1942 in baseball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following are the baseball events of the year 1942 throughout the world.

Major League Baseball

Awards and honors

Statistical leaders

Any team shown in small text indicates a previous team a player was on during the season.

American League National League Negro American League Negro National League
Stat Player Total Player Total Player Total Player Total
AVG Ted Williams1 (BOS) .356 Ernie Lombardi (BSN) .330 Ted Strong2 (KCM) .364 Lennie Pearson3 (NE/HOM) .347
HR Ted Williams1 (BOS) 36 Mel Ott (NYG) 30 Ted Strong2 (KCM) 6 Lennie Pearson3 (NE/HOM) 11
RBI Ted Williams1 (BOS) 137 Johnny Mize (NYG) 110 Ted Strong2 (KCM) 32 Lennie Pearson3 (NE/HOM) 56
W Tex Hughson (BOS) 22 Mort Cooper (STL) 22 Diamond Pipkins (BBB) 7 Ray Brown (HOM)
Bill Byrd (BEG)
10
ERA Ted Lyons (CWS) 2.10 Mort Cooper (STL) 1.78 Smoky Owens (CLB) 1.83 Roy Partlow (HOM) 1.69
K Tex Hughson (BOS)
Bobo Newsom (WSH)
113 Johnny Vander Meer (CIN) 186 Satchel Paige (KCM) 56 Leon Day (NE/HOM) 86

1 American League Triple Crown batting winner
2 Negro American League Triple Crown batting winner
3 Negro American League Triple Crown batting winner

Major league baseball final standings

American League final standings

National League final standings

Negro league baseball final standings

All Negro leagues standings below are per Seamheads.[1]

Negro American League final standings

Negro National League final standings

Independent teams final standings

The Negro American League All Star team & Cincinnati Clowns played against the two leagues.

vs. All Teams
Independent Clubs W L T Pct. GB
NAL All Stars 2 2 0 .500
Cincinnati Clowns 9 16 1 .365

Events

January

Rogers Hornsby

February

March

April

Lou Boudreau

May

June

Joe Gordon

July

August

  • August 4 – Wartime "dim-out" restrictions dictate an abrupt halt to a 1–1 deadlock between the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants at the Polo Grounds in the visitors' half of the tenth frame—and wipe out an inside-the-park grand-slam homer just struck by the Dodgers' Pee Wee Reese. The score reverts to the bottom of the ninth inning and the game is ruled a tie.[24][25] When the St. Louis Cardinals drop a 4–3 contest to the Cincinnati Reds at Crosley Field, the Dodgers, now 73–30–1 and seemingly breezing to their second straight pennant, increase their National League lead to ten full games over the 62–39–1 Cardinals; it's the largest cushion Brooklyn will enjoy in 1942.
  • August 8 – At Forbes Field, the Cardinals and host Pittsburgh Pirates play to a 16-inning, 5–5 tie before the rain-delayed game is called on account of darkness. St. Louis ace Mort Cooper turns in a rare poor performance, but the Redbird bullpen fires 1323 scoreless innings.[26] Individual statistics will count, but the teams will start from scratch on Monday, August 10.
  • August 9 – The Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati Reds struggle for 18 innings before the visiting Cubs emerge victorious, 10–8, in the first game of a doubleheader at Crosley Field. The teams combine for 39 hits (with no homers for either side) in the majors' longest game, by innings played, of 1942. Dom Dallessandro's double off Elmer Riddle provides the winning run.[16][27]
  • August 20 – The Pittsburgh Pirates reveal that owner William Benswanger has asked Wendell Smith of the Pittsburgh Courier, one of the leading proponents within the Black press advocating the dismantling of the baseball color line, to identify Black players from the Negro leagues as candidates to try out over the off-season to become members of the all-white Pirates in 1943. Smith selects four: pitcher Leon Day, catcher Josh Gibson, shortstop Willie Wells and outfielder Sam Bankhead.[28] Nothing comes of the request; the tryouts never occur.[29] Day, Gibson and Wells all are eventually enshrined in Cooperstown as members of the Baseball Hall of Fame.
  • August 23 – In a benefit appearance before 69,136 fans, Babe Ruth, 47, dons a New York Yankees' uniform for the first time in seven years for a hitting exhibition against Walter Johnson, now 54, at Yankee Stadium.[30] On Johnson's fifth pitch, Ruth hits a drive into the lower right field stands, and the crowd thunders its approval.[30] On the final pitch, Ruth smashes a towering, upper-deck shot that's just foul; he circles the bases anyway, doffing his cap and saluting the roaring crowd with every step.[30] Ruth and Johnson then leave the field together to a thunderous ovation. Their exhibition raises $80,000 for the Army-Navy relief fund.[30][31]
  • August 31

