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Old 11-18-2019, 12:59 AM   #21
Jamee999
All Star Reserve
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1917

Changes
  • Historic relocation -The Philadelphia Athletics will become the Kansas City Athletics.
  • Clear rosters - !!! An enormous change. Every player becomes a free agent.
  • Contraction - The Rochester Red Wings and the St. Louis Browns will be removed from the league.
Here is where some of the most notable stars moved following the roster clearing.

- Red Ames - Braves to Athletics
- Pete Alexander - Yankees to Bisons
- Frank Baker - Colonels to Quakers
- Johnny Bassler - Stayed with Yankees
- Ginger Beaumont - Pirates to Cardinals
- Charles Bender - Twins to Yankees
- Heinie Berger - Braves to Giants
- Bill Bradley - Indians to Dodgers
- Donie Bush - Indians to Colonels
- Ralph Caldwell - Giants to Dodgers
- Ray Chapman - Bisons to Orioles
- Ty Cobb - Angels to Dodgers
- Eddie Collins - Braves to Yankees
- Ray Collins - Senators to Twins
- Bill Donovan - Dodgers to Cardinals
- Elmer Flick - Phillies to Athletics
- Jack Fournier - Browns to Dodgers
- Bubbles Hargrave - Browns to Orioles
- Harry Heilmann - Orioles to Nationals
- Pete Hill - Red Sox to Angels
- Rogers Hornsby - Red Wings to Brewers
- Joe Jackson - Nationals to Pirates
- Walter Johnson - Senators to Tigers
- Joe Judge - Browns to Orioles
- High Pockets Kelly - Phillies to White Sox
- Harry Krause - Angels to Red Sox
- Dutch Leonard - Orioles to Indians
- Sherry Magee - Cubs to Dodgers
- Rabbit Maranville - White Sox to Braves
- Guy Morton - Packers to Angels
- Pat O'Farrell - Giants to Indians
- Steve O'Neill - Browns to Braves
- Roger Peckinpaugh - Bisons to Dodgers
- Jeff Pfeffer - Pirates to Dodgers
- Eddie Plank Jr. - Nationals to Twins
- Del Pratt - Yankees to Twins
- Sam Rice - Tigers to Cubs
- Babe Ruth - Bisons to Braves
- George Ruth - Phillies to Nationals
- George Sisler - Cardinals to Giants
- Tris Speaker - Giants to Brewers
- Honus Wagner - Pirates to Angels
- Ed Walsh - Indians to Dodgers
- Zack Wheat - Colonels to Braves
- Ken Williams - Quakers to Cubs
- Hooks Wiltse - Dodgers to Pirates
- Ivey Wingo - Braves to Quakers
- Joe Wood - Dodgers to Giants

American League
Detroit Tigers (88-52)
New York Yankees (86-54)

Cleveland Indians (85-55)
Baltimore Orioles (83-57)
Minnesota Twins (77-63)
Chicago White Sox (74-66)
Milwaukee Brewers (71-69)
Kansas City Athletics (61-79)
Providence Angels (59-81)
Boston Red Sox (55-85)
Philadelphia Quakers (52-88)
Washington Senators (49-91)

AL MVP: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) (3rd award, 1st in AL)
AL CYA: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland)
AL ROY: Irish Meusel (Cleveland)

National League
Boston Braves (89-51)
Louisville Colonels (84-56)

Brooklyn Dodgers (82-58)
Cincinnati Reds (74-66)
Pittsburgh Pirates (74-66)
Kansas City Packers (67-73)
St. Louis Cardinals (65-75)
Buffalo Bisons (64-76)
New Jersey Nationals (64-76)
Philadelphia Phillies (64-76)
Chicago Cubs (57-83)
New York Giants (56-84)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston)
NL MOP: Reb Russell (Louisville)
NL ROY: Ross Youngs (Cleveland)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) .345, Ty Cobb (Brooklyn) .364
Home Runs: High Pockets Kelly (Chicago) 10, Babe Ruth (Boston) 27
Runs Batted In: Harry Hooper (Detroit) 71, Babe Ruth (Boston) 105
Stolen Bases: Tillie Shafer (Detroit) / Jack Smith (Chicago) 36, Donie Bush (Louisville) 33
WAR: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) 8.5, Roger Peckinpaugh (Brooklyn) 9.2

Wins: Doc Ayers (New York) / Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 24, Harry Coveleski (Brooklyn) 24
ERA: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 1.49, Claude Hendrix (Cincinnati) 1.49
Strikeouts: Walter Johnson (Detroit) 190, Ed Walsh (Brooklyn) 179
Saves: Homer Hillebrand (New York) 27, George Dumont (Boston) 39
WAR: Walter Johnson (Detroit) 7.5, Ed Walsh (Brooklyn) 10.4

Notes
- Detroit, New York, and Cleveland battled down the stretch, with the Yankees overtaking the Indians in the final week.
- The roster clearance didn't stop the Braves from finishing atop the NL standings for the third straight year.
- Good pitching and defense let Louisville pip the star-studded Brooklyn Dodgers to the second NLCS spot.
- Speaker led the American League in hits, average, OBP, slugging, OPS, and WAR.
- Dutch Leonard was fourteen strikeouts away from winning the Triple Crown.
- Babe Ruth emerged as a bone fide superstar, batting .354/.465/.576 and setting the single-season home run record.

Achievements & Milestones
- Ruth became the first man to hit three home runs in a single game, going deep in all three at-bats against Howie Camnitz in Pittsburgh on August 16th.
- Walter Johnson (Detroit) hit for the cycle while playing as the designated hitter against the White Sox on June 13th, one of nine appearances for Johnson as a non-pitcher.
- George Dumont (Braves) broke the single-season saves record.
- Mike Donlin (Providence), Solly Hofman (Packers), and Freddy Parent (Phillies) all reached 2000 hits.
- Tom Hughes (White Sox) and Ed Walsh (Brooklyn) won their 200th games.
- Charles Bender (Yankees) struck out his 2000th batter.

ALCS
- Detroit defeated New York, 3 games to 2.
- 1B Marty Kavanagh was MVP, as he went 7-18 with a homer.
- The Yankees scored three runs in the ninth inning of Game Two, to win 5-4 and level the series.
- Lefty Tyler (Detroit) threw a sublime three-hitter in Game Three, re-taking the series lead.
- Doc Ayers (New York) came back with a Game Four shutout, sending the series to a decisive final game.
- Game Five was a pitchers' duel between Walter Johnson (Detroit) and Chief Bender (New York). Johnson was victorious, as the Tigers' ace won 2-1, and sent his team to the World Series for the first time.
- Eddie Collins (New York) struggled, going only 3-19.
NLCS
- Louisville defeated Boston, 3 games to 1.
- The MVP was Vean Gregg, who threw eight scoreless innings in Game One, as Louisville won 4-0, and then a complete game two-hitter in Game Four, as the Colonels won 1-0, and secured the pennant for the first time.
- Donie Bush went 6-13 for Louisville.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) was not effective, as he managed only two hits.

World Series
- Detroit defeated Louisville, 5 games to 3.
- Walter Johnson was the series MVP, allowing one run in 15.1 innings of work.
- Johnson threw a brilliant shutout in Game Three, allowing only three hits and three walks.
- Game Four took an extra frame to decide, as Donie Bush (Louisville) hit a walk-off single in the bottom of the eleventh frame.
- Vean Gregg continued his NLCS form in Game Five, throwing a shutout, as the Cols won 3-0.
- Game Six was a marathon. Tillie Shafer (Detroit) was the hero in the end, cracking a line drive to score Heinie Heitmuller in the fifteenth inning.
- Reb Russell (Louisville) came up huge in Game Seven, as his two-hit shutout kept the series alive for the Colonels.
- Tillie Shafer was 10-35, with hits at crucial moments.
- Harry Hooper (Detroit) struggled, going only 4-27.
- Edd Roush (Louisville) was 13-31.

Retirements
- Fred Beebe. 1907 AL Most Outstanding Pitcher. Cleveland ace, who picked up a ring in 1916. 181-113 career record, with a 2.38 ERA.
- Roger Bresnahan. Nine-time All-Star backstop for the Orioles. Eight Silver Sluggers for the offensive powerhouse catcher.
- Johnny Evers. The outstanding defensive second baseman of his generation, recognized with ten Gold Gloves. Strong career for Cleveland and the Phillies.
- Zaza Harvey. Speedy outfielder who led league in base thefts three times. Four All-Star nods, four Silver Sluggers, and two rings with the White Sox.
- Honus Wagner. Five-time MVP, generally considered to be one of the greatest players of all-time. 1901 and 1912 World Series MVP, and won three rings with the Pirates. Thirteen-time All-Star.
- Hooks Wiltse. NL Most Outstanding Pitcher in 1901, 1911, and 1913. 216-142 career record. Known for his dominating curveball. Ace of the Dodgers staff for more than a decade.

Off-Season
- The Senators chose Austin McHenry with the first overall pick.
- Outfielder Johnny Mostill went second to the Quakers.
- The Red Sox opted for Charlie Hollocher at #3.
- Waite Hoyt was the first pitcher off the board, to the Cubs at five.
- The Cubs traded started Ed Summers to the Red Sox for four prospects, including outfielder Socks Seibold.
- Washington traded Elmer Smith and a minor leaguer to the Yankees for starter Bert Gallia.
- The Phillies traded starter Ray Fisher to the NL champion Colonels for two prospects.
- The Cardinals traded veteran hurler Bill Donovan to the Yankees for two hitting prospects.


Babe Ruth set a home run record as he won the National League MVP.


Walter Johnson of the Tigers was World Series MVP.

Last edited by Jamee999; 11-19-2019 at 01:48 PM.
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Old 11-19-2019, 12:50 AM   #22
Jamee999
All Star Reserve
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1918

Changes
  • Erase all injuries - This benefits Max Carey (Yankees) who was set to miss most of the season.
  • Add fictional player - Roy Hobbs, a 19-year-old first baseman from Nebraska, was added to the game. He signed with Cleveland.
  • Expand FA - Players will become free agents after 13 years of major league service time.
American League
Milwaukee Brewers (89-51)
Chicago White Sox (87-53)

Detroit Tigers (80-60)
Baltimore Orioles (77-63)
Kansas City Athletics (73-67)
New York Yankees (73-67)
Boston Red Sox (67-73)
Minnesota Twins (64-76)
Cleveland Indians (59-81)
Providence Angels (59-81)
Washington Senators (58-82)
Philadelphia Quakers (54-86)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (2nd award)
AL CYA: Frank Corridon (Chicago)
AL ROY: Charlie Hollocher (Boston)

National League
Boston Braves (89-51)
Louisville Colonels (80-61)

New Jersey Nationals (80-62)
Brooklyn Dodgers (79-62)
New York Giants (72-68)
Kansas City Packers (70-70)
Philadelphia Phillies (70-70)
Pittsburgh Pirates (67-73)
Cincinnati Reds (65-75)
Chicago Cubs (61-79)
Buffalo Bisons (58-82)
St. Louis Cardinals (51-89)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (2nd award)
NL MOP: Hod Eller (Boston)
NL ROY: Tom Sheehan (Kansas City)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .358, George Sisler (New York) .362
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 16, Babe Ruth (Boston) 20
Runs Batted In: Elmer Smith (New York) 102, Babe Ruth (Boston) 82
Stolen Bases: Tillie Shafer (Detroit) 40, George Moriarty (Philadelphia) / Ray Schalk (Philadelphia) 28
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 10.4, Rabbit Maranville (Boston) 8.3

Wins: Herb Pennock (Chicago) 23, Hod Eller (Boston) 22
ERA: Frank Corridon (Chicago) 1.50, Rube Kroh (New Jersey) 1.36
Strikeouts: Harry Krause (Boston) 163, George Ruth (New Jersey) 131
Saves: Fred Applegate (Chicago) 25, George Dumont (Boston) 35
WAR: Charles Bender (New York) 8.7, Ed Walsh (Brooklyn) 7.6

Notes
- Milwaukee's superstar pairing of Speaker and Hornsby powered the Brewers to the top of the American League.
- Chicago's excellent pitching gave the White Sox an ALCS bid.
- There was a three-way tie between Brooklyn, Louisville, and New Jersey for the second NLCS spot. George Ruth (New Jersey) threw seven strong innings to eliminate Brooklyn, 6-2, but Louisville won 3-1 the next day, to set a rematch of last year's NLCS.
- Hornsby hit .358/.432/.591 with 26 triples.
- Hornsby and Ruth were the only two men to hit more than eight homers.
- 37-year-old Frank Corridon had by far the best season of his career, spearheading Chicago's pennant push.
- Sisler's batting average was nearly 30 points better than any other NL hitter.
- The Braves led the NL in nearly every offensive category, and cruised to the joint-best record in baseball even with average pitching.
- Roy Hobbs (Cleveland) batted .234 in 99 games.
- The Red Sox traded veteran outfielder Jimmy Sheckard to Providence for two minor leaguers.
- The Braves traded Frank Gilhooley to Milwaukee for pitcher Rube Benton and a minor leaguer

Achievements & Milestones
- Ferdie Schupp (Philadelphia Quakers) threw a no-hitter against the Red Sox.
- Ty Cobb (Brooklyn) had a 33-game hitting streak split between 1917 and 1918.
- Bill Bradley (Brooklyn) joined Ginger Beaumont in the 2500 hits club.
- Jimmy Sebring (St. Louis), Eddie Collins (Yankees), and Sherry Magee (Brooklyn) all passed 2000 hits.
- Walter Johnson (Detroit) and Harry Krause (Red Sox) won their 200th games and struck out their 2000th batters. Jack Harper (Pittsburgh) also won #200.
- Bill Donovan (Cincinnati) became the first man to make 500 starts on the mound.

ALCS
- Milwaukee defeated Chicago, 3 games to 1.
- Outfielder Frank Gilhooley was MVP, going 7-15.
- Frank Corridon (Chicago) threw a shutout in Game One.
- Frank Lange (Milwaukee) sealed the series with a four-hit shutout in Game Four.
- Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) was 6-15, but Rogers Hornsby struggled, only picking up two hits.
- Milwaukee won the pennant for the first time since 1904.
NLCS
- Boston defeated Louisville, 3 games to 0.
- Rabbit Maranville was the series MVP. He batted 6-12.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) hit a two-run homer as part of a five-run rally for the Braves in the bottom of the first inning of Game One.
- Ruth and Zack Wheat had RBI singles in the top of the tenth inning in Game Three, powering the Braves to a series-clinching 3-1 win.
- Closer George Dumont had a big series, picking up two wins in relief.
- The Braves' third pennant.

