Detroit Tigers vs Boston Red Sox
July 11, 1946 Box Score

The box score below is an accurate record of events for the baseball contest played on July 11, 1946 at Fenway Park. The Boston Red Sox defeated the Detroit Tigers and the box score is "ready to surrender its truth to the knowing eye."

"The box score is the catechism of baseball, ready to surrender its truth to the knowing eye." - Author Stanley Cohen in The Man in the Crowd (1981)
Baseball Almanac Box Scores

Detroit Tigers 2, Boston Red Sox 3

Detroit Tigers ab   r   h rbi
Lake ss 5 0 3 2
Kell 3b,1b 5 0 2 0
Evers cf,lf 5 0 1 0
Wakefield lf 2 0 0 0
  Outlaw lf,3b 2 0 0 0
Mullin rf 5 0 0 0
Cullenbine 1b 3 0 1 0
  Webb 2b 0 0 0 0
Bloodworth 2b 3 0 0 0
  Cramer cf 1 1 0 0
Tebbetts c 3 0 2 0
  Lipon pr 0 1 0 0
  Swift c 0 0 0 0
Hutchinson p 4 0 1 0
Totals 38 2 10 2
Boston Red Sox ab   r   h rbi
Campbell 1b 5 0 0 0
Pesky ss 5 1 2 0
DiMaggio cf 4 0 2 0
Williams lf 4 0 2 1
Doerr 2b 5 1 2 0
Russell 3b 5 0 1 1
Culberson rf 4 1 2 0
Wagner c 3 0 1 0
Hughson p 4 0 1 1
Totals 39 3 13 3
Detroit 000 000 002 02100
Boston 001 100 000 13130
  Detroit Tigers IP H R ER BB SO
Hutchinson  L(4-6) 9.2 13 3 3 3 5
Totals
9.2
13
3
3
3
5
  Boston Red Sox IP H R ER BB SO
Hughson  W(10-5) 10.0 10 2 2 2 3
Totals
10.0
10
2
2
2
3

  E–None.  DP–Detroit 3. Cullenbine-Lake-Cullenbine, Hutchinson-Kell-Lake, Lake-Bloodworth-Cullenbine, Boston 1. Pesky-Doerr-Campbell.  2B–Detroit Lake (12), Boston Pesky (22); Williams (17); Russell (6).  SH–Wakefield (1).  Team LOB–9.  Team–10.  U–Eddie Rommel, Jim Boyer, Bill Grieve.
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Fred Schwed, Jr., in How to Watch a Baseball Game (1957) wrote our favorite baseball box score quote, "The baseball box score is the pithiest form of written communication in America today. It is abbreviated history. It is two or three hours (the box score even gives that item to the minute) of complex activity, virtually inscribed on the head of a pin, yet no knowing reader suffers from eyestrain."

     

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