The Pittsburgh Press (October 7, 1943)
Mort Cooper’s ‘win for Pop’ ties Series
Home runs by Marion, Sanders help send Bonham down to defeat
By Jack Cuddy, United Press staff writer
New York –
Two boys from Missouri – Mort and Walker Cooper – with the sadness of their father’s death tugging in their hearts, went out before nearly 70,000 sympathetic fans in Yankee Stadium yesterday and “won a ball game for Pop” and the St. Louis Cardinals over the New York Yankees in the second game of the 1943 World Series.
The score, if it matters was 4–3, evening up the 1943 classic.
What did matter was the way that famous brother battery – Mort, the pitcher, and Walker, the catcher – played their hearts out, and carried on despite the sudden death of their father, Robert, at Independence, Missouri, yesterday morning. The Cooper boys had the 68,578 fans with them all the way.
Won it for ‘Pop’
Big, brown-haired Mort, the Cardinals’ ace right-handed pitcher, said before the game:
We’ll win this one for Pop. He’d want it that way.
And win it they did, with Mort pitching to his catcher brother, as he registered his first World Series mound victory – and also his first pitching victory against the American League – in five tries, three World Series Games and two All-Star Games.
While Mort was limiting the Yanks to six hits, with his fastball flinging, his Cardinals mates garnered seven off Ernie Bonham, big Yankee right-hander, and Fireman Johnny Murphy, who relieved him in the ninth. Two of those hits were home runs.
Marion, Sanders clout homers
Slats Marion, the Cards’ elongated shortstop who had hit but one home run all season, slammed Bonham’s first pitch of the third inning into the lower left field stand, just a couple feet inside the foul pole, for a four-bagger. The next circuit drive came in the fourth inning when first baseman Ray Sanders blasted the ball into the lower right stands, the ball barely clearing Bud Metheny’s reaching hands. Bud fell backwards over the stands rail when he failed to grab the ball.
This homer drove in Whitey Kurowski, the third baseman who had singled earlier. The blow brought that inning’s accomplishments to three tallies because, earlier in the season, Stan Musial had singled and had been advanced to second by Walker Cooper’s sacrifice. Kurowski’s single brought him home.
The fans, who gave the Cooper brothers great ovations every time they came to bat, thought in the last inning that the rallying Yanks might deprive them of victory. The Yanks made a great try. They had registered one run in the fourth inning, but in the ninth they added two more and threatened to walk off with victory.
Gordon ends rally
Third baseman Billy Johnson opened the ninth by doubling to left. Charlie Keller, slugging left fielder, hammered the ball to the center field fence for a triple, scoring Johnson. Bill Dickey lined to second baseman Lou Klein. Nick Etten went out. Klein to Sanders. Keller scoring. Then Joe Gordon, a hero of Tuesday’s Yankee victory, fouled to Walker Cooper for the final cut.
The Yanks, who had gone into yesterday’s game, 9–5, favorites, couldn’t garner a tally until the Cards had a 4–0 lead on them going into the last half of the fourth. Then singles by Frank Crosetti and Billy Johnson and Keller’s long fly to center, let Crosetti come in with one marker.
It was a more spiritedly-contested game than Tuesday’s and the brand of ball was superior, although again the Cards were charged with two errors.
Walker Cooper will remain with the team today to do the catching. Mort left last night for their home in Independence, Missouri.
Other players who have performed in World Series after the death of close relatives were Rogers Hornsby in the Cardinal-Yankee Series of 1926, after his mother died; Alvin Crowder in the Detroit-Cubs classic of 1935 after the death of his father, and Bobo Newsom in the Detroit-Cincinnati engagement of 1940, after his father’s death.