fbpx
Wikipedia

Ten Cent Beer Night

Ten Cent Beer Night was a promotion held by Major League Baseball's Cleveland Indians during a game against the Texas Rangers at Cleveland Stadium on June 4, 1974. The promotion was meant to improve attendance at the game by offering cups of low-alcohol beer for just 10 cents each (equivalent to $0.62 in 2023), a substantial discount on the regular price of 65 cents (equivalent to $4.02 in 2023), with a limit of six beers per purchase but with no limit on the number of purchases made during the game.

Ten Cent Beer Night
A Stroh's beer promotion was blamed for the riot
DateJune 4, 1974
TimeEvening
LocationCleveland Stadium,
Cleveland, Ohio
CauseFan animosity from previous game combined with low-point beer being sold cheaply and liberally (10 cents per cup, up to 6 cups at a time)
ParticipantsCleveland Indians and Texas Rangers baseball clubs, several thousand inebriated attendees
OutcomeRangers/Indians game forfeited to Texas
Non-fatal injuriesVarious players, officials, and fans (exact count unknown)
Property damageDamage to the field of Cleveland Stadium; bases stolen, never returned
Suspects9 fans arrested
ChargesDisorderly conduct

Six days earlier, the Indians and the Rangers had been involved in a widely-publicized bench-clearing brawl; the game therefore drew a rowdy and belligerent crowd. As the game proceeded, on-field incidents and massive alcohol consumption further agitated the audience, many of whom threw lit firecrackers, streaked across the playing field, and openly smoked marijuana. Most sober fans departed early, leaving an increasingly drunk and unruly mob behind. Continued degradation of the game culminated in a riot in the ninth inning when fans rushed the field. Players were forced to protect themselves with bats while retreating from the field. Chief umpire Nestor Chylak declared the game to be forfeited in Texas's favor due to the mob's uncontrollable behavior.

Background edit

The Indians had previously held such promotions without incident, beginning with Nickel Beer Day in 1971.[1]

However, a bench-clearing brawl during the teams' last meeting one week earlier at Arlington Stadium in Texas angered many Indians fans, who then harbored a grudge against the Rangers. The trouble at Arlington began in the bottom of the fourth inning with a walk to the Rangers' Tom Grieve, followed by a Lenny Randle single. The next batter hit what should have been a double-play ball to Indians third baseman John Lowenstein; Lowenstein stepped on third base to retire Grieve and threw the ball to second base for the second out, but Randle disrupted the play with a hard slide into second baseman Jack Brohamer.[2]

The Indians retaliated in the bottom of the eighth when pitcher Milt Wilcox threw behind Randle's legs. Randle eventually laid down a bunt. When Wilcox fielded the ball and tagged Randle out, Randle hit him with his forearm. Indians first baseman John Ellis responded by punching Randle, and both benches emptied for a brawl. After the brawl was broken up, as Indians players and coaches returned to the dugout, they were struck by food and beer hurled by Rangers fans; catcher Dave Duncan had to be restrained from entering the stands to fight the fans.[2]

The game was not suspended or forfeited, no players from either team were ejected, and the Rangers won 3–0.[3]

After the game, a Cleveland reporter asked Rangers manager Billy Martin, "Are you going to take your armor to Cleveland?" to which Martin replied, "Naw, they won't have enough fans there to worry about."[4] During the week leading up to the teams' next meeting in Cleveland, sports radio talk show host Pete Franklin and Indians radio announcer Joe Tait made comments that fueled the fans' animosity toward the Rangers. In addition, The Plain Dealer printed a cartoon the day of the game showing Chief Wahoo holding a pair of boxing gloves with the caption, "Be ready for anything."[5]

The game edit

Problems from the beginning edit

Six days after the brawl in Texas, Cleveland's Ten Cent Beer Night promotion drew 25,134 fans to Cleveland Stadium for the Tuesday night game, twice the number expected.[6] 12 fluid ounce (355 ml) cups of beer were offered for just 10 cents each, a substantial discount on the regular price of 65 cents, with a limit of six beers per purchase but with no limit on the number of purchases made during the game.[7]

The Rangers quickly took a 5–1 lead. Meanwhile, throughout the game, the increasingly inebriated crowd grew more and more unruly. Early in the game, Cleveland's Leron Lee hit a line drive into the stomach of Rangers pitcher Ferguson Jenkins, after which Jenkins dropped to the ground. Fans in the upper deck of the stadium cheered, then chanted, "Hit 'em again! Hit 'em again! Harder! Harder!" A woman ran out to the Indians' on-deck circle, flashed her breasts, and then tried to kiss umpire Nestor Chylak, who "was not in a kissing mood."[8] As Grieve hit his second home run of the game, a naked man sprinted to second base and slid in, "probably getting dirt in places unsuitable for speculation," in the words of one sportswriter.[8] One inning later, a father-and-son pair ran onto the outfield and mooned the fans in the bleachers.

