1909 San Francisco Seals season

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1909 San Francisco Seals
1909 San Francisco Seals
1909 San Francisco Seals
LeaguePacific Coast League
BallparkRecreation Park
CitySan Francisco
Record132–80
League place1st
ManagersDan Long

The 1909 San Francisco Seals season was the seventh season in the history of the San Francisco Seals baseball team. The 1909 team won the Pacific Coast League (PCL) pennant with a 132–80 record. Dan Long was the team's manager[1]

The 1925 Seals were selected in 2003 by a panel of minor league experts as the tenth best team in the PCL's 100-year history.[2] The team was also ranked No. 71 by baseball historians Bill Weiss and Marshall Wright in their ranking of the 100 best teams in Minor League Baseball history.[1]

Pitchers

[edit]

The pitching staff included two 30-game winners.

Frank Browning led the PCL and all of Minor League Baseball with 32 wins and a 2.00 earned run average (ERA).[3][1] Browning later played for the Detroit Tigers and performed as part of a vaudeville quartet.

Cack Henley finished second with a 31–10 record and a 1.56 ERA.[3][1] On June 8, 1909, Henley pitched a 24-inning, complete-game shutout at Freeman's Park in Oakland. Jimmy Wiggs pitched 23 scoreless innings for Oakland and lost on an unearned run in the 24th inning.[4][5]

Position players

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Right fielder Henry Melchior appeared in 195 games for the Seals, tallied 47 extra base hits and 27 stolen bases, and led the PCL with a .298 batting average.[1] Melchior continued to play on the West Coast until 1915 but never played in the major leagues.[6]

Outfielder Doc Miller compiled a .347 batting average for the Seals but did not have enough at bats (he had 219) to qualify for the batting title.[3] Miller later played five years in the major leagues.[7]

Third baseman Rollie Zeider compiled a .289 batting average and led the PCL with 93 stolen bases and 141 runs scored.[1] Zeider later played nine seasons in the major leagues.[8]

Left fielder Ping Bodie, a San Francisco native, led the team with 10 home runs.[3] He hit 30 home runs for the Seals in 1910 and later played nine seasons in the majors.[9]

1909 PCL standings

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Team W L Pct. GB
San Francisco Seals 132 80 .622 --
Portland Beavers 112 87 .563 13.5
Los Angeles Angels 118 97 .549 15.5
Sacramento Sacts 97 107 .475 31.0
Oakland Oaks 88 125 .413 44.5
Vernon Tigers 80 131 .379 51.0

[1]

Statistics

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Batting

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Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; SLG = Slugging percentage

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR SLG
OF Henry Melchior 195 692 206 .298 5 386
3B, 2B, OF Rollie Zeider 189 705 204 .289 2 374
OF, P Ping Bodie 157 543 135 .249 10 .401
3B Howard Mundorff 102 320 85 .266 0 .328
C Claude Berry 166 577 141 .244 1 .289
1B Tom Tennant 188 692 159 .230 2 .289
OF Jim Lewis 97 303 69 .228 0 .231
SS Harry McArdle 207 690 136 .197 0 .252
C, 1B, OF Nick Williams 114 345 77 .223 0 .275
2B Kid Mohler 184 607 117 .193 1 .247

[3][1]

Pitching

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Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; PCT = Win percentage; ERA = Earned run average

Player G IP W L PCT ERA
Frank Browning 54 432.0 32 16 .667 2.00
Cack Henley 46 386.2 31 10 .756 1.56
Ralph Willis 34 281.2 21 9 .700 2.01
Pat Eastley 41 326.0 19 16 .543 2.13
Ed Griffin 26 200.1 12 10 .545 2.52
Joe Corbett 12 91.0 4 7 .364 2.67

[3][1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bill Weiss; Marshall Wright. "Top 100 Teams: 71. 1909 San Francisco Seals". Minor League Baseball. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
  2. ^ "PCL top 10". Los Angeles Times. March 30, 2003. p. D9 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "1909 San Francisco Seals Stats". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
  4. ^ P.J. Dragseth (2013). The 1957 San Francisco Seals: End of an Era in the Pacific Coast League. McFarland. pp. 13–14. ISBN 978-0786465453.
  5. ^ Herman F. Budde (June 9, 1909). Fans Set Baseball Mad Seeing Wiggs and Henley Pitch 24-Inning Game: Seals Triumph in Record-Breaking Battle. p. 11. {{cite book}}: |newspaper= ignored (help)
  6. ^ "Henry Melchoir". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  7. ^ "Doc Miller". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  8. ^ "Rollie Zeider". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  9. ^ "Ping Bodie". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 18, 2020.

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