calsnowskier
Sarcastic F-wad
I never understood anyone liking “that”…We all know she's on your "fantasy" team...
I never understood anyone liking “that”…We all know she's on your "fantasy" team...
We all know she's on your "fantasy" team...
Whelp, I love her so...
cal, I found a book, "Total Ballclubs", that was gifted to me years ago. It is a complete history of all MLB franchises from 1876 to 2004. Really good read if you have time. Anyway, what I noticed that is the early clubs DID pay their players. I think you are thinking about pre-1876 clubs and independent clubs where amateurs were mixed. Sure, MLB teams played them but those were exhibitions and do not count in the stat books.OPS+ is definitely the way to go when comparing different eras. But in the super early years, not all the players were pros. Some players were literally playing for no pay at all.
Typically, when I do “all time” studies, I completely ignore anything pre-1900. The game was too volatile to trust, both in rules and player consistency. For example, for the first few years, if a player hit a double, it was actually scored as a single with a SB.
cal, I found a book, "Total Ballclubs", that was gifted to me years ago. It is a complete history of all MLB franchises from 1876 to 2004. Really good read if you have time. Anyway, what I noticed that is the early clubs DID pay their players. I think you are thinking about pre-1876 clubs and independent clubs where amateurs were mixed. Sure, MLB teams played them but those were exhibitions and do not count in the stat books.
That’s why the Reds used to open every MLB season. They stopped that tradition maybe 10 years ago.I believe I read somewhere that the Cincinnati Reds were the first paid professional baseball team, and it was like 1869.
When did the Cincinnati Reds really start? It wasn’t in 1869, the year widely celebrated
The Cincinnati Reds trace their founding to the 1869 Red Stockings, the first pro team. But their history is a bit complicated.www.cincinnati.com
Yes they were but the start of major league baseball was the formation of the National League in 1876. That league, and all other major leagues started after it, were all professional teams and thus all their players were paid.I believe I read somewhere that the Cincinnati Reds were the first paid professional baseball team, and it was like 1869.
When did the Cincinnati Reds really start? It wasn’t in 1869, the year widely celebrated
The Cincinnati Reds trace their founding to the 1869 Red Stockings, the first pro team. But their history is a bit complicated.www.cincinnati.com
What I find strange about that is that the Reds are not the longest continuously ran franchise in MLB. That title belongs to the Cubs. There was a Reds team that was part of the initial NL season of 1876 but it folded in June 1877. The NL quickly replaced it with another franchise that same season but they folded at the end of 1879. A 3rd franchise folded after 1880. Cincinnati didn't have a team in the NL again until 1890, when the present franchise was founded.That’s why the Reds used to open every MLB season. They stopped that tradition maybe 10 years ago.
So…What I find strange about that is that the Reds are not the longest continuously ran franchise in MLB. That title belongs to the Cubs. There was a Reds team that was part of the initial NL season of 1876 but it folded in June 1877. The NL quickly replaced it with another franchise that same season but they folded at the end of 1879. A 3rd franchise folded after 1880. Cincinnati didn't have a team in the NL again until 1890, when the present franchise was founded.
I know you are being humorous, but I'll be an HF and respond seriously.So…
The Reds kept failing (miserably), but there was always another group ready to pick up the team name because “We know how to run this team right!” Only to, ultimately, fail humiliatingly, just like the previous group.
Interesting story…