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1941 Brooklyn Dodgers season

The 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers, led by manager Leo Durocher, won their first pennant in 21 years, edging the St. Louis Cardinals by 2.5 games. They went on to lose to the New York Yankees in the World Series.

In The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract, this team was referenced as one of "The Greatest Teams That Never Was", due to the quality of its starting lineup. Dolph Camilli was the slugging star with 34 home runs and 120 RBI. He was voted the National League's Most Valuable Player. Pete Reiser, a 22-year-old rookie, led the league in batting average, slugging percentage, and runs scored. Other regulars included Hall of Famers Billy Herman, Joe Medwick, Pee Wee Reese, and Dixie Walker. Not surprisingly, the Dodgers scored the most runs of any NL team (800).

The pitching staff featured a pair of 22-game winners, Kirby Higbe and Whitlow Wyatt, having their best pro seasons.

On July 1, the Dodgers played the Phillies in Brooklyn; the game was televised by WNBT in New York (now WNBC), making the contest the first program aired by a commercial TV station in the United States. Although the Dodgers would later win the pennant and the Phillies would finish dead last in the NL, Philadelphia won the game 6–4, in 10 innings.[1]

Offseason edit

Regular season edit

Season standings edit

National League W L Pct. GB Home Road
Brooklyn Dodgers 100 54 0.649 52–25 48–29
St. Louis Cardinals 97 56 0.634 53–24 44–32
Cincinnati Reds 88 66 0.571 12 45–34 43–32
Pittsburgh Pirates 81 73 0.526 19 45–32 36–41
New York Giants 74 79 0.484 25½ 38–39 36–40
Chicago Cubs 70 84 0.455 30 38–39 32–45
Boston Braves 62 92 0.403 38 32–44 30–48
Philadelphia Phillies 43 111 0.279 57 23–52 20–59

Record vs. opponents edit


Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
Team BOS BR CHC CIN NYG PHI PIT STL
Boston 4–18–2 11–11 9–13 6–16 14–8 10–12 8–14
Brooklyn 18–4–2 13–9 14–8 14–8 18–4 12–10 11–11–1
Chicago 11–11 9–13 8–14 9–13 14–8–1 9–13 10–12
Cincinnati 13–9 8–14 14–8 15–7 16–6 12–10 10–12
New York 16–6 8–14 13–9 7–15 16–6 8–14–2 6–15–1
Philadelphia 8–14 4–18 8–14–1 6–16 6–16 6–16 5–17
Pittsburgh 12–10 10–12 13–9 10–12 14–8–2 16–6 6–16
St. Louis 14–8 11–11–1 12–10 12–10 15–6–1 17–5 16–6


Notable transactions edit

Roster edit

Player stats edit

= Indicates team leader

Batting edit

Starters by position edit

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases

Pos Player G AB R H Avg. HR RBI SB
C Mickey Owen 128 386 32 89 .231 1 44 1
1B Dolph Camilli 149 529 92 151 .285 34 120 3
2B Billy Herman 133 536 77 156 .291 3 41 1
3B Cookie Lavagetto 132 441 75 122 .277 1 78 7
SS Pee Wee Reese 152 595 76 136 .229 2 46 10
OF Dixie Walker 148 531 88 165 .311 9 71 4
OF Pete Reiser 137 536 117 184 .343 14 76 4
OF Joe Medwick 133 538 100 171 .318 18 88 2

Other batters edit

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases

Player G AB R H Avg. HR RBI SB
Jimmy Wasdell 94 265 39 79 .298 4 48 2
Lew Riggs 77 197 27 60 .305 5 36 1
Herman Franks 57 139 10 28 .201 1 11 0
Pete Coscarart 43 62 13 8 .129 0 5 1
Joe Vosmik 25 56 0 11 .196 0 4 0
Alex Kampouris 16 51 8 16 .314 2 9 0
Leo Durocher 18 42 2 12 .286 0 6 0
Paul Waner 11 35 5 6 .171 0 4 0
Babe Phelps 16 30 3 7 .233 2 4 0
Augie Galan 17 27 3 7 .259 0 4 0
Tommy Tatum 8 12 1 2 .167 0 1 0
Tony Giuliani 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
George Pfister 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pitching edit

Starting pitchers edit

Note: G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; CG = Complete games; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; BB = Bases on balls; SO = Strikeouts

