On July 6, 1932, Violet Valli, a
showgirl with whom Jurges was romantically linked, tried to kill Jurges at the Hotel Carlos in Chicago, where each lived. Jurges had previously tried to end their relationship. Valli (born Violet Popovich) also left a suicide note in which she blamed the Cubs outfielder
Kiki Cuyler for convincing Jurges to break up with her. Although initial reports stated that Jurges was shot while trying to wrestle the gun from Valli, later reports, based on Valli's suicide note, stated that she was trying to kill Jurges as well as commit suicide. A week after the shooting, charges were dismissed against Valli when Jurges appeared in court and announced that he would not testify and wished to drop the charges. Valli was later involved in a lawsuit when she sued a real estate developer who was blackmailing her by threatening to release letters in which Valli threatened Jurges. The future Chicago baseball club owner
Bill Veeck was working for the Cubs at the time, and later wrote in his memoir ''The Hustler's Handbook'' (Ch. 6) that the intended victim was actually a married player of whom Valli had been the mistress. By Veeck's account, that player was relaxing in Jurges's room when confronted by Valli, and Jurges, trying to defuse the situation, was shot and then, being single, covered for the other player by indicating that he himself had jilted the showgirl. The shooting of Jurges—and the later shooting of the professional ballplayer
Eddie Waitkus at a
Chicago hotel in 1949—may, either or both, have inspired the author
Bernard Malamud in creating the title character, Roy Hobbs, of his novel
The Natural (1952), later adapted into a
Hollywood film starring
Robert Redford and
Glenn Close. ==Career as coach, manager and scout==