Pearson Cup Explained

Pearson Cup
Team1:Montreal Expos
Team2:Toronto Blue Jays
Firstmeeting:June 29, 1978
Olympic Stadium, Montreal, Canada
Expos 5, Blue Jays 4
Mostrecent:July 4, 2004
Estadio Hiram Bithorn, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Expos 6, Blue Jays 4
Total:43
Regularseason:Blue Jays, 24–19
Largestvictory:Blue Jays: 14–2 (June 22, 1998)
Expos: 11–2 (June 10, 2000)
Currentstreak:defunct
Section Header:Post-season history

The Pearson Cup (French: Coupe Pearson) was an annual midseason Major League Baseball rivalry between former Canadian rivals, the Toronto Blue Jays and Montreal Expos. Named after former Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, it was originally created to raise money for minor league baseball in Canada. In later years, it was incorporated into the interleague baseball schedule.

The series began in 1978, and ran until 1986.[1] Due to a strike, no game was played in 1981. In 2003, the series was revived as part of the Blue Jays–Expos interleague rivalry. It continued on into the 2004 season, after which the Expos moved to Washington, D.C., and became the Washington Nationals. The cup is now on display in the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in St. Marys, Ontario.

Results

From 1978 to 1986, the Cup was awarded after a one-game exhibition, that had no effect on the major league standings. The 1979 and 1985 games were abandoned as ties due to time constraints; in 1979 the Expos had to catch an airplane flight, while in 1985 the Jays had to catch a flight.[2]

The game was suspended in 1987 as the two teams could not find a mutually agreeable date to play the game.[3] There was discussion about reviving the game in the preseason, or playing it in another Canadian city such as Vancouver, but this never took place.[4] [5] [6]

During the 2003 and 2004 series, the Cup was awarded after a six-game set, three in Toronto and three in Montreal.[7] These games counted in major-league standings and were played during the regular season.

Single exhibition games
SeasonDateLocationVisiting teamRunsHome teamAttendanceRefcol width="15%;" colspan=2Cumulative
record
June 29 Toronto 4–5 (10) Montreal20,221 [8] Montreal 1–0–0
April 19 Montreal 4–4 (11) Toronto 21,564 [9] Montreal 1–0–1
July 31 Olympic Stadium Toronto 1–3 Montreal 6,731 [10] Montreal 2–0–1
July 6 Exhibition Stadium [11] [12] align=right; colspan=2Montreal 2–0–1
September 2 Exhibition Stadium Montreal 7–3 Toronto 23,102 [13] Montreal 3–0–1
May 5 Olympic Stadium Toronto 7–5 Montreal8,291 [14] Montreal 3–1–1
May 24 Exhibition Stadium Montreal 5–6 (13) Toronto 24,768 [15] Montreal 3–2–1
May 9 Olympic Stadium Toronto 2–2 (11) Montreal 11,075 [16] Montreal 3–2–2
April 28 Exhibition Stadium Montreal 2–5 Toronto 16,786 [17] Tied 3–3–2
Regular season series
SeasonDateLocationVisiting teamGamesHome teamAverage
Attendance
RefSeriesCumulative
record
June 20–22 Olympic StadiumToronto 2–1 Montreal 12,782 [18] Tied
3–3
Tied 3–3–3
June 27–29Montreal 2–1 Toronto 31,571
June 25–27 SkyDome Montreal 1–2 Toronto 22,091 [19] Tied
3–3
Tied 3–3–4
July 2–4 Hiram Bithorn Stadium
(San Juan, Puerto Rico)
Toronto 1–2 Montreal 8,443

The All-Canadian Series

The Blue Jays and Expos first played meaningful baseball in the season with the introduction of interleague play, with the teams being designated natural rivals.[20] In 1997, the teams played three games at Toronto; the two teams played home and home series for the first time in . The series was a decided boost to the paltry attendance numbers at Olympic Stadium in Montreal, and gave a modest increase in attendance at SkyDome in Toronto; it failed, however, to become a serious rivalry amongst the players or the fans.[1] Some people attribute this to a lack of Canadian players on both teams, while others point to the general discontent of Canadians with Major League Baseball during the late 1990s and early 2000s.[1] [21]

