1955 Global World Series Explained

Num Teams:8
Continents:3
Defending Champion:Colombia
Medal Type:world cup
Champion:USA
Champion-Flagvar:1912
Second:Hawaii
Third:Canada
Third-Flagvar:1921
Fourth:Colombia
Nextseason:1956

The 1955 Global World Series was the first Global World Series, an international baseball tournament organized by the International Baseball Congress in the mid-1950s. It was held in Milwaukee from September 23 to 28, 1955, and was the first worldwide baseball tournament hosted in the United States.

Background

At the time, the Amateur World Series (AWS), the internationally sanctioned baseball world championship, was on hiatus; it was last held in 1953, and would not be held again until 1961 Amateur World Series.[1] The AWS did not allow professional baseball players, excluding players active with Major League Baseball and its affiliates; on top of that, the United States had not participated in the AWS since 1942.

Thus, the Global World Series emerged as an alternative tournament, organized by the semi-professional National Baseball Congress (NBC). NBC president Ray Dumont had begun discussing an international tournament that would feature multiple semipro teams from across the globe as early as 1948, supported by J. G. Taylor Spink, publisher of The Sporting News, and Alejandro Aguilar Reyes, founder and then-commissioner of the Mexican League.[2] These efforts were spearheaded by former MLB Commissioner Happy Chandler, in his role as head of the International Baseball Congress.[3] Chandler in particular sought to expand and existing two-nation series (most recently played between the United States and Japan) to a series involving four nations, or perhaps eight, in 1954.

Despite the success of the two series in Japan, Chandler felt that, in order to increase the number and scope of the teams in the tournament, an American city would have to host. The organizers initially looked at Ebbets Field in New York City, put forth by Brooklyn Dodgers president Walter O'Malley, but Chandler instead selected Milwaukee County Stadium, the new home of the Milwaukee Braves. Chandler and Dumont initially sought to host the first Global World Series in 1954, but plans fell through and it was instead held in 1955.

Participants

Some national teams were made up of their country's professional or semi-pro club champions, including the United States, represented by the Boeing Bombers of Wichita, Kansas. Aside from Daryl Spencer, a former New York Giants infielder, the team was made up of Boeing factory workers with minor league baseball experience. Canada was represented by the Saskatoon Gems, which included Canadian hockey international Jackie McLeod.[4] Mexico was represented by the Refinerias club of Poza Rica, and Hawaii by the Honolulu Red Sox.

The other national teams were true all-star selections. Puerto Rico included Luis Olmo, a former Major League outfielder and scout who had most recently played with the Cangrejeros de Santurce in the 1954–55 season.[5] The Spanish national team classified by virtue of winning the 1955 European Baseball Championship.[6] Spain's participation was a coup for the tournament's organizers, as the rival International Baseball Federation had not yet been able to involve European countries in the Amateur World Series.[7]

Venue

Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Milwaukee County Stadium
Capacity: 15,000

Final standings

width=25Rkwidth=170Teamwidth=25width=25
151
242
Third place game
332
Eliminated after four games
423
Eliminated after three games
512
612
Eliminated after two games
702
802

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Historia de la Copa Mundial/World Cup History XI-XX (1950-1972) . Baseball de Cuba . https://web.archive.org/web/20131207185735/http://www.baseballdecuba.com/WCup2011/History1950-1972.html . 7 December 2013 . es.
  2. Buege, 2012
  3. Book: USIS Features . 1952 . US Department of State . 159 . Baseball Interest Growing in Free World .
  4. Web site: 1955 Saskatoon Gems . Western Canada Baseball . 17 August 2024.
  5. Web site: Luis Olmo . SABR . Society for American Baseball Research.
  6. Book: Julio Pernas López . Strike Two: El Béisbol en la españa de la posguerra 1939-1960 y otras curiosidades del deporte español . 2011 . World Baseball Softball Confederation . 224–26 . 2 August 2024 . es.
  7. Book: Riccardo Schiroli . The Game We Love . 2019 . . 68.