Sunday, June 28, 2020

Daily Recap: Tuesday, April 11th

The Red Sox wave goodbye to Arizona as spring training is over and a new season begins tomorrow!

Today's Scores

no games played

Tomorrow's Games

American League
New York (0-0) at Philadelphia (0-0): Hippo Vaughn (no games played) vs. Chief Bender (no games played)
Cleveland (0-0) at St. Louis (0-0): Fred Blanding (no games played) vs. Jack Powell (no games played)
Boston (0-0) at Washington (0-0): Joe Wood (no games played) vs. Dolly Gray (no games played)

National League
Brooklyn (0-0) at Boston (0-0): Cy Barger (no games played) vs. Buster Brown (no games played)
St. Louis (0-0) at Chicago (0-0): Slim Sallee (no games played) vs. Ed Reulbach (no games played)
Pittsburgh (0-0) at Cincinnati (0-0): Babe Adams (no games played) vs. Art Fromme (no games played)
Philadelphia (0-0) at New York (0-0): Earl Moore (no games played) vs. Red Ames (no games played)

Saturday, June 27, 2020

1911 Season Preview: National League

Can anyone stop the Chicago Cubs? The only time they didn't win the pennant in the last five years, they still won 104 games in 1909.

Boston Rustlers: Boston dropped the "Doves" nickname and make a lot of moves in the offseason to revitalize their quiet offense, which finished last in 1910. This includes re-signing Fred Tenney as player-manager after a three year absence in New York. The team looks completely different than when he left even after such a short time. One advantage he has to work with is a veteran catcher that can hit, Peaches Graham. Graham hit .282 last season, second on the team to Doc Miller at .286.

Buster Brown, Cliff Curtis, and Al Mattern combined for 66 losses in 1910. They return to eat innings and take losses for the Rustlers. The only thing going for them is that St. Louis gave up more than half an earned run per game than they did.

Verdict: The Rustlers are most likely doomed to a last place finish, though a complete shakeup of their lineup could help them avoid 100 losses again if it works out.

Future Hall of Famers: none

Brooklyn Dodgers: Brooklyn outscored Boston by just two runs to avoid the title of lowest scoring team. If the team is going to turn it around in the coming years, it will be around left fielder Zack Wheat. Wheat, who will turn 23 in May, hit .284 while playing in every single game. His 53 extra base hits were also fourth in the National League. The only comparable batter on the team is Jake Daubert, who tied Wheat's 15 triples and hit a team-high eight home runs in his rookie season.

The Dodgers are different from the Rustlers as they have a better pitching staff. Nap Rucker went 17-18 and Cy Barger managed to go 15-15. Unfortunately, George Bell, who had nearly an identical ERA to Rucker and several tenths better than Barger, had a league-worst 27 losses. This seemed to be an aberration and he should get better results in 1911.

Verdict: The Dodgers have some very good players, but finishing in the first division for the first time since 1902 is still not within reach. You can still expect Brooklyn to make a run at 70 wins, another feat they have not accomplished since 1903.

Future Hall of Famers: Zack Wheat

Chicago Cubs: Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers, and Frank Chance finished their ninth season together on the Cubs with their fourth pennant, solidifying them as the most decorated infield of all time. But Chicago used others to succeed as well, which will come in handy to keep competing even as all three are in the second half of their careers. In Chance's case, he may very well pull himself out of the lineup more and more as player-manager. The Cubs had two .300 hitters, Solly Hofman at .325 and Wildfire Schulte at .301. Schulte also led the NL with ten homers and also hit 29 doubles and 15 triples.

Three Finger Brown has won at least 20 games and kept his ERA below two runs for five consecutive seasons coming into 1911. Newly joining him in the 20-win club is King Cole, who also had the best ERA in the NL last season. The Cubs do not return any other pitchers with 200 innings, though, leaving uncertainty in at least half of their games when Brown nor Cole can start.

Verdict: Until they are beaten again, it is Chicago's pennant to lose. Their infield will need to keep performing and their starters outside of Brown and Cole will need to play at least at a mediocre level for the Cubs to make it five-for-six.