World Series
- Milwaukee defeated Boston, 5 games to 4.
- Tris Speaker was MVP. The Grey Eagle went 16-35 with 8 RBI.
- Zack Wheat (Boston) went 5-5 with a triple in Game One.
- Milwaukee launched a furious two-out comeback in Game Two, scoring five runs in the top of the ninth to win 7-6 and level the series.
- The Brewers won Game Three in eleven innings, with a double and a steal from Fred Merkle allowing catcher Hank Gowdy to drive him in for a 5-4 win.
- A pitchers' duel between Fred Toney and Tom Hughes was settled in Milwaukee's favor in Game Eight, as Mike Mowrey cracked the game-winning double in the bottom of the tenth, giving the Brewers the 1-0 win.
- The Brewers won Game Nine 5-2, with Frank Gilhooley, Speaker, and Rogers Hornsby all driving home runs. Frank Lange picked up the win on the mound.
- Gilhooley (Milwaukee) was 11-32 facing the team he was traded away from midseason. Hornsby batted 8-33 with 4 RBI.
- Pete Alexander (Milwaukee) lost all three of his starts against Hod Eller.
- Tex McDonald and Zack Wheat (Boston) both went 18-37.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) struggled, batting only .194, though he did hit two home runs.
- Milwaukee previously won the World Series in 1904.

Retirements
- Heinie Berger. 1912 NL MOP. Member of 1911 Braves championship team. 155-93 record, 2.64 ERA. Overpowering stuff, but career started late, and injuries hampered his effectiveness after 30.
- Elmer Flick. 11-time All-Star, with 2454 career hits. Won two Gold Gloves, and was an effective outfielder for the Phillies for a long time. 1913 NLCS MVP.
- Jack Harper. Cardinals workhorse, winning a ring in 1903. 208-195, 2.78 ERA. Member of a big-league rotation at 40.
- Freddy Parent. Shortstop who was a key member of Boston's 1900s dynasty, winning five rings. Six-time All-Star, 1908 WS MVP. 2004 career hits, and more than 1000 RBI.

Draft
- The Cardinals chose Frankie Frisch with the first pick in the draft.
- Al Wingo went second to the Quakers.
- Washington chose Cliff Lee at #3.
- Buffalo elected for Earl Smith fourth.


Rogers Hornsby was AL MVP and a world champion.


Hod Eller was NL Most Outstanding Pitcher, and won three World Series games, but his Braves still fell just short of a title.

Last edited by Jamee999; 11-19-2019 at 01:48 PM.
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Old 11-19-2019, 01:45 PM   #23
Jamee999
All Star Reserve
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1919

Changes
  • Shorten playoffs - the LCS is eliminated, only the top team in the league will make the postseason.
  • Random playoff rule - the World Series will revert to the 4 home, 4 away, 1 home format.
  • 3 more fan loyalty - Providence's fan loyalty is increased from 7 to 10.
Off-Season
- The Phillies traded starter Art Nehf to Louisville for catching prospect Cy Perkins.
- Charles Bender moved from the Yankees to the Cubs in free agency.
- Veteran Bill Bradley left Brooklyn, signing with the Tigers.
- AL Cy Young winner Frank Corridon moved from the White Sox to Pittsburgh.
- Bill Donovan left the Reds, and returned to Brooklyn.
- Tom Hughes moved across town from the White Sox to the Cubs.
- Ed Walsh replaced Corridon and Hughes, moving from the Dodgers to the White Sox.

American League
Baltimore Orioles (88-52)
Milwaukee Brewers (87-53)
Cleveland Indians (81-59)
Chicago White Sox (80-60)
Detroit Tigers (77-63)
Minnesota Twins (71-69)
Providence Angels (67-73)
New York Yankees (63-77)
Philadelphia Quakers (59-81)
Kansas City Athletics (58-82)
Boston Red Sox (56-84)
Washington Senators (53-87)

AL MVP: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) (4th award, 2nd in AL)
AL CYA: Walter Johnson (Detroit) (3rd award)
AL ROY: Dickey Kerr (Detroit)

National League
Boston Braves (91-49)
New York Giants (84-56)
Louisville Colonels (79-61)
Brooklyn Dodgers (77-63)
Kansas City Packers (77-63)
New Jersey Nationals (71-69)
Chicago Cubs (70-70)
Pittsburgh Pirates (65-75)
Philadelphia Phillies (59-81)
St. Louis Cardinals (57-83)
Buffalo Bisons (55-85)
Cincinnati Reds (55-85)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (3rd award)
NL MOP: Vean Gregg (Louisville)
NL ROY: Frankie Frisch (St. Louis)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) .376, George Sisler (New York) .369
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 17, Babe Ruth (Boston) 35
Runs Batted In: Jack Tobin (Baltimore) 107, Babe Ruth (Boston) 93
Stolen Bases: Jack Smith (Chicago) 35, Fred Snodgrass (Philadelphia) 36
WAR: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) 9.7, Babe Ruth (Boston) 10.2

Wins: Walter Johnson (Detroit) / Frank Lange (Milwaukee) / Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 21, Erskine Meyer (New York) 22
ERA: Walter Johnson (Detroit) 1.72, Vean Gregg (Louisville) 1.59
Strikeouts: Harry Krause (Boston) 154, Vean Gregg (Louisville) 1.59
Saves: Fred Applegate (Chicago) / Josh Swindell (Baltimore) 23, Tom Sheehan (Kansas City) 30
WAR: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 6.6, Bill Donovan (Brooklyn) 6.6

Notes
- The Orioles won the AL pennant on the last day, as Hank Severeid (Minnesota) hit a walk-off single to down the reigning champion Brewers.
- The Braves cruised to a second-straight NL title.
- Speaker had an outstanding season, batting .376/.431/.593.
- Ruth showed he was the greatest power hitter the world has ever seen, destroying the home run record.
- Vean Gregg was two wins away from the Triple Crown.
- 42-year-old Bill Donovan (Brooklyn) shone on his return, bouncing back from two mediocre seasons to lead the NL in WHIP and WAR.
- Louisville had the best starting rotation in baseball, but poor hitting and bullpen work relegated them to third place in the NL.
- Minnesota traded starter Bill Steen to Baltimore for veteran Hal Chase and a prospect.

Achievements & Milestones
- Joe Judge (Baltimore) hit for the cycle.
- Joe Boehling (KC Packers) and Bill Steen (Baltimore) both threw no-hitters.
- Jimmy Sheckard (White Sox) joined Ginger Beaumont and Bill Bradley in the 2500 hits club.
- Ty Cobb (Brooklyn) tallied his 2000th hit.
- Bill Donovan (Brooklyn) became the first man to win 250 games.
- Glenn Liebhardt (Cubs) and Frank Corridon (Pittsburgh) won their 200th games.
- Ed Walsh (White Sox) became the seventh man to strike out 2000 batters.
- Ralph Caldwell (Louisville) saved his 400th game, a feat never before achieved.
- Walter Johnson (Detroit) became the first starter to throw 300 complete games.

World Series
- Baltimore defeated Boston, 5 games to 3.
- Joe Judge was the series MVP. The first baseman was 11-23 with a homer and three RBI.
- Steve Yerkes (Boston) was the goat in Game One, as he booted a groundball which should have ended the ninth inning, but instead allowed Jack Tobin to score the winning run for the Orioles.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) went 3-5 with a double, a homer, four RBI, and three runs score in Game Two, as the Braves romped to an 11-1 win.
- Bill Steen (Baltimore) took his second victory of the series in Game Five, going the distance as the O's won 5-1.
- A three-run eighth inning rally by Boston in Game Six tied up the series, with the Braves winning 3-1.
- Bob Groom (Baltimore) threw a shutout in Game Seven, taking his team within a game of victory.
- Ruth hit his second homer of the series in Game Eight, but it wasn't enough, as Baltimore won the game and series 5-3.

Retirements
- Ginger Beaumont. The all-time hit king, with 2689 safeties. Won three World Series with the Pirates, with WS MVP in 1912. Four All-Star bids and six Silver Sluggers in center field. 40-game hitting streak in 1908 is still the record.
- Charles Bender. The 35-year-old was forced to retire with a recurring shoulder injury. He was a 197-149 pitcher with a 2.16 ERA, and was named to four All-Star teams, mostly for Duluth/Minnesota.
- Frank Chance. Eight-time All-Star at first base for the Cubs. 1883 career hits, and four Gold Gloves for good defense.
- Mike Donlin. A five-time All-Star and six-time Silver Slugger for the Orioles. 2104 career hits and a .302 average.
- Jeff Pfeffer. 1914 NL MOP. Athletics regretted trading him to Pittsburgh in 1909. Three world titles with the Pirates. 180-141, with a 2.72 ERA.

Draft
- The Senators chose Ray Grimes with the first pick.
- Buffalo opted for Joe Sewell at two.
- Bibb Falk went third to Cincinnati.
- Bob Meusel was the Red Sox's choice with the fourth selection.


Joe Judge was World Series MVP.


Ginger Beaumont retired as the all-time hits leader.
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Old 11-19-2019, 11:10 PM   #24
Jamee999
All Star Reserve
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1920

Changes
  • Change stolen base success (lower) - Steals are now even more likely to fail than before. I haven't covered this too much in the story, but a lot of guys have been getting thrown out more often than they successfully steal, which I think has made the real life high SB guys less valuable than in real life, because they erase a lot of their hits by making outs on the bases.
  • 3 more fan loyalty - St. Louis's fan loyalty was increased from 8 to 10. New Jersey's fan loyalty was increased from 4 to 5.
  • Change hits (larger) - base hits will now be 1.2x as common as in real life.
Off-Season
- Brooklyn traded starter Earl Yingling to the Red Sox for Tillie Shafer and a pitching prospect.
- New Jersey traded ace Dixie Walker to Louisville for second baseman Bill Rodgers and a minor leaguer.
- All-time saves leader Ralph Caldwell moved from Louisville to Baltimore.
- Ty Cobb signed with the White Sox, leaving Brooklyn behind.
- Starter Tom Hughes moved from the Cubs to the Phillies.
- Veteran Jimmy Sheckard signed with the Yankees.

American League
Cleveland Indians (86-55)
Baltimore Orioles (85-56)
Chicago White Sox (81-59)
Minnesota Twins (78-62)
Kansas City Athletics (75-65)
Milwaukee Brewers (74-66)
New York Yankees (68-72)
Boston Red Sox (67-73)
Providence Angels (62-78)
Detroit Tigers (60-80)
Philadelphia Quakers (56-84)
Washington Senators (49-91)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (3rd award)
AL CYA: Harry Krause (Boston) (5th award)
AL ROY: Bob Meusel (Boston)

National League
Boston Braves (97-43)
Louisville Colonels (80-60)
New York Giants (79-61)
Kansas City Packers (78-62)
New Jersey Nationals (72-68)
Philadelphia Phillies (70-70)
Chicago Cubs (65-75)
Buffalo Bisons (64-76)
St. Louis Cardinals (61-79)
Brooklyn Dodgers (58-82)
Cincinnati Reds (58-82)
Pittsburgh Pirates (58-82)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (4th award)
NL MOP: George Ruth (New Jersey)
NL ROY: Joe Sewell (Buffalo)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .467, George Sisler (New York) .492
Home Runs: Bob Meusel (Boston) 24, Babe Ruth (Boston) 37
Runs Batted In: Bubbles Hargrave (Baltimore) 152, Zack Wheat (Boston) 144
Stolen Bases: Max Carey (New York) 25, Donie Bush (Louisville) 24
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 7.2, Babe Ruth (Boston) 9.4

Wins: Herb Pennock (Chicago) 23, Rube Marquard (Boston) 23
ERA: Harry Krause (Boston) 2.87, George Ruth (New Jersey) 3.03
Strikeouts: Harry Krause (Boston) 1.62, Joe Wood (New York) 130
Saves: Fred Link (Kansas City) 22, Ben Van Dyke (Boston) 27
WAR: Harry Krause (Boston) 6.6, Ray Fisher (Philadelphia) 6.2

Notes
- The Orioles swept the Brewers in the last series of the year to force a one-game playoff for the AL pennant with Cleveland. The Indians scored four runs in the seventh inning and six in the eighth to win 14-4.
- The Braves won their final ten games in a row, winning the pennant by seventeen games, their third NL crown on the bounce, as they led the league in almost every offensive category.
- Offense exploded across the big leagues, with many .400 hitters and many records broken. The AL ERA jumped from 3.27 to 5.28, while the NL went from 2.94 to 4.56.
- Hornsby hit .467/.530/.762, a record for slugging percentage.
- Bubbles Hargrave became the first man to break 150 RBI in a single season.
- Charlie Deal (Washington) set a record with 29 triples.
- Sisler was six hits shy of .500.
- Ruth hit .430/.540/.703, and scored a record 176 runs.

Achievements & Milestones
- Dave Bancroft (KC Packers), Fred Luderus (Cleveland), Bill Lamar (Baltimore), Wally Pipp (Cubs), Frank O'Rourke (New Jersey), Charlie Hollocher (Red Sox), Jimmy Johnston (Braves), Jack Tobin (Baltimore), and Babe Pinelli (Providence) all had six hits in a game. Lamar set a record by being the first player to have a 7-7 day.
- George Sisler and Happy Felsch (both NY Giants) hit for the cycle.
- Jimmy Johnston (Braves) had a record-breaking 50-game hit streak.
- Fred Nicholson (St.Louis) hit in 48 straight games, while Bobby Veach (KC Athletics) had one in 47 consecutively.
- Tris Speaker (Milwaukee), Zack Wheat (Braves), Frank Baker (Quakers), Joe Jackson (Pittsburgh), and Heinie Zimmerman (Phillies) all reached 2000 hits.
- Red Ames (Milwaukee) and Ed Walsh (White Sox) won their 200th games.
- Bill Bradley (Detroit) and Jimmy Sheckard (NY Yankees) both passed Ginger Beaumont's all-time hits record.

World Series
- Boston defeated Cleveland, 5 games to 4.
- Steve O'Neill was the MVP, going 21-38 with 6 RBI.
- Game Nine ended in walk-off fashion, as after Maranville and Ruth walked, and Zack Wheat bunted them across to 2nd and 3rd, O'Neill singled into left field, giving the Braves a 5-4 victory. Ruth had already hit two solo home runs earlier in the game.
- Ruth went 14-37 with six homers and 11 RBI.
- First baseman George Burns (Boston) was 14-34 with 6 RBI.
- Rube Marquard (Boston) picked up two wins.
- Pat O'Farrell (Cleveland) had a strong series, batting 18-40.
- Boston's second title.

Retirements
- Bobby Byrne. Strong third baseman for the Brewers and Reds. 1145 career hits, and led the AL in runs and doubles in excellent 1912 season.

Draft
- The Senators chose Riggs Stevenson first overall.
- Goose Goslin was the Quakers' choice at #2.
- Kiki Cuyler went third to the Reds.


George Ruth was the NL MOP.


