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1889 in baseball

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The following are the baseball events of the year 1889 throughout the world.  

Contents

[edit] Champions

[edit] Major League Baseball final standings

[edit] National League final standings

National League
Club Wins Losses Win %   GB
New York Giants 83 43 .659 --
Boston Beaneaters 83 45 .648 1
Chicago White Stockings 67 65 .508 19
Philadelphia Phillies/Quakers 63 64 .496 20.5
Pittsburg Alleghenys 61 71 .462 25
Cleveland Spiders 61 72 .459 25.5
Indianapolis Hoosiers 59 75 .440 28
Washington Nationals 41 83 .331 41

[edit] American Association final standings

American Association
Club Wins Losses Win %   GB
Brooklyn Bridegrooms 93 44 .679 --
St. Louis Browns 90 45 .667 2
Philadelphia Athletics 75 58 .564 16
Cincinnati Red Stockings 76 63 .547 18
Baltimore Orioles 70 65 .519 22
Columbus Solons 60 78 .435 33.5
Kansas City Cowboys 55 82 .401 38
Louisville Colonels 27 111 .196 66.5

[edit] Statistical leaders

[edit] National League Statistical Leaders

National League
Type Name Stat
AVG Dan Brouthers BSN .373
HR Sam Thompson PHI 20
RBI Roger Connor NYG 130
Wins John Clarkson BSN 49
ERA John Clarkson BSN 2.73
Strikeouts John Clarkson BSN 284

[edit] American Association Statistical Leaders

American Association
Type Name Stat
AVG Tommy Tucker BAL .372
HR Bug Holliday CIN 19 Harry Stovey PHA 19
RBI Harry Stovey PHA 119
Wins Bob Caruthers BRO 40
ERA Jack Stivetts STL 2.25
Strikeouts Mark Baldwin COL 368

