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CORKS AND CURLS 1911 UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA BASEBALL HOF PITCHER EPPA RIXEY MLB

$ 118.8

Availability: 72 in stock
  • Condition: SEE MY DESCRIPTION AND PICTURES
  • Team: Virginia Cavaliers
  • Year: 1911
  • Team-Baseball: Cincinnati Reds
  • Sport: Baseball
  • Player: EPPA RIXEY
  • Grade: Good
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Other Topics: Personal copy of H H Lannigan aka Pops Lannigan, Basketball Coach
  • Modification Description: BOOK IS INSCRIBED - To "Pop" Lannigan with compliments of Corks and Curls.
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Vintage: Yes
  • Sub-Topic: UVA - University Of Virginia Corks and Curls 1911 Yearbook
  • Modified Item: Yes
  • Topic: Hall Of Fame Baseball Pitcher Eppa Rixey
  • Team-Basketball: Virginia Cavaliers - University of Virginia

    Description

    CORKS AND CURLS MCMXI
    UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA VOLUME XXIV 1911 YEARBOOK -
    THIS YEARBOOK IS INSCRIBED ON FIRST BLANK PAGE IN FRONT (To “Pop” Lannigan with the compliments of Corks and Curls) - SO THIS BOOK WAS THE PERSONAL PROPERTY OF HENRY HAYDEN LANNIGAN aka “POPS” LANNIGAN. HE WAS THE FIRST HEAD COACH OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA’S BASKETBALL TEAM, VIRGINIA CAVILIERS, FROM 1905 TO 1929, AND THE TRACK TEAM’S TRAINER. LANNIGAN WAS A RENOWNED COLLEGE BASKETBALL COACH IN THE EARLY YEARS OF THE SPORT AND THE TRACK FIELD IS NOW NAMED AFTER HIM AT UVA
    THE LARGE 1 1/2” THICK X 9” WIDE X 11 3/8” HEIGHT BROWN LEATHER COVER IS SQUARE AND TIGHT AND LARGER THAN THE INSIDE PAGES WITH ABOUT A 3/8” TO 1/2” OVERHANG AT EDGES, THERE IS WEAR (RUBS, NICKS) AT ALL EXTREMITIES CORNERS AND EDGES AND SPINE TIPS (WORSE AT SPINE TIPS) AND SCUFFS AND SCRAPES AND RUBS ON ALL SURFACES FRONT-BACK-SPINE; STILL A VERY SOLID BOOK AFTER 110+ YEARS
    THE INSIDE CHARCOAL COLORED BOARDS AND END PAGES ARE TIGHT (BACK IS VERY-TIGHT) AND CLEAN OTHER THAN SOME HINTS OF FOXING SPECS AT PARTS OF TOP EDGES AND HINGES
    THE 297 GLOSSY PAGES PLUS NUMEROUS ADVERTISEMENT PAGES ARE TIGHT AND MOSTLY WHITE AND CLEAN WITH SOME SCATTERED MOSTLY LIGHT FOXING WITH A BIT MORE IN VERY BEGINNING COUPLE PAGES, THERE ARE JUST A FEW CORNER CREASES AND PAGE 179/180 HAS A 1/1” X 1” PIECE TORN OFF OUTER EDGE WHICH DOES NOT COME CLOSE TO ANY TEXT, THERE ARE 3 PAGES OF ILLUSTRATIONS THAT HAVE TISSUE PAPER STILL ATTACHED THE ONE IN VERY FRONT WITH THE COLORED ILLUSTRATED LADY NEXT TO TITLE PAGE IS CLEAN THE SECOND ONE NEXT TO DEDICATION PAGE/PICTURE OF HENRY C. STUART HAS SOME LIGHT CREASES AND THE LAST TISSUE PAPER PAGE NEXT TO BLUE EYES POEM IS CLEAN WITH PIECE OFF BOTTOM CORNER, ALL THE COLOR ILLUSTRATIONS ARE VIBRANT - EPPA RIXEY IS MENTIONED A FEW TIMES THROUGHOUT THE BOOK, HE PLAYED OF COURSE ON THE BASEBALL TEAM AND THE BASKETBALL TEAM, THE TENNIS TEAM AND LISTED UNDER THE ENGINEERING CLASS SECTION, THERE ARE PICTURES OF HIM WITH BOTH THE BASEBALL TEAM (WHICH I NOTED WHERE HE IS IN THE PICTURE) AND THE BASKETBALL TEAM