Future Hall of Famers: Three Finger Brown, Frank Chance, Johnny Evers, Joe Tinker

Cincinnati Reds: With 310 steals, the Reds led the majors as the speediest team on the base paths. 70 of them were stolen by Bob Bescher, an excellent leadoff man as he also drew 81 walks to go with his .250 average. If Bescher can get on base, there's a good chance he will make into scoring position regardless of what the number two hitter does. This year, that number two hitter will be offseason acquisition Johnny Bates. A major trade with Philadelphia brought the .305 hitter to the Reds, along with third baseman Eddie Grant.

The Reds had four pitchers with 200+ innings last year, but two were traded to the Phillies. This leaves 20-game winner George Suggs and 15-game winner Harry Gaspar as the only two starters with experience.

Verdict: The Reds are above average at getting on base and then the best at stealing another. If their pitchers can stay about the same as last season even with the changes, the Reds should eclipse .500 this time around.

Future Hall of Famers: none

New York Giants: New York had last year's highest scoring offense, and they return their entire starting lineup. Six starters had at least 490 at bats, and one of the two that didn't is catcher Chief Meyers. Meyers still appeared in 127 games and is one of the most reliable catchers in the game. Much like the Athletics in the AL, there just isn't a weakness in the Giants' lineup. Outfielders Josh Devore, Fred Snodgrass, and Red Murray stole 133 bases and hit around .300 combined. If that's not enough, Larry Doyle is great at getting on base out of the two slot and Fred Merkle belted 53 extra base hits white hitting .292.

Christy Mathewson, who has notched 30 wins four times in his career, had to settle for a league-best 27 wins in 1910. Mathewson is now just 37 wins, the total he notched in the 1908 season, away from 300 on his career. Red Ames, Hooks Wiltse, and Louis Drucke each had winning records and combined to make 80 starts last season. And Doc Crandall did a little bit of everything, racking up 17 wins in a mix of starts and relief appearances, and can also start in the infield as needed when he's not pitching.

Verdict: New York has the firepower to win the pennant, and will surely be in the fight with Chicago and Pittsburgh to take it all. The Giants really just need a second ace, or a breakout season by one of their young pitchers like Drucke or Rube Marquard, to give them the advantage over their competitors.

Future Hall of Famers: Rube Marquard, Christy Mathewson

Philadelphia Phillies: Sherry Magee led the National League in many categories, including runs, RBIs, extra base hits, average, on base percentage, slugging percentage, and total bases. The Phillies brought in a pair of .300 hitters, Hans Lobert and Dode Paskert in the big trade with Cincinnati during the offseason to support him.

Earl Moore won 22 games for Philadelphia last season and led the league in strikeouts. The Phillies hope new rookie Pete Alexander can act as a second ace, and he got off to a great start with five innings of no-hit ball against the Athletics in an exhibition game before the season. He has never played an actual game that counts, but that start suggests he will be the rookie to watch in 1911.

Verdict: Philadelphia should be the favorite for fourth place behind the three clear favorites, the same place they finished in 1910. They have a good mix of hitting and pitching that make them the best of the rest at the start of the season.

Future Hall of Famers: Pete Alexander

Pittsburgh Pirates: The trio of Honus Wagner, Fred Clarke, and Tommy Leach have been together since their days in Louisville and have been starters in Pittsburgh ever since they were traded over in 1899. Leach and Clarke continue to play well, but only Wagner remains elite. His four-year batting title streak came to an end in 1910, but he still led the league in total hits. Starting with Clarke and Leach in the outfield is Chief Wilson, who led the team in triples and tied for most home runs of returning players. The Pirates will turn to a fourth outfielder to fill in as needed, a rookie born in 1890 named Max Carey. Carey was signed on a recommendation of the president of the Central League after a great season there in 1910.

Pittsburgh will run a three-man rotation when they can, once again trusting Babe Adams, Lefty Leifeld, and Howie Camnitz. Of the three, Adams was the best in 1910, winning twice as many games as he lost with a 2.24 ERA.

Verdict: Pittsburgh's window is closing as their trio of Wagner, Clarke, and Leach get older every year. They only have a few more chances, maybe even just one with Clarke a year away from turning 40. The Pirates need a productive fourth starter to put them back on top like in 1909. If they can find that, they should make a run for the pennant.

