1901 in baseball
The following are the baseball events of the year 1901 throughout the world.
Champions
Major League Baseball
Other champions
- Minor leagues
- San Francisco Wasps [1]
- Hustlers [citation needed]
- Inter-Mountain League: Ogden [citation needed]
- Interstate League or Western Association: champion unknown
- New England League: Portland (ME)
- New York State League: champion unknown
- Pacific Northwest League: Portland Webfoots (OR)
- Southern Association: Nashville Vols
MLB statistical leaders
American League | National League | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Stat | Player | Total | Player | Total |
AVG | Nap Lajoie2 (PHA) | .4261 | Jesse Burkett (SLC) | .376 |
HR | Nap Lajoie2 (PHA) | 14 | Sam Crawford (CIN) | 16 |
RBI | Nap Lajoie2 (PHA) | 125 | Honus Wagner (PIT) | 126 |
Wins |
Cy Young3 (BSA) | 33 | Bill Donovan (BKN ) |
25 |
ERA | Cy Young3 (BSA) | 1.62 | Jesse Tannehill (PIT) | 2.18 |
K | Cy Young3 (BSA) | 158 | Noodles Hahn (CIN) | 239 |
1 Modern (post-1900) single season batting average record
2 American League Triple Crown batting winner
3 American League Triple Crown pitching winner
Notable seasons
- Nap Lajoie of the Philadelphia Athletics hits .426, an AL batting average record that still stands today. This record is also the modern or post-1900 batting average record and is often cited as the highest batting average of all time. However, the all-time batting average leader is Hugh Duffy, who hit .440 in 1894.
- Boston Americans leads the AL in ERA at 1.62 and wins 33 games, 41.8% of the Pilgrims' total.
Major league baseball final standings
American League final standings
National League final standings
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Events
January
- January 4 – The Baltimore Orioles club incorporates. John McGraw is manager and part-owner.
- January 27 - Boston Beaneatersto the Milwaukee Brewers.
- January 28 – The Boston Americans, Baltimore Orioles, and Philadelphia Athleticsare admitted. Teams are limited to 14 players and will play 140 games per season.
February
- February 8 – Philadelphia Phillies second baseman Nap Lajoie, along with pitchers Chick Fraser and Bill Bernhard, jump to the new American League Philadelphia club, the Athletics.
- February 27 – The first base.
March
- March 2 – Milwaukee Brewers, and Sullivan will catch for the Chicago White Stockings.
- March 11 - John McGraw, manager of the Baltimore Orioles of the American League, attempts to sign infielder Charlie Grant, a black man, and attempt to pass him off as a Cherokee Indian named Tokohoma. However, Chicago White Sox president Charles Comiskey recognizes Grant and McGraw's attempt to integrate major league baseball falls apart.
- March 19 - Pitcher Boston Americans.
- March 28 – Philadelphia Phillies owner John Rogers files an injunction to stop Nap Lajoie, Bill Bernhard and Chick Fraser from playing for the Phillies' AL rival, the Philadelphia Athletics.
April
- April 3 – Giantsin March.
- April 18 – With a six-run first-inning, the Brooklyn Superbas beat the Philadelphia Phillies 12-7 to open the National League's 1901 season.
- April 24 – The Cleveland Blues 8-2 as Roy Pattersoncollects his first of 20 wins.
- April 25 – History is made in just the second day of play in the new Pop Dillon drives in the winning run with his fourth double of the game, setting a Major League Baseball record with four doubles on Opening Day, that will be matched by Jim Greengrassin 1954.
- April 26 – Brooklyn Superbas5-3.
- April 27 - Billy Clingman of the Washington Senators hits the first home run in franchise history off Wiley Piatt of the Philadelphia Athletics. Washington would go on to win the game 11-5.
- April 28 - The Cleveland Blues defeat the Chicago White Sox 13-1. The Blues (who would later change their name to the Indians) hit 23 singles, 22 of them off White Sox pitcher Bock Baker.
May
- May 1 - Herm McFarland of the Chicago White Sox hits the first gland slam in American League history as the White Sox rout the Detroit Tigers 19-9. The Tigers commit an AL record 12 errors, 10 in the infield.
- May 2 – This was the date of the American League's first forfeit, with the Detroit Tigers playing the Chicago White Stockings. The Tigers scored five runs in the top of the ninth to put them on top, 7-5, and the White Stockings began stalling for a rainout. However, the umpire forfeited the game to the Tigers.