    *** BELOW MY DESCRIPTION AND INFO ARE EPPA RIXEL INFO AND STATS FROM WIKIPEDIA ***
    ***
    THIS YEARBOOK HAD NUMEROUS LARGE AND SMALL FOUR LEAF CLOVERS? STUCK BETWEEN SEVERAL PAGES WHICH LEFT SOME MINOR DISCOLOR SPOTS NOTHING BAD, BUT I PULLED THEM ALL OUT AND HAVE PRESERVED THEM BETWEEN SOME PARCHMENT PAPER AND INSIDE A CLEAR ACID-FREE COMIC BOOK BAG AND WILL INCLUDE IT WITH THE BOOK
    ***
    M7C22B22A#300(150)
    I USUALLY SHIP WITHIN 24 HOURS AFTER PAYMENT HAS BEEN RECEIVED * PAYMENTS MANAGED BY EBAY * SHIPPING IS MEDIA MAIL,
    SECURELY PACKAGED ON THIS OVER-SIZED HEAVY BOOK
    * SHIPPING DISCOUNTS ON COMBINED ORDERS * PLEASE FEEL FREE TO CONTACT ME WITH ANY QUESTIONS
    * THANK YOU
    Eppa Rixey
    Pitcher
    Born:
    May 3, 1891
    Culpeper, Virginia
    Died:
    February 28, 1963 (aged 71)
    Cincinnati, Ohio
    Batted:
    Right
    Threw:
    Left
    MLB debut
    June 21, 1912, for the Philadelphia Phillies
    Last MLB appearance
    August 5, 1933, for the Cincinnati Reds
    MLB statistics
    Win–loss record
    266–251
    Earned run average
    3.15
    Strikeouts
    1,350
    Teams
    Philadelphia Phillies (1912–1917, 1919–1920)
    Cincinnati Reds (1921–1933)
    Career highlights and awards
    NL wins leader (1922)
    Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame
    Member of the National
    Baseball Hall of Fame
    Induction
    1963
    Election Method
    Veteran's Committee
    Eppa Rixey Jr. (May 3, 1891 – February 28, 1963), nicknamed "Jephtha", was an American left-handed pitcher who played 21 seasons for the Philadelphia Phillies and Cincinnati Reds in Major League Baseball from 1912 to 1933. Rixey was best known as the National League's leader in career victories for a left-hander with 266 wins until Warren Spahn surpassed his total in 1959.
    Rixey attended the University of Virginia where he was a star pitcher. He was discovered by umpire Cy Rigler, who convinced him to sign directly with the Phillies, bypassing minor league baseball entirely. His time with the Phillies was marked by inconsistency. He won 22 games in 1916, but also led the league in losses twice. In 1915, the Phillies played in the World Series, and Rixey lost in his only appearance. After being traded to the Reds prior to the 1921  season, he won 20 or more games in a season three times, including a league-leading 25 in 1922, and posted eight consecutive winning seasons. His skills were declining by the 1929 season, when his record was 10–13 with a 4.16 earned run average. He pitched another four seasons before retiring after the 1933 season.
    An intellectual who taught high school Latin during the off-season, earning the nickname "Jephtha" for his southern drawl, Rixey was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1963. Early life
    Rixey was born on May 3, 1891 in Culpeper, Virginia, and at the age of ten, his father, a banker, moved his family to Charlottesville, Virginia. His uncles were John Franklin Rixey a former congressman and Presley Marion Rixey the former Surgeon General of the United States Navy.
