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Old 07-01-2025, 09:48 PM   #741
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THE LIBERTY BELL CLASSIC MATCHUP IS SET
FRANKFORD RETURNS; MERION TAKES THREE-TEAM PLAYOFF TO WIN WEST PHILADELPHIA


PHILADELPHIA (Aug 18, 1874) – It took an extra two days, but the three-team playoff in the western half of Philadelphia is over and the two teams to play in the second Liberty Bell Classic are in place.

EAST PHILADELPHIA: Frankford Arsenal, in 3rd place and two games behind leaders Port Richmond to begin August, went 10-2 over their remaining schedule while Pt. Richmond was 2-10 and 2nd-place Keystone was 5-7. As a result, red-hot Frankford won the East championship by four games, with a similarly hot Spartan team finishing runner-up.

KEY PLAYER: Joseph Evans (LF) – .336, .857 OPS, 76 R, 109 H, 22 2B, 13 3B, 67 RBI, 18 BB, 157 TB, 4.0 WPA, 3.1 WAR

WEST PHILADELPHIA: The three-way playoff started with Merion at Mercantile. It was a close game for six innings, tied 1-1, but a dozen runs over the 7th & 8th made Merion clear winners and set up a showdown at Schuylkill for the pennant. This time, Merion put their opposition to the sword over the middle innings, scoring ten runs over the 4th, 5th, & 6th to win 12-5 and take the West Philadelphia pennant.

KEY PLAYER: Jonathan Atkins (P) – 20-15, 2.39 ERA, 342.0 IP, 22 CG, 1 SHO, 33 K, 1.7 K/BB, 1.24 WHIP, 6.1 WAR


THE 1874 LIBERTY BELL CLASSIC


SEEDING
• #1: Frankford at 42-28 (+47 RD)
• #2: Merion at 41-31 (+25 RD)
PLAYOFF SERIES FORMAT
• Best of five games
• 2-2-1 format
• Higher seed (FA) has Home Field Advantage
WRITERS POOL PREDICTION
• Frankford Arsenal (10-2 in August, 8-4 in 1-run games) over Merion
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File Type: pdf 1874-046 PCBL PLAYOFFS.pdf (64.3 KB, 40 views)
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Old 07-02-2025, 01:32 AM   #742
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CREIGHTON MAKES IT TO 30 WINS FOR 1ST TIME
LEGENDARY PITCHER GOES 10 INNINGS TO BEAT AMERICAN AND REACH HISTORIC MILESTONE


BROOKLYN (Aug. 22, 1874) - During a legendary career that began in 1860, Jim Creighton has done just about everything. On Saturday he was able to cross off one of the few things he hasn’t done: earn 30 Wins in a single season.

It took ten innings of pitching, but eventually Creighton and his Excelsior teammates beat American 7-6 at their Home of Carroll Park on Saturday afternoon, with a Marcel Bresciani sacrifice sending in the run that made more history for the mighty pitcher at the end of the season's penultimate game.

Not that Creighton didn’t help himself during the contest. He was 3/4 with the bat, scoring twice and driving in two runs. The biggest hit of the day for Excelsior came from leadoff man Charles Hormel, who hit a two-run, inside-the-park Home Run in the bottom of the 4th that put the exclamation point on a four-run Excelsior rally.

After struggling as a 19-year-old greenhorn during his first season with Excelsior, starting almost immediately in year #2 Creighton became one of the sport’s premier talents, culminating in an 1868 season in which he led the New York League in Wins (29), Innings Pitched (362.2), Complete Games (35), Strikeouts (197; NBBO record), K/9 (4.9; NBBO record), K/BB Ratio (5.6), Pitching WAR (10.3; NBBO record), On-Base % (.463), OPS (.977), & Total WAR (13.6; NBBO record) while splitting time as a Pitching & First Baseman for Excelsior in the NBBO.

As far as this year goes, Creighton is almost certain to end the season as the APBL leader in Wins, Earned Run Average, and Strikeouts among all pitchers with more than 200 innings to their name. It would be the second time he’s performed such as feat, as in 1862 his 26 Wins, 2.29 ERA, & 69 Strikeouts led all NYL pitchers.

A simple look at Jim Creighton’s career pitching statistics could make a grown man weep:




In addition, Creighton has done the following as a batter:

• .340/.394/.451, .845 OPS (145 OPS+), 814 H, 152 2B, 52 3B, 3 HR, 392 RBI, 222 BB, 36 K, 22.8 WPA, 26.3 WAR

He has made thirteen All-Star Games between the NBBO & APBL, been named Most Valuable Player of his league five times, won Pitcher of the Year once (introduced in 1869), and he’s been in his league’s Team of the Year half a dozen times.

About the only thing left for Jim Creighton to accomplish is to win a championship. If he can manage that before his retirement sometime in the next 5-10 years, Creighton will leave a resumé that no pitching peer will ever be able to touch.
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Old 07-02-2025, 02:28 AM   #743
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FOUNDERS’ CUP IV MATCHUP IS SET
ALLEGHANY SURVIVES ST. JOHN’S ONSLAUGHT, WILL FACE ORANGE FOR APBL TITLE


MANHATTAN & PITTSBURGH (Aug. 24, 1874) – The APBL season is over, and the matchup for the fourth edition for the Founders’ Cup is now in place.

COLONIAL: Alleghany (52-38) survived…barely. After struggling again during the season’s final week, they took the Colonial Conference by two games over St. John’s when the gap between the two had been eight just fifteen games prior. A 4-11 stretch run, the worst in the whole APBL, will have Orange confident in taking their first Founders’ Cup title.

KEY PLAYERS:
Gerald Strong (SS) – .341, .770 OPS, 92 R, 147 H, 23 XBH, 1 HR, 55 RBI, 29 SB, +21.5 ZR, 5.1 WPA, 4.8 WAR
Jerald Peterson (1B) – .341, .787 OPS, 79 R, 144 H, 30 XBH, 1 HR, 78 RBI, 10 BB, 13 SB, 3.9 WPA, 2.4 WAR
Harry Thompson (C) – .340, .769 OPS, 54 R, 100 H, 19 XBH, 2 HR, 54 RBI, 3 SB, 2.88 C-ERA, 2.8 WPA, 2.0 WAR
Elmer Seabold (P) – 25-19, 2.94 ERA, 358.0 IP, 27 CG, 1 SHO, 78 K, 1.5 K/BB, 1.33 WHIP, 4.9 WAR, 5.1 rWAR
METROPOLITAN: The entire Metropolitan conference ranged from 4-6 to 6-4 over its final ten games, but unlike the Colonial champs Orange (53-37) played .500 baseball in August (8-7). That meant they were able to fend off the challenges from 2x defending champions American (5 GB) and the late-charging Gotham team (3 GB).

KEY PLAYERS:
Anthony Mascherino (CF) – .317, .703 OPS, 102 R, 140 H, 16 2B, 4 3B, 56 RBI, 36 SB, +18.5 ZR, 6.2 WPA, 4.1 WAR
Everett Schreiber (C) – .357, .803 OPS, 72 R, 125 H, 23 2B, 1 3B, 75 RBI, 8 BB, 3.26 C-ERA, 5.0 WPA, 3.8 WAR
Samuel Kessler (1B) – .323, .761 OPS, 93 R, 138 H, 30 XBH, 1 HR, 71 RBI, 14 BB, 21 SB, 4.0 WPA, 2.7 WAR
Paul Caldwell (P) – 24-11, 3.26 ERA, 312.0 IP, 22 CG, 2 SHO, 20 K, 0.9 K/BB, 1.30 WHIP, 3.2 WAR, 2.4 rWAR
The Founders’ Cup is a best-of-seven series with the following schedule:
Aug. 25: GAME 1 – Alleghany at Orange
Aug. 26: GAME 2 – Alleghany at Orange
Aug. 27: No game
Aug. 28: GAME 3 – Orange at Alleghany
Aug. 29: GAME 4 – Orange at Alleghany
Aug. 30: GAME 5 – Orange at Alleghany (if necessary)
Aug. 31: No game
Sep. 1: GAME 6 – Alleghany at Orange (if necessary)
Sep. 2: GAME 7 – Alleghany at Orange (if necessary)
The Writers Pool sees Orange as the favorites due to Alleghany’s late collapse:
• Orange (29-16 at home) beats Alleghany (4-11 post-ASG)
• The series will go five or six games
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File Type: pdf 1874-048 FC MATCHUP.pdf (93.8 KB, 45 views)
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Old 07-02-2025, 03:32 PM   #744
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THE SECOND LIBERTY BELL CLASSIC
MERION V FRANKFORD TO DETERMINE THE CHAMPIONS OF PHILADELPHIA


PHILADELPHIA (Aug. 20-23, 1873) – The inaugural Liberty Bell Classic was…well…a classic. The series between Frankford Arsenal & Mercantile B.C. went the full five games, with Mercantile conquering Frankford in the winner-take-all Game Five by the score of 12-10 and 1B Benjamin Warnock taking home Most Valuable Player honors.

Thanks to a scorching-hot finish, Frankford took West Philadelphia by four games and were back in the final series of the PCBL season looking to avenge that tough defeat. On the other hand, Merion did things the hard way: a 3-7 final ten games to lose their West Philadelphia lead before taking the three-way playoff by winning twice away from home.

Frankford, the best offensive team in the PCBL, was led by mostly the same group as last year. They had the now 22-year-old LF Jonathan Evans, the most complete player in the league. CF Francis Brown (65 RBI, 2.0 WAR) held down the middle of the lineup again. Charlie Grenier (19-17, 2.64 ERA) & Walter Denman (17-8, 2.25 ERA) remained a premier pitching duo. The noticeable difference was at the top of the lineup, where greenhorn 2B Jonathan Toppin (.311, 72 RBI, 2.7 WAR) immediately proved himself to be one of the best infielders in the league.

Merion, for all their late-season flaws, still couldn’t be taken lightly. They had star #1 Jonathan Atkins (20-15, 2.39 ERA, 6.1 WAR), impressive CF Wallace Wagner (.322, 59 RBI, 3.0 WAR), reliable RF Clifford Martin (.320, 61 RBI, 3.1 WAR), and a total of five .300 hitters in a lineup that only had one weak spot. That, and as one of the three B.C.C. teams they automatically commanded respect, or perhaps jealousy, given their impressive organization and facilities.

One team was back looking to right the previous year’s wrongs, and the other was somewhere they felt they belonged. Now it was time to see who would be crowned the second champions of baseball in Philadelphia.


GAME ONE (Frankford Park)
MBCC 9-3 FRA – Jonathan Atkins (P, MBCC) CG, 7 HA, 0 ER, 2/5, 1 R

The LBC opener was a surprise: Merion dominating with hosts Frankford offering little resistance. Unanswered runs by the visitors in the 1st, 3rd, 5th, & 6th put them ahead 7-0, and with Jonathan Atkins pitching that was easily a big enough lead to beat Frankford and go up 1-0.


GAME TWO (Frankford Park)
MBCC 21-9 FRA – William Norman (1B, MBCC) 6/7, 2B, 3 R, 3 RBI

If Game One was a surprise, then Game Two was a stunner. Merion didn’t care that Frankford scored four times in the bottom of the 1st. All that did was make their margin of victory twelve runs instead of sixteen. Norman had six hits, CF Wallace Wagner was 5/7 (5 R, 2 RBI), 2B Everton Woods was 4/7 (3 R, 3 RBI), & RF Clifford Martin was 3/7 (3 R, 3 RBI).


GAME THREE (Cheswold Lane Cricket Grounds)
FRA 9-10 MBCC in 10 – James Cray (LF, MBCC) 3/5, 2 2B, SAC BUNT, 2 R, 2 RBI, GW HIT

Given how they ended the season nobody expected a Merion sweep, and yet there it was.

Game Three was bizarre. After some early scoring saw Merion ahead 4-3 at the end of the 5th, nobody crossed the plate until a Joe McGee sacrifice in the top of the 9th tied the score 4-4 and forced extra innings. Then, the game really took off.

Frankford scored five times in the top of the 10th on a three-run Double by Burton Hyde and a pair of Singles, and with a 9-4 lead it looked to all in attendance as if it was time to get ready for Game Four. As it turned out, Merion had other plans. After an Error opened B10, a Double, a one-run Single by PH Robert Clark, a Base on Balls, a one-run Single by PH Joseph Wanser, another one-run Single by sub RF Ed Skonieczny, and a Sacrifice Fly by Clifford Martin plated a total of four runs to make the score 9-8. Then, with two men on Cray drove them both in with a Double that won the game and completed a Merion sweep of the second Liberty Bell Classic.


LIBERTY BELL CLASSIC MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
William Norman (1B, MBCC) – .562 (9/16), 1.299 OPS, 6 R, 2 2B, 6 RBI, 2 BB, 1x PotG

Game Two’s PotG took the Liberty Bell Classic MVP honors. The 23-year-old Norman was the most productive hitter on either side, with three more hits than anyone else in the LBC as well as being the only player with 6+ Runs and 6+ RBI.


LIBERTY BELL CLASSIC SUMMARY

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Old 07-04-2025, 03:28 PM   #745
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TWC XVIII: A FAMILIAR FIELD WITH TWO CLEAR FAVORITES


NORTHEAST U.S.A. (Aug. 20 to Sep. 3, 1873) – – The eighteenth edition of the Tucker-Wheaton Cup playoffs had a familiar feel to it. Five of the six teams in the field took part the previous year, and the other team was making their third appearance in four seasons.

The headliners were the defending champions: Utica B.B.C., who were returning with five more wins than their title-winning 1873 team earned. Their excellent 2B/3B/SS trio from last year was back, as was their outstanding outfield of Felix Brand, William Buschmann, & James Heilman, although Heilman would spend at least the 1st round bye fending off back spasms.

1872 champions Eckford were back after seeing off a fierce challenge from Atlantic in Brooklyn, and 1871 champions Quaker State were back after overcoming a similarly tough Trenton United team in the Coastal Championship. Portland punished their opponents while winning the New England Championship for the fourth straight year, and Metropolitan took New York City again thanks to a ten-game winning streak to end the season.

The only team participating that wasn’t in the playoffs last year was this year’s overall #1: Susquehanna. They entered the playoffs fresh off a 53-17 season with a +245 Run Differential and a seventeen-game chasm between themselves and 2nd-place Reading in the Inland Championship.

There were two clear favorites from among the six: Susquehanna and Portland, who both finished the season 53-17. Susquehanna had an absurd pitching duo of William Hawk (32-6, 2.00 ERA) & Earl Henry (17-8, 2.86 ERA) and a lineup that had five .300 hitters. Portland had a full half a dozen .300 hitters, the NEL’s best defense, and their own star pitching duo of James Dressman (30-9, 2.38 ERA) & Grover Wright (16-7, 2.42 ERA). The problem: both were NEL sides, so only one could make it to the cup final.

