Originally published on Jun. 15, 2023
By Zane Miller
On Thursday, September 16th, 1926, the Cleveland
Indians (now Cleveland Guardians) hosted the New York Yankees at Dunn Field in
Cleveland, Ohio in a game that was rescheduled from its original August 24th
date due to rain, consequently becoming the first game of a doubleheader.
Coming into the contest, the Yankees held first place
in the American League, holding an 87-54 record, while the Indians took the
second spot with an 81-61 showing. With a potential World Series appearance on
the line, the Yankees sent recently acquired starting pitcher Dutch Ruether to
the mound for game one of the twin bill.
Ruether, a veteran starter by this point, had already
enjoyed a successful MLB career, winning the 1919 World Series with the
Cincinnati Reds while also securing a 21-win season as a member of the Brooklyn
(now Los Angeles) Dodgers in 1922. However, after spending the past couple of
seasons with the Washington Senators (now Minnesota Twins), Ruether was headed
back to the Big Apple following a trade on August 27th. As the
Yankees traveled to Cleveland, Ruether carried a 13-7 record with a 4.52 ERA and
54 strikeouts over the course of 185 innings pitched.
However, if you thought this would be the only player
named Dutch to pitch in this game, think again as Dutch Levsen took the mound
for Cleveland. Unlike his name-sharing counterpart, Levsen was largely new to
the MLB scene, as he had only been used sparingly by the Indians since his debut
in 1923. However, the 1926 season was the first that he received significant
playing time, holding a 15-11 record with an impressive 3.30 ERA with 48
strikeouts in 218 innings, including an August 28th which saw him pitch
all 18 innings of a doubleheader against the Boston Red Sox, remaining the most
recent occurrence of this feat as of this writing.
After a scoreless first inning, Indians third baseman
Rube Lutzke drew first blood as he knocked in right fielder Homer Summa with an
RBI double in the bottom of the second inning, which was followed up nicely in
the top of the third with a one-two-three inning from Levsen. The contest would
quickly turn into a pitching duel, as neither team would get any hits for the next
two innings, including a fourth inning which saw both Ruether and Levsen set
the offense down in order. This hitless streak would be broken in the bottom of
the fifth with a single from Levsen himself, though New York would do one
better in the sixth.
After Yankees star first baseman Lou Gehrig reached
with a double, left fielder Bob Meusel drove in the Iron Horse with a groundout
that was thrown errantly by Indians second baseman Freddy Spurgeon. While
Cleveland was able to get a runner in scoring position in the bottom of the
inning, Ruether got out of the inning unharmed, keeping the game even at one
apiece. Levsen faced another scare in the seventh as Yankees third baseman Joe
Dugan reached scoring position, though this threat was quickly alleviated as
Dugan was thrown out at third.
The pitching battle continued deep into the afternoon,
with Levsen setting down New York in order in the next two innings while Ruether
did so once, although the bid for his third one-two-three inning was only
broken up by a two-out eighth inning single. As the teams went into the bottom of
the ninth, Ruether would be facing the bottom of the Indians order, with
catcher Chick Autry leading off. In his previous three career games at the MLB
level to this point, Autry had been held hitless in all of them. However, despite Ruether giving up just four
hits over eight innings, Autry picked a good time for his first career hit as
he slapped a single to get the potential winning run aboard for the Indians. As
Autry was quickly moved over to second thanks to a successful sacrifice bunt by
Lutzke, he was then pinch run for by Glenn Myatt, the team’s regular starting
catcher. With the first game of the doubleheader on the line, none other than
Dutch Levsen himself would come up to the plate.
Although Levsen had continued to deal on the mound, giving
up only two hits and no earned runs throughout his nine-inning performance, he
struggled at the plate during the year with a .184 batting average, in addition
to a meager seven RBIs in 76 at-bats with 21 strikeouts. Despite this, Levsen
created his own run support, swatting a single to center field for his second
hit of the day, driving in Myatt to put the game away in walk-off fashion as
Cleveland took game one by a 2-1 score.
The victory allowed the Indians to advance to an 82-61
record, before a 5-0 victory in the second game allowed the team to jump to
83-61 by the day’s end, although they finished the season at an 88-66 record to
come up one spot short of their second World Series appearance. After being
swept in the doubleheader, the Yankees dropped to 87-56, though this was of
little consequence in the end as the team went on to win the American League
pennant at 91-63 before losing the World Series in seven games to the St. Louis
Cardinals.
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