TheContinental League of Professional Baseball Clubs (known as theContinental League orCL) was a proposed thirdmajor league forbaseball in the United States and Canada. The league was announced in 1959 and scheduled to begin play in the 1961 season. Unlike previous attempts at competitor leagues toMajor League Baseball such as thePlayers' League (1890) and theFederal League (1913-1915), the Continental League sought membership and acceptance within organized baseball, as attempts to form outsider leagues could be quashed per a1922 Supreme Court case that declared Major League Baseball exempt from federal antitrust laws.[1] The league disbanded in August 1960 without playing a single game as a concession by lawyerWilliam Shea as part of his negotiations with Major League Baseball to expand to incorporate at least eight new teams.
The move of theNew York Giants (to San Francisco) and theBrooklyn Dodgers (to Los Angeles) following the 1957 season led New York City mayorRobert F. Wagner Jr. to appoint a four-man committee to bring the National League back to the city in 1958. Early overtures to entice one of the other six existing NL teams – theCincinnati Redlegs,Philadelphia Phillies, andPittsburgh Pirates were reportedly approached – were abandoned.
The Continental League was the idea of attorneyWilliam Shea, who proposed it in November 1958. On July 27, 1959, the new league was formally announced, with teams inDenver,Houston,Minneapolis–St. Paul,New York City, andToronto.[2] The name of the league was said to have been the suggestion of Colorado senatorEdwin C. Johnson.
Representing the team owners at the announcement wereBob Howsam (Denver),Craig F. Cullinan Jr. (Houston),Wheelock Whitney Jr. (Minneapolis–St. Paul), Dwight F. Davis, Jr., who was representing the group headed byJoan Whitney Payson (New York), andJack Kent Cooke (Toronto). Owners in each city had agreed to pay $50,000 to the league and committed to a capital investment of $2.5 million, not including stadium costs. A minimumseating capacity of 35,000 was established by the league for the venues in which its teams would play.
At least three other teams were expected to be in place before play began in 1961, and the league said it had received applications from 10 cities. The three that were later selected wereAtlanta (announced December 8, 1959),[3]Dallas–Fort Worth (announced December 22, 1959),[4] andBuffalo (backed byRobert O. Swados and announced on January 29, 1960).[5] Former Dodgers presidentBranch Rickey was named league president on August 18, 1959.[6] Appearing in that capacity as a guest on the liveCBS broadcast ofWhat's My Line on Sunday, September 13, 1959, he pronounced the new league as "Inevitable as tomorrow morning."[7]
On February 18, 1960, Rickey and Cooke announced an opening date of April 18, 1961.[8]
The Major League Baseball commissioner's office was noncommittal on the issue. At that time, however, theAmerican League and theNational League enjoyed far more autonomy than they do today, answering more to their constituent owners (who were universally hostile to the new league) than to the Commissioner's Office. They reacted to the formation of the new league by announcing plans to expand by adding two teams in each of the existing leagues. Priority would be given, it was stated, to cities that did not have Major League Baseball. Accordingly, the NL placed one of its expansion teams inHouston (the then-Houston Colt .45s, now the American League Astros), a Continental League city without an existing Major League Baseball team.
Though the AL placed one of its expansion teams (theWashington Senators, now theTexas Rangers) in a previously existing Major League Baseball city (Washington, D.C.), this was done to replace theoriginal Senators team, which had relocated toMinneapolis–St. Paul and became theMinnesota Twins. Like Houston, the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul were a Continental League city without an existing Major League Baseball team.
However, notwithstanding aforementioned promise to expand to non-MLB cities, the National League owners had always had misgivings regarding their apparent ceding of the nation's largest market to the American League. Thus, once expansion was committed to, it was virtually inevitable the NL would return to New York City. The NL opted to offer its tenth franchise to the owners of the Continental League New York team, who immediately accepted, effectively killing any attempt to revive the proposed league. This franchise would become theNew York Mets. The AL then followed by placing a second expansion team in Los Angeles, theAngels, giving the American League its first presence on the West Coast.
With Shea's mission to bring the National League back to New York successful, he stopped championing the Continental League's formation. The promise of expansion achieved the owners' desired effect; on August 2, 1960, the Continental League formally disbanded.
Baseball historians concur that even without the imminent threat of a third major league, Major League Baseball expansion would inevitably have happened due to such factors as pressure from Congress, the rapid growth of professional football, and the replacement of conservative long-tenured owners with younger businessmen who tended to be far more amenable to expansion. Nevertheless, the Continental League undoubtedly compelled MLB to hasten expansion by several years. Although Major League Baseball had succeeded in preventing the launch of an eight-team CL, it only did so by committing to eventually add eight franchises of its own. MLB finished honoring this commitment in 1969 when the AL and NL each added two more teams for a total of eight over the course of the decade, thereby matching the total number of new teams envisioned by the Continental League.
Although William Shea's efforts to create a third major league are not well known today,Shea Stadium, home of the New York Mets from 1964 to 2008, was named in his honor for his efforts in bringing National League baseball back to New York. Over the next two decades, Shea would become involved in efforts to secure second franchises for the New York metropolitan area in each of the other three major sports. He brokered the 1963 sale of the Titans of New York (now known as theNew York Jets) fromHarry Wismer toSonny Werblin, ensuring the survival of the then-strugglingAmerican Football League franchise, and then worked to bring theNew York Nets of theAmerican Basketball Association to Nassau Coliseum. Shea also helped negotiate the mergers of both rival leagues with the establishedNational Football League andNational Basketball Association respectively. On the other hand, he actively opposed efforts to establish aWorld Hockey Association team onLong Island by successfully lobbying theNational Hockey League and theNew York Rangers to award an NHL franchise (theNew York Islanders) toNassau County.[9]
Of the eight proposed Continental League cities, all but one eventually received relocated or expansion Major League Baseball franchises –Minneapolis–St. Paul in 1961,Houston andNew York in 1962,Atlanta in 1966,Dallas–Fort Worth in 1972,Toronto in 1977, andDenver in 1993. Buffalo, although it made efforts to lure an MLB team to then-newPilot Field in the early 1990s, has not succeeded in bringing Major League Baseball back. (There had been a major league team in Buffaloin the nineteenth century.) Buffalo remains home to theBuffalo Bisons, a team in the Triple-AInternational League. Buffalo also played host to the majority of Toronto Blue Jays home games for the2020 season and part of thenext season due to cross-border travel restrictions caused by theCOVID-19 pandemic.[10]
What is still in place, firmly, is Major League Baseball's ability to work to thwart competitors, if any ever arise, and its ability to carve out protected geographic territories for its clubs and anti-competitive contract rights for its clubs.