Caught red-handed taking bribe money
(Part 1 of this series, detailing the involvement of Gene
Dale in the 1919 Pacific Coast League gambling scandal, was presented here on
June 14-15. An introduction that will help you pick up the story was presented
on those days.)
Harl Maggert
By midway through the 1920 season, tensions in the
Pacific Coast League were running high and nerves were chafing raw. Accusations
once whispered in the locker rooms had become louder and spilled over onto the
playing field.
The gist of it was that the Los Angeles Angels, who had
lost the 1919 P.C.L. pennant to cross-town rival Vernon in the final days of
the season, blamed Salt Lake City for laying down in a crucial late-season
series with Vernon. When certain S.L.C. players could no longer stand the gaff,
team management began to get the drift of the rumors.
On July 27 the Bees blew into L.A. for a series with
Vernon. Apparently a tail was placed on one or more of the Salt Lake players.
Whether the gumshoes were hired by the team or the league is unknown. The mists
of nearly a century of passed time have obscured some of the details.
What is known is that a private detective spotted Salt
Lake City center fielder Harl Maggert accepting $300 in cash from Vernon first
baseman Babe Borton.
In what may have been a prearranged confrontation
designed to get Maggert off the field while the investigation continued, he was
thrown out of the July 29 game, fined and suspended for arguing with an umpire.
A bad-ass ballplayer all of his professional life, it was
not Maggert’s first set-down – he had once been suspended for fighting with a
P.C.L. umpire after accusing him of betting on a ballgame – but it would be his
last. He demanded that the fine be lifted, threatening to quit the game. The more
he protested, the deeper he dug himself into a hole. Eventually he said too
much and Salt Lake City management dismissed him.
Maggert attempted to explain the $300 payoff as
settlement of a year-old debt accrued by Borton in a card game. It was a story
he would later attempt to peddle to a grand jury. Nobody was buying.
As the weeks wore on an investigation chaired by league
president William McCarthy began to piece together the scandal. Borton and
Maggert were joined on the suspended list by Salt Lake City right fielder Bill
Rumler, effectively ending the team’s contention for the 1920 pennant. Gene
Dale, who had pitched for the Bees in 1919, but moved on to Dallas in 1920 was
also caught in the net and eventually (apparently unofficially) blackballed.
With his paychecks stopped, Maggert threatened to sue
everyone in sight. McCarthy offered him a league hearing or the opportunity to
defend himself in a civil action. Maggert never made good on his threats.
That, however, didn’t keep him out of the courtroom.
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Among several Pacific Coast League baseball card sets in which Harl Maggert appeared was the 1910 Bishop & Co. (E99) candy issue. |
In October a grand jury was convened in Los Angeles to
determine whether criminal charges were warranted in connection with the
baseball scandal. On Oct. 20 Maggert was called before the panel.
In a two-hour grilling he implicated teammates Dale,
Rumler and Eddie Mulligan (who was never sanctioned in connection with the
mess), along with Vernon’s Borton and second baseman Bobby Fisher (also
exonerated).
After months of examination, the grand jury handed down
indictments in early December charging Maggert, Borton, Rumler and West Coast
gambler Nate Raymond with conspiracy to throw ballgames and bribe ballplayers.
Shortly before Christmas a judge quashed the indictments for the very valid
reason that fixing games was not illegal under California law. While that
effectively ended the prosecution of Maggert, his professional baseball career
was also ended.
That career had begun in 1906 when the 23-year-old
Maggert split time between Sharon in the Ohio-Pennsylvania League and Ft. Wayne
in the Interstate Association, both Class C circuits. Available records show
Maggert his .244 for Sharon, the I.A. folded on July 8 without promulgating
stats.
Maggert was not a big man. He stood 5'8" and in his prime weighed 155 pounds. He batted left and threw right.
A year later Maggert was in the Big Leagues. After
playing most of the season with Wheeling in the Central League (Class B), where
he hit .270 and stole 28 bases, Maggert was taken on for a trial with the
Pittsburgh Pirates. In half a dozen at-bats over three games with the Bucs,
Maggert failed to garner a hit, though he did walk twice and stole a base. He
was turned back to Wheeling for the 1908 season.
Hitting .225 at mid-season, Maggert was released to
Springfield in the Connecticut State League. In the final two months of the
season he hit .312 to help the Ponies capture the pennant.
Maggert sent the first half of 1909 with Springfield,
hitting .307. Though he played in only 94 games, his 30 doubles were tied for
fourth in the league. With the team headed for a fifth-place finish, Maggert
was sold to Oakland for $1,500.
In two months with the Oaks, Maggert hit .265. His fielding
average was the worst among Pacific Coast League outfielders in more than 50
games.
While his batting average dropped off slightly, to .254,
with Oakland in 1910, the rest of Maggert’s game improved considerably. His 34
doubles were tied for fourth and his nine home runs tied for fifth. With 91
runs scored he was in the top 10 in that category, and his 58 stolen bases were
second-best in the circuit. Maggert’s glovework improved to the point that he
was 10th in fielding average among outfielders in more than 100 games. Oakland finished
second in the P.C.L. that season.
Maggert’s 1911 season was limited to about half of the
P.C.L.’s traditional 220-game schedule, through a combination of injuries and
inability to get along with Oaks manager Harry Wolverton. He hit .314, which
was third-best among batters in over 100 games or 300 at-bats, but the bottom
again fell out of his fielding. He was third from last among outfielders in
more than 100 games.
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With only 75 games in the majors, it's not surprising that all of Maggert's baseball cards depict him as a Pacific Coast Leaguer. This 1911 Obak T212 cigarette issue is the most common of Maggert's cards. |
In December, Maggert was purchased by the Philadelphia
A’s. The Sporting News sent him off to the American League with less than a
ringing endorsement that attested to Maggert’s growing reputation as a
difficult ballplayer. “Maggert is hard to handle, but withal is a fine sticker,
base runner and fielder. He is fast, hits on a line and can cover ground like a
lion. Connie Mack will probably have use for him if he behaves.
“This season Maggert batted among the leaders,” the paper
continued, “but was banished from the game because he made trouble for
Wolverton just as he had every other manager whom he had worked under. As a
base runner Maggert is hard to beat. He’s a foxy, wide-awake player, and but
for his ill-temper would easily be held as an idol by the public.”
The A’s, coming off consecutive World Series wins in
1910-11 were able to work Maggert into about half their games as a replacement
for the regular garden trio of Bris Lord, Rube Oldring and Amos Strunk. Maggert
responded by hitting a mediocre .256 and fielding in the bottom 40% of the
league’s outfielders. The A’s finished third in the A.L. in 1912.
For 1913 Maggert was returned to the Pacific Coast
League. He would never play Organized Baseball in any other circuit for the
remainder of his career.
(Continued tomorrow)