Patrick T. Powers

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For persons with the similar name Patrick Power, see Patrick Power (disambiguation).

Patrick T. Powers (June 27, 1860 - August 29, 1925) was an American baseball executive who served as president of the Eastern League and founding president of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, the minor leagues organization that celebrated its hundredth season in 2001. Already president of the EL, he was elected by several minor league presidents on September 5, 1901 at the Leland Hotel in Chicago.

The purpose of the NAPBL was to keep the uniting minor leagues independent of the American and National Leagues who were engaged in a nasty turf war, stealing players and hurling accusations at each other. (The established major National League had abrogated its agreement with the minor leagues when threatened by the American.) After the AL won its equality with the NL, the two major leagues and the minor association led by Powers reestablished a National Agreement. Once again, a system was in place to protect rosters and territories and at the same time feed some players to the National and American Leagues.

Before becoming a league executive, Powers was a team manager including two seasons in the major leagues. In 1890 he led the Rochester Broncos of the American Association to a 63-63 record and a fifth place finish. With the New York Giants in 1892, he finished 8th in the 12-team National League with a record of 71-80.

Powers retired from the presidency of the NABPL in 1909, at a time when the Eastern League considered leaving. There were 35 leagues and 246 professional baseball clubs in the organization. It has continued on as the trade association of those lesser baseball leagues that make up "organized baseball". It goes by the moniker Minor League Baseball today, which implies a universality no longer even approximately attained. Once again at the end of the 20th century as at the beginning, there are many independent professional leagues — such as the Northern League, Central League, and Golden Baseball League. Those leagues also feed players, albeit many fewer, to the major leagues.

Powers died at the age of 65 in Belmar, New Jersey.

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