The regular season of my 1950 APBA
baseball replay ended today when Philadelphia Phillies shortstop
Granny Hamner grounded out to Brooklyn Dodgers' second baseman Jackie
Robinson.
Robinson scooped the dribbler up,
tossed it over to Gil Hodges and the Dodgers grabbed the pennant,
taking it by one game over the New York Giants. Dodgers catcher Roy
Campanella drove in three runs, including one on a second-inning home
run, and Brooklyn won, 4-2.
That, coupled with a New York Giants
loss in the game before, punched Brooklyn's ticket to the World
Series to face the New York Yankees.
It was the closest finish to a replay
I've ever done. The Dodgers and Giants were tied going into Oct.1,
1950, the last day of the season. It was almost foreshadowing what
really happened in 1951 when the two teams faced off in the memorable
playoff and Bobby Thomson hit the home run and the Giants won the
pennant, the Giants won the pennant.
But it wasn't to happen in my replay.
In the first contest, the Giants took the lead over Boston, 1-0, and
held it through five innings. But Walker Cooper hit a two-run homer
off  Giants starter Jim Hearn in the top of the sixth. Cooper added
an RBI single in the eighth and Vern Bickford pitched a complete game
for the Braves and won 3-2.
Philadelphia actually led the Dodgers
twice in the season's final game, but couldn't contain Campanella.
So, the 1950 season ended in a great
finale. The APBA game is simplistic in that it uses cards and dice
and basic rules; a game can be completed in 15 minutes, but the
results of these games are pretty complex. I spent the week doing the
“What-ifs” and figuring out how four teams could end up winning
the National League with only a few days remaining to play.  
Here are the final standings:
AMERICAN   W   L  GB
New York      106  48   -
Boston             95  59     11
Cleveland        91  63     15
Detroit             90  64     16
Washington     64  90     42
St. Louis          62  92      44
Philadelphia     57   97      49
Chicago            51   103    55
NATIONAL   W   L   GB
Brooklyn         87  67    -
New York        86  68    1
Boston             85  69    2
St. Louis          85  69    2
Pittsburgh        79  75    8
Philadelphia    76  78   11
Chicago           64  90   23
Cincinnati        55  99   32
Remember, I didn't keep full stats. At
times, lots of times really, I regret that. But I mostly play the
games for the peace they bring at the time and the standings. I've
always loved standings and watched them daily in the Minneapolis
Tribune when I was a toddler. I still love them. 
Here are the leaders of the limited
stats I did keep:
American League
Home runs: 41- J. DiMaggio. NYY; 37-
Stephens, Bos; 36- Mize, NYY; 34- Williams, Bos, and Rosen, Cle.
Wins: 23-3– Wynn, Cle; 23-4– Lopat,
NYY; 22-6– Houtteman, Det.
Saves: 19– Calvert, Det; 18- Page,
NYY; 15- Aloma, Chi; 9- Hooper, Phil.
National League
Home runs: 46- Kiner, Pit; 43- Sauer,
Chi; 37- Snider, Bro; 35- Ennis, Phil; 34- Pafko, Chi.
Wins: 23-7- Newcombe, Bro; 21-10-
Chambers, Pitt; 20-7- Maglie, NYG.
Saves: 27- Konstanty, Phil; 16- Brazle,
StL; 15- Hogue, Bos; 14- Werle, Pit; 11- Leonard, Chi.
Before I began this replay, I looked
over the cards, as we APBA guys always do, and, based on the numbers
on the cards, I expected the Yankees and the Dodgers to be the front
runners for their pennants. It ended up that way, but not without the
drama that ensues during a good season. 
Now, the World Series are next. It's
late here and, although I'm cranking Fleetwood Mac and Pink Floyd on the stereo as I write, I ought to consider sleep; the cards
are in their envelopes waiting for the contest to begin. Eighteen
months and a day after I began this journey, the 1950 season draws
near a close. But the new questions are ahead. Will DiMaggio have a
Series to remember? Will Roy Campanella continue his pace? Will
pitching — stellar on both teams during the regular season— be
the main story? 
 
 
Fleetwood Mac & Pink Floyd -- Once again, as always, great taste!
ReplyDeleteCongrats on a great season, Ken! I hope the WS provides as thrilling a finish as your NL pennant race. (How sad that the term "pennant race" no longer applies to today's bastardized version of a MLB season.)
ReplyDelete