Youngstown Champs
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The Youngstown Champs were a minor league baseball team that competed in the Ohio-Pennsylvania League in 1907 and 1908. The club won the league championship in 1907[1] but disbanded in the middle of the 1908 season.[2]
[edit] Origins
The Champs were among several minor league ball clubs that operated in Youngstown, Ohio, in the early 20th century. The team was preceded by the Youngstown Ohio Works, which won two consecutive league championships in 1905 and 1906.[1]
In 1907, the Ohio Works' sponsors, local industrialists Joseph and Thomas McDonald, approved the sale of the franchise to Zanesville investors.[3] A new club was organized, with Sam L. Wright as manager.[1] That year, the Youngstown Baseball Company took an office on the mezzanine floor of the Dollar Bank Building in downtown Youngstown.[4]
Wright, who was city editor and former sports editor of The Youngstown Daily Vindicator,[4] went on to serve as president of the Ohio-Pennsylvania League in 1909.[2]
[edit] Championship and dissolution
The Youngstown club won the 1907 championship in a close race with a Newark, Ohio, franchise.[1] The Champs closed the season with an 86–53 record, while the Newark Newks worked up an 86–52 record, placing second in the league.[1] The Champs met with less success the following season.
On June 9, 1908, The Youngstown Daily Vindicator reported the Champs' claim that two losses suffered at East Liverpool, Ohio, and McKeesport, Pennsylvania, resulted from "putrid" drinking water at East Liverpool that made the players sick.[4] The Champs' situation failed to improve, and in the middle of the 1908 season, the club's owners withdrew their sponsorship.[2]
The team was later replaced by the Youngstown Indians, which competed in the Ohio-Pennsylvania League in 1909, under the sponsorship of a New Castle, Pennsylvania, stock company.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e Ohio-Pennsylvania League. Baseball Reference. Retrieved on 2007-10-10.
- ^ a b c d Spalding's Official Athletic Library Baseball Guide (New York: American Sports Publishing Co., 1910), p. 217.
- ^ "Franchise, Team and Marty Hogan are Coming Here", The Zanesville Signal, February 18, 1907, p. 1.
- ^ a b c "A Century of Sports: The Mahoning and Shenango Valleys", The Vindicator, April 11, 1999, p. D-6.