George Sisler took advantage of the live ball, batting .492.

Last edited by Jamee999; 11-19-2019 at 11:23 PM.
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Old 11-19-2019, 11:40 PM   #25
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WORLD CHAMPIONS, 1901 - 1920

1901: Pittsburgh d. Boston (AL)
1902: Boston (AL) d. St. Louis (NL)
1903: St. Louis (NL) d. Baltimore
1904: Milwaukee d. Pittsburgh
1905: Boston (AL) d. St. Louis (NL)
1906: Boston (AL) d. Pittsburgh
1907: Boston (AL) d. Cincinnati
1908: Boston (AL) d. Pittsburgh
1909: Philadelphia (AL) d. Brooklyn
1910: Pittsburgh d. Washington
1911: Boston (NL) d. Boston (AL)
1912: Pittsburgh d. Providence
1913: Chicago (AL) d. Philadelphia (NL)
1914: Providence d. Brooklyn
1915: Chicago (AL) d. Boston (NL)
1916: Cleveland d. Buffalo
1917: Detroit d. Louisville
1918: Milwaukee d. Boston (NL)
1919: Baltimore d. Boston (NL)
1920: Boston (NL) d. Cleveland

CAREER LEADERBOARDS

AVG: George Sisler (NY Giants) .376 - Retired Leader: Nap Lajoie .347
OBP: John McGraw .453 - Active Leader: Joe Judge (Baltimore) .437
SLG: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .525 - Retired Leader: Nap Lajoie .490
OPS: George Sisler (NY Giants) .935 - Retired Leader: Nap Lajoie .884

Runs: Jimmy Sheckard (NY Yankees) 1381 - Active Second: Pete Hill (Brooklyn) 1215
Hits: Bill Bradley (Detroit) 2744 - Second: Jimmy Sheckard (NY Yankees) 2724
Doubles: Bill Bradley (Detroit) 520 - Active Second: Ty Cobb (White Sox) 442
Triples: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) 242 - Active Second: Eddie Collins (NY Yankees) 200
Home Runs: Babe Ruth (Braves) 148 - Active Second: Sherry Magee (Brooklyn) 106

RBI: Jimmy Williams 1255 - Second: Bill Bradley (Detroit) 1157
Stolen Bases: Pete Hill (Brooklyn) 758 - Second: Eddie Collins (NY Yankees) 600
Walks: Jimmy Sheckard (NY Yankees) 1432 - Active Second: Pete Hill (Brooklyn) 1199
WAR: Pete Hill (Brooklyn) 1a11.9 - Active Second: Tris Speaker (Milwaukee) 95.1

Wins: Bill Donovan (Brooklyn) 264 - Second: Red Ames (Milwaukee) 251
Winning %: Cy Young .760 - Active Leader: Hod Eller (Braves) .664
Games Started: Bill Donovan (Brooklyn) 577 - Second: Tom Hughes (Phillies) 539
ERA: Noodles Hahn 1.91 - Active Leader: Walter Johnson (Detroit) 1.96
WHIP: Cy Young 0.91 - Active Leader: Walter Johnson (Detroit) 0.95

Shutouts: Harry Krause (Red Sox) 68 - Second: Walter Johnson (Detroit) 67
Strikeouts: Red Ames (Milwaukee) 2498 - Second: Bill Donovan (Brooklyn) 2451
Saves: Ralph Caldwell (Baltimore) 403 - Second: Homer Hillebrand (Cubs) 324
WAR: Ed Walsh (White Sox) 97.8 - Second: Walter Johnson (Detroit) 97.5
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Old 11-20-2019, 11:51 PM   #26
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1921

Changes
  • 4-team expansion - For 1922, the Toronto Blue Jays and the St. Louis Browns will be added to the American League. The Indianapolis Hoosiers and the Columbus Clippers will join the National League.
  • Suspend random 4*+ - Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee), the reigning AL MVP, was suspended for the entirety of the 1921 season.
  • Fire manager - The Quakers' skipper was relieved of his duties.
Off-Season
- Washington traded veteran Pete Alexander to the Giants for catching prospect Johnny Walker.
- The Tigers traded ace Walter Johnson to Baltimore for three prospects.
- Free agent Ty Cobb moved from the White Sox back to Brooklyn.
- Eddie Collins signed with the Kansas City Athletics, having previously manned the second bag for the Yankees.
- Starter Bill Donovan moved from the Dodgers to the Red Sox.

American League
Baltimore Orioles (92-48)
Kansas City Athletics (80-60)
Chicago White Sox (79-61)
Cleveland Indians (74-66)
Minnesota Twins (72-68)
Washington Senators (69-71)
Boston Red Sox (68-72)
New York Yankees (67-73)
Detroit Tigers (66-74)
Providence Angels (65-75)
Philadelphia Quakers (62-78)
Milwaukee Brewers (46-94)

AL MVP: Bubbles Hargrave (Baltimore)
AL CYA: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) (2nd award)
AL ROY: Lu Blue (Providence)

National League
Boston Braves (91-49)
St. Louis Cardinals (90-50)
Louisville Colonels (87-53)
New York Giants (78-62)
Buffalo Bisons (72-68)
Kansas City Packers (65-75)
Cincinnati Reds (63-77)
Brooklyn Dodgers (62-78)
Chicago Cubs (61-79)
Pittsburgh Pirates (60-80)
Philadelphia Phillies (59-81)
New Jersey Nationals (52-88)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (5th award)
NL MOP: Duster Mails (St. Louis)
NL ROY: Lew Fonseca (Brooklyn)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Eddie Collins (Kansas City) .486, Joe Sewell (Buffalo) .480
Home Runs: High Pockets Kelly (Chicago) 33, Babe Ruth (Boston) 70
Runs Batted In: Bill Lamar (Baltimore) 164, Babe Ruth (Boston) 201
Stolen Bases: Cliff Heathcote (Kansas City) 29, George Sisler (New York) 31
WAR: Johnny Bassler (New York) 7.8, Babe Ruth (Boston) 10.9

Wins: Harry Suter (Kansas City) 22, Tom Seaton (Boston) 22
ERA: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 3.75, Vean Gregg (Louisville) 3.18
Strikeouts: Harry Krause (Boston) 156, Pete Schneider (Boston) 130
Saves: Red Causey (Philadelphia) 19, Jesse Baker (St. Louis) / Buddy Napier (Louisville) 32
WAR: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 6.3, Tom Seaton (Boston) 6.6

Notes
- The Orioles batted .402 as a team, and had the strongest offense in the majors.
- Game 140 was a de facto one-game playoff between the Braves and the Cardinals. The game was tied at 2-2 with two outs in the top of the ninth, before a crucial error by rookie Frank Parkinson allowed Jimmy Johnston to reach base. Rabbit Maranville walked, and then Ruth, Zack Wheat and Steve O'Neill hit back-to-back-to-back singles, bringing home three runs, and taking the Braves to their fourth straight pennant.
- Dutch Leonard was the only AL pitcher with an ERA under four, as run scoring continued to explode.
- The Brewers collapsed to the worst record in baseball, as Rogers Hornsby was absent for the entire year.
- Ruth hit .476/.562/.951, and broke countless records.
- The Indians traded Urban Shocker to the Athletics for third baseman Earl Smith and a minor league pitcher.
- Sam Rice was traded from the Cubs to the White Sox. Veteran Red Ames and a pitching prospect went the other way across town.
- The Nationals traded veteran Ed Konetchy to Minnesota for three prospects.

Achievements & Milestones
- Babe Ruth (Braves) and Whitey Witt (Cleveland) each had three home runs in a game. Ruth had previously been the only person to do so, in 1917.
- Twelve players had six hits in a game. Wally Gerber (Cleveland) had seven, while Bubbles Hargrave (Baltimore) and High Pockets Kelly (White Sox) both totaled nine hits during their efforts.
- Kelly's six hit day saw him hit for the cycle. Babe Ruth hit for the cycle twice in 1921, while Marty Krug (Detroit), Frank Gilhooley (Milwaukee), Ben Paschal (Milwaukee), Elmer Smith (NY Yankees) and Austin McHenry (Washington) also collected all four base hits.
- Bernie Friberg (Minnesota) had a 60-game hitting streak. Austin McHenry (Washington) and Bob Meusel (Red Sox) also tallied hits in at least 50 consecutive games.
- Al Bridwell (Milwaukee), Frank Schulte (NY Yankees), Jake Daubert (KC Athletics), Ed Konetchy (Minnesota), Amos Strunk (Baltimore), and Fred Merkle (Milwaukee) all reached 2000 hits.
- Eddie Collins (KC Athletics) passed 2500 hits.
- Joe Wood (NY Giants) and Ray Collins (Minnesota) won their 200th games.
- Walter Johnson (Baltimore), Tom Hughes (Phillies), and Harry Krause (Red Sox) joined the 250 win club.
- Red Ames (Cubs) and Harry Krause (Red Sox) became the first two men to strike out 2500 batters.

World Series
- Baltimore defeated Boston, 5 games to 0.
- Bill Cunningham was the MVP. He went 10-15 with four homers, and drove in ten.
- Babe Ruth and Hack Miller both homered in Game One, but the Braves still lost, 9-5.
- Harry Coveleski (Baltimore) was huge in Game Two, allowing just one run as he went the distance in a 9-1 win.
- Rookie Cunningham had two doubles and two homers in Game Four, as the Orioles won 21-10, and won the four first games of the series in Charm City.
- Walter Johnson (Baltimore) sealed the sweep by allowing just a single run in Game Five.
- Joe Judge (Baltimore) was 11-18. Jack Tobin (Baltimore) had fourteen hits.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) went 7-9 with two homers against his hometown club.

Retirements
- Bill Bradley. Outstanding two-way third baseman who retired as the all-time leader in doubles and total bases, and third in hits with 2754. A career .283 hitter, with fourteen Gold Gloves. 1916 World Champion with Cleveland.
- Bill Carrigan. Catcher made three All-Star teams for the White Sox in the early 1910s. Won a Gold Glove and a Silver Slugger. Also played significantly for the Reds and Packers, finishing with 1509 career hits.
- Frank Corridon. Journeyman starter who broke out as a 37-year-old to win the AL Cy Young Award in 1918. Pitched for seven teams, never for more than five years in one place. Career 217-216 record, with an above average ERA.
- Pete Hill. Five-time AL MVP. Arguably the greatest player of his generation. 11-time Gold Glover in center field, five world titles and two WS MVPs with Boston in the 1900s. Extremely effective hitter, fielder and baserunner in the heart of the deadball era. Retires as career leader in steals and WAR.
- Tom Hughes. 253-game winner as a workhorse starter for the Cubs. Reliable moundsman with career 2.89 ERA, but also most career losses.
- Jimmy Sheckard. All-time leader in games, at bats, runs, hits, and walks. 2808 hits and seven All-Star bids, mostly for Brooklyn and Detroit. .287 career hitter.
- Ed Walsh. 1916 AL Cy Young award winner and world champion with Cleveland. Five All-Star appearances, five Gold Gloves, 258-213 career record with a 2.76 ERA. Minnesota's decision to trade him to Cleveland in 1912 is considered a blunder.

Draft
- Teams were allowed to protect 12 players in the expansion draft.
- St. Louis chose outfielder Amos Strunk (Baltimore) first.
- Tony Boeckel (Louisville) went to Indianapolis at #2.
- NL wins leader Tom Seaton (Braves) was sent to Toronto with the third pick.
- Columbus opted for 1919 NL MOP Vean Gregg (Louisville) with their first pick.
- In the regular draft, the Clippers picked catcher Gabby Hartnett first overall.
- George Grantham was picked second by Toronto.
- Travis Jackson was #3 for Indianapolis.
- The Browns picked Topper Rigney fourth.
- The Phillies picked up Jim Bottomley at seven.


Bubbles Hargrave was American League MVP.


Jimmy Sheckard retired as the all-time leader in hits.
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Old 11-21-2019, 07:08 PM   #27
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1922

Changes
  • Change HOF setting - Players will be HoF-eligible two years after retiring.
  • 20 years later stats - The baseline for stats will now be 1942, moving forward each year.
  • Change spring training - Spring training will now be two weeks long.
Off-Season
- Minnesota traded hurler Eddie Plank Jr. to Buffalo for catcher Les Nunamaker and a minor leaguer.
- The Athletics traded starting second baseman Johnny Rawlings to the Phillies for catcher Ray Schalk.
- Veteran starter Red Ames signed with the New York Giants in free agency.
- First baseman Ed Konetchy moved to Louisville.
- Tris Speaker moved from Milwaukee to Cleveland, becoming the best-paid player in baseball.

American League
Cleveland Indians (89-51)
Chicago White Sox (83-57)
Baltimore Orioles (77-63)
Kansas City Athletics (77-63)
Milwaukee Brewers (75-65)
Boston Red Sox (71-69)
St. Louis Browns (70-70)
Minnesota Twins (67-73)
Washington Senators (66-74)
Providence Angels (65-75)
Toronto Blue Jays (63-77)
Detroit Tigers (59-81)
New York Yankees (59-81)
Philadelphia Quakers (59-81)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (4th award)
AL CYA: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) (3rd award)
AL ROY: Joe Hauser (Philadelphia)

National League
Boston Braves (97-43)
New York Giants (90-50)
Buffalo Bisons (85-55)
Chicago Cubs (84-56)
Brooklyn Dodgers (75-65)
Louisville Colonels (73-67)
Philadelphia Phillies (72-68)
Pittsburgh Pirates (67-73)
Kansas City Packers (64-76)
St. Louis Cardinals (60-80)
Indianapolis Hoosiers (57-83)
New Jersey Nationals (55-85)
Columbus Clippers (53-87)
Cincinnati Reds (48-92)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (6th award)
NL MOP: Rube Marquard (Boston)
NL ROY: Jim Bottomley (Philadelphia)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .432, Babe Ruth (Boston) .449
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 44, Babe Ruth (Boston) 75
Runs Batted In: Clyde Barnhart (Kansas City) 144, Babe Ruth (Boston) 176
Stolen Bases: Joe Judge (Baltimore) 22, Sam Bohne (Louisville) 23
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 10.4, Babe Ruth (Boston) 14.2

Wins: Harry Suter (Kansas City) 23, Joe Wood (New York) 19
ERA: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 2.76, Erskine Mayer (New York) 2.45
Strikeouts: Harry Suter (Kansas City) 170, Rube Marquard (Boston) 164
Saves: Clarence Mitchell (Baltimore) 26, Marv Goodwin (Chicago) 34
WAR: Harry Suter (Kansas City) 8.3, Pete Schneider (Boston) 7.5

Notes
- Tris Speaker led his new Cleveland team to their third pennant.
- The Braves won the NL for the fifth straight year.
- Baltimore had a strong season at the plate, but, except for Walter Johnson, they were a weak pitching team, and so failed to defend their title.
- The resurrected Browns surprisingly finished .500 as an expansion team.
- Hornsby was 11 RBI away from the AL Triple Crown, and set an AL record for home runs.
- League-wide offense fell somewhat from the highs of 1921, but Ruth went from strength-to-strength, winning the first Triple Crown in NL history, and setting records in slugging, OPS, homers, and WAR.
- Fred Snodgrass (Phillies) walked a record 131 times.

