The Chicago White Sox team of 1919 is your saddest team to win a pennent. The team is bitter at their own teammates, and also at their pennypincher owner, Charles Comiskey. Gamblers take advantage of this opportunity to offer some players to throw the string (Most of those players did not get as far as promised.) But Buck Weaver and the terrific Shoeless Joe Jackson return at the eleventh hour to decide to try and play with their very best. The Sox actually return from a 3-1 deficit. Two years later, the facts breaks from the Sox are sued on accounts. Baseball commissioner Landis has additional plans although they are found innocent by the prosecution. The eight players have been frozen for lifetime, and Buck Weaver, for the remainder of his life, tries to clean his name.
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The Chicago White Sox team of 1919 is your saddest team to win a pennent. The team is bitter at their own teammates, and also at their pennypincher owner, Charles Comiskey. Gamblers take advantage of this opportunity to offer some players to throw the string (Most of those players did not get as far as promised.) But Buck Weaver and the terrific Shoeless Joe Jackson return at the eleventh hour to decide to try and play with their very best. The Sox actually return from a 3-1 deficit. Two years later, the facts breaks from the Sox are sued on accounts. Baseball commissioner Landis has additional plans although they are found innocent by the prosecution. The eight players have been frozen for lifetime, and Buck Weaver, for the remainder of his life, tries to clean his name.
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