Although it is not clear why, some fans brought firecrackers to the game, which they set off in the stands or threw onto the field.[8] As the game progressed, more fans ran onto the field and disrupted play. Rangers first baseman Mike Hargrove was pelted with hot dogs and spat at, and at one point was nearly struck by an empty gallon jug of Thunderbird.

The Rangers later argued a call in which Lee was called safe in a close play at third base, spiking Jenkins with his cleats in the process and forcing him to leave the game. The Rangers' angry response to this call provoked an enraged outburst from Cleveland fans, who again began throwing objects onto the field. A fan also threw lit firecrackers into the Rangers' bullpen.[8] The clouds of firecracker and marijuana smoke further contributed to the unsettling mood.[8]

By the seventh inning, families and those fans who remained sober had mostly left the ballpark— the remaining crowd became increasingly intoxicated and belligerent.[8] As sportswriter Paul Jackson described in a 2008 article on the event:[8]

Early on, the demand for beer surpassed the Indians' capacity to ferry it to concession stands, and a luminary, perhaps the same person who suggested the promotion in the first place, decided to allow fans to line up behind the outfield fences and have their cups filled directly from Stroh's company trucks. The promotion achieved critical mass at that moment, as weaving, hooting queues of people refilled via industrial spigot.

In the bottom of the ninth, the Indians managed to rally, tying the game 5–5, and had Rusty Torres on second base representing the potential winning run. However, with a rowdy crowd that had been drinking heavily for nine innings, the situation finally boiled over.

The riot edit

After the Indians had tied the game, a 19-year-old fan named Terry Yerkic[9] ran onto the field and attempted to steal Texas outfielder Jeff Burroughs' cap.[10] Burroughs stumbled while confronting Yerkic. Thinking that Burroughs had been attacked, Texas manager Billy Martin and his players ran onto the field; some with bats. A large number of intoxicated fans—some armed with knives, chains, and clubs fashioned from portions of stadium seats that they had torn apart—surged onto the field, and others hurled bottles from the stands. Two hundred fans surrounded the 25 Rangers, with more fans coming.[8]

Realizing that the Rangers' lives might be in danger, Cleveland manager Ken Aspromonte ordered his players to grab bats and help the Rangers, attacking the team's own fans in the process. Rioters began throwing steel folding chairs, and Cleveland relief pitcher Tom Hilgendorf was hit in the head by one of them. Hargrove, after subduing one rioter in a fistfight, had to fight another on his way back to the Texas dugout, while Texas catcher and former Indian Duke Sims also wound up getting into a fight with a fan. The two teams retreated off the field through the dugouts in groups, with players protecting each other.[8]

The teams fled into their clubhouses and closed and locked the doors. The crowd pulled up and stole the bases from the infield. Rioters threw a vast array of objects, including cups, rocks, bottles, batteries from radios, hot dogs, popcorn containers, and folding chairs. Umpire crew chief Chylak, realizing that order would not be restored in a timely fashion, forfeited the game to Texas.[11] He, too, was a victim of the rioters, as one struck and cut his head with part of a stadium seat,[12] and his hand was cut by a thrown rock. He later called the fans "uncontrollable beasts" and stated that he'd never seen anything like what had happened "except in a zoo".[13]

The rioting continued for 20 minutes. As Joe Tait and Herb Score called the riot live on radio, Score noted the security guards' inability to handle the crowd. Tait said, "Aw, this is absolute tragedy." The Cleveland Division of Police finally arrived to restore order, arresting nine fans. Indians players escorted the Rangers to the team bus.[8] A local sportswriter, Dan Coughlin of the Chronicle-Telegram, attempted to interview fans but was punched in the face twice.[8]

Cleveland general manager Phil Seghi blamed the umpires for losing control of the game. The Sporting News wrote that "Seghi's perspective might have been different had he been in Chylak's shoes, in the midst of knife-wielding, bottle-throwing, chair-tossing, fist-swinging drunks".[14] American League president Lee MacPhail commented, "There was no question that beer played a part in the riot."[12]

