Even though the Sandy Hooks captain 'Pudgey' Dieckman fielded
a formidable squad of capable ballists on Saturday, somewhere
in the intervening week and fifteen years (of rule changes) the
luster of the previous week's success was supplanted by the realities
of the game.
As the blazing sun baked the asylum turf around the makeshift
diamond 'Mule' Snyder manned the box for the hometown nine mowing
down the first three strikers in the visitors order. Intuitive
fielding and ball handling skills made short work of the visitor's
efforts, and everything seemed to fall into place. As the Hooks
came to bat, 'Eskimo' Quinn, hurling for the upstate visitors
took the box for Hartford and as a result of a well struck two-bagger
by 'Pops' Pendergist relinquished the first ace of the match.
This, along with subsequent hits by his mates, harkened back
to similar successes on the previous weekend when the Hooks seized
an early lead and never looked back.As the game progressed, a
series of all too familiar fielding miscues by the local nine
allowed the Senators to rebound with no less than one ace per
inning to pull steadily ahead of their downstate hosts to lead
by a score of 6 to 3 at the end of five frames.
No matter what adjustments the Hooks seemed to make in the
field they could not overcome their inability to handle the ever-bounding
ball. The Hooks had not only succumbed to the gremlins of the
past but thanks to a horrendous seventh inning when the Senators
scored seven additional unanswered runs, the match had fallen
decisively in the favor of the visitors.
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