Baseball on Ice: Difference between revisions
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|Term=Baseball on Ice | |Term=Baseball on Ice | ||
|Game Family=Baseball | |Game Family=Baseball | ||
|Game Regions=US | |Game Regions=US | ||
|Game Eras=1800s, Derivative | |Game Eras=1800s, Derivative | ||
|Invented Game=Yes | |Invented Game=Yes | ||
|Description=<p>The first known game of base ball played on ice skates occurred on in January 1861 near Rochester NY. Skating was very popular, and the hybrid game was played into the late 1800s.</p> | |Description=<p>[A] The first known game of base ball played on ice skates occurred on in January 1861 near Rochester NY. Skating was very popular, and the hybrid game was played into the late 1800s.</p> | ||
<p>A few special rules are known, a key one being that runners were not at risk when they overskated a base. Deliveries were pitches, not throws; a dead ball was used and the bound rule was in effect. A ten-player team deployed a left shortstop and a right shortstop.</p> | <p>A few special rules are known, a key one being that runners were not at risk when they overskated a base. Deliveries were pitches, not throws; a dead ball was used and the bound rule was in effect. A ten-player team deployed a left shortstop and a right shortstop.</p> | ||
<p>--</p> | <p>--</p> | ||
<p>Richard Hershberger posted the following on Facebook on 2/4/22:</p> | <p>[B] Richard Hershberger posted the following on Facebook on 2/4/22 [See clip, below]:</p> | ||
<p> "150 years ago in baseball: baseball on ice. This was a thing. Look at the list of the "Capitoline Ten" and you will see some top ball players. This is not true of the Brooklyn Skating Club's players, raising the question, is baseball or skating skill more important here? Good question. I don't know. I also don't know if there is money involved here, or if everyone is doing this for fun.</p> | <p> "150 years ago in baseball: baseball on ice. This was a thing. Look at the list of the "Capitoline Ten" and you will see some top ball players. This is not true of the Brooklyn Skating Club's players, raising the question, is baseball or skating skill more important here? Good question. I don't know. I also don't know if there is money involved here, or if everyone is doing this for fun.</p> | ||
<p><br /><span>Adapting sports for ice skates was a thing more broadly. In Britain they sometimes played cricket on ice, which takes real devotion. They also adapted the fine old summer game of hockey to play on ice. This will spread to Canada, where it will be discreetly forgotten that they hadn't come up with the idea themselves.</span><br /><br /><span>Baseball on ice required some rules adaptations. Ten players is the most obvious, the extra fielder playing at right short. Chadwick had been advocating this for the regular game for years. Spoiler alert: It won't happen. But it was standard for the ice version. Over-skating the bases also was standard, and this variant did influence regular baseball. The rule allowing the batter-runner to overrun first base was borrowed from the ice game. This was a safety measure, advocating by George Wright who had pulled a hammy. But while safety was the motivation, ice baseball provided the solution to the problem. There will be discussions for another twenty years about extending the right to overrun to the other bases, but nothing will come of it. <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York Sunday Mercury</span> February 4, 1872:</span><span> </span></p> | <p><br /><span>Adapting sports for ice skates was a thing more broadly. In Britain they sometimes played cricket on ice, which takes real devotion. They also adapted the fine old summer game of hockey to play on ice. This will spread to Canada, where it will be discreetly forgotten that they hadn't come up with the idea themselves.</span><br /><br /><span>Baseball on ice required some rules adaptations. Ten players is the most obvious, the extra fielder playing at right short. Chadwick had been advocating this for the regular game for years. Spoiler alert: It won't happen. But it was standard for the ice version. Over-skating the bases also was standard, and this variant did influence regular baseball. The rule allowing the batter-runner to overrun first base was borrowed from the ice game. This was a safety measure, advocating by George Wright who had pulled a hammy. But while safety was the motivation, ice baseball provided the solution to the problem. There will be discussions for another twenty years about extending the right to overrun to the other bases, but nothing will come of it. <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New York Sunday Mercury</span> February 4, 1872:</span><span> </span></p> | ||