Achievements & Milestones
- Ruth had two more three-HR days. He has now done this four times, and only one player has ever managed it.
- Guy Zinn (NY Yankees), Babe Twombly (Milwaukee), Al Wingo (Quakers), Mike Menosky (Cardinals), Bill Lamar (Baltimore), and Heinie Mueller (Providence) all had six hit days.
- Charlie Grimm (Baltimore) hit for the cycle.
- Harry Krause (Red Sox) and Carmen Hill (Brooklyn) threw no-hitters, the first since 1919. Krause previously threw a no-no for the Angels in 1911.
- Billy Southworth (Washington) had a 33-game hitting streak, the longest in baseball.
- Larry Gardner (Red Sox) and Bill Sweeney (Braves) reached 2000 hits.
- Ty Cobb (Brooklyn), Tris Speaker (Cleveland), and Zack Wheat (Braves) joined the 2500 hit club.
- Harry Coveleski (Baltimore) won his 200th game.
- Joe Wood (NY Giants) struck out his 2000th hitter.
- Walter Johnson (Baltimore) joined Harry Krause and Red Ames in the 2500 K club.

World Series
- Cleveland defeated Boston, 5 games to 2.
- Tris Speaker was the MVP. The outfielder was 15-30 with 8 RBI. He had previously been the 1918 WS MVP for Milwaukee.
- Game One ended 6-5 in thirteen innings. Rookie Bert Griffith (Boston) singled home Pat Duncan, who scored from second.
- George Smith went the distance to pick up the win in the deciding game.
- Zack Wheat (Boston) missed the series through injury.
- Roy Hobbs (Cleveland) was 13-26 with six RBI. Pat O'Farrell (Cleveland) was 12-30.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) batted 10-26 with five homers and 11 RBI.
- Cleveland previously won the World Series in 1916.

Retirements
- Bill Donovan. All-time wins leader, at a 280-243 record with a 2.90 ERA, mostly for Brooklyn. Five All-Star bids as a durable workhorse, but was also NL ERA king in 1912.
- Glenn Liebhardt. 239-209 career record for the Athletics, Cubs, and Phillies. Ring in 1909, All-Star in 1916. Veteran who rarely missed a start in 16 years.

Draft
- Cincinnati chose Lou Gehrig first overall.
- Hack Wilson was the second pick by Columbus.
- The New Jersey Nationals drafted Bill Terry at #3.
- Indianapolis picked Heinie Manush fourth.


Tris Speaker won World Series MVP in his first year in Cleveland.


Rube Marquard was the National League's Most Outstanding Pitcher.
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Old 11-22-2019, 04:56 PM   #28
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1923

Changes
  • Change triples (lower) - Triples will now be less common than real life.
  • Change SP stam (larger) - Starters will now have Very High stamina.
  • 3 less fan loyalty - Washington's fan loyalty was reduced from 7 to 4.
Off-Season
- The Packers traded shortstop Dave Bancroft to the world champion Indians for four minor leaguers.
- The Braves traded outfielder Hack Miller to the Giants for starter Erskine Mayer and a second base prospect.
- Veteran third baseman Frank Baker signed with Cleveland.
- Joe Jackson moved from the Pirates to the Quakers.
- Ace Harry Krause left the Red Sox, returning to Providence, where he played from 1908 to 1916.
- NL MOP Rube Marquard signed with the Phillies from the Braves.
- Fred Snodgrass left the Phillies, signing with the Kansas City Athletics.
- Joe Wood, a star outfielder and starter, left the Giants to sign with the Brewers.

American League
Cleveland Indians (107-33)
Baltimore Orioles (90-50)
Providence Angels (84-56)
Milwaukee Brewers (79-61)
Kansas City Athletics (74-66)
Minnesota Twins (70-70)
Chicago White Sox (68-72)
Philadelphia Quakers (65-75)
Boston Red Sox (63-77)
New York Yankees (60-80)
Detroit Tigers (58-82)
St. Louis Browns (57-83)
Washington Senators (56-84)
Toronto Blue Jays (49-91)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (5th award)
AL CYA: Harry Krause (Providence) (6th award)
AL ROY: Eddie Moore (Minnesota)

National League
Boston Braves (90-50)
Chicago Cubs (84-56)
Brooklyn Dodgers (82-58)
Louisville Colonels (76-64)
St. Louis Cardinals (75-65)
New York Giants (74-66)
Buffalo Bisons (71-69)
New Jersey Nationals (69-71)
Philadelphia Phillies (69-71)
Pittsburgh Pirates (66-74)
Indianapolis Hoosiers (64-76)
Cincinnati Reds (60-80)
Columbus Clippers (53-87)
Kansas City Packers (47-93)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (7th award)
NL MOP: Pete Donohue (New Jersey)
NL ROY: Heinie Manush (Indianapolis)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .448, Jim Bottomley (Philadelphia) .415
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 20, Babe Ruth (Boston) 27
Runs Batted In: Charlie Grimm (Baltimore) 147, Travis Jackson (Indianapolis) 103
Stolen Bases: Joe Judge (Baltimore) 29, George Sisler (New York) 31
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 10.4, Joe Sewell (Buffalo) 7.8

Wins: Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) 24, Bernie Boland (Buffalo) / Carl Weilman (Pittsburgh) 21
ERA: Guy Morton (Providence) 2.68, Jack Quinn (Louisville) 2.31
Strikeouts: Harry Krause (Providence) 209, Pete Schneider (Boston) 158
Saves: Ralph Comstock (Milwaukee) 29, George Dumont (Boston) 34
WAR: Harry Krause (Providence) 8.8, Eddie Plank Jr. (Buffalo) 7.0

Notes
- The Indians soared to a record 107-win season, leading the AL in run scoring and prevention. Roy Hobbs, Pat O'Farrell, Dave Bancroft, and Dutch Leonard were the stars, as veteran Tris Speaker missed most of the year through injuries.
- The Braves won an unprecedented sixth straight pennant, and set up a rematch of the 1920 and 1922 World Series.
- Hobbs hit .408/.502/.547.
- Hornsby hit .448/.526/.660 for the best OPS mark in baseball.
- Ruth came back down to earth from his unmatched 1921 and 1922 seasons, as his OPS dropped by more than 400 points, to .384/.492/.604.

Achievements & Milestones
- Charlie Hollocher (Red Sox), Whitey Witt (Cleveland), and Hack Miller (NY Giants) had six hit games.
- Joe Judge (Baltimore) hit for the cycle.
- Harry Hooper (Detroit), Max Carey (NY Yankees), Red Smith (Buffalo), Fred Snodgrass (KC Athletics), Donie Bush (Columbus), Hi Myers (Columbus), and Tex McDonald (Quakers) all reached 2000 hits.
- Joe Jackson (Quakers) crossed 2500 hits.
- Eddie Collins (KC Athletics) became the first man to collect 3000 base hits and the first to 1500 runs scored.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) became the first player to hit 300 home runs.
- Rube Marquard (Phillies), Lew Moren (NY Yankees), Carl Weilman (Pittsburgh), and Ray Fisher (Phillies) reached 200 wins.
- Walter Johnson (Baltimore) became the first pitcher to win 300 games.
- Lu Blue (Providence) set a record by walking 123 times.

World Series
- Cleveland defeated Boston, 5 games to 4.
- Roy Hobbs was the Series MVP, batting 18-32 with 6 RBI.
- Game One ended in a walkoff win for Cleveland, as Dave Bancroft singled home Tris Speaker to give the Tribe a 2-1 win.
- Game Five was a classic. It was settled by good hitting from the bottom of Boston's order. Rookie Freddie Maguire drove home Steve O'Neill, giving the Braves the 4-3 win. Pete Schneider was huge for Boston, allowing only three earned runs in eleven innings.
- The next day, Boston lead 4-3 after eight innings, but Cleveland rallied in the top of the ninth, with a single from Burrus, and then two-out hits from Witt, Hobbs, Speaker, Harper, and Bob O'Farrell, giving the Indians the 7-4 victory.
- Game Seven saw a comeback win by Boston. Trailing 8-7 going into the bottom of the ninth, Rabbit Maranville doubled, Bill Sweeney walked, Freddie Maguire reached on an error by Dave Bancroft, and then pinch hitter Larry Gardner drove two runs home to win the game.
- Cleveland barraged 15 runs on 23 hits in Game Eight to level the series.
- Hobbs, Pat O'Farrell and George Harper had key hits as Cleveland won Game Nine, 10-4.
- Catcher Bob O'Farrell (Cleveland) was 17-35, while George Harper went 16-41 with an amazing 16 RBI. Pat O'Farrell batted 15-42.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) was 17-34 with a single homer.
- Cleveland's third title and second in a row. The Braves have now only won one of their six straight World Series appearances.

Retirements
- Vean Gregg. 1917 WS MVP, and 1919 NL MOP. 165-139 career record, mostly with Kansas City and Louisville. Four-time All-Star.
- Ed Konetchy. Five-time All-Star who excelled for Brooklyn and New Jersey. 2158 career hits and a .293 average.

Draft
- The Packers picked second baseman Charlie Gehringer first.
- Chick Hafey went second to Toronto.
- Columbus chose Al Simmons at #3.
- Max Bishop went to the Senators, fourth overall.


Roy Hobbs was the World Series MVP.


Eddie Collins was the first player to reach 3000 hits.

Last edited by Jamee999; 11-22-2019 at 04:58 PM.
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Old 11-22-2019, 09:52 PM   #29
Jamee999
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Posts: 769
1924

Changes
  • Suspend random prospect - SP Red Lucas (Louisville) is suspended for the entire season.
  • Historic schedule - The schedule will now be 154 games long.
  • Weaken FA - Free agency will now only be for 17-year veterans.
Off-Season
- Ace Red Ames moved from the Giants to Brooklyn in free agency.
- Frank Baker returned to the Quakers, after playing for Cleveland in 1923.
- Starter Dixie Walker moved from Louisville to Brooklyn.

American League
Cleveland Indians (108-46)
Providence Angels (97-57)
Kansas City Athletics (96-58)
Chicago White Sox (85-69)
Milwaukee Brewers (85-69)
Baltimore Orioles (81-73)
Detroit Tigers (79-75)
Philadelphia Quakers (78-76)
Boston Red Sox (70-84)
Washington Senators (67-87)
Minnesota Twins (66-88)
Toronto Blue Jays (61-93)
St. Louis Browns (57-97)
New York Yankees (48-106)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (5th award)
AL CYA: Harry Krause (Providence) (7th award)
AL ROY: Glenn Wright (St. Louis)

National League
Indianapolis Hoosiers (94-61)
Brooklyn Dodgers (93-62)
Louisville Colonels (90-64)
Boston Braves (88-66)
St. Louis Cardinals (87-67)
New Jersey Nationals (86-68)
Cincinnati Reds (74-80)
Buffalo Bisons (73-81)
New York Giants (71-83)
Philadelphia Phillies (71-83)
Chicago Cubs (69-85)
Columbus Clippers (67-87)
Pittsburgh Pirates (67-87)
Kansas City Packers (49-105)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (8th award)
NL MOP: Pete Donohue (New Jersey) (2nd award)
NL ROY: Freddie Lindstrom (Cincinnati)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .461, Lew Fonseca (Brooklyn) .446
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 38, Babe Ruth (Boston) 66
Runs Batted In: Clyde Barnhart (Kansas City) 145, Babe Ruth (Boston) 172
Stolen Bases: Jack Smith (Chicago) 28, George Sisler (New York) 28
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 9.2, Babe Ruth (Boston) 12.2

Wins: Harry Krause (Providence) 26, Hod Eller (Indianapolis) 24
ERA: Harry Krause (Providence) 2.44, Pete Donohue (New Jersey) 2.21
Strikeouts: Harry Krause (Providence) 216, Bill James (Louisville) 169
Saves: Charlie Becker (Detroit) / Bill Evans (Cleveland) 30, Tim McCabe (Brooklyn) 33
WAR: Harry Suter (Kansas City) 9.8, Pete Donohue (New Jersey) 8.8

Notes
- The Indians continued to excel, winning their third consecutive pennant.
- The NL playoff was settled by a two-out walk-off hit by Travis Jackson, who drove home Irish Meusel to give the Hoosiers a 4-3 victory and their first pennant. Indianapolis is the first team from the 1922 expansion to reach the World Series.
- Hornsby hit .461/.540/.799.
- Harry Krause won the Triple Crown, a feat he had previously achieved in 1912. No other pitcher has ever led his league in wins, earned run average, and strikeouts.

Achievements & Milestones
- Rookie Phil Todt (Buffalo) hit three homers in a game. Only Whitey Witt and Babe Ruth (four times) had previously done so.
- Denver Grigsby (Buffalo), Lew Fonseca (Brooklyn), and Lance Richbourg (KC Athletics) had six hit days.
- Denver Grigsby (Buffalo) and Joe Judge (Baltimore) hit for the cycle.
- Fonseca had a 53-game hitting streak, while Charlie Grimm (Baltimore) had one of 47 games.
- Ted Easterly (Columbus), Jack Fournier (Brooklyn), Lee Magee (Cincinnati), George Sisler (NY Giants), Bobby Veach (KC Athletics), Del Pratt (Minnesota), Ping Bodie (NY Yankees), Jimmy Johnston (Braves), and Milt Stock (Minnesota) all reached 2000 hits.
- Frank Baker (Quakers) and Amos Strunk (Red Sox) passed 2500 hits.
- Harry Suter (KC Athletics), Herb Pennock (White Sox), Dixie Walker (Brooklyn), Dutch Leonard (Cleveland), Reb Russell (Louisville), and Joe Bush (White Sox) won their 200th games.
- Joe Wood (Milwaukee) passed 250 wins.
- Harry Krause (Providence) and Red Ames (Brooklyn) joined the 300 win club.
- Harry Krause (Providence) struck out his 3000th batter, the first man to do so.
- Ty Cobb (Brooklyn) passed Bill Bradley to become the all-time doubles leader.
- Zack Wheat (Braves) became the RBI king.
- Eddie Collins (KC Athletics) became the career leader in position player WAR.

