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Slightly O/T: Did Cy Young "Only" Win 510 Games?
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While looking up some info for a player on the 1890 Pittsburgh Alleghenys, I ran across this very interesting note from the president of the Pittsburgh club. The Alleghenys played the Cleveland Spiders on September 18, 1890 in Canton, Ohio. The Spiders won and the winning pitcher was a rookie named Cy Young...
Here's the interesting part. The club president claimed that it was just an exhibition game in an 1890 issue of the Sporting Life two weeks later. Clubs played in-season exhibition games all of the time back then AND the Alleghenys played a game two days later in Wheeling, WV which he doesn't say anything about being an exhibition game. You would think the club president would know if a game was an exhibition or not, but here he is in black and white claiming that one of Cy Young's career wins shouldn't be counted on his record. |
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Perhaps more proof is needed?
The Pittsburgh Press from September 19, 1890 Or the standings two days after they played their final game. Current records show 23-113 for reference |
John, they could take away 11 wins and he'd still have 500! :p Something tells me that is one of those unbreakable records...
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Baseball lives for iconic numbers. I still find it completely ridiculous that every year on the anniversary of Pete Rose breaking Ty Cobb's hit record that absolutely nothing is mentioned, despite it being known for over 30 years that Cobb actually finished with 4,189 hits, not 4,191. Hit 4,192 was the moment he celebrated it and anyone who saw it, remembers it, but it needs to be called what it is. You just don't gloss over the actual historic moment because someone added wrong years ago. I've found other mistakes and not shared them here, but this one is a pretty big deal and has some major proof that the game didn't count. The local paper didn't even print a boxscore, which could be a fourth example if I knew how to show something that wasn't there. |
Maybe I missed it, but what makes you think the win was counted in his regular season totals?
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All of the stuff above shows that it wasn't an official game and shouldn't be included in the stats for the 18 players in the game. |
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We need to recognize the correct numbers. |
Chris, agreed, correct, and if some evidence is unearthed that should change the currently official count,
it shouldn't just be bandied about by a few fans and left there. z28jd, have you approached MLB, RetroSheet, and/or the HOF with your research? |
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There's also the matter of the team being 21-104 at the time. If he wanted to avoid losses, they wouldn't have cut some of the best players near the end of the season to save money. The Sporting Life had this note in with all of their other random notes from the time, which were compiled by them. This was listed two issues before the quote from the team president |
I've been trying to track down a game log, or list of games that are credited to Cy Young. Do you have a link showing that he was in fact the winning pitcher?
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From the book The Pittsburgh Pirates By Fred Lieb, the author states this:
http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=25030 So Fred Lieb's research led him to the fact that the game was deemed an exhibition by the league. |
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Young made 16 starts and all 16 were complete games. You can see on there that Cleveland won 9, tied 1 and lost six. He recorded his other loss that season in his only relief outing. The game in question is Sept 18th, which is listed as an official game now, but wasn't official back then. |
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I suppose if the league (for whatever asshatted reason) deemed it to (retroactively) be an exhibition, then the stats should not count. |
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From the Pittsburgh Dispatch September 19, 1890 which calls it as being a "championship game".
http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=25031 |
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I have this also, from the Dispatch dated September 17, 1890 states that the NL clubs would play in Canton the following day. http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=25032 |
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The final results from the Dispatch say 23-112, which is now 23-113 and it says 6-11 vs Cleveland, which is now 6-12, so the Dispatch did not include that game in the final standings, even though they may have said earlier that it was a championship game. |
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There obviously seemed to be confusion about this game when it happened, BUT you have four sources saying it was an exhibition game, even though two of them earlier said it wasn't. Here is everything in one post:
1. Sept 13, The Sporting Life/schedule (all games that were played) 2. Sept 19, Pittsburgh Press/game recap w/ no boxscore 3. Sept 20, The Sporting Life/game recap 4. Oct 4, Alleghenys President/quote 5. Oct 5, Pittsburgh Press/final standings 6. Oct 5, Pittsburgh Dispatch/final standings |
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For what it's worth, the following happened at the National League meeting on November 13, 1890, as reported on page 4 of the November 15, 1890 Sporting Life. By that time, the NL officially considered Pittsburgh to have lost 114 game in the 1890 championship season, which must have included the September 18 game. I haven't yet found the meeting at which the NL discussed the September 18 game and declared it a championship game rather than an exhibition, but it wasn't at this meeting.
