Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Cleveland Spiders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American baseball team (1887–1899)
For the minor league team known as the Cleveland Spiders, seeCleveland Bearcats.

Cleveland Spiders

Logo
1892 team photo atLeague Park, with the original wooden stands visible in the background
Information
Affiliations
LocationCleveland,Ohio
Ballpark
Founded1887
Folded1899
Temple Cup championships1 (1895)
Former nameForest Citys / Cleveland Blues
(1887–1888)
Colors
    • Black, dark gray, white
    •    
OwnershipFrank Robison &Stanley Robison
(1887–1899)
Manager

TheCleveland Spiders were an American professionalbaseball team based inCleveland,Ohio. The team competed at themajor league level from 1887 to 1899, first for two seasons as a member of the now-defunctAmerican Association (AA), followed by eleven seasons in theNational League (NL). Early names for the team included theForest Citys andBlues. The name Spiders itself emerged early in the team'sinaugural NL season of 1889, owing to new black-and-gray uniforms and the skinny, long-limbed look of many players (thereby evoking thespider arachnid).National League Park served as the team's home for its first four seasons until the opening ofLeague Park in 1891.

Amid seven straight winning seasons under managerPatsy Tebeau, the team finished second in the National League three times – in1892,1895, and1896. While the Spiders never won theNational League pennant, the club did win the 1895Temple Cup, a two-team league championship playoffpredating the World Series. The Spiders beat that year's pennant winner, theBaltimore Orioles (unrelated to themodern franchise), four games to one in a best-of-seven game series. Six Spiders players were later inducted into theNational Baseball Hall of Fame, including left fielderJesse Burkett and pitcherCy Young.

In 1899, ownersFrank andStanley Robison purchased a second team – the bankruptSt. Louis NL franchise – and sent all of the Spiders' top talent to that club, including future Hall-of-Famers Young, Burkett, andBobby Wallace. The resulting Spiders roster finished the1899 season 20–134, a record which remains theworst for a single season in major league history. The Spiders were subsequently one of four teams contracted by the National Leaguethat year. Partly in response to the Robison brothers' actions – which effectively ended the Spiders franchise – the practice of "syndicate ownership" was later banned.

Spiders outfielderLouis Sockalexis played for the team during its final three seasons and is often credited as the firstNative American to play major league baseball. TheCleveland Guardians, major league successor to the Spiders in Cleveland, have long cited Sockalexis as the inspiration for theircontroversial former team name – "Indians" – though that claim is disputed.[1]

History

[edit]

The Spiders were the third professional baseball franchise based in Cleveland. The first team,Forest City, which played from 1870 through 1872, was initially an independent team before joining theNational Association of Professional Base Ball Players for two seasons before disbanding. They were followed in 1879 by the city's firstNational League team, theCleveland Blues, which folded after the 1884 season.[2]

1887–1888

[edit]

After the 1886 season, thePittsburgh Alleghenys left theAmerican Association (AA) to join the National League. The AA, then considered amajor league, chose the Cleveland group headed byFrank Robison as an expansion team to begin play in 1887 over proposals from Kansas City and Detroit. Later, Robison's brotherStanley was added to the ownership group. Initially, the team was known as the Forest Citys, drawing on the city's nickname and the nickname that had been used on the city's two previous professional baseball teams. The nickname Blues was also used again in reference to the team uniforms.[2][3] The Forest Citys were a weak team in their early years.

1889–1898

[edit]
Cy Young in 1891

In1889, they moved to theNational League and became known as the Spiders, reportedly after comments from a team executive assessing the players.[4] Frank H. Brunell, this team executive who also doubled as sportswriter forThe Plain Dealer, noted the combination of the team's new black-and-gray uniforms together with the sight of several skinny, long-limbed players. He joked the team should be called "Spiders", and the name stuck.[2] The team started to improve in1891, largely due to the signing of futureBaseball Hall of Fame pitcherCy Young.[3]

The Spiders had their first taste of success in 1892 when they finished 93–56 overall; winning the second half by three games over Boston with a 53–23 record. Other than standoutsecond basemanCupid Childs, the Spiders had an unremarkable offense. Their success in 1892 was built on pitching strength; Cy Young was the NL's most dominant hurler, and 22-year-oldGeorge Cuppy had an outstandingrookie year. Following the season, a "World's Championship Series" exhibition was played between Cleveland and the first-half winnerBoston Beaneaters, but the Spiders could only muster one tie in six games.

