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Version 1.0  1 
September 2013  2 
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Sliding in the Amateur Era  4 
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Richard Hershberger  6 
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Did base runners slide in the amateur era, and if so, how frequently?    Looking at period  10 
reports, the most striking feature is that the evidence is thin.    There are undoubted  11 
reports of runners sliding, but they are few and far between.    The problem then is to  12 
determine if reports of sliding are rare because sliding was rare, or because it was  13 
commonplace and therefore unremarkable: are they man bites dog reports, or dog bites  14 
man?    Or something in between?  15 
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To finish off the preliminaries, there are several distinct acts which today share the name  17 
slide.    There is no hint of evidence for the hook slide or the pop-up slide in the amateur  18 
era.    What there is evidence for is the straight slide into the base, both head-first and  19 
feet-first.    There also are two reasons for a runner to slide: to avoid a tag, or to stop  20 
quickly without overrunning the base.    Part of our task is to determine which of these or  21 
both led to sliding in the amateur era.  22 
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The earliest example in my notes of what seems to be a slide is from the New York  24 
Clipper of October 10, 1857:  25 
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...one of the Libertys, running to the first base and falling upon it with his hands, was decided in time.  27 
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Did the player literally fall down on the base, or is this a case of there not yet being a  29 
conventional vocabulary for the writer to employ?    Another point to consider is that 1857  30 
is when we start to see gloriously detailed accounts of games.    Absence of evidence is  31 
always weak evidence of absence.    This is especially true of baseball events first  32 
documented to 1857, as there are so few earlier detailed descriptions of the game.  33 
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There are two similar accounts from the following year, from the New York Sunday  35 
Mercury of July 25, 1858 and October 31, 1858:  36 
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[picked nines New York vs. Brooklyn 7/20/1858] Davis struck a fine ball, and made the second base  38 
with a mighty close shave, the ball having been passed up so quickly to Holder that Davis hadnt the  39 
twentieth part of a second to spare, and he only touched the base by sprawling on the ground.    40 
Judgment was asked, and the umpire decided Davis not out.  41 
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[Olympic of Brooklyn vs. Independent of Somerville 10/14/1858] A striker of the Olympic was running  43 
from the second to the third base, the ball was passed to the third base, and reached it nearly at the  44 
same time as the runner, but it was at least a foot from him in fair view, when he fell on the base 45 
decided out.    46 
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These raise the same questions as the 1857 account.    The last one is particularly  48 
interesting.    This is from a letter to the editor by a member of the Olympic club,  49 
complaining about the umpire.    Did the slide (or fall) by the runner catch the umpire  50 
unprepared to properly interpret the play, or was it simply a blown call?  51 
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We first see a form of the word slide in this account, from the New York Sunday Mercury  53 
of August 26, 1860:  54 
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[Atlantic vs. Excelsior 8/23/1860]    McMahon ran from the second to the third base, where he was put  56 
out...    The ball was thrown by Leggett to Whiting to head off McMahon, who reached the base  57 
simultaneously with the ball; but in sliding in, he so far overreached the base that his arm was the only  58 
part of his body on the base.    Judgment was asked for, and the umpire promptly decided that  59 
McMahon was not out.    But McMahon, immediately after, incautiously raised his arm from the base  60 
before Whiting had a chance to deliver the ball; and the latter, detecting the movement, instantly  61 
touched him with the ball, and demanded judgment, which the umpire, of course, gavedeciding  62 
McMahon out, as he undoubtedly was.  63 
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The placing of sliding in in quotation marks suggests that this was not yet regarded as a  65 
standard usage.    Subsequent accounts use the word routinely and without the quotation  66 
marks, suggesting that it was a recognized standard usage, which in turn implies that the  67 
action it named was common enough to merit a standard name.    This and later accounts  68 
lack the hint of a pratfall.    The simultaneous appearance of a standard vocabulary and  69 
disappearance of the language of falling and sprawling may hint that those earlier  70 
runners were truly sliding into the base, but the writers had not yet found the best  71 
vocabulary to describe it.  72 
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The account also seems to describe a feet-first slide, since it is hard to see how  74 
over-sliding head-first would leave only the arm touching the base.    This seems to have  75 
developed into a trend, according to this account from the Philadelphia Inquirer of June  76 
24, 1865:  77 
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The system of which I disapprove, and I am confident I will be upheld by the majority of players is, that  79 
on the field we notice the "slide game," or when a player in an effort to gain his base will throw himself  80 
on the ground, feet foremost, sliding for fully a distance of twenty feet.  81 
