SABR Baltimore/Babe Ruth Chapter

SABR Baltimore/Babe Ruth Chapter The Baltimore/Babe Ruth Chapter serves members in Charm City and around Maryland.

https://www.youtube.com/
06/01/2026

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Official site of the Baltimore/Babe Ruth Chapter of SABR. Chapter founded in June of 2015.

A great discussion today about ballparks and inspired stories about those who work in and around them. Former MLB on-fie...
05/31/2026

A great discussion today about ballparks and inspired stories about those who work in and around them. Former MLB on-field reporter Robby Incmikoski and Orioles PA Announcer Adrienne Roberson brought those stories to life. Robby's new book Sacred Grounds is a must read ballpark travel log.

All set up for today’s event at the Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum - former MLB TV field reporter Robby Incmikoski in conve...
05/30/2026

All set up for today’s event at the Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum - former MLB TV field reporter Robby Incmikoski in conversation with Orioles PA Announcer Adrienne Roberson discussing Robby's new book Sacred Grounds! 12 noon until 2 pm. Come on down!

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05/21/2026

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Babe Ruth in his distinctive batting stance during Spring Training in March 1920, his first camp as a New York Yankee after the most consequential transaction in baseball history brought him over from the Boston Red Sox that January.

Ruth would go on to hit 54 home runs that season, more than any other entire American League team, announcing to the baseball world that the sport would never look the same again.

For anyone who chases MLB ballparks, hoping one day to visit all 30 - here is an event not to be missed - former MLB TV ...
05/21/2026

For anyone who chases MLB ballparks, hoping one day to visit all 30 - here is an event not to be missed - former MLB TV field reporter Robby Incmikoski in conversation with Orioles PA Announcer Adrienne Roberson (pinch hitting for Janet Marie Smith) discussing Robby's new book Sacred Grounds! At The Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum Saturday May 30, 2026, 12 noon until 2 pm.

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05/20/2026

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“There are good teams. There are great teams. And then there are teams that change what ‘great’ means.”

— Old Yankee clubhouse saying, often repeated about 1927

If you wanted to explain dominance in baseball using only one team, you would start with the 1927 New York Yankees.

They were called “Murderers’ Row,” a lineup so powerful that opposing pitchers often admitted privately they felt defeated before the first pitch was thrown.

But what made them truly terrifying was not just one star — it was the stack of them, one after another, with no relief in sight.

The heart of that team was Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, two of the greatest hitters baseball has ever seen, playing together at their absolute peak.

That season, Ruth delivered one of the most iconic statistical performances in baseball history:

• 60 home runs
• .356 batting average
• 165 RBIs
• .772 slugging percentage
• 158 runs scored

At the same time, Lou Gehrig was quietly producing a season that would be legendary on its own:

• .373 batting average
• 47 home runs
• 175 RBIs
• 218 hits
• 18 triples

Behind them, the Yankees’ supporting cast filled in every gap with discipline and consistency. Tony Lazzeri drove in over 100 runs. Earle Combs hit over .300 and set the table constantly. Bob Meusel provided additional power and clutch hitting.

The pitching staff was equally steady. Waite Hoyt won 22 games. Herb Pennock added veteran stability. Urban Shocker and Wilcy Moore provided crucial depth across the season.

But statistics still don’t fully capture what made the 1927 Yankees feel different.

They didn’t just win.

They overwhelmed.

They finished the regular season 110–44, winning the American League by 19 games. Opposing pitchers entered games knowing that even a single mistake to Ruth or Gehrig could turn into a three-run home run instantly.

And when the World Series arrived, the Yankees completed the story in sweep fashion, defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates 4 games to 0. The final scorelines were not close enough to suggest uncertainty.

One overlooked detail from that season is how little bullpen specialization existed compared to modern baseball. Starters were expected to finish games more often, meaning opposing pitchers had to survive the entire Murderers’ Row lineup multiple times per outing.

That was the true psychological weight of 1927.

There was no escaping them.

Even in the late innings, even after already surviving Ruth once, Gehrig would be waiting again.

Over time, baseball historians began comparing the 1927 Yankees to every dominant team that followed — the Big Red Machine, the 1998 Yankees, the 1970s A’s, modern analytics-era juggernauts.

None of those comparisons ever fully settle the argument.

Because greatness changes shape over time.

But the 1927 Yankees did something rare enough to transcend debate:

They made dominance feel inevitable.

And that is why nearly a century later, they are still the benchmark.

Not just for winning.

But for what it looks like when baseball forgets how to stop you.

— Written in the style of Gary Livacari

05/09/2026
05/08/2026

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401 E 30th St
Baltimore, MD
21218

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