Player G GS CG IP W L ERA BB SO
Kirby Higbe 48 39 19 298.0 22 9 3.14 132 121
Whit Wyatt 38 35 23 288.1 22 10 2.34 82 176
Freddie Fitzsimmons 13 12 3 82.2 6 1 2.07 26 19
Ed Albosta 2 2 0 13.0 0 2 6.23 8 5

Other pitchers edit

Note: G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; CG = Complete games; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; BB = Bases on balls; SO = Strikeouts

Player G GS CG IP W L ERA BB SO
Hugh Casey 45 18 4 162.0 14 11 3.89 57 61
Curt Davis 28 16 10 154.1 13 7 2.97 27 50
Luke Hamlin 30 20 5 136.0 8 8 4.24 41 58
Johnny Allen 11 4 2 57.1 3 0 2.51 12 21
Newt Kimball 15 5 1 52.0 3 1 3.63 29 17
Tom Drake 10 2 0 24.2 1 1 4.38 12 21
Larry French 6 1 0 15.2 0 0 3.45 4 8
Lee Grissom 4 1 0 11.1 0 0 2.38 8 5

Note: Hugh Casey was team leader in saves with 7.

Relief pitchers edit

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; BB = Bases on balls; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L SV ERA BB SO
Mace Brown 24 42.2 3 2 3 3.16 26 22
Kemp Wicker 16 32.0 1 2 1 3.66 14 8
Vito Tamulis 12 22.0 0 0 1 3.68 10 8
Bill Swift 9 22.0 3 0 1 3.27 7 9
Bob Chipman 1 5.0 1 0 0 0.00 1 3
Van Mungo 2 2.0 0 0 0 4.50 2 0

1941 World Series edit

The 1941 World Series matched the New York Yankees against the Dodgers, with the Yankees winning in five games to capture their fifth title in six years, and their ninth overall.

The name "Subway Series" arose for a World Series played between two New York City teams. The series was punctuated by the Dodgers' Mickey Owen's dropped third strike of a sharply breaking curveball (a suspected spitball) pitched by Hugh Casey to Tommy Henrich in the 9th inning of Game 4. The play led to a Yankees rally and brought them one win away from another championship.

The Yankees were back after a one-year hiatus, having won thirteen (13) of their last fourteen (14) Series games and twenty-eight (28) of their last thirty-one (31) games in the World Series.

This was the first Subway Series between the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees, who had already faced the crosstown New York Giants five times, and the Series was now 1–0 in favor of the Bronx Bombers. These two teams would meet a total of seven (7) times from 1941 to 1956 – the Dodgers' only victory coming in 1955.

Game 1 edit

October 1, 1941, at Yankee Stadium in New York

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Brooklyn (N) 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 2 6 0
New York (A) 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 x 3 6 1
W: Red Ruffing (1–0)   L: Curt Davis (0–1)
HR: NYYJoe Gordon (1)

Game 2 edit

October 2, 1941, at Yankee Stadium in New York

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Brooklyn (N) 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 3 6 2
New York (A) 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 9 1
W: Whit Wyatt (1–0)   L: Spud Chandler (0–1)

Game 3 edit

October 4, 1941, at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
New York (A) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 8 0
Brooklyn (N) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 4 0
W: Marius Russo (1–0)  L: Hugh Casey (0–1)

Game 4 edit

October 5, 1941, at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
New York (A) 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 7 12 0
Brooklyn (N) 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 4 9 1
W: Johnny Murphy (1–0)  L: Hugh Casey (0–2)
HR: : BROPete Reiser (1)

Game 5 edit

October 6, 1941, at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
New York (A) 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 6 0
Brooklyn (N) 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 1
W: Tiny Bonham (1–0)  L: Whit Wyatt (1–1)
HR: : NYYTommy Henrich (1)

Awards and honors edit

 
Whit Wyatt had a career season in 1941.