Major League Baseball put the final nail in the Series' coffin by playing the final set between the Jays and Expos in San Juan, Puerto Rico instead of Montreal. Major League Baseball's intention to boost attendance by playing in San Juan ended up resulting in lower attendance than the series had attracted in Montreal a year earlier.[22] [23] [24]

The All-Canadian Series ended after when the Expos were relocated and became known as the Washington Nationals.[25] [26] The Blue Jays won the series 24 games to 19 games, and Toronto also won the most season series (3–2–2).[27]

Season-by-season results

The two teams met annually from 1997 to 2004 as part of the All-Canadian Series, then met annually again starting in 2023 as a result of the scheduling formula change, meeting intermittently from 2005 to 2022. |-| | style=";" | Expos| style=";" | 21| style=";" | Expos
21| no games| style=";" | Expos
21| First regular season games played between the two clubs
First regular season games played between two Canadian teams
Only time Expos have held the overall series lead|-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 40| style=";" | Blue Jays
20| style=";" | Blue Jays
20| style=";" | Blue Jays
52| First regular season games played between the two clubs at Olympic Stadium
First season series sweep by either team|-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 42| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
94| First year of 6-game home and away format|-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 42| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
136||-| | Tie| 33| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Expos
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
169||-| | style=";" | Expos| style=";" | 42| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Expos
30| style=";" | Blue Jays
1813||-| | Tie| 33| style=";" | Expos
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
2116| Last meetings played in Montreal|-| | Tie| 33| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Expos
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
2419| Expos played their home games during this series in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Most recent MLB games between two Canadian franchises.|-| | Tie| 33| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style="| Nationals
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
2722| First meetings between the Nationals and Blue Jays.
Last 6-game series meeting
Only Washington-Toronto meeting to have games played in both cities|-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 30| style=";" | Blue Jays
30| no games| style=";" | Blue Jays
3022| Second season series sweep for Blue Jays|-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 21| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| no games| style=";" | Blue Jays
3223||-| | style=";" | Nationals| style=";" | 21| no games| style="| Nationals
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
3325||-| | style=";" | Nationals| style=";" | 30| style="| Nationals
30| no games| style=";" | Blue Jays
3328| First season series sweep for Expos/Nationals franchise|-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 21| no games| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
3529||-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 30| style=";" | Blue Jays
30| no games| style=";" | Blue Jays
3829| Third season series sweep for Blue Jays|-| | Tie| 22| no games| Tie
22| style=";" | Blue Jays
4031| Both Blue Jays home games relocated to Nationals Park due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as their alternate stadium (Sahlen Field) in Buffalo, New York was being prepared. These are considered home games for the Nationals, per official statistics,[28] though each team played two games batting in the bottom of innings.|-| | style=";" | Nationals| style=";" | 31| Tie
11| style="| Nationals
20| style=";" | Blue Jays
4134| Both Blue Jays home games played at TD Ameritrade Park (their Spring Training venue) due to the COVID-19 pandemic.|-| | style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 21| style=";" | Blue Jays
21| no games| style=";" | Blue Jays
4335| Beginning this season, teams play three games annually in alternating venues as MLB adopts a new scheduling format.|-| | style=";" | Nationals| style=";" | 21| no games| style="| Nationals
21| style=";" | Blue Jays
4437||-| Toronto Blue Jays vs Montreal Expos| style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 2419| style=";" | Blue Jays, 149| Tie, 1010| |-| Toronto Blue Jays vs Washington Nationals| style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 2018| style=";" | Blue Jays, 137| style=";" | Nationals, 117||-| Overall Regular season| style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 4437| style=";" | Blue Jays, 2716| style=";" | Nationals, 2117|

|-| Toronto Blue Jays vs Montreal Expos series| style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 323| style=";" | Blue Jays, 62| style=";" | Blue Jays, 43| |-| Toronto Blue Jays vs Washington Nationals series| style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 542| style=";" | Blue Jays, 511| style=";" | Nationals, 411||-| Overall Regular season series| style=";" | Blue Jays| style=";" | 865| style=";" | Blue Jays, 1131| style=";"| Expos/Nationals, 751|

