
The popular tradition that baseball was invented by Abner Doubleday
at Cooperstown, N.Y., in 1839 has been enshrined in the Hall of Fame and
National Museum of Baseball erected in that town, but research has
proved that a game called “Base Ball” was played in this
country and England before then. The first team baseball as we know it
was played at the Elysian Fields, Hoboken, N.J., on June 19, 1846,
between the Knickerbockers and the New York Nine. The next fifty years
saw a gradual growth of baseball and an improvement of equipment and
playing skill.
Historians have it that the first pitcher to throw a curve was
William A. (Candy) Cummings in 1867. The Cincinnati Red Stockings were
the first all-professional team, and in 1869 they played 64 games
without a loss. The standard ball of the same size and weight, still the
rule, was adopted in 1872. The first catcher's mask was worn in 1875.
The National League was organized in 1876. The first chest protector was
worn in 1885. The three-strike rule was put on the books in 1887, and
the four-ball ticket to first base was instituted in 1889. The pitching
distance was lengthened to 60 feet 6 inches in 1893, and the rules have
been modified only slightly since that time.
The American League, under the vigorous leadership of B. B. Johnson,
became a major league in 1901. Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, by action
of the two major leagues, became Commissioner of Baseball in 1921.
In recent years, the sport has been marred by allegations that the
game's most popular players are using steroids to enhance performance.
Among those most often mentioned is Barry Bonds, who recently passed Hank Aaron as the all-time homerun king. The league has instituted a steroid testing policy that includes a minimum ten game suspension for the first offense, but many counter that this policy is still too lenient.
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