home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1996-03-13 | 4.9 KB | 103 lines | [TEXT/MSWD] |
- 1.5
- Raised in an orphanage in Baltimore, Maryland, George
- Herman Ruth was baseball's greatest home run hitter and
- perhaps the game's most dynamic player. A long-time New
- York Yankee player, the "Sultan of Swat" hit 714 homers for
- an unequalled lifetime record. In each of 11 seasons he hit
- more than 40 home runs. His 1927 record of 60 lasted 34
- years. Even in his farewell game in 1935 he slammed three
- homers, one of them among the longest ever hit. Potato-
- nosed and moon-faced, Ruth's 15-stone-plus bulk atop
- spindly legs gave him a mincing gait. Yet he played with
- gusto (as he ate and drank). He struck out as dramatically as
- he hit home runs and was worth $85,000 annual pay even in
- Depression years like 1930, so great was his drawing power.
- Along with Dempsey, Tilden, Bobby Jones and Hagen, he
- ruled America's Golden Age of Sport, the Twenties, and and
- he was among the first five elected to Baseball's Hall of Fame.
- Although a much deader ball was used in his heyday, Ruth
- reigned supreme. More than anyone else he shaped baseball
- into a crowd-rousing, home-run spectacle
- @
- 2.2
- A young man about 30 years of age, who 15 years ago was
- an inmate of a Catholic orphanage near New York, this week
- signed a three years' contract at a salary of between $75,000
- and $100,000 a year, a salary larger than that of the
- President of the United States.
-
- He is George H. ("Babe") Ruth, the most famous present-day
- baseball professional in the United States, and he thus
- becomes the highest paid athlete in the world.
-
- Some years ago Ruth entered the ranks of first class baseball
- as a pitcher for the "Red Sox" of Boston. He was later
- transferred to the "Yankees" of New York, and it was
- discovered that he was a wonderful adept at hitting home
- runs; in the season of 1920 he hit 54 home runs and last year
- he increased the number to 59.
-
- By his new contract he will receive in addition to his huge
- salary the sum of $100 for each home run that he hits during
- the season. He has also the option of extending his contract
- for two years more.
-
- Ruth has refrained from signing his contract till this week
- though the training camps are now in full swing in the
- Southern State, and it is said that the owners of the
- "Yankees" finally gave in and accepted his terms. Both sides
- had held out so long that it was agreed to decide by a toss of
- the coin and Ruth won.
- @
- 2.4
- Mr. G. H. ("BABE") Ruth, the greatest baseball layer of all
- time and perhaps the bearer of the best known name in the
- United States, has died in New York at the age of 53, as
- briefly reported in our later editions yesterday.
-
- He was a formidable left-hand pitcher in major league clubs
- before he became the mighty hitter who scored 714 home
- runs, most of them during the 16 seasons that he played for
- the New York Yankees. No rival hitter in the American
- national game, has come near that record, nor has Ruth's 60
- home runs in one season ever been equalled. He had
- riotously high spirits, which brought him frequently into
- conflict with authority, but on the baseball park he was a
- host in himself, and the place he occupied in baseball is
- comparable with that occupied by Dr. W. G. Grace in cricket.
-
- George Herman Gerhardt Ruth was brought up in a Roman
- Catholic orphanage near New York, and his career and
- character contain all the elements that make a national idol
- in the United States. He began his baseball career in 1914 as
- a left-handed pitcher with the Baltimore team, but in the
- same year was transferred to the Boston Red Sox. By the
- time he was transferred to the New York Yankees he was
- considered the best left-handed pitcher in the American
- League, but he was moved to the outfield when it was
- realized that his great strength would be of more service to
- his team than his ability as a pitcher. There-after his records
- kept statisticians busy for years. As early as 1920 he hit 54
- home runs, and the next year he increased the number to 59.
- In 1922 he signed a contract with the New York Yankees for
- three years at a salary of between $75,000 and $100,000 to
- which a bonus of $100 was to be added for every home run
- hit. Thus he became the highest paid athlete in the world,
- whom the followers of the game affectionately dubbed "the
- Home-run King." It is estimated that he earned more than
- $1m. during his career.
-
- He retired in 1935, and a year ago he originated a foundation
- which assists and encourages the American young idea to
- play baseball. Last June he was engaged as consultant to the
- American Legion Junior Baseball Tournament by the Ford
- Motor Company, which sponsored the tournament. Though he
- had been in indifferent health for some time, he was able
- recently to attend the first showing of a film based on his
- career. The day of this performance - July 26 - was
- proclaimed by the Mayor of New York "Babe Ruth Day," and
- all Americans were invited to observe it "in honour of a
- beloved citizen."
-
-
-