Tuesday, November 29, 2016

AC: Father of the Fumblerooski II

Roos, Friends:

It’s Friday afternoon! I wasn’t planning on writing or posting a Roo Tale this week. But two games requires that I pull an old one out of the archives and dust it off.

Pitt topped Georgia Tech 37-34 two weeks ago at Heinz Field, in part on a touchdown reception by Brian O’Neill.

Offensive Lineman Brian O’Neill.

The Fumblerooski is no longer a legal play in college football, so we’ll call Pitt’s TD a “Screenrooski”.

Former Pitt & Tennessee coach Johnny Majors was watching that day. Believe it or not, there’s an AC-Johnny Majors “Roo Tale” to be told. Another day…….

Also, tomorrow our Roos take on rival Trinity in Sherman. And the classic Austin College / Trinity game in 1935 has been added as a Chapter 5 to this already cool Roo Tale.

This story was initially dedicated to Nebraska native Frank Tooley, Baylor Bear fan Kevin Krause, Vandy grad Todd Treible, and Corpus Christi resident Wayne Whitmire. Let’s add to it.

This Roo Tale is also dedicated to Brien Sanders and Heather Woods Sanders. Brien was an offensive lineman for the 1990 Kangaroos that advanced to the NAIA D2 playoffs, before falling to William Jewel in OT. I got to listen to some Sanders tales at City Limits after Legends this past summer; doesn’t get more AC than that! Heather Sanders was a star AC Volleyball player, and is head coach of New Braunfels Canyon volleyball. Coach Sanders has turned New Braunfels Canyon into a Texas volleyball power, and I’m a fan. Canyon has made numerous trips to the state tournament, including a state semifinal run in 2015. Go Canyon!

And this Roo Tale is dedicated to Kelly Carver, Janna Janna Lowrance Carver, and Meredith Clayton Allen, whose kids look like future Roo stars to me! See you guys on Saturday. :)

For those interested in reading all Roo Tales to date, visit the archive:

http://bit.ly/1UM0CSH

Chapter 1: The Huskers
Chapter 2: The Championship
Chapter 3: The Call
Chapter 4: The Aftermath
Chapter 5: Fumblerooski Beats Trinity!



O’Neill lives the lineman’s dream!



Coach Heather Sanders and New Braunfels Canyon volleyball:
 
http://www.expressnews.com/sports/high_school/high_school_volleyball/article/New-Braunfels-New-Braunfels-Canyon-high-school-9218117.php

Chapter 1: The Huskers
Chapter 2: The Championship
Chapter 3: The Call
Chapter 4: The Aftermath

Chapter 1: The Huskers

All AC Roo stories should be dedicated to someone, right?. This one is dedicated to former AC Roo football player and Nebraska native Mr. Frank Tooley.

Nebraska Cornhusker football has few peers. 126 years of competition (6 more than AC ;)). 880 wins (5th all time). 5 claimed national championships (9 unclaimed). Three Heisman trophy winners. The Blackshirts. Memorial Stadium. Nebraska football truly is "The Big Red Machine."

And the Huskers are known for something else as well. Trick Plays! Black 41 Flash Reverse vs. Oklahoma in 2001. The "Bounce Rooskie" vs. Oklahoma in 1982. The "Bummerooski" at Missouri in 1975. The "Flea Flicker" vs. Oklahoma in 1974. And the most famous trick play of all……………….the "Fumblerooski".

The Fumblerooski is a designed play where the QB intentionally fumbles the snap, leaving the ball on the ground for a guard to scoop up and take off. Usually, the QB, backs, and line take off one way, while the guard lumbers (hopefully) unnoticed the opposite way. If it fails, it fails disastrously. If it works, it works very well.

Coach Tom Osbourne pulled out the fumblerooski in the fourth quarter of a close game against the Big 8 rival Oklahoma Sooners in 1979. On a third-and-long deep in OU territory, Nebraska scored on this trick play, leaving announcers Keith Jackson and Frank Broyles baffled. In the end, it would not be enough as OU would prevail 17-14. But the success of the play meant Osbourne would likely try it again.

And he did. Successfully. In the 1984 National Championship game against Miami in the Orange Bowl in 1984. Dean Steinkuhler's touchdown run against the Hurricane is probably the most famous fumblerooski in history, because it occurred on such a prominent stage. Unfortunately for Nebraska, it would not be enough as the Huskers would fall to the Hurricane 31-30 in dramatic fashion.

Nebraska would execute the fumblerooski a third time in 1992, against Big 8 rival Colorado in Lincoln towards the end of the first half. Once again successfully. Once again catching the announcers by surprise. See video for all three NU fumblerooskis.

Nebraska is so associated with the play that when a fumblerooski allows Adam Sandler & Burt Reynolds to win at the end of 1995's "The Longest Yard", Chris Berman gives a shout out to Nebraska football.

Given all of this history, it would be rational to assume that the fumblerooski was created by Tom Osbourne & the Huskers in Lincoln, right? Right? Surely by now you should know the answer. Oh no, my friend. Oh no. :)



 Burt Reynolds pulls a Dean Steinkuhler, and Chris Berman gives Nebraska some love. 



Chapter 2: The Championship

All AC Roo stories should be dedicated to someone, right?. This one is dedicated to Mr. Frank Tooley 


Tonight's Chapter is dedicated to Kevin Krause.

Earlier in this thread, Kevin mentions a 1924 AC 7-3 win over Baylor in Waco, and that the game ball exists in the "A" Room on campus. The Roos did indeed take down the Bears in 1924, one of many times AC beat Baylor back in the day. 1924 was legendary coach Pete Cawthon's (more on him later) first year. Many of Cawthon's boys would later go on to impressive coaching careers themselves.

One of those Cawthon stars was Henry Frnka (Freen-ka). In a preview of the game, the Waco News-Tribune featured Frnka as a "Real Star", and warned that SWC member Baylor had better not take TIAA member Austin College lightly given past clashes. Yup. See attached article. Frnka's solid career at AC ended after graduation, and he had one profession in mind: coaching.

He eventually landed the head football coach job in Greenville, TX, and began to quietly build a power. By 1933, the Greenville Lions were a title contender roaring through the Texas High School playoffs. A state quarterfinal matchup against a strong defensive San Antonio Brackenridge team awaited.

