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  1. Hugh Stuart Fullerton III (10 September 1873 – 27 December 1945) was an American sportswriter in the first half of the 20th century. He was one of the founders of the Baseball Writers' Association of America .

  2. chicagology.com › 1919worldseries › hughfullertonHugh Fullerton - chicagology

    Mar 17, 2003 · Hugh S. Fullerton was born in 1873, and he was considered one of “the best-known baseball writers in the country” for the first quarter of the twentieth century. “A titan of the Chicago press box,” Fullerton graduated from Ohio State College and started writing in Cincinnati in 1889.

  3. Nov 2, 2021 · The World Series was rigged. Hugh Fullerton's revolutionary analysis backed it up. But in 1919 his calls were ignored by a game now transformed by data.

    • White Sox Players Conspire with Crooks
    • White Sox Players Call Off The Fix—But Still Lose
    • The Outcome of The Scandal
    • Baseball's First Commissioner Bans The Players For Life

    As Gandil recruited conspirators on the team, Sullivan and a tangled web of crooks— that may have included former Sox player “Sleepy” Bill Burns, former Detroit Tiger Bill Maharg and boxer Abe Attell—began raising the bribe money. New York mob leader Arnold Rothsteinmay have been a major player, but his involvement has never been proven, and eviden...

    The White Sox continued losing over the next few games, and by October 6, the series stood at 4-1 in favor the Reds. Everything was proceeding as planned, yet according to later accounts, many of the crooked Sox players had begun to grow restless. They had purportedly arranged to receive their bribes in five $20,000 installments—one after each loss...

    Rumors of a fix continued to persist in the months after the championship defeat. Leading the charge was sportswriter Hugh Fullerton, who investigated the 1919 series and later wrote a famous article for the New York Evening Worldtitled “Is Big League Baseball Being Run for Gamblers, With Players in the Deal?” Chicago White Sox owner Charles Comisk...

    The ballplayers’ vindication would not last long. Only a day after the acquittal, Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, recently appointed as baseball’s first commissioner, decreed that all eight players were permanently banned from organized baseball. “Regardless of the verdict of juries,” Landis wrote, “no player who throws a ballgame, no player that un...

  4. Who Was Hugh Fullerton? Hugh Fullerton never intended to be a hero. In fact, he may never have perceived himself to be a muckraking progressive attempting to reform the game he loved to his dying day, a quarter century after writing the most important and vilified story of his life.

  5. In 1906 sportswriter Hugh Fullerton applied his own brand of baseball analysis and concluded that the Chicago White Sox—known as “the Hitless Wonders”—would beat the crosstown Chicago Cubs in that year’s World Series.

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  7. No one who knew him would have been surprised to learn that Hugh S. Fullerton was in the middle of the fracas that led to the formation of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America during the 1908 World Series.