1891 in baseball

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

List of years in baseball

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 8751 0.630 51–20 36–31
Chicago Colts 8253 0.607 43–22 39–31
New York Giants 7161 0.538 13 39–28 32–33
Philadelphia Phillies 6869 0.496 18½ 35–34 33–35
Cleveland Spiders 6574 0.468 22½ 40–28 25–46
Brooklyn Grooms 6176 0.445 25½ 41–31 20–45
Cincinnati Reds 5681 0.409 30½ 26–41 30–40
Pittsburgh Pirates 5580 0.407 30½ 32–34 23–46

American Association final standings

American Association W L Pct. GB Home Road
Boston Reds 9342 0.689 51–17 42–25
St. Louis Browns 8551 0.625 52–21 33–30
Baltimore Orioles 7164 0.526 22 44–24 27–40
Philadelphia Athletics 7366 0.525 22 43–26 30–40
Milwaukee Brewers 2115 0.583 22½ 16–5 5–10
Cincinnati Kelly's Killers 4357 0.430 32½ 24–21 19–36
Columbus Solons 6176 0.445 33 33–29 28–47
Louisville Colonels 5483 0.394 40 39–32 15–51
Washington Statesmen 4491 0.326 49 28–40 16–51

Statistical leaders

National League statistical leaders

National League
TypeNameStat
AVGBilly Hamilton PHP.340
HRHarry Stovey BSB16Mike Tiernan NY16
RBICap Anson CHI120
WinsBill Hutchinson CHI44
ERAJohn Ewing NYG2.27
StrikeoutsAmos Rusie NYG337

American Association statistical leaders

American Association
TypeNameStat
AVGDan Brouthers BSR.350
HRDuke Farrell BSR12
RBIHugh Duffy BSR110Duke Farrell BSR110
WinsSadie McMahon BAL35
ERAEd Crane CNK2.45
StrikeoutsJack Stivetts STL259

Notable seasons

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 – Chicago Colts outfielder Jimmy Ryan hits for the cycle in a 9–3 win over the Cleveland Spiders. It's the second time in Ryan's career that he has hit for the cycle.
  • July 31 – New York Giants pitcher Amos Rusie no-hits the 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 – Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Abner Dalrymple hits for the cycle in a 10–4 win over the Washington Statesmen.

October–December

  • October 4 – On the final day of the American Association season, Ted Breitenstein of the St. Louis Browns throws a no-hitter against the Louisville Colonels, in an 8–0 Browns win. It is Breitenstein's first major league start. He faced the minimum number of batters, 27, allowing just one base on balls. It was also the last no-hitter thrown in the American Association, as the league folded following the season.
  • November 26 – A series for the championship of the Pacific Coast begins between the champions of the California League (the San Jose Dukes) and the Pacific Northwest League pennant winners (the Portland Webfeet). San Jose wins the opener, 8–6. The series will last until January 10 with San Jose winning 10 games to 9. All the games are played in San Jose, California.

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.