Tags: baseball superstitions, Boston Braves, Carl Hubbell, Coogan's Bluff, Henry Fabian, New York Giants, New York History, Polo Grounds, Tom Zachary
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Quite a few cats have interrupted Major League ballgames.
In September 1969, a black cat appeared on the field at Shea Stadium in
New York while Ron Santo of the Chicago Cubs was standing in the
on-deck circle. The Cubs would go on to lose the game and their spot
atop the National League East. The Mets went on to win the World Series a
month later.
Dr. Stuart Vyse, an author and psychology professor at Connecticut College, says one reason baseball players are such a suspicious bunch is that the game involves a lot of waiting around. “And if they’re waiting, they have time to perform these rituals.”
In general, superstitious players and coaches will always go out of their way to avoid stepping on the foul line on trips to and from the dugout so as not to jinx their game or their game stats.
These same folks believe that if a black cat crosses their path they’ll have bad luck and bad stuff will happen during the game or series.

Many
New Yorkers know that Derek Jeter always made a point of touching a
signed painted with the famous Joe DiMaggio quote –“I want to thank the
Good Lord for making me a Yankee” – before every home game. That
pre-game step may not have had anything to do with superstition, but it
was a ritual.
On September 21, 1932, in a game between what were then the New York Giants and the Boston Braves (today’s San Francisco Giants and Atlanta Braves), superstition struck twice when a little black cat appeared on the field and began meddling with a ball that had just landed on the foul line. For Braves pitcher Tom Zachary, the bad luck signs were enough to shake him up so much it cost him the game (at least that’s what he said).
It was the bottom half of the final inning and the score was tied with Zachary on the mound. Giants slugger Carl Hubbell took a swing, sending the ball down the third-base line. Just as the ball rolled onto the foul line, a skinny black cat came out from under the left-field stands, made his way across the diamond, and walked up to give the ball a sniff. As the cat started to play with the ball, everyone on the field and in the stands froze in place.

Carl
Owen Hubbell, nicknamed “The Meal Ticket” and “King Carl,” was a
pitcher for the New York Giants from 1928 to 1943. Joe DiMaggio once
called Hubbell the toughest pitcher he’d ever faced.
Still shaken by the appearance of a black cat on the field, Zachary was not on his game when he pitched the next ball to Hubbell. The Giants’ southpaw singled to left field, and although he was forced out by left-fielder Joseph “Jo-Jo” Moore, Jo-Jo was able to score – he even picked up some of the dirt with the cat’s paw prints as he ran to home plate — and the Giants won the game by a score of 2 to 1.

Jonathan
“Tom” Zachary is probably best known for giving up Babe Ruth’s
record-setting 60th home run in 1927. Before joining the Boston Braves,
he went 12–0 for the 1929 Yankees, which is still the major league
record for most pitching wins without a loss in one season.
In the late 1800s, the “polo grounds” was a name used for multiple New York City ballparks where the sport of polo was played. The first Polo Grounds for baseball was located on the northern edge of Central Park between 110th and 112th Street at 6th Avenue.
Here, in 1880, John Bailey Day rented land previously used for polo matches to construct a single-tier grandstand for his baseball team, the New York Metropolitans. In 1883, Day’s new National League Team, the New York Gothams, played their first game at the ballpark on May 1, 1883. A second deck was added to the ballpark that year, giving the first Polo Grounds a seating capacity of 12,000.

In
1885, under manager Jim Mutrie, the New York Gothams were renamed the
New York Giants. The 1888 team, shown here, played their last game at
the first polo grounds on October 13, 1888 — city officials evicted the
team and 111th street was constructed through the outfield.
After the Giants played their last game at the second “polo grounds” (Polo Grounds II) on September 30, 1890, they moved to the adjacent field to the north, called Brotherhood Park. (There were actually two New York Giants franchises for a short time during this era; the Players’ League team played at Brotherhood Park and the National League team stayed at Polo Grounds II.) The Players’ League folded in 1891, and the National League team moved into the bigger ballpark. Polo Grounds II was renamed Manhattan Field and converted for other sports such as football and track-and-field.

Because
of its elevation, fans frequently watched games from Coogan’s Bluff
without buying tickets. Locals from Harlem and Washington Heights often
referred to it as Deadhead Hill.
By 1911, the ballpark was the largest stadium in baseball with seating for 31,000 fans. Built of wood, the ballpark caught fire and burned while the Giants were out of town on April 14, 1911. Following the lead of other teams, the Giants constructed their fourth and final Polo Grounds of steel and concrete. The team played its first game at the partially completed stadium on June 28, 1911.
The Cat Colony of the Polo Grounds
For many years, a colony of cats lived under the dark and cool stands at the Polo Grounds. In 1932, when the little black cat stopped the ballgame, the space under the stands was also used as storage for circus seats, so there were lots of places to hide.
Sometimes the luckier cats that didn’t run and hide would go home with women who came to the ballgames or with the ballerinas from the opera companies that performed at the Polo Grounds when the Giants were out of town.

This 1905 photo of the Polo Grounds shows Coogan’s Bluff in the background — the Morris-Jumel Mansion is to the right.
Jack, the long-time assistant foreman in charge of sweepers, also kept several cats in his little cubbyhole where he stored his brooms. The cats, which he named Blackie, Wildcat, Little Red, Mickey, Big Blackie, Nig and Brownie, would all gather around him and rub his legs when it was time for supper. Jack admitted that while first baseman Memphis Bill Terry was the best player on the Giants, the ballplayer couldn’t hold a candle to his cat Brownie. “Brownie’s the best rat catcher I’ve got,” Jack said.

Born
in New Orleans in 1866, Henry Fabian spent nearly 60 years in
professional baseball as a player, manager, owner, and groundskeeper.
Henry joined the New York Giants as head groundskeeper in 1914; he was
considered the premier groundskeeper in baseball for the next 25 years.
The End of the Polo Grounds
With few fans, a stadium crumbling into disrepair, and a slew of tenement housing encroaching Coogan’s Bluff, Giants owner Horace Stoneham announced on August 19, 1957, that the team would move to San Francisco the following year (the Brooklyn Dodgers would also move to Los Angeles).
The Giants played their last game at the Polo Grounds on September 29, 1957. The ballpark sat mostly vacant for three years, until the newly formed Titans (present-day New York Jets) began to play there in 1960, followed by the newly formed New York Mets in 1962.

What remained of the Polo Grounds in July 1964.

The
John T. Brush Stairway, which runs down Coogan’s Bluff from Edgecombe
Avenue to Harlem River Drive at about 157th Street, was named for the
recently deceased owner of the Giants when it opened in 1913. The
stairs led to a ticket booth overlooking the stadium and offered a clear
view of the stadium for fans who did not purchase tickets.
And who knows, maybe a few descendents of the Polo Grounds cats still make their home in the area…

A
rusty plaque inside the Polo Grounds Towers commemorates the place
where the New York Giants, Yankees, and Mets once made their home.