Scoring was likely to be a challenge. And when halftime ended with the score tied at 0-0, Frnka decided to go into his bag of tricks. On the second play of the half, Greenville ran the "hidden ball" trick, later known as the "fumblerooski". Tackle Jim Rogers picked up the fumble and rumbled 68 yards for the games only touchdown. Final Score: Greenville 6, Brackenridge 2.

Greenville would eventually win the 1933 Texas HS state championship, topping Dallas Tech 20-14 in the state final at Fair Park in Dallas. It remains today Greenville's only state championship.

Brackenridge was furious. They protested the legality of the play. They claimed the tackle's knee touched the ground. They appealed the loss, and they came up empty. Frnka had earlier painstakingly discussed the play with the referee of the game, to ensure its legality. He also gave the referee a heads up to guarantee that he would be watching closely as the play commenced. The referee's testimony sealed Brackenridge's fate. Greenville would keep their title.

So all good right? All on the up-and-up? Eh, Probably. :) Who was this mystery referee in the 1933 Greenville - Brackenridge state quarterfinal? Why, one Mr. Eddie Dyer. That's right, Frnka's former Austin College coach in the 1920s and future World Series winning Manager of the Cardinals in 1946. Well played Henry, well played. :)

Frnka's fumblerooski at Greenville, TX is the first documented call of the fumblerooski ever. Frnka would be headed towards better opportunities later, and he would keep that play in his hip pocket just in case………………….


 




































Frnka runs the "Hidden Ball" play against Brackenridge. Former AC Coach / HS football referee Eddie Dyer says it's all good.






















Chapter 3: The Call

All AC Roo stories should be dedicated to someone, right?. This one is dedicated to Mr. Frank Tooley.


Tonight's Chapter is dedicated to Vandy Grad Todd Treible.

In 1922, Henry Frnka and the Roos traveled to Dallas and took down SMU 10-7. It must have made quite an impact on first year head coach Ray Morrison. Morrison, a Vanderbilt grad, would coach the Mustangs for 12 more years, before landing the head coaching job at his alma mater in Nashville in 1935.

A head coach has to have assistants. Who better than Henry Frnka, who whipped SMU in 1922 and won a HS state title in Greenville in 1933? Frnka was hired as Morrison's assistant, and made the jump to SEC football during FDR's first term.

In 1937, Vanderbilt had an SEC contender, and raced out to a 3-0 record. Up next? A trip to Dallas against SMU. After the Mustangs? The undefeated, unscored upon, and SEC favorite LSU Tigers. The Tigers had not lost an SEC game since 1934.

On the train ride from Nashville to Dallas, Vandy passed through Greenville. And Frnka, concerned with putting points on the board against the Tigers, had an idea. Why not run his hidden ball play? After much initial reluctance, Morrison finally agreed. While Vandy's defense was solid, they had to figure out SOME way to score. So Frnka went to work in secret with his starters for the week leading up to the big game.

Game day arrived. Just as in Greenville, Frnka gave the referees a heads up. This time, however, Vandy ran the hidden ball play on the second play of the game. The play call in the Vanderbilt huddle was "Henry Frnka". Everyone saw what occurred next, except Coach Morrison. "Tell me when it's over", he told an assistant.

Touchdown, Vanderbilt.

Commodore tackle Greer Ricketson went right, while all of Vandy went left. By the time LSU realized what happening, it was too late. No one got within a mile of Ricketson as he strolled into the end zone. Vandy played inspired defense the rest of the way, and ended LSU's SEC win streak by a score of 7-6. Vanderbilt would finish a strong season at 7-2.

After the game, Morrison was asked about the big play that ended LSU's SEC run. "Talk to Henry", he said.

Morrison would spend two more years in Nashville, before moving on to 9 seasons coaching at Temple. The success of the play would prove beneficial for Henry Frnka. Coach Frnka would lead Tulsa to five straight winning seasons in the early 1940s, and would later enjoy a successful stint as head coach of Tulane. His last season with the Green Wave was in 1951.

Frank Broyles was a 13 year old Southern kid and football fan when Frnka ran his famous play. Later, he would lead Georgia Tech as QB against Frnka's Tulsa teams in both the 1944 Sugar and 1945 Orange Bowl. After graduation, Broyles would join the Baylor Bear coaching staff and face off once again against Frnka's Tulane Green Wave in 1948. Broyles knew former AC Coach Henry Frnka well. And when Nebraska dusted off this Austin College special against OU in 1979, Broyles was calling the game. Everything started to come flooding back……

http://www.scout.com/college/vanderbilt/story/310898-flashback-hidden-ball-play-beat-lsu-in-1937


Ricketson & Frnka score!



















Chapter 4: The Aftermath

All AC Roo stories should be dedicated to someone, right?. This one is dedicated to former AC Roo football player and Nebraska native Mr. Frank Tooley.

Because of the Corpus Christi background of Creighton, today's chapter is dedicated to Corpus native Wayne Whitmire.

For Broyles, it all came flooding back. In 1979, Nebraska had just pulled to within 3 points of the Sooners late in the game, on a wild play. And later in the broadcast, Broyles would eventually remember:

"The craziest thing I ever saw. It was the old hidden ball trick. I think it's the same one Henry Frnka used years ago with Vanderbilt to knock Alabama out of the Rose Bowl."

LSU not Alabama. But pretty close coach. :)

Today, the fumblerooski is not a legal college football play. The NCAA banned plays with intentional fumbles back in the 1990s, just as the NFL had done decades before. Variations still remain, from the bummerooski to the puntrooski. But all variations involve the ball never touching the turf.

We can definitely say Frnka's 1933 play in Greenville is the first documented use of the play. But when was the play first run according to legend? We have anecdotal evidence that suggests that the answer might be good ol' Luckett Field on the campus of Austin College. Frnka himself says that he recalls the play from his playing days in Sherman. And there's corroboration of Frnka's recollections.

Jimmy (Snuffy) Creighton played football at AC from 1919 to 1923 and was a teammate of Frnka. In 1967, he wrote a book about his experiences in Sherman (football included) entitled "Once Upon A Time". Creighton was a coach, teacher, historian, and legend at Corpus Christi Miller high school for most of his career. After a local team ran the fumblerooski in 1964, Creighton wrote to the Corpus Christi Caller Times to provide some historical reflections of his own.

