1885 St. Louis Browns season

1885 St. Louis Browns
1885 American Association Championship
Major league affiliations
Location
1885 Information
Owner(s) Chris von der Ahe
Manager(s) Charlie Comiskey
Stats ESPN.com

BB-reference

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The 1885 St. Louis Browns season was the team's 4th season in St. Louis, Missouri and the 4th season in the American Association. The Browns went 79-33 during the season, best in the American Association, and won their first AA pennant. In the World Series, the Browns played the National League champion Chicago White Stockings. The series ended in dispute with each club winning 3 games with 1 tie.

Contents

Regular season

Season summary

The making of the first championship

Manager Charlie Comiskey finally was able to assemble and direct a team from start to finish the way he wanted. The result: a runaway championship.

The team was built on daring baserunning, clutch hitting, and the best pitching in the league. The team as a whole led the league in both earned run average and overall runs allowed by a healthy margin over second-best Louisville.[1] Individually, Dave Foutz was outstanding, as he won 33 of the 46 games he started and ranked fifth in ERA. His teammate Bob Caruthers was even better, compiling league-leading totals in wins (40), ERA (2.07) and winning percentage (a stellar .755).[2]

Running away from the pack

The Browns took over first place to stay in the second week of May, but they made a joke of the race in July. On successive home stands, they had winning streaks of 17 and 10 games, combining for a major-league record 27-game winning streak at home that still stands as the best ever.[3] They finished 16 laps ahead of second-place Cincinnati Red Stockings and earned a berth in the World Series against National League champion Chicago White Stockings.

The championship

Game 1 between the Browns and White Stockings was called for darkness tied 5-5 after eight innings. The Series turned with Game 2 in St. Louis. Chicago was leading 5-4 in the sixth inning when Comiskey pulled his team off the field in protest of the work of umpire Dave Sullivan. Sullivan later forfeited the game to Chicago.

After Foutz pitched St. Louis to a 13-4 victory, however, Anson reneged, and the baseball world called the series a draw.

Season standings

American Association W L GB Pct.
St. Louis Browns 79 33 -- .705
Cincinnati Red Stockings 63 49 16 .563
Pittsburg Alleghenys 56 55 22.5 .505
Philadelphia Athletics 55 57 24 .491
Brooklyn Grays 53 59 26 .473
Louisville Colonels 53 59 26 .473
New York Metropolitans 44 64 33 .407
Baltimore Orioles 41 68 36.5 .376

Roster

1885 St. Louis Browns
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
1B Comiskey, CharlieCharlie Comiskey 83 340 87 .256 2 44
OF O'Neill, TipTip O'Neill 52 206 72 .350 3 38

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Sullivan, DanDan Sullivan 17 60 7 .117 0 3
Broughton, CalCal Broughton 4 17 1 .059 0 1

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Caruthers, BobBob Caruthers 53 482.1 40 13 2.07 90
Foutz, DaveDave Foutz 47 407.2 33 14 2.63 147
McGinnis, JumboJumbo McGinnis 13 112 6 6 3.38 41

World Series

Notes

References

Preceded by
New York Metropolitans
1884
American Association Championship Season
1885
Succeeded by
St. Louis Browns
1886