Buffalo Bisons (NL)
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The original Buffalo Bisons baseball club played in the National League between 1879 and 1885. The Bisons played their games at Riverside Park (1879-83) and Olympic Park (1884-85).
Contents |
[edit] Year-by-year records
Season | Manager | Games | W | L | T | WP | PL | GB |
1879 | John Clapp | 79 | 46 | 32 | 1 | .590 | 3rd | 10.0 |
1880 | Sam Crane | 85 | 24 | 58 | 3 | .293 | 7th | 42.0 |
1881 | Jim O'Rourke | 83 | 45 | 38 | 0 | .542 | 3rd | 10.5 |
1882 | Jim O'Rourke | 84 | 45 | 39 | 0 | .536 | 3rd | 10.0 |
1883 | Jim O'Rourke | 98 | 52 | 45 | 1 | .536 | 5th | 10.5 |
1884 | Jim O'Rourke | 115 | 64 | 47 | 4 | .577 | 3rd | 19.5 |
1885 | Pud Galvin / Jack Chapman | 113 | 38 | 74 | 1 | .339 | 7th | 49.0 |
[edit] Players of note
- Dan Brouthers
- Bill Crowley
- Davy Force
- Pud Galvin
- Charley Radbourn
- Jim O'Rourke
- Hardy Richardson
- Jack Rowe
- Deacon White
Brouthers, Galvin, O'Rourke and Radbourn are members of the Baseball Hall of Fame.
[edit] Highlights and memorable moments
- 1877: A precursor to the Bisons played an independent schedule, finishing with a 79-28-3 record. The team would subsequently join the National League. [1]
- 1880: Future Hall of Fame pitcher Charlie Radbourn debuted as a second baseman on May 5
- 1880: Pud Galvin pitched a no-hitter against Worcester on Aug. 20
- 1881: 2B Davy Force recorded 12 putouts, seven assists, two unassisted double plays, participated in a triple play, and made just one error in 20 chances in a 12-inning game against Worcester, on September 15.
- 1882: Ireland-born Curry Foley became the first major league player ever to hit for the cycle (including a grand slam), on May 25, and Dan Brouthers led the National League with a .368 batting average
- 1883: Brouthers won his second consecutive NL batting title with a .374 average and Galvin posted 46 wins
- 1884: Brouthers hit triples in four consecutive games, set a season team-record with 14 home runs, and Galvin won 46 games for the second year in a row. Galvin threw another no-hitter, on August 4. Two years after Foley, Jim O'Rourke became the second player in MLB history to hit for the cycle, on June 16.
- 1885: Brouthers hit .359, ending second in the NL batting race behind Roger Connor (.371)
[edit] See also
- Buffalo Bisons all-time roster
- 1879 Buffalo Bisons season
- 1880 Buffalo Bisons season
- 1881 Buffalo Bisons season
- 1882 Buffalo Bisons season
- 1883 Buffalo Bisons season
- 1884 Buffalo Bisons season
- 1885 Buffalo Bisons season
- Buffalo Bisons (disambiguation)
- 19th century National League teams
[edit] External links
- Baseball Almanac
- Team index page at Baseball Reference
- Buffalo Bisons history