Tucker-Wheaton Cup XVIII was a field full of familiarity. At the same time, two of the Northeastern League teams were a clear cut above the rest. Would it be Portland or Susquehanna who lifted the cup? Would Utica repeat? Could Eckford take the cup for the second time in three years? Could Quaker St. overcome consecutive shocks in the League Championship Series to take their second title? Could Metropolitan take their first? It was time to find out.
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Old 07-04-2025, 03:29 PM   #746
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NEW YORK LEAGUE SEMIFINALS
GAME 1: MET 13-12 ECK – Ezechiele Cornaro (1B, MET) 3/5, 2B, 3B, 2 R, 1 RBI, 1 BB
GAME 2: MET 7-6 ECK in 11 – William Simons (LF, MET) 3/6, 3B, 2 R, 0 RBI, SB
GAME 3: ECK 10-5 MET – Louis Murray (LF, ECK), 3/5 (all 1B), 1 R, 1 RBI, 1 BB, 1 SB
GAME 4: ECK 7-10 MET – Ezechiele Cornaro (1B, MET) 3/5 (all 1B), 1 R, 2 RBI
The opener at Eckford was back-and-forth. Tied 5-5 after the 4th, Eckford went ahead in the 5th only to see Metro go up 9-6 in the 6th. Eckford then tied it in the 7th, but four more Metro runs in the 8th made it 13-9. Eckford tried to tie it again in the 9th but after three runs a ground ball stranded a man on third, and the visitors won Game One.

Game Two was another thriller. Tied 3-3 after five, the teams traded solo runs twice over the next four innings to force extras. After trading single runs again in the 10th PH William Hurt hit a run-scoring Single, and Metro had a 2-0 series lead.

Game Three was an easy Eckford win – nine runs over the first four innings saw them ahead 9-3, and from there it was just a matter of keeping mistakes to a minimum.

Metropolitan took the series in Game Four, but it wasn’t easy. Down 5-0 after five, Eckford put up a seven-run rally in the 6th to take the lead. Metro responded with two runs in the 6th, two more in the 7th, and an insurance run in the 8th to take a three-run lead that wasn’t threatened in Eckford’s last time at bat.


NORTHEASTERN LEAGUE SEMIFINALS
GAME 1: QS 5-12 PORT – Jonathan Ovaska (CF, PORT) 3/5 (all 1B), 2 R, 1 RBI
GAME 2: QS 5-6 PORT – Grover Wright (P, PORT) CG, 11 HA, 3 ER, 1 K, 1/3
GAME 3: PORT 8-7 QS – Carrick Kennedy (2B, PORT) 2/5, 2B, 1 R, 2 RBI
The first game was an easy Portland home win. Even at 1-1 after three, Quaker St. scored in the top of the 4th but Portland responded with six runs to make it a 7-2, and they were up 9-2 before the visitors could muster any response.

Game Two was closer. Quaker St. struck first with two in the 2nd, but Portland took the lead with four in the 6th before adding two more in the 8th. A valiant visiting rally in the 9th came up just short, a Fly Out stranding men on 2nd & 3rd.

And for the third straight year Portland eliminated Quaker St. A 4-3 game to the home team after six, Portland scored twice in T7 to make it 5-4 and then Quaker St. scored three times to make it a 7-5 game. However, in the top of the 8th Portland scored three more times, the key hit an Alfred Williams two-run Double, to take the lead back and complete the sweep.


NEW YORK LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
GAME 1: MET 3-13 UTI – Frank Darcy (1B, UTI) 2/4, 2B, SAC BUNT, 2 R, 5 RBI
GAME 2: MET 3-8 UTI – William Cook (C, UTI) 2/4 (both 1B), 2B, 1 R, 2 RBI
GAME 3: UTI 2-3 MET – Orville Usher (2B, MET) 3/5 (all 1B), 1 R, 1 RBI, 2 DEF DP
GAME 4: UTI 9-17 MET – Francis Smith (CF, MET) 4/6 (all 1B), 2 R, 5 RBI
GAME 5: MET 13-9 UTI – George Brown (RF, MET) 4/6, 3B, 3 R, 2 RBI
To open the NYLCS, Utica scored five runs over the first two innings to go ahead 5-0, and that was more than enough as quality pitching by Rudy Fowler and steady defense kept Metro from threatening while Utica ran up the score.

Game Two was more of the game. Utica again scored five times over the first two innings, and although their lead was 5-1 instead of 5-0 more excellent pitching & defense saw the team through to a 2-0 lead over the New York City champs.

Utica again displayed excellent pitching & defense in Game Three, but their offense sputtered and Metro took advantage, forcing extra innings before C Harold Rowsey hit the game-winning Single in the bottom of the 10th.

Metropolitan forced Game Five with a dominant home win. The hosts scored five times over the first two innings and six more over the 4th & 5th to take an 11-5 lead, and in the bottom of the 7th they wrapped up the win with a six-run rally.

Metropolitan finished the comeback from 0-2 down at Utica. Metro was ahead 8-2 after two innings and looking like they already had tickets to the cup final punched, but a seven-run outburst by Utica over the middle innings turned it into a 9-8 game. In the top of the 8th a Single by Brown and a Double by Francis Smith drove in runs to put Metro in the lead 10-9, and from there they added three more runs in the 9th to spoil Utica’s comeback chances and become NYL champions.


NORTHEASTERN LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
GAME 1: PORT 8-5 SUS – James Dressman (P, PORT) CG, 9 HA, 1 ER, 1 K, 2/4, 2 R
GAME 2: PORT 8-10 SUS – Walter Braden (RF, SUS) 3/4 (all 1B), 1 R, 4 RBI
GAME 3: SUS 9-6 PORT – Walter Braden (RF, SUS) 4/6, 2 2B, 2 R, 2 RBI
GAME 4: SUS 16-3 PORT – John Schultz (CF, SUS) 4/7 (all 1B), 4 R, 3 RBI, 2 SB
Portland took first blood in the battle of the 53-17 teams in Wilkes-Barre. The visitors opened Game One with three tallies in the top of the 1st, and from there Susquehanna was left playing a game of catch-up that they just couldn’t win as Dressman kept them at arm’s length with both ball and bat.

In Game Two it was Susquehanna who scored early – four times in B1 – to take an early lead and force the opposition to play catch up. By the final inning they had a 10-4 lead, and the gap was simply too much for Portland’s valiant four-run rally to erase. The series was tied 1-1.

Game Three in Portland was a game of twos. Susquehanna scored twice in the 1st, 5th, 7th, & 8th, while Portland scored twice in the 3rd, 6th, & 8th. A single run in the top of the 9th meant Susquehanna were deserved 9-6 winners, and Braden took PoG honors for the second time in a row with another stellar performance.

Portland would not get another crack at lifting the Tucker-Wheaton Cup. One run in T1 followed by eight more in T2 put Susquehanna ahead 9-0 early in Game Four, and from there steady pitching by William Hawk made sure there would be no scare for the visitors.


TUCKER-WHEATON CUP XVII FINAL

It was time for the final of Tucker-Wheaton Cup XVIII.

Susquehanna would enter the series as clear favorites, given that they dispatched their fellow 53-17 team, Portland, in just four games in the NEL Championship Series. Still, counting the final two weeks of the season Metropolitan was 16-3 over their previous nineteen games and thus was a serious threat.

Either way, one team would be lifting the cup for the first time.


GAME ONE (River View Field in Wilkes-Barre, Penn.)
MET 8-12 SUS – Walter Braden (RF, SUS) 3/5, HR, 2 R, 3 RBI

It took some work, but Susquehanna did the expected and won the opener.

Behind 4-1 after two, Metro proceeded to score three runs in both the 3rd & 4th to take a 7-4 lead. However, that lead was short-lived as Susquehanna scored once in the 4th and then five times in the 5th to go ahead 10-7. Metro scored in the top of the 7th to make it a two-run contest, but Braden’s two-run homer in B7 put the game away for the hosts.


GAME TWO (River View Field in Wilkes-Barre, Penn.)
MET 3-19 SUS – Joseph Jurski (1B, SUS) 4/6, 3B, 1 R, 3 RBI

Susquehanna put Metropolitan under a steamroller to go up 2-0.

After four innings it looked like Metro might have a chance as the score was 5-2 to the hosts, but Susquehanna then scored twice in the 5th, six times in the 6th, and six more times in the 7th to turn that 5-2 into a 19-2 lead. Aside from Jurski, 2B Will Gillete (3/6, 4 R, 1 RBI) also had a notable performance with the bat for Susquehanna.


GAME THREE (Hamilton Square in New York City)
SUS 8-7 MET in 10 – Ellis Smith (C, SUS) 3/3, 2B, 1 R, 1 RBI

There would be no 0-2 comeback for Metropolitan like in the previous series.

Susquehanna had the early lead: 4-0 by the middle of the 2nd. Metropolitan then chipped away at it, with two runs in the 2nd followed by single runs in the 5th & 6th evening the score. In the top of the 7th Susquehanna took the lead 6-4 on an Error and a Single by Smith. Metro then scored a run in B8 that was cancelled out by the visitors in T9, and the score was 7-5 going into Metro’s final chance to extend the season.

With two out in B9, Metro RF George Brown delivered a two-run Single that tied the game 6-6 and forced extra innings. In the top of the 10th fifteen-year veteran 3B Bertrand Sargent put Susquehanna back in the lead with a one-run Single, and William Hawk, author of a historic season, shut down Metro from there.

The NBBO’s best team in 1874 had swept the Tucker Wheaton Cup final, becoming champions for the first time.


TUCKER-WHEATON CUP MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Ellis Smith (C, SUS) – 7 G, .500 (15/30), 1.133 OPS, 6 R, 4 2B, 6 RBI, 0.6 WPA, 0.4 WAR, 2/6 RTO

Ellis Smith was an unlikely choice for TWC Most Valuable Player. He was 7/12 in the cup final with three RBI, with four Susquehanna batsmen driving in more runs than him. Smith also played in just 49 games during the season, batting .313 (.677 OPS) with 31 RBI.

The Writers Pool felt that his clutch hitting, combined with his defensive work and expert handling of Susquehanna’s star pitchers, was deserving of the trophy over teammate Walter Braden, who took Player of the Game honors in three of the team’s seven outings this postseason but was ineffectual in the other four games.


TUCKER-WHEATON CUP FINAL SUMMARY


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Old 07-04-2025, 03:30 PM   #747
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FOUNDERS’ CUP IV: WHO WANTS TO WIN IT?


MANHATTAN & PITTSBURGH. (Aug. 25 to Sep. 1, 1874) – Founders’ Cup #4 would not be a repeat of the previous two editions. 2x defending champions American simply weren’t as great as they were last year, and finished tied for 3rd in the Metropolitan with a 48-42 record. St. John’s mounted the cavalry for a mighty late-season charge, but because they were stuck around .500 for much of the season the Providence men came up two games short in the Colonial.

This was a Founders’ Cup that casual fans weren’t sure what to make of. Alleghany was in it even though they were an APBL-worst 4-11 in August, and Orange was only 8-7 after the All-Star Game. If the Founders’ Cup field was based on late-season record and star power there would have been multiple teams in each conference that would have been more worthy contestants than these two.

Still, Orange was entering the series with the APBL’s #1 record and an impressive mix of legends and younger stars. They had 15x All-Stars Samuel Kessler & Anthony Mascherino, 9x All-Star Taliesin Buckley, 7x All-Star Everett Schreiber, 4x All-Star Will Chaffin, the productive Charles Whitehead, repeat All-Star P Paul Caldwell, and the recently returned William Valentine, who had All-Star-level production but missed six weeks of the season due to a broken hand.

Alleghany, for all their late struggles, still had to be respected. Their pitching duo of Raynard Cordell & Elmer Seabold both finished with 23-25 Wins and ERA’s of around 3.00. Gerald Strong hit .341 while having a Zone Rating of +21 at SS and an APBL-best Batsman War of 4.8. Jerald Peterson, a 9x All-Star in the NBBO, hit .341 in with 78 RBI in his first APBL season at the age of 39. Harry Thompson was the best C in the Colonial Conference all season. Most importantly, their fielders led the APBL in all four factors – Errors, Fielding %, Efficiency, & Zone Rating – and it wasn’t close.

For Orange, this was a chance to reverse their disappointing five-game loss in the inaugural Founders Cup’ and take their first title since 1868, when all the APBL teams were still in the NBBO. For Alleghany, this was their first chance at a title since winning the 1869 Tucker-Wheaton Cup.

In a battle of teams who were mediocre or worse during the stretch run, who would win? Would it simply be a matter of who made the fewest mistakes? Or would one team wake up from its slumber?
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Old 07-04-2025, 03:30 PM   #748
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GAME ONE (Upper Manhattan Grounds)
ALL 25-3 ORA – Ashley Hearns (RF, ALL) 4/6, 2 2B, 4 R, 4 RBI, SB

It was Alleghany that woke up from their 4-11 slumber, and how!

The visitors started the game off right with three runs in T1, and they ended up ahead 10-0 before Orange could put any runs on the board. Alleghany raised the lead to 15-1 by the end of the 8th but apparently they felt that wasn’t enough, as they then added ten runs in the 9th to turn what was an amazing performance into an otherworldly one.

1B Jerald Peterson led Alleghany with five base hits (5/7, 2B, 3 R, 1 RBI), while Hearns, CF Solomon Springs, & C Harry Thompson had four each. In addition, 2B Burton Ellerby finished with five RBI.


GAME TWO (Upper Manhattan Grounds)
ALL 7-6 ORA – Gerald Strong (SS, ALL) 3/5 (all 1B), 1 R, 1 RBI, SB, GW HIT

Game Two was much closer than the opener, although it wasn’t a back-and-forth contest.

Alleghany again started off strong, with five runs over the first three innings and a 5-0 lead that stood until the bottom of the 6th. That was when Orange pulled off a six-run rally that was punctuated by the first Grand Slam in Founders’ Cup history, a blast over the Right Field fence by Taliesin Buckley.

That appeared to send Alleghany reeling, but after a scoreless 7th the visitors and plated two runs in the 8th on Singles by Strong & PH Charles Davis to take a 7-6 lead that stood the rest of the way. Alleghany had wiped out the Orange HFA and taken a 2-0 series lead.


GAME THREE (Recreation Park in Pittsburgh)
ORA 9-8 ALL – Charles Whitehead (2B, ORA) 4/4, 3B, 3 R, 2 RBI, 1 BB, 1 DEF DP

All of the excitement came early in Game Three.

All seventeen runs in the contest were scored during the first six innings. After a 2-1 opening inning Alleghany scored five times in the 2nd and once in both the 3rd & 4th to take an 8-2 lead. The Orange response began in earnest during the 5th, when they scored four runs on a series of singles & sacrifices to cut the deficit to two. In the top of the 6th, a Whitehead Single and a two-run Double by Everett Schreiber put Orange in the lead 9-8, and from there stellar pitching & defense put Orange in the win column.


GAME FOUR (Recreation Park in Pittsburgh)
ORA 6-3 ALL – Everett Schreiber (C, ORA) 3/4, 3B, 1 R, 1 RBI, 1/3 RTO

It was four away wins in four games at the end of nine innings in Pittsburgh.