Future Hall of Famers: Max Carey, Fred Clarke, Bill McKechnie, Honus Wagner

St. Louis Cardinals: The Cardinals were near last in hits, doubles, triples, and dead last in home runs in 1910, yet still scored above the league average in runs. How? They led the league in walks by far, with only the Giants coming within 100 of their 655 as a team. With nearly an extra base runner every single game just from a walk, the Cardinals had extra opportunities to score when their bats failed. Leadoff man Miller Huggins led the majors with 116 of those walks alone. Also, all eight starting Cardinals had double digit stolen bases, even their catcher Roger Bresnahan. Bresnahan only struck out 17 times and hit .278, trailing just Mike Mowrey (.282) and Ed Konetchy (.302) on the team.

Of the team's six pitchers with 100+ innings last season, only Slim Sallee (2.97) had an ERA below three runs. The Cardinals allowed more runs than any other team in the league, so they have brought in several rookies to find a pitcher that can help them.

Verdict: The offense is solid thanks to the walks and stolen bases, though it is not nearly enough to overcome the terrible pitching. The Cardinals will not improve unless they can find a pitcher, preferably multiple, that can go out there 30 times a year and actually put them in a position to win each time.

Future Hall of Famers: Roger Bresnahan, Miller Huggins

Finishing Order Prediction

1. Chicago Cubs

2. New York Giants

3. Pittsburgh Pirates

4. Philadelphia Phillies

5. Cincinnati Reds

6. St. Louis Cardinals

7. Brooklyn Dodgers

8. Boston Rustlers

1911 Season Preview: American League

The 1911 Philadelphia Athletics look very similar to their champion squad of 1910. This spells bad news for the rest of the AL.

Boston Red Sox: The Red Sox are, by far, the youngest team in the AL. The average age of Boston batters last season weighted for every at bat was 25.5. The next youngest was Chicago at 27.1, who were closer to the two oldest teams of Cleveland and St. Louis at 28.2. Similarly, the Red Sox also had the youngest pitching staff by innings pitched. Star center fielder Tris Speaker turns 23 just a week before Opening Day, but already hit .340 last season. Cleanup hitter Duffy Lewis tied for second in the league with eight homers in his first ever season and is exactly two weeks Speaker's junior. Rounding out one of the top outfields in baseball is Harry Hooper, the old man of the group at 23 and a half years of age. He led the majors in plate appearances and sacrifice hits last season.

On the mound, the Red Sox have several excellent starters. The best of the bunch is Joe Wood. Wood actually went 12-13 last season, but his ERA of 1.69 suggests better luck in the future. He also struck out 145 batters in less than 200 innings of work last season. Expect greatness from Wood, who is only 21 years old and one of the youngest players in the entire league.

Verdict: Expect the Red Sox to have a winning record and compete for second or third in the league. Unfortunately, the pennant looks to be out of reach with a weak infield and a lot of inexperience. But this team could very well be competing for titles in 1912 and beyond.

Future Hall of Famers: Harry Hooper, Tris Speaker

Chicago White Sox: Chicago's anemic offense scored just two runs more than last place St. Louis in 1910. They were dead last in doubles and home runs, but slightly better at triples where they were second-to-last. Not only did they lack power, but their average of .211 was also worst in the league. The best hitter would be Harry Lord, who hit .267 on the season between Chicago and Boston, from whom he was acquired mid-season.

Two years ago, he won 40 games. Yet, his ERA was lower in 1910 at 1.27. Unfortunately, playing on the sixth place team was therefore the reason Ed Walsh went 18-20 last season. Walsh is usually good for somewhere around 400 innings in a season, which Chicago will need all of if they wish to compete.

Verdict: The team moved into White Sox Park mid-season last year, but the change could not help their offense. The White Sox will need to either make some trades or have some young players step up to compete for a spot in the first division since Walsh can't pitch every game.

Future Hall of Famers: Ed Walsh

Cleveland Naps: There is a reason Cleveland is the only team whose nickname is based on one of its players. Nap Lajoie started his third decade in the majors nearly taking the batting title, which would have been his fifth in ten years. Lajoie resigned as manager the year before that, which seemed to revitalize him in 1910. Lajoie will be joined in the lineup by Joe Jackson, who also came to Cleveland from the Athletics. Their loss could be Cleveland's gain as the rookie hit .387 in his limited playing time last season.

Cleveland was devastated by the death of Addie Joss at the start of April during spring training. He had not been a factor in 1910, but the 30-year-old was one of the top pitchers in the AL the previous decade. His loss hangs sadly over the heads of Cleveland. Last year, the Naps allowed the second most runs in the AL, of course only trailing St. Louis in that category. They hope to change that in 1911 with a couple of rookies moving into the rotation, Vean Gregg and Gene Krapp. Neither Gregg nor Krapp have ever made a start in the majors, but they can't be much worse than what Cleveland already had. The Naps will also bring back the oldest player still active, Cy Young. After winning 19 games in his first season in Cleveland the year before, Young struggled in 1910 in going 7-10 with just 21 starts. This season may just be a final victory lap before he heads off into the sunset as the greatest pitcher the game has seen.

Verdict: There's a lot of uncertainty in Cleveland, where the team will turn to rookies to try and improve on a losing campaign last season. The Naps nearly put it together in 1908, finishing a half game back in the pennant race, but have taken steps backwards since then. Luckily, the presence of Lajoie on the team ensures they will at least finish around .500 even if nothing else goes right.

Future Hall of Famers: Nap Lajoie, Cy Young

Detroit Tigers: The 3-4-5 hitters of Ty Cobb, Sam Crawford, and Jim Delahanty are the reason Detroit scored more runs than anyone else last year and will once again have the Tigers near the top. Really, it's all about Cobb, who is the best hitter in baseball already at age 24. Crawford and Delahanty provide insurance pitchers still throw to Cobb since they would love to come to the plate with one of the fastest men in the league already on base. Last season, Crawford ended Cobb's own three-year streak of winning the RBI title and finished five off of the all-time AL record with 120 thanks to batting behind Cobb on a daily basis. Delahanty did not do as well in his first full season with the Tigers, but he is capable of hitting .300 and can be counted on to finish off what Cobb and Crawford start. Batting ahead of all of them will be Donie Bush, one of the best fielding shortstops in the game and a master at getting on base despite a mediocre bat as he has led the AL in walks during both of his two full seasons in the majors.

The Tigers' pitching staff is the obvious weak link in the team. George Mullin won 21 games, but most of that is thanks to the high-powered offense behind him as he gave up the most earned runs in the league without even reaching 300 innings. Detroit will depend on a pair of Ed's, Ed Willett and Ed Lafitte, to try and not lose games so Cobb and company can win them.

Verdict: After winning three pennants in a row, winning just 86 games and finishing third was a big disappointment. Detroit did not need any revolutionary changes in the offseason and maintains stability. Better pitching will be the key to catching back up to Philadelphia for the pennant.

Future Hall of Famers: Ty Cobb, Sam Crawford

New York Highlanders: The Highlanders don't have any sluggers, but but they still had the fourth most runs last season. Second baseman John Knight hit .312 with a team-high 25 doubles, though his glove can still be a liability. Luckily, most throws he makes to first baseman Hal Chase will be caught anyway as Chase is an excellent fielder at the position, a rarity. He also hit .290, stole 40 bases, and drove in 73 runs last year. The last batter of note is Birdie Cree, who hit 16 triples and batted .287 in a surprising breakout season at age 27.

Last year's top rookie was, without a doubt, Russ Ford. Ford went 26-6 with an ERA of 1.65, struck out 209, and was one out short of pitching 300 innings. Possibly the second best rookie campaign came from number two pitcher Hippo Vaughn, who had an ERA of 1.83, joins Ford to make a formidable one-two punch.

Verdict: New York notched its first winning season in four years with a surprising second place finish. On paper, it doesn't seem like they should be competing, and beating, Detroit, but they may be able to do it again if they can just repeat 1910 with mostly the same personnel.

Future Hall of Famers: none

Philadelphia Athletics: There is no finer infield in baseball than the four men manning the bases in Philadelphia. Second baseman Eddie Collins is off to an amazing start for his bright career, hitting .324 (actually down from his average in 1909) and stealing a league-high 81 bases in 1910. Cleanup hitter Frank Baker is also hitting his stride over at third base. Baker was one of three Athletics players with at least 40 extra base hits, the others patrolling the otherwise overlooked outfield in Rube Oldring and Danny Murphy. The big change coming on offense is at first base, where 37-year-old Harry Davis will start the season. However, Stuffy McInnis looks eager to replace him as one of the first players born in the 1890s to make the majors.

Jack Coombs matched his win total from his first four seasons in Philadelphia with 31 wins last year. He also matched his career shutouts with 13, both of which were best in the majors. The best winning percentage, however, went to Chief Bender, who will get the nod on Opening Day. Bender went 23-5 and may still be considered the ace despite Coombs' amazing campaign. The Athletics also have veteran Eddie Plank, who surpassed 200 wins last season in his tenth season with the team.

Verdict: Philadelphia is the heavy favorite to repeat and will probably be favored in the World Series should they make it. They have no glaring weaknesses. Last year, they became the first American League club to ever win 100 games in a season. Now they will be expected to do it again.

Future Hall of Famers: Frank Baker, Chief Bender, Eddie Collins, Eddie Plank

St. Louis Browns: A constant in St. Louis since 1899, first with the Cardinals before joining the Browns in 1902, Bobby Wallace remains the star player on the team. Unfortunately, he is a 37-year-old shortstop who is on the decline in the field and at the plate. The Browns brought in Frank LaPorte and Jimmy Austin to join him at second and third base, respectively, through a trade with the Highlanders in February. Austin can field well and LaPorte immediately becomes the top hitter on the club, but neither can perform well in the opposite discipline. Expect an assortment of first basemen to round out the infield as they try to find someone who can hit better than Patrick Newnam's .216 last season.

Jack Powell and Joe Lake combined for 18 wins last season, but each could be 20-game winners on a better team. A pair of rookies who have never played in the majors will join them in the rotation as the other starters returning from 1910 could not earn their spot again.

Verdict: The embarrassment from the Chalmers Award controversy last season led to the firing of old manager Jack O'Connor, who is now replaced by Wallace. He has the impossible task ahead of him with the players under his management in just finishing outside of last place.

Future Hall of Famers: Bobby Wallace

Washington Senators: Clyde Milan hit .279 in center field and also drew 71 walks, making him possibly the best leadoff man in the league. Outside of Milan, the lineup is unspectacular, though not nearly as bad as St. Louis or Chicago. Rookie Bill Cunningham will start the year batting cleanup after hitting .297 in 21 games last year. If he can do that again over a full season, Washington has a chance to improve.

He had already established himself as the staff ace going into 1910, but last season cemented Walter Johnson as one of the best pitchers in the game. Johnson had never had a winning record nor led the lead in any category in his first three seasons. But in 1910, Johnson went 25-17 and led the league in games, games started, complete games, innings pitched, and strikeouts. He also led in hits, though that was inevitable with the workload he amassed. Expect to see Johnson log 300+ innings for years to come as the Senators will need his arm to be competitive. The next pitcher may on the team may be Dolly Gray, who has totaled 38 losses over the last two seasons as another regular starter in the rotation.

Verdict: Washington is clearly in another league from St. Louis, but they will have to put up a fight to jump Chicago or whoever else seems destined for sixth place in the AL. Johnson and Milan can be the centerpieces of a team competing for a pennant, but Washington needs better supporting players just to reach the first division before that.

Future Hall of Famers: Walter Johnson

Finishing Order Prediction

1. Philadelphia Athletics

2. Detroit Tigers

3. Boston Red Sox

4. New York Highlanders

5. Cleveland Naps

6. Chicago White Sox

7. Washington Senators

8. St. Louis Browns

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

1910 Season Review


The Philadelphia Athletics won the seventh World Series four games to one against the Chicago Cubs. It marked their first World Series victory in their second appearance after falling to the New York Giants by the same result in 1905. For Chicago, it was their fourth pennant in the last five years but first loss since their defeat at the hands of the Chicago White Sox in 1906.