- May 4 - Future politician Fred Brown makes his MLB debut. Brown, who'd later win a seat as a Democrat in New Hampshire, only plays nine games over two years in the major leagues.
- May 8:
- Amos Rusie, pitching for the Cincinnati Reds, makes his first start in more than two years. He loses, 14-3, and retires after two more appearances.
- With the New York Giants leading the Philadelphia Phillies 9-8 with two out in the ninth, John Ganzel of the Giants pulls the hidden ball trick on Harry Wolvertonof the Phillies. This trick ends the game and preserves the Giants' win.
- May 9 – Earl Moore of the Cleveland Blues pitched nine hitless innings against the Chicago White Stockings before giving up two hits in the 10th inning to lose 4-2.
- May 15 - Boston Americans4-0 in Boston. The 21 year-old southpaw, who will finish the season with a 16-16 record, will be the author of two of the eight shutouts thrown in the Junior Circuit's inaugural season.
- May 17 – The Philadelphia Athletics are beating the Washington Senators 7-6 in the bottom of the ninth when Senators player Bill Coughlin hits an apparent game-ending home run. However, under the rules of the time, Coughlin is credited with just a single, as that is all that it would have taken for the Senators to beat the Athletics.
- May 21 – New York Giants, refuses to allow umpire Billy Nash inside the Polo Grounds, accusing him of incompetence.
- May 23 – bases loaded.
- Scoring nine runs in the bottom of the ninth at Cleveland's League Park, the Blues, later to be known as the Indians, stun the Senators, 14-13. The incredible comeback, which consists of six singles, two doubles, a walk, a hit batsman, and a passed ball, comes after two outs.
- May 27 – Lenny Merullo.
- May 30 – In the afternoon game of a holiday doubleheader, the New York Giants 6-5 in 10 innings. An NLrecord 28,500 fans attend the game.
June
- June 9–17,000 fans attend the Giants game. The Giants are up, 15-4, after six innings, when the fans begin to overflow the field. Over the next two and a half innings, 19 runs score as ground-rule doubles multiply. As the crowd enters the infield, with the Giants leading 25-13, umpire Bob Emslieforfeits the game to the Giants. The game ends with a record 31 hits and 13 doubles.
- June 20 – Giants7-0.
- The contract of Brooklyn Superbas from the Philadelphia Phillies.
- The contract of
- June 24 – Mike Donlin of the Baltimore Orioles goes 6-6 with 2 singles, 2 doubles and 2 triples as the Orioles defeat the Detroit Tigers 17-8.
July
- July 1 – With the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds, Jack Doyle, first baseman of the Orphans who was formerly of the Giants, gets into a fight with a fan. Though the police arrive, Doyle does not get in trouble, though he has to take himself out of the game in the seventh as his hand is hurting.
- Emil Frisk is released by the Detroit Tigers.
- July 10 – Boston Americans.
- July 15 – New York Giants rookie pitcher Christy Mathewson pitches a no-hitter as the Giants beat the St. Louis Cardinals5-0.
- July 23 – hits for the cycle in a 9-2 win over the Cincinnati Reds.
- July 24 - The playing career of Joe Quinn comes to an end after 17 years when he is released by the Washington Senators.
- July 30 – Cleveland Blues. Philadelphia defeats Cleveland, 11-5.
August
- August 5 - In the second inning of the nightcap against the Boston Americans, Jimmy Hart of the Baltimore Orioles punches umpire John Haskell in the face. The rookie first baseman who hits .311 playing in a total of only 58 games in his major league career, serves a ten-day suspension, but quits after going 4-for-4 upon his return because the team refused to pay the $25 he had been fined.
- August 10 – extra base hitsin a game.
September
- September 1 - Days after his contract is sold by the Boston Americans.
- September 3 – Milwaukee Brewers10-0 and losing to them, 6-1.
- September 5 – The National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, which would later become known as Minor League Baseball, was formed at a meeting of minor league executives at the Leland Hotel in Chicago. Patrick T. Powers, president of the Eastern League, became the first president of the NAPBL. [3]
- September 19 – All games are cancelled due to the recent death of President William McKinley.
- September 21 – Though the Boston Americans3-1.
- September 23 - The Brooklyn Superbasestablish a new franchise record for runs scored in a game when they rout the Cincinnati Reds, 25-6. Brooklyn scores 11 runs in the fifth inning.
