Baseball The Way It Never Was

Tag: Willie Mays

TWIWBL 7.0: Notes from Series VI

April 24th

Series VI saw the Kansas City Monarchs slow down the runaway steam train of the New York Black Yankees (they split a four game series) and the Portland Sea Dogs streak into first place of the Marvin Miller Division by taking 4 straight from the San Francisco Sea Lions.

League Standings | League Stats

Leading SP: Walter Johnson (POR), 4-0, 2.23 ERA, 1.13 WHIP; Don Drysedale (BRK), 4-0, 1.00 ERA, 1.11 WHIP; Ron Guidry (NYY), 4-1, 2.32 ERA, 0.98 WHIP, 51 K.

Leading RP: Johan Santana (POR), 0-1, 4.00 ERA, 11 Sv; Tom Henke (OTT), 0.90 ERA, 7 Sv; Bob Howry (PHI) 7 Sv; Ron Reed (PHI) 0-0, 2 Sv, 6 H.

Leading Batters: Babe Ruth (NYY), 449/534/867, 11 HR, 34 R, 32 RBI, 44 H; Jake Stenzel (IND), 261/330/420, 11 2B; Eric Davis (NYY), 290/309/542, 34 RBI; Rickey Henderson 244/421/337, 25 BB, 16 SB.

Boldface indicates league leading mark.

Streaks

Babe Ruth’s hitting streak ended at 23 games, leaving the Wandering House of David‘s Ernie Banks (19 games) and Ruth’s teammate Albert Belle (14 games) as the longest active streaks. Belle has also driven in a run in his last 8 games.

Four players (Bob Bailey of the Detroit Wolverines, Banks, Willie Mays of the New York Gothams, and Frank McCormick of the Birmingham Black Barons) have active streaks of 10 games of reaching base safely.

The Miami Cuban GiantsCamilo Pascual hasn’t allowed a run in his last 15 innings.

Series VI Results

Three Game Series

Cleveland Spiders over House of David

Series Sweeps

Portland over San Francisco

Taking 3 out of 4 in Series VI

Birmingham over Indianapolis ABC’s
Chicago American Giants over Philadelphia Stars
Memphis Red Sox over Homestead Grays

Series Splits

Baltimore Black Sox @ Houston Colt 45’s
Brooklyn Royal Giants @ Miami
Detroit v New York Gothams
Kansas City v New York Black Yankees
Ottawa Mounties v Los Angeles Angels

TWIWBL 3.0: Series II – Brooklyn Royal Giants @ New York Gothams

This time up, we’re heading for a Subway Series between the Brooklyn Royal Giants (4-1) and the New York Gothams (3-2).

Brooklyn may be better built for the future than this year. A lot of their success will depend on how a pair of youngsters, 21 year old Dutch Leonard and 20 year old Don Drysedale, do in the starting rotation. Roy White and Duke Snider look solid offensively, but any team with 2 Spring Training insertions in the regular lineup (2B Davey Lopes and RF Raul Mondesi) is taking a lot of risk.

The Gothams, on the other hand, could be contenders this year. Christy Mathewson anchors what should be a deep pitching staff, and especially if Buster Posey continues to produce at an all-league level, a lineup with the 2 Willie‘s–Mays and McCovey–should score some runs.

The first game matched up the aces, as Leonard faced off against Mathewson. Leonard was fantastic in his first start; in this one, not so much as New York rocked him for 9 runs in 5.2 IP. Mays paced a 17 hit attack for the Gothams, going 4 for 5. Most of the damage was in the 3rd, when the Gothams scored 5 runs with Art Fletcher driving in 2 runs with a 1-out double. Newly acquired 2B Cookie Rojas chipped in with 3 hits, 2 runs, and 2 RBI’s, allowing New York to overcome a mediocre start by Mathewson that saw him surrender 4 runs in 6 IP. Still, it was enough: New York got the win 12-5 and both pitchers leveled their records at 1-1.

New York was on the verge of taking a 2-0 lead in the series, taking a 5-3 lead in the bottom of the 8th on 4 consecutive singles from Rojas, Eugenio Suarez, Mark Loretta, and Posey. Ron Cey singled to lead off the 9th for Brooklyn, bringing in Gotham’s closer, Brian Wilson. After a walk to Jim Delahanty, Wilson gave up a 2 run double to White, sending us into extra innings. It remained scoreless until the 15th inning, when Cey and Dickie Thon managed to drive in runs. Brooklyn closer Watty Clark pitched the final 4 innings, giving up only 1 hit and earning the victory, 7-5. The loss went to New York’s Mike Norris, who was tagged for those final 2 runs in 3.2 IP of relief.

With the series tied 1-1, game 3 saw Brooklyn’s Don Sutton taking the mound against New York’s Sad Sam Jones. A solo HR in the top of the 5th by Brooklyn’s Beals Becker increased the Royal Giants’ lead to 3-1, but the Gothams would tie the game in the bottom of the 6th and put it away in the bottom of the 8th behind a 3-run HR from Wally Berger. Robb Nen got the 7-3 win with Marcel Lachemann picking up the save and Smokey Joe Williams was tagged with the loss.

Brooklyn rode a great start from Drysedale to even the series at 2-2. He gave up 8 hits and only 1 run in 8 IP, which was plenty as the Brooklyn offense tallied 9 runs against losing pitcher Juan Marichal and reliever Gaylord Perry. Drysdale moved to 2-0 on the year with the 9-1 victory, and White led the way for Brooklyn, with 4 hits in 5 at-bats, totaling 3 2Bs, 2 runs, and 2 RBIs. Dan Brouthers added his 2nd HR of the year, and Becker continued his hot streak with 3 hits.

