The Nashville Vols were a Minor League Baseball team that played in Nashville, Tennessee, from 1901 to 1963. [1] They were established as charter members of the Southern Association in 1901. [2] Known as the Nashville Baseball Club during their first seven seasons, they became the Nashville Volunteers (regularly shortened to Vols) in 1908. [3] Nashville remained in the Southern Association until it disbanded after the 1961 season. [2] The team sat out the 1962 campaign but returned for a final season in the South Atlantic League in 1963 before ceasing operations altogether. [1]
Over the Vols' 62 seasons, their pitchers threw seven no-hitters, which includes one perfect game. [4] A no-hit game occurs when a pitcher (or pitchers) allows no hits over the course of a game. [5] A perfect game, a much rarer feat, occurs when no batters reach base by a hit or any other means, such as a walk, hit by pitch, or error. [5] The feats were accomplished by a total of seven different pitchers. [4] Four occurred at Nashville's home ballpark, Athletic Park, better known as Sulphur Dell from 1908. [6] Three were pitched in road games. Six occurred while the team was a member of the Southern Association and one as a member of the South Atlantic League.
The Nashville Baseball Club's first no-hitter was Bill Dammann's 8–0 win over the Shreveport Giants at Nashville's Athletic Park on July 9, 1902, in a rain-shortened five-inning game. [7] The left-hander walked four batters in the first inning, and one Shreveport man reached first base on an error, accounting for the only base runners of the game. [7]
John Duggan threw the Volunteers' second no-hit game on September 10, 1908, against the Little Rock Travelers at Sulphur Dell in Nashville. [8] Only two Travelers reached base, one by a walk in the second inning and the other via a fielding error by third baseman Pryor McElveen in the third. [8] The Vols scored their lone run in the 1–0 victory in the fifth inning when Doc Wiseman came home from third base on McElveen's slow infield hit to shortstop. [8] The club's third no-hitter was tossed by Charlie Case on August 31, 1909, versus the New Orleans Pelicans at Pelican Park in New Orleans, Louisiana. [9] Nashville's Harry Bay led off the game with a double to left field, advanced to third base on Doc Wiseman's out, and came home to score on Walter East's soft ground ball to second base for the only run of the 1–0 contest. [9] Case hit a batter and walked three, while three others reached on errors. [9]
On July 11, 1916, Tom Rogers pitched the first and only perfect game in team history against the Chattanooga Lookouts at Sulphur Dell. [10] The Lookouts nearly recorded a hit in the second inning when Joe Harris led off with a sharp line drive to right-center field. Center fielder Billy Lee made a diving catch half-way up the notorious Sulphur Dell right field incline, saving the perfect game bid in its early stages. [11] A second defensive play was made by Vols left fielder Gus Williams in the top of the seventh when he crashed into the left field bleacher fence in the act of catching Jake Pitler's sharply hit ball to left. [12] With two outs in the top of the ninth inning, John Peters came in to pinch hit for Chattanooga pitcher James Allen. He hit a soft fly ball to second base, which was fielded by Tom Sheehan for the final out. [11] In all, Rogers struck out 4 of the 27 batters he faced. [11] The game, a 2–0 Nashville victory, lasted 1 hour and 25 minutes. [12]
Thomas "Shotgun" Rogers climbed yesterday to the proudest pinnacle in the baseball world. The Gallatin Gunner, in the most gallant exhibition of slab work ever unfurled in this section of the more or less United States, reported with that fondly cherished dream of every gent who makes the diamond his habitat—a perfect game. One unmarred by either a run, a hit, or a hostile son of swat reaching the initial corner.