The next Beer Night promotion on July 18 attracted 41,848 fans with beer again selling for 10 cents per cup but with a limit of two cups per person at the reduced price.[15]

Box score edit

June 4, 1974
8:05 pm EDT
Texas Rangers 5–5 Cleveland Indians Cleveland Stadium
Attendance: 25,134
Umpires: HP: Larry McCoy
1B: Joe Brinkman
2B: Nick Bremigan
3B: Nestor Chylak (cc)
Boxscore

Notable attendees edit

Among the Indians players fleeing was outfielder Rusty Torres. In his career, Torres wound up seeing three big-league baseball riots close up (all of which resulted in forfeits); in addition to this game, he had been with the New York Yankees at the Senators' final game in Washington in 1971, and he would be with the Chicago White Sox during the infamous Disco Demolition Night in 1979.[16]

NBC newscaster Tim Russert, then a student at the Cleveland–Marshall College of Law, attended the game. "I went with $2 in my pocket," recalled the Meet the Press host. "You do the math."[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kozloski, Hank (June 27, 1971). "Cleveland Indians Plan Nickel Beer Day in July". Mansfield News Journal. Cleveland. p. 63. from the original on August 19, 2016. Retrieved July 26, 2016. Dime Beer Day was a king-size success in Houston's Astrodome. Then the Milwaukee Brewers held a Dime Beer Day and, being the beer capital of the world, it, too, was a smasheroo. Now the Indians are going the Astros and Brewers one better. They're planning a combination Nickel Beer and Helmet Day July 5. That's a Monday afternoon (1:30) single game with the Washington Senators. It works this way: dad can buy a 12-ounce cup of suds for five cents, while junior gets an Indians batting helmet if he (or she) is under 16. The nickel beer will be available before and during the game behind the centerfield fence and at special stands throughout the stadium, but not at regular concession stands. Helmets will be given away at all gates, and "NO" combination admission is required.
  2. ^ a b Schneider, Russell (May 30, 1974). "Rangers top Indians, 3–0". The Plain Dealer. p. G1.
  3. ^ "Retrosheet Boxscore: Texas Rangers 3, Cleveland Indians 0". Retrosheet. May 29, 1974. from the original on May 30, 2021.
  4. ^ Braham, Jim (May 30, 1974). "Here's beer in your eye? Could be for Texas' Martin". The Cleveland Press. p. E2.
  5. ^ Coughlin, Dan (2010). Crazy, with the Papers to Prove It: Stories About the Most Unusual, Eccentric and Outlandish People I've Known in 45 Years as a Sports Journalist. Gray & Company, Publishers. pp. 75–83. ISBN 978-1-59851-068-3.
  6. ^ Lebovitz, Hal (June 6, 1974). "Where was the warning?". The Plain Dealer. p. F1.
  7. ^ Lebovitz, Hal. "10,000 six packs?" The Plain Dealer. June 9, 1974: 2C
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Jackson, Paul (June 4, 2008). "The night beer and violence bubbled over in Cleveland". ESPN. from the original on October 17, 2008. Retrieved June 8, 2008.
  9. ^ "Remember 10-cent beer night?". ESPN. June 2, 2014. from the original on August 1, 2019. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  10. ^ Netzel, Andy (June 2007). "The Experience: Swiping Jeff Borroughs' cap on 10-cent Beer Night". Cleveland Magazine. from the original on April 7, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2012.
  11. ^ "Fans cost Tribe forfeit to Texas". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. June 5, 1974. p. 1, part 2.
  12. ^ a b "This Week in Baseball History: Ten Cent Beer Night". Coffeyville Whirlwind. from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved July 5, 2011.
  13. ^ O'Connor, Ian (April 17, 2003). "Alcohol puts a damper on fun and games". USA Today. from the original on July 13, 2004. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  14. ^ Neyer, Rob (2006). Rob Neyer's Big Book of Baseball Blunders. Simon & Schuster. pp. 175–176.
  15. ^ Campbell, W. Joseph; Daniels, Robert (July 19, 1974). "Sanity reigns at Beer Night II". The Plain Dealer. p. 1–A.
  16. ^ Castle, George (July 11, 2016). "New book takes a new spin on historic Disco Demolition night". Cook County Chronicle. from the original on June 25, 2020. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
  17. ^ Eaton, Sabrina (February 23, 2008). "Russert returns to Cleveland State for debate". Cleveland.com. Cleveland Live. from the original on June 8, 2009. Retrieved July 5, 2011.

