September 28, 1920 – A dark day in baseball, but also one that started to cleanse. Eight Chicago White Sox baseball players were indicted by a grand jury. The charge against them was fixing the 1919 World Series otherwise known as the infamous “Black Sox scandal.”
They will be acquitted by a jury in August, but Commissioner Landis will ban the Black Sox for life. The eight men involved were Chick Gandil, Swede Risberg, Fred McMullen, Eddie Cicotte, Claude “Lefty” Williams, Buck Weaver, “Happy” Felsch, and Shoeless Joe Jackson.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

Sports History On This Day: April 21
Home Run Magic! Yes, there have been plenty of base clearers hit in single

Peter Bonert Shares Stories of the Link Between Germany and the NFL
In this episode, Peter Bonert rides shotgun in the DeLorean to take us back

Sports History On This Day: April 20
Three MLB ballparks had debuts into the Big Leagues on this day in history.

Sports History On This Day: April 19
April 19, 1947 – Maurice Richard is named as the National Hockey League’s Most Valuable

Swinging A’s (The Oakland Athletics of the 1970s)
Just how good were the Oakland Athletics from 1971-to-1975? They were good enough to

Sports History On This Day: April 18
April 18, 1942 – It was a miraculous comeback in the Stanley Cup Finals! The

Sports History On This Day: April 17
April 17, 1911 – Clarence DeMar won his first Boston Marathon race. The victory was run at

Sports History On This Day: April 16
April 16, 1912 – The Pittsburgh Pirates turned in a fielding rarity of a 5-3-7