Word: rickey
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...reason the St. Louis Cardinals give night sweats to managers of other National League clubs is Branch Rickey, a chunky, bespectacled David Harumish man of 60, who is referred to with awed hush in organized baseball as "the Brain." Branch Rickey is full of endless surprises. As vice president and general manager of the Cards, he whisks forth young players nobody ever heard of and makes stars of them; he sells established stars to other clubs for huge sums and laughs when the stars fail to come through for their new owners. To the fury of the St. Louis fans...
...When Rickey went to the Cardinals 25 years ago, the club had no more color or draw than the present-day St. Louis Browns. After he got back from France, where he served as a chemical warfare major in the A.E.F., he took stock. There was only one really good ballplayer on the team, Second Sacker Rogers Hornsby. There was a debt of $175,000; no money for a training trip that winter, not even enough for new uniforms...
Naturally, there were no funds to purchase stars from other teams, so Rickey dreamed up the farm system, i.e., buying minor-league clubs and developing young players on them. At first the other big-league teams hooted at "Rickey's chain gang," but by 1926 it began to pay off spectacularly. That year the Cards won not only the pennant but the World Series...
Billy's Kids. The Cardinals may lack the smoothness of the Yankees and the fiery leadership of the Dodgers, but they are a scrappy, slugging team. Critics say the Cards might have been the Yankees of the National League, if money-minded General Manager Branch Rickey, founder of the farm system, had not sold so many ($4,000,000 worth) of their promising farm products. Still, St. Louis has nothing to mope about. Manager Billy Southworth, a paternal oldtimer with infectious enthusiasm, has a green thumb for ripening green players. This year's Cardinals have six regulars batting...
Born. To Mrs. John Eckler, oldest of the five daughters of shrewd Branch Rickey, business manager of the St. Louis Cardinals: a son, weight 8 lb.; in Chicago. Gloated Baseballer Rickey, pointing to his grandson's large baby hands, a catching prospect: "Didn't I tell you? This proves there is such a thing as prenatal influence...