First Reference to Change-of-Pace Pitching: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "{{Other First |Coordinates=40.7127837, -74.00594130000002 |Name=First Reference to Change-of-Pace Pitching |Type of Date=Day |Date=1859/07/03 |Country=United States |State=NY ...") |
Bsallardice (talk | contribs) (Edited automatically from page First Reference to Change-of-Pace Pitching.) |
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|Type of Date=Day | |Type of Date=Day | ||
|Date=1859/07/03 | |Date=1859/07/03 | ||
|Date Note= | |||
|Country=United States | |Country=United States | ||
|State=NY | |State=NY | ||
|City=NYC | |City=NYC | ||
|Modern Address= | |||
|Description=<p><span>"[Eckford vs. Putnam 7/1/1859] Mr. Pidgeon (their pitcher) at first annoyed the strikers on the opposite side somewhat, by his style of pitching–first very slow, then a very swift ball; but the Putnam players soon got posted, and were on the look-out for the 'gay deceivers.'"</span></p> | |Description=<p><span>"[Eckford vs. Putnam 7/1/1859] Mr. Pidgeon (their pitcher) at first annoyed the strikers on the opposite side somewhat, by his style of pitching–first very slow, then a very swift ball; but the Putnam players soon got posted, and were on the look-out for the 'gay deceivers.'"</span></p> | ||
|Sources=<p><span><em>New York Sunday Mercury</em></span><span> July 3, 1859</span></p> | |Sources=<p><span><em>New York Sunday Mercury</em></span><span> July 3, 1859</span></p> | ||
|Source Image= | |||
|Has Source On Hand=No | |Has Source On Hand=No | ||
|Comment= | |||
|Query= | |||
|Reviewed=Yes | |||
|Submitted by=Richard Hershberger | |Submitted by=Richard Hershberger | ||
|Submission Note=2/4/2014 | |Submission Note=2/4/2014 | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 11:45, 16 November 2020
Date | Sunday, July 3, 1859 |
---|---|
Location | NYC, NY, United States |
Modern Address | |
Description | "[Eckford vs. Putnam 7/1/1859] Mr. Pidgeon (their pitcher) at first annoyed the strikers on the opposite side somewhat, by his style of pitching–first very slow, then a very swift ball; but the Putnam players soon got posted, and were on the look-out for the 'gay deceivers.'" |
Sources | New York Sunday Mercury July 3, 1859 |
Source Image | [[Image:|left|thumb]] |
Has Source On Hand | No |
Comment | |
Query | |
Submitted by | Richard Hershberger |
Submission Note | 2/4/2014 |
Comments
<comments voting="Plus" />