World Series
- Cleveland defeated Indianapolis, 5 games to 3.
- Roy Hobbs won his second straight World Series MVP, batting 13-38 with 5 RBI.
- Travis Jackson (Indianapolis) hit a three-run walk-off homer in the tenth inning of Game One, and Hughie Critz (Indianapolis) singled to win Game Three in the bottom of the tenth.
- The Indians rallied to tie the series in the top of the tenth inning of Game Four, with RBI singles from Pat O'Farrell and Bob O'Farrell.
- Roy Hobbs hit a walk-off single in Game Seven.
- Dutch Leonard threw six strong innings in Game Eight, as the Indians won the World Series for the third straight year.
- The O'Farrells both had 7 RBI, while George Harper had twelve hits.
- Travis Jackson had 13 RBI, batting 14-36 for the Hoosiers.

Retirements
- Art Fletcher. An outstanding two-way shortstop for Providence and Pittsburgh, who won nine Gold Gloves and accrued 1955 hits on his way to three All-Star appearances and a ring in 1914.
- Larry Gardner. 1913 NL MVP and 1911 WS MVP. .319 career hitter for 2044 hits and four All-Star trips for the Braves and Red Sox.
- Heinie Zimmerman. Fine second and third baseman who hit safely 2341 times over a long career for Duluth/Minnesota, the Phillies, Quakers, Cleveland, and Buffalo.

Draft
- The Yankees picked Jimmie Foxx with the first overall pick.
- Catcher Mickey Cochrane was the second choice for the Kansas City Packers.
- The Browns picked Buddy Myer at three.
- The Blue Jays opted for Shanty Hogan fourth.
- The Senators spent the seventh selection on Lefty Grove.


Pete Donohue won his second consecutive NL MOP award.


Travis Jackson starred on the pennant-winning Indianapolis Hoosiers.
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Old 11-22-2019, 11:48 PM   #30
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1925

Changes
  • Change hits (smaller) - Hits will now be 70% as common as real life.
  • Take [team] 5*SS money - The Quakers' budget was reduced by $49k.
  • Change triples (larger) - Triples will return to normal rates.
Off-Season
- The Yankees traded catcher Johnny Gooch to Washington for outfielder Austin McHenry and a minor league pitcher.
- Starter Red Ames signed in free agency with the Reds.

American League
Cleveland Indians (96-59)
Baltimore Orioles (95-60)
Milwaukee Brewers (92-62)
Providence Angels (92-62)
Philadelphia Quakers (86-68)
Kansas City Athletics (81-73)
Chicago White Sox (75-79)
Detroit Tigers (74-80)
St. Louis Browns (69-85)
Washington Senators (69-85)
Minnesota Twins (67-87)
Toronto Blue Jays (67-87)
Boston Red Sox (59-95)
New York Yankees (57-97)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (6th award)
AL CYA: Harry Krause (Providence) (8th award)
AL ROY: Dick Cox (Chicago)

National League
Boston Braves (90-64)
Indianapolis Hoosiers (86-68)
New York Giants (86-68)
Chicago Cubs (85-69)
New Jersey Nationals (85-69)
Brooklyn Dodgers (83-71)
Louisville Colonels (80-74)
Buffalo Bisons (76-78)
St. Louis Cardinals (73-81)
Cincinnati Reds (70-84)
Philadelphia Phillies (67-87)
Kansas City Packers (66-88)
Pittsburgh Pirates (66-88)
Columbus Clippers (65-89)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (9th award)
NL MOP: Elmer Knetzer (Boston)
NL ROY: Mandy Brooks (Buffalo)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .262, Babe Ruth (Boston) .277
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 34, Babe Ruth (Boston) 61
Runs Batted In: Joe Hauser (Philadelphia) 78, Babe Ruth (Boston) 105
Stolen Bases: Joe Judge (Baltimore) 27, Sparky Adams (Cincinnati) 23
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 15.3, Babe Ruth (Boston) 16.5

Wins: Harry Krause (Providence) / Harry Suter (Kansas City) / Joe Wood (Milwaukee) 22, 4 NL Pitchers 21
ERA: George Smith (Cleveland) 1.43, Percy Jones (Chicago) 1.15
Strikeouts: Lefty Grove (Washington) 199, Charlie Whitehouse (Indianapolis) 167
Saves: Scott Perry (Baltimore) 31, Paul Strand (New York) 36
WAR: Harry Suter (Kansas City) 12.3, Eddie Plank (Buffalo) 11.2

Notes
- Cleveland lost their final four regular season games, leading to a one-game playoff with the Orioles. The Indians won 8-0, with George Smith throwing a shutout.
- Boston broke out of a fierce multi-way battle for the NL pennant to return to the World Series.
- The depression in base hits made power hitters like Hornsby and Ruth even more valuable as both leagues had record low ERAs.
- Hornsby batted .262/.368/.548, while Ruth was .277/.402/.662.

Achievements & Milestones
- Mickey Cochrane (KC Packers) hit for the cycle.
- Jim Shaw (Browns) threw the first perfect game in big league history. He struck out four Senators on May 11th.
- There were 15 total no-hitters. Bill Steen (Baltimore) and Ferdie Schupp (Cubs) both threw their second career no-no, while Harry Krause (Providence) threw his third and fourth lifetime no-hitter during the season, blanking both Detroit and Boston.
- Babe Ruth (Braves), Rabbit Maranville (Braves), Roger Peckinpaugh (Brooklyn), Ray Chapman (Baltimore), Steve O'Neill (Braves), and Harry Heilmann (New Jersey) reached 200 hits.
- Ruth also became the first man to 400 homers.
- Bill James (Louisville) won his 200th game.
- Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) and Harry Suter (KC Athletics) struck out their 2000th batters.
- Red Ames (Cincinnati) joined the 3000 strikeout club.
- Ben Van Dyke (Indianapolis) saved his 300th game.
- Eddie Collins (KC Athletics) became the first man to bat 10000 times.

World Series
- Cleveland defeated Boston, 5 games to 4.
- Doc Crandall (Boston) was the series MVP, going 2-0.
- Crandall threw a two-hit shutout in Game Four, winning 3-0 and tying the series, and then another two-hit shutout in Game Eight, winning 10-0!
- Two-out hits from Billy Southworth and Steve O'Neill in the bottom of the 12th inning of Game Seven kept the series alive, as the Braves won 2-1.
- Three runs in the fifth inning of Game Nine took Boston to a 3-2 victory.
- Pat O'Farrell (Cleveland) struggled, batting only 4-35. Tris Speaker was 8-32, while Bob O'Farrell was 10-30.
- Stars Roy Hobbs and Dutch Leonard both missed the series for Cleveland, while ace Pete Schneider was absent for Boston.
- Billy Southworth (Boston) was 11-35, Bert Griffith was 11-38 for the Braves.
- Babe Ruth was 7-33 with three homers.
- Cleveland joined the Boston Americans (Red Sox) 1905-1908 in winning four straight titles.
- The Braves have been on the losing side in six of the last eight World Series, only winning it all in 1920.

Retirements
- Al Bridwell. 2222 hits, mostly for Cincinnati. Two Gold Gloves at shortstop, as excellent fielding went along with solid hitting in a long career.
- Claude Hendrix. Workhorse who labored for many bad teams, making seven All-Star teams in spite of a 176-208 career record. Mostly played for Cardinals and Reds.
- Sherry Magee. 2400 hits and 499 steals for outfielder with Cubs and Dodgers. Three All-Star nods, as well as a Silver Slugger and a Gold Glove.
- Fred Merkle. 2341 hits for veteran first baseman. Two Silver Sluggers, one All-Star, and a title with Milwaukee in 1918.
- Dixie Walker. Veteran ace who totaled a 215-203 record with 23 saves for Baltimore, New Jersey, Louisville, and Brooklyn.
- Ivey Wingo. 1915 NL MVP. Five-time All-Star catcher for the Braves and Quakers whose career dropped off after showing excellence in his 20s. Three Gold Gloves and two Silver Sluggers showed his ability as an all-around backstop.

Draft
- The Yankees selected Joe Cronin with the first pick.
- Mel Ott went second to the Red Sox.
- Columbus chose Babe Herman at #3.
- Kansas City opted for Paul Waner fourth overall.
- The Pirates drafted Tony Lazzeri fifth.


Percy Jones had the best ERA in baseball.


Doc Crandall allowed no runs and just four hits in two World Series complete games, but his Braves lost the deciding Game Nine.

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Old 11-23-2019, 10:22 AM   #31
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1926

Changes
  • 4-team contraction - The Toronto Blue Jays and the Philadelphia Quakers will be contracted from the AL. The Columbus Clippers and the Kansas City Packers will be removed from the NL.
  • Change Ks (smaller) - strikeouts will now be 40% less common.
  • Change dev speed - Batter and pitcher development speed will be set to 1.1
Off-Season
- Ty Cobb moved from Brooklyn to the NL champion Braves.
- Mickey Cochrane, the Packers' second overall pick in 1924, moved to Milwaukee.
- His former teammate Charlie Gehringer signed with the New Jersey Nationals.
- Quaker Goose Goslin moved to the St. Louis Browns.
- Toronto second baseman George Grantham signed with Baltimore.
- Former Columbus catcher Gabby Hartnett signed with the Dodgers.
- Quakers slugger Joe Hauser moved to the Indianapolis Hoosiers.
- #3 overall pick Babe Herman signed with Detroit.
- Shoeless Joe Jackson signed with Milwaukee.
- Walter Johnson switched from Baltimore to Indianapolis.
- Al Simmons moved from Columbus to the Cardinals.
- Rookie Lloyd Waner signed with the Cardinals as well.
- Slugger Hack Wilson joined the world champion Indians.

American League
Providence Angels (91-64)
Cleveland Indians (90-65)
Baltimore Orioles (87-67)
Milwaukee Brewers (87-67)
Washington Senators (81-73)
Kansas City Athletics (76-78)
St. Louis Browns (76-78)
New York Yankees (74-80)
Boston Red Sox (71-83)
Detroit Tigers (68-86)
Chicago White Sox (66-88)
Minnesota Twins (58-96)

AL MVP: Hack Wilson (Cleveland)
AL CYA: Lew Moren (Chicago / Providence)
AL ROY: Babe Herman (Detroit)

National League
New Jersey Nationals (89-65)
Indianapolis Hoosiers (87-67)
St. Louis Cardinals (87-67)
Boston Braves (84-70)
Chicago Cubs (82-72)
Cincinnati Reds (79-75)
Pittsburgh Pirates (76-78)
Brooklyn Dodgers (72-82)
Buffalo Bisons (71-83)
Louisville Colonels (71-83)
New York Giants (69-85)
Philadelphia Phillies (57-97)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (10th award)
NL MOP: Pete Donohue (New Jersey) (3rd award)
NL ROY: Paul Waner (St. Louis)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Eddie Collins (Kansas City) .240, Babe Ruth (Boston) .277
Home Runs: Hack Wilson (Cleveland) 38, Babe Ruth (Boston) 54
Runs Batted In: Hack Wilson (Cleveland) 90, Babe Ruth (Boston) 104
Stolen Bases: Pat O'Farrell (Cleveland) 19, Freddie Lindstrom (Cincinnati) 14
WAR: Max Bishop (Washington) 9.2, Babe Ruth (Boston) 16.0

Wins: Lew Moren (Providence) 24, Pete Donohue (New Jersey) 26
ERA: Lew Moren (Providence) 1.40, Pete Donohue (New Jersey) 0.98
Strikeouts: Lefty Grove (Washington) 132, Hod Eller (Indianapolis) 117
Saves: Bill Evans (Cleveland) 35, Ben Van Dyke (Indianapolis) 36
WAR: Bill Steen (Baltimore) 8.3, Eddie Plank (Buffalo) 12.3

Notes
- Providence won 13 of their final 14 games to force a playoff with Cleveland, the second straight year an AL tiebreaker game had been required. The Angels rallied to score four runs in the eighth inning, and win the game 5-4 for their first pennant since 1914.
- The Nationals won their first ever pennant.
- The Braves led the NL by six games on June 4th, but came back to earth over the second half of the season.
- Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) missed most of the season with a back injury.
- The Nationals had the best pitching in the NL, and their batting was just good enough to get the pennant.
- Ruth's OPS was nearly 300 points higher than anyone else, and he won the Triple Crown for the second time.
- Louisville traded strong starter Bill James to Philadelphia for an exchange of minor leaguers.
- 42-year-old Lew Moren was traded from the White Sox to the Angels at midseason, and went on to win his first Cy Young Award.

Achievements & Milestones
- There were 19 no-hitters. Earl Whitehill (NY Giants) threw one in consecutive years. Elmer Knetzer (Braves) threw two no-nos in May. Harry Krause (Providence) threw his fifth no-hitter.
- Clarence Mitchell (Baltimore) threw the second perfect game, against the Yankees on September 24th.
- Stuffy McInnis (Kansas City) reached 2000 hits.
- Bill Sweeney (Cubs) and Max Carey (NY Yankees) collected their 2500th hits.
- Zack Wheat (Providence) and Joe Jackson (Milwaukee) joined the 3000 hit club.
- Eddie Collins (Kansas City) became the first man to 3500 hits.
- Babe Ruth (Braves) passed 500 homers.
- Pete Alexander (NY Giants), Bill Steen (Baltimore), and Guy Morton (Providence) won their 200th games.
- Lew Moren (White Sox), Harry Coveleski (Baltimore), Harry Suter (Kansas City), and Ray Collins (Braves) picked up win #250.
- Harry Krause (Providence) and Walter Johnson (Indianapolis) became the first men to win 350 games.
- Pete Donohue (New Jersey) was the first pitcher to have an ERA under 1.
- George Ruth (New Jersey) pitched a record 13 shutouts.

World Series
- Providence defeated New Jersey, 5 games to 4.
- Pete Donohue (New Jersey) was the series MVP, winning two games practically single-handedly, though his teammates couldn't live up to his high standards.
- Donohue went the distance in Game One, allowing a single unearned run as the Nationals won 4-1.
- Second baseman Ossie Bluege hit two homers in Game Two, giving the Angels a 3-1 win.
- Donohue threw a dominant three-hit shutout in Game Five, giving the Nats the lead in the series.
- Providence previously won the World Series in 1914.
- The American League has now won six straight World Series, and 13 of the last 14.

Retirements
- Grover Cleveland Alexander. A workhorse of a starter, even if he was never particularly outstanding. 205-188 career record for seven big league clubs.
- Red Ames. 1907 NL MOP and five-time All-Star. 326-280 career record, with only Harry Krause and Walter Johnson having won more games. World champion with the Braves in 1911. Played for nine teams from 1903 to 1926.
- Harry Hooper. Fine outfielder for Athletics, Tigers, and Twins. 2281 career hits, seven All-Star games, four Silver Sluggers, two Gold Gloves, and rings in 1909 and 1917.
- Wally Schang. Excellent catcher who starred for the Packers and Cardinals. Career .290 hitter with three Silver Sluggers and five All-Star games. 1913 NL Rookie of the Year.
- Bill Sweeney. Career .305 hitter who made three All-Star games at second base. Played for strong Orioles and Braves teams, but never won it all.