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I knew about the 112 losses for quite some time now, but figured that was just a mistake. I didn't look into it because I had no idea where to start and whether it would just be a waste of time over an editing error. Sure would love to find that banner! |
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I don't think it was a typo or a mistake by the editor. The flag was mentioned again in the November 29, 1890 Sporting Life (page 3), and it was again said to have 114 stars:
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Could you imagine if someone went through all of the records and found that Roberto Clemente was credited with a hit that was actually changed to an error by the scorer at a later date.....? :eek:
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Entertaining, yes, but ultimately pointless to argue it only here.
If you believe there's a case to be made for changing the official record, present your findings to Retrosheet / BBR. |
Look what happened to Old Hoss for his 1884 season. Someone read a bit too much and there went that magical number.... :o
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The other route is based off the 114 star banner mentioned above. We found a mention in the 1891 Spalding Guide that said the Alleghenys lost 114 games and had a 6-13 record against Cleveland, which is not accepted as true today. They are credited with 113 losses and a 6-12 record. So maybe then, Cy Young could have had 512 wins...I present you with a "lost game from September 3rd in Altoona with the local paper calling it a "Championship game" which back then just meant regular season. So I present to you, "loss 114" that was apparently accepted in 1890 by the league itself and 1891 by the league record keepers, but no longer counts as a game. For the naysayers for the original game, this is a tough one to argue against. |
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That's the part to me personally that makes me think that neither should count. Also, the league had zero problem with teams not making up games, judging by the games played totals, which range from 129 to 138, so it's not like any team needed to have a certain amount for the league to be satisfied. Every team played exhibition games back then in season, so it seems odd that the Alleghenys and Cleveland, the two worst teams, are the ones they made judgment calls on for no apparent reason. The league clearly got together at some point and decided 114 losses happened and spent money to "celebrate" it and the Alleghenys apparently how no problem accepting that fact because they hung it in a public place for all to see. The guide does have 113 losses listed, but you have 114 right there with a 6-13 record to show where that extra loss came from, plus a 10-7 record for Young as you pointed out. What may have happened is when they went back over games to double check, they got rid of the one game but not the other. Was that on purpose, or an error? It's obvious that errors were being made in real time back then, so it's not hard to fathom that they were made at a later date and only one game was erased (or neither should have been). Unless someone has something specific that says why such odd decisions were made, then you can make cases for Young winning 8, 9 or 10 games that year, with 9 wins only coming from the "well, that's what they decided" reason. Those people known as "they" got a lot of things wrong back then and a lot of it has been corrected over time. |
I would also add that it's wrong to just quickly dismiss the local paper saying "championship game", because they didn't write that for every game. That's rare to see at the top of a game story because there's no reason to write it in most cases. In my mind, they were noting that at the top for a reason and that's because it was played at a different location. This is the same paper that wrote exhibition game for the Sept 18th game and didn't even include a boxscore.
The 113 losses we recognize now could very well be right, but "they" included the wrong game out of these two contests. Something else to consider... |
Nice research, John. I have a feeling there are a fair amount of inconsistencies in really old stats.
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I don't buy into revisionism decades or even more than a century after the fact as adding accuracy. To me, this is nonsense. In cases other than this one, the stats were tabulated from the official score sheets, not the box scores. I don't believe the former are still available, although the latter probably most often are. Taking Ty Cobb's lifetime average down from .367 to .366 and Teddy Ballgame's rookie walk total down two (?) from 107 is sheer nonsense. This is simply the height of arrogance. The number in Cy's case is 511, plain and simple, in Cobb's, .367, and 107 rookie walks for Williams.
Highest regards, Larry |
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