External links edit

41°30′22″N 81°42′00″W / 41.506°N 81.700°W / 41.506; -81.700

cent, beer, night, promotion, held, major, league, baseball, cleveland, indians, during, game, against, texas, rangers, cleveland, stadium, june, 1974, promotion, meant, improve, attendance, game, offering, cups, alcohol, beer, just, cents, each, equivalent, 2. Ten Cent Beer Night was a promotion held by Major League Baseball s Cleveland Indians during a game against the Texas Rangers at Cleveland Stadium on June 4 1974 The promotion was meant to improve attendance at the game by offering cups of low alcohol beer for just 10 cents each equivalent to 0 62 in 2023 a substantial discount on the regular price of 65 cents equivalent to 4 02 in 2023 with a limit of six beers per purchase but with no limit on the number of purchases made during the game Ten Cent Beer NightA Stroh s beer promotion was blamed for the riotDateJune 4 1974TimeEveningLocationCleveland Stadium Cleveland OhioCauseFan animosity from previous game combined with low point beer being sold cheaply and liberally 10 cents per cup up to 6 cups at a time ParticipantsCleveland Indians and Texas Rangers baseball clubs several thousand inebriated attendeesOutcomeRangers Indians game forfeited to TexasNon fatal injuriesVarious players officials and fans exact count unknown Property damageDamage to the field of Cleveland Stadium bases stolen never returnedSuspects9 fans arrestedChargesDisorderly conduct Six days earlier the Indians and the Rangers had been involved in a widely publicized bench clearing brawl the game therefore drew a rowdy and belligerent crowd As the game proceeded on field incidents and massive alcohol consumption further agitated the audience many of whom threw lit firecrackers streaked across the playing field and openly smoked marijuana Most sober fans departed early leaving an increasingly drunk and unruly mob behind Continued degradation of the game culminated in a riot in the ninth inning when fans rushed the field Players were forced to protect themselves with bats while retreating from the field Chief umpire Nestor Chylak declared the game to be forfeited in Texas s favor due to the mob s uncontrollable behavior Contents 1 Background 2 The game 2 1 Problems from the beginning 2 2 The riot 2 3 Box score 3 Notable attendees 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground editThe Indians had previously held such promotions without incident beginning with Nickel Beer Day in 1971 1 However a bench clearing brawl during the teams last meeting one week earlier at Arlington Stadium in Texas angered many Indians fans who then harbored a grudge against the Rangers The trouble at Arlington began in the bottom of the fourth inning with a walk to the Rangers Tom Grieve followed by a Lenny Randle single The next batter hit what should have been a double play ball to Indians third baseman John Lowenstein Lowenstein stepped on third base to retire Grieve and threw the ball to second base for the second out but Randle disrupted the play with a hard slide into second baseman Jack Brohamer 2 The Indians retaliated in the bottom of the eighth when pitcher Milt Wilcox threw behind Randle s legs Randle eventually laid down a bunt When Wilcox fielded the ball and tagged Randle out Randle hit him with his forearm Indians first baseman John Ellis responded by punching Randle and both benches emptied for a brawl After the brawl was broken up as Indians players and coaches returned to the dugout they were struck by food and beer hurled by Rangers fans catcher Dave Duncan had to be restrained from entering the stands to fight the fans 2 The game was not suspended or forfeited no players from either team were ejected and the Rangers won 3 0 3 After the game a Cleveland reporter asked Rangers manager Billy Martin Are you going to take your armor to Cleveland to which Martin replied Naw they won t have enough fans there to worry about 4 During the week leading up to the teams next meeting in Cleveland sports radio talk show host Pete Franklin and Indians radio announcer Joe Tait made comments that fueled the fans animosity toward the Rangers In addition The Plain Dealer printed a cartoon the day of the game showing Chief Wahoo holding a pair of boxing gloves with the caption Be ready for anything 5 The game editProblems from the beginning edit Six days after the brawl in Texas Cleveland s Ten Cent Beer Night promotion drew 25 134 fans to Cleveland Stadium for the Tuesday night game twice the number expected 6 12 fluid ounce 355 ml cups of beer were offered for just 10 cents each a substantial discount on the regular price of 65 cents with a limit of six beers per purchase but with no limit on the number of purchases made during the game 7 The Rangers quickly took a 5 1 lead Meanwhile throughout