Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
1897 Boston Beaneaters. This team has been cited (along with the 1880s St. Louis Browns and the 1890s Baltimore Orioles) as one of the greatest of the 19th century. [citation needed] It featured five Hall of Famers: manager Frank Selee, pitcher Kid Nichols, third baseman Jimmy Collins, and outfielders Billy Hamilton and Hugh Duffy.
The 1883 Boston Beaneaters season was the 13th season of the franchise. The Beaneaters won their third National League pennant , their third in six years. This is also generally recognized as the year during which the team's nickname became the Boston Beaneaters .
The 1893 Boston Beaneaters season was the 23rd season of the franchise. They won their third straight and sixth overall National League pennant. Regular season
The 1898 Boston Beaneaters season was the 28th season of the franchise. The Beaneaters won their second straight National League pennant and their eighth overall. It was also their fifth, and last, of the decade.
The 1894 Boston Beaneaters season was the 24th season of the franchise. The team finished in third place in the National League with a record of 83–49, 8 games behind the Baltimore Orioles . They hold the MLB record for most runs scored in a single season by one team with 1,220, a stunning 9.24 runs per contest.
Boston Beaneaters (1896–1899) Martin Bergen (October 25, 1871 – January 19, 1900) was an American professional baseball player. From 1896 to 1899 he played in 344 games with the Boston Beaneaters of Major League Baseball (MLB), 337 of them as their catcher .
The 1901 Boston Beaneaters season was the 31st season of the franchise. ... 1901 Boston Beaneaters season at Baseball Reference This page was last ...
Boston Beaneaters Cleveland Spiders. The 1892 World Series followed the first split season in National League history, with the first-half champion Boston Beaneaters (102–48) playing the second-half champion Cleveland Spiders (93–56) in a best-of-nine postseason series to determine the overall champion of the 1892 baseball season.