Draft
- The Phillies chose shortstop Woody English with the first pick.
- Sam West went second to Minnesota.
- Dick Bartell was the White Sox's pick at three.
- #4 was Red Kress to Detroit.
- Buffalo chose Lloyd Waner seventh.
- The Browns opted for Wes Ferrell at twelve.


Hack Wilson was American League MVP.


42-year-old knuckleballer Lew Moren was the Cy Young Award winner, and was traded to the champion Angels mid-season.

Last edited by Jamee999; 11-23-2019 at 10:26 AM.
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Old 11-23-2019, 02:34 PM   #32
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1927

Changes
  • Random relocation - The Indianapolis Hoosiers were selected for relocation. I used the Census List of Population of the 100 Largest Urban Places in the US in 1930. I picked a city at random from the top 50. They relocated to Fort Worth, becoming the Texas Rangers, the first southern team.
  • 20 years later stats - Stats will now be based on 40 years after the present day.
  • International relocation - The Buffalo Bisons will become the Montreal Expos.
Off-Season
- The Cardinals traded infielder Frank Parkinson to the Cubs for starter Waite Hoyt and a minor leaguer.
- Eight-time AL Cy Young winner Harry Krause and reigning winner Lew Moren both signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

American League
Milwaukee Brewers (98-56)
New York Yankees (86-68)
Baltimore Orioles (83-71)
Cleveland Indians (83-71)
Providence Angels (79-75)
Detroit Tigers (77-77)
Washington Senators (77-77)
Kansas City Athletics (75-79)
Boston Red Sox (71-83)
Chicago White Sox (69-85)
St. Louis Browns (64-90)
Minnesota Twins (62-92)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (7th award)
AL CYA: Earl Hamilton (New York)
AL ROY: Dick Bartell (Chicago)

National League
Boston Braves (96-58)
New Jersey Nationals (91-63)
New York Giants (83-71)
Chicago Cubs (80-74)
Texas Rangers (80-74)
Brooklyn Dodgers (75-79)
St. Louis Cardinals (74-80)
Louisville Colonels (73-81)
Cincinnati Reds (72-82)
Philadelphia Phillies (68-86)
Pittsburgh Pirates (68-86)
Montreal Expos (64-90)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (11th award)
NL MOP: Rube Foster (Boston)
NL ROY: Wally Roettger (Brooklyn)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Babe Herman (Detroit) .251, Babe Ruth (Boston) .294
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) / Hack Wilson (Cleveland) 46, Babe Ruth (Boston) 81
Runs Batted In: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 99, Babe Ruth (Boston) 137
Stolen Bases: Joe Judge (Baltimore) 20, Bill Barrett (Philadelphia) 17
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 13.3, Babe Ruth (Boston) 19.1

Wins: Earl Hamilton (New York) 22, Rube Foster (Boston) 26
ERA: Roy Wilkinson (Washington) 1.29, George Ruth (New Jersey) 1.01
Strikeouts: Lefty Grove (Washington) 277, Bill James (Philadelphia) 170
Saves: Ralph Comstock (Milwaukee) / Red Hoff (Boston) 27, George Dumont (Boston) 40
WAR: Lefty Grove (Washington) 12.9, Rube Foster (Boston) 12.6

Notes
- The Brewers won the pennant for the first time since 1918, with Hornsby, Mickey Cochrane, Dutch Ruether, and Joe Wood starring.
- Babe Ruth hit 19 home runs in his first 24 games as he blew past his own records and slugged the Braves into the World Series as he won his third straight Triple Crown.
- Hornsby was eight points of batting average away from his own Triple Crown.
- Lefty Grove blew past strikeout records despite it being a poor era for pitcher Ks.
- Dutch Henry (NY Giants), a very good 25-year-old hurler, retired with a shoulder injury after going 16-3 with a 1.02 ERA in 1927.

Achievements & Milestones
- George Grantham (Baltimore) had a three home run game.
- Bernie Neis (Cubs) hit for the cycle, an impressive feat in an era of low offense.
- There were 29 no-hitters. Earl Hamilton (NY Yankees) threw his third and fourth, Harry Krause (Brooklyn) threw his sixth, while Jakie May (Cleveland) threw two no-hitters just eleven days apart. Pete Donohue (New Jersey) threw a pair of no-nos against the Dodgers.
- Nemo Leibold (Minnesota), Billy Southworth (Braves), Jack Tobin (Baltimore), and Walton Cruise (Minnesota) all reached 2000 hits.
- George Sisler (NY Giants), and Red Smith (Montreal) passed 2500 hits.
- Ty Cobb (Braves) joined the 3000 hit club.
- Erskine Mayer (Braves), George Ruth (New Jersey), Eddie Plank Jr. (Montreal), Wilbur Cooper (NY Yankees), and Doc Ayers (Browns) won their 200th games.
- Herb Pennock (White Sox) and Dutch Leonard (Cleveland) picked up their 250th wins.
- Joe Wood (Milwaukee) became the fourth man to win 300 games. He also struck out his 2500th batter.
- Eddie Collins (Kansas City) played his 3000th game.
- George Dumont (Braves) set a record by saving 40 games in a single year.
- Walter Johnson (Texas) became the first pitcher to throw 400 complete games.

World Series
- Boston defeated Milwaukee, 5 games to 1.
- Babe Ruth was the series MVP. He was 8-19 with three homers and five RBI.
- Rube Foster (Boston) threw a four-hit shutout in Game One.
- Ruth hit a walk-off homer in Game Two, to win the game 3-2.
- Speed Martin (Milwaukee) allowed only a single hit in Game Three, to bring the series back to 2-1.
- Pete Schneider won the series in Game Six, throwing a shutout, while Ruth hit a pair of homers.
- The Braves' third title in eleven World Series trips.

Retirements
- Ray Fisher. 249-250 career record with the Twins and Phillies.
- Tex McDonald. 2353 hits and four Silver Sluggers at third base. Twice an All-Star, and won a ring in 1920.
- Lew Moren. Workhorse knuckleballer who surprisingly won the 1926 AL CYA. 272-279 career record with a 3.24 ERA. 1926 World Series winner.
- Tris Speaker. One of the outstanding all-around players of all-time. Four-time MVP, 11-time All-Star, 13 Gold Gloves, four batting titles, five World Series wins. 3060 career hits.
- Bobby Veach. 2146 hits for the four-time All-Star with the Twins and Athletics.
- Zack Wheat. 1916 NL MVP. 7-time All-Star, and 8-time Silver Slugger. 3126 hits and a .325 average. 1920 ring with the Braves, and 1926 with Providence.

Draft
- Chuck Klein was the first overall pick for the Twins.
- Catcher Bill Dickey went second to Montreal.
- Pitcher Carl Hubbell was the third pick for the Browns.
- The Phillies picked Ed Morgan at #4.


Earl Hamilton was the AL Cy Young Award winner.


Lefty Grove set the single season strikeout record.
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Old 11-23-2019, 05:58 PM   #33
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A brief history of the Australia-New Zealand Baseball League (AUNZBL 2019-2119)--A Dynasty Report
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Old 11-23-2019, 09:03 PM   #34
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1928

Changes
  • Change secondary (larger) - The secondary roster will now allow up to 42 players.
  • Import HoFer - I chose a random member of the Hall, not including any non-players, or anyone whose career would likely overlap with his real self if I included him. Carlton Fisk was imported. He signed with the Browns, but was assigned to AA.
  • Rename team - The New Jersey Nationals were renamed to the Newark Bears.
Off-Season
- Veteran Ty Cobb signed with the White Sox, whom he previously played for in 1920.
- Ace Smokey Joe Wood moved from Milwaukee to their rival, Cleveland.

American League
Minnesota Twins (90-64)
Milwaukee Brewers (87-67)
Providence Angels (86-68)
Cleveland Indians (83-71)
Boston Red Sox (80-74)
New York Yankees (80-74)
Baltimore Orioles (76-78)
Kansas City Athletics (73-81)
Washington Senators (73-81)
St. Louis Browns (71-83)
Chicago White Sox (64-90)
Detroit Tigers (61-93)

AL MVP: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) (8th award)
AL CYA: Lefty Grove (Washington)
AL ROY: Chuck Klein (Minnesota)

National League
Boston Braves (89-65)
Montreal Expos (87-67)
St. Louis Cardinals (87-67)
Texas Rangers (85-69)
Brooklyn Dodgers (78-76)
Louisville Colonels (78-76)
Pittsburgh Pirates (76-78)
New York Giants (75-79)
Philadelphia Phillies (74-80)
Chicago Cubs (69-85)
Newark Bears (67-87)
Cincinnati Reds (59-95)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (12th award)
NL MOP: Pete Donohue (Newark) (4th award)
NL ROY: Don Hurst (Pittsburgh)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) .279, Babe Ruth (Boston) .257
Home Runs: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 64, Babe Ruth (Boston) 67
Runs Batted In: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 119, Babe Ruth (Boston) 127
Stolen Bases: George Grantham (Baltimore) 15, Carl Reynolds (New York) 15
WAR: Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) 17.3, Babe Ruth (Boston) 16.2

Wins: Hugh McQuillan (Minnesota) 22, Duster Mails (St. Louis) 21
ERA: Guy Morton (Providence) 1.37, Dixie Leverett (Texas) 1.04
Strikeouts: Lefty Grove (Washington) 237, George Earnshaw (New York) 195
Saves: Moses Yellow Horse (Milwaukee) 32, Epp Sell (St. Louis) 39
WAR: Lefty Grove (Washington) 11.5, Pete Donohue (Newark) 11.5

Notes
- The Twins rode an excellent pitching staff to the best record in baseball, and their first pennant.
- The Braves won their 11th pennant in 13 years.
- Hornsby was the first AL hitter to win the Triple Crown since Jack Fournier in 1916.
- Ruth won his fourth straight Triple Crown.

Achievements & Milestones
- Babe Ruth (Braves) and Don Hurst (Pittsburgh) hit three homers in a game. It is the fifth time that Ruth has done so.
- Ray Kremer (Providence) threw a perfect game on April 4th against the White Sox.
- Hod Eller (Texas) threw three no-hitters, including two in back-to-back starts.
- Burleigh Grimes (Cubs), Eddie Rommel (Newark), Joe Wood (Cleveland), Pete Donohue (Newark) and Tommy Thomas (Cubs) all threw their third career no-hitters.
- High Pockets Kelly (White Sox), Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee), Charlie Deal (Louisville), and Whitey Witt (Cleveland) reached 2000 hits.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) picked up his 2500th hit. He also became the first man to hit 600 home runs.
- Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) joined Ruth in the 300 homer club.
- Hod Eller (Texas) won his 200th game.
- Bullet Joe Bush (Cardinals) won game #250.
- Bill James (Philadelphia) struck out his 2000th batter.
- Harry Krause (Brooklyn) became the first pitcher to reach 3500 Ks.
- George Dumont (Braves) saved his 300th game.
- Joe Jackson (Milwaukee) and Ty Cobb (White Sox) broke the 600 doubles barrier.

World Series
- Boston defeated Minnesota, 5 games to 2.
- Babe Ruth was the World Series MVP. He was 9-23 with an amazing six home runs.
- Rube Foster (Boston) allowed only one hit, a solo homer to rookie Chuck Klein, as the Braves won Game One 2-1.
- Harry Harper (Minnesota) threw a shutout in Game Three, as the Twins took the lead in the World Series for the first time.
- Ruth hit two homers in Game Six, as the Braves won 5-3 and took a 4-2 lead in the series.
- Ruth hit two more homers in Game Seven, as the Braves took the series.
- Rube Foster won both of his starts.
- Chuck Klein was 9-25 for Minnesota.
- The Braves win back-to-back rings.

Retirements
- Max Carey. Reliable center fielder who totaled 2584 hits and 357 steals. Three All-Star games for the Browns and Yankees star.
- Ray Collins. Workhorse starter for nearly two decades. 265-215 record, 2.97 ERA. Championship with the Braves in 1927. Also had long stretches with Washington and Minnesota.
- Jack Fournier. Fearsome deadball era slugger who won the AL Triple Crown in 1916. 2413 hits, and five All-Star games, though he was often let down by lackluster fielding.
- Walter Johnson. One of the finest pitchers of all-time. Three-time MOP, 16-time All-Star, two-time WS MVP, for a 372-256 record with a 2.26 ERA. 417 complete games are most ever.
- Dutch Leonard. Three-time AL Cy Young winner, as ace of Cleveland's dynasty, winning four rings. Led league in wins three times, ERA three times, and strikeouts twice. 270-159, 2.59 ERA.
- Hi Myers. 2323 career hits and six Gold Gloves in center field for Louisville, Cincinnati, and the Browns.
- Eddie Plank Jr. 221-188 record for a career that surpassed his father. Excelled in his late 30s for Buffalo/Montreal.
- Del Pratt. Doubles machine at second base. 2221 hits, and 458 two base blows. Two Gold Gloves, two Silver Sluggers, three All-Stars.
- Fred Snodgrass. Veteran outfielder known for fine plate discipline. 2396 career hits, and a .410 OBP. Four All-Star bids, and a ring in 1909 with the A's.
- Amos Strunk. 2731 hits and three Gold Gloves for the center fielder. Four world championships in long career anchored by stints with the White Sox, Orioles, and Red Sox.
- Ben Van Dyke. Star closer who was his league's Reliever of the Year three times. Championship with Providence in 1914, Detroit in 1917, and the Braves in 1920. 381 career saves.

Draft
- Cincinnati selected Earl Averill first overall.
- Outfielder Johnny Frederick went second to Detroit.
- The White Sox picked Dale Alexander third.


Babe Ruth and Rogers Hornsby won their respective leagues' Triple Crowns.


Chuck Klein was AL Rookie of the Year, and led the Twins to the pennant.
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Old 11-24-2019, 12:22 AM   #35
Tieran
Minors (Single A)
 
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Is there any way when players retire that you could mention ERA+ or OPS+? It's hard to tell if a 2.59 Career ERA is good with the rapidly changing environment in this league.
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Old 11-24-2019, 10:30 AM   #36
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1929

Changes
  • Change DH - both leagues will now use the DH.
  • 3 less fan loyalty - Milwaukee's fan loyalty is reduced from 7 to 4.
  • 10 more fan interest - Cardinals' fan interest increased from 81 to 91.
Off-Season
- Veteran ace Joe Wood signed with the Twins, the franchise he started his career with.

