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Hot stove league

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the baseball term. For the South Korean television series, seeHot Stove League (TV series).
Term for baseball's off-season

Inbaseball,hot stove league is the sport'soff-season.[1] The phrase does not denote an actual league, but instead calls up images of baseball fans gathering around a hotstove during the coldwinter months, discussing their favorite baseball teams and players.[2][3] During this time, players move to other teams more actively. Fans are also interested in the new season when they see the news of the transfer.

The term has also come to refer to the wave ofMLB player transactions (contract negotiations, re-signings, trades,free agency, etc.) that occur between seasons. Since most free-agent signings and trades occur during the off-season, this time of significant player transactions (including rumors and speculation about possible trades), is often referred to as thehot stove league or more simply, thehot stove.

History

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Pot-bellied stove

According toProfessor James Hardy, the termhot stove league dates from nineteenth-century small town America when, during the winter, people "gathered at the general store/post office, sat around an iron pot-bellied stove, and discussed the passing parade. Baseball, along with weather, politics, the police blotter and the churches, belonged in that company".[4] Hardy states that the term was popularly employed bysportswriters untilWorld War II, after which rural America gave way to larger, urban centers. Baseball analysis and conversation became the province of radio and television commentators, with off-season chatter becoming less interactive and more impersonal.[5]

According to David Anderson, the news and coverage provided by hot stove league newspaper columnists during the first half of the 20th century, when professional football and basketball had not yet come into being, gave baseball its foothold as "the national pastime and dominant professional sport for more than half of the twentieth century".[6] The hot stove league was especially important in the era of thereserve clause, when the only leverage a player had to receive more money or better contract provisions was to hold out from re-signing, refuse to play, or threaten to retire. During the off-season, when contract negotiations were underway, the rumors and reports were frequent, and fans kept up with the news through hot stove league chatter. The introduction of free agency reduced the importance of the hot stove league.[6]

In the twenty-first century, the term is still used to describe the "endless discussions", speculation and predictions bandied about by "baseball fans, baseball columnists, baseball bloggers, baseball writers, baseball podcasters and baseball radio talk show hosts" to fill the time between the end of the Major League BaseballWinter Meetings and the start ofspring training.[7][8][9] TheMLB Network's daily off-season show of record is calledHot Stove.[10] Often times, teams will post updates of their prospects playing inwinter leagues, which run from middle November to February with the championship series in the Caribbean (Caribbean Series) or Australia (Claxton Shield).

Other uses

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Hot Stove League was the name of a radio segment featuring hockey chatter and analysis that was broadcast between periods on the radio showHockey Night in Canada beginning in 1939.[11] The segment became a pre-game series onCBC Television in the 1950s.[12][13]

Hot Stove League (Korean: 스토브리그; RR:Seutobeu Ligeu; lit.Stove League) is also a 2019 South Korean television series about an underdog baseball team.

Notes

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References

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  1. ^Kirksey, George (January 10, 1938)."Hot stove baseball".Pittsburgh Press. United Press. p. 23.
  2. ^Rielly 2005, p. 261.
  3. ^Martinez 2000, p. 284.
  4. ^Hardy 2007, p. 8.
  5. ^Hardy 2007, pp. 8–9.
  6. ^abAnderson 2003, p. 36.
  7. ^Mahony 2014, p. 199.
  8. ^Dahlgren & Sparks 1992, p. 193.
  9. ^Brand 2007, p. 183.
  10. ^"Hot Stove".MLB.com. 2015.
  11. ^Young 1990, p. 87.
  12. ^"The Virtual Hot Stove".CBC Television. 2014. Retrieved27 December 2014.
  13. ^Nolan 2001, p. 184.

Sources

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