the game the increasingly inebriated crowd grew more and more unruly Early in the game Cleveland s Leron Lee hit a line drive into the stomach of Rangers pitcher Ferguson Jenkins after which Jenkins dropped to the ground Fans in the upper deck of the stadium cheered then chanted Hit em again Hit em again Harder Harder A woman ran out to the Indians on deck circle flashed her breasts and then tried to kiss umpire Nestor Chylak who was not in a kissing mood 8 As Grieve hit his second home run of the game a naked man sprinted to second base and slid in probably getting dirt in places unsuitable for speculation in the words of one sportswriter 8 One inning later a father and son pair ran onto the outfield and mooned the fans in the bleachers Although it is not clear why some fans brought firecrackers to the game which they set off in the stands or threw onto the field 8 As the game progressed more fans ran onto the field and disrupted play Rangers first baseman Mike Hargrove was pelted with hot dogs and spat at and at one point was nearly struck by an empty gallon jug of Thunderbird The Rangers later argued a call in which Lee was called safe in a close play at third base spiking Jenkins with his cleats in the process and forcing him to leave the game The Rangers angry response to this call provoked an enraged outburst from Cleveland fans who again began throwing objects onto the field A fan also threw lit firecrackers into the Rangers bullpen 8 The clouds of firecracker and marijuana smoke further contributed to the unsettling mood 8 By the seventh inning families and those fans who remained sober had mostly left the ballpark the remaining crowd became increasingly intoxicated and belligerent 8 As sportswriter Paul Jackson described in a 2008 article on the event 8 Early on the demand for beer surpassed the Indians capacity to ferry it to concession stands and a luminary perhaps the same person who suggested the promotion in the first place decided to allow fans to line up behind the outfield fences and have their cups filled directly from Stroh s company trucks The promotion achieved critical mass at that moment as weaving hooting queues of people refilled via industrial spigot In the bottom of the ninth the Indians managed to rally tying the game 5 5 and had Rusty Torres on second base representing the potential winning run However with a rowdy crowd that had been drinking heavily for nine innings the situation finally boiled over The riot edit After the Indians had tied the game a 19 year old fan named Terry Yerkic 9 ran onto the field and attempted to steal Texas outfielder Jeff Burroughs cap 10 Burroughs stumbled while confronting Yerkic Thinking that Burroughs had been attacked Texas manager Billy Martin and his players ran onto the field some with bats A large number of intoxicated fans some armed with knives chains and clubs fashioned from portions of stadium seats that they had torn apart surged onto the field and others hurled bottles from the stands Two hundred fans surrounded the 25 Rangers with more fans coming 8 Realizing that the Rangers lives might be in danger Cleveland manager Ken Aspromonte ordered his players to grab bats and help the Rangers attacking the team s own fans in the process Rioters began throwing steel folding chairs and Cleveland relief pitcher Tom Hilgendorf was hit in the head by one of them Hargrove after subduing one rioter in a fistfight had to fight another on his way back to the Texas dugout while Texas catcher and former Indian Duke Sims also wound up getting into a fight with a fan The two teams retreated off the field through the dugouts in groups with players protecting each other 8 The teams fled into their clubhouses and closed and locked the doors The crowd pulled up and stole the bases from the infield Rioters threw a vast array of objects including cups rocks bottles batteries from radios hot dogs popcorn containers and folding chairs Umpire crew chief Chylak realizing that order would not be restored in a timely fashion forfeited the game to Texas 11 He too was a victim of the rioters as one struck and cut his head with part of a stadium seat 12 and his hand was cut by a thrown rock He later called the fans uncontrollable beasts and stated that he d never seen anything like what had happened except in a zoo 13 The rioting continued for 20 minutes As Joe Tait and Herb Score called the riot live on radio Score noted the security guards inability to handle the crowd Tait said Aw this is absolute tragedy The Cleveland Division of Police finally arrived to restore order arresting nine fans Indians players escorted the Rangers to the team bus 8 A local sportswriter Dan Coughlin of the Chronicle Telegram attempted to interview fans but was punched in the face twice 8 Cleveland general manager