Thomas Anthony Connolley
(December 31, 1870 - April 28, 1961) was an English-American
umpire in Major League Baseball. He
officiated in the
National League
from 1898 to 1900, followed by 31 years of service in the
American League from 1901 to 1931. In over
half a century as an AL umpire and supervisor, he established the
high standards for which the circuit's arbiters became known, and
solidified the reputation for integrity of umpires in the major
leagues.
Connolly
was born in Manchester
, England
, and played
cricket as a boy. It was not until his
family emigrated to the United States in 1885, settling in Natick,
Massachusetts
, that he saw the game of baseball played for the
first time, but he was quickly fascinated and resolved himself to
learning as much about the game as he could. He immersed
himself in the rule book, and within a few years was umpiring for
local games. While working in
YMCA games, he
was discovered by major league umpire
Tim
Hurst, who gained a position for him in the New England League,
where he umpired from 1894 to 1897. In 1898 the NL brought him up
to the majors, but he was offended by the league president's
reluctance to back up umpires' decisions on the field, and resigned
in the middle of the 1900 season, later signing with the fledgling
AL in 1901. That league's president,
Ban
Johnson, was eager to create a reputation for the AL as a solid
challenger to the NL, and he gave umpires a greater measure of
support than they had previously received, demonstrating that
attacks upon umpires would not be tolerated and that their judgment
was final. Connolly had the privilege of umpiring, by himself, the
first American League game ever played on April 24, 1901.
Although he had begun his career by showing that he was willing to
remove players from the field – he ejected 10 in his first season –
he came to earn great respect from the players, and once went 10
full years without needing to throw one out of a game. He also
showed an ability to stand firm against the toughest players in
defense of the rules; on September 11, 1912, he called
Ty Cobb out for stepping across home plate while
batting, after Cobb had hit an RBI triple on the third pitch of an
intentional walk. During the ensuing argument, Connolly was struck
in the mouth by a bottle thrown by a spectator.
His reputation earned
him prominent game assignments, including the first AL games ever
played at Comiskey
Park
, Shibe
Park
, Fenway
Park
, and Yankee Stadium
. Connolly was also the sole AL umpire chosen
to work in the first
World Series in
1903.
In 1931, new AL president
Will
Harridge was concerned about widespread complaints that the
quality of umpiring in the league had deteriorated, and Connolly
retired from active field work to become the league's first
supervisor of umpires. Travelling throughout the league to work
with other umpires and ensure that everyone's work was meeting the
same high standards, he remained in that post until 1954, and came
to be known as the nation's foremost expert on baseball
rules.
In his career, Connolly worked in an AL-record 8 World Series:
1903,
1908 (even-numbered games),
1910,
1911,
1913,
1916,
1920 and
1924. He was also the home plate umpire
for
Addie Joss'
perfect game on October 2, 1908, one of four
no-hitters in which he called balls and strikes.
On May 4, 1928, he was
the first base umpire for a remarkable game between the New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Athletics, in which 12
players who would eventually be elected to the Baseball Hall of
Fame
appeared. Leo
Durocher, who would be elected as a manager, also played; both
managers,
Miller Huggins and
Connie Mack, were eventually elected,
as were Connolly and fellow umpire
Bill
McGowan.
Connolly was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1953, one of
the first two umpires (the NL's
Bill Klem
was the other) named to that honor. Connolly and Klem are the only
two umpires in history to have worked in five decades; Connolly's
record of 31 years umpiring American League games was broken by
Larry Barnett in 1999.
He died at
age 90 in Natick,
Massachusetts
.
Contrary to popular belief tom connolley was not racist
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