Orange scored first with a pair of runs in the 2nd, and they extended the lead to 4-0 with two more tuns in the 5th. Alleghany responded with two runs of their own in the bottom of the 5th and one more in the 6th to make it a 4-3 game, but run-scoring Singles by Charles Whitehead & Samuel Kessler in the top of the 7th gave Orange a 6-3 lead and sealed the win.


GAME FIVE (Recreation Park in Pittsburgh)
ORA 4-1 ALL – George Sturgis (P, ORA) CG, 8 HA, 1 ER, 1 K, 1/4

And it was five away wins in five games…

This game was all pitching & defense. The two teams combined for just five fielding errors (APBL avg: 13.6 total E/G) and neither pitcher allowed a Base on Balls.

The result was decided in the top of the 9th. With the game tied 1-1, Orange came to bat and scored runs on a Single by RF William Valentine, a Sacrifice Fly by Taliesin Buckley, and a Single by Isaac Holm to go ahead 4-1. Sturgis was fine in the bottom of the 9th, and Orange had an unlikely 3-2 series lead.


GAME SIX (Upper Manhattan Grounds)
ALL 1-8 ORA – Taliesin Buckley (CF, ORA) 2/4, HR, 2 R, 3 RBI

Orange completed the delayed sweep at home.

The key inning in Game Six was the 5th. Orange came to bat ahead 1-0 and scored six runs, with the first three scoring on Singles by Charles Whitehead, Samuel Kessler, & Will Chaffin before Buckley put an exclamation point at the end of the rally with a three-run, inside-the-park Home Run that put Orange ahead 7-0. George Sturgis’ pitching was excellent once again, and that meant Orange had nothing to worry about over the final four innings.

Orange B.B.C. had taken their first Founders’ Cup title, and their third overall.


FOUNDERS’ CUP MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Charles Whitehead (2B, ORA) – .444 (12/28), 1.020 OPS, 7 R, 1 2B, 1 3B, 3 RBI, 1 BB, 1 SB

Taliesin Buckley’s two Home Runs and eight Runs Batted In had a pretty good argument for Founders’ Cup MVP, but Whitehead hit 150 points higher than him, and Whitehead was at his best in the Game Three that marked the start of Orange’s reversal of their two home losses to open the series.

It was the end of a fine season for Whitehead. Signed by Orange ahead of 1872 to notable fanfare, during 1874 “Rowdy Chuck” made his first All-Star Game appearance and now had taken MVP honors in the season’s biggest series.


FOUNDERS' CUP SUMMARY


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Old 07-05-2025, 02:53 PM   #749
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1874 PHILADELPHIA CITY BASEBALL LEAGUE REVIEW


1874 PCBL STANDINGS





PER-TEAM STATISTICS

1874: 7.9 R/G, .276, .639 OPS, 804 H, 91 2B, 38 3B, 9 HR, 49 SB, 2.83 ERA, 69 BB, 60 K, 8.3 E/G, .815 FLD%
1873: 8.1 R/G, .283, .649 OPS, 825 H, 98 2B, 36 3B, 4 HR, 69 SB, 2.87 ERA, 67 BB, 58 K, 8.4 E/G, .813 FLD%


LIBERTY BELL CLASSIC: Merion B.C.C. v Frankford Arsenal

GAME 1: MBCC 9-3 FRA – Jonathan Atkins (P, MBCC) CG, 7 HA, 0 ER, 2/5, 1 R
GAME 2: MBCC 21-9 FRA – William Norman (1B, MBCC) 6/7, 2B, 3 R, 3 RBI
GAME 3: FRA 9-10 MBCC in 10 – James Cray (LF, MBCC) 3/5, 2 2B, SAC BUNT, 2 R, 2 RBI, GW HIT

Merion B.C.C. wins series 3-0

LIBERTY BELL CLASSIC MVP: William Norman (1B, Merion)


PHILADELPHIA CITY BASEBALL LEAGUE AWARD WINNERS


BATSMAN OF THE YEAR: Joseph Evans (LF/CF, age 22) – Frankford Arsenal; 2nd career BotY

• .336/.372/.485, .857 OPS, 76 R, 109 H, 22 2B, 13 3B, 0 HR, 67 RBI, 18 BB, 8 SB, 157 TB, 4.0 WPA, 3.1 WAR
• Led PCBL in SLG, OPS, 2B, BB, & TB; 2nd consecutive BotY; Turned 22 on July 30
• Herman Stanley (2B, QV) 2nd – .350, .835 OPS, 79 R, 115 H, 25 XBH, 1 HR, 61 RBI, 9 BB, 7 SB, 3.1 WPA, 2.9 WAR
• Franklin Decker (LF, YORK) – PCBL Greenhorn of the Year

NOTE: If Decker hadn’t played for the worst team in the PCBL – Yorktown was 26-44 – he quite likely would have won either BotY or Most Valuable Player. As it was, he had to “settle” for Greenhorn of the Year.


PITCHER OF THE YEAR: Casper Shultis (age 36) - Mercantile B.C.

24-17, 2.02 ERA, 355.2 IP, 29 CG, 0 SHO, 35 K, 3.2 K/BB, 0.3 BB/9, 1.22 WHIP, 6.2 WAR, 7.8 rWAR
• Led PCBL in W, IP, CG, K/BB, BB/9, & rWAR; Had sub-2.00 ERA in May, July, & August
• Arthur Lipscomb (PBCC) 2nd – 22-16, 2.44 ERA, 350.2 IP, 27 CG, 3 SV, 29 K, 1.1 K/BB, 1.21 WHIP, 5.0 WAR, 5.9 rWAR
• John Shaw (QV) – 18-20, 1.95 ERA, 328.1 IP, 22 CG, 2 SHO, 41 K, 2.3 K/BB, 1.23 WHIP, 7.1 WAR, 6.2 rWAR


MOST VALUABLE PLAYER: Clifford Martin (RF, age 24) – Merion B.C.C.

• .320/.355/.421, .776 OPS, 60 R, 108 H, 11 2B, 10 3B, 1 HR, 61 RBI, 17 BB, 11 SB, 142 TB, 3.2 WPA, 3.2 WAR
• Top five in five offensive categories; Won Golden Glove at RF; Led PCBL champions in WAR
• Jonathan Toppin (2B, FRA) 2nd – .311, .755 OPS, 80 R, 109 H, 29 XBH, 2 HR, 72 RBI, 7 BB, 20 SB, 5.1 WPA, 2.7 WAR
• Frederick Pike (2B, PBCC) 3rd – .311, .756 OPS, 64 R, 105 H, 18 2B, 8 3B, 59 RBI, 10 BB, 27 SB, 3.7 WPA, 3.2 WAR


GREENHORN OF THE YEAR: Franklin Decker (LF, age 27) - Yorktown B.C.

• .330/.347/.448, .795 OPS, 71 R, 107 H, 14 2B, 12 3B, 0 HR, 76 RBI, 7 BB, 9 SB, 140 TB, 5.2 WPA, 3.3 WAR
• #1 in both WPA & WAR; Tied for league lead in RBI; Top five in SLG, OPS, & 3B
• Jonathan Toppin (2B, FRA) – PCBL Most Valuable Player runner-up
• Arthur Hall (RF, SoB) 3rd – .310, .765 OPS, 82 R, 103 H, 14 2B, 12 3B, 73 RBI, 11 BB, 22 SB, 4.2 WPA, 2.1 WAR


PCBL GOLDEN GLOVES

P: Charlie Greiner (FRA) – 21 PO, 43 AST, 2 DP, 19 E, 1.85 RNG, +2.9 ZR, 1.064 EFF
C: Charles Kelly (IND) – 42.9 RTO%, 3.27 C-ERA, 3 PB, 14 E, +3.5 ZR, 1.176 EFF
1B: William Norman (MBCC) – 665 PO, 58 AST, 27 DP, 44 E, 10.32 RNG, +6.1 ZR, 1.076 EFF
2B: J.H. George (MERC) – 281 PO, 237 AST, 15 DP, 97 E, 7.36 RNG, +15.7 ZR, 1.106 EFF
3B: Charles Hunt (PBCC/2nd) – 113 PO, 137 AST, 6 DP, 82 E, 3.63 RNG, +12.1 ZR, 1.140 EFF
SS: Moody Steiger (OVER/2nd) – 193 PO, 225 AST, 17 DP, 99 E, 6.08 RNG, +33.2 ZR, 1.281 EFF
LF: Jacob Jensen (SPA) – 119 PO, 3 AST, 40 E, 1.82 RNG, +1.1 ARM, +5.5 ZR, 1.089 EFF
CF: Wild Bill Jackson (SCH/2nd) – 211 PO, 12 AST, 49 E, 3.19 RNG, +3.3 ARM, +11.2 ZR, 1.113 EFF
RF: Clifford Martin (MBCC) – 135 PO, 5 AST, 38 E, 2.06 RNG, +1.9 ARM, +6.4 ZR, 1.090 EFF


PCBL TEAM OF THE YEAR

P: Casper Shultis (MERC) - 24-17, 2.02 ERA, 355.2 IP, 29 CG, 0 SHO, 35 K, 3.2 K/BB, 1.22 WHIP, 6.2 WAR, 7.8 rWAR
C: Harrison Hearst (PBCC) - .345, .799 OPS, 64 R, 97 H, 12 2B, 3 3B, 0 HR, 54 RBI, 12 BB, 2.42 C-ERA, 3.5 WPA, 2.8 WAR
1B: Jonathan Bagwell (GER) - .303, .716 OPS, 58 R, 96 H, 11 2B, 5 3B, 1 HR, 65 RBI, 12 BB, 120 TB, 2.4 WPA, 1.8 WAR
2B: Herman Stanley (QV) - .350, .835 OPS, 79 R, 115 H, 14 2B, 10 3B, 1 HR, 61 RBI, 7 SB, +13.8 ZR, 3.1 WPA, 2.9 WAR
3B: Ben Roberts (MBCC) - .289, .707 OPS, 54 R, 90 H, 15 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 49 RBI, 12 BB, 116 TB, 4.6 WPA, 2.2 WAR
SS: Edward Grady (MIN) - .314, .705 OPS, 67 R, 87 H, 11 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 61 RBI, 9 BB, 1 SB, 4.0 WPA, 1.5 WAR
OF: Joseph Evans (FRA/2nd) - .336, .857 OPS, 76 R, 109 H, 22 2B, 13 3B, 0 H, 67 RBI, 18 BB, 157 TB, 4.0 WPA, 3.1 WAR
OF: Clifford Martin (MBCC) - .320, .776 OPS, 60 R, 108 H, 11 2B, 10 3B, 1 HR, 61 RBI, 17 BB, 11 SB, 3.2 WPA, 3.2 WAR
OF: Franklin Decker (YORK) - .330, .795 OPS, 71 R, 107 H, 14 2B, 12 3B, 0 HR, 76 RBI, 7 BB, 145 TB, 5.2 WPA, 3.3 WAR


MISCELLANEOUS


PCBL STATISTICAL LEADERS

Average: .350 by Herman Stanley (2B, Queen Village)
On-Base: .390 by Harrison Hearst (C, P.B.C.C.)
Slugging: .485 by Joseph Evans (LF, Frankford)
OPS: .857 by Joseph Evans
Hits: 115 by Herman Stanley
Extra-Base Hits: 35 by Joseph Evans
Doubles: 22 by Joseph Evans
Triples: 15 by Francis Brown (CF, Frankford)
Home Runs: 4 by Isaac James (CF, Keystone)
Runs Batted In: 76 by Franklin Decker (LF, Yorktown) & Joseph Sizemore (RF, Spartan)
Runs: 92 by Arlington Guest (2B, Yorktown)
Stolen Bases: 42 by Joseph King (RF, Independent)
Total Bases: 157 by Joseph Evans
Bases on Balls: 18 by three different batsmen
Zone Rating: +33.2 by Moody Steiger (SS, Overbrook)
Win Prob. Added: 5.17 by Franklin Decker
Batsman WAR: 3.3 by Franklin Decker

Wins: 24 by Acie Collins (Pt. Richmond) & Casper Shultis (Mercantile)
Losses: 27 by Jameson Jenkins (Penn)
ERA (175+ IP): 1.95 by John Shaw (Queen Village)
Innings: 355.2 by Casper Shultis
Complete Games: 29 by Casper Shultis
Shutouts: 2 by Walter Denman (Frankford) & John Shaw
BB/9 (175+ IP): 0.3 by Casper Shultis
Strikeouts: 42 by Charlie Greiner (Frankford)
K/9 (175+ IP): 1.2 by Charlie Greiner
K/BB (175+ IP): 3.2 by Casper Shultis
WHIP (175+ IP): 1.14 by Albert Cave (Merion)
Pitcher WAR: 7.1 by John Shaw
Pitcher rWAR: 7.8 by Casper Shultis
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Old 07-05-2025, 02:57 PM   #750
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1874 NATIONAL BASE BALL ORGANIZATION REVIEW


1874 NBBO STANDINGS








PER-TEAM STATISTICS

1874 NYL: 7.9 R/G, .288, .664 OPS, 817 H, 98 2B, 38 3B, 7 HR, 75 SB, 3.22 ERA, 61 BB, 49 K, 7.6 E/G, .829 FLD%
1874 NEL: 7.7 R/G, .293, .670 OPS, 827 H, 98 2B, 37 3B, 5 HR, 76 SB, 3.23 ERA, 62 BB, 54 K, 7.4 E/G, .833 FLD%

1873 NYL: 8.0 R/G, .287, .661 OPS, 813 H, 95 2B, 37 3B, 6 HR, 101 SB, 3.24 ERA, 66 BB, 49 K, 7.7 E/G, .828 FLD%
1873 NEL: 8.0 R/G, .294, .673 OPS, 834 H, 98 2B, 37 3B, 5 HR, 109 SB, 3.44 ERA, 62 BB, 53 K, 7.5 E/G, .829 FLD%


TUCKER-WHEATON CUP XVIII

NYL SEMIFINALS: Metropolitan (#3) beats Eckford (#2) 3-1
NEL SEMIFINALS: Portland (#2) beats Quaker State (#3) 3-0

NYL CHAMPIONSHIP: Metropolitan (#3) beats Utica (#1) 3-2
NEL CHAMPIONSHIP: Susquehanna (#1) beats Portland (#2) 3-1

TWC FINAL GAME 1: MET 8-12 SUS – Walter Braden (RF, SUS) 3/5, HR, 2 R, 3 RBI
TWC FINAL GAME 2: MET 3-19 SUS – Joseph Jurski (1B, SUS) 4/6, 3B, 1 R, 3 RBI
TWC FINAL GAME 3: SUS 8-7 MET in 10 – Ellis Smith (C, SUS) 3/3, 2B, 1 R, 1 RBI

Susquehanna (1st title) wins series 3-0

TWC FINAL MVP: Ellis Smith (C, Susquehanna)