League top ten finishers edit

Dolph Camilli

  • NL leader in home runs (34)
  • NL leader in RBI (120)
  • #2 in NL in slugging percentage (.556)
  • #2 in NL in bases on balls (104)
  • #3 in NL in on-base percentage (.407)

Hugh Casey

Kirby Higbe

  • NL leader in wins (22)
  • #4 in NL in strikeouts (121)

Joe Medwick

  • #3 in NL in batting average (.318)
  • #3 in NL in runs scored (100)

Pete Reiser

  • NL leader in batting average (.343)
  • NL leader in slugging percentage (.558)
  • NL leader in runs scored (117)
  • NL leader in triples (17)
  • #4 in NL in on-base percentage (.406)

Whit Wyatt

  • MLB leader in shutouts (7)
  • NL leader in wins (22)
  • #2 in NL in strikeouts (176)
  • #2 in NL in ERA (2.34)
  • #2 in NL in complete games (23)

Farm system edit

Level Team League Manager
AA Montreal Royals International League Clyde Sukeforth
A1 Knoxville Smokies Southern Association Fred Lindstrom
B Reading Brooks Interstate League Fresco Thompson
B Durham Bulls Piedmont League Bruno Betzel
C Santa Barbara Saints California League John Clancy
C Quebec Athletics Canadian–American League Del Bissonette
Roland Gladu
C Grand Rapids Colts Michigan State League Charles Lucas
C Dayton Ducks Middle Atlantic League Paul Chervinko
Howard Holmes
William McWilliams
C Troy Dodgers/Tuskegee Airmen Alabama State League Orace Powers
D Elizabethton Betsy Red Sox Appalachian League Hobe Brummitt
D Valdosta Trojans Georgia–Florida League Stew Hofferth
D Newport Dodgers Northeast Arkansas League Merle Settlemire
D Johnstown Johnnies Pennsylvania State Association George Treadwell
D Olean Oilers Pennsylvania–Ontario–New York League Jake Pitler
D Big Spring Bombers West Texas–New Mexico League Joe Tate

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Montreal, Durham, Santa Barbara, Elizebethton, Newport

Notes edit

  1. ^ Baseball Reference
  2. ^ a b Vito Tamulis at Baseball-Reference
  3. ^ Tot Pressnell at Baseball-Reference
  4. ^ Boze Berger at Baseball-Reference
  5. ^ Glen Stewart at Baseball-Reference
  6. ^ Gus Mancuso at Baseball-Reference
  7. ^ Pep Young at Baseball-Reference
  8. ^ Pep Rambert at Baseball-Reference
  9. ^ a b Lefty Mills at Baseball-Reference
  10. ^ Wally Westlake at Baseball-Reference
  11. ^ Roxie Lawson at Baseball-Reference
  12. ^ Newt Kimball at Baseball-Reference
  13. ^ a b Mace Brown at Baseball-Reference
  14. ^ Johnny Hudson at Baseball-Reference
  15. ^ Joe Becker at Baseball-Reference

References edit

  • Baseball-Reference season page
  • Baseball Almanac season page

External links edit

  • 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers uniform
  • Brooklyn Dodgers reference site
  • Acme Dodgers page September 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  • Retrosheet