According to Creighton, Frnka's inspiration for his 1933 play came straight outta AC football. In 1919, Coach Ewing Y. Freeland drew it up, and Freeland's 6'4" 220 pound tackle Shem Cunningham carried it out. Fumblerooski. Touchdown. Austin College. Nearly 100 years ago.

Shem Cunningham's name might be familiar to some Roos already. The AC Cunningham Lectures were established by a gift from 1920 grad Shem Cunningham and his wife in order to promote academic discussions of faith. 


http://www.austincollege.edu/seminary-professor-to-discuss-meaning-and-beauty-of-quran/

In addition to recognizing the football genius of AC alums, Broyles is also famous for leading Jerry Jones, Jimmy Johnson, and the Arkansas Razorbacks to the college football national championship in 1964. Arkansas clinched that championship with a win in the 1965 Cotton Bowl against ……… the soon-to-be fumblerooski fanatic Cornhuskers of Lincoln, NE.

The starting offensive linemen on that 1964 Husker team played too early to enjoy any fumblerooski glory. But one of them would have his own story to tell. Tackle Larry Kramer would soon begin his own coaching career, the highlight of which would be a 1981 NAIA Division II National Championship at the helm of the Roos of Austin College.

But that, my friends, is ANOTHER story.  Oh what a tangled web we weave, Roos & Huskers.
 







































 Chapter 5: Fumblerooski Beats Trinity!

Austin College, father of the Fumblerooski. First documented use by Henry Frnka, who learned it from former AC Coach Ewing Freeland in Sherman around 1920. But how do we know for sure?

Freeland left AC in the early 20s for other opportunities, becoming head coach at SMU and later the first coach of brand new Texas Tech. In 1935, he returned to AC as athletic director.

The 1935 Roos were a Texas conference (successor to the TIAA) power, and they stormed through the competition all the way to the final game of the season against rival Trinity. The winner of this game in Sherman on Thanksgiving day would become Texas conference champion.

The game was a defensive struggle. By the 4th quarter, the Roos held onto a 6-0 lead, and were looking to put the game away. A final drive took AC to the Trinity 27 yard line, when Coach Bill Pierce made the call. Right guard Caudle pulled left, picked up the intentional fumble, and rumbled 27 yards to the end zone.

Final score: AC 13, Trinity 0.

Austin College: 1935 Texas Conference Champions. Freeland’s last year at AC in 1920 had provided both a Fumblerooski and a conference championship, and his first year back in 1935 would do the same.








































The 1935 Kangaroos. Go get ‘em tomorrow Roos. Beat Trinity!



This. Is. The. Year. Roos, Giants & Cubs

This. Is. The. Year.

It’s Friday afternoon! Time for another Austin College Roo Tale. Yes, yes. I know. I’ve got a lot of friends who are Rangers fans. And they may not enjoy this story. The Rangers’ day will come. Just not yet.

Some professional sports fans bask in the glory. Yankees. Celtics. Patriots. Others endure futility, sometimes for an extended period of time. But the sports gods can eventually be merciful, and bring long overdue relief.

Earlier this year, the city of Cleveland ended a 52-year period of professional title drought when the Cavaliers won an NBA title. In 1994, the New York Rangers ended a 54-year skid and hoisted the Stanley cup. And my beloved Boston Red Sox reversed the curse in 2004 after 86 years of Bambino trade punishment.

But nobody, NOBODY suffers like fans of the Chicago Cubs.

I lived in Luckett Hall in the fall of 1989. The Cubbies made the post season, but would fall to the Giants in the NLCS. I recall watching one of those games in Craig Roberts’s room. Poor Cubs. 81 years without a championship.

Make that 108 years now. There is not a single resident of Cook County, Illinois who was alive when the Cubs last celebrated a championship. It’s a streak unmatched by any organization.

Explanations for the curse vary.

Most common is the curse of the Billy Goat. During the 1945 World Series, Billy Goat Tavern owner Billy Sianis was asked to leave Wrigley Field because his pet goat was bothering fans. He angrily declared that the Cubs “ain’t gonna win no more”.

The 1969 Cubs were in first place, when someone dropped a black cat onto the field during a game with the Mets at Shea Stadium. The cat headed to the visitor dugout and stared menacingly. The Cubs faltered, and the Miracle Mets would end up as champions of baseball.

Late in the final game of the 1984 NLDS, Ryne Sandberg accidentally spilled Gatorade on Leon Durham’s glove in the dugout. A ground ball minutes later slipped past Durham’s mitt and gave the Padres the series win.

And poor Steve Bartman. This Cubs fan interfered with a catchable foul ball in 2003 with the Cubs just 5 outs from the World Series. The monumental collapse that followed would give the Marlins the World Series championship and force Bartman to deal with the injustice that comes with 108 years of fan frustration.

Where does blame lie for Chicago Cubs misery? The Billy Goat? The Black Cat? The Gatorade Glove? The Bartman? None of the above.

The curse of the Chicago Cubs is an Austin College Kangaroo curse, and it originates in Sherman, TX.

This Roo Tale is dedicated to Eric & Caroline Sanderson, Denis & Beth Valentine Sugrue, & Mark & LuAnn Glowacz. Eric & Caroline are fellow 1995 Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy grads. Eric is a Chicago native and life-long Cubs fan. Denis & Beth are Austin friends of the Parrishes. Denis is a retired Chicago law enforcement officer who has seen his fair share of Cubs disappointment. Mark is a next door neighbor, Chicago native, and longtime fan of that team from Wrigley. All are watching this baseball post season like most Cub fans, with an intense mix of hope and dread.

This Roo Tale is dedicated to Christopher Davis, Tim Chamberlain, and Lindsay Chamberlain. Chris, Tim, & Lindsay are former University of Texas colleagues. Tim & Lindsay are rival St. Louis Cardinal fans. However, like political columnist George Will, Chris is a Cubs fan. Will grew up in central Illinois and famously said that he grew up embittered and conservative because he rooted for the Cubs while his friends rooted for the Cards. Chris, This. Is. The. Year.

This Roo Tale is dedicated to Dawn Wayland Wilson and Kristiann Erbe Monti. Dawn and Kristiann are good friends with whom I studied in Madrid, Spain a quarter century ago. Dawn is a huge Dodgers fan, and is celebrating the 67th (!!!) and final year of Vin Scully’s Dodger broadcasting career. Scully grew up a Giants fan, and your humble author’s one Cubs game at Wrigley was against the Dodgers. Kristiann is a Giants fan. Both are California natives and Occidental College (CA) alumni. Last year Austin College football whipped Whittier (CA) 55-12, and Occidental College football whipped Whittier (CA) 62-15. Go Roos & Tigers!