NEW YORK LEAGUE AWARD WINNERS


BATSMAN OF THE YEAR: James Heilman (RF, age 44) – Utica B.B.C.; 1st career BotY

• .357/.421/.463, .884 OPS, 71 R, 105 H, 14 2B, 7 3B, 1 HR, 79 RBI, 39 BB, 18 SB, 136 TB, 4.1 WPA, 3.1 WAR
• Led NYL in OBP, OPS, & BB; 2nd in RBI; Led league in BB for 5th straight season
• Chester Alexander (2B, SYR) 2nd – .377, .860 OPS, 82 R, 125 H, 22 XBH, 2 HR, 63 RBI, 10 BB, 3 SB, 5.9 WPA, 2.1 WAR
• Henry Nabors (SS, VIC) 3rd – .358, .820 OPS, 67 R, 119 H, 21 XBH, 2 HR, 76 RBI, 9 BB, 6 SB, 3.1 WPA, 3.1 WAR


PITCHER OF THE YEAR: Olaf Sorensen (age 33) – Atlantic B.B.C.; 1st career PotY

• 26-15, 2.47 ERA, 350.0 IP, 30 CG, 0 SHO, 28 K, 0.7 K/9, 1.4 K/BB, 1.15 WHIP, 5.1 WAR, 8.8 rWAR
• Led NYL in CG & rWAR; Top five in W, ERA, IP, SHO, WHIP, HA/9, & QS
• Edward Koch (UNI) 2nd – 26-15, 2.61 ERA, 347.2 IP, 25 CG, 1 SHO, 26 K, 1.0 K/BB, 1.25 WHIP, 5.3 WAR, 6.9 rWAR
• Augustus Cook (ECK) 3rd – 29-12, 2-54 ERA, 350.1 IP, 24 CG, 1 SHO, 23 K, 0.6 K/BB, 1.17 WHIP, 3.5 WAR, 4.8 rWAR


MOST VALUABLE PLAYER: Huibrecht van der Laan (2B, age 35) – Eckford of Greenpoint; 1st career MVP

• .339/.367/.471, .839 OPS, 68 R, 95 H, 15 2B, 8 3B, 2 HR, 57 RBI, 18 SB, 132 TB, +19.1 ZR, 3.8 WPA, 4.0 WAR
• Led NYL in Batsman WAR; 2nd in Zone Rating; Career highs in AVG, OBP, SLG, OPS, R, & ZR
• Francis Smith (CF, MET) 2nd – .328, .774 OPS, 75 R, 116 H, 21 2B, 8 3B, 71 RBI, 8 BB, 11 SB, 3.0 WPA, 3.0 WAR
• Will Buschmann (CF, UTI) 3rd – .326, .778 OPS, 99 R, 112 H, 23 XBH, 1 HR, 55 RBI, 16 BB, 28 SB, 4.4 WPA, 2.7 WAR


GREENHORN OF THE YEAR: Remi Scrovegni (3B, age 28) – Frontier B.B.C.

• .315/.335/.389, .724 OPS, 75 R, 106 H, 14 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 61 RBI, 11 BB, 8 SB, 131 TB, 3.4 WPA, 1.6 WAR
• Had 49-game Hitting Streak that ended Aug. 5 (2nd-longest in NBBO history)
• Edward Pelham (P, FRO) 2nd – 18-15, 3.38 ERA, 300.2 IP, 15 CG, 1 SHO, 21 K, 1.9 K/BB, 1.41 WHIP, 5.5 WAR, 2.8 rWAR
• Fritz Schuster (P, VIC) 3rd – 17-20, 2.66 ERA, 328.2 IP, 22 CG, 0 SHO, 22 K, 1.8 K/BB, 1.17 WHIP, 4.8 WAR, 4.3 rWAR


NYL GOLDEN GLOVES

P: Richard Majors (MET/1st) – 28 PO, 39 AST, 0 DP, 15 E, 1.83 RNG, +7.2 ZR, 1.224 EFF
C: Joseph Kryszak (MER/2nd) – 44.7 RTO%, 3.01 C-ERA, 1 PB, 10 E, +3.6 ZR, .877 EFF
1B: Thomas Cox (BING/1st) – 405 PO, 53 AST, 12 DP, 11 E, 10.98 RNG, +11.1 ZR, 1.204 EFF
2B: Huibrecht v. d. Laan (ECK/2nd) – 270 PO, 177 AST, 17 DP, 46 E, 7.39 RNG, +19.1 ZR, 1.170 EFF
3B: Hoyt Woodford (HAR/1st) – 112 PO, 152 AST, 2 DP, 65 E, 3.87 RNG, +15.2 ZR, 1.189 EFF
SS: William Holcomb (BED/1st) – 186 PO, 250 AST, 13 DP, 95 E, 6.29 RNG, +21.0 ZR, 1.176 EFF
LF: William Simons (MET/1st) – 129 PO, 0 AST, 18 E, 1.90 RNG, +6.1 ARM, +5.2 ZR, 1.093 EFF
CF: Lage Barlund (CTL/1st) – 195 PO, 11 AST, 52 E, 3.01 RNG, +1.2 ARM, +10.3 ZR, 1.120 EFF
RF: George Gregory (ATL/1st) – 132 PO, 11 AST, 30 E, 2.08 RNG, +2.0 ARM, +6.5 ZR, 1.095 EFF


NYL TEAM OF THE YEAR

P: Augustus Cook (ECK/1st) - 29-12, 2.54 ERA, 350.1 IP, 24 CG, 1 SHO, 23 K, 0.6 K/BB, 1.17 WHIP, 3.5 WAR, 4.8 rWAR
C: Harold Rowsey (MET/1st) - .352, .774 OPS, 60 R, 95 H, 10 2B, 2 3B, 0 HR, 60 RBI, 8 BB, 37.9 RTO%, 2.2 WPA, 2.5 WAR
1B: Samuel Gillespie (NC/1st) - .365, .835 OPS, 62 R, 109 H, 18 2B, 5 3B, 0 HR, 58 RBI, 20 SB, 137 TB, 3.2 WPA, 2.5 WAR
2B: Huibrecht v. d. Laan (ECK/1st) - .339, .839 OPS, 68 R, 95 H, 15 2B, 8 3B, 2 HR, 57 RBI, 18 SB, +19.1 ZR, 3.8 WPA, 4.0 WAR
3B: Ellis Terrien (MUT/2nd) - .331, .750 OPS, 70 R, 108 H, 9 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 78 RBI, 14 BB, 1 SB, 3.7 WPA, 1.5 WAR
SS: Henry Nabors (VIC/5th) - .358, .820 OPS, 67 R, 119 H, 15 2B, 4 3B, 2 HR, 76 RBI, 9 BB, 6 SB, 3.1 WPA, 3.1 WAR
OF: James Heilman (UTI/2nd) - .357, .884 OPS, 71 R, 105 H, 14 2B, 7 3B, 1 HR, 79 RBI, 39 BB, 18 SB, 4.1 WPA, 3.1 WAR
OF: Herb Verrett (ATL/2nd) - .336, .828 OPS, 76 R, 118 H, 12 2B, 17 3B, 1 HR, 64 RBI, 7 SB, 167 TB, 2.7 WPA, 3.1 WAR
OF: William Vickers (CTL/1st) - .311, .779 OPS, 76 R, 98 H, 16 2B, 9 3B, 2 HR, 70 RBI, 11 BB, 31 SB, 5.0 WPA, 2.8 WAR


NORTHEASTERN LEAGUE AWARD WINNERS


BATSMAN OF THE YEAR: Ned Morganti (CF, age 30) – Quaker State B.C.; 1st career BotY

• .389/.414/.503, .917 OPS, 75 R, 129 H, 19 2B, 8 3B, 1 HR, 79 RBI, 11 BB, 22 SB, 167 TB, 3.1 WPA, 3.9 WAR
• Led NEL in SLG, OPS, RBI, TB, & Batsman WAR; Top three in AVG, OBP, & Hits
• Gerhardt Berg (1B, QS) 2nd – .396, .416 OBP, .902 OPS, 92 R, 133 H, 15 2B, 6 3B, 1 HR, 73 RBI, 163 TB, 4.5 WPA, 3.3 WAR
• Robert Basalyga (LF, LB) 3rd – .366, .846 OPS, 68 R, 122 H, 20 2B, 8 3B, 73 RBI, 4 BB, 3 SB, 158 TB, 5.4 WPA, 2.5 WAR


PITCHER OF THE YEAR: William Hawk (age 24) – Susquehanna B.C.; 1st career PotY

32-6, 2.00 ERA, 355.0 IP, 31 CG, 0 SHO, 39 K, 0.4 BB/9, 2.8 K/BB, 1.11 WHIP, 5.4 WAR, 11.3 rWAR
• Led NEL in W, Win%, ERA, IP, CG, BB/9, K/BB, WHIP, & rWAR; 2nd-most Wins in NBBO history
• James Dressman (PORT) 2nd – 30-9, 2.38 ERA, 351.0 IP, 31 CG, 2 SV, 29 K, 1.1 K/BB, 1.19 WHIP, 4.7 WAR, 9.4 rWAR
• Ross Gill (QS) 3rd – 27-13, 2.97 ERA, 339.1 IP, 26 CG, 1 SHO, 29 K, 1.2 K/BB, 1.21 WHIP, 5.2 WAR, 8.5 rWAR


MOST VALUABLE PLAYER: John Schultz (CF, age 27) – Susquehanna B.C.; 1st career MVP

• .352/.373/.449, .821 OPS, 105 R, 124 H, 6 2B, 11 3B, 2 HR, 52 RBI, 8 BB, 34 SB, 158 TB, 4.7 WPA, 3.6 WAR
• Led NEL in Runs; Top five in Hits, 3B, HR, XBH, SB, & WAR; Hit .350 (14/40) w/ 15 Runs in playoffs
• Manuel Romeiras (CF, TU) 2nd – .303, .751 OPS, 87 R, 107 H, 30 XBH, 1 HR, 74 RBI, 13 BB, 58 SB, 4.9 WPA, 3.2 WAR
• Gerhardt Berg (1B, QS) – NEL Batsman of the Year runner-up


GREENHORN OF THE YEAR: Alfred Williams (3B, age 27) – Portland B.C.

• .294/.327/.422, .749 OPS, 75 R, 94 H, 13 2B, 14 3B, 58 RBI, 13 BB, 19 SB, 135 TB, +9.5 ZR, 3.2 WPA, 2.5 WAR
• Started for NEL in All-Star Game; Led NEL in Triples; Beat 2x All-Star Dallas Campanelli for PORT 3B role
• James Kilgore (P, OCE) 2nd – 18-7, 2.66 ERA, 223.2 IP, 18 CG, 1 SHO, 20 K, 1.4 K/BB, 1.14 WHIP, 3.1 WAR, 4.2 rWAR
• Tom Fetterman (RF, NEW) 3rd – .329, .804 OPS, 62 R, 100 H, 16 2B, 13 3B, 42 RBI, 6 BB, 5 SB, 2.3 WPA, 1.9 WAR


NEL GOLDEN GLOVES

P: Grover Wright (PORT/2nd) – 17 PO, 42 AST, 2 DP, 10 E, 2.38 RNG, +5.6 ZR, 1.393 EFF
C: Charles Singer (TU/1st) – 39.6 RTO%, 3.33 C-ERA, 0 PB, 8 E, +4.4 ZR, 1.005 EFF
1B: Samuel Blalock (SCR/1st) – 578 PO, 64 AST, 18 DP, 36 E, 10.45 RNG, +6.6 ZR, 1.092 EFF
2B: Lacy LeGendre (SotO/2nd) – 275 PO, 211 AST, 19 DP, 50 E, 7.12 RNG, +17.2 ZR, 1.133 EFF
3B: Herbert Ray (TIG/4th) – 95 PO, 153 AST, 5 DP, 63 E, 3.76 RNG, +15.6 ZR, 1.192 EFF
SS: Peter Jones (Soto/4th) – 215 PO, 241 AST, 18 DP, 65 E, 6.99 RNG, +35.5 ZR, 1.282 EFF
LF: Charles Boyd (LE/1st) – 132 PO, 5 AST, 17 E, 2.16 RNG, -1.2 ARM, +7.4 ZR, 1.100 EFF
CF: Ned Morganti (QS/1st) – 187 PO, 6 AST, 60 E, 2.86 RNG, 0.0 ARM, +9.9 ZR, 1.131 EFF
RF: George Scott (MM/2nd) – 136 PO, 8 AST, 51 E, 2.13 RNG, -0.4 ARM, +7.7 ZR, 1.111 EFF


NEL TEAM OF THE YEAR

P: William Hawk (SUS/1st) - 32-6, 2.00 ERA, 355.0 IP, 31 CG, 39 K, 0.4 BB/9, 2.8 K/BB, 1.11 WHIP, 5.4 WAR, 11.3 rWAR
C: Hal Brinks (SotO/1st) - .364, .803 OPS, 54 R, 114 H, 17 2B, 3 3B, 0 HR, 77 RBI, 3 BB, 2.64 C-ERA, 2.9 WPA, 2.6 WAR
1B: Gerhardt Berg (QS/1st) - .396, .416 OBP, .902 OPS, 92 R, 133 H, 15 2B, 6 3B, 1 HR, 73 RBI, 11 BB, 4.5 WPA, 3.0 WAR
2B: Carrick Kennedy (PORT/1st) - .305, .767 OPS, 61 R, 92 H, 13 2B, 8 3B, 2 HR, 66 RBI, 12 BB, +13.2 ZR, 2.7 WPA, 2.7 WAR
3B: Bertrand Sargent (SUS/1st) - .330, .787 OPS, 59 R, 102 H, 12 2B, 9 3B, 0 HR, 75 RBI, 14 BB, 2 SB, 3.8 WPA, 2.1 WAR
SS: Jonathan Richards (QS/2nd) - .338, .820 OPS, 88 R, 118 H, 24 2B, 8 3B, 1 HR, 57 RBI, 19 SB, +16.4 ZR, 2.6 WPA, 3.5 WAR
OF: Ned Morganti (QS/4th) - .389, .503 SLG, .917 OPS, 75 R, 129 H, 28 XBH, 1 HR, 79 RBI, 22 SB, 167 TB, 3.1 WPA, 3.9 WAR
OF: John Schultz (SUS/1st) - .352, .821 OPS, 105 R, 124 H, 6 2B, 11 3B, 2 HR, 52 RBI, 8 BB, 34 SB, 4.7 WPA, 3.6 WAR
OF: Robert Basalyga (LB/1st) - .366, .846 OPS, 68 R, 122 H, 20 2B, 8 3B, 0 HR, 73 RBI, 4 BB, 7 SB, 5.4 WPA, 2.5 WAR


MISCELLANEOUS


RECORDS

• William Hawk (Susquehanna) tied James Goodman’s record for ERA (200+ IP) with 2.00.
• Charles Haynes (Mutual) tied the record for Runs in a game with seven on July 12.
• Arjen Zuiderwijk (Marathon) set a new record for RBI in a game with nine on Aug. 12.
• Elton Pugh (N.Y.A.C.) set a new record for Triples in a game with four on Aug. 14.