American League
Providence Angels (88-66)
St. Louis Browns (84-70)
Minnesota Twins (83-71)
Boston Red Sox (81-73)
Detroit Tigers (80-74)
Chicago White Sox (79-75)
Milwaukee Brewers (79-75)
Cleveland Indians (77-77)
Kansas City Athletics (73-81)
Washington Senators (71-83)
Baltimore Orioles (65-89)
New York Yankees (64-90)

AL MVP: Chuck Klein (Minnesota)
AL CYA: Lefty Grove (Washington)
AL ROY: Johnny Frederick (Detroit)

National League
Newark Bears (93-61)
Boston Braves (91-63)
St. Louis Cardinals (87-67)
Cincinnati Reds (84-70)
Pittsburgh Pirates (83-71)
Philadelphia Phillies (81-73)
Texas Rangers (79-75)
Chicago Cubs (77-77)
Montreal Expos (70-84)
New York Giants (65-89)
Brooklyn Dodgers (60-94)
Louisville Colonels (54-100)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (13th award)
NL MOP: Pete Donohue (Newark) (5th award)
NL ROY: Earl Averill (Cincinnati)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) .253, Babe Ruth (Boston) .260
Home Runs: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) 56, Babe Ruth (Boston) 74
Runs Batted In: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) 120, Babe Ruth (Boston) 123
Stolen Bases: Jack Smith (Chicago) 28, Bernie Neis (Chicago) 20
WAR: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) 10.6, Babe Ruth (Boston) 15.4

Wins: Guy Morton (Providence) 23, Pete Donohue (Newark) 25
ERA: Joe Wood (Minnesota) 1.37, Pete Donohue (Newark) 1.34
Strikeouts: Lefty Grove (Washington) 263, George Earnshaw (New York) 165
Saves: John Sullivan (Providence) 31, Dutch Ulrich (Pittsburgh) 28
WAR: Lefty Grove (Washington) 12.1, Pete Donohue (Newark) 12.6

Notes
- The Angels won their first pennant since 1926, although their run differential was only +17, considerably worse than both Minnesota and Boston.
- Newark's excellent pitching and defense let them overcome Babe Ruth's fearsome power hitting. The team also played in the 1926 World Series, although they were known as the New Jersey Nationals.
- Klein won the Triple Crown, as did Ruth, for the sixth time.
- Lou Gehrig (Cincinnati) had a great season, bashing 47 homers and finishing second in the NL in OPS.
- The Yankees traded veteran ace Earl Hamilton to Kansas City for a minor leaguer.

Achievements & Milestones
- Earl Averill (Cincinnati) hit three homers in a game.
- Alex Ferguson (Philadelphia) and Carl Hubbell (Browns) both threw perfect games. Hubbell also threw two other no-hitters.
- Edd Roush (Texas), Pat O'Farrell (Cleveland), Happy Felsch (NY Giants), Bill Lamar (White Sox), Johnny Bassler (NY Yankees), and Joe Judge (Baltimore) all reached 2000 hits.
- Babe Ruth (Braves) hit his 700th homer.
- Burleigh Grimes (Cubs), Elmer Knetzer (Texas), Rube Foster (Braves), Ray Keating (Detroit), Bill Doak (Kansas City), and Dutch Reuther (Milwaukee) won their 200th games.
- Bill James (Philadelphia) and Guy Morton (Providence) passed 250 wins.
- Herb Pennock (White Sox) joined the 300 wins club.
- Guy Morton (Providence), Herb Pennock (White Sox), and George Ruth (Newark) struck out their 2000th hitters.

World Series
- Newark defeated Providence, 5 games to 2.
- Pete Donohue was the series MVP, winning both of his starts. He had previously been MVP on the losing side in 1924.
- Donohue threw a shutout in Game One, as the Bears won 1-0.
- Ray Blades (Newark) bashed three doubles in Game Two, but Providence won 8-7.
- Huck Betts (Providence) out-dueled George Ruth in Game Three, winning 2-0.
- Game Four took eleven innings to settle. Taylor Douhit (Newark) doubled home Ray Blades to give the Bears the 2-1 win.
- Newark scored three runs in the top of the ninth in Game Five, winning 3-2.
- George Ruth threw a shutout in Game Seven to secure the series for the Bears.
- Blades was the best hitter for Newark, going 7-25.
- Babe Pinelli (Providence) batted 10-22.
- Newark's first championship. They are the first NL team other than the Braves to win the World Series since the 1912 Pirates.

Retirements
- Dave Bancroft. Fine two-way shortstop who won three Gold Gloves. Back-to-back-to-back titles with Cleveland from 1923 to 1925. Only a 98 OPS+, and struggled to produce in his mid-to-late 30s, but his glove more than made up for it.
- Ray Chapman. Four-time All-Star who had a career 112 OPS+ as a shortstop. Won ring with Baltimore in 1919 and 1921.
- Ty Cobb. 1913 and 1914 AL MVP. Outstanding hitter who made 11 All-Star games and won five batting titles. Rings in 1914 and 1927. 3083 hits and a 156 OPS+, and would have accrued even more impressive stats if it weren't for recurring injuries.
- Harry Coveleski. 259-178 in long career for Reds, Cubs, Dodgers, Orioles, and Bears, winning two rings. 116 ERA+.
- Elmer Knetzer. 1925 NL MOP who broke out in his late 30s on the Braves dynasty. 211-156 record, but only a 109 ERA+.
- Harry Krause. Arguably the greatest pitcher of all-time. 384-216 record, 2.24 ERA and 146 ERA+. Eight Cy Young Awards, 1912 ALCS MVP, 1914 WS MVP, and two rings. Career leader in many stats, including wins, shutouts, and strikeouts.
- Erskine Mayer. Veteran hurler who was Knetzer's teammate with the Braves. 247-189, 116 ERA+.
- Steve O'Neill. One of the outstanding catchers of his generation. Ten All-Star teams, seven Silver Sluggers, and the 1920 WS MVP. Starting backstop for three championships with the Braves, and many other pennant-winners. 118 OPS+ and nearly 2000 games caught.
- Roger Peckinpaugh. Shortstop who starred for Buffalo and Brooklyn. 2219 hits, 107 OPS+ for a very consistent and reliable veteran.
- Bill Steen. Important pitcher for strong Baltimore teams of the 20s, winning two rings. 234-193, 3.17 ERA, 105 ERA+.

Draft
- Louisville picked Hank Greenberg with the first pick.
- Brooklyn opted for Wally Berger at two.
- Luke Appling was the Yankee's choice at three.
- Dizzy Dean went to the Giants fourth.
- #6 was Lefty Gomez for Montreal.


Babe Ruth won his fifth straight Triple Crown.


Carl Hubbell threw an eleven-inning perfect game.

Last edited by Jamee999; 11-24-2019 at 02:54 PM.
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Old 11-24-2019, 02:36 PM   #37
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1930

Changes
  • Change trade deadline (later) - The trade deadline is moved to August 10th.
  • Remove minor league - AA is deleted, leaving only AAA.
  • Change BBs (higher) - Walks will now be 50% more common than real life, an interesting factor with hits and strikeouts already down.
Off-Season
- Montreal traded starter George Uhle to the Red Sox for two minor leaguers.
- Smokey Joe Wood signed with the Boston Braves.

American League
Minnesota Twins (94-60)
St. Louis Browns (91-63)
New York Yankees (79-75)
Washington Senators (79-75)
Detroit Tigers (78-76)
Boston Red Sox (77-77)
Providence Angels (76-78)
Chicago White Sox (72-82)
Milwaukee Brewers (72-82)
Cleveland Indians (71-83)
Kansas City Athletics (71-83)
Baltimore Orioles (64-90)

AL MVP: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) (2nd award)
AL CYA: Lefty Grove (Washington) (3rd award)
AL ROY: Ben Chapman (Baltimore)

National League
Boston Braves (100-54)
Cincinnati Reds (93-61)
Newark Bears (91-63)
Pittsburgh Pirates (81-73)
Texas Rangers (78-76)
Chicago Cubs (77-77)
Brooklyn Dodgers (76-78)
Montreal Expos (70-84)
Philadelphia Phillies (70-84)
New York Giants (67-87)
St. Louis Cardinals (65-89)
Louisville Colonels (56-98)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (14th award)
NL MOP: Pete Donohue (Newark) (6th award)
NL ROY: Wally Berger (Brooklyn)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) .294, Babe Ruth (Boston) .297
Home Runs: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) 68, Babe Ruth (Boston) 64
Runs Batted In: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) 138, Earl Averill (Cincinnati) 143
Stolen Bases: Ben Chapman (Baltimore) 17, Bernie Neis (Chicago) / Carl Reynolds (New York) 15
WAR: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) 12.7, Babe Ruth (Boston) 13.9

Wins: Lefty Grove (Washington) 23, Pete Schneider (Boston) 27
ERA: Jakie May (Cleveland) 1.77, Pete Donohue (Newark) 1.13
Strikeouts: Lefty Grove (Washington) 249, Lefty Gomez (Montreal) 177
Saves: Elmer Ponder (Minnesota) 31, Frank Woodward (Cincinnati) 30
WAR: Lefty Grove (Washington) 15.4, Red Lucas (Louisville) 12.8

Notes
- Chuck Klein's second Triple Crown powered the Twins to the pennant.
- Boston returned to the postseason, setting up a rematch of the 1927 World Series.
- If Grove had conceded one fewer earned run, he would have won the Triple Crown.
- The Angels slipped from the AL pennant to a losing record.
- The first time since 1916 that Ruth didn't lead the NL in runs scored.
- Cincinnati's power hitting duo of Earl Averill and Lou Gehrig wasn't enough to challenge the Braves.
- Newark led the league in run prevention, but were outhit by Boston and Cincinnati.
- Cleveland traded Whitey Witt to the Yankees for two young pitchers.

Achievements & Milestones
- Lou Gehrig (Cincinnati), Harry Rice (Providence), Johnny Gill (Providence), and Earl Averill (Cincinnati) all hit three home runs in a game.
- Marty McManus (Cardinals), Dick Burrus (Minnesota), and Lyn Lary (Washington) hit for the cycle.
- Joe Wood (Braves) and Burleigh Grimes (Cubs) threw perfect games.
- Austin McHenry (NY Yankees), Ross Youngs (Louisville), and Ray Morgan (NY Giants) reached 2000 hits.
- Milt Stock (Cubs) and Harry Heilmann (Newark) collected their 2500th hit.
- George Smith (Cleveland), Pete Schneider (Newark), and Al Mamaux (Minnesota) won game #200.
- Joe Wood (Braves) became the third man to win 350 games.

World Series
- Boston defeated Minnesota, 5 games to 3.
- Ace Rube Foster was the series MVP, winning both his starts, and allowing just a single earned run in 17 IP.
- Al Mamaux (Minnesota) threw a shutout in Game Three, allowing a hit and four walks, as the Twins won 2-0.
- Chuck Klein (Minnesota) single-handedly tied the series in Game Four, hitting two solo homers to give the Twins the 2-1 victory.
- Foster was the dominant hurler in Game Five, shutting out the Twins, as the Braves won 3-0 to retake the lead.
- Boston won Game Six in a walk-off, as catcher Rollie Hemsley hit the first pitch of the bottom of the eleventh inning for a home run.
- Minnesota tied Game Seven in the top of the ninth, after being down to their last out. Klein then hit a two-run home run in the top of the 15th inning, as the Twins won 6-4.
- Joe Wood (Boston) secured the championship for the Braves, allowing just one run in Game Eight, as his B's won 4-1.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) had a quiet World Series, going just 5-31 with a single homer.
- Pat Crawford (Boston) was 8-31 with two homers and eight RBI.
- Klein batted 8-36 with four homers and eight RBI.
- Boston's third title in four years, and their fifth overall.

Retirements
- Doc Ayers. Workhorse who pitched excellently for bad teams in New York and St. Louis. 234-250 with a 113 OPS+.
- George Harper. An important piece of the Cleveland dynasty who won four consecutive rings. Career 127 OPS+ and a .300 batting average in left field.
- Joe Jackson. One of the finest hitters of all-time. Eleven times an All-Star, and eleven Silver Sluggers. A .318 average, 162 OPS+, and 3280 hits in a long career for New Jersey, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia Quakers, Milwaukee, and the Cubs.
- Rabbit Maranville. 1915 AL MVP in Chicago. Star shortstop who was an important complement to the power hitting of Babe Ruth in Boston. 2430 hits, 100 OPS+, six Gold Gloves, six rings, and the 1918 NLCS MVP.
- George Smith. Another Cleveland Indian who won four World Series, the ace made four All-Star games, and picked up 207 wins.
- Red Smith. Third baseman who won ALCS MVP and the World Series with Providence in 1914. 2586 hits, five All-Star games, and a 123 OPS+.

Draft
- The Colonels drafted Ripper Collins first overall.
- Billy Herman went second to Baltimore.
- The Cardinals picked catcher Ernie Lombardi at three.


Joe Wood threw a perfect game, picked up his 350th win, and won the clinching game of the World Series.


Earl Averill denied Babe Ruth another Triple Crown.
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Old 11-24-2019, 02:51 PM   #38
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
3000 Hits: *Eddie Collins, Joe Jackson, Zack Wheat, Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker
500 Doubles: Joe Jackson, Ty Cobb, Amos Strunk, Bill Bradley, John Anderson
400/500/600/700 Home Runs: *Babe Ruth
500 Stolen Bases: Pete Hill, *Eddie Collins, Donie Bush, Frank Isbell, Clyde Milan
90 WAR: *Babe Ruth, *Eddie Collins, *Rogers Hornsby, Ty Cobb, Pete Hill, Tris Speaker, Honus Wagner, Rabbit Maranville, Freddy Parent, Bill Bradley

300 Wins: Harry Krause, Walter Johnson, *Joe Wood, Red Ames, *Herb Pennock
2500 Strikeouts: Harry Krause, Walter Johnson, Red Ames, *Joe Wood
60 Shutouts: Harry Krause, Walter Johnson, *Joe Wood, *George Ruth, *Herb Pennock, Red Ames, *Guy Morton, *Pete Donohue, *Bill James, Ed Walsh, *Burleigh Grimes, Dutch Leonard
90 WAR: Harry Krause, Walter Johnson, *Joe Wood, Harry Suter, Red Ames, Ed Walsh, *Guy Morton, Dutch Leonard, *Herb Pennock, *Rube Foster, *Pete Donohue, Ray Collins

14 Gold Gloves: Bill Bradley (3B)
13 Gold Gloves: Tris Speaker (CF)
12 Gold Gloves: Joe Tinker (SS)
11 Gold Gloves: Pete Hill (CF), *Ray Schalk (C)
10 Gold Gloves: Johnny Evers (2B)
9 Gold Gloves: Art Fletcher (SS), *Gabby Hartnett (C), Stuffy McInnis (1B)
8 Gold Gloves: *Travis Jackson (SS), *Willie Kamm (3B)

5 World Championships: Boston Braves, Boston Red Sox, Cleveland Indians
3 World Championships: Pittsburgh Pirates
2 World Championships: Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox, Milwaukee Brewers, Providence Angels
1 World Championship: Detroit Tigers, Kansas City Athletics (in Philadelphia), Newark Bears, St. Louis Cardinals
0 World Championships: Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Reds, Louisville Colonels, Minnesota Twins, Montreal Expos, New York Giants, New York Yankees, St. Louis Browns, Texas Rangers, Washington Senators
Defunct: Columbus Clippers, Kansas City Packers, Philadelphia Quakers, Rochester Red Wings, St. Louis Browns (original), Toronto Blue Jays
Relocated: Buffalo Bisons, Duluth Dragons, Indianapolis Hoosiers, Philadelphia Athletics

* denotes an active player.

