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・ 1923 VMI Keydets football team
・ 1923 VPI Gobblers football team
・ 1923 WAFL season
・ 1923 Walker Cup
・ 1923 Waratahs tour of New Zealand
・ 1923 Washington and Lee Generals football team
・ 1923 Washington Senators season
・ 1923 Wightman Cup
・ 1923 Wimbledon Championships
・ 1923 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Singles
・ 1923 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Singles
・ 1923 Wisconsin Badgers football team
・ 1923 Women's British Open Squash Championship
・ 1923 World Allround Speed Skating Championships
・ 1923 World Figure Skating Championships
1923 World Series
・ 1923 World Weightlifting Championships
・ 1923 Yale Bulldogs football team
・ 1923 Yorkshire Cup
・ 1923 Yugoslav Football Championship
・ 1923 Úrvalsdeild
・ 1923–24 Aberdeen F.C. season
・ 1923–24 American Soccer League
・ 1923–24 Arsenal F.C. season
・ 1923–24 Atromitos F.C. season
・ 1923–24 Austrian football championship
・ 1923–24 Belgian First Division
・ 1923–24 Beşiktaş J.K. season
・ 1923–24 Birmingham F.C. season
・ 1923–24 Blackpool F.C. season


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1923 World Series : ウィキペディア英語版
1923 World Series

In the 1923 World Series, the New York Yankees beat the New York Giants in six games. This would be the first of the Yankees' 27 World Series championships (as of 2015). The series was not played in a 2–3–2 format: as with the previous two Series (where both clubs had shared the Polo Grounds) the home field alternated each game, though this time it involved switching ballparks, as the first Yankee Stadium had opened this season.
== Background ==
The Yankees opened their new stadium in April on a home run by Babe Ruth, setting the tone for the season and this Series, in which Ruth hit three home runs along with drawing eight walks. In Game 2, second baseman, Aaron Ward hit a home run. The Giants' one bright spot was "Old Casey" Stengel, who hit game-winning homers in each of the two Giants' victories. In typically eccentric Stengel fashion, one of them was inside-the-park at the cavernous Yankee Stadium, and his shoe came loose during his run around the bases. Stengel was traded after the season, leading him to quip later in life, "It's a good thing I didn't hit ''three'' homers in ''three'' games, or McGraw would have traded me to the Three-I League!". A quarter century later, Stengel would take on the role of Yankees manager, and would guide the Bronx Bombers through one of their most successful eras.
In Game 6, The Yankees overcame the 4–1 deficit by staging a five-run rally in the eighth inning to clinch the series.
The three consecutive matchups between the Yankees and Giants (1921–1923) marked the only time (as of 2012), that three straight World Series featured the same two clubs.
Thanks to the large seating capacity of the new Yankee Stadium, coupled with expansion of the Polo Grounds the same year, the 1923 Series was the first to eclipse 300,000 in total attendance (301,430), averaging over 50,000 per game (50,238), with gate receipts over $1 million ($1,063,815.00).
This was the third time that a team had inaugurated a new stadium with a World Series win, and would be the last until the St. Louis Cardinals victory in their new ballpark in and the New York Yankees again won the World Series in in their new Yankee Stadium
Babe Ruth had a great series, his first great one as a Yankee, batted .368 and hit three home runs in the series.
Neither Lou Gehrig, Bill Terry nor Hack Wilson played in the Series. These future Hall of Famers were each in their first season and had played no more than thirteen games in the regular season. Gehrig had been called up from Hartford to play for the Yankees that year. In that time, however, a team had to have the permission of both the commissioner and the opposing team's manager to make a roster change so late in the season eligible for postseason play. The Yankees gained the permission of Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis who then told them to get John McGraw's permission. McGraw and the Yankees had a long history of disdain after both teams had shared a stadium and the Giants had won both the 1921 and 1922 World Series from New York. Therefore he declined permission and Gehrig would not be allowed to participate in the series which otherwise would have been his first World Series. As noted baseball historian John Thorn said, "As if the Yankees needed any more reason to hate John McGraw."〔John Thorn interview, Yankeeography, Lou Gehrig, 2004.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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