This Roo Tale is dedicated to Lance Rowell. Lance is a University of Texas System colleague of 16 years. He’s also an Aggie, a former member of the fightin’ Texas Aggie band, and a native of Marlin, TX. In the 1980s, trips from College Station to visit my grandparents in McGregor, TX would require a left turn in Marlin. Little did I know I was driving past some great baseball history.

And, because this Austin College Sports Roo Tale is baseball, it is dedicated to all of the Roo ballers who played, assisted, or coached when I was in Sherman:

Wayne Whitmire, Jason Willis, Kevin Krause, Pat Abernathey, John Talley, Cliff Brooks, Phil Novicki, Rebecca Cannon Novicki, Jamie Muro, Pat Rabjohn, Shane Montgomery, Wes Tarbox, Michael Turner Norman, Tony Bitros, Kelly Carver, B.k. May, Jimmy Baird, Ben Satterwhite, Kyle Matlock, and Coach David Norman.

Also, a special dedication to Big Jim Norman, David’s father, Shane Montgomery’s mentor, and head coach of 1981 Roo baseball!

All Roo Tales can be found in the archive:

http://bit.ly/1UM0CSH

Chapter 1: Welcome to Marlin
Chapter 2: The Giants come to Sherman
Chapter 3: The Curse of the Roo
Chapter 4: The Giants return to Sherman, and Cubs futility begins
Chapter 5: This. Is. The. Year.







































Your humble author takes in a Cubs / Dodgers game in 1993…


My most “baseball” photo ever. Dodgers take BP at Wrigley while Harry Caray & Tommy Lasorda chat…




Dodger Eric Davis early in the game. Cubs would win 6-2. Cubbie Steve Buechele would go 0-4 and Horns QB Shane Buechele did not yet exist.






































The black cat at Shea in 1969…



Leon Durham and the Gatorade Glove...



Vin Scully with the call. With your humble author watching from Luckett Hall, Will Clark & the Giants defeat the Cubs in the 1989 NLCS…



Reluctant to even post this one. Hopefully Bartman can forgive us all one day. :(



Chapter 1: Welcome to Marlin

Major League ball clubs today all head south to Florida or Arizona when spring training begins. Not 100 years ago. Teams would head south, but pretty much wherever they wanted. For Manager John McGraw and the New York Giants, “wherever” was Marlin, TX.

The Giants had trained in Los Angeles in 1907, and McGraw disliked the distractions. He desired a quiet location away from the lights, ladies, and other temptations that can keep a man’s thoughts from baseball. When the Giants skipper stumbled upon the seat of Falls county, he declared it heaven on earth. “Tell ‘em the Giants are coming”, he announced to the Marlin mayor.

In early February 1908, the squad hopped onto a luxury liner from New York harbor to New Orleans, and then headed west by rail to Marlin. The town was isolated, even for Texas standards. Its healthy natural springs and inaccessibility turned out to be perfect for focused preparation. Even most sports writers took a pass at the trip, which was fine by McGraw. The City of Marlin rolled out the red carpet for the Giants for nearly a decade starting in 1908; the Giants would return the favor by coming back again and again. See the iconic photo of the Giants walking along the tracks from their hotel to practice.

But one does not win pennants on practice alone. Games were desired, and the Giants would spend the months of February & March traveling throughout the state and playing city and college clubs. Dallas. Fort Worth. Houston. Austin.

And Sherman too.

The Giants preferred to scrimmage with the best college teams in the state, and that meant trips to Austin College. In 1908, a contingent of Giants headed north from Dallas to face the mighty Roos in a two game set at Luckett Field. Enthusiasm on campus was high; students and Sherman locals were all abuzz. After all, it’s not every day that the 1905 World Series champions drop by, like Cubbie Ernie Banks, to say “let’s play two.”


      
 Luckett Field, site of the Roos clash with the New York Giants…




Site of Luckett Field, not far from where the fellas and I would play quite a bit of football and ultimate Frisbee at Old Settlers…






































Chapter 2: The Giants come to Sherman

The Giants took Game #1 12-3 on Monday, March 23rd. Getting the win for New York was Doc Crandall. Crandall would pitch in the majors for a decade, earning 108 wins over his career. He was the first hurler in the majors to be used as a relief pitcher; his appearances late to rescue games in distress would earn him his nickname “Doc”. Behind the plate for Crandall was catcher Roger Bresnahan, who resides in the baseball hall of fame in Cooperstown, NY.

After an overnight stay near campus, the Giants and Roos met up once again at Luckett Field on a beautiful Grayson county spring day. Pitching for the visitors was Cooperstown inductee Joe McGinnity. His career highlights included 246 wins, a lifetime ERA of 2.66, and over 1,000 Ks. Bresnahan once again was behind the plate.

McGinnity is considered one of the best hurlers to don a NY Giants uniform. He owned seven 20-win seasons and two 30-win seasons during baseball’s dead ball era; his 48 career complete games remains an NL record today. McGinnity had contributed to New York’s World Series title in 1905. 1908 would be his last year in the majors.

Performing umpire duties behind the plate in Sherman over those two days? Legendary NY Giants Manager John McGraw. McGraw managed the Giants for three decades until 1932, and is second on the all-time manager win list. McGraw is considered by many to be the best player / manager in baseball history; over 30 years, his Giants teams won 3 World Series titles, 11 NL pennants, and had only two losing seasons. Not surprisingly, McGraw also resides in Cooperstown.

Replacing McGraw as Giants Manager that week was pitcher Christy Mathewson. Arguably the most famous and recognizable of all Giants, Mathewson was one of the most dominant pitchers of his era. 373 wins. 2.13 ERA. Over 2500 Ks. Mathewson can also be found in Cooperstown. Mathewson’s win total puts him tied for third on the all-time list, behind Cy Young & Walter Johnson. His lifetime ERA puts him tied for eighth all-time. Mathewson is the only MLB pitcher in the top ten in both wins & ERA. Both McGraw and Mathewson’s jerseys (before numbers were commonplace) are retired at AT&T Park in San Francisco (see photo).

