In a span of about 24 hours, Grover Cleveland Alexander twice held the fate of the 1926 Cardinals in his right hand. With a loss meaning elimination of the Cardinals from the World Series, Alexander delivered a win and a save against the Yankees of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig at New York.
Alexander’s save, one of the top five iconic moments in Cardinals lore, was accomplished on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 10, in Game 7 with 2.1 innings of hitless relief, including the storied strikeout of Tony Lazzeri with two outs and the bases loaded in the seventh inning, in a 3-2 Cardinals victory.
Alexander’s win, accomplished a day earlier on Saturday afternoon, Oct. 9, in Game 6, was just as impressive, but often overshadowed by the Game 7 drama.
With the Yankees in position to clinch the championship with a victory, Alexander, 39, got a complete-game win for the Cardinals in Game 6.
Displaying remarkable command of his pitches, Alexander kept Ruth from hitting a ball out of the infield and limited Gehrig to a single in the 10-2 Cardinals victory.
In an Associated Press report, Cardinals player-manager Rogers Hornsby said of Alexander, “(He) has left a mark for the next generation to aim at.”
Wrote The Sporting News: “(Alexander) has been pitching a long, long time, but it is doubtful if he ever rose to the heights he ascended in this Series.”
Duel of veterans
On Oct. 3 at Yankee Stadium, Alexander started and won Game 2 of the 1926 World Series, pitching a complete-game four-hitter and striking out 10 in the Cardinals’ 6-2 triumph. That win evened the best-of-seven Series at 1-1.
The Yankees won two of the next three at St. Louis.
With Game 6 at Yankee Stadium, Alexander was matched against Bob Shawkey, 35, who had pitched primarily in relief during the regular season.
Yankees manager Miller Huggins was confident Shawkey could deliver a strong start. Shawkey had pitched in relief in Game 2 and Game 3 and hadn’t allowed the Cardinals a baserunner over 3.2 total innings. Huggins also was confident Alexander wouldn’t be as sharp in Game 6 as he had been in Game 2.
Under control
As Shawkey took the mound for the start of Game 6, “the sun was shining but there was an October chill in the air,” according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The Cardinals scored three in the first, led 4-1 through six and secured their grip with a five-run seventh.
Alexander never gave the Yankees a chance to rally. He threw 104 pitches, including 75 for strikes. “It was remarkable to watch the old master put the ball almost where he wanted to,” the Post-Dispatch reported. “It was the finest exhibition of control seen in many a day.”
Said Alexander: “The day was cold and at times I had trouble in cutting loose with my fastball, but my control was exceptionally good with men on the bases and that was what helped me.”
Besting The Babe
Alexander especially was effective against Ruth, who’d hit 47 home runs during the season and three against the Cardinals in Game 4 of the World Series at St. Louis. Ruth was 0-for-3 with a walk against Alexander in Game 6. In the third inning, Ruth batted with runners on first and second, two outs, and grounded out to first. In the seventh, with runners on second and third, two outs, Alexander induced Ruth to ground out to shortstop.
“It was my control that kept Ruth from hitting,” Alexander said. “Every ball that Babe hit broke on the inside of the plate, close enough so that the big fellow could do no damage.”
Said Huggins: “Alexander had a better game left in his system than we thought.”
Alexander was supported by the hitting of Les Bell (four RBI, three hits, including a two-run home run), Hornsby (three RBI) and Billy Southworth (double, triple, three runs). Boxscore
“I want to thank the fans of New York for the way they have treated the Cardinals at the Stadium,” Alexander said. “They have been fair and square, ever ready to applaud when a good play was made.”
Cooper, who led the NL in wins (22), shutouts (10) and ERA (1.78) and placed among the top two in strikeouts (152), starts (35) and innings pitched (278.2), started Games 1 and 4 of the 1942 World Series against the Yankees.
Jaster, 22, a Cardinals left-hander, made five starts against the 1966 Dodgers and tossed shutouts against them each time.
Eight different Cardinals pitchers accounted for those 12 consecutive road wins. Ten of those wins were achieved by starters, including eight complete-game efforts.
In May 1986, Burris joined Dizzy Dean of the 1936 Cardinals as Redbirds pitchers to produce three RBI or more in consecutive games.
The Cardinals’ team record for most home runs in a game is seven. They’ve done that twice.