1882 in baseball explained
Champions
Chicago White Stockings
Cincinnati Red Stockings
New York Metropolitans
Interleague
- Chicago (NL) vs. Cincinnati (AA) tie 1 game each
- Chicago (NL) def. New York (LA) 2 games to 1
Major league baseball final standings
American Association final standings
Statistical leaders
National League statistical leaders
American Association statistical leaders
Notable seasons
- Buffalo Bisons first baseman Dan Brouthers leads the NL with 129 hits, a .368 batting average, a .950 OPS, and a 199 OPS+. His 63 runs batted in rank second in the league.[1] [2]
- Cincinnati Red Stockings pitcher Will White has a record of 40–12 and leads the AA with 480 innings pitched, 40 wins, and 8 shutouts. He has a 1.54 earned run average and a 173 ERA+.[3] [4]
Events
January–March
- January 20 – The state of Kentucky modifies a poorly written law that had banned baseball from being played in the state.
- February 25 – In an effort to increase attendance, the Providence Grays will require their players and the opposition team to parade through the streets of Providence in full uniform on game days, accompanied by a brass band.
- March 11 – After losing Dasher Troy and Sam Wise to the National League after signing contracts to play in the American Association, the AA drops its policy honoring the blacklist and expelled list of the National League.
April–June
- April 10 – William Hulbert, the man most responsible for the founding of the National League and its sitting president, dies in Chicago. Arthur Soden, owner of the Boston Red Caps, is named as Hulbert's temporary replacement for the 1882 season.
- May 1 – The National League season begins.
- May 2 – The American Association begins play with all 6 teams in action.
- May 2 – Charles Comiskey makes his debut with the St. Louis Brown Stockings.
- May 2 – John Clarkson makes his debut with the Worcester Ruby Legs.
- May 5 – Cap Anson of the Chicago White Stockings is called out for walking back to the base after a foul ball was hit. The rule states the baserunner must run back to the base. The rule will be changed in the off season.
- May 6 – Joe Hornung of the Boston Red Caps becomes the first player to hit 2 triples in one inning.
- May 25 – Charles Foley of the Buffalo Bisons becomes the first major leaguer to hit for the cycle. Foley will also become the first player to hit 2 grand slams in one season in 1882.
- May 27 – Mike Moynahan has his finger amputated at the first joint after breaking it during a game. Moynahan will hit .310 as the everyday shortstop for the Philadelphia Athletics in the American Association in .
- June 1 – The Worcester Ruby Legs lose at home 13–3 in front of 50 people.
- June 5 – In describing the Boston Red Caps 10–2 win over the Detroit Wolverines, the Chicago Tribune states it is the first game in which a team scored 10 runs or more with all of them being earned.
- June 6 – Blondie Purcell of the Buffalo Bisons is fined for cutting the game ball open, which was soggy, rendering it unusable. Purcell did it to force the umpire to put in a new ball so that Bison pitcher Pud Galvin could throw his curve more effectively.
- June 20 – Larry Corcoran, pitcher for the Chicago White Stockings, goes 4–4 at the plate, including the first grand slam in the history of the White Stockings. It is the only home run of Corcoran's career.
- June 22 – The Cincinnati Red Stockings defeat the Pittsburgh Alleghenys on a game-ending triple play in the bottom of the 14th inning.
July–September
October–December
- October 4 – The Cincinnati Red Stockings of the American Association defeat the Cleveland Blues of the National League 5–2 in an exhibition game. It is the first victory by an AA team after losing the first 22 times to the NL.
- October 6 – In the first post-season meeting of league champions, the Cincinnati Red Stockings of the American Association defeat the Chicago White Stockings 4–0.
- October 7 – The Chicago White Stockings even their series with the Cincinnati Red Stockings with a 2–0 victory. Cincinnati will drop out of the series under threats of expulsion by the American Association.
- October 28 – The Philadelphia Athletics of the American Association announce that the club turned a $22,000 profit during the 1882 season. It is more than any team in the National League made and gives credibility to the fledgling AA.
- November 18 – A court rules in favor of player Charlie Bennett over the Pittsburgh Alleghenys of the American Association. Bennett had signed a $100 agreement to sign a contract to play for Pittsburgh in 1883. Instead, he ended up re-signing with the Detroit Wolverines of the National League. This case will be a factor in the player/owner battles of – that results in the formation of the Players' League.
- November 22 – John Day, owner of the New York Gothams, proposes a resolution that would prohibit teams from signing players who had broken the reserve clause. Both leagues will ultimately adopt this proposal and turn the reserve clause from a protection against roster-raiding by other clubs into an item used against hard-bargaining players. The Gothams will join the National League in 1883.
- December – Abraham G. Mills is elected the new president of the National League.
- December 6 – The National League formally admits the New York Gothams and the Philadelphia Quakers.
- December 14 – The American Association hires a permanent staff of umpires who will be scheduled, paid and overseen by the league rather than individual teams. It will eventually become the standard practice in every professional league, regardless of sport.
Births
Deaths
External links
Notes and References
- https://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/NL/1882-batting-leaders.shtml "1882 National League Batting Leaders"
- https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/broutda01.shtml "Dan Brouthers Stats"
- https://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/AA/1882-pitching-leaders.shtml "1882 American Association Pitching Leaders"
- https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/whitewi01.shtml "Will White Stats"
- Web site: A Look at Pitchers Who Take Each Other Deep. BaseballLibrary.com. 13 December 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121118041320/http://www.baseballlibrary.com/columns/column.php?id=178. 2012-11-18. dead.