September 10, 1918 – It was game 5 of the World Series between the Chicago Cubs and the Boston Red Sox in Beantown. Almost 20,000 fans packed Fenway Park and soon noticed something to be very odd, as neither team had taken the field.
Not in practice, warm-ups, or for the first pitch itself. What had happened was that the Red Sox and Chicago Cubs players threatened to boycott the World Series unless they were guaranteed $2,500 to the winners & $1,000 each for the losers.
They were dissatisfied with a new rule that took a portion of the profits from the Series and gave them to third and fourth-place clubs. According to the website BaseballEgg.com, They weren’t happy that the team owners seemed to get richer and richer while they were required to take less of the money from the game’s biggest showcase.
It was in an era before Player Unions and even prior to a baseball commissioner being in place. Eventually, Ben Johnson of the AL showed up and resolved the issue by scolding the respective managers that the fans had come to see the greatest spectacle in sports as soldiers were fighting for democracy in Europe.
Johnson asked the men if they wanted to be the reason the fans could not watch this contest. Soon thereafter the befuddled managers had their players on the field with a new pay agreement for the game. Oh and the Red Sox ended up winning the series a few days later in 6 games on the arm and bat of their young pitcher, Babe Ruth.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

The Monsters of the Midway: Inside the 1940s Chicago Bears Dynasty
The Chicago Bears franchise started in 1919 as the Decatur Staleys. The Staleys were

The Evolution of Football Tactics Through the Decades
Football became a game of strategy, a battle for control of every blade of

The Evolution of Sports Betting and Its Influence on Historic Sporting Moments
The sports betting industry has undergone a significant transformation over the past decade, shifting

The Evolution of Triathlon Pacing: From Iron Men to Digital Calculators
Triathlon is one of the youngest major sports with a specific, documentable origin story.

The Evolution of Prediction: From Ancient Gambling to FanDuel Predict
A Modern Take on a Long Tradition of Sports Forecasting Image by David from

The Result No One Expected Is Usually Built Earlier Than It Looks
A true upset does not feel surprising only because the underdog wins. It lands

FIFA World Cup’s Worst Ever Cases of Inter-Squad Turmoil
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is fast approaching, and while excitement levels are ramping

The 2026 Transfer Window Sparks Early Attention
Off-season activity in soccer during 2026 keeps showing familiar patterns: big-name transfers, shifts in