1941, brooklyn, dodgers, season, this, article, about, baseball, team, team, 1941, brooklyn, dodgers, season, 1941, brooklyn, dodgers, manager, durocher, their, first, pennant, years, edging, louis, cardinals, games, they, went, lose, york, yankees, world, ser. This article is about the baseball team For the NFL team see 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers NFL season The 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers led by manager Leo Durocher won their first pennant in 21 years edging the St Louis Cardinals by 2 5 games They went on to lose to the New York Yankees in the World Series 1941 Brooklyn DodgersNational League ChampionsLeagueNational LeagueBallparkEbbets FieldCityBrooklyn New YorkOwnersJames amp Dearie Mulvey Brooklyn Trust CompanyPresidentLarry MacPhailManagersLeo DurocherRadioWORRed Barber Al Helfer 19401942 In The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract this team was referenced as one of The Greatest Teams That Never Was due to the quality of its starting lineup Dolph Camilli was the slugging star with 34 home runs and 120 RBI He was voted the National League s Most Valuable Player Pete Reiser a 22 year old rookie led the league in batting average slugging percentage and runs scored Other regulars included Hall of Famers Billy Herman Joe Medwick Pee Wee Reese and Dixie Walker Not surprisingly the Dodgers scored the most runs of any NL team 800 The pitching staff featured a pair of 22 game winners Kirby Higbe and Whitlow Wyatt having their best pro seasons On July 1 the Dodgers played the Phillies in Brooklyn the game was televised by WNBT in New York now WNBC making the contest the first program aired by a commercial TV station in the United States Although the Dodgers would later win the pennant and the Phillies would finish dead last in the NL Philadelphia won the game 6 4 in 10 innings 1 Contents 1 Offseason 2 Regular season 2 1 Season standings 2 2 Record vs opponents 2 3 Notable transactions 2 4 Roster 3 Player stats 3 1 Batting 3 1 1 Starters by position 3 1 2 Other batters 3 2 Pitching 3 2 1 Starting pitchers 3 2 2 Other pitchers 3 2 3 Relief pitchers 4 1941 World Series 4 1 Game 1 4 2 Game 2 4 3 Game 3 4 4 Game 4 4 5 Game 5 5 Awards and honors 5 1 League top ten finishers 6 Farm system 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksOffseason editNovember 11 1940 Vito Tamulis Bill Crouch Mickey Livingston and cash were traded by the Dodgers to the Philadelphia Phillies for Kirby Higbe 2 November 19 1940 Tot Pressnell was purchased from the Dodgers by the St Louis Cardinals 3 December 1940 Boze Berger was traded by the Dodgers to the New York Yankees for Jack Graham 4 December 4 1940 Glen Stewart was purchased by the Dodgers from the New York Giants 5 December 4 1940 Gus Mancuso minor leaguer John Pintar and cash were traded by the Dodgers to the St Louis Cardinals for Mickey Owen 6 December 9 1940 Pep Young was traded by the Dodgers to the Cincinnati Reds for Lew Riggs 7 January 27 1941 Pep Rambert was purchased by the Dodgers from the Pittsburgh Pirates 8 February 4 1941 Lefty Mills was purchased by the Dodgers from the St Louis Browns 9 Prior to 1941 season Wally Westlake was acquired from the Dodgers by the Merced Bears 10 Regular season editSeason standings edit vteNational League W L Pct GB Home Road Brooklyn Dodgers 100 54 0 649 52 25 48 29 St Louis Cardinals 97 56 0 634 2 53 24 44 32 Cincinnati Reds 88 66 0 571 12 45 34 43 32 Pittsburgh Pirates 81 73 0 526 19 45 32 36 41 New York Giants 74 79 0 484 25 38 39 36 40 Chicago Cubs 70 84 0 455 30 38 39 32 45 Boston Braves 62 92 0 403 38 32 44 30 48 Philadelphia Phillies 43 111 0 279 57 23 52 20 59 Record vs opponents edit 1941 National League recordvteSources 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Team BOS BR CHC CIN NYG PHI PIT STL Boston 4 18 2 11 11 9 13 6 16 14 8 10 12 8 14 Brooklyn 18 4 2 13 9 14 8 14 8 18 4 12 10 11 11 1 Chicago 11 11 9 13 8 14 9 13 14 8 1 9 13 10 12 Cincinnati 13 9 8 14 14 8 15 7 16 6 12 10 10 12 New York 16 6 8 14 13 9 7 15 16 6 8 14 2 6 15 1 Philadelphia 8 14 4 18 8 14 1 6 16 6 16 6 16 5 17 Pittsburgh 12 10 10 12 13 9 10 12 14 8 2 16 6 6 16 St Louis 14 8 11 11 1 12 10 12 