- September 23 and 24 – Jimmy Sheckard hits grand slams in two consecutive games, as the Brooklyn Dodgers beat the Cincinnati Reds 25-6 on 23rd and 16-2 on 24th.
- September 26 – The Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Brooklyn Dodgers 4-3, thus clinching the 1901 National League pennant.
- September 28 - the Baltimore Orioles sign outfielder Slats Jordan.
October
- October 19 - Ed Delahanty, Al Orth, Happy Townsend, and Harry Wolverton all jump from the NL's Philadelphia Phillies to the AL's Washington Senators. Meanwhile, Monte Cross, Bill Duggleby and Elmer Flick all jump from the Phillies to the AL's Philadelphia Athletics.
November
- November 5 - Sportsman Park is lease by the American League. Two weeks later, the league transfers the Milwaukee Brewers to St. Louis and the team is renamed the St. Louis Browns.
December
- December 3 - The Milwaukee Brewers are contracted from the American League, due to poor attendance and fiscal instability. The league adds the St. Louis Browns to replace the Brewers.
- December 19 - Chicago Orphansof the national league to Los Angeles of the California League.
Births
January
- January 5 – Luke Sewell
- January 8 – Joe Benes
- January 11 – George McNamara
- January 13 – Fred Schulte
- January 24 – John Freeman
- January 24 – Grant Gillis
- January 24 – Curly Ogden
- January 24 – Flint Rhem
- January 27 – Fred Heimach
- January 28 – Ray Knode
February
- February 2 – Otto Miller
- February 3 – Ernie Maun
- February 6 – Glenn Wright
- February 11 – Jimmy O'Connell
- February 12 – Virgil Cheeves
- February 13 – Herman Layne
- February 17 – Eddie Phillips
- February 22 – Saul Davis
- February 22 – Dan Jessee
March
- March 2 – Butch Weis
- March 7 – Dick Loftus
- March 18 – Johnny Cooney
- March 25 – Denver Grigsby
- March 26 – Jim Battle
April
- April 8 – Carr Smith
- April 9 – Vic Sorrell
- April 19 – Bernie DeViveiros
- April 20 – Frank Wilson
- April 22 – Taylor Douthit
- April 22 – Jim Mahady
- April 22 – Juanelo Mirabal
- April 27 – Johnny Stuart
May
- May 6 – Earle Brucker
- May 10 – Ted Blankenship
- May 13 – Pat Burke
- May 13 – John Jones
- May 13 – Leo Taylor
- May 14 – Drew Rader
- May 18 – John Happenny
- May 19 – Newt Allen
- May 22 – Babe Ganzel
- May 24 – Mule Shirley
- May 25 – Bud Connolly
- May 25 – Doc Ozmer
- May 28 – Norm Lehr
- May 29 – Jim Stroner
June
- June 1 – Lou Legett
- June 1 – Fred Stiely
- June 7 – Jerry Conway
- June 8 – Leo Tankersley
- June 20 – Pryor McBee
July
- July 8 – Tex Wilson
- July 9 – Lou Polli
- July 20 – Heinie Manush
- July 23 – Mack Hillis
- July 24 – Bob Adams
- July 26 – Doc Gautreau
- July 28 – Freddie Fitzsimmons
August
- August 2 – Charlie Caldwell
- August 9 – Phil Todt
- August 14 – Oscar Siemer
- August 15 – Les Sweetland
- August 16 – Mahlon Higbee
- August 17 – Slim Embrey
- August 21 – Wes Schulmerich
- August 23 – Guy Bush
- August 27 – Johnny Berger
- August 27 – Phil Collins
September
- September 2 – Marty Griffin
- September 4 – Al Grabowski
- September 11 – George Loepp
- September 11 – Monroe Mitchell
- September 16 – Ken Ash
- September 18 – Tige Stone
- September 29 – Rabbit Benton
- September 29 – Tony Rensa
October
- October 1 – Jimmie Reese
- October 5 – Scottie Slayback
- October 6 – Carlisle Littlejohn
- October 12 – Erv Brame
- October 13 – Phil Hensiek
- October 16 – Al Yeargin
- October 25 – Ray Gardner
- October 27 – George Smith
- October 30 – Al Kellett
- October 31 – Ray Flaskamper
November
- November 2 – Jerry Standaert
- November 4 – Bill Henderson
- November 8 – Beauty McGowan
- November 13 – Moose Clabaugh
- November 14 – Bill Owens
- November 15 – John Dobb
- November 15 – Bunny Roser
- November 17 – Ed Taylor
- November 21 – Johnson Fry
- November 22 – Harry Rice
- November 22 – Walt Tauscher
- November 29 – Buddy Crump
- November 30 – Sid Graves
- November 30 – Clyde Sukeforth
December
- December 1 – Ed Coleman
- December 3 – Bennie Tate
- December 5 – Ray Moss
- December 5 – Carey Selph
- December 7 – Ralph Judd
- December 11 – Elbert Andrews
- December 12 – Bill Moore
- December 14 – Les Bell
- December 16 – Hugh McMullen
- December 23 – Ox Eckhardt
- December 25 – Buster Chatham
- December 26 – Doc Farrell
- December 28 – Wattie Holm
- December 30 – Dick Porter
Deaths
- February 3 – Tom O'Brien, 27, outfielder for the Baltimore Orioles, Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Giants National League clubs between 1897 and 1900.
