February 3, 2011
11 days until pitchers and catchers
55 days until Opening Day
55 days until Opening Day
Trivia: One of today’s birthday boys, Fred Lynn, was the first player to win Rookie of the Year and his league’s MVP award in the same season. Only one other player has achieved that feat. Who is it?
“You throw the ball, you catch the ball, you hit the ball”: On this day in 1886 Albert Spalding forms the company that will bear his name and manufacture the first official baseball. Spalding made the official baseballs for MLB until 1977 when Rawlings took over.
So that’s why the museum is in Kansas City: On this day in 1920 in Paris of the Plains the Negro National League is formed. The league consisted of 8 teams; 3 were named Giants (Chicago, Chicago American, St. Louis) and 2 were named Stars (Cuban and Detroit). The creatively named teams were the Dayton Marcos, the Indianapolis ABCs, and the Kansas City Monarchs. The Cuban Stars were not based in Cuba. They were actually two teams, one based out of New York and one based out of Cincinnati. Most of the players themselves were Cuban. In a lot of ways things were much more complicated back then. And less politically correct.
(Kansas City is called Paris of the Plains because it has more boulevards than any city outside the real Paris.)
Baseball birthday: Chicken Hawks, 1896. He played two seasons, one for the Yankees (shared the outfield with a guy named Ruth) and one for the Phillies. Most well-known for having a preposterous name.
Also birthed today: Fred Lynn, 1952. Lynn might very well hold the record for Number of Unusual Achievements, and therefore is the answer to many trivia questions. Lynn was the first player to win Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season. He is the only player to hit a grand slam in an All-Star Game. He hit exactly 23 home runs 4 years in a row. He won ALCS MVP in 1982 even though his team lost the series (he hit .611). On June 18, 1975, he recorded 16 total bases in one game against the Tigers (only 16 other players have ever had 16 total bases or more in a game). He finished his career with 1,111 RBI; an impressive but otherwise insignificant number, nevertheless one that stands out because it’s just so darn symmetrical. Believe it or not, he’s one of two in the history of baseball to have that exact number (the other being George Hendrick).
There are 108 double stiches on each baseball. |
Trivia answer: Ichiro Suzuki won AL MVP and AL Rookie of the Year in 2001. He had a ridiculous 242 hits while hitting .350 and stealing 56 bases for the 116-win Mariners.
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