Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Opening Day for the American and National Leagues was on April 14, and featured all 16 teams of those leagues, [4] only the third time those two leagues started their season on the same day (the 1912 season had been the second). The National League had its final day of the regular season on October 6, [5] while the American League's final day ...
November 10 – Heinie Reitz, 47, National League second baseman for the Orioles, Senators and Pirates from 1893 to 1899, who hit .292 in 724 games and led the league with 31 triples in 1894. November 28 – Tug Wilson , 54, outfielder and catcher for the 1884 Brooklyn Atlantics.
The 1914 Boston Braves season was the 44th season of the franchise. The team finished first in the National League, winning the pennant by 10½ games over the New York Giants after being in last place in the NL at midseason. The team, which became known as the 1914 Miracle Braves, went on to sweep the Philadelphia Athletics in the World Series.
Locations of teams for the 1914 National League season National League. 1914 NL season changes: Brooklyn Dodgers rename as the Brooklyn Robins ...
The following lists the events of the 1914 Philadelphia Phillies season. Offseason ... 1914 National League record. Sources: Team BOS BR CHC CIN NYG ...
The National League pennant winner of a given Major League Baseball season is the team that wins the championship—the pennant—of MLB's National League (NL). This team receives the Warren C. Giles Trophy and the right to play in the World Series against the champion of the American League (AL).
1914 MLB season changes: Brooklyn Dodgers rename as the Brooklyn Robins; Boston Braves leave South End Grounds and move to Fenway Park after August 11; The Federal League declares itself a major league
In 1948, the team won the National League pennant by capturing 91 games to finish 6 1 ⁄ 2 places ahead of the second–place St. Louis Cardinals. They also attracted 1,455,439 fans [ 12 ] to Braves Field , the third-largest gate in the National League and a high-water mark for the team's stay in Boston.