1895 Cleveland Spiders team

In 1895, the Spiders again finished second, this time to the equally rough-and-tumbleBaltimore Orioles. Young again led the league inwins, and speedyleft fielderJesse Burkett won thebatting title with a .409 average. The Spiders won theTemple Cup, an 1890s postseason series between the first- and second-place teams in the NL. Amid fan rowdyism and garbage-throwing, the Spiders won four of five games against Baltimore, including two wins for Cy Young.

The 1895 championship was the high-water mark for the franchise. The following season, Baltimore and Cleveland again finished first and second in the NL, but in the battle for the 1896 Temple Cup, the second-place Spiders were swept in four games. In 1897, despite a winning record, the franchise finished fifth, a season highlighted by Young throwing the first of three careerno-hitters on September 18. The Spiders again finished fifth in 1898.

1899 season

[edit]
Main article:1899 Cleveland Spiders season

In 1899, the Spiders' owners, the Robison brothers, bought theSt. Louis Browns out of bankruptcy and changed their name to the Perfectos. However, they kept the Spiders as well—a blatant conflict of interest. Believing the Perfectos would draw greater attendance in more densely populated St. Louis, the Robisons transferred most of the Cleveland stars, including future Baseball Hall of FamersCy Young,Jesse Burkett, andBobby Wallace, to St. Louis. They also shifted a large number of Cleveland home games to the road (for instance, the originalOpening Day game was shifted to St. Louis).

With a decimated roster, the Spiders made a wretched showing. They finished with a dismal win-loss record of 20–134 (.130), theworst in MLB history, 84 games behind the pennant-winningBrooklyn Superbas and 35 games behind the next-to-last (11th) placeWashington Senators. Their batting records were the worst in the league in runs, hits, doubles, triples, home runs, walks, stolen bases, on-base percentage, and slugging percentage.[5]

The Robisons announced after buying the Perfectos that they intended to run the Spiders as a "sideshow", and Cleveland fans apparently took them at their word. The Spiders' first 16 home games drew a total of 3,179 fans, or an average of 199 fans per game. Due to these meager attendance figures, the other 11 NL teams refused to come to League Park, as their cut of the revenue from ticket sales did not even begin to cover their hotel and travel expenses. The Spiders were thus forced to play 85 of their remaining 93 games on the road. Counting the large number of home games that had been shifted to the road earlier in the season, they only played 42 home games during the season, including only eight after July 1, and finished 9–33 (.214) at home and 11–101 (.098) on the road. Only 6,088 fans paid to attend Spiders home games in 1899, for a pitiful average of a mere 145 spectators per game in 9,000-seat League Park.

The 101 road losses is a major-league record that will never be threatened, as current scheduling practices have teams play a maximum of 81 away games. The team's longest winning streak of the season was two games, which they accomplished once: on May 20–21. Spiders opponents scored ten or more runs 49 times in 154 games. Pitchers Jim Hughey (4–30) and Charlie Knepper (4–22) tied for the team lead in wins.

The 1962New York Mets, 40–120 (.250), and the 2024Chicago White Sox, 41–121 (.253), own the modern records in their respective leagues for the most losses, and thus draw frequent comparisons to the 1899 Spiders for futility.

Legacy

[edit]

The Robisons' decision to effectively reduce the Spiders tominor league status, along with other intra-league raiding such as that conducted by the Dodgers and to a lesser extent thePittsburgh Pirates, unwittingly helped pave the way to the National League's loss of its major league monopoly. The 12th-place Spiders were one of four teams contracted out of the National League at the end of the 1899 season (the others were the 11th-place Senators, the ninth-placeLouisville Colonels and the bankrupt fourth-placeBaltimore Orioles). The 1899 fiasco played a role in the major leagues passing a rule which barred one person from owning controlling interest in two clubs.

The Robisons sold the assets of the Spiders team to Charles Somers and John Kilfoyle in 1900.[6] In 1900, the then-minor American League (previously the Western League) moved theGrand Rapids (baseball) team in to take the Spiders' place, and called the Cleveland Lake Shores. In 1901, after theAmerican League declared major league status, the team was called the Cleveland Blues, eventually the Cleveland Indians, and now theCleveland Guardians.