NEW YORK LEAGUE LEADERS

Average: .377 by Chester Alexander (2B, Syracuse)
On-Base: .421 by James Heilman (RF, Utica)
Slugging: .482 by Farris Crowe (RF, Baltic)
OPS: .884 by James Heilman
Hits: 125 by Chester Alexander
Extra-Base Hits: 31 by Farris Crowe
Doubles: 23 by Robert Wolfe (RF, Mutual)
Triples: 17 by Herb Verrett (CF, Atlantic)
Home Runs: 4 by three different batsmen
Runs Batted In: 84 by William Winters (3B, Empire)
Runs: 99 by William Buschmann (CF, Utica)
Stolen Bases: 54 by Louis Murray (LF, Eckford)
Total Bases: 167 by Herb Verrett
Bases on Balls: 39 by James Heilman (RF, Utica)
Zone Rating: +21.0 by William Holcomb (SS, Bedford)
Win Prob. Added: 5.9 by Chester Alexander
Batsman WAR: 4.0 by Huibrecht van der Laan (2B, Eckford)

Wins: 29 by Augustus Cook (Eckford)
Losses: 27 by Willie Gray (Marathon)
ERA (175+ IP): 2.34 by Jesse McDermott (Utica)
Innings: 351.0 by Augustus Cook
Complete Games: 30 by Olaf Sorensen (Atlantic)
Shutouts: 2 by Gus Woods (Union)
BB/9 (175+ IP): 0.3 by three different pitchers
Strikeouts: 36 by Richard Frazee (Syracuse)
K/9 (175+ IP): 1.5 by Robert Fertel (Marathon)
K/BB (175+ IP): 2.5 by Charles Rhodes (N.Y.A.C.)
WHIP (175+ IP): 1.09 by Rudolph Fowler
Pitcher WAR: 6.0 by Charles Rhodes
Pitcher rWAR: 8.8 by Olaf Sorensen


NORTHEASTERN LEAGUE LEADERS

Average: .396 by Gerhardt Berg (1B, Quaker St.)
On-Base: .416 by Gerhardt Berg
Slugging: .503 by Ned Morganti (CF, Quaker St.)
OPS: .917 by Ned Morganti
Hits: 133 by Gerhardt Berg
Extra-Base Hits: 33 by Jonathan Richards (SS, Quaker St.) & Julius Scott (LF, Maryland)
Doubles: 24 by Lennon Haley (2B, Lancastra) & Jonathan Richards
Triples: 14 by Alfred Williams (3B, Portland)
Home Runs: 4 by William Strausbaugh (2B, Pt. Jersey)
Runs Batted In: 79 by Ned Morganti
Runs: 105 by John Schultz (CF, Susquehanna)
Stolen Bases: 58 by Manuel Romeiras (CF, Trenton Utd.)
Total Bases: 167 by Ned Morganti
Bases on Balls: 19 by Joe Mitchell (2B, Lake Erie)
Zone Rating: +35.5 by Peter Jones (SS, S.o.t.O.)
Win Prob. Added: 5.4 by Robert Basalyga (LF, Lancastra)
Batsman WAR: 3.9 by Ned Morganti

Wins: 32 by William Hawk (Susquehanna)
Losses: 29 by Daniel Flynn (National)
ERA (175+ IP): 2.00 by William Hawk
Innings: 355.0 by William Hawk
Complete Games: 31 by James Dressman (Portland) & William Hawk
Shutouts: 3 by George Burroughs (Pt. Jersey)
BB/9 (175+ IP): 0.4 by four different pitchers
Strikeouts: 45 by Earl Quinn (Maryland)
K/9 (175+ IP): 1.2 by Earl Quinn
K/BB (175+ IP): 2.8 by William Hawk
WHIP (175+ IP): 1.11 by William Hawk
Pitcher WAR: 5.8 by Robert Dressen (Salem)
Pitcher rWAR: 11.3 by William Hawk


ACHIEVEMENTS & NOTABLE EVENTS

May 13: George Scott (Merrimack) bats 6/6 (2 2B) with 5 RBI vs Pioneer.
May 16: Hiram Britton (Portland) hits for the Cycle (4/6) with 4 RBI vs Green Mtn.
May 20: William Strausbaugh (Pt. Jersey) bats 5/7 (2B, 3B) with 6 RBI at Quaker St.
June 3: Louis Brasch (Star) bats 6/7 (2B, 2 3B) with 7 RBI at Marathon.
June 17: The Hitting Streak of Ned Morganti (Quaker St.) ends after 41 games.
June 17: George Gregory (Atlantic) bats 6/7 (2B, 3B) at Empire.
June 27: Metropolitan has two players finish with five Hits in a 17-3 win at Hilltop.
July 3: Charles Ross (Pioneer) bats 5/5 with five XBH (2 2B, 2 3B, HR), 4 Runs, & 14 TB vs Merrimack.
July 5: Union scores a record 17 Runs in the fifth inning of their 23-3 win at Baltic.
July 12: Elton Lewis (Granite) bats 6/7 (2 2B) with 4 RBI vs Salem.
July 12: Charles Haynes (Mutual) bats 5/6 (2 3B) with 7 Runs & 3 RBI at Union.
July 27: The NEL wins the 16th All-Star Game 14-8. MVP: William Sudduth (Merrimack). HOST: National.
July 29: John Sumpter (Pioneer) bats 3/5 with 2 HR & 8 RBI at Sportsman’s.
July 29: Rainer van der Hout (Cantabrigians) becomes the 1st P with 300 Wins in the NBBO.
Aug. 5: The Hitting Streak of Remi Scrovegni (Frontier) ends after 49 games.
Aug. 12: Arjen Zuiderwijk (Marathon) bats 4/5 with a Grand Slam & 9 RBI (all-levels record) vs Empire.
Aug. 13: Carl Bancroft (Frontier) becomes the 2nd P with 300 Wins in the NBBO.
Aug. 14: Elton Pugh (N.Y.A.C.) bats 4/6 with 4 Triples (new record) & 8 RBI at Baltic.
Aug. 16: Charles Rhodes (N.Y.A.C.) pitches the NBBO’s 7th No-Hitter at Baltic on the season’s final day.
Aug. 17: Charles Rhodes (N.Y.A.C.) finishes #1 in NYL in Pitcher WAR for the fourth consecutive season.
Aug. 17: William Hawk (Susquehanna) finishes #1 in the NEL in nine pitching categories.

• No batsman hit .400 for the second consecutive season.
• There were nine six-hit games, one off last season’s record amount.
• The longest Hitting Streak this season was 49 games by Remi Scrovegni (Frontier).
• For the third consecutive season, no players hit 5+ Home Runs.
• One batsman scored 100+ Runs.
• Seven batsmen had 75+ RBI in 1874, five fewer than last season.
• No batsman stole 70+ bases. Five stole 70+ in 1873.
• Two P’s finished with 30+ Wins, and in total eight finished the season with 25+ Wins.
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Old 07-05-2025, 03:29 PM   #751
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1874 AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE REVIEW


WRITERS POOL OBSERVATIONS

ALLEGHANY: A sad end to what had been a fantastic season. If the APBL ran 70 games instead of 90 perhaps they would have taken the Founders’ Cup in a sweep. Their NBBO imports – Hearns, Peterson, & Springs – all had a positive impact, their APBL signees – Ellerby & Thompson – were All-Stars, & Gerald Strong had the best season of his career.

AMERICAN: They took a step back this year, the rest of the Metro took a step forward, and American finished over .500 but missed the playoffs. The team’s best batsmen are all due back next season but both regular pitchers are free to leave, and if both Johns – Brown & Henry – do leave it could put American in a bind.

EXCELSIOR: Finally, a .500 season. Jim Creighton had his most dominant APBL campaign, NBBO imports Elijah Hill & Troy Oberst were All-Stars, and rescuing Charles Hormel from a back-up role with Shamrock proved to be an inspired decision. They now have to look at upgrading SS & RF, and if they do then Excelsior could finally go above .500.

FLOUR CITY: A tough season. Projected to finish atop the Colonial for the 1st time, F.C. lost James Goodman for three weeks and their offense slipped to the bottom quarter of the league in terms of production. The team needs upgrades at 1B, RF, and possibly SS over the winter if they are to improve in 1874.

GOTHAM: A fourteen-win improvement over 1873. Babe Johnson had a 100-RBI season, Clive Strachan was fantastic, William Theriault hit over .350, Royal Altman’s bat was back in form, and NBBO import Jonathan Quarles had a fine debut season. An upgrade at CF and this could be a 1st-place team next year.

KINGS CO: Burn it all down and start over. Nobody should win less than 30% of their games in a twelve-team league.

KNICKERBOCKER: Knick played well for large stretches of the season, but ultimately an offense that ranked 11th in Runs did them in. NBBO import McLean was a huge surprise that made the ASG. Their outfield is fantastic defensively but has light bats, so they’re going to need much better production from 2B, 3B, & SS in order to be Colonial contenders next year.

MASS. BAY: Another last-place finish is dulled somewhat by the fact that they were 23-17 over their final 40 games. Their first-year P’s, Butler & Kihlstedt, improved during the season and Greenhorn Garvin was an All-Star, but their lineup has holes. Their big need is SS, as even though Trowbridge hit .354 his -37.4 ZR more than undid any good work with the bat.

NIAGARA: An offense that ranked 11th in AVG, On-Base, & OPS meant that even though Greenhorn #1 Tomoharu Mukai pitched well he took 25 losses. SS Arthur Bliss doesn’t have an APBL-level bat and 2B Ernest Lewis is looking his age (36). However, 22-year-old Charles Barrett had a good debut season in the Niagara outfield.

ORANGE: The champions don’t have much to worry about. Every regular is due back except Samuel Kessler, but he’s 38 and 1B is the easiest position to fill. If there was one complaint about the Orange lineup it’s that NBBO import Isaac Holm was just above replacement level at LF, so they might need an upgrade there.

SHAMROCK: Their luck went the opposite way from the implication of their name, finishing 42-48 with a positive Run Differential that suggested 3rd place. The team needs an upgrade at CF and possibly RF & P with Henry Gaul & Henry Tallman free to leave. What Shamrock does with respect to those positions will determine how they’re projected to finish next season.

ST. JOHN’S: They went sleepwalking for much of the season and woke up too late. Falco van der Vaart hit just .230 in his 2nd year as the team’s C and may be replaced by the younger Frederick Drake. 2B Theo Kohlberg saw his average drop 80 points as he began to look his age (37) and an upgrade there is likely. On the bright side, Eamonn Todd was a nice surprise at 3B.
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Old 07-05-2025, 03:33 PM   #752
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1874 APBL STANDINGS





PER-TEAM STATISTICS

1874: 7.4 R/G, .293, .672 OPS, 1,050 H, 123 2B, 44 3B, 10 HR, 156 SB, 3.38 ERA, 79 BB, 72 K, 6.8 E/G, .846 FLD%
1873: 7.9 R/G, .297, .680 OPS, 1,079 H, 125 2B, 48 3B, 9 HR, 184 SB, 3.72 ERA, 78 BB, 66 K, 7.2 E/G, .837 FLD%


FOUNDERS' CUP IV: Alleghany v Orange

GAME 1: ALL 25-3 ORA – Ashley Hearns (RF, ALL) 4/6, 2 2B, 4 R, 4 RBI, SB
GAME 2: ALL 7-6 ORA – Gerald Strong (SS, ALL) 3/5 (all 1B), 1 R, 1 RBI, SB, GW HIT
GAME 3: ORA 9-8 ALL – Charles Whitehead (2B, ORA) 4/4, 3B, 3 R, 2 RBI, 1 BB, 1 DEF DP
GAME 4: ORA 6-3 ALL – Everett Schreiber (C, ORA) 3/4, 3B, 1 R, 1 RBI, 1/3 RTO
GAME 5: ORA 4-1 ALL – George Sturgis (P, ORA) CG, 8 HA, 1 ER, 1 K, 1/4
GAME 6: ALL 1-8 ORA – Taliesin Buckley (CF, ORA) 2/4, HR, 2 R, 3 RBI

Orange (1st APBL title; 3rd overall) wins series 4-2

FOUNDERS’ CUP MVP: Charles Whitehead (2B, Orange)


AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE AWARD WINNERS
Career award totals are carried over from the NBBO

BATSMAN OF THE YEAR: Konrad Jensen (LF, age 35) – St. John’s B.C.; 4th career BotY

• .368/.413/.486, .899 OPS, 96 R, 144 H, 13 2B, 12 3B, 3 HR, 79 RBI, 33 BB, 56 SB, 190 TB, 6.4 WPA, 4.0 WAR
• Led APBL in OBP, SLG, OPS, HR, BB, & TB; Top three in AVG & Batsman WAR; 2nd BotY in three years
• William Busby (1B, AME) 2nd – .361, .817 OPS, 83 R, 139 H, 18 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 97 RBI, 16 BB, 4.1 WPA, 2.6 WAR
• Babe Johnson (2B, GOT) 3rd – .336, .797 OPS, 88 R, 138 H, 20 2B, 7 3B, 102 RBI, 30 BB, 44 SB, 6.7 WPA, 2.3 WAR

It was the final week, in which he hit three Home Runs while trying to lead St. John’s to the pinnacle of divisional comebacks, that put Jensen over the top. Having led the APBL in Bases on Balls, On-Base %, & OPS in each of the past three seasons, Jensen remains the sport’s most cerebrally and technically gifted batsman at the age of 35. To wit, he is the only long-time regular to switch leagues during the split that actually has a higher average in the APBL (.376 to .374).


PITCHER OF THE YEAR: Jim Creighton (age 33) – Excelsior B.B.C.; 2nd career PotY

30-21, 2.56 ERA, 396.2 IP, 28 CG, 1 SHO, 136 K, 3.1 K/9, 4.1 K/BB, 1.20 WHIP, 10.1 HA/9, 7.8 WAR
• Tied APBL Wins record; Also led APBL in ERA, IP, G, CG, QS, K, K/9, K/BB, WHIP, HA/9, RA/9, & WAR
• Elmer Seabold (ALL) 2nd – 25-19, 2.94 ERA, 358.0 IP, 27 CG, 1 SHO, 78 K, 1.5 K/BB, 1.33 WHIP, 4.9 WAR, 5.1 rWAR
• Thomas Smith (StJ) 3rd – 24-19, 2.64 ERA, 358.0 IP, 27 CG, 0 SHO, 20 K, 0.6 K/BB, 1.29 WHIP, 4.6 WAR, 6.1 rWAR

This was perhaps Creighton’s finest season, when you consider the level of competition. He led the APBL in thirteen pitching categories while reaching the 30-Win milestone for the first time, and he did so while pitching in an absurd 64 games, eight more than any other pitcher has done in a season during the APBL’s brief history. Seabold & Smith are basically there because writers had to vote for 2nd & 3rd place.