The sun was shining during Game #2 on Tuesday, March 24th. AC fans were out in force. Star Roo slugger J.A. Henderson led off the 1st with a triple against McGinnity, but was left stranded. The Roos got 6 hits off of McGinnity, but could not bring anyone home. The Giants methodically manufactured run after run, and took Game #2 by a 6-0 count. Starting first baseman Fred Tenney had a strong outing, and accounted for 2 of the 6 runs. McGraw commented to the press that after a shaky first game, the local college boys really came out to play. Over 1000 Sherman locals turned out to watch their hometown Roos battle one of the best teams in the country. At the end of the game, McGraw promised that his Giants would return to Sherman for more baseball. He kept his word.

Making the trip to Sherman that March was a little known Giants rookie and back up first baseman from Ohio. He would see action against the Roos, relieving starter Tenney and drawing walks in both games. At the time, he was the youngest player in the entire National League. His name? Fred Merkle.

No one knows the true origin of the curse of the Roo, but it can be traced directly to Merkle in Sherman. Maybe Merkle vandalized brand new Luckett Hall, constructed a mere 6 months earlier. Maybe he convinced a disgruntled student to burn down Austin College’s Ol’ Main administration building 5 years later. Or, maybe Merkle just had some unkind words about the chicken fried steak at City Limits. Whatever the cause, the curse of the Roo left Sherman with Merkle, changed the fortunes of the NY Giants in 1908, and the history of the Chicago Cubs in every year thereafter.
 







Doc Crandall, winning Giants pitcher in Game #1…





































Joe McGinnity, winning Giants pitcher in Game #2…



Christy Mathewson, one of the best pitchers in MLB history and 2-0 as Giants Manager against the Roos…


John McGraw, legendary player/manager for the New York Giants. Also, umpire for two Giants/Roos ball games.



Fred Merkle, sees action at Luckett Field, carries of the “Curse of the Roo” from Sherman to Manhattan…






































Giants take game #1 12-3. Roos manage 3 runs on 9 hits…

    





































Giants take game #2 6-0. Write up in the New York Times.

  
Game #2 coverage in the Austin Statesman. Roo Captain J.A. Henderson leads off the game with a triple.






































Chapter 3: The Curse of the Roo

The Giants were well on their way to another National League pennant six months later. All that remained was to shake those pesky Cubs. But Chicago refused to go quietly into the night. When the Cubs visited the Giants late in the season on September 23, 1908, the two teams were tied for first. An important matchup at the Polo Grounds awaited.

In 1908, New York fans rooted for the Giants. What about the Yankees? New York’s most famous organization today was then known as the Highlanders, Yankee stadium did not yet exist, and the Highlanders were cellar dwellars. What about the Dodgers? Brooklyn’s team was known as the Superbas, Ebbets Field was still a dream, and the Superbas rarely had winning seasons. To root for baseball in New York in 1908 was to travel north in Manhattan to Coogan’s Bluff and cheer for McGraw’s club at the most famous stadium in the country at the time.

First baseman Joe Tenney had started the entire season. But a bad back forced his backup Fred Merkle into the lineup for the first time all year. Mathewson, who had earlier managed the Giants in Sherman, was on the mound. The Giants tied the score at 1-1 in the sixth, thanks in part to a sacrifice fly by Bresnahan. New York came to bat in the bottom of the ninth looking to end the game. A single by Merkle put runners on the corners with two outs.

Al Birdwell ripped the first pitch to center, scoring the winning run. Giants 2, Cubs 1. Giants fans stormed the field. Giants players all headed towards the club house in centerfield to avoid the rush. Including Merkle.

He never touched second.

The rule book in 1908 clearly stated that all base runners had to advance to the next base. However, the rule was not enforced and was regularly overlooked and ignored by all teams in major league baseball. The Cubs saw an opportunity to violate the spirit and enforce the letter of the law.

Cubs infielder Johnny Evers, of the famed Tinkers-Evers-Chance infield, called for the ball to force out Merkle. Joe McGinnity saw what was occurring. The Giants pitcher who had shutout the Roos six months earlier was coaching first base that day. Amidst a swarm of rushing fans, McGinnity ran onto the field, intercepted the throw, and threw the baseball into the Polo Ground stands. Cubs infielders ran into the stands, confronted the fan who had caught the ball, wrestled him to the ground, grabbed the ball, made their way back onto the field, and touched second base.

For reasons still debated to this day, base path umpire Bob Emslie decided to go with the letter of the law. Merkle was out and the game would continue.

Pandemonium erupted. Celebrating fans were confused. Both teams were either in the clubhouse or arguing the call. Darkness was approaching. Eventually, the game was called and declared a tie. A tie would not be relevant, however, unless both teams ended the regular season tied for first.

Both teams ended the regular season tied for first.

National League president Harry Pulliam ordered a replay of the game to determine to determine the NL pennant winner. Fans filled the stadium and stood atop Coogan’s bluff to watch (see photo). Once again, the Cubs journeyed to the Polo Grounds. Once again, Mathewson was to get the start. However, Mathewson woke up ill and declared that he was “not fit to pitch today” against the Cubs.

Tinker, Evers, and Chance provided the offense, and Mordecai “Three Finger” Brown was solid in relief. Cubs 4, Giants 2. Chicago advanced to the World Series, where they would defeat Detroit in 5 games. Chicago Cubs, 1908 champions.




Cubs Win in 1908. Chicago press prepares for dynasty that is still to come…



The 1908 Chicago Cubs, champions of baseball…



Giants fans need a scapegoat. Merkle’s boner provides…



 Chapter 4: The Giants return to Sherman, and Cubs futility begins

The Giants were back in Marlin in 1909. As promised, McGraw took his NY squad to Sherman to face the Roos. Once again, Mathewson was manager and Crandall pitched. The Roos put up a solid effort, and fell in game #1 5-2. The New York Tribune reported that Mathewson was on the receiving end of a good number of cracks because the amateurs in Sherman made the game so close. See article in NY Tribune.

Perhaps influenced by the jokes, Mathewson himself took to the mound in game #2 at Luckett Field, and contributed to a complete game shutout of Austin College. Mathewson didn’t win 373 MLB games for nuthin’, Roo fans.

It’s actually not too surprising that Austin College was able to compete with some of the best professionals the country had to offer in 1909. AC Roo baseball had a tremendous season that year, the first year of TIAA conference play.