- February 21 – Dennis Driscoll, 38, second baseman for the 1885 Buffalo Bisons.
- February 22 – Tom Kinslow, 35, distinguished catcher during the Dead Ball Era, a career .266 hitter who posted a .923 fielding average for eight teams from 1886 to 1892.
- March 3 – Charles Snyder, 28, catcher/outfielder who hit .273 for the 1890 Philadelphia Athletics.
- March 24 – Mike Trost, 35[?], backup catcher/centerfielder/first baseman for the 1890 St. Louis Browns and 1895 Louisville Colonels.
- March 31 – George Popplein, 60, utility player who appeared in one game for the Baltimore Marylands during the 1873 season.
- April 10 – John Hiland, 40, backup infielder for the 1885 Philadelphia Quakers.
- April 14 – Pat Sullivan, 38, third baseman/centerfielder for the 1884 Kansas City Cowboys.
- April 20 – Bill Yeatman, 62, outfielder who played one game with the 1872 Washington Nationals.
- April 30 – Dude Esterbrook, 43, infielder who batted .314 for the pennant-winning 1884 New York Metropolitans
- June 17 – Bill Craver, 57, catcher and manager who later was expelled from organized baseball for gambling.
- July 9 – Sy Studley, 60, center fielder for the 1872 Washington Nationals of the National Association.
- July 11 – Dave McKeough, 37, catcher who hit .231 in part of two seasons for the Rochester Broncos (1890) and Philadelphia Athletics (1891).
- July 24 – Joe Simmons, 56, player in National Association for three seasons, them managed the 1884 Wilmington Quicksteps of the Union Association.
- August 15 – Gene Bagley, 40, catcher/outfielder for the 1886 New York Giants.
- August 15 – Milt Whitehead, 39[?], Canadian shortstop who played in 1884 with the St. Louis Maroons and Kansas City Cowboys.
- August 22 – Pete Sweeney, 37, infielder/outfielder who played from 1888 through 1890 for the Nationals, Browns, Athletics and Colonels.
- September 23 – Doc McJames, 27, pitcher who posted a 79-80 record with 593 strikeouts and a 3.43 ERA in six seasons, and led the National League with 156 strikeouts in 1897.
- October 9 – Chappy Lane, [?], who hit .203 with four home runs in 114 games for the Pittsburgh Alleghenys (1882) and Toledo Blue Stockings (1884), and led American Association first basemen in fielding percentage (1882).
- October 16 – Jim Duncan, 28, catcher/first baseman for the Cleveland Spiders and Washington Senators during the 1899 season.
- October 31 – John Cahill, 36, outfielder/infielder/pitcher for the Columbus Buckeyes (1884), St. Louis Maroons (1886) and Indianapolis Hoosiers (1887).
- November 2 – John Corcoran, 28[?], infielder for the 1895 Pittsburgh Pirates.
- November 7 – Tub Welch, 35, catcher/first baseman who hit .261 in 82 games for the Toledo Maumees (1890) and Louisville Colonels (1895).
- November 29 – Jim Sullivan, 34, who posted a career pitching record of a 26-28 and was a member of the 1897 National League Champions Boston Beaneaters.
- December 19 – American Associationteams from 1884 to 1886.
- December 28 – George Flynn, 30, outfielder for the 1896 Chicago Cubs.