1924 in baseball
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following are the baseball events of the year 1924 throughout the world.
Contents |
[edit] Champions
- World Series: Washington Senators over New York Giants (4-3)
- First Negro League World Series: Kansas City Monarchs over Hilldale (5-4-1)
[edit] Awards and honors
[edit] MLB Statistical Leaders
|
[edit] Major League Baseball final standings
[edit] American League final standings
American League | ||||
Club | Wins | Losses | Win % | GB |
Washington Senators | 92 | 62 | .597 | -- |
New York Yankees | 89 | 63 | .586 | 2 |
Detroit Tigers | 86 | 68 | .558 | 6 |
St. Louis Browns | 74 | 78 | .487 | 17 |
Philadelphia Athletics | 71 | 81 | .467 | 20 |
Cleveland Indians | 67 | 86 | .438 | 24.5 |
Boston Red Sox | 67 | 87 | .435 | 25 |
Chicago White Sox | 66 | 87 | .431 | 25.5 |
[edit] National League final standings
National League | ||||
Club | Wins | Losses | Win % | GB |
New York Giants | 93 | 60 | .608 | -- |
Brooklyn Robins | 92 | 62 | .597 | 1.5 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 90 | 63 | .588 | 3 |
Cincinnati Reds | 83 | 70 | .542 | 10 |
Chicago Cubs | 81 | 72 | .529 | 12 |
St. Louis Cardinals | 65 | 89 | .422 | 28.5 |
Philadelphia Phillies | 55 | 96 | .364 | 37 |
Boston Braves | 53 | 100 | .346 | 40 |
[edit] Negro League Baseball final standings
[edit] Negro National League final standings
Negro National League (West) | ||||
Club | Wins | Losses | Win % | GB |
Kansas City Monarchs | 60 | 27 | .690 | |
Chicago American Giants | 63 | 29 | .685 | |
St. Louis Stars | 36 | 31 | .537 | |
Detroit Stars | 38 | 37 | .507 | |
Cuban Stars | 19 | 19 | .472 | |
Birmingham Black Barons | 37 | 46 | .446 | |
Memphis Red Sox† | 26 | 36 | .419 | |
Cleveland Browns | 17 | 34 | .333 | |
Indianapolis ABCs† | 3 | 12 | .200 |
† Indianapolis dropped out of the league in June and was replaced by Memphis.
[edit] Eastern Colored League final standings
Eastern Colored League (East) | ||||
Club | Wins | Losses | Win % | GB |
Philadelphia Hilldale Giants | 58 | 23 | .716 | |
Baltimore Black Sox | 51 | 35 | .593 | |
New York Lincoln Giants | 55 | 44 | .556 | |
Harrisburg Giants | 40 | 34 | .541 | |
Atlantic City Bacharach Giants | 34 | 30 | .531 | |
Washington/Wilmington Potomacs | 23 | 36 | .390 | |
Brooklyn Royal Giants | 12 | 23 | .343 | |
Cuban Stars | 16 | 36 | .308 |
[edit] Events
- September 20 - Grover Cleveland Alexander of the Chicago Cubs records his 300th career win.
[edit] Births
[edit] January-March
- January 1 - Charlie Bishop
- January 1 - Earl Torgeson
- January 5 - Fred Marsh
- January 7 - Jim Pendleton
- February 8 - Joe Black
- February 20 - Sal Yvars
- February 23 - Phil Haugstad
- February 25 - Jack Lohrke
- February 29 - Al Rosen
- March 1 - Tim Thompson
- March 2 - Cal Abrams
- March 6 - Ed Mierkowicz
- March 6 - Bud Podbielan
[edit] April-June
- April 2 - Bobby Avila
- April 4 - Gil Hodges
- April 23 - Chuck Harmon
- April 25 - Art Schallock
- April 27 - Frank Wurm
- April 29 - Freddy Rodríguez
- May 23 - Clyde King
- May 27 - Tom Hurd
- May 30 - Turk Lown
- June 16 - Ernie Johnson
- June 24 - Lou Brissie
[edit] July-September
- July 1 - Ken Wood
- July 6 - Frank Kellert
- July 15 - Bob Barthelson
- July 20 - Claude Crocker
- August 20 - George Zuverink
- August 21 - Jack Buck
- August 23 - Sherm Lollar
- August 26 - Alex Kellner
- September 1 - Ed Samcoff
- September 6 - Jim Fridley
- September 6 - Hal Jeffcoat
- September 10 - Ted Kluszewski
- September 12 - Bubba Church
- September 14 - Jerry Coleman
- September 15 - Jim Davis
- September 19 - Vern Benson
- September 23 - Dino Restelli
[edit] October-December
- October 13 - Charlie Silvera
- October 16 - Bob Cain
- October 24 - Dave Jolly
- October 25 - Bobby Brown
- October 31 - Dee Fondy
- November 18 - Rocky Nelson
- November 21 - Warren Hacker
- November 29 - Irv Noren
- December 11 - Hal Brown
- December 13 - George Shuba
- December 19 - Rex Barney
- December 24 - Chico Garcia
- December 31 - Ted Gray
[edit] Deaths
- January 4 - John Peters, 73, 19th century shortstop for four clubs, including the pennant-winning 1876 Chicago White Stockings in the very first year of the National League
- February 27 - Thomas Lynch, 65, NL president from 1910 to 1913, previously a highly regarded umpire from 1888 to 1899
- March 7 - Pat Moran, 48, Cincinnati manager since 1919 who was first man to lead two teams to World Series, winning with 1919 Reds but losing with 1915 Phillies; previously catcher for three NL teams, including 1906-08 champion Cubs
- March 17 - Bill Harbridge, 68, catcher/outfielder for five teams from 1875-1884.
- April 4 - George Wood, 65, left fielder, mainly in Detroit and Philadelphia, who batted .300 twice, led NL in home runs in 1882
- May 16 - Candy Cummings, 75, pitcher credited with developing the curveball in 1867, won 28 or more games for four teams in National Association; later a minor league executive
- August 17 - John Bruce, 67, secretary of the National Commission from 1903 to 1920, previously legal counsel to AL president; part owner of Browns from 1902 to 1916
- September 15 - Frank Chance, 47, first baseman and manager of the Cubs who anchored famed infield of four NL and two World Series champions from 1906-1910, batted .300 four times, led NL in runs once and steals twice; 1906 squad won record 116 games, career winning percentage (.593) was second highest among managers of 1500 or more games; 401 steals were top mark for first basemen
- October 9 - Jake Daubert, 40, first baseman and captain for NL champions in Brooklyn and Cincinnati who batted .303 lifetime, won batting titles in 1913-14; 1913 MVP led NL in triples twice
- October 29 - Pop Snyder, 70, catcher for several teams over 18 seasons including 1878 Boston champions; also managed Cincinnati to 1882 American Association pennant