Phil Seghi blamed the umpires for losing control of the game The Sporting News wrote that Seghi s perspective might have been different had he been in Chylak s shoes in the midst of knife wielding bottle throwing chair tossing fist swinging drunks 14 American League president Lee MacPhail commented There was no question that beer played a part in the riot 12 The next Beer Night promotion on July 18 attracted 41 848 fans with beer again selling for 10 cents per cup but with a limit of two cups per person at the reduced price 15 Box score edit June 4 1974 8 05 pm EDT Texas Rangers 5 5 Cleveland Indians Cleveland Stadium Attendance 25 134 Umpires HP Larry McCoy1B Joe Brinkman2B Nick Bremigan3B Nestor Chylak cc BoxscoreNotable attendees editAmong the Indians players fleeing was outfielder Rusty Torres In his career Torres wound up seeing three big league baseball riots close up all of which resulted in forfeits in addition to this game he had been with the New York Yankees at the Senators final game in Washington in 1971 and he would be with the Chicago White Sox during the infamous Disco Demolition Night in 1979 16 NBC newscaster Tim Russert then a student at the Cleveland Marshall College of Law attended the game I went with 2 in my pocket recalled the Meet the Press host You do the math 17 See also edit nbsp Baseball portal nbsp History portal Bottlegate a 2001 Cleveland Browns game ended early due to unruly fan behavior Bounty Bowl Disco Demolition Night Forfeit baseball for a list of similar events Hooliganism for additional examples of disruptive fan behaviorReferences edit Kozloski Hank June 27 1971 Cleveland Indians Plan Nickel Beer Day in July Mansfield News Journal Cleveland p 63 Archived from the original on August 19 2016 Retrieved July 26 2016 Dime Beer Day was a king size success in Houston s Astrodome Then the Milwaukee Brewers held a Dime Beer Day and being the beer capital of the world it too was a smasheroo Now the Indians are going the Astros and Brewers one better They re planning a combination Nickel Beer and Helmet Day July 5 That s a Monday afternoon 1 30 single game with the Washington Senators It works this way dad can buy a 12 ounce cup of suds for five cents while junior gets an Indians batting helmet if he or she is under 16 The nickel beer will be available before and during the game behind the centerfield fence and at special stands throughout the stadium but not at regular concession stands Helmets will be given away at all gates and NO combination admission is required a b Schneider Russell May 30 1974 Rangers top Indians 3 0 The Plain Dealer p G1 Retrosheet Boxscore Texas Rangers 3 Cleveland Indians 0 Retrosheet May 29 1974 Archived from the original on May 30 2021 Braham Jim May 30 1974 Here s beer in your eye Could be for Texas Martin The Cleveland Press p E2 Coughlin Dan 2010 Crazy with the Papers to Prove It Stories About the Most Unusual Eccentric and Outlandish People I ve Known in 45 Years as a Sports Journalist Gray amp Company Publishers pp 75 83 ISBN 978 1 59851 068 3 Lebovitz Hal June 6 1974 Where was the warning The Plain Dealer p F1 Lebovitz Hal 10 000 six packs The Plain Dealer June 9 1974 2C a b c d e f g h i j k Jackson Paul June 4 2008 The night beer and violence bubbled over in Cleveland ESPN Archived from the original on October 17 2008 Retrieved June 8 2008 Remember 10 cent beer night ESPN June 2 2014 Archived from the original on August 1 2019 Retrieved August 1 2019 Netzel Andy June 2007 The Experience Swiping Jeff Borroughs cap on 10 cent Beer Night Cleveland Magazine Archived from the original on April 7 2014 Retrieved June 4 2012 Fans cost Tribe forfeit to Texas Milwaukee Sentinel Associated Press June 5 1974 p 1 part 2 a b This Week in Baseball History Ten Cent Beer Night Coffeyville Whirlwind Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved July 5 2011 O Connor Ian April 17 2003 Alcohol puts a damper on fun and games USA Today Archived from the original on July 13 2004 Retrieved May 25 2010 Neyer Rob 2006 Rob Neyer s Big Book of Baseball Blunders Simon amp Schuster pp 175 176 Campbell W Joseph Daniels Robert July 19 1974 Sanity reigns at Beer Night II The Plain Dealer p 1 A Castle George July 11 2016 New book takes a new spin on historic Disco Demolition night Cook County Chronicle Archived from the original on June 25 2020 Retrieved May 14 2020 Eaton Sabrina February 23 2008 Russert returns to Cleveland State for debate Cleveland com Cleveland Live Archived from the original on June 8 2009 Retrieved July 5 2011 External links editBox score and play by play at Retrosheet 41 30 22 N 81 42 00 W 41 506 N 81 700 W 41 506 81 700 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ten Cent Beer Night amp oldid 1220281341, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.