Notes

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: A series without rivals. Joe. O'Connor. National Post. June 28, 2002. S1.
  2. Book: Zawadzki, Edward. The Ultimate Canadian Sports Trivia Book, Volume 1. 2001. Dundurn Press Ltd. Canada. 9780888822376. 216.
  3. Web site: Royals' hopes high for Tartabull. 1987-01-07. Calgary Herald.
  4. Web site: Exhibition game ends with Jays, Expos tied. Windsor Star.
  5. Web site: Pearson Cup played in near-empty Big O. Elliot. Bob. Ottawa Citizen.
  6. Web site: Big O roof, Toronto dome might save Pearson Cup. 1986-04-27. 2013-09-29. Toronto Star. MacCarl. Neil.
  7. Web site: Pearson Cup again up for grabs. 2003-06-16. 2013-09-28. CBC News.
  8. News: Expos 5–4 win over Jays. 1978-06-30. The Globe and Mail. Patton. Paul.
  9. Web site: Jays, Expos give exciting display. 1979-04-20. 2013-09-28. Leader-Post.
  10. Web site: Farm hands spark Expos. 1980-08-01. 2013-09-29. The StarPhoenix.
  11. News: Now even inflation costs a quarter. 1981-07-08. Toronto Star. George. Gamester.
  12. News: Iorg stalled in pay talks by lost time. 1981-06-23. Toronto Star. MacCarl. Neil.
  13. Web site: Expos win Pearson Cup. 1982-09-03. 2013-09-28. Leader-Post.
  14. News: Jays' McLaughlin not impressed after gaining victory over Expos. 1983-05-06. The Globe and Mail. Marty. York.
  15. News: Game was strange, but true as Jays prevail over Expos. The Globe and Mail. Larry. Millson.
  16. News: Watching Jays, Expos draw enough to put you to sleep. The Globe and Mail. Philip. King.
  17. Web site: Little excitement as Jays down Expos. 1986-04-29. 2013-09-28. Toronto Star.
  18. Web site: 2004 Toronto Blue Jays schedule. 2013-09-28. Baseball-Reference.com.
  19. Web site: 2004 Toronto Blue Jays schedule. 2013-09-28. Baseball-Reference.com.
  20. News: Rivalry could be over before it gets started. David. Shoalts. The Globe and Mail. July 1, 1997. D10.
  21. News: Fans balk at rivalry that died years ago. Tom. Maloney. National Post. June 16, 2001. A19.
  22. News: Jays' pen gives Lilly no relief. Geoff. Baker. Toronto Star. July 5, 2004. C4.
  23. News: Minaya manages to care. Richard. Griffin. Toronto Star. July 4, 2004. E4.
  24. News: Doc cures what ails Jays; Halladay handcuffs Expos to tie series Interleague game draws just 8,831 fans. Geoff. Baker. Toronto Star. July 4, 2004. E4.
  25. News: Baseball's Coming Back to Washington. Lori. Montgomery. Thomas. Heath. Washington Post. September 30, 2004. A1.
  26. News: Expos Bid Adieu to Montreal. Steve. Henson. Emma. Schwartz. Los Angeles Times. September 30, 2004. D4.
  27. Web site: Head-to-Head results for Toronto Blue Jays vs. Montreal Expos and Washington Nationals from 1901 to 2010. baseball-reference.com. January 10, 2011.
  28. https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/head2head-games.cgi?team1=TOR&team2=WSN&from=2020&to=2020
  29. Web site: Boxscore and Play by Play. 2013-09-28. Baseball-Reference.com.