1937 | |
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Date | 7 – 14 August |
Host(s) | Adelaide, SA |
Teams | 4 |
Defending champions | South Australia |
Final positions | |
Champion | New South Wales (1st title) |
1st runner-up | Victoria |
2nd runner-up | South Australia |
The 1937 Claxton Shield was the fourth annual Claxton Shield, an Australian national baseball tournament. It was held at Unley Oval in Adelaide from 7 to 14 August, [1] the second time Adelaide had hosted the Shield. New South Wales won the Shield for the first time. Western Australia joined the tournament for the first time, becoming the fourth state to be represented. The other participating teams were Victoria and hosts South Australia. [2] [3]
With the introduction of a fourth team to the tournament, changes were made to the format used in the three previous years. The four teams played a round-robin schedule, meeting each other team once, [1] with two competition points were on offer in each game. The points were awarded as follows:
At the end of these preliminary games, the top two teams played each other to determine the champions, while the remaining two teams faced each other to determine third place.
In the event of a tie between teams in terms of points, the tiebreaker used would have been the net runs for and against, with the team achieving the greater value placing in the higher position. This became a factor in the final preliminary game, between South Australia and Victoria. If South Australia had won, they would have tied with New South Wales and Victoria on points. Given the previous results in the tournament, South Australia needed to win by four or more runs to overtake Victoria on for and against, and therefore meet New South Wales in the championship game. Leading 1–0 in the bottom of the ninth inning, South Australia intentionally allowed Victoria to score a run to tie the game, and force extra innings. The plan failed though, as neither team was able to score any further runs, and the game was called after 14 innings because of the light. As a result, Victoria and New South Wales contested the final. [4]
Team | Points | Wins | Ties | Losses | For-Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Victoria | 5 | 2 | 1 | – | +4 |
New South Wales | 4 | 2 | – | 1 | +7 |
South Australia | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | -3 |
Western Australia | 0 | – | – | 3 | -8 |
7 August 1936 | Western Australia | 2 – 5 | Victoria | Unley Oval |
7 August 1936 | New South Wales | 6 – 0 | South Australia | Unley Oval |
10 August 1936 | Western Australia | 0 – 3 | South Australia | Unley Oval |
10 August 1936 | New South Wales | 1 – 2 | Victoria | Unley Oval |
12 August 1936 | Western Australia | 0 – 2 | New South Wales | Unley Oval |
12 August 1936 | Victoria | 1 – 1 (F/14) | South Australia | Unley Oval |
14 August 1936 | Western Australia | 0 – 2 | South Australia | Unley Oval |
14 August 1936 | New South Wales | 4 – 1 | Victoria | Unley Oval |
1937 Claxton Shield Champions |
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New South Wales 1st title |
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The Perth Heat is a baseball team in the current Australian Baseball League and a foundation member of the Australian Baseball League. It is the most successful team in ABL history, winning 15 Claxton Shields.
The Claxton Shield was the name of the premier baseball competition in Australia held between state-based teams, as well as the name of the trophy awarded to the champion team. From the summer of 1989–90 until 2001–02, and again since 2010–11, the tournament was replaced by one of three other competitions: the original Australian Baseball League (ABL), the International Baseball League of Australia (IBLA), and since the 2010–11 season the new ABL. Despite other competitions being held in place of the Claxton Shield, the physical trophy has remained the award for the winning teams. Though city-based teams have competed for the Claxton Shield in some seasons, the name engraved on the shield is that of the winning state; for the 2010–11 ABL season won by the Perth Heat, "West Australia 2011" was engraved.
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South Australia's Tactics Fail