1955 Washington Senators season explained

Washington Senators
Season:1955
League:American League
Ballpark:Griffith Stadium
City:Washington, D.C.
Owners:Clark Griffith (majority owner)
Managers:Chuck Dressen
Television:WTTG
Radio:WWDC (FM)
(Arch McDonald, Bob Wolff, Les Sands)
Season List:List of Minnesota Twins seasons

The 1955 Washington Senators season was the franchise's 55th in Major League Baseball. The Senators won 53 games, lost 101, and finished in eighth place in the American League. They were managed by Chuck Dressen and played home games at Griffith Stadium, where they draw 425,238 fans, eighth and last in the American League and 16th and last in MLB.[1]

It was Dressen's first year as the Senators' manager, after Bucky Harris had led the 1954 club to a 66–88, sixth place finish. Dressen, 60, came to Washington two years removed from a highly successful three-year term as skipper of the Brooklyn Dodgers, where his teams finished in a dead heat for first in (losing the 1951 National League tie-breaker series on Bobby Thomson's famous home run), then won back-to-back NL titles in and . But in each of the latter seasons, his Dodgers were defeated by the New York Yankees in the World Series, and when Dressen decided to demand a three-year contract to return to Brooklyn for 1954, his owner, Walter O'Malley, let his 1953 contract expire. Dressen spent 1954 managing Oakland in the highly competitive Pacific Coast League, and his return to the major leagues was viewed with anticipation by some observers.[2]

His hiring was a departure for the Senators' management and ownership. He was the first manager outside the Washington team's "family" hired during Clark Griffith's presidency, which began in 1920. Through 1954, Griffith had appointed eight different men to manage his club (with one, Harris, serving three different terms), and all had been current or former Senator players. Dressen, as a veteran National Leaguer and a high profile manager with New York ties, broke that 35-season trend.

And, though no one knew it at the time, 1955 would be a milestone for baseball in Washington when it proved to be Griffith's last season as the club's president and chief stockholder. He died at age 85 on October 27, and his nephew Calvin, who succeeded him, would move the franchise to Minneapolis–Saint Paul as the Minnesota Twins after only five seasons as the Senators' president.

Offseason

Regular season

Notable transactions

Roster

1955 Washington Senators
Roster
PitchersCatchersInfieldersOutfieldersOther battersManagerCoaches

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
C 74 236 56 .237 4 19
1B 150 538 162 .301 14 85
2B 134 503 143 .284 2 49
SS 94 294 65 .221 2 28
3B 122 375 91 .243 7 48
LF 144 509 138 .271 25 106
CF 110 323 70 .217 2 19
RF 115 351 105 .299 6 45

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
100 263 71 .270 0 25
75 238 71 .298 2 30
47 191 44 .230 6 14
63 183 40 .219 2 17
77 140 31 .221 0 9
54 132 25 .189 0 11
46 107 24 .224 0 5
38 80 16 .200 4 7
30 57 10 .175 0 3
29 57 13 .228 0 4
20 46 7 .152 1 4
13 36 10 .278 0 2
10 25 5 .200 1 3
16 16 3 .188 1 4
10 14 3 .214 0 1
7 7 0 .000 0 0
6 6 0 .000 0 0

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
30 178.0 10 17 4.45 74
32 165.0 7 10 3.71 49
31 156.0 10 10 3.75 78

Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
43 180.0 6 13 4.15 84
41 140.1 4 14 5.00 60
45 130.0 5 11 3.88 34
43 129.0 2 12 6.14 82
40 119.1 5 9 5.96 79
7 21.1 0 0 4.64 9
7 15.1 0 0 4.11 10

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGWLSVERASO
29 2 3 0 5.27 28
27 2 2 2 3.99 16
3 0 0 0 12.46 2
3 0 0 0 4.50 1
1 0 0 0 27.00 1
1 0 0 0 27.00 0

Award winners

All-Star Game

[6]

Farm system

See also: Minor League Baseball.

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Orlando

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Baseball Reference]
  2. Povich, Shirley, "Schemeboat on the Potomac", Baseball Digest, May 1955
  3. https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/colemch01.shtml Choo Choo Coleman page at Baseball Reference
  4. https://www.baseball-reference.com/s/simaal01.shtml Al Sima page at Baseball Reference
  5. https://www.baseball-reference.com/c/chakabo01.shtml Bob Chakales page at Baseball Reference
  6. Web site: 1955 All-Star Game.