MOST VALUABLE PLAYER: Gerald Strong (SS, age 29) – Alleghany B.C.; 1st career MVP

• .341/.359/.411, .770 OPS, 92 R, 147 H, 17 2B, 5 3B, 1 HR, 55 RBI, 29 SB, 177 TB, +21.5 ZR, 5.1 WPA, 4.8 WAR
• Led APBL in AVG, OBP, OPS, & BB; Top three in Slugging, Hits, Stolen Bases, & WAR
• A. Mascherino (SS, ORA) 2nd – .317, .703 OPS, 102 R, 140 H, 16 2B, 4 3B, 56 RBI, 36 SB, +18.5 ZR, 6.2 WPA, 4.1 WAR
• Konrad Jensen (LF, StJ) 3rd – APBL Batsman of the Year

After five consecutive All-Star Game appearances going back to the NBBO, this was a most deserved MVP for Strong. No other batsman had his combination of offensive consistency and defensive excellence, as the only player with a higher Zone Rating than him, George Pugatch, hit .258 with a .585 OPS. Mascherino was close, but his offense just wasn’t as good.


GREENHORN OF THE YEAR: Lane Garvin (C, age 28) – Massachusetts Bay B.C.

• .324/.335/.375, .710 OPS, 65 R, 110 H, 14 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 50 RBI, 3 BB, 2 SB, 127 TB, 3.0 WPA, 1.5 WAR
• Only Greenhorn to make All-Star Game; Led Greenhorns in Batting Average
• Eamonn Todd (3B, StJ) 2nd – .318, .708 OPS, 67 R, 127 H, 13 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 83 RBI, 8 BB, 1 SB, 5.5 WPA, 1.8 WAR
• Tomoharu Mukai (P, NIA) 3rd – 16-25, 3.38 ERA, 341.1 IP, 16 CG, 0 SHO, 14 K, 0.6 K/BB, 1.48 WHIP, 5.7 WAR, 1.1 rWAR

Todd had a better overall season, but the fact that Garvin was the only Greenhorn to make the All-Star Game while having a comparable Average & OPS made him the GotY. Mukai had some good moments and a fine August but was frequently let down by the Niagara offense. I.A. Butler (P, MB) turned his talent into production too late to make the top three


APBL GOLDEN GLOVES

P: James Goodman (FC/5th) – 12 PO, 43 AST, 2 DP, 16 E, 1.75 RNG, +5.7 ZR, 1.151 EFF
C: James Simon (SHA/1st) – 34.7 RTO%, 2.93 C-ERA, 3 PB, 18 E, +3.8 ZR, 1.057 EFF
1B: Cormack Alexander (KNI/4th) – 853 PO, 81 AST, 31 DP, 46 E, 10.50 RNG, +9.2 ZR, 1.071 EFF
2B: Clyde Hudspeth (EXC/2nd) – 278 PO, 306 AST, 18 DP, 70 E, 7.12 RNG, +18.0 ZR, 1.086 EFF
3B: Frank Doherty (ALL/2nd) – 148 PO, 185 AST, 3 DP, 71 E, 3.89 RNG, +11.9 ZR, 1.128 EFF
SS: George Pugatch (GOT/1st) – 266 PO, 271 AST, 16 DP, 98 G, 6.52 RNG, +27.0 ZR, 1.152 EFF
LF: Robert Golden (ALL/1st) – 158 PO, 4 AST, 39 E, 1.91 RNG, +1.7 ARM, +5.3 ZR, 1.063 EFF
CF: Louis Dyke (KNI/2nd) – 259 PO, 8 AST, 62 E, 3.00 RNG, -2.3 ARM, +10.5 ZR, 1.082 EFF
RF: Ashley Hearns (ALL/1st) – 159 PO, 6 AST, 44 E, 1.90 RNG, +3.0 ARM, +3.1 ZR, 1.050 EFF


APBL TEAM OF THE YEAR

P: Jim Creighton (EXC/6th) - 30-21, 2.56 ERA, 396.2 IP, 28 CG, 136 K, 3.1 K/9, 4.1 K/BB, 10.1 HA/9, 1.20 WHIP, 7.8 WAR
C: Everett Schreiber (ORA/5th) - .357, .803 OPS, 72 R, 125 H, 23 2B, 1 3B, 0 HR, 75 RBI, 8 BB, 3.26 C-ERA, 5.0 WPA, 3.8 WAR
1B: William Busby (AME/5th) - .361, .817 OPS, 83 R, 139 H, 18 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 97 RBI, 16 BB, 1 SB, 4.1 WPA, 2.6 WAR
2B: Babe Johnson (GOT/4th) - .336, .797 OPS, 88 R, 138 H, 20 2B, 7 3B, 0 HR, 102 RBI, 30 BB, 44 SB, 6.7 WPA, 2.3 WAR
3B: William Dickerson (SHA/4th) - .329, .778 OPS, 83 R, 136 H, 23 2B, 10 3B, 0 HR, 85 RBI, 10 BB, 42 SB, 4.1 WPA, 3.1 WAR
SS: Gerald Strong (ALL/1st) - .341, .770 OPS, 92 R, 147 H, 17 2B, 5 3B, 1 HR, 55 RBI, 29 SB, +21.5 ZR, 5.1 WPA, 4.8 WAR
OF: Konrad Jensen (StJ/14th) - .368, .899 OPS, 96 R, 144 H, 28 XBH, 3 HR, 79 RBI, 32 BB, 56 SB, 190 TB, 6.4 WPA, 4.0 WAR
OF: Clive Strachan (GOT/1st) - .348, .791 OPS, 113 R, 150 H, 12 2B, 8 3B, 2 HR, 51 RBI, 8 BB, 70 SB, 5.6 WPA, 3.8 WAR
OF: James Burke (AME/5th) - .337, .783 OPS, 105 R, 143 H, 14 2B, 6 3B, 2 HR, 79 RBI, 20 BB, 86 SB, 5.4 WPA, 3.8 WAR


MISCELLANEOUS


RECORDS

• Mario Fusilli (St. John’s) set a new record for Singles in a season with 132.
• Jim Creighton (Excelsior) tied the record for Wins in a season with 30.
• Jim Creighton (Excelsior) set a new record for Games Pitched in a season with 64.
• Jim Creighton (Excelsior) set a new record for Innings Pitched in a season with 396.0
• Raynard Cordell (Alleghany) set a new record for Home Runs Allowed in a season with 11 (0.26 HR/9).
• Fred Richards (Kings Co.) set a new record for Hits Allowed in a season with 528 (14.8 HA/9).


APBL STATISTICAL LEADERS

Average: .374 by Mario Fusilli (1B, St. John’s)
On-Base: .413 by Konrad Jensen (LF, St. John’s)
Slugging: .486 by Konrad Jensen
OPS: .899 by Konrad Jensen
Hits: 158 by Mario Fusilli
Extra-Base Hits: 36 by Hugh Harris (3B, Flour City)
Doubles: 27 by Troy Oberst (LF, Excelsior)
Triples: 14 by Taliesin Buckley (CF, Orange) & Rudolph Decker (CF, St. John’s)
Home Runs: 3 by eight different batsman
Runs Batted In: 102 by Babe Johnson (2B, Gotham)
Runs: 115 by Nelson Townsend
Stolen Bases: 86 by James Burke (CF, American)
Total Bases: 190 by Mario Fusilli & Konrad Jensen
Bases on Balls: 32 by Konrad Jensen
Zone Rating: +27.0 by George Pugatch (SS, Gotham)
Batsman WPA: 6.7 by Babe Johnson
Batsman WAR: 4.8 by Gerald Strong (SS, Alleghany)

Wins: 30 by Jim Creighton (Excelsior)
Losses: 28 by Fred Richards (Kings Co.)
ERA (200+ IP): 2.56 by Jim Creighton
Strikeouts: 136 by Jim Creighton
Innings: 396.2 by Jim Creighton
Complete Games: 28 by Raynard Cordell (Alleghany) & Jim Creighton
Shutouts: 2 by three different pitchers
BB/9 (200+ IP): 0.4 by Howard Burns (St. John’s)
K/9 (200+ IP): 3.1 by Jim Creighton
K/BB (200+ IP): 4.1 by Jim Creighton
WHIP (200+ IP): 1.20 by Jim Creighton
Pitcher WAR: 7.8 by Jim Creighton
Pitcher rWAR: 8.6 by Raynard Cordell


ACHIEVEMENTS & NOTABLE EVENTS

May 8: James Simon (Shamrock) bats 5/5 with a HR & 6 RBI at St. John’s.
May 21: Flour City erases eight-run deficit (13-5) at the start of the 8th to win at St. John’s.
May 21: Hugh Harris (Flour City) bats 5/6 with 4 R & 3 RBI at St. John’s.
May 26: Alfred Calvert (Excelsior) bats 5/5 with a Triple & Home Run vs Orange.
May 31: American wins 28-1 vs Kings Co. to set a new APBL record for margin of victory (27 runs).
June 2: Three different players finish games with five Hits, an APBL first.
June 7: Wilbur Graff (Niagara) bats 5/6 with 4 RBI vs Alleghany.
July 15: James Burke (American) bats 5/5 with 2 SB vs Gotham.
July 16: Samuel Kessler (Orange) bats 6/6 with 4 R & 4 RBI at Knickerbocker.
July 30: Four Gotham batsmen finish with 4+ Hits in a 27-5 win at Knickerbocker.
July 30: William Theriault (Gotham) bats 5/7 with 5 R & 7 RBI at Knickerbocker.
Aug. 3: The Metropolitan wins the All-Star Game 7-6. MVP: Mario Fusilli (St. John’s). HOST: American.
Aug. 22: Jim Creighton (Excelsior) records 30 Wins in a season for the 1st time in his career.
Aug. 24: Konrad Jensen (St. John’s) finishes #1 in the APBL in six batting categories.
Aug. 24: Jim Creighton (Excelsior) finishes #1 in the APBL in thirteen pitching categories.

• For the second season in a row no batsman hit .400.
• No batsman reached 5.0 WAR.
• Three players had 90+ RBI in 1873, and one had 100+.
• Eight players scored 100+ Runs in 1873.
• Two players finished 1873 with 70+ Stolen Bases.
• There was one six-hit game in 1874.
• The longest Hitting Streak of the season was 31 games by Troy Oberst (Excelsior).
• Two pitchers earned 25+ Wins, down from four in 1873.


PERFORMANCES OF THE SEASON

#1: William Theriault (Gotham) 5/7, 2B, 5 R, 7 RBI, 6 TB on July 30 at KNI (116 GMSC)
#2: Samuel Kessler (Orange) 6/6, 2B, 4 R, 4 RBI, SB, 7 TB on July 16 at KNI (104 GMSC)
#3: James Simon (Shamrock) 5/5, 2B, HR, 2 R, 6 RBI, 9 TB on May 8 at StJ (101 GMSC)
#4: Norman Kennemore (Kings Co.) 5/5, 2B, 3 R, 5 RBI, BB, 4/10 RTO on June 12 at GOT (101 GMSC)
#5: William Theriault (Gotham) 4/5, HR, 5 R, 4 RBI, 7 TB on Aug. 13 at KC (96 GMSC)
#6: William Busby (American) 4/4 (all 1B), 3 R, 5 RBI, 1 BB on May 31 vs KC (93 GMSC)
#7: Willie Davis (American) 4/6, 2B, 5 R, 4 RBI, 1 BB, 5 TB on June 26 at GOT (92 GMSC)
#8: Taliesin Buckley (Orange) 4/5, 3 2B, 4 R, 5 RBI, 7 TB on May 22 vs KNI (91 GMSC)
#9: Ashley Hearns (Alleghany) 4/5, 2B, 3B, 4 R, 5 RBI, 7 TB on June 25 at StJ (91 GMSC)
#10: Jack Doherty (Kings Co.) 13.0 IP, 7 HA, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K on May 5 at EXC (89 GMSC)
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Old 07-10-2025, 07:41 AM   #753
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FOUR OF GAME’S EARLY STARS END THEIR CAREERS
DAVIS, HEILMAN, HUNTLEY, & MALONEY HANG UP THEIR CLEATS FOR THE LAST TIME


NORTHEAST U.S.A. (Oct. 1, 1874) - After the end of each baseball season, the more experienced men of the sport must decide whether or not to continue playing for one more season or to quit the endeavor and go back to year-round employment at a more standard full-time job.

For four of the early stars of the sport of baseball, the decision has been made: the uniforms have been put away, the bats have been set aside, and it’s time to stop playing competitive baseball. The four players: Willie Davis, James Heilman, Edward Huntley, & Thomas Maloney, three legends in the APBL and an NBBO star who took a while to receive his due.

For the three APBL retirees stardom came almost instantly. After a fine debut campaign in 1858 (.318, 40 RBI, 34 SB, 2.6 WAR) as a 21-year-old, Davis spent the next three seasons winning an NEL Most Valuable Player Award and back-to-back Batsman of the Year awards for Susquehanna. As a 21-year-old in the NBBO’s inaugural season Huntley led the NYL in Batsman WAR (4.4), something he would do in eleven of the league’s first thirteen seasons, and he also took home a Golden Glove (3B) while batting .359 for Orange. Maloney was also 21 in the league’s inaugural season, during which he hit .364 (.865 OPS, 43 RBI, 30 SB, 3.4 WAR) for Shamrock in one of the most difficult hitting environments in the sport, and just two seasons later he would lead the NEL with a .401 average while becoming one of the first set of NBBO All-Stars.

Heilman’s path to stardom took longer. As a 27-year-old in the NBBO’s inaugural season he was a very good player for Nassau County (.329, 46 RBI, 28 SB, 2.4 WAR) and over time was consistently one of the more valuable corner outfielders in the NBBO, but proper recognition eluded him until 1871, when he was named an All-Star for the first time at the age of 41. Heilman would make three All-Star Games and two Teams of the Year in his last four NBBO seasons, and he ended his career by winning NYL Batsman of the Year at the age of 44.


Willie Davis’ career statistics & accomplishments:




• 2x APBL Champion (1872-73)
• 2x NBBO NEL Batsman of the Year (1860-61)
• 2x NBBO NEL Most Valuable Player (1859, 65)
• 13x All-Star (10x NBBO, 3x APBL)
• 5x NBBO NEL Team of the Year (1859-61, 64-65)
• 6x Golden Glove (5x APBL, 1x NBBO)
• 3x NBBO NEL leader in Total Bases (1860-62)
• 3x NBBO NEL leader in Slugging % (1860-61, 65)
• 2x NBBO NEL leader in Batsman WAR (1865, 69)
• 2x NBBO NEL leader in Hits, 2B, OPS



Davis joined the NBBO in 1858 with Susquehanna. After spending the first seven years of his career with the team, he joined American in his hometown of Philadelphia ahead of the 1865 season and spent the last ten years of his career there. Davis remains the youngest player to win either Batsman of the Year or Most Valuable Player in any league, and he also remains the youngest batsman ever to lead his league in OPS. Over time, he may end up most remembered for being part of American’s back-to-back APBL championship teams in 1872 & 73, and a key piece of the ‘72 title winners.


