https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/WS1/WS1192408160.shtmlDetroit came to town on Saturday, August 16, 1924, for a weekend showdown with the upstart Griffs, and 15,000 hopeful Washington fans turned out to see. By the way, that was nearly a full house at Griffith Stadium...the great old ballpark held a maximum of about 25,000, with some seats so far away that it felt like the bleachers were out in Maryland. But fans had hope. You've gotta have hope, mustn't sit around and mope!
Unfortunately, Ty Cobb's Tigers, only a game behind the Yankees, intended to force Washingtonians to give up hope for anything but a first division finish. Cobb picked an ace, Earl Whitehill, to start. Bucky Harris tried Firpo Marberry, relief pitcher and spot starter. Firpo gave up four runs in his five innings, while Griffith's men got noth8ing much in reply.
The lineups:
1 Bob Jones 3B
2 Frank O'Rourke 2B
3 Ty Cobb CF
4 Harry Heilmann RF
5 Al Wingo LF
6 Del Pratt 1B
7 Topper Rigney SS
8 Johnny Bassler C
9 Earl Whitehill P
And your Washington Nationals, as Bob Wolff used to say:
1 Earl McNeely CF
2 Bucky Harris 2B
3 Sam Rice RF
4 Goose Goslin LF
5 Joe Judge 1B
6 Ossie Bluege 3B
7 Muddy Ruel C
8 Roger Peckinpaugh SS
9 Firpo Marberry P
Note that Marberry's name was "Fred", but the Baseball Ref play-by-play always calls him "Firpo"
In the third, Johnny Bassler led off with a double and scored on Bob Jones's double, so it was 1-0, Detroit.
The Nats tied the score in the fourth on Earl McNeely's lead-off triple to left, and Harris's run-scoring ground-out.
The score remained tied until the top of the 6th, when Firpo faltered. And how! Jones led off with a double to Sam Rice in right. Of course, the next batter, Frank O'Rourke, bunted Jones to third. Ty Cobb, the greatest player of all time, then singled, making it 2-1 Detroit. Harry Heilmann, the future Hall of Famer who batted behind Cobb, singled to center and Cobb took third. pause to consider: Cobb went first to third on a single to center that was fielded by McNeely, who was no shrub. Heilmann stole second while Cobb scored on Muddy Ruel's throw to second. 3-1, Tigers. The batter, Al Wingo walked. Next batter, Del Pratt, tried to advance the runners on a sac bunt, but popped it up to Bucky Harris, covering first. Bucky dropped the ball, so Heilmann scored. 4-1 Detroit. Even though Topper Rigney lined into a double play, Harris to Roger Peckinpaugh, Bucky decided that Marberry had pitched himself out.
In the bottom half, Bucky sent Mule Shirley to pinch-hit for Firpo, and Shirley led off with a single. McNeely singled, advancing Shirley to second. Harris singled, scoring Shirley and pushing McNeely to second. With runners on first and second, nobody out, down 4-2, the accepted strategy called for a sacrifice bunt. And so Sam Rice bunted on toward 1B, but Del Pratt threw across the diamond to get McNeely at third. Ouch. And more painful when Good Goslin hit a popfly caught by SS Topper Rigney who threw to O'Rourke for a double play.
Detroit picked up a fifth run in the 8th, of off Allen Russell, the legal spit-baller, but it didn't matter much because the Senators could not hit Whithill. Maybe the Detroit run is interesting, because it came from a triple by the great one, himself, Ty Cobb. An infield hit drove him in.
Detroit wins.
In other action, the Browns swept a double-header from Boston, and New York beat the White Sox behind Wait Hoyt.
1. NYY: 65-49
2. DET: 64-49 (1/2 GB)
3. WSH: 62-52 (3 GB)
4. SLB: 60-52 (4 GB, and only 1 GB the Griffs. The "Never say die" Brownies have not given up. A series against the Yankees and the Tigers, and then...)