In that inaugural season, the Roos chalked up wins over Trinity, TCU, Texas A&M, and the Longhorns of Texas. On April 9th & 10th, the Roos journeyed to College Station, defeated A&M 1-0 & 3-2 at Kyle Field, and returned home to celebrate. The April 22nd victory over the Longhorns occurred at Luckett Field in Sherman; the Roos took care of business by downing the Horns 6-2.

Meanwhile, the 1909 Chicago Cubs were just starting their attempt to repeat their 1908 championship. They still are.



 “Christy Mathewson will pitch” against the Roos…



 Captain J.A. Henderson is back for fightin’ 1909 Roo baseball…



 Henderson and the Roos take down the Horns & Aggies…

Chapter 5: This. Is. The. Year.

Fred Merkle’s infamous boner was brought on by the curse of the Roo, and would haunt him throughout his playing days. Perhaps understanding the source of their misfortune, the Giants eventually traded Merkle to the very same Chicago Cubs in the very same year that Wrigley Field opened. The result? Since 1908, the Giants have won 7 World Series titles while the Cubs have lost 7. One of those 7 Cub losses? To the Boston Red Sox in 1918.

The Red Sox of course, had their own curse, linked to another famous trade when Babe Ruth was dealt to the Yankees after their 1918 championship. This curse was lifted in 2004 in dramatic fashion, after an historic 3-0 ALCS comeback against the same Yankees. Boston’s World Series was clinched after a St. Louis Cardinal groundout by a batter wearing Ruth’s #3.

The Cubs curse still lingers, however, primarily because of a failure to accurately identify the culprit. The Billy Goat? The Black Cat? The Gatorade Glove? The Bartman? No. The Curse of the Roo. Unknown in origin, born in Sherman, transferred to New York by way of Merkle and facilitating a 1908 Cubs championship, it finally arrived in Chicago and has lingered for 108 years due to Merkle’s trade to the Cubs.

Why, signs of the curse of the Roo have been a fixture of the Wrigleyville neighborhood for some time. Walk south from Wrigley Field on North Clark for one block, and you will pass Merkle’s bar and grill. Cub fans celebrate this local institution because of Merkle’s boner and the 1908 championship, but fail to realize that Merkle’s boner is actually part of a Roo curse that has haunted the Cubs ever since the Merkle trade during Wrigley Field’s first year of play.

Roo fans, it’s time we give Chicago baseball some long overdue peace. How much additional anguish should Cubs fans endure?

No more! This Roo Tale officially ends the curse of the Roo. Whatever transgressions occurred in Sherman that March day in 1908 are formally forgiven.

Cub fans, Wrigley Field turns 100 years old this year. Your Cubbies have the best record in baseball and the post season is about to start. First up in the playoffs? Yup, you guessed it. The Giants. If Boston had to go through the Yankees to break their curse, then the Cubs will need to do the same to the very organization that gave them Merkle and battled the Roos in Sherman 108 years ago. Game #1 of Cubs-Giants kicks off tonight at Wrigley. Game #2 takes place on Saturday, and former AC Roo ball player Wes Tarbox will be in attendance, personally overseeing the end of the curse. Send me a photo Wes!

108 years is payment in full Chicago. Now get out there, take down the Giants, win the NL pennant, and bring a long overdue championship to the Windy City. Austin College has spoken; you’ve endured long enough. We’ll all celebrate at Merkle’s in November.

This. Is. The. Year.

Go Cubs…………….and Go Roos.

Merkle’s Boner, Part 1


Merkle’s Boner, Part 2



Merkle’s Bar & Grill just outside of Wrigley, where the celebration will be rockin’ in a few weeks…



   
This. Is. The. Year.



Roos, Pirates & the Red River Rivalry

The United Kingdom is bursting at the seams once again. Ehh, makes sense.

Scotland and England have always had something of a troubled relationship, and it is on display once more. Recent parliamentary elections showed a decisive divide between Tory England and SNP Scotland. The Brexit vote proved similar.

Thus it was always so.

The Roman Catholic church began to lose its political grip on Christianity in 16th Europe, and Scotland & England each went their own way. Influenced by the works of Calvin, John Knox and other Scots defied Papal Rome, establishing the Presbyterian church in Glasgow, Edinburgh, and points north. The reformist fervor would be carried by Scotch-Irish on their centuries long trek west through Ulster, North America, and the American frontier. The Scots were also wary of the Catholic successors to Rome in London, namely the Church of England.

To be honest, the English weren’t big fans of London either.

John Wesley would lead an English reformist movement of his own against the Church of England, eventually renamed the Methodist church. The fervor of the Methodists would also spread with the British Empire across the globe, including North America. Soon, Presbyterians & Methodists found themselves both heading west …….. organizing revivals, converting lost souls, and more than anything else………. mixing it up with each other on the way to the great state of Texas.

But conflict can often have unintended benefits. And such is the case here. For the Texas rivalry between my Presbyterian alma mater and its oldest Methodist rival just happened to play a role in the establishment of the most legendary collegiate football event in the state of Texas ……. the Red River Rivalry between the UT Longhorns and OU Sooners.

It’s Friday afternoon! Time for another installment of Roo Tales. I’m going to start posting these babies consistently on Friday afternoons, with a few exceptions here and there.

This Roo Tale is dedicated to Patricia Rojas-Ungar and Michael Ungár. Patricia is a Parrish family friend going back 20 years (welcome to the family Michael :) ). Michael is a former Longhorn special teams standout and fan favorite from the early Mack Brown era (1999-2002). Michael & Patricia are both UT alumni and now have adorable twins. Check out the video clip of #29 Michael Ungar sticking an OU Sooner punt returner in the 2002 edition of the Red River Rivalry!

This Roo Tale is dedicated to Jason Johnson & Lisa Lindsay Johnson. Jason is not on FB, so Lisa……please make Jason read. :) Jason is an Oklahoma native and a huge Sooner fan. He is also an Austin College friend and former Roo tailback. Jason is the all-time Roo TD scoring leader (as of 1996, and I believe as of today); over a span of 42 games between 1988 and 1991, Jason notched 34 TDs for 204 points. Amazingly, Jason never had a single game with 3 or more TDs. Which means that if you were a Roo fan like me during that time frame, it was highly likely you would see Jason in the end zone on any given Saturday. He was all-TIAA in 1990 & 1991, and a recipient of the Gene Babb award for football in 1991.