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Here are three more accounts, respectively from the New York Sunday Mercury of    83 
September 15, 1861, August 12, 1866, and the Detroit Advertiser and Tribune October  84 
18, 1866:  85 
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[Eckford vs. Eureka of Newark, 9/13/1861] [Northup of the Eurekas at second base].    Anxious to avail  87 
himself of all the chances, Northup seized the first favorable opportunity to run for the third base, and  88 
started for it.    The ball was there, however, as soon as henotwithstanding he adopted the sliding  89 
scale motive to avoid it.    By accident, he raised his foot from the base while the ball was yet in the  90 
hands of Grum, who, of course, immediately touched him, and demanded judgment, which the umpire  91 
promptly pronounced in favor of the ball, and the second hand (Northup) was declared out.    This  92 
decision, though manifestly just, was in direct antagonism to the feelings of the outer circle, and was  93 
responded to by a general hiss, which, however, had not effect upon the invincible Peter,[Pete  94 
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OBrien] who knew he was right.      95 
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[Mutual vs. Union of Lansingburgh 8/10/1866] In the third inning, McQuade retired, from lifting his hand  97 
off the base and being touched by Goldie, Waterman fielding the ball to the first-base finely.  98 
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Ives obtained his run by a tremendous jump and slide on to the base under the pitchers hands.  100 
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The practice was mentioned by Henry Chadwick in 1868 in The American Game of Base  102 
Ball:  103 
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Some base runners have the habit of sliding in to a base when they steal one.  105 
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In our final account the runner did not slide despite his teammates calling to him to do so,  107 
from the Philadelphia Sunday Mercury of July 12, 1868:  108 
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[Athletic vs. Excelsior of Rochester 6/29/1868] ...hope never forsook any of us, until Dick [McBride]  110 
hesitated in the last inning between second and third base, undecided whether to run back to second or  111 
to go on; and, mind you, there was a man on second.    Dicks hesitancy broke the camels back.    Had  112 
he listened to Cuthy, and slid for his third, he would have got it.    Had he run for it he would have made  113 
it.  114 
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What to make of these accounts?    There arent many.    In the fourteen years from 1857  116 
through 1870, the end of the NABBP era, my notes contain but ten mentions of what can  117 
plausibly be interpreted as sliding.    One certainly can take from this that sliding was very  118 
rare indeed, but I am not so sure.    Fully half of the accounts describe the runner being  119 
put out: one through (alleged) umpire error, one when the runner failed to slide when he  120 
should have, and three when the runner recklessly removed himself from the base  121 
following a successful slide.    The plays merited mention not because the runner  122 
performed an unusual act, but because of the subsequent out.    (One constant feature of  123 
early baseball reporting is that how outs were made is noted more carefully than how runs  124 
were made: the reverse of modern baseball reporting, reflecting the early condition that  125 
outs were harder to get than today, and runs easier.)      This, combined with the other  126 
citations, suggests that by the post-war period slides were not extraordinary.  127 
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Another point to take away is that many of these accounts seem to describe attempts to  129 
evade a tag rather than to prevent overrunning the base.    A bit of indirect evidence that  130 
preventing such overrunning was not the point of sliding comes from the enactment for  131 
the 1871 season of a new rule allowing runners to overrun first base without risk of being  132 
tagged out.    This rule was due to the danger of injury from pulling up suddenly, according  133 
to the New York Clipper of December 10, 1870:  134 
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This rule was suggested by George Wright, whose lameness, like that of many other players, is  136 
attributable to an effort to check his speed when running to first base.    The new rule, by allowing the  137 
base runner time to stop beyond, will avoid a frequent cause of injuries to base runners.    138 
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If sliding was a recognized option for stopping quickly at the base, no mention was made  140 
in discussions of the revised rule, and players were risking injury despite having this  141 
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option.      142 
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So in summary, I believe that sliding was, at least by the post-war period, less common  144 
than today, but not extraordinary, and was used more to avoid tags than to stop quickly.      145 
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I close with an excerpt not from a period source, but from Peter Morriss discussion of  147 
sliding from A Game of Inches:  148 
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Sliding does appear to have remained uncommon in the early days of baseball, and generally  150 
inadvertent.    That is, a runner realized at the last moment that he would be unable to avoid overrunning  151 
and base and therefore chose instead to dive.    Thus a premeditated slide may have been regarded as  152 
a novelty.  153 
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I quote this in respectful disagreement with Morris.    I come to a different conclusion, but  155 
intelligent observers can read the evidence differently.  156