1892 Major League Baseball season
1892 MLB season | |
---|---|
League | National League (NL) |
Sport | Baseball |
Duration | Regular season:
|
Number of games | 154 |
Number of teams | 12 |
Pennant winner | |
NL champions | Boston Beaneaters |
NL runners-up | Cleveland Spiders |
First-half champions | Boston Beaneaters |
First-half runners-up | Brooklyn Grooms |
Second-half champions | Cleveland Spiders |
Second-half runners-up | Boston Beaneaters |
World's Championship Series | |
Champions | Boston Beaneaters |
Runners-up | Cleveland Spiders |
The 1892 major league baseball season began on April 12, 1892. Unique to National League history, the season was organized into a split season format, with July 14 being the split date between the two half seasons. The regular season ended on October 15, with the Boston Beaneaters as the pennant winner of the National League overall, as well as the first-half champions, with the Cleveland Spiders as second-half champions. The postseason began with Game 1 of the eighth and final World's Championship Series on October 17 and ended with Game 6 on October 24. Aside from a tie game, the Beaneaters swept the Spiders with five wins in the best-of-nine playoff, and therefore winner of the final Dauvray Cup. This was Boston's only pre-modern championship.
The 1892 season saw the return of a postseason championship series (albeit a one-off of this format), following the demise of the American Association. The one-off was the first since the 1890 World's Championship Series. The next championship series would take place in 1894 via the Temple Cup.
The demise of the American Association saw four of its teams merged into the National League, including the Baltimore Orioles, Louisville Colonels, St. Louis Browns, and Washington Statesmen (renamed as the Washington Senators). The four other American Association clubs active at the end of the previous season, the Boston Reds, Columbus Solons, Milwaukee Brewers, and Philadelphia Athletics), saw their owners paid $135,000 (equivalent to $4,578,000 in 2023) and their players dispersed to the surviving clubs.
Schedule
[edit]The 1892 schedule consisted of 154 games for the twelve teams of the National League. Each team was scheduled to play 12 games against the other eleven teams in the league. This replaced the 140-game, 20-games-each against seven-teams format previously used by the National League since 1888 and defunct-American Association since 1886. The 140-game format would return in 1900.
Opening Day took place on April 12 featuring all twelve teams. Each half of the season was split by an off day on July 14. The final day of the season was on October 15 and also featured all twelve teams.[1] The 1892 World's Championship Series took place between October 17 and October 24.
Teams
[edit]An asterisk (*) denotes the ballpark a team played the minority of their home games at
Standings
[edit]National League
[edit]Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boston Beaneaters | 102 | 48 | .680 | — | 54–21 | 48–27 |
Cleveland Spiders | 93 | 56 | .624 | 8½ | 54–24 | 39–32 |
Brooklyn Grooms | 95 | 59 | .617 | 9 | 51–24 | 44–35 |
Philadelphia Phillies | 87 | 66 | .569 | 16½ | 55–26 | 32–40 |
Cincinnati Reds | 82 | 68 | .547 | 20 | 45–32 | 37–36 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 80 | 73 | .523 | 23½ | 54–34 | 26–39 |
Chicago Colts | 70 | 76 | .479 | 30 | 36–31 | 34–45 |
New York Giants | 71 | 80 | .470 | 31½ | 42–36 | 29–44 |
Louisville Colonels | 63 | 89 | .414 | 40 | 37–31 | 26–58 |
Washington Senators | 58 | 93 | .384 | 44½ | 34–36 | 24–57 |
St. Louis Browns | 56 | 94 | .373 | 46 | 37–36 | 19–58 |
Baltimore Orioles | 46 | 101 | .313 | 54½ | 29–44 | 17–57 |
National League First-half standings |
W | L | Pct. | GB |
---|---|---|---|---|
Boston Beaneaters | 52 | 22 | .703 | — |
Brooklyn Grooms | 51 | 26 | .662 | 2½ |
Philadelphia Phillies | 46 | 30 | .605 | 7 |
Cincinnati Reds | 44 | 31 | .587 | 8½ |
Cleveland Spiders | 40 | 33 | .548 | 11½ |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 37 | 39 | .487 | 16 |
Washington Senators | 35 | 41 | .461 | 18 |
Chicago Colts | 31 | 39 | .443 | 19 |