The Cleveland Guardians have long claimed Spiders outfielderLouis Sockalexis as the inspiration for theircontroversial former team name – "Indians" – in use from1915 to2021. Sockalexis played three seasons for the Cleveland Spiders, from 1897 to 1899, and is often credited as the firstNative American to play professional baseball at the major league level. During his time with the Spiders, the press often referred to the team as the Indians or "Tebeau's Indians".[7] The Cleveland Guardians claim has been disputed, however, including in a 2012Cleveland Scene essay titled "The Curse ofChief Wahoo", which argues the organization cited Sockalexis in part to justify use of the "Indians" name.[8]

Baseball Hall of Famers

[edit]
Cleveland Spiders Hall of Famers
Affiliation according to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
Cleveland Spiders

Jesse Burkett *
John Clarkson

George Davis
Buck Ewing

Bobby Wallace
Cy Young *

  • Players and managers listed inbold are depicted on their Hall of Fame plaques wearing a cap insignia.
  • * Cleveland Spiders listed as primary team according to the Hall of Fame

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Posnanski, Joe (March 18, 2014)."The Cleveland Indians, Louis Sockalexis, and The Name".NBC Sports. RetrievedJuly 1, 2023.
  2. ^abcFleitz, p. 22. "Brunell suggested, jokingly, that such a gangly, long-limbed collection of ballplayers in their black and gray uniforms should be called Spiders. And so they were. Brunell first used the name Spiders in hisPlain Dealer column on May 12."
  3. ^ab"Cleveland Spiders".Encyclopedia of Cleveland History.Case Western Reserve University. May 11, 2018. RetrievedJuly 13, 2020.
  4. ^Light, p. 205. "... a club executive assessing their shapes supposedly said: 'They look skinny and spindly, just like spiders. Might as well call them Spiders and be done with it.' "
  5. ^"1899 Cleveland Spiders Statistics".
  6. ^"Frank Robison".Encyclopedia of Cleveland History.Case Western Reserve University. May 11, 2018. RetrievedJuly 13, 2020.
  7. ^Fleitz, David."Louis Sockalexis".SABR.org.Society for American Baseball Research. RetrievedJuly 13, 2020.
  8. ^Pattakos, Peter (April 25, 2012)."The Curse of Chief Wahoo".Cleveland Scene. Archived fromthe original on January 17, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 16, 2014.
Books

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toCleveland Spiders.
  • Defunct; existed18871899
  • Formerly theForest Citys andCleveland Blues
  • Based inCleveland,Ohio
Franchise
Ballparks
Owners
Culture and lore
Postseason appearances
Championships
Hall of Famers
League affiliations
Seasons (13)
1880s
1890s
Transferred to
National League
Still active
Now defunct
Defunct
Years in parentheses are years in the American Association
Histories of teams inMajor League Baseball
American
League
East
Central
West
National
League
East
Central
West
Relocated
teams
American League
Milwaukee Brewers (1901) •St. Louis Browns (1902–1953) •Philadelphia Athletics (1901–1954) •Washington Senators (1901–1960) •Kansas City Athletics (1955–1967) •Seattle Pilots (1969) •Washington Senators (1961–1971) •Oakland Athletics (1968–2024)
National League
Boston Braves (1871–1952) •New York Giants (1883–1957) •Brooklyn Dodgers (1890–1957) •Milwaukee Braves (1953–1965) •Montreal Expos (1969–2004)
Defunct
teams
American League
Baltimore Orioles (1901–1902)
National League
New York Mutuals (1876) •Athletic of Philadelphia (1876) •Hartford Dark Blues (1876–1877) •St. Louis Brown Stockings (1876–1877) •Louisville Grays (1876–1877) •Indianapolis Blues (1878) •Milwaukee Grays (1878) •Syracuse Stars (1878) •Cincinnati Red Stockings (1876–1879) •Cincinnati Stars (1880) •Worcester Worcesters (1880–1882) •Providence Grays (1878–1885) •Buffalo Bisons (1879–1885) •Cleveland Blues (1879–1884) •Troy Trojans (1879–1882) •St. Louis Maroons (1885–1886) •Kansas City Cowboys (1886) •Detroit Wolverines (1881–1888) •Indianapolis Hoosiers (1887–1889) •Washington Nationals (1886–1889) •Cleveland Spiders (1889–1899) •Baltimore Orioles (1892–1899) •Louisville Colonels (1892–1899) •Washington Senators (1892–1899)
International
National
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cleveland_Spiders&oldid=1323530286"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp