Greenville Lions (baseball)
The Greenville Lions were a minor league baseball team that existed from 1939 to 1941 and from 1946 to 1950. They played in the Alabama–Florida League in 1939, and in the Alabama State League for the rest of their existence. In 1939, they were affiliated with the Chicago White Sox, in 1940 they were affiliated with the Brooklyn Dodgers and from 1948–1950 with the Pittsburgh Pirates. They were based in Greenville, Alabama. Their home games were played at Greenville Stadium[1] The team was known as the Greenville Pirates during their final years of existence.
Greenville Pirates 1939–1950 (1939–1941, 1946–1950) Greenville, Alabama | |
Minor league affiliations | |
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Previous classes | Class D |
League | Alabama State League (1940–1941, 1946–1950) |
Previous leagues | Alabama–Florida League (1939) |
Major league affiliations | |
Previous teams |
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Minor league titles | |
League titles | 1 (1947) |
Team data | |
Previous names |
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Previous parks | Greenville Stadium |
Year-by-year record
(from Lions Baseball Reference Bullpen) (from Pirates Baseball Reference Bullpen)
Year | Record | Finish | Manager | Playoffs |
---|---|---|---|---|
1939 | 44-85 | 6th | Paul Kardow | |
1940 | 71-59 | 2nd | Dick Luckey | Won 1st round vs. Troy Trojans (3 games to 2) Lost League Finals vs. Dothan Browns (4 games to 2) |
1941 | 45-72 | 6th | Ernie Wingard / Herb Thomas | |
1946 | 67-62 | 3rd | Dan Miller / William Anderson | Won 1st round vs. Dothan Browns (3 games to 1) Lost League Finals vs. Geneva Red Birds (3 games to 1) |
1947 | 90-48 | 1st | Sam Demma | Won 1st round vs. Enterprise Boll Weevils (4 games to 3) League Champs vs. Brewton Millers (4 games to 3) |
1948 | 80-46 | 2nd | Walt Tauscher | Won 1st round vs. Ozark Eagles (4 games to 3) Lost League Finals vs. Dothan Browns (4 games to 0) |
1949 | 83-44 | 1st | Walt Tauscher | Won 1st round vs. Enterprise Boll Weevils (4 games to 1) Lost League Finals vs. Andalusia Arrows (4 games to 1) |
1950 | 65-61 | 4th | Mickey O'Neil | Lost in 1st round vs. Dothan Browns (4 games to 2) |
gollark: We already have neural networks optimizing parameters for other neural networks, and machine learning systems are able to beat humans at quite a few tasks already with what's arguably blind pattern-matching.
gollark: One interesting (story-wise) path AI could go down is that we continue with what seems to be the current strategy - blindly evolving stuff without a huge amount of intentional design - and eventually reach human-or-better performance on a lot of tasks (including somewhat general-intelligency ones), while working utterly incomprehensibly to humans.I was going to say this after the very short discussion about ad revenue maximizers but left this half written and forgot.
gollark: And probably isn't smart enough to think very long-term, and isn't in charge of demonetization and stuff.
gollark: Which would be very bad.
gollark: An ad revenue maximizer.
References
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