<div class="oajrlxb2 g5ia77u1 qu0x051f esr5mh6w e9989ue4 r7d6kgcz rq0escxv nhd2j8a9 nc684nl6 p7hjln8o kvgmc6g5 cxmmr5t8 oygrvhab hcukyx3x jb3vyjys rz4wbd8a qt6c0cv9 a8nywdso i1ao9s8h esuyzwwr f1sip0of lzcic4wl gpro0wi8 oo9gr5id lrazzd5p"> </div> | <div class="oajrlxb2 g5ia77u1 qu0x051f esr5mh6w e9989ue4 r7d6kgcz rq0escxv nhd2j8a9 nc684nl6 p7hjln8o kvgmc6g5 cxmmr5t8 oygrvhab hcukyx3x jb3vyjys rz4wbd8a qt6c0cv9 a8nywdso i1ao9s8h esuyzwwr f1sip0of lzcic4wl gpro0wi8 oo9gr5id lrazzd5p"> </div> | ||
|Sources=<p>Priscilla Astifan, "Baseball in the Nineteenth Century," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Rochester History LII </span>(Summer 1990), page 9.</p> | |Sources=<p>[A] Priscilla Astifan, "Baseball in the Nineteenth Century," <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Rochester History LII </span>(Summer 1990), page 9.</p> | ||
<p>Peter Morris, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Game of Inches</span> (Ivan Dee, 2010 Single-volume edition), page 500.</p> | <p>[B] Peter Morris, <span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Game of Inches</span> (Ivan Dee, 2010 Single-volume edition), page 500.</p> | ||
<p>Richard Hershberger, FB posting of 2/4/22 [clip below].</p> | <p>Richard Hershberger, FB posting of 2/4/22 [clip below].</p> | ||
<p> </p> | <p> </p> | ||
|Source Image=Ice baseball 1872.jpg | |Source Image=Ice baseball 1872.jpg | ||
|Comment=<p>For some sketchy reports of ice-bound base-running games see Chronology entries [[1847.11]], [[1860.67]], | |Comment=<p>For some sketchy reports of ice-bound base-running games see Chronology entries. A clippings search for "ice" turns up a few mor.</p> | ||
<p>[[1844..6]], <span>Novel Cites "the Game of Bass in the Fields"</span><span><br /></span></p> | |||
<p>[[1847.11]], Alabama: <span>"Bass Ball," or "Goal," or "Hook-em-Snivy," on the Ice?</span></p> | |||
<p>[[1860.67]], <span>A GAME OF BASE BALL ON THE ICE</span></p> | |||
<p>[[1861.5]]-- <span>15,000 Watch Ice Base Ball in Brooklyn: Atlantic 37, Charter Oak 26.</span></p> | |||
<p><span>1867 -- Clipping: Ice Baseball on the East River</span></p> | |||
<h1 id="firstHeading" class="firstHeading mw-first-heading"><span style="font-size: 14px;"> </span></h1> | |||
|Has Supplemental Text=No | |Has Supplemental Text=No | ||
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Revision as of 13:44, 10 February 2023
Game | Baseball on Ice |
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Game Family | Baseball |
Location | |
Regions | US |
Eras | 1800s, Derivative |
Invented | Yes |
Tags | |
Description | [A] The first known game of base ball played on ice skates occurred on in January 1861 near Rochester NY. Skating was very popular, and the hybrid game was played into the late 1800s. A few special rules are known, a key one being that runners were not at risk when they overskated a base. Deliveries were pitches, not throws; a dead ball was used and the bound rule was in effect. A ten-player team deployed a left shortstop and a right shortstop. -- [B] Richard Hershberger posted the following on Facebook on 2/4/22 [See clip, below]: "150 years ago in baseball: baseball on ice. This was a thing. Look at the list of the "Capitoline Ten" and you will see some top ball players. This is not true of the Brooklyn Skating Club's players, raising the question, is baseball or skating skill more important here? Good question. I don't know. I also don't know if there is money involved here, or if everyone is doing this for fun.
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Sources | [A] Priscilla Astifan, "Baseball in the Nineteenth Century," Rochester History LII (Summer 1990), page 9. [B] Peter Morris, A Game of Inches (Ivan Dee, 2010 Single-volume edition), page 500. Richard Hershberger, FB posting of 2/4/22 [clip below].
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Source Image | |
Comment | For some sketchy reports of ice-bound base-running games see Chronology entries. A clippings search for "ice" turns up a few mor. 1844..6, Novel Cites "the Game of Bass in the Fields" 1847.11, Alabama: "Bass Ball," or "Goal," or "Hook-em-Snivy," on the Ice? 1860.67, A GAME OF BASE BALL ON THE ICE 1861.5-- 15,000 Watch Ice Base Ball in Brooklyn: Atlantic 37, Charter Oak 26. 1867 -- Clipping: Ice Baseball on the East River Edit with form to add a comment |
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