10 15 6 1 17 5 16 6 Notable transactions edit April 3 1941 Roxie Lawson was purchased by the Dodgers from the St Louis Browns 11 April 15 1941 Newt Kimball was purchased by the Dodgers from the St Louis Cardinals 12 April 15 1941 Lefty Mills was returned by the Dodgers to the St Louis Browns 9 April 22 1941 Mace Brown was purchased by the Dodgers from the Pittsburgh Pirates 13 May 6 1941 Lee Grissom was traded by the Dodgers to the Philadelphia Phillies for Vito Tamulis 2 May 6 1941 Johnny Hudson Charlie Gilbert and cash were traded by the Dodgers to the Chicago Cubs for Billy Herman 14 August 14 1941 Joe Becker George Staller and minor leaguers John S Bell and Ray Roche were traded by the Dodgers to the Philadelphia Phillies for Dixie Howell 15 August 26 1941 Mace Brown and cash were traded by the Dodgers to the Chicago Cubs for Augie Galan 13 Roster edit 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers Roster Pitchers 29 Ed Albosta 22 Johnny Allen 28 33 Mace Brown 25 Hugh Casey 32 Bob Chipman 26 Curt Davis 15 Tom Drake 14 Freddie Fitzsimmons 20 Larry French 32 Lee Grissom 12 Luke Hamlin 15 13 Kirby Higbe 21 Newt Kimball 16 Van Mungo 22 Bill Swift 15 Vito Tamulis 20 Kemp Wicker 17 Whit Wyatt Catchers 19 Herman Franks 6 38 Tony Giuliani 10 Mickey Owen 9 Babe Phelps 47 George Pfister Infielders 4 Dolph Camilli 3 Pete Coscarart 2 Leo Durocher 16 Billy Herman 31 Alex Kampouris 5 Cookie Lavagetto 1 Pee Wee Reese 18 Lew Riggs Outfielders 24 Augie Galan 77 6 Joe Medwick 27 Pete Reiser 24 Tommy Tatum 8 Joe Vosmik 11 Dixie Walker 24 Paul Waner 8 29 Jimmy Wasdell Manager 2 Leo Durocher Coaches 7 Charlie Dressen 30 Red CorridenPlayer stats edit Indicates team leader Batting edit Starters by position edit Note Pos Position G Games played AB At bats R Runs H Hits Avg Batting average HR Home runs RBI Runs batted in SB Stolen bases Pos Player G AB R H Avg HR RBI SB C Mickey Owen 128 386 32 89 231 1 44 1 1B Dolph Camilli 149 529 92 151 285 34 120 3 2B Billy Herman 133 536 77 156 291 3 41 1 3B Cookie Lavagetto 132 441 75 122 277 1 78 7 SS Pee Wee Reese 152 595 76 136 229 2 46 10 OF Dixie Walker 148 531 88 165 311 9 71 4 OF Pete Reiser 137 536 117 184 343 14 76 4 OF Joe Medwick 133 538 100 171 318 18 88 2 Other batters edit Note G Games played AB At bats R Runs H Hits Avg Batting average HR Home runs RBI Runs batted in SB Stolen bases Player G AB R H Avg HR RBI SB Jimmy Wasdell 94 265 39 79 298 4 48 2 Lew Riggs 77 197 27 60 305 5 36 1 Herman Franks 57 139 10 28 201 1 11 0 Pete Coscarart 43 62 13 8 129 0 5 1 Joe Vosmik 25 56 0 11 196 0 4 0 Alex Kampouris 16 51 8 16 314 2 9 0 Leo Durocher 18 42 2 12 286 0 6 0 Paul Waner 11 35 5 6 171 0 4 0 Babe Phelps 16 30 3 7 233 2 4 0 Augie Galan 17 27 3 7 259 0 4 0 Tommy Tatum 8 12 1 2 167 0 1 0 Tony Giuliani 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 George Pfister 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pitching edit Starting pitchers edit Note G Games pitched GS Games started CG Complete games IP Innings pitched W Wins L Losses ERA Earned run average BB Bases on balls SO Strikeouts Player G GS CG IP W L ERA BB SO Kirby Higbe 48 39 19 298 0 22 9 3 14 132 121 Whit Wyatt 38 35 23 288 1 22 10 2 34 82 176 Freddie Fitzsimmons 13 12 3 82 2 6 1 2 07 26 19 Ed Albosta 2 2 0 13 0 0 2 6 23 8 5 Other pitchers edit Note G Games pitched GS Games started CG Complete games IP Innings pitched W Wins L Losses ERA Earned run average BB Bases on balls SO Strikeouts Player G GS CG IP W L ERA BB SO Hugh Casey 45 18 4 162 0 14 11 3 89 57 61 Curt Davis 28 16 10 154 1 13 7 2 97 27 50 Luke Hamlin 30 20 5 136 0 8 8 4 24 41 58 Johnny Allen 11 4 2 57 1 3 0 2 51 12 21 Newt Kimball 15 5 1 52 0 3 1 3 63 29 17 Tom Drake 10 2 0 24 2 1 1 4 38 12 21 Larry French 6 1 0 15 2 0 0 3 45 4 8 Lee Grissom 4 1 0 11 1 0 0 2 38 8 5 Note Hugh Casey was team leader in saves with 7 Relief pitchers edit Note G Games pitched IP Innings pitched W Wins L Losses SV Saves ERA Earned run average BB Bases on balls SO Strikeouts Player G IP W L SV ERA BB SO Mace Brown 24 42 2 3 2 3 3 16 26 22 Kemp Wicker 16 32 0 1 2 1 3 66 14 8 Vito Tamulis 12 22 0 0 0 1 3 68 10 8 Bill Swift 9 22 0 3 0 1 3 27 7 9 Bob Chipman 1 5 0 1 0 0 0 00 1 3 Van Mungo 2 2 0 