[edit] Notable seasons

[edit] Events

[edit] January-March

[edit] April-June

[edit] July-September

  • Early July - John Montgomery Ward convinces representatives for The Brotherhood of Professional Base Ball Players to hold off on their planned strike for a couple of weeks until he can present them with a better long-term solution.
  • July 2 - Louisville Colonels owner Mordecai Davidson, unable to pay the players salaries, turns the team over to the American Association. The AA will announce new ownership for the team within 3 days.
  • July 6 - Player-manager John Morrill, his team in last place in the National League at 13-40 and a personal batting average of .185, is let go by the Washington Nationals after leaving the team to go see ailing relatives in Worcester.
  • July 8 - The New York Giants play their first game at the newly relocated Polo Grounds. The stadium will remain a fixture in major league baseball until its demolition in 1964.
  • July 12 - John Clarkson of the Boston Beaneaters is taken out after pitching 5 innings of no-hit ball in order to rest him for his next start. Teammate Bill Sowders allows 1 hit over the last 4 innings for the combined 1-hitter.
  • July 14 - Albert Spalding publishes his ideas for the classification and structure of the minor leagues. His ideas will be the foundation of minor league baseball that last to the present day.
  • July 14 - At a secret meeting of The Brotherhood of Professional Base Ball Players held at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, John Montgomery Ward instructs Brotherhood representatives that "each player look up the feasibility of securing capital in his own city" for the purpose of starting a competing league that would give the players an equal say in all baseball matters.
  • July 24 - Joe Dowie will collect only 17 hits in his one season of major league baseball, but 5 of them come on this day in as he helps the Baltimore Orioles to an easy 17-3 win over the Louisville Colonels.
  • July 26 - Jay Faatz hits possibly the shortest grand slam ever when he hits a ball that ricochets off of the 3rd baseman's foot and rolls under some temporary bleachers placed close to 3rd base. Faatz circles the bases as the ball is still in play according to the park's ground rules.
  • July 29 - Mike "King" Kelly of the Boston Beaneaters robs the Philadelphia Quakers of a victory when, after Sam Thompson had apparently hit a long drive over the right field fence for a home run, he manages to throw a ball back into the infield that holds Thompson on the bases. While the Quakers argue that Kelly used a different ball, the umpire rules it is the game ball and allows the play to stand. Thompson is stranded on base as the Beaneaters go on to win 7-6 in extra innings.
  • August 7 - The Cleveland Spiders score 14 runs in the 3rd inning, still a record for that inning, in a 20-6 win over the Washington Nationals.
  • August 12 - The first-place St. Louis Browns complete a 3 game sweep in St. Louis over the 2nd place Brooklyn Bridegrooms with a 11-0 win in front of 32,911 fans.
  • August 18 - The Cincinnati police stop a scheduled Cincinnati Red Stockings Sunday game after a court ruling prohibits Sunday baseball. The ban will be a factor in the Red Stockings' decision to jump to the National League in 1890.
  • August 25 - The Red Stockings are again stopped by police from playing a Sunday game.
  • September 1 - After having led the American Association all but 3 days of the season, the St. Louis Browns fall out of first place by losing in extra innings to the Columbus Solons.
  • September 3 - Con Daily of the Indianapolis Hoosiers makes the final out in a 7-6 loss to the Boston Beaneaters just after the umpire had apparently called time. Given a second chance, Daily hits a 2-run single to give the Hoosiers an 8-7 win.
  • September 7 - In a critcical 2-game series, the St. Louis Browns leave the field in Brooklyn in the 9th inning leading 4-2 claiming it is too dark to continue play. Umpire Fred Goldsmith disagrees and forfeits the game to the Brooklyn Bridegrooms. Several Browns players are hit by thrown bottle as they leave the park.
  • September 8 - Citing safety concerns, the Browns fail to show for their game against Brooklyn and forfeit for the 2nd day in a row, giving the Bridegrooms a 4-1/2 game lead over the Browns.
  • September 11 - In a season that will have 135 rainouts between the 2 leagues, every scheduled game in both leagues is postponed due to rain on this day.
  • September 23 - The American Association, in an emergency meeting, overturns the forfeit by the St. Louis Browns on September 7th and awards them a 4-2 victory. The ruling draws the Browns back to within 4-1/2 games of the Brooklyn Bridegrooms.
  • September 25 - The Brotherhood of Professional Base Ball Players' plan to start a rival league is leaked to the press.
  • September 27 - Out of the pennant race, the Philadelphia Quakers make a largely symbolic move by releasing Brotherhood activists outfielder George Wood who is batting .251 and pitcher Dan Casey who has a 6-10 record.

[edit] October-December

  • October 22 - The Bridegrooms take Game 3 by a score of 8-7 in a game called because of darkness that ends with the Giants having the bases loaded and 1 out in the top of the 9th inning.
  • October 23 - In another game called early by darkness, New York scores 5 runs in the top of the 6th to tie the game at 7, only to see the Bridegrooms win it on a 3-run homer by Oyster Burns in the bottom of the 6th inning.
  • October 25 - New York evens the series at 3 games apiece by tying the game at 1 with a run in the 9th inning. The Giants then win it in the 11th inning as Hank O'Day outlasts Adonis Terry in the 2-1 extra inning thriller.
  • November 4 - The Brotherhood of Professional Base Ball Players issues its Manifesto stating that "players have been bought‚ sold and exchanged as though they were sheep instead of American citizens."
  • November 21 - The National League issues its reply to the Players League manifesto. Claiming that the League saved baseball in 1876 and that under the reserve rules players' salaries had "more than trebled," the NL denounces the Brotherhood movement as "the efforts of certain overpaid players to again control [baseball] for their own aggrandizement. . . to its ultimate dishonor and disintegration."
  • December 17 - The Players League votes to utilize a 2-man umpiring crew for their 1890 season and also set their pitching distance at 57 feet, a 1-1/2 foot increase over the NL and AA.

[edit] Births

[edit] January-April

* Somes sources show 1890

[edit] May-August

[edit] September-December

[edit] Deaths

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Nemec, David (1994). The Beer and Whiskey League: The Illustrated History of the American Association-Baseball's Renegade Major League. New York: Lyons & Burford, Publishers ISBN 1-55821-285-X
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