July 14, 1914 – This is truly a great story of overcoming much in a short time. The National Leagues’ Boston Braves had just a day earlier been swept in a double header against the Brooklyn Dodgers. These losses were enough to drop them into the basement of the NL Standings at 26-40.
To make matters worse they traveled to play an exhibition game against the franchise’s minor league club and lost to them 10-2 in Buffalo. In years past the team had been in a similar plight and they succumbed to just being a bottom feeder, but not this year. The loss to farm team Buffalo woke something in these men that played for the Braves.
Coach Evers challenged his team to respond and show some life after the embarrassing losses and they did. They won 12 of their next 16 games and climbed from the bottom to fourth place. A home stand then followed where they took 12 of 14 games and found themselves in second behind the New York Giants. With all the confidence in the world, they caught the Giants and sailed past them and then won the World Series 4 games to none over the Philadelphia Athletics.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.

More From Sports History Network

Discussing Dallas Cowboys’ Best Team of the 1970s
Were it not for the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Dallas Cowboys would undoubtedly be called

A Lamb to the Slaughter (WWE Superstar – Sergeant Slaughter)
There’s a reason there’s never been a mainstream movie about Drill Instructor training school. A

The Frustrating History of the New York Jets
Although I was a Dallas Cowboys fan as a young boy, I couldn’t help

The Beards! Looking Back at the Red Sox 2013 Season
As the new MLB season gets underway, there will be plenty of interesting twists

The 1971 Atlanta Falcons: How a Gritty Underdog Season Made Franchise History
The season of 1971 might be considered to most casual observers as a mediocre

Wrestling With Andre: A Parody of My Dinner With Andre
I am a big fan of the 1981 film My Dinner with Andre. The

Kicking Cousins–Anglo and American Football Ties
You’re a freshman at Harvard in 1827. It’s Bloody Monday. You’re out on the

Inside the Record Makers Invitational: The Weightlifting Showdown of the 80s
I started Olympic Weightlifting in 1981, and up to that point, I didn’t know