Nashville's fifth no-hit game was pitched by Zeke Lohman on July 25, 1920, versus the Atlanta Crackers in the second game of a seven-inning doubleheader at the Dell. [13] Lohman walked two and hit one batsman in the 6–0 win. [13] The sixth occurred nearly 31 years later on July 21, 1951, when southpaw Umberto Flammini fired a 2–0 no-hitter against Atlanta, this time at Ponce de Leon Park in Atlanta, Georgia. [14] He finished one base runner shy of perfection when Alvin Aucoin reached first base on an error after shortstop Joe Damato bobbled the ball in the second inning. [14] Aucoin was retired after the next batter, Jack Dittmer, hit into a force out. [14] Dittmer moved to second on a wild pitch, but the inning ended following a pop out and a strikeout. [14] The game was scoreless until the ninth inning, when Jack Harshman drove in two runs off of Atlanta's Art Fowler. [14]
The Vols' seventh and final no-hit game was Edward Kikla's gem on July 17, 1963, over the Augusta Yankees in game one of a seven-inning doubleheader at Jennings Stadium in Augusta, Georgia. [15] The lefty allowed three runners in the fourth on a walk, an error, and a fielder's choice, but then retired the side and held Augusta hitless for the remainder of the 8–0 win. [15]
Score | Game score with Vols runs listed first |
---|---|
BR | Number of base runners by the opposing team |
(#) | Number of innings in a game that was shorter or longer than 9 innings |
£ | Pitcher was left-handed |
† | Perfect game |
No. | Date | Pitcher | Score | BR | Opponent | Location | Catcher | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | July 9, 1902 | Bill Dammann £ | 8–0 (5) | 5 | Shreveport Giants | Athletic Park | Ike Fisher |
| [7] |
2 | September 10, 1908 | John Duggan | 1–0 | 2 | Little Rock Travelers | Sulphur Dell | Ed Hurlburt | [8] | |
3 | August 31, 1909 | Charlie Case | 1–0 | 7 | New Orleans Pelicans | Pelican Park | James Seabough | [9] | |
4 | July 11, 1916 | Tom Rogers † | 2–0 | 0 | Chattanooga Lookouts | Sulphur Dell | Gabby Street |
| [11] |
5 | July 25, 1920 | Zeke Lohman | 6–0 (7) | 3 | Atlanta Crackers | Sulphur Dell | Bubber Jonnard |
| [13] |
6 | July 21, 1951 | Umberto Flammini£ | 2–0 | 1 | Atlanta Crackers | Ponce de Leon Park | Bob Brady |
| [14] |
7 | July 17, 1963 | Edward Kikla£ | 8–0 (7) | 3 | Augusta Yankees | Jennings Stadium | Ray Bond |
| [15] |
In baseball, a no-hitter or no-hit game is a game in which a team does not record a hit through conventional methods. Major League Baseball (MLB) officially defines a no-hitter as a completed game in which a team that batted in at least nine complete innings recorded no hits. A pitcher who prevents the opposing team from achieving a hit is thereby said to have "thrown a no-hitter". In most cases, no-hitters are recorded by a single pitcher who throws a complete game; one thrown by two or more pitchers is a combined no-hitter.
José Dennis Martínez Ortiz, nicknamed "El Presidente", is a Nicaraguan former professional baseball pitcher. Martínez played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Baltimore Orioles, Montreal Expos, Cleveland Indians, Seattle Mariners, and Atlanta Braves from 1976 to 1998. He threw a perfect game in 1991, and was a four-time MLB All-Star. He was the first Nicaraguan to play in the majors.
Sulphur Dell, formerly known as Sulphur Spring Park and Athletic Park, was a baseball park in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was located just north of the Tennessee State Capitol building in the block bounded by modern-day Jackson Street, Fourth Avenue North, Harrison Street, and Fifth Avenue North. The ballpark was home to the city's minor league baseball teams from 1885 to 1963. The facility was demolished in 1969.
Herschel Greer Stadium was a Minor League Baseball park in Nashville, Tennessee, on the grounds of Fort Negley, an American Civil War fortification, approximately two mi (3.2 km) south of the city's downtown district. The facility closed at the end of the 2014 baseball season and remained deserted for over four years until its demolition in 2019. Following an archaeological survey, the land is expected to be reincorporated into Fort Negley Park.
The Nashville Vols were a Minor League Baseball team that played in Nashville, Tennessee, from 1901 to 1963. Known as the Nashville Baseball Club during their first seven seasons, they became the Nashville Volunteers in 1908 in reference to Tennessee's nickname, "The Volunteer State". The Vols played their home games at Athletic Park, which had been home to the city's professional baseball teams since 1885 and was renamed Sulphur Dell in 1908.
Thomas Andrew "Shotgun" Rogers was a Major League Baseball pitcher from 1917 to 1921 for the St. Louis Browns, Philadelphia Athletics, and New York Yankees.
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The 1908 Nashville Vols season was the 15th season of minor league baseball in Nashville, Tennessee, and the Nashville Vols' 8th season in the Southern Association. The Vols finished the previous season in last place, but this year won the league pennant, by defeating he New Orleans Pelicans 1-0 on the last day of the season in a game dubbed by Grantland Rice "The Greatest Game Ever Played In Dixie."