American League

Team W L GB
Philadelphia Athletics 102 48 --
New York Highlanders 88 63 14.5
Detroit Tigers 86 68 18.0
Boston Red Sox 81 72 22.5
Cleveland Naps 71 81 32.0
Chicago White Sox 68 85 35.5
Washington Senators 66 85 36.5
St. Louis Browns 47 107 57.0


The Athletics came to life in the summer, taking the lead for good on June 21st and gradually pulling away from New York and Detroit by about five games per month. Jack Coombs won a majors best 31 games, including another majors best 13 shutouts. He then won three of the five games in the World Series to finish off a nearly perfect season.

With Philadelphia's dominating campaign, the big story line in the final months was the race for the Chalmers Award. Hugh Chalmers of Chalmers Automobile announced before the season that we would present a Chalmers Model 30 automobile to the player with the highest batting average across both leagues at the end of the season. National League champion Sherry Magee finished more than 50 points behind the two competitors for the car in the American League: Nap Lajoie and Ty Cobb.

Cobb seemingly had an insurmountable advantage going into the final day of the season and sat out with nothing on the line. Lajoie, however, had a doubleheader against the St. Louis Browns. With the Browns playing back defensively, Lajoie continuously bunted to reach base and started 8-for-8 but still came up a hit short after a wild throw to first base on his final at bat resulted in an error, and thus a hitless at bat. Supposedly, the Browns tried to bribe the official scorer of the game to credit Lajoie with a hit in his final at bat, but this would not pass. Cobb ended the year batting .385 to Lajoie's .384 to win the title, though Chalmers ultimately awarded both players with an automobile after all.

National League

Team W L GB
Chicago Cubs 104 50 --
New York Giants 91 63 13.0
Pittsburgh Pirates 86 67 17.5
Philadelphia Phillies 78 75 25.5
Cincinnati Reds 75 79 29.0
Brooklyn Superbas 64 90 40.0
St. Louis Cardinals 63 90 40.5
Boston Doves 53 100 50.5


The Cubs were tied with the New York Giants for the lead until June 10th, when they beat New York on the road. They then beat them twice more to sweep the three game series and held the lead for the rest of the way. It was still a close fight for a month, though, as the lead shrank back to just half a game by July 10th after two straight wins in Chicago by the Giants, but the Cubs won the third game of the series and soon after went on an 18-2 stretch over 20 games from mid-July to early August. The Cubs' steady infield that won its fourth pennant in five years was also immortalized in July by Franklin Pierce Adams in "Baseball's Sad Lexicon," better known by "Tinker to Evers to Chance."

The National League's three-year win streak in the World Series, all at the hands of the Detroit Tigers, ended with the Cubs' loss to the Athletics. The Senior Circuit still held a 4-3 advantage overall after the loss and has only ever been represented by three teams: the Cubs, Giants, and Pittsburgh Pirates. Not so coincidentally, these were the only three teams to really compete for the pennant in 1910.

1911 Season Introduction


The 1911 season is the oldest season offered by Strat-O-Matic for play by cards and dice. In fact, it is the only dead-ball season available as the next oldest created is the 1920 season, which marks the start of the live-ball era.

There are many seasons from the first two decades of the 20th century that also provide compelling choices:
  • 1903: The first World Series marks the start of 50 years of stability in the MLB, as every team will remain in the same city until 1953
  • 1904: One of only two seasons without a World Series (the other being 1994) as the New York Giants, who won 106 games with six future Hall of Famers on their roster, declare themselves world champions and refuse to play the AL pennant winner
  • 1906: The Cubs win 116 games, scoring nearly double the amount of runs as they gave up, but lose the first cross-town World Series to the White Sox
  • 1908: Both leagues are decided on the final day as three teams finish within one game of the eventual pennant winners (the Cubs will go on to win their final World Series for another 108 years)
  • 1914: The "Miracle Braves" bounce back from last place on July 4th to win the National League by 10.5 games, then sweep the Athletics in the World Series, who had won three of the previous four Series. A third major league, the Federal League, also starts up and will also operate during the 1915 season
  • 1918: The Red Sox win their last World Series for another 86 years by defeating the Cubs in a war-shortened season, led all season by a young double duty pitcher-hitter named Babe Ruth
  • 1919: Ruth shatters the dead-ball era as he transitions to play more in the outfield, but the Red Sox struggle and he will be sold at season's end to the Yankees. The World Series features the Reds and White Sox, but fans are robbed of a legitimate champion as the "Black Sox" throw the playoffs intentionally