St. Louis Browns | 31 | 42 | .425 | 20½ |
New York Giants | 31 | 43 | .419 | 21 |
Louisville Colonels | 30 | 47 | .390 | 23½ |
Baltimore Orioles | 20 | 55 | .267 | 32½ |
National League Second-half standings |
W | L | Pct. | GB |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cleveland Spiders | 53 | 23 | .697 | — |
Boston Beaneaters | 50 | 26 | .658 | 3 |
Brooklyn Grooms | 44 | 33 | .571 | 9½ |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 43 | 34 | .558 | 10½ |
Philadelphia Phillies | 41 | 36 | .532 | 12½ |
New York Giants | 40 | 37 | .519 | 13½ |
Chicago Colts | 39 | 37 | .513 | 14 |
Cincinnati Reds | 38 | 37 | .507 | 14½ |
Louisville Colonels | 33 | 42 | .440 | 19½ |
Baltimore Orioles | 26 | 46 | .361 | 25 |
St. Louis Browns | 25 | 52 | .325 | 28½ |
Washington Senators | 23 | 52 | .307 | 29½ |
Postseason
[edit]Bracket
[edit]World's Championship Series | |||||||||
NL1 | Boston Beaneaters | 011 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 12 | 8 | ||
NL2 | Cleveland Spiders | 011 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 7 | 3 |
Managerial changes
[edit]Off-season
[edit]Team | Former Manager | New Manager |
---|---|---|
Baltimore Orioles | Billy Barnie | George Van Haltren |
Boston Reds | Arthur Irwin | Team folded |
Cincinnati Reds | Tom Loftus | Charles Comiskey |
Columbus Solons | Gus Schmelz | Team folded |
Milwaukee Brewers | Charlie Cushman | Team folded |
New York Giants | Jim Mutrie | Patrick Powers |
Philadelphia Athletics | George Wood | Team folded |
Pittsburgh Pirates | Bill McGunnigle | Al Buckenberger |
St. Louis Browns | Charles Comiskey | Jack Glasscock |
Washington Senators | Sandy Griffin | Billy Barnie |
In-season
[edit]League leaders
[edit]National League
[edit]Stat | Player | Total |
---|---|---|
AVG | Dan Brouthers (BKN) | .335 |
OPS | Dan Brouthers (BKN) | .911 |
HR | Bug Holliday (CIN) | 13 |
RBI | Dan Brouthers (BKN) | 124 |
R | Cupid Childs (CLE) | 136 |
H | Dan Brouthers (BKN) | 197 |
SB | John Ward (BKN) | 88 |
Stat | Player | Total |
---|---|---|
W | Bill Hutchinson (CHI) Cy Young (CLE) |
36 |
L | George Cobb (NY) | 37 |
ERA | Cy Young (CLE) | 1.93 |
K | Bill Hutchinson (CHI) | 314 |
IP | Bill Hutchinson (CHI) | 622.0 |
SV | Gus Weyhing (PHI) | 3 |
WHIP | Cy Young (CLE) | 1.062 |
Home field attendance
[edit]Team name | Wins | %± | Home attendance | %± | Per game |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cincinnati Reds[2] | 82 | 46.4% | 196,473 | 101.5% | 2,456 |
Philadelphia Phillies[3] | 87 | 27.9% | 193,731 | −10.8% | 2,392 |
St. Louis Browns[4] | 56 | −34.1% | 192,442 | — | 2,566 |
Brooklyn Grooms[5] | 95 | 55.7% | 183,727 | 1.2% | 2,355 |
Pittsburgh Pirates[6] | 80 | 45.5% | 177,205 | 38.4% | 1,991 |
Boston Beaneaters[7] | 102 | 17.2% | 146,421 | −20.6% | 1,927 |
Cleveland Spiders[8] | 93 | 43.1% | 139,928 | 6.0% | 1,771 |
Louisville Colonels[9] | 63 | 16.7% | 131,159 | — | 1,874 |
New York Giants[10] | 71 | 0.0% | 130,566 | −38.0% | 1,653 |
Chicago Colts[11] | 70 | −14.6% | 109,067 | −39.9% | 1,628 |
Washington Senators[12] | 58 | 31.8% | 128,279 | — | 1,833 |
Baltimore Orioles[13] | 46 | −35.2% | 93,589 | — | 1,215 |
References
[edit]- ^ "1892 Major Leagues Schedule". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 27, 2025.
- ^ "Cincinnati Reds Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "Philadelphia Phillies Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "St. Louis Cardinals Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "Los Angeles Dodgers Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "Pittsburgh Pirates Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "Atlanta Braves Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "Cleveland Spiders Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
- ^ "Louisville Colonels Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
- ^ "San Francisco Giants Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "Chicago Cubs Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "Washington Senators Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
- ^ "Baltimore Orioles Attendance, Stadiums, and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 22, 2025.