1891 in baseball

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following are the baseball events of the year 1891 throughout the world.

Champions

World Series: Boston (NL) declined to meet Boston (AA)

Major league baseball final standings

National League final standings

National League
W
L
Pct. GB Home Road
Boston Beaneaters 87 51 0.630 51–20 36–31
Chicago Colts 82 53 0.607 43–22 39–31
New York Giants 71 61 0.538 13 39–28 32–33
Philadelphia Phillies 68 69 0.496 18½ 35–34 33–35
Cleveland Spiders 65 74 0.468 22½ 40–28 25–46
Brooklyn Grooms 61 76 0.445 25½ 41–31 20–45
Cincinnati Reds 56 81 0.409 30½ 26–41 30–40
Pittsburgh Pirates 55 80 0.407 30½ 32–34 23–46

American Association final standings

W
L
Pct. GB Home Road
Boston Reds 93 42 0.689 51–17 42–25
St. Louis Browns 85 51 0.625 52–21 33–30
Baltimore Orioles 71 64 0.526 22 44–24 27–40
Philadelphia Athletics 73 66 0.525 22 43–26 30–40
Milwaukee Brewers 21 15 0.583 22½ 16–5 5–10
Cincinnati Kelly's Killers 43 57 0.430 32½ 24–21 19–36
Columbus Solons 61 76 0.445 33 33–29 28–47
Louisville Colonels 54 83 0.394 40 39–32 15–51
Washington Statesmen 44 91 0.326 49 28–40 16–51

Statistical leaders

Bill Hutchison

National League statistical leaders

National League
Type Name Stat
AVG Billy Hamilton PHP .340
HR Harry Stovey BSB
Mike Tiernan NY
16
RBI Cap Anson CHI 120
Wins
Bill Hutchison CHI 44
ERA John Ewing NY 2.27
Strikeouts Amos Rusie NY 337

American Association statistical leaders

American Association
Type Name Stat
AVG
BSR
.350
HR
BSR
12
RBI
BSR
110
Wins
Sadie McMahon BAL 35
ERA
CNK
2.45
Strikeouts Jack Stivetts STL 259

Notable seasons

  • Philadelphia Phillies left fielder Billy Hamilton leads the NL with 179 hits, 111 stolen bases, 141 runs scored, and a .340 batting average. His .874 OPS and 155 OPS+ both rank second in the league.[1][2]
  • Chicago Colts pitcher Bill Hutchison has a record of 44-19 and leads the NL with 561 innings pitched and 44 wins. His 261 strikeouts rank second in the league. He has a 2.81 earned run average and a 123 ERA+.[3][4]

Events

January–March

  • January 16 - An agreement is signed between the National League, American Association, and Western Association which creates a three man panel to settle any and all disputes between the three leagues. The agreement occurs two days after the National League allowed the American Association to place a team in Boston, a move the NL's
    Boston Beaneaters
    opposed.
  • January 30 - The Boston Reds purchase the contract of second baseman Cupid Childs from the Syracuse Stars for $2,000.
  • February 1 - The New York Giants sell the contract of Jesse Burkett to the Cleveland Spiders
  • February 6 – The
    New York Giants' salary list is leaked to the press. It shows a total player payroll of $54,600 with Buck Ewing
    's $5,500 salary topping the scale.

April–June

July–September

  • July 1 –
    hit for the cycle
    .
  • July 31 –
    Brooklyn Bridegrooms 6-0, on 8 walks and 4 K's. At 20 years and 2 months he is the youngest pitcher to toss a no-hitter
    .
  • August 26 – John McGraw debuts with the Baltimore Orioles in the AA. He plays shortstop, makes an error, and he has a hit as the Orioles defeat the Columbus Buckeyes, 6-5.
  • September 4 – Responding to writers who claim it's time for him to quit, Chicago's 39-year-old player-manager Cap Anson wears a false white beard against Boston. It doesn't help him at the plate – he is hitless in 3 at-bats. The White Stockings beat Boston, 5-3.
  • September 12 –
    Washington Statesmen
    .

October–December

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

References

  1. ^ "1891 National League Batting Leaders". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
  2. ^ "Billy Hamilton Stats". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
  3. ^ "1891 National League Pitching Leaders". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
  4. ^ "Bill Hutchison Stats". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved August 29, 2020.

External links