Last edited by Jamee999; 11-24-2019 at 02:59 PM.
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Old 11-24-2019, 06:00 PM   #39
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1931

Changes
  • Random playoff rule - The World Series format is changed to 2 home, 2 away, 2 home, 2 away, 1 home.
  • Add fictional player - Technically not a fictional person, but I decided to add Don Bradman, the greatest cricket player of all-time, as a 22-year-old second baseman. He has very high potentials for contact and batting eye, and is a good fielder, but is not expected to ever be a good power hitter. The Don signed with the Cincinnati Reds, becoming teammates with Lou Gehrig.
  • Shorten schedule - Teams will now play 148 games in a season.
American League
Chicago White Sox (84-64)
Detroit Tigers (82-66)
St. Louis Browns (82-66)
Baltimore Orioles (78-70)
Minnesota Twins (78-70)
New York Yankees (78-70)
Washington Senators (78-70)
Cleveland Indians (71-77)
Boston Red Sox (69-79)
Providence Angels (68-80)
Kansas City Athletics (63-85)
Milwaukee Brewers (57-91)

AL MVP: Jimmie Foxx (New York)
AL CYA: Carl Hubbell (St. Louis)
AL ROY: Billy Urbanski (Baltimore)

National League
Pittsburgh Pirates (93-55)
Cincinnati Reds (85-63)
Chicago Cubs (84-64)
Newark Bears (80-68)
Texas Rangers (78-70)
Boston Braves (76-72)
Brooklyn Dodgers (73-75)
Philadelphia Phillies (71-77)
New York Giants (64-84)
Montreal Expos (63-85)
Louisville Colonels (61-87)
St. Louis Cardinals (60-88)

NL MVP: Babe Ruth (Boston) (15th award)
NL MOP: Paul Derringer (Chicago)
NL ROY: Ripper Collins (Louisville)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) .275, Babe Ruth (Boston) .288
Home Runs: Jimmie Foxx (New York) 54, Babe Ruth (Boston) 55
Runs Batted In: Jimmie Foxx (New York) / Glenn Wright (St. Louis) 107, Wally Berger (Brooklyn) / Lou Gehrig (Cincinnati) 97
Stolen Bases: Joe Judge (Baltimore) 29, Billy Werber (Texas) 16
WAR: Jimmie Foxx (New York) 11.8, Babe Ruth (Boston) 11.8

Wins: Carl Hubbell (St. Louis) 20, Paul Derringer (Chicago) 20
ERA: Dutch Reuther (Milwaukee) 1.94, Earl Whitehill (New York) 1.70
Strikeouts: Guy Morton (Providence) 169, Lefty Gomez (Montreal) 162
Saves: Tim McCabe (Detroit) 34, Colonel Slover (Texas) 39
WAR: Carl Hubbell (St. Louis) 11.9, Red Lucas (Louisville) 10.5

Notes
- The American League was very close, as six teams were still in contention with just four days left in the season. The White Sox won their last four games to hold off Detroit and St. Louis, taking the league title for the third time. Dale Alexander, High Pockets Kelly, and Red Ruffing starred for the Pale Hose.
- Pittsburgh won the NL pennant for the first time since 1914. Hitters Don Hurst and Tony Lazzeri led the way at the plate, while Ben Cantwell was the finest pitcher.
- Lefty Grove (Washington) suffered an elbow injury that ruled him out of the second half of the season, and the first half of 1932.
- The Braves struggled, as veteran starters Pete Schneider and Joe Wood had poor seasons. Babe Ruth was two RBI shy of another Triple Crown.
- Gehrig finished in the top three of every Triple Crown statistic.
- George Ruth (Newark) made only eleven starts due to injury.
- Don Bradman (Cincinnati) was the Reds' starting second baseman, and the rookie had a respectable .196 average, 99 OPS+, and won a Gold Glove.
- Baltimore traded second baseman George Grantham to the Braves for starter Bert Cole and a minor leaguer.
- The Phillies traded All-Star first baseman Jim Bottomley to the Cubs for two pitchers.

Achievements & Milestones
- Lou Gehrig (Cincinnati) and Pat Crawford (Braves) hit three home runs in a game.
- Phil Todt (Montreal) hit for the cycle.
- 17 no-hitters were thrown.
- Charlie Hollocher (Red Sox), Bubbles Hargrave (Baltimore), and John Kelleher (Milwaukee) reached 2000 hits.
- Babe Ruth (Braves) passed 800 homers and 2000 RBI, both records.
- Hack Wilson (Cleveland), High Pockets Kelly (White Sox), and Gabby Hartnett (Brooklyn) joined the 300 homer club.
- Pete Donohue (Newark) and Art Nehf (Pittsburgh) won their 200th games.
- George Ruth (Newark) and Hod Eller (Texas) each won game #250.
- Guy Morton (Providence) became the sixth man to win 300 games.
- Joe Wood (Braves) broke Red Ames' record for games started and Walter Johnson's record for innings pitched.

World Series
- Pittsburgh defeated Chicago, 5 games to 4.
- Don Hurst was the MVP despite being on the losing side. The Pittsburgh first baseman went 9-33 with three round trippers.
- Tony Lazzeri (Pittsburgh) hit two homers for three RBI in Game Three as the Pirates won 4-3.
- Red Ruffing (Chicago) went the distance in Game Five, as the White Sox won 6-1 and brought the series back to 3-2.
- Lon Warneke (Chicago) threw a shutout in Game Seven, allowing only three Pirate hits.
- Herb Pennock (Chicago) also shutout the Buccos in Game Eight, as the White Sox danced to a 9-0 win, and a decisive Game Nine.
- Ace Ben Cantwell (Pittsburgh) was the hero, going the distance in Game Nine, and not allowing a run. A pair of Pirates scores in the fourth innings gave them the 2-0 win, and their fourth ring.

Retirements
- Eddie Collins. All-time hit king, and the epitome of a deadball era hitter. 3746 hits, for a .327 batting average and a 141 OPS+. Four times a batting champion, and five times his league's OBP leader. 17 All-Star bids, 11 Silver Sluggers, four Gold Gloves, one ring, and the NL MVP in 1911 and 1912.
- Butch Henline. A short but strong career behind the plate. 117 OPS+ led to five All-Star games. Won a ring with the Pirates before retiring.
- Ray Schalk. Outstanding defensive catcher of his generation, winning eleven Gold Gloves, and three All-Star bids. World championship with Cleveland in 1916.
- George Sisler. Eight-time All-Star and seven-time Silver Slugger at first base. Batted .492 in 1920, an all-time record that may never be beaten. Led the NL in hits six times, with a career total of 2836 and a 154 OPS+.
- Milt Stock. Fine third baseman for Red Sox, Twins, and Cubs. 2639 hits, but only a 97 OPS+. Two All-Star games.
- Jack Tobin. Outfielder for a generation of strong Baltimore sides, winning rings in 1919 and 1921. 2321 hits, and a 113 OPS+, for four Silver Sluggers.

Draft
- Milwaukee chose Arky Vaughan first overall.
- Joe Medwick was drafted second by the Cardinals.
- Catcher Bill DeLancey went #3 to Louisville.
- Stan Hack was the fifth pick by Kansas City.


Jimmie Foxx was the American League MVP.


Paul Derringer was the National League's Most Outstanding Pitcher.
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Old 11-24-2019, 11:53 PM   #40
Jamee999
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 769
1932

Changes
  • Swap two team best - Paul Derringer (Cubs), the reigning NL MOP, and first baseman Dale Alexander (White Sox) are traded for one another, swapping sides of Chicago.
  • Random year stats - Statistics will be based on 1973.
  • Fire manager - The Senators' manager was fired.
Off-Season
- The Cardinals traded Frankie Frisch to Brooklyn for outfielder Lew Fonseca and a minor league pitcher.
- The Reds sent Kiki Cuyler to Washington in exchange for shortstop Stu Clarke and a prospect.
- Veteran Ross Youngs was sent from Louisville to Texas for prospect Bill Dunlap.
- Bill James moved from the Phillies to the Tigers.
- Veteran Pat O'Farrell signed with the Giants in free agency. He previously played for them in 1916.

American League
St. Louis Browns (96-52)
New York Yankees (83-65)
Boston Red Sox (80-68)
Minnesota Twins (80-68)
Washington Senators (76-72)
Cleveland Indians (75-73)
Providence Angels (74-74)
Detroit Tigers (69-79)
Chicago White Sox (65-83)
Kansas City Athletics (65-83)
Baltimore Orioles (64-84)
Milwaukee Brewers (61-87)

AL MVP: Jimmie Foxx (New York) (2nd award)
AL CYA: Bill Doak (Kansas City)
AL ROY: Bill Swift (St. Louis)

National League
Cincinnati Reds (90-58)
Brooklyn Dodgers (84-64)
Pittsburgh Pirates (81-67)
Newark Bears (78-70)
Louisville Colonels (73-75)
Texas Rangers (73-75)
Chicago Cubs (72-76)
St. Louis Cardinals (71-77)
Montreal Expos (69-79)
Philadelphia Phillies (68-80)
Boston Braves (66-82)
New York Giants (63-85)

NL MVP: Ripper Collins (Louisville)
NL MOP: Pete Donohue (Newark) (7th award)
NL ROY: Joe Medwick (St. Louis)

Statistical Leaders
Batting Average: Chuck Klein (Minnesota) .238, Babe Ruth (Boston) .258
Home Runs: Jimmie Foxx (New York) 48, Ripper Collins (Louisville) 61
Runs Batted In: Jimmie Foxx (New York) 107, Ripper Collins (Louisville) 118
Stolen Bases: Joe Judge (Baltimore) 20, Ethan Allen (Philadelphia) 14
WAR: Jimmie Foxx (New York) 10.7, Babe Ruth (Boston) 10.1

Wins: Ted Lyons (Cleveland) 20, Pete Donohue (Newark) 22
ERA: Bill Doak (Kansas City) 1.59, Hub Pruett (Brooklyn) 1.22
Strikeouts: Pat Malone (Kansas City) 158, Whit Wyatt (Newark) 184
Saves: Tim McCabe (Detroit) / Jim Wright (New York) 28, Bud Tinning (Louisville) / Dutch Ulrich (Pittsburgh) 35
WAR: Carl Hubbell (St. Louis) 10.4, Pete Donohue (Newark) 13.7

Notes
- The Browns cantered to their first pennant, with Bob Fothergill, Goose Goslin, Carlton Fisk, Carl Hubbell, and Larry French leading the way.
- Cincinnati's one-two punch of Lou Gehrig and Earl Averill bashed 46 and 36 homers respectively, as they took the Reds to the most runs in the NL, and their first pennant since 1907.
- The Braves had a terrible season, even as Babe Ruth kept producing. Recent retirements caught up to Boston, while aging starters Rube Foster, Pete Schneider, and Joe Wood all had poor years.
- Ruth's run of 15 straight NL MVPs was finally broken by Ripper Collins.
- Paul Derringer (White Sox) went 15-7 with a 1.86 ERA in the American League, but his new team scored the fewest runs in the league. Dale Alexander (Cubs), the man who went the other way in the trade, hit 29 homers, and formed a mean tandem with Jim Bottomley.

Achievements & Milestones
- Jim Bottomley and Dale Alexander (both Cubs) had three homer games just ten days apart.
- Jimmy Ring (Washington) threw a perfect game against the Reds.
- Tommy Thomas (Philadelphia) threw two no-hitters.
- Jack Smith (White Sox) hit safely for the 2000th time.
- Billy Southworth (Braves) and High Pockets Kelly (White Sox) both collected their 2500th hits.
- Babe Ruth (Boston) joined the 3000 hit club.
- Lou Gehrig (Cincinnati) bashed his 300th homer.
- Rogers Hornsby (Milwaukee) became the second man to hit 400 homers.
- Hugh McQuillan (Minnesota) won his 200th game.
- Rube Foster (Braves) and Burleigh Grimes (Cubs) picked up win #250.
- Tim McCabe (Detroit) picked up his 300th save.
- George Dumont (Braves) saved his 400th game, and broke Ralph Caldwell's record of 403 career saves.
- Joe Wood (Braves) became the all-time wins leader, surpassing Harry Krause.

World Series
- St. Louis defeated Cincinnati, 5 games to 4.
- Outfielder Bruce Campbell was the MVP. He was 7-28 with three home runs.
- Larry French (St. Louis) threw a shutout in Game Two, as the Browns won 2-0.
- The first four games of the series were all won by the road team, as the series was tied at 2-2.
- Virgil Cheeves (Cincinnati) shutout the Browns in Game Five, allowing just five hits in the 3-0 win.
- Earl Averill (Cincinnati) made a crucial error in Game Six, allowing the go-ahead run to score as he failed to catch a fly ball. St. Louis won 5-4 in thirteen innings, and leveled the series.
- Campbell hit two homers in Game Eight, giving the Browns a 3-2 victory.
- Game Nine was a pitchers' duel - scoreless through eight innings. The Browns exploded in the top of the ninth, scoring six runs, and winning their first World Series.
- Carlton Fisk (St. Louis) was 7-32 with two homers and seven runs driven in.
- Lou Gehrig (Cincinnati) was 8-35 with four homers and eight RBI. Earl Averill was 8-33.
- Carl Hubbell (St. Louis) won Games One and Nine, but lost Game Five.
- Sam Gibson (Cincinnati) was 2-0 with three earned runs in his two starts.

Retirements
- Rube Foster. 1927 NL MOP, 1930 WS MVP. 253-229 pitcher, with 124 career ERA+. Won three rings with the Braves late in his career.
- Bubbles Hargrave. 1921 AL MVP. Excellent long-serving catcher for the Orioles, winning rings in 1919 and 1921. 10 All-Star games, 2027 hits, 122 OPS+. 1146 RBI is a record for a catcher.

Draft
- The Brewers picked Hal Trosky first overall.
- Cecil Travis went second to the Giants.
- Bob Johnson was Baltimore's choice at #3.
- Kansas City drafted Frankie Hayes fourth.
- Montreal made Schoolboy Rowe the first pitcher off the board with the eighth pick.


Ripper Collins was the National League MVP.


Bruce Campbell was World Series MVP.
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