This Roo Tale is dedicated to the following OU Sooner fans & FB friends, nearly all of whom have liked the OU football or athletics FB pages:

Mary Finnigan Griffith, James Dean, JP Seale, Ed Scruggs, Kevin Spencer, Skyler Thomas, Nicholas Hodgins, Becky Roberson, Debra Epps Caffey

This Roo Tale is dedicated to the following UT Longhorn fans & FB friends, nearly all of whom have liked the UT football or athletics FB pages:

Stephen Sides, David Vance, Pat Abernathey, Michael Williams, Rayan Rutledge, Shelton Williams, Roxanne King, Wayne King, John Cotton, Allyson Brooks Fertig, Michael Fertig, Lindsay Chamberlain, Tim Chamberlain, Christine Bunce, Kate Hodgins Chambers, Don Chambers, Tina Cook, Jason Willis, Wayne Whitmire, Stephen Sides, Kristina Henderson, Leslee Wyatt, Shannon Harpold Hutcheson, Dave Youngblood, Margie Norman Oliver, Brian Land, Brittany Fowler Norman, Robert Trent, Angeleena Young, Shelley Joanne Weedon, Tate Gorman, Celeste Lunceford Havis, Craig Eivens, John Wilson, Leslie Wilson

Chapter 1: Before there was Austin College, there was…………well, nobody.
Chapter 2: Before there was the Cotton Bowl, there was Gaston Park.
Chapter 3: Before there was a Red River Rivalry, there were Methodists and Presbyterians
Chapter 4: Before there was Dallas, there was Austin & Norman

#RooNation: All Austin College Sports “Roo Tales” can be found in the archive:

http://bit.ly/1UM0CSH

Go Roos.







The ancestors of Presbyterians Roos and Methodist Pirates mixing it up at Bannockburn…


 

The descendants of Scottish Presbyterians and English Methodists today in the UK…




Michael Ungár (#29) sticks an OU punt returner in the 2002 Red River Rivalry. Today, Michael and Patricia are more likely to be sticking some diapers on two precious little ones.



A must read on Michael during his time with the Horns. It’s why so many of us are football fans.

http://www.texassports.com/news/2002/8/22/082202aac_803.aspx


Your humble author’s favorite Red River Rivalry moment…



Chapter 1: Before there was Austin College, there was…………well, nobody.

Southwestern University claims to be the oldest university in the state of Texas.

Puhleeeeezzzeeeee. Have you heard this ridiculous tale?

Four small Texas Methodist communities in four towns you’ve never heard of each attempted to establish Methodist institutions of higher education. They all failed. By 1867, none existed.

The oldest of these was founded in Rutersville, TX in 1840. Rutersville! Where the heck is that? Go find it on Google Earth. I’ll wait here. I promise you will not be impressed. I’ll give you a hint. In Rutersville, you head to La Grange for fine dining.

Methodist leaders examined their smoldering ruins in 1873 and decide to start over. One central Methodist university would be founded in Georgetown, TX, and would be named “The University of Texas”.

Isn’t that special? Unfortunately, the state legislature was soon in the process of establishing two state schools of higher learning in College Station & Austin, the latter of which they intended to name “The University of Texas”. A visit was paid to Georgetown to deliver the bad news.

The Methodists quietly bowed to the inevitable name change. But they struck a deal. Might the legislature officially recognize Rutersville and the other three schools as the official “predecessors” of the new Southwestern University? “Sure, whatevs” said the legislature.

Southwestern’s claim to be the oldest university in the state of Texas is yet another good lesson about politics. It pays to possess something desired, it pays to have good lobbyists, it pays to have those lobbyists located a mere 30 minutes away from the center of political power in the state of Texas.

Austin College was founded in 1849. It was named Austin College in 1849. And its founding document written in 1849 honors Mr. Austin, the father of education in Texas.

Southwestern University? Established in 1873 people. 1873. In honor of a vague geographic region I suppose.

Presbyterian – Methodist conflicts in Texas even precede this well-known “oldest university in Texas” battle between Southwestern and Austin College.

The smoke from Catholic Mexico’s defeat at San Jacinto in 1836 had barely subsided when these two Protestant factions and recent Texas arrivals started mixing it up once again. In 1837, a full three years before Rutersville, Presbyterian migrants led by James Russell established San Augustine University in San Augustine, TX. Henry Kendall and the local Methodist community in San Augustine responded by founding rival Wesleyan University in 1844 (one of the four Southwestern predecessors). For a brief period of time, San Augustine, TX was known as the “Athens of Texas”.

Things quickly went south.

Russell started a Presbyterian newspaper. Kendall started a Methodist newspaper. Russell’s newspaper began to criticize Methodists. Kendall’s newspaper began to criticized Presbyterians. Russell and Kendall began to attack each other.

Then Russell’s paper said something unflattering about Kendall’s sister. Kendall shot and killed Russell in his office, and fled to Louisiana. Both schools would fold in the 1840s.

Thankfully, the Presbyterians and Methodists would eventually find a new place to fight. The football field.


Austin College & “Southwestern” in 1849…





Chapter 2: Before there was the Cotton Bowl, there was Gaston Park.

Poor Dallas.

Austin had the Longhorns. Houston had Rice. Fort Worth had TCU. Waco had Baylor. Even smaller towns such as Sherman, Georgetown, Waxahachie, and Brownwood had college football available.

But not Big D. SMU did not even open until 1915; by then the Roos had been playing ball for two decades. Instead, fans of T.I.A.A. football in Dallas county demanded that their favorite teams be brought to them. And civic leaders did just that.

The Texas State Fair has been a part of Dallas since 1886, when it was established as a private entity run by Dallas business. Costs associated with its success, however, led to its sale to the City of Dallas in the first decade of the 20th century. One condition of the sale? Dallas would be required to hold the fair during the fall over the span of roughly three weeks.

The Fairgrounds just southeast of downtown already included a baseball field by the name of Gaston Park (see photo). Starting in 1908, Gaston Park was enlarged and modernized in order to accommodate football and attract the best college teams around the state. The park was located where the current Music Hall at Fair Park stands.

The football at Gaston Park was not a huge affair at first. In 1908, Simmons College (now Hardin-Simmons) was invited to play a local Dallas squad on Thanksgiving day. TCU made similar trips in 1909 and 1910. But the fans wanted more. They wanted games with impact. They got it.