On the surface, I did not see anything as compelling as these seasons as to why 1911 was chosen in particular as the first, and only, dead-ball season. The Philadelphia Athletics would win the World Series in real life after dominating the American League to win by 13.5 games. However, they had already won the title the year before and would win again in 1913, so this season is hardly unique for their early dynasty. The team they defeated, the New York Giants, won the National League by 7.5 games, not extremely close but a nail-biter compared to the AL race. They had already won the World Series in 1905 and would go on to win the pennant but lose to the AL champion in 1912 and 1913, as well.

Digging deeper, though, reveals a great cross-section of dead-ball era players at various points in their careers:
  • Ty Cobb, arguably the greatest player of the era, has possibly the best season of his career. The Georgia Peach bats .419, the second best average in AL history behind Nap Lajoie's .426 in 1901, and leads the majors in runs, hits, doubles, RBIs, stolen bases, slugging percentage, OPS, and total bases. His Detroit Tigers will need all of this to remain competitive as the only team that can even slightly threaten the Athletics.
  • Speaking of Lajoie, he is still playing at an elite level as the player-manager for the Cleveland Naps, the only such team in the majors named in one man's honor. Lajoie, who split the Chalmers Award for best batting average in baseball with Cobb following some controversy the year before, would bat .365 the year he turned 37. Injuries would limit him to just 90 games, otherwise Cleveland may have been more competitive than their third place finish.
  • The "$100,000 Infield" gets its start in Philadelphia. Hall of Famers Eddie Collins and Frank "Home Run" Baker, along with Jack Barry, are joined by Stuffy McInnis and will remain the every-day starters through 1914. While this would not be a very impressive nickname in 2020, over a century ago it rang as the highest praise.
  • Honus Wagner wins the last of his eight National League batting titles at the age of 37. Wagner will continue to play at an elite level for a couple of years but will never lead the NL in any major category again.
  • Cy Young pitches his final season in the majors. Even after turning 44 in March, Young will make 18 starts for both the Naps and the Boston Rustlers before calling it quits to get awards named after him a few decades later. Young is one of only two players born in the 1860s, the other being an uncarded player who appeared in just one game, still active in 1911.
  • The Rookie of the Year Award would not officially be rewarded for another two world wars, but voters would've had a tough time choosing if they could only just choose one. "Shoeless" Joe Jackson hits .408 in his first full season, the highest total for a runner-up in the 20th century. That still may not have been enough as Grover Cleveland "Pete" Alexander won a majors high 28 games, including an also high of seven shutouts, in his very first season. Alexander would yet still improve on this and become the dominant pitcher in the National League by mid-decade, akin to Walter Johnson in the American League.

Though I would personally prefer to run a replay of the 1914 season, since I am a Braves fan after all, I love the aspect of physical cards and dice baseball that Strat-O-Matic offers and will certainly settle to run a replay of 1911. The game will certainly be different than I am used to with more modern card sets. With pitchers expected to go all nine innings on their own, plenty of errors on defense, hit and runs and stolen base attempts used liberally, and no home runs, the game of baseball for any pre-1920 season is almost foreign.

I look to forward to starting this project soon by playing all 1,232 games, followed by the best-of-seven World Series for the two pennant winners, over the coming years. This will be a long undertaking but I hope that anyone who reads this will enjoy the content. After a short review of 1910 and a preview for 1911, we will start off the season with a nearly full slate of games on Wednesday, April 12, 1911!

Daily Recap: Tuesday, April 11th

The Red Sox wave goodbye to Arizona as spring training is over and a new season begins tomorrow! Today's Scores no games played Tomo...