    He attended the University of Virginia, where he played basketball and baseball; he was a member of Delta Tau Delta International Fraternity. His brother Bill also played baseball for Virginia. During the off-season, umpire Cy Rigler worked as an assistant coach for the University. He recognized Rixey's talent and tried to sign him to the Philadelphia Phillies. Rixey originally declined, saying he wanted to be a chemist, but Rigler insisted, even offering a substantial portion of the bonus he received for signing a player. With his family in financial trouble, Rixey accepted the deal. The National League, upon hearing of the deal, created a rule that prohibits umpires from signing players.
    Neither Rixey nor Rigler received any signing bonus.
    Baseball career
    Philadelphia Phillies
    Rixey joined the Phillies for the 1912 season without playing a single game of minor league baseball. His time with the Phillies was marked by inconsistency. He went 10-10 in his first year, with a 2.50 earned run average (ERA) and 10 complete games in 23 games pitched. He had a three hit shutout against the Chicago Cubs on July 18. Rixey was on the losing end of a no-hitter by Jeff Tesreau on September 6. After the season, the Chicago Cubs, under new manager Johnny Evers, offered a "huge sum" to the Phillies for Rixey, but manager Red Dooin declined the offer. Prior to the 1913 season, Rixey notified the Phillies of his desire to finish his studies at the University of Virginia and graduate in June; however, after some negotiation, he decided to sign a contract and re-joined the team shortly after the season began. That season, he appeared in 35 games, started 19 of them, winning nine games, and had a 3.12 earned run average. In 1914, his record worsened to 2–11, and his earned run average increased to 4.37. Rixey's record improved to 11–12 in 1915, and his earned run average was 2.39 as the Phillies won the National League pennant and played the Boston Red Sox in the 1915 World Series. During Game 5 of the series, Rixey replaced starter Erskine Mayer for the final six innings of the game. He allowed three runs in the final two innings and lost 5–4.
    Rixey went 22–10 in 1916 with a 1.85 ERA and a career high of 134 strikeouts. On June 29, Rixey pitched a four-hit shutout against the New York Giants, facing the minimum 27 batters, because of three double plays, and a player caught stealing. In 1917, despite having a 2.27 earned run average, Rixey led the league in pitching losses with 21. He also handled 108 chances without a single error. Rixey hated losing and was known for destroying the team locker room, or disappearing for days at a time after a loss. He missed the 1918 season to serve in the Chemical Warfare Division of the United States army during the war effort. He struggled upon returning to baseball, going 6–12 with a 3.97 earned run average in 1919, and again leading the league in losses with 22 in 1920. Prior to the 1920 season, rumours circulated that his former manager, Pat Moran, now with the Cincinnati Reds, was interested in trading for Rixey. The relationship between Rixey and manager Gavvy Cravath was never good, and Cravath had made known his desire to trade him; however, he stayed with the Phillies that season, working on his delivery with former pitcher Jesse Tannehill, who, Rixey admitted, helped with his pitching delivery. On November 22, 1920, Rixey was traded to the Cincinnati Reds in exchange for Jimmy Ring and Greasy Neale. His record during his eight seasons with the Phillies was 87 wins and 103 losses.
    Cincinnati Reds
    Rixey was traded to the Reds prior to the 1921 season for Jimmy Ring and Greasy Neale. In his first season with the Reds, he won 19 games, and set a Major League record by allowing just one home run in 301 innings pitched.