So, a split series, which has to be more encouraging for Brooklyn than the Gothams. White was the key for the Royal Giants, amassing 12 hits–8 of which were doubles–in the series and raising his BA to .425 on the young season.

Seed Players

Each franchise, working within a WAR (Wins Above Replacement, per bb-ref) budget, selected historical players to seed their franchise. This group was augmented by a somewhat arbitrary top-40 NeL players, and a handful of 19th century players and/or players who “belonged” to franchises not represented in the league.

The budget led to some difficult choices–as an example, the New York Gothams (the New York and San Francisco Giants franchise) start in the WBL without Barry Bonds, instead opting for the duo of Christy Mathewson and Willie Mays as their franchise anchors (in addition to Al Spalding, Bill Terry, Buster Posey, Pop Lloyd, Carl Hubbell, and Carlos Moran).

Each of these players enter the league towards the start of their careers, and received a 5 year contract.

Each team additionally maintained “franchise rights” to a handful of players. Many of these players were in the 3,000+ players comprising the initial draft class for the WBL; the rest will appear on the franchise when, randomly, they appear in a rookie class down the road

Sticking with the Gothams, this meant the franchise starts with Gaylord Perry, Juan Marichal, Will Clark, and Willie McCovey as well, with each of them signed for 3 years. These players entered the league at points throughout their career, but almost always with at least a few peak season remaining.

It also means that, whenever they enter the WBL, Homestead will hold the rights to Bonds, Mel Ott, Roger Connor, and Tim Keefe.

You can see on each team’s home page the Seed Players, the Franchise Rights players, and the players for which they hold Future Rights.

Willie Mays of the New York Gothams

New York Gothams

New York Gothams / New York Giants / San Francisco Giants

AAA – Hartford Dark Blues
AA – Troy Trojans
A – Boston Pilgrims

Effa Manley Divisions

WBL | Home PageRoster | Leaders | News | Transactions

An important historical franchise returns to its origins. Banner had little choice but to be the Say-Hey Kid, Willie Mays.

Polo Grounds (55,000)
HR: 1.146 | BA: .980
Dunkin Donuts Park (32,500)
HR: 1.039 | BA: 1.044
Lloyd Street Grounds (10,000)
HR: .958 | BA: .941
Huntington Avenue Grounds (9,000)
HR: 1.140 | BA: .996

2000: 2nd Place, .565.

2001 Projections

As of the end of Spring Training.

CBuster Posey
Wes Westrum
Dick Dietz
Doggie Miller
Ivey Wingo
Kirt Manwaring
Steve O’Neill
John Kerins
Cliff Bolton
dick buckley
Dave Sax
1BWill Clark
Joe Adcock
Bill Terry
Dan Johnson
Justin MorneauDominic Smith
Bill White
2BPete Runnels
Larry Doyle
Neifi Pérez
Mark Loretta
Brian DozierGordon Beckham
David Eckstein
Roy Hughes
Joe Gerhardt
Tim Shinnick
SSBrandon CrawfordFreddie PatekD. Concepción
Spike Owen
Joe Sullivan
Chico Carrasquel
Adam Everett
Nanny Fernandez
Don Buddin
Jake Caulfield
Chick Fulmer
Bill Gleason
Pat Listach
3BPinky Higgins
Eugenio Suárez
Jim Ray Hart
Frank Malzone
Matt Williams
Ryan Zimmerman
Johan Camargo
Billy Cox
Pinky Whitney
Tom Burns
Ron Coomer
Sean Burroughs
Mike Pagliarulo
OFJimmy Sheckard
Benny Kauff
Willie Mays
Johnny Callison

Carl Furillo
George Van Haltren
Steve Kemp
Ben Oglivie
Wally Berger
Mike Tiernan

Jo-Jo Moore
Fred Lewis
Rick Manning
John Reccius

Johnny Rucker
Carl Warwick
Max West
Kyle Tucker
Art Rebel
SPChristy Mathewson
Gaylord Perry
Juan Marichal
Don Sutton
Carl Hubbell
Pete Donohue
Tony Mullane
Masahiro Tanaka
w. vanLandingham
Guy Hecker
j. montgomery
Roger Nelson
Randall Delgado
Mat Latos
Wandy Rodríguez
Al Mays
Willie Banks
Lefty Hoerst
bugs raymond
Harvey Bailey
RPMike Norris
Robb Nen
Troy Percival
Brian Wilson
Carson Smith
Buck O’Brien
Al Spalding
Henry Rodríguez
Aaron Loup
Matt Cain
George Jeffcoat
Santiago Casilla
Carl Pavano
Liván Hernández
ferdie schupp
logan webb
Chuck McElroy
Nelson Cruz
Babe Birrer
Jack Wisner
UPRube Waddell
Steve Howe
Edwin Jackson
Charlie Robertson
Tully Sparks
Joe Bush
Doug Bird
Wei-Yin Chen
Vean Gregg
Rick Helling
Darold Knowles
Jim Bullinger
Joe Black
Alonzo Breitenstein
Clint Rogge
Moe Drabowsky
Luis Avilán
5+ Year Contracts; 2-4 year contracts; future rights; Injured

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