Edward Huntley’s career statistics & accomplishments:




• 3x NBBO Champion (1859, 65, 67)
• 1x NBBO NYL Batsman of the Year (1866)
• 4x NBBO NYL Most Valuable Player (1859, 62, 65, 69)
• 16x All-Star (12x NBBO, 4x APBL)
• 10x Team of the Year (9x NBBO, 1x APBL)
• 9x NBBO NEL Golden Glove (1857, 59-63, 65, 67-68)
• 11x NBBO NEL leader in WAR (1857, 59-63, 65-69)
• 2x league leader in BB, SLG, & TB
• Career Zone Rating of +226.7 as 3B & SS
• WPA of 7.92 in 1873 is the all-leagues record



Huntley immediately became one of the stars of the sport as a 21-year-old with Orange, with his talent & popularity never waning during his eighteen-year career. After eight seasons with Orange he joined the other Manhattan team, Knickerbocker, and immediately won a championship with the famous 58-12 team of 1865. He spent nine more seasons with the team, all of them All-Star worthy, before calling for an end to his career.

Of course, a discussion of Huntley’s career wouldn’t be complete without noting his legendary exploits during the postseason:




Somehow, a player who was talented enough to lead his league in Batsman WAR eleven times in thirteen seasons played even better in the most high-pressure baseball on the calendar against the best teams in the sport. He and James Burke are the only players to go to the playoffs more than twice and have a career postseason Batting Average over .400, but Burke has played 27 games over three postseason appearances while Huntley had 74 games played over seven.

Simply put, Edward Huntley was one of the best batsmen and fielders in the sport for eighteen years, both during the regular season and postseason.


Thomas Maloney’s career statistics & accomplishments:




• 1x NBBO Champion (1862)
• 1x NBBO NEL Batsman of the Year (1865)
• 2x NBBO NEL Batting Champion (1859, 65)
• 12x NBBO NEL All-Star (1859-70)
• 4x NBBO NEL Team of the Year (1859-60, 62, 65)
• Career .354 postseason Batting Average



Maloney began his career with a remarkable run for Shamrock. After a dip from his .364 average in the inaugural season of the NBBO, his .401 in 1859 is heralded as one of the most remarkable feats of batsmanship ever considering Shamrock’s home grounds (AVG factor: .884) even though he didn’t win BotY (Anderson MacGyver). Stunningly, Shamrock let him leave after a down year in 1864. Maloney then joined Reading, where he rebounded with a BotY campaign in 1865. After another stellar campaign for Reading in 1866 Maloney came back to Boston, where he would join Massachusetts Bay and spend the final eight seasons of his career.


James Heilman’s career statistics & accomplishments:




• 1x NBBO Champion (1873)
• 1x NYL Batsman of the Year (1874)
• 3x NBBO All-Star (1871-72, 74)
• 2x NYL Team of the Year (1872, 74)
• 1x NEL Golden Glove (1867)
• 7x league leader in Bases on Balls (1858, 60, 70-74)



What made James Heilman so popular wasn’t that he put up superstar levels of production for his entire career. Instead, it was that he was a very good player who then peaked after he hit the age of forty thanks to a combination of extraordinary patience at the plate – his 77 Bases on Balls in 1871 are the all-leagues record – and fundamental baseball ability. Heilman bounced around more than the other three men, playing for four different teams after spending the first eight seasons of the NBBO playing for Nassau County. Yet, Heilman stands as a beloved figure whose 1874 season, in which he led the NYL in OPS and won Batsman of the Year at age 44, will be remembered as one of the most remarkable seasons of all time.


So, here’s to the retirements of four of the early history of the sport’s brightest stars. One can only hope that their legacies will be remembered for generations.
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Old 07-13-2025, 09:25 AM   #754
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FRANKFORD’S EVANS OPENS RESTAURANT
22-YEAR-OLD DEBUTS “HOME PLATE CAFÉ”, SHOWING NO SHORTAGE OF AMBITION


PHILADELPHIA (Jan. 23, 1875) - Joseph Evans is encouraging visitors to the Frankford Arsenal ballpark to spend a pleasant hour after the game at the Home Base Cafe, an eatery that the left fielder has recently opened with his partner, Henry Tafel.



Image taken from an 1867 menu in the digitized menu collection at The Library Company of Philadelphia and modified, including manual font matching to fit menu. Story slightly modified from OOTP-generated article.

The establishment is already a success, featuring an extensive bill of fare including the house specialty, Clam soup. The chef will even prepare “Beef Tongue a la Evans”, which is sure to please the gourmand and the baseball enthusiast alike.

The genial native of South Windsor, Connecticut assures the public that prices for these viands will be reasonable, with most dishes starting at fifteen cents. The options to choose from include numerous varieties of beef and chops, including Roast Beef, Spiced Beef, Corned Beef, Beef Salad, Pork chops, Mutton chops, and Veal chops.

With Evans finding himself a source of income that does not include backbreaking work during the offseason, does that mean a longer stay in Philadelphia for the young star, or will he still do what common opinion suggests and leave for a four-figure payday from a team in the A.P.B.L. next winter? Frankford fans surely know which outcome they prefer.

In just two years Joseph Evans has become the brightest young baseball star in Philadelphia. Now he’ll see if he can become the brightest young restauranteur in Philadelphia well. If his exploits on the baseball field are anything to go by then Evans has more than enough natural talent to pull it off.
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Old 07-15-2025, 07:07 AM   #755
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A.P.B.L. REDEFINES GREENHORNS AT MEETINGS
UNDER PAST DEFINITION, ONLY FIVE GREENHORNS PLAYED REGULARLY IN 1874


NEW YORK CITY (Mar. 10-14, 1875) - Last season the A.P.B.L. had three finalists for Greenhorn of the Year: Lane Garvin (C, Mass. Bay), Tomoharu Mukai (P, Niagara), & Eamonn Todd (3B, St. John’s). It’s a good thing that the list of finalists didn’t go much further, because in the end only five regular batsmen or pitchers in the league last year qualified as Greenhorns.

The above is not because only five regulars were in their first season in the A.P.B.L. The current definition of Greenhorn in all three competitions states that a Greenhorn is a player in their first year on a Senior Roster. Had players purchased from N.B.B.O. teams who were spending their first season at the game’s highest level counted, then surely players like Excelsior All-Stars 3B Elijah Hill & LF Troy Oberst would have finished 1-2, or vice versa, for the GotY honor.

That is what part of the Spring Executive Committee Meetings was dedicated to: the question “What is a Greenhorn with respect to the highest level of baseball?” Those present didn’t want another season with only five Greenhorn regulars, leaving open the chance of someone taking the award almost by default. They also believed that more experienced players, usually in their 30’s, who freely came in from one of the other two competitions shouldn’t be called Greenhorns, and furthermore that those men would be insulted with such a label. Still, there was a middle ground.

Younger prospects and stars in their early-to-mid-20’s could have their services “transferred” from a team in the N.B.B.O. and presumably a team in the P.C.B.L., even though none had been offered up yet, to any team in the A.P.B.L. for the right price, typically in the range of $1,000-1,500. Those players would have to make a sizeable adjustment to the quality of play, and at the same time they’d still be young men yet to reach the peak of their skills.

And thus, it was agreed that starting in the 1875 season the definition of an A.P.B.L. Greenhorn would now have two parts:
1. Any player that is in the midst of his first full season as part of a team’s Senior Roster.
2. Any player purchased from another league playing his debut season in the A.P.B.L.
Would the change have an impact on the number of Greenhorns playing regularly in the league? Hopefully. Would the change have an impact on the long-term status of players purchased from other teams? Not likely, because most purchased to date have been signed to contracts that last through the four-year probationary period before they hit Free Agency.

It might seem like a cosmetic change on the face of it, but for the members of the Executive Committee they felt this was another way to signify that the American Professional Baseball League was the highest level of the sport.
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Old 07-15-2025, 07:08 AM   #756
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EX-CO PUBLISHES UMPIRE’S GUIDE FOR 1875
FIRST MAJOR REFERENCE BOOK FOR UMPS CONTAINS GROUND RULES, PLAYING RULES, & MORE


NEW YORK CITY (Mar. 10-14, 1875) - The topic of Greenhorns was not the only thing discussed at the Spring Executive Committee meetings. In addition, help for the sport’s umpires was on the way.

For the first time, the Executive Committee partnered with a New York publishing house to print the first all-in-one reference volume for umpires of the sport at all levels, “De Witt’s Base Ball Umpires Guide”.




The guide offers the umpire handy reminders and references for every aspect of the sport, from ground rules…
• Size of the Batter’s Box
• Size of the Pitcher’s Box
• Distance of the bases from one another
• Diameter of the bases
• How Home Plate differs from 1st-3rd base
• Where the foul flags & poles should be
…to equipment regulations…
• Size & Weight of the game ball
• Proper game ball materials
• Provider of the ball & who makes them
• Length & circumference of the bat
• Restrictions of materials used in the bat
• Types of shoes that may be worn
…to playing rules…
• Definition of a “hittable ball” for calling strikes
• Parameters of legal & illegal pitching motions
• When to call a game on account of low visibility
• The different methods of recording an out (there are eight)
• How to determine if a player has run out of the base line
…to more administrative aspects of the sport…
• The difference between professional & semi-professional contracts
• The administrative definition of an Amateur player
• The official duties of an umpire
• How umpires should be compensated for their work
Each one the collective total of 76 teams in the three competitive leagues – the A.P.B.L., N.B.B.O., & P.C.B.L. – were given copies to hand out to players, executives, and area umpires, and more were given out to sell on upcoming game days.

Umpires who wish to order a copy to keep in their study have been told to send $1.00 to Robert De Witt and his publishing house on 33 Rose Street in New York City, and to expect delivery a few weeks later.

Time travelers from the future can access the handy reference guide here, at the Vintage Base Ball Association’s “Rules & Customs” website. (It’s too large to attach…)
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Old 07-15-2025, 12:04 PM   #757
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THE 1875 AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE PREVIEW


NORTHEAST U.S.A. (May 4, 1875) – The American Professional Baseball League is ready to begin Season #5, with First Pitch taking place this afternoon in six cities across the Northeast. The two favorites this season are the two teams who made the Founders’ Cup last year: Alleghany & Orange. However, one team is expected to give Orange an extremely tough battle for the Metropolitan pennant and, as always, St. John’s will be fighting with Alleghany for Colonial bragging rights to the very end of the season.

A summary of the offseason for each team:

ALLEGHANY – Alleghany returns every regular from last year’s Colonial champions, and they upgraded an outfield spot by signing the #1 indy ball batsman: four-star LF John Meier. As a result, the writers expect them back in the Founders’ Cup with the same record they had last year.

AMERICAN – They tried to make a big signing to replace Willie Davis over the winter but ultimately had to replace from within, with Sidney Crowder (2.0*) the new LF at a big downgrade. The rest of the batsmen are back. They also have two Greenhorn P’s and a number of prospects at the position, so a potential revolving door there has American expected to finish the season at .500.

EXCELSIOR – After Jim Creighton’s finest APBL season Excelsior wasn’t able to sign any big names over the winter, but they did bring in Bill Lewis to be their RF to ensure that they should have an elite defense once again. With Elijah Hill & Troy Oberst having an APBL season behind them and Nicholas Banfield reportedly looking more talented than before during spring games, Excelsior is projected to be just as good as Orange and possibly go to the Founders’ Cup for the first time.

FLOUR CITY – They replaced one aging 1B – Hawk Peterson – with another, but Samuel Kessler isn’t a standard 38-year-old. They’re hoping backup Alfred Suber has a better season than the departed Lon Duffy at RF, and after James York’s shock retirement at age 30 in December they’ve made Greenhorn Daniel Gibson their new #2 at a downgrade. Still, they should finish safely above .500

GOTHAM – All of their regular batsmen except average CF Edward Johnson are back and they replaced Howard Budd with Knick stalwart Peadar Daly, but the Writers Pool doesn’t like Gotham because once again their defense looks poor on paper. Their new CF Gerbrand Boonstra is a career APBL backup but grades at 2.5* and will be a defensive upgrade. Still, they’re projected to finish 4th.

KINGS COUNTY – After the retirement of legendary SS/3B Edward Huntley, this will be a transition year. The team tried to land star SS Jonathan Richards from the NBBO but missed and instead will have 2.5* Greenhorn Arthur Groff there, a BIG downgrade from Huntley. They also lost Leonard Noble but have replaced him with Charles Washer, who should at least be good in the field. The big plus: their two P’s are 5.0* Bert Landreth and 4.5* Greenhorn Charles Burton. Still, they’re projected to finish last.

KNICKERBOCKER – One change to the regular setup over the winter, as they let Ed Donovan leave for Flour City and replaced him from within, making outfield defensive specialist Henry Jost their new LF after two seasons as a backup. Aside from that, Bert Landreth should become their new #1 now that Peadar Daly is on the wrong side of 35.

MASSACHUSETTS BAY – After another last-place finish they did some sensible things over the winter. William Trowbridge was moved from SS, where he racked up a -65.7 ZR over two seasons, to 3B, where the .350 hitter should be much less of a defensive negative. In at SS is Jonathan Richards, good for 3.6 WAR and +13.5 ZR in the NBBO last year. They also signed 2x All-Star Henry Gaul from Shamrock. With the previous taken into account the team shouldn’t be the Colonial doormat this year.

NIAGARA – Charles Barrett, now 23, should be great with bat & glove at LF. The problem: that might be more than cancelled out by Ernest Lewis & Obelix Tsiaris both being 37 and losing range at important positions. Aside from Reginald Roper the rest of their batsmen are just okay, and the Writers Pool thinks that spells out a last-place finish for Niagara in 1875.

ORANGE – The champs are expected to have the same record as last year. They lost Samuel Kessler but replaced him with Walter Dudley, an All-Star 1B for Orange before they signed Kessler. Every other regular is back. The only major worry is that 9x All-Star Taliesin Buckley is 38 and noticeably losing range at CF. Can Corner OF’s Isaac Holm & William Valentine help him out?

SHAMROCK – They lost regulars over the winter but didn’t upgrade or downgrade any position. 3.0* star RF Henry Gaul moved across Boston, and they signed 3.0* Leonard Noble to replace him. 2.5* CF Hiram Majors retired, and they signed 2.5* Charles Hormel to replace him. 3.0* P Henry Tallman left, and 3.0* John Henry will replace him. The result: a projected repeat 42-48 finish.