September

Johnny Beazley

October

  • October 5 – After dropping the first game of the World Series to the New York Yankees at Sportsman's Park on September 30, the St. Louis Cardinals win their fourth straight contest, 4–2, and capture the fourth world title in their history. Johnny Beazley, who whipped the Yanks in Game 2 to start the Redbirds' championship streak, racks up another complete-game victory; Whitey Kurowski's, two-run, ninth-inning homer provides the winning runs. The Bombers are swept in all three games played at Yankee Stadium, and drop their first Fall Classic since 1926—when they also fell to the Cardinals; they had won eight consecutive Series appearances in the interim.[39]
    • The Cardinals' victory caps one of the hottest stretch-drive streaks in baseball annals; they've gone 48–10–1 since August 4, overcoming a ten-game deficit in the National League standings, and did not lose two in a row after August 2.
Branch Rickey
  • October 29
    • The Brooklyn Dodgers sign Branch Rickey to a five-year contract as club president and general manager, replacing Larry MacPhail, now serving in the United States Army. Rickey, 60, had been business manager and vice-president of the St. Louis Cardinals since May 1925; St. Louis owner Sam Breadon had allowed Brooklyn's board of directors to speak with Rickey about their executive vacancy earlier this month. The inventor of the modern farm system, Rickey's scouting and player development acumen has enabled the cost-conscious Cardinals to capture six NL pennants and four World Series titles during his 17 full seasons as head of their front office. At Rickey's introductory press conference, he notes that the Dodgers, who won 104 games this past season but lagged behind Rickey's world-champion Redbirds, need to develop younger players to remain competitive.[42] The 1942 Dodgers were the second-oldest team in the NL; Rickey's Cardinals, the second-youngest.[37]
    • Meanwhile, Breadon says he will divide Rickey's old responsibilities among multiple men within the Cardinals' organization, taking on a more involved role himself as club president and including his nephew, William Walsingham Jr., chief scout Joe Mathes, and ex-pitcher and longtime farm system official Eddie Dyer on his front-office team.[43]

November

December

  • December 1 – At the winter meetings in Chicago, player shortages and potential travel restrictions are the order of the day.[45] The St. Louis Cardinals, who operate baseball's largest farm system, reports that 67 varsity and minor-league players have joined the military in the eight weeks since the conclusion of the 1942 season. At the request of the federal Office of Defense Transportation (ODT), owners reduce 1943's regular-season travel by 25% by restricting road trips from four to three series for each team. The ODT's suggestions that spring training be moved from the warm-weather South and Southwest to locations closer to the 16 MLB clubs is initially resisted, however.[46]
  • December 3 – Ten members of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, a U.S. labor union confederation, are rebuffed in their attempt at the winter meetings to confer with Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis to urge the abolition of the baseball color line. Landis issues a statement claiming that no rule prohibits teams from hiring Black athletes; later, Chicago Cubs owner Philip K. Wrigley admits that a "gentleman's agreement" among owners enforces racial segregation among the playing ranks.[45][47]
  • December 4
  • December 12 – Branch Rickey's first official trade as front-office boss of the Brooklyn Dodgers sees him obtain pitcher Rube Melton, 25, from the Philadelphia Phils for fellow right-hander Johnny Allen, 38, and $30,000. Melton went 9–20 (3.70) in 42 games and 20913 innings pitched for the cellar-dwelling Phils last season.
  • December 17 – Well-traveled Roy Cullenbine's tenure as the New York Yankees' starting right-fielder ends after 28 regular-season and five World Series games when he's dealt to the Cleveland Indians with catcher Buddy Rosar for infielder Oscar Grimes and outfielder Roy "Stormy" Weatherly. The switch-hitting Cullenbine, 29, batted .364 with 28 hits (and an OPS of 1.017) for the Yanks over 1942's stretch drive after they acquired him from the Washington Senators on August 31.

Movies

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

References

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