Dallas leaders came up with a grand idea. Why not invite two TIAA teams to Gaston Park to compete in an actual conference game? Interest was solicited, and both Austin College and Southwestern were enthusiastic. An agreement was reached for the Kangaroos and Pirates to play their last game of the season on Thanksgiving Day, November 30th, 1911.

Just as in Sherman, interest in intercollegiate athletics had taken hold in Georgetown in the 1890s. When the first state conference (the T.I.A.A.) was formed in 1908, Austin College & Southwestern were both considered integral members:

University of Texas
Texas A&M
Baylor
TCU
Austin College
Southwestern
Trinity
Fort Worth Poly (now Texas Wesleyan)
Daniel Baker (now Howard Payne)

By 1911, the Roos and the Pirates were considered heavyweights.

Austin College and Southwestern had tremendous seasons in 1911. The Roos defeated Baylor and TCU (twice). The Pirates defeated TCU & LSU, and had managed a tie with Arkansas. As the season wound down to the close, Texas & Texas A&M had secured 1st & 2nd, respectively, in the T.I.A.A. The final clash of the campaign on Thanksgiving day in Dallas between Austin College and Southwestern would be for third place behind the two state school powers.

The contest also offered the first potential win for either school in the rivalry. The first meeting was in 1909, year #1 of the T.I.A.A conference. The Roos ventured to Georgetown, but left with a tie. A trip for the Pirates to Sherman in 1910 ended in the same fashion without a winner. Maybe 1911 would finally be the year one team would emerge victorious.





A baseball game at Gaston Park in Dallas, circa 1908…


Parry avenue during the 1908 Texas State Fair. Gaston Park is out of the photo to the right…

Chapter 3: Before there was a Red River Rivalry, there were Methodists and Presbyterians

Interest was very high on both campuses. Both schools chartered trains to transport students, faculty, and fans from Georgetown & Sherman to Big D. Newspaper reports predicted huge crowds, and game advertisements were found in many cities on points north and south (see preview in the Houston Post).

Austin College was banged up, and reports indicated concern about how the Roos would handle this adversity. Captain Alexander Gray, however, would have none of it. Using the language of the day, this Austin College Hall of Honor member explained to the Houston Post that:

“…on Thanksgiving Day at Dallas I expect my team to show the Methodist brothers how to play football; and, although we are undoubtedly severely crippled, I’m confident that we can demonstrate the superiority of the doctrine of the Presbyterian team in what I think will be the hardest fought game of the season.”

Thousands were in attendance, and would not be disappointed. The game was fast and exciting. Long runs, big hits, and goal line stands. Also, the game was sloppy. Fumbles and missed field goals were plentiful. By the fourth quarter, the contest stood deadlocked 0-0.

But clutch runs by Cecil Griggs (also in the AC Hall of Honor with a Roo Tale still to come) deep into Pirate territory led to a dramatic field goal by “Chili” Richards to take the lead. The Roo defense would hold. Final score: Austin College 3, Southwestern 0. The Roos were the third best team in the state of Texas, behind the Horns & Aggies.

On that very same day at that very same hour, another football game was taking place. At Clark Field in Austin, the T.I.A.A. champion Texas Longhorns were battling the Oklahoma Sooners. The winner would be crowned the “mythical” champions of the Southwest. In an equally hard fought battle, the visiting Oklahoma squad would hold on for a 6-3 victory over Texas.

As the Sooners & Horns walked off Clark Field that day, neither team had a clue about what awaited their schools. Gaston Park was calling, and so was Dallas……..forever.


        
Southwestern fans are excited, and prepare to head north to Dallas…

  
Preview of the game in the Sherman Democrat…




 From the AC Chromascope. Roos win!

  





































….and take 3rd in the state behind UT & A&M...


Photos from the Thanksgiving contest…






































“That Game”…







































OU triumphs in Austin at the same hour as the Roos in Dallas…






































Chapter 4: Before there was Dallas, there was Austin & Norman

Austin College & Oklahoma both triumphed in Texas that Thanksgiving Day in 1911 (see Houston Post). The Roo - Pirate Thanksgiving matchup was a success. Locals from Sherman & Georgetown had traveled south and north with great fanfare, and Dallas fans had benefited. City leadership in government and business began to wonder whether Gaston Park might be able to attract more and better games. If two of the top private schools in the state could be enticed to play, why not two of the largest state schools in the region?

Inquiries were made in Austin & Norman. Oklahoma was immediately interested. Texas was reluctant, but finally agreed when Dallas proposed a date change. Instead of meeting on the Thanksgiving holiday, UT & OU would face off in October during the State Fair. The Horns would need to find a new rival to play on Thanksgiving. As we all know, they would.

11 months after the Austin College / Southwestern game, Dallas fans were treated to an even bigger Gaston Park contest. The Sooners came ready to play, and the outcome was never in doubt. Crowds in the thousands once again saw some great football, this time with Oklahoma defeating Texas 21-6 in the first ever Red River Rivalry in Dallas.

After 1912, trains continued to carry Horns and Sooner fans both north and south to Dallas every year for this emerging annual classic. Eventually, Fair Park itself would be enlarged and Gaston Park would be replaced with Fair Park stadium (see an earlier Roo Tale here: http://bit.ly/2ceZ3Ri) and finally the Cotton Bowl.

The Horns and Sooners will face off once again on Saturday, October 8th. It will be the 102nd meeting in Dallas. But that won’t be the only game on tap that afternoon. The Kangaroos will journey to Georgetown to take on the Southwestern Pirates. Just as in 1911, both games will be occurring simultaneously not far from downtown Dallas and downtown Austin.

I’ll be out of town that day, far from both Austin & Dallas. I’ll probably be watching the Horns & Sooners like most of the state of Texas. But I’ll also have a silent toast to both schools in Georgetown …………. two of the oldest schools in the state of Texas and two institutions that helped pave the way for the best college football game in the state of Texas.

Go Horns or Go Sooners………………………and Go Presbyterians Roos.


   




































OU starters ready for the first Dallas clash, 1912…


Thousands of fans from Dallas, Austin, & Norman watch the first Red River Rivalry at Gaston Park, 1912...


Scenes from Gaston Park in 1912. OU 21, UT 6.




 The enjoyable ride that is the UT OU Red River Rivalry…