ST. JOHN’S – Every regular is back except Theo Kohlberg, who was replaced with Greenhorn Gerald Hathway, a 2.5* Greenhorn expected to provide excellent defense and good baserunning. Everything else remaining the same means they should have the Colonial’s best offense, good pitching, decent defense, and another 50-40 finish.
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Old 07-15-2025, 12:06 PM   #758
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AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE PROJECTED STANDINGS


Code:
COLONIAL CONFERENCE
		 W	 L	 PCT	GB	 R	 RA	   RD	 1874
Alleghany	52	38	.578	--	671	562	 +109	52-38
St. John's	50	40	.556	 2	734	638	  +96	50-40
Flour City	49	41	.544	 3	727	689	  +38	44-46
Shamrock	42	48	.467	10	606	652	  -46	42-48
Mass. Bay	40	50	.444	12	615	705	  -90	38-52
Niagara		37	53	.411	15	603	711	 -108	44-46

METROPOLITAN CONFERENCE
		 W	 L	 PCT	GB	 R	 RA	   RD	 1874
Excelsior	53	37	.589	--	691	580	 +111	45-45
Orange		53	37	.589	--	769	660	 +109	53-37
American	45	45	.500	 8	686	660	  +26	48-42
Gotham		41	49	.456	12	680	696	  -16	50-40
Kings Co.	40	50	.444	13	683	817	 -134	26-64
Knick		39	51	.433	14	645	742	  -97	48-42

APBL AWARD FAVORITES

Batsman of the Year: Konrad Jensen (LF, St. John’s) – projected .386/.424/.478, 2 HR, 92 RBI, 62 SB
Pitcher of the Year: Jim Creighton (P, Excelsior) – projected 26-16, 3.13 ERA, 129 K over 370.2 IP
Most Valuable Player: James Burke (CF, American) – projected .357/.379/.443, 1 HR, 65 RBI, 93 SB
Greenhorn of the Year: Charles Burton (P, Knick) – projected 17-22, 3.08 ERA, 30 K over 330.1 IP


APBEL TEAM OF THE YEAR FAVORITES

P: Jim Creighton (EXC), C: Everett Schreiber (ORA), 1B: Cormack Alexander (KNI), 2B: Babe Johnson (GOT), 3B: William Dickerson (SHA), SS: Gerald Strong (ALL), LF: Konrad Jensen (StJ), CF: James Burke (AME), RF: Clive Strachan (GOT)


KEY SIGNINGS & PLAYER CHANGES

P: Mattia Benetti (Greenhorn; 3.0/3.5 stars) to American
P: Charles Burton (Greenhorn; 4.5/4.5 stars) to Knickerbocker
P: Joseph Caviness (Greenhorn; 2.5/2.5 stars) to St. John’s
P: Peadar Daly (20-17, 3.49 ERA, 3.7 WAR) from Knickerbocker to Gotham
P: Simon DiStefano (Greenhorn; 3.0/3.5 stars) to American
P: Jimmy Everhart (2.5/3.5 stars) from Pioneer (NBBO) to American for $1,500
P: Daniel Gibson (Greenhorn; 3.0 stars) to Flour City
P: Willie Gray (3.5 stars) from Marathon (NBBO) to Kings Co. for $1,200
P: John Henry (20-17, 3.50 ERA, 3.3 WAR) from American to Shamrock
P: Sam Kelly (Greenhorn: 3.0/3.5 stars) to Orange
P: Henry Tallman (17-16, 2.96 ERA, 2.7 WAR) from Shamrock to Kings Co.
P: Marshal; Yarber (2.5 stars) from Olympic (NBBO) to Niagara for $1,000

C: Sydney Styles (Backup; 2.5 stars) from Gotham to Kings Co.
1B: Walter Dudley (Backup; 3.0 stars) from American to Orange
1B: Samuel Kessler (.323, 71 RBI, 2.6 WAR) from Orange to Flour City
2B: Gerald Hathaway (Greenhorn; 2.5/2.5 stars) to St. John’s
SS: Arthur Groff (Greenhorn; 2.5/2.5 stars) to Knickerbocker
SS: Jonathan Richards (3.0 stars) from Quaker St. (NBBO) to Mass. Bay

LF: John Meier (Greenhorn; 4.0/4.0 stars) to Alleghany
LF: Charles Washer (Backup; 2.5 stars) from Mass. Bay to Knickerbocker
CF: Gerbrand Boonstra (Backup; 2.5 stars) from Mass. Bay to Gotham
CF: Charles Hormel (.274, 57 RBI, 1.5 WAR) from Excelsior to Shamrock
RF: Henry Gaul (.306, 70 RBI, 2.2 WAR) from Shamrock to Mass. Bay
RF: Bill Lewis (Backup; 2.5 stars) from Orange to Excelsior
RF: Leonard Noble (.275, 54 RBI, 1.6 WAR) from Knickerbocker to Shamrock
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Old 07-21-2025, 09:22 PM   #759
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APBL: TWO FIVE-HIT BATSMEN ON GAMEDAY FIVE
ALLEGHANY’S MEIER & MASS. BAY’S STOFFERS HAVE HOT HANDS TO OPEN THE WEEKEND


BOSTON, MASS. & ROCHESTER, N.Y. (May 8, 1875) - The first Saturday of games of the 1875 A.P.B.L. season saw a pair of batsmen collect five hits each, one a new face and one a well-known star.

First up: the new face.

To cap off a back-and-forth game Alleghany scored a run in the top of the 9th to win 10-9 at Flour City in Riverside Park. The winning hit was a one-run Single by CF Robert Golden in T9 and the biggest hit was a two-run Home Run by 1B Jerald Peterson in T5, but the Player of the Game was LF John Meier who put together a 5/6 performance:
T1: Single to LCF off J. Goodman (SB, R)
T3: Ground Out to SS
T5: 1-run Single past 2B off J. Goodman (SB, R)
T6: Single past SS off J. Goodman
T7: 1-run Single to LCF off J. Goodman
T9: Single to RCF off J. Murphy
TOTAL: 5/6 (all 1B), 2 R, 2 RBI, 2 SB
Meier, who has been trusted with the #3 place in the Alleghany batting order to start his maiden season of organized baseball, had those five hits in just his fifth APBL game. The four-star Greenhorn is 11/26 with eight Runs Batted In.

Next up: the familiar face.

In Boston, Massachusetts Bay started strong with five runs in B1 against visiting St. John’s but unfortunately the visitors’ offense, led by C Falco van der Vaart and his 4/5 (2B, 2 R, 1 RBI) afternoon, stormed back and St. John’s won 12-10.

In a losing effort, Mass. Bay 1B Albert Stoffers took Player of the Game honors:
B1: 1-run Single past 2B off H. Burns (R)
B3: Leadoff Double to LF off H. Burns (R)
B5: Leadoff Single past 2B off H. Burns (SB, R)
B7: Double to CF off H. Burns (R)
B9: Double to RCF off J. Caviness
TOTAL: 5/5, 3 2B, 4 R, 1 RBI, SB, 8 TB
The perfect day continued a red-hot Opening Week for Stoffers. The 3x APBL All-Star is 14/24 (5 2B, 1 HR) with eight Runs Batted In through the first five games of 1875.
Attached Images
File Type: pdf 1875-006 APBL 5H BATSMEN.pdf (90.6 KB, 21 views)
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Old 07-21-2025, 09:27 PM   #760
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THE 1875 NATIONAL BASE BALL ORGANIZATION PREVIEW


NORTHEAST U.S.A. (May 12, 1875) – Today begins Year Nineteen of play in the National Base Ball Organization

Last year, Utica was up to the task of defending its cup title as they went 50-20, but Portland & Susquehanna entered the playoffs as cup favorites with their league-best 53-17 records. It was Susquehanna that won out, brushing aside Portland over four games in the N.E.L.C.S. before sweeping surprise N.Y.L. champs Metropolitan in the Tucker-Wheaton Cup final.

All three of last year’s 50-game winners are expected to come back to the pack, with only Susquehanna favored to win their region and even then with an increase of ten losses over last year. This year’s projected #1: Trenton United, whom the Writers Pool thinks has what it takes to win 50+ games and take the Tucker-Wheaton Cup for the first time.

Two regions are expected to be a fight to the bitter end in 1875. The two are Upstate New York and New England, in which the top four teams are projected finish just 2-3 games apart. In New York City the projected spread is larger than in previous years, with 3rd & 4th place predicted to finish 6-8 games behind the leaders.

Two teams are expected to see an increase of 10+ losses this year: Susquehanna, as mentioned, and Portland, whom the pool thinks will lose fourteen more games. On the other hand, Scranton has been picked for a fifteen-win improvement.

There is no shortage of quality Greenhorns that will take to the field this year. There are three five-star Pitchers: Walt Harper of Sportsman’s, Will McMahon of Bedford, & Jacob Wesolowski of Syracuse. There are a number of Greenhorn P’s rated 4.5 stars, and two batsmen as well: 1B Jesse Craig of Sons of the Ocean & 3B William Rockford of Frontier. In addition, there is a further handful of four-star Greenhorns, and in the end this could be the best Greenhorn class ever.

1875 is expected to be a season in which some regions will see one team dominate and others will have a free-for-all at the top of the standings, and it is one in which the star power of the incoming pitchers could mean that the projections for the upcoming season don’t come close to matching the reality as it plays out.

And with that, it’s time to play ball!


NATIONAL BASE BALL ORGANIZATION PROJECTED FINISH


Brooklyn Championship
Favorites: Eckford of Greenpoint at 47-23 (+135 RD)
• Empire & Marathon 10 GB; Atlantic & Continental 11 GB

New York City Championship
Favorites: Metropolitan at 43-27 (+75 RD)
• Mutual 4 GB, Union 6 GB, N.Y.A.C. 8 GB

Upstate New York Championship
Favorites: Syracuse at 43-27 (+75 RD)
• Utica 1 GB, Frontier & Minuteman 2 GB

Coastal Championship
Favorites: Trenton Utd. at 51-19 (+200 RD)
• Quaker St. 12 GB, Pt. Jersey 14 GB, Maryland 15 GB

Inland Championship
Favorites: Susquehanna at 43-27 (+120 RD)
• Scranton 4 GB, Merrimack 5 GB, Pioneer 7 GB

New England Championship
Favorites: Sons of the Ocean at 40-30 (+60 RD)
• Portland & Quinnipiac 1 GB, Cantabrigians 3 GB

Tucker-Wheaton Cup favorites: Trenton United B.B.C.

BROOKLYN – 3x defending Brooklyn champs Eckford have every notable regular back except SS Jake Johnson, but they’ve replaced him with respectable veteran Tracy Spencer and they have a new #1: former American backup William Barnhill. With that in mind the Writers Pool thinks they’ll simply overpower the rest of the Brooklyn field.

NEW YORK CITY – Metro is replacing from within at 3B (Tiarnan Fitzgerald for Leon Freeman) & RF (John Norris for George Brown). However, the team returns its best players and as a result they’re expected to be a bit better than Mutual & Union in the always tough New York City Championship.

UPSTATE – Syracuse added former A.P.B.L. regular Lon Duffy at RF, and they replaced departed All-Star #1 Richard Frazee with five-star Greenhorn Jacob Wesolowski. With the roster ranking in the top ten at five positions, the Writers Pool thinks they’ll get the better of Utica and make it back into the playoffs for the first time since 1872.

COASTAL – Quaker St. lost SS Jonathan Richards to the NBBO and replaced him with Brede Wilhelmsen at a 2.5-star downgrade. They now have two big weak points in the batting order, and to the pool that means it’s Trenton United’s year as CF Manuel Romeiras & SS Earl Seals should be the most valuable 1-2 lineup punch in the NBBO.

INLAND – Susquehanna’s regulars are back with the exception of SS Raymond Fortney and #2 P Earl Henry, replaced by 3.0/3.5-star greenhorn Stephen Barley and 2.5-star backup Irving Noble. That will bring them back to the pack, but they still remain the favorites. The projected #2: Scranton, tipped to win fifteen more games than in 1874.

NEW ENGLAND – Portland replaced RF Luc Billon with the excellent Martin Craven, but the pool believes their 53-17 run last season was a one-off and that New England will be a fight to the finish. The favorites: Sons of the Ocean, who have a 4.5-star greenhorn (Jesse Craig) at 1B, the game’s premier defender in SS Peter Jones, steady pitching, and plenty of talent.


NBBO AWARD FAVORITES

NYL Batsman of the Year: Chester Alexander (2B, Syracuse) – projected .362/.387/.429, 1 HR, 67 RBI, 3 SB
NEL Batsman of the Year: Gerhardt Berg (1B, Quaker St.) – projected .405/.441/.499, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 5 SB
NYL Pitcher of the Year: William Tighe (Minuteman) – projected 23-14, 2.75 ERA, 35 K over 330.2 IP
NEL Pitcher of the Year: Francis Molinari (Trenton Utd.) – projected 26-12, 2.99 ERA, 31 K over 334.0 IP
NYL Most Valuable Player: Isaac Kelly (3B, Eckford) – projected .340/.370/.442, 2 HR, 65 RBI, 1 SB
NEL Most Valuable Player: Manuel Romeiras (CF, Trenton Utd.) – projected .303/.332/.419, 1 HR, 49 RBI, 62 SB
NYL Greenhorn of the Year: Jacob Wesolowski (P, age 24, Syracuse)
NEL Greenhorn of the Year: Jesse Craig (1B, age 29, S.o.t.O.)


NBBO TEAM OF THE YEAR FAVORITES

NEW YORK LEAGUEP: Rudolph Fowler (Utica), C: Robert Borut (Eckford), 1B: Ezechiele Cornaro (Metro), 2B: Chester Alexander (Syracuse), 3B: Isaac Kelly (Eckford), SS: Henry Nabors (Victory), OF: Herb Verrett (Atlantic), OF: Francis Smith (Metro), OF: William Vickers (Cont’l)

NORTHEASTERN LEAGUEP: Francis Molinari (Trenton Utd.), C: Bertrand Bosley (Green Mtn.), 1B: Gerhardt Berg (Quaker St.), 2B: Frank Thomas (Pioneer), 3B: Alfred Williams (Portland), SS: Earl Seals (Trenton Utd.), OF: Ned Morganti (Quaker St.), OF: Manuel Romeiras (Trenton Utd.), OF: Harold Durand (Olympic)


MOST TALENTED GREENHORNS (by position)

P: Jacob Wesolowski (age 24, Syracuse) at 5.0*, C: Alistair Cooper (age 28, Tiger S.C.) at 2.5*, 1B: Jesse Craig (age 29, S.o.t.O.) at 4.5*, 2B: John Kelly (age 28, Star) at 4.0*, 3B: William Rockford (age 29, Frontier) at 4.5*, SS: Ashley Stretton (age 28, Salem) at 4.0*, OF: Julius Tierney (age 25, Star) at 3.5*, OF: Christos Pappas (age 30, Marathon) at 3.5*, OF: Alexander Engels (age 25, Reading A.C.) at 3.5*


MOST TALENTED RESERVE PROSPECTS (by position)

P: Peter Dittmer (age 20, Maryland) at 2.0/5.0*, C: Mark Lehmann (age 23, Metro) at 3.0/4.0*, 1B: Chester Dudek (age 20, National) at 1.5/5.0*, 2B: Jerry Rockford (age 20, Trenton Utd.) at 1.5/4.0*, 3B: Earl McKeon (age 21, Maryland) at 1.5/3.0*, SS: Philip Little (age 19, Lancastra) at 1.0/4.0*, OF: Jonathan Nabors (age 23, Susquehanna) at 3.0/5.0*, OF: Jonathan Cobb (age 19, Granite) at 1.5/5.0*, OF: Arthur Capone (age 22, Maryland) at 2.0/4.0*
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File Type: pdf 1875-007 NBBO PREVIEW.pdf (79.7 KB, 16 views)
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