1893 MLB season | |
---|---|
League | National League (NL) |
Sport | Baseball |
Duration | April 27 – September 30, 1893 |
Number of games | 132 |
Number of teams | 12 |
Pennant winner | |
NL champions | Boston Beaneaters |
NL runners-up | Pittsburgh Pirates |
The 1893 Major League baseball season began on April 27, 1893. The regular season ended on September 30, with the Boston Beaneaters as the pennant winner of the National League and therefore winner of the final Dauvray Cup.
The 1893 season saw no postseason championship series, unlike the split-season 1892 World's Championship Series. This would not last, as the following season would see the Temple Cup, which would be a championship series between the NL pennant winner and the runner-up.
The 1893 schedule consisted of 132 games for the twelve teams of the National League. Each team was scheduled to play 12 games against the other eleven teams in the league. This replaced the 154-game, 14-games-each format put in place in the previous season and would be used until 1898.
Opening Day took place on April 27 featuring eight teams. The final day of the season was on September 30, featuring six teams. [1]
The 1893 season saw the following rule changes:
An asterisk (*) denotes the ballpark a team played the minority of their home games at
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boston Beaneaters | 86 | 43 | .667 | — | 49–15 | 37–28 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 81 | 48 | .628 | 5 | 54–19 | 27–29 |
Cleveland Spiders | 73 | 55 | .570 | 12½ | 47–22 | 26–33 |
Philadelphia Phillies | 72 | 57 | .558 | 14 | 43–22 | 29–35 |
New York Giants | 68 | 64 | .515 | 19½ | 49–20 | 19–44 |
Cincinnati Reds | 65 | 63 | .508 | 20½ | 37–27 | 28–36 |
Brooklyn Grooms | 65 | 63 | .508 | 20½ | 43–24 | 22–39 |
Baltimore Orioles | 60 | 70 | .462 | 26½ | 36–24 | 24–46 |
Chicago Colts | 56 | 71 | .441 | 29 | 38–34 | 18–37 |
St. Louis Browns | 57 | 75 | .432 | 30½ | 40–30 | 17–45 |
Louisville Colonels | 50 | 75 | .400 | 34 | 24–28 | 26–47 |
Washington Senators | 40 | 89 | .310 | 46 | 21–27 | 19–62 |
Stat | Player | Total |
---|---|---|
AVG | Billy Hamilton (PHI) | .380 |
OPS | Billy Hamilton (PHI) | 1.014 |
HR | Ed Delahanty (PHI) | 19 |
RBI | Ed Delahanty (PHI) | 146 |
R | Herman Long (BOS) | 149 |
H | Sam Thompson (PHI) | 222 |
SB | Tom Brown (LOU) | 66 |
Stat | Player | Total |
---|---|---|
W | Frank Killen (PIT) | 36 |
L | Duke Esper (WSH) | 28 |
ERA | Theodore Breitenstein (STL) | 3.18 |
K | Amos Rusie (NY) | 208 |
IP | Amos Rusie (NY) | 482.0 |
SV | Mark Baldwin (NYG/ PIT ) Tom Colcolough (PIT) Frank Donnelly (CHI) Frank Dwyer (CIN) Tony Mullane (BAL/ CIN ) Cy Young (CLE) | 2 |
WHIP | Kid Nichols (BOS) | 1.280 |
Team name | Wins | %± | Home attendance | %± | Per game |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Philadelphia Phillies [7] | 72 | −17.2% | 293,019 | 51.3% | 4,440 |
New York Giants [8] | 68 | −4.2% | 290,000 | 122.1% | 4,085 |
Brooklyn Grooms [9] | 65 | −31.6% | 235,000 | 27.9% | 3,507 |
Chicago Colts [10] | 56 | −20.0% | 223,500 | 104.9% | 3,062 |
St. Louis Browns [11] | 57 | 1.8% | 195,000 | 1.3% | 2,708 |
Cincinnati Reds [12] | 65 | −20.7% | 194,250 | −1.1% | 2,943 |
Boston Beaneaters [13] | 86 | −15.7% | 193,300 | 32.0% | 2,974 |
Pittsburgh Pirates [14] | 81 | 1.3% | 184,000 | 3.8% | 2,521 |
Baltimore Orioles [15] | 60 | 30.4% | 143,000 | 52.8% | 2,383 |
Cleveland Spiders [16] | 73 | −21.5% | 130,000 | −7.1% | 1,857 |
Washington Senators [17] | 40 | −31.0% | 90,000 | −29.8% | 1,837 |
Louisville Colonels [18] | 50 | −20.6% | 53,683 | −59.1% | 1,013 |