    [2]
    In three of the next four seasons, he had 20 or more victories each season, with a league-leading total of 25 in 1922. He also led the league in innings pitched and hits allowed in 1922 and shutouts with four in 1924. In 1926 he had 14 wins, followed by seasons of 12, 19 and 10 wins. Rixey's production began to decline in 1930, when he went 9–13 with a 5.10 ERA, and pitched fewer than 200 innings for the first time since 1919. From 1931 through 1933, Rixey pitched very little, and was used almost exclusively against the Pittsburgh Pirates. For the 1933 season, he was the only Reds pitcher with a winning record, at 6-3  as the Reds finished last in the National League with a 58-94 record. He retired prior to the 1934 season, stating "the manager wasn't giving me enough work". Rixey completed his career with 266 wins, 251 losses, and a 3.15 ERA. He appeared in 692 games and completed 290, and had 20 wins and 14 saves as a relief pitcher.
    Bubbles Hargrave, former Cincinnati catcher, gave this testimonial: "Eppa was just great. He was great as a pitcher, fielder and competitor. I look on him as the most outstanding player I came in contact with in my entire career."
    Rixey's approach to the game is exemplified by the following quote: ""How dumb can the hitters in this league get? I've been doing this for fifteen years. When they're batting with the count two balls and no strikes, or three and one, they're always looking for the fastball and they never get it." – Eppa Rixey (1927)
    Legacy
    Originally Rixey had trouble controlling his speed, but eventually became one of the most feared pitchers in baseball according to reporters. Rixey was considered a pitcher with an "peculiar motion", who rarely walked a batter. Throughout his long career, the 210-pound Rixey charmed teammates and fans with his dry wit and big Southern drawl. His nonsensical nickname "Jephtha" seemed to capture his roots and amiable personality. Some writers thought "Jephtha" was a part of Rixey's real name, but it was likely invented by a Philadelphia sportswriter. Rob Neyer called Rixey the fourth best pitcher in Reds history behind Bucky Walters, Paul Derringer and teammate Dolf Luque.
    His 266 career victories was the record for most wins by a left-handed pitcher in the National League until Warren Spahn broke it in 1959, however his 251 losses are an all-time record for left-handed pitchers. He also held the longevity record for most seasons pitched by a National League left-hander until Steve Carlton broke it in 1986. As time passed, support for Rixey to be inducted to the Baseball Hall of Fame grew. He was also inducted into the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame in 1958. In 1960, Rixey finished third in the balloting behind former teammate Edd Roush and Sam Rice (who was later inducted the same year as Rixey). Upon his election to the Hall of Fame on January 27, 1963, he was quoted as saying "They're really scraping the bottom of the barrel, aren't they?"
    In 1969, he was named by Reds fans as the greatest left-handed pitcher in Reds history. The Reds Hall of Fame summed up his career: "He was the best left-hander ever to pitch for the Reds with a 179–148 record, 180 complete games, 23 shutouts and a 3.33 ERA in his 13 seasons."
    In 1972 he was inducted into the first class of the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame and Museum.
    In 2017 he was inducted into the inaugural class of the University of Virginia Baseball Hall of Fame:
    Rixey's childhood home in Culpeper still stands; it suffered some damage in the 2011 Virginia earthquake.
    Personal life
    He was married to Dorothy Meyers of Cincinnati and had two children, Eppa Rixey III and Ann Rixey Sikes and five grandchildren, James Rixey, Eppa Rixey IV, Steve Sikes, Paige Sikes, and David Sikes. After his retirement from baseball, Rixey worked for his father-in-law's successful insurance company in Cincinnati, eventually becoming president of the company. He died of a heart attack on February 28, 1963, one month after his election to the Hall of Fame, becoming the first player to die between election and induction to the Hall of Fame.
    He is interred at Greenlawn Cemetery in Milford, Ohio.
    When Rixey started playing, he was considered an "anomaly". He came from a well-off family and was college-educated, something that was rare during his era. He wrote poetry, and took graduate school classes in chemistry, mathematics and Latin. During the off-season, he was a Latin teacher at Episcopal High School in Alexandria, Virginia. He was also considered among the best golfers among athletes during the time period. He was the subject of hazing in his first few years in the Majors. Eventually he teamed up with other college graduates, Joe Oeschger and Stan Baumgartner and the hazing lessened to a degree.