1948 Philadelphia Athletics season

Last updated

1948  Philadelphia Athletics
League American League
Ballpark Shibe Park
City Philadelphia
Owners Connie Mack
Managers Connie Mack
Television WPTZ/WCAU
(Claude Haring)
Radio WIBG
(By Saam, Chuck Thompson)
  1947
1949  

The 1948 Philadelphia Athletics season, the 48th in the history of the American League franchise, resulted in Connie Mack's club finishing in the AL's first division for the first time in 15 years [1] with a record of 84 wins and 70 losses (.545), good enough for fourth place. The 1948 Athletics drew 945,076 fans to Shibe Park, which will be the largest "gate" in their 54-year history in Philadelphia. [1] Their home attendance ranked fifth-best in the AL and eleventh-best among the 16 Major League Baseball teams (and 177,647 higher than their National League tenants, the Phillies). [2] [1]

Contents

On the field, the 1948 season represented a dramatic turnaround from the club's dismal 1946 campaign, when it finished last at 49–105, a full 55 games out of first place. In both on- and off-field terms, it will prove to be the high-water mark for the Athletics' final 22 seasons in Philadelphia.

Posting stellar records in May (21–7) and July (18–13) of 1948, the Athletics ranked among the American League's contenders for most of the season, spending May 26 to June 5 in, or virtually tied for, first place. They returned to the AL's top spot on August 1, and held first for the month's first eight days. However, a five-game losing streak from August 20–25, then an eight-game skid between August 29 and September 6, [3] effectively doomed their chances of gaining a tenth pennant for "Mister Mack", the club's 85-year-old manager, co-founder, and principal owner.

Led by pitchers Carl Scheib, Dick Fowler, Lou Brissie and Joe Coleman, and position players Hank Majeski, Eddie Joost, Ferris Fain, Elmer Valo and Barney McCosky, the Athletics finished fourth in the circuit in runs per game (4.73), and fifth in both total runs allowed (735) and staff earned run average (4.43). [4]

Regular season

Season standings

American League
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Cleveland Indians 9758.62648304928
Boston Red Sox 9659.619155234136
New York Yankees 9460.61050274433
Philadelphia Athletics 8470.54512½36414829
Detroit Tigers 7876.50618½39383938
St. Louis Browns 5994.3863734422552
Washington Senators 5697.3664029482749
Chicago White Sox 51101.33644½27482453

Record vs. opponents


Sources:
TeamBOSCWSCLEDETNYYPHASLBWSH
Boston 14–811–1215–714–812–1015–715–7
Chicago 8–146–168–146–166–168–13–19–12–1
Cleveland 12–1116–613–910–1216–614–8–116–6
Detroit 7–1514–89–139–1312–1011–1116–6
New York 8–1416–612–1013–912–1016–617–5
Philadelphia 10–1216–66–1610–1210–1218–414–8
St. Louis 7–1513–8–18–14–111–116–164–1810–12
Washington 7–1512–9–16–166–165–178–1412–10

Notable transactions

Roster

1948 Philadelphia Athletics
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

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

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
C Buddy Rosar 9030277.255441
1B Ferris Fain 145520146.281788
2B Pete Suder 148519125.241760
SS Eddie Joost 135509127.2501655
3B Hank Majeski 148590183.31012120
OF Elmer Valo 113383117.305346
OF Barney McCosky 135515168.326046
OF Sam Chapman 123445115.2581370

Other batters

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

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
Don White 8625362.245128
Ray Coleman 6821051.243021
Mike Guerra 5314230.211123
Herman Franks 409822.224114
Skeeter Webb 23548.14803
Rudy York 31518.15706
George Binks 17414.09802
Billy DeMars 18295.17201
Nellie Fox 3132.15400
Bob Wellman 4102.20000
Earle Brucker 261.16700

Pitching

Starting pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Phil Marchildon 33226.19154.5366
Joe Coleman 33215.214134.0986
Dick Fowler 29204.21583.7850
Carl Scheib 32198.21483.9444
Bill McCahan 1786.2475.7120

Other pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Lou Brissie 39194.014104.13127
Wally Holborow 517.1125.713
Bill Dietrich 415.1125.875

Relief pitchers

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

PlayerGWLSVERASO
Bubba Harris 455254.1332
Bob Savage 335156.2126
Alex Kellner 130007.8314
Nels Potter 82214.0013

Farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
A Savannah Indians Sally League Eric McNair
A Lincoln Athletics Western League Jimmie DeShong
C Martinsville Athletics Carolina League Eddie Morgan
C Moline/Kewanee A's Central Association Joe Glenn
D Welch Miners Appalachian League Woody Wheaton
D Federalsburg A's Eastern Shore League Ducky Detweiler
D Moultrie Athletics Georgia–Florida League Joe Antolick
D Lexington Indians North Carolina State League Homer Lee Cox
D Portsmouth A's Ohio–Indiana League George Staller
D Red Springs Red Robins Tobacco State League Red Norris
LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Martinsville, Red Springs
Moline franchise moved to Kewanee, June 18, 1948

References

  1. 1 2 3 "(Oakland) Athletics (1901–2024) franchise history", Retrosheet
  2. "1948 Major League Attendance by team", Baseball Reference
  3. "1948 Philadelphia Athletics game log", Retrosheet
  4. "1948 American League team statistics", Baseball Reference
  5. 1 2 3 4 "Transactions for 1948 Philadelphia Athletics." Retrosheet
  6. Ray Coleman at Baseball-Reference