0 0 0 4 50 2 01941 World Series editMain article 1941 World Series The 1941 World Series matched the New York Yankees against the Dodgers with the Yankees winning in five games to capture their fifth title in six years and their ninth overall The name Subway Series arose for a World Series played between two New York City teams The series was punctuated by the Dodgers Mickey Owen s dropped third strike of a sharply breaking curveball a suspected spitball pitched by Hugh Casey to Tommy Henrich in the 9th inning of Game 4 The play led to a Yankees rally and brought them one win away from another championship The Yankees were back after a one year hiatus having won thirteen 13 of their last fourteen 14 Series games and twenty eight 28 of their last thirty one 31 games in the World Series This was the first Subway Series between the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees who had already faced the crosstown New York Giants five times and the Series was now 1 0 in favor of the Bronx Bombers These two teams would meet a total of seven 7 times from 1941 to 1956 the Dodgers only victory coming in 1955 Game 1 edit October 1 1941 at Yankee Stadium in New York Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E Brooklyn N 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 2 6 0 New York A 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 x 3 6 1 W Red Ruffing 1 0 L Curt Davis 0 1 HR NYY Joe Gordon 1 Game 2 edit October 2 1941 at Yankee Stadium in New York Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E Brooklyn N 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 3 6 2 New York A 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 9 1 W Whit Wyatt 1 0 L Spud Chandler 0 1 Game 3 edit October 4 1941 at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn New York Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E New York A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 8 0 Brooklyn N 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 4 0 W Marius Russo 1 0 L Hugh Casey 0 1 Game 4 edit October 5 1941 at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn New York Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E New York A 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 7 12 0 Brooklyn N 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 4 9 1 W Johnny Murphy 1 0 L Hugh Casey 0 2 HR BRO Pete Reiser 1 Game 5 edit October 6 1941 at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn New York Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E New York A 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 6 0 Brooklyn N 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 1 W Tiny Bonham 1 0 L Whit Wyatt 1 1 HR NYY Tommy Henrich 1 Awards and honors edit nbsp Whit Wyatt had a career season in 1941 1941 Major League Baseball All Star Game Whit Wyatt starter Mickey Owen starter Pete Reiser starter Dolph Camilli reserve Billy Herman reserve Cookie Lavagetto reserve Joe Medwick reserve National League Most Valuable Player Dolph Camilli TSN Major League All Star Team Whit Wyatt Pete Reiser Dolph Camilli TSN NL Most Valuable Player Dolph Camilli League top ten finishers edit Dolph Camilli NL leader in home runs 34 NL leader in RBI 120 2 in NL in slugging percentage 556 2 in NL in bases on balls 104 3 in NL in on base percentage 407 Hugh Casey 2 tied in NL in saves with Bill Crouch 7 Kirby Higbe NL leader in wins 22 4 in NL in strikeouts 121 Joe Medwick 3 in NL in batting average 318 3 in NL in runs scored 100 Pete Reiser NL leader in batting average 343 NL leader in slugging percentage 558 NL leader in runs scored 117 NL leader in triples 17 4 in NL in on base percentage 406 Whit Wyatt MLB leader in shutouts 7 NL leader in wins 22 2 in NL in strikeouts 176 2 in NL in ERA 2 34 2 in NL in complete games 23 Farm system editLevel Team League Manager AA Montreal Royals International League Clyde Sukeforth A1 Knoxville Smokies Southern Association Fred Lindstrom B Reading Brooks Interstate League Fresco Thompson B Durham Bulls Piedmont League Bruno Betzel C Santa Barbara Saints California League John Clancy C Quebec Athletics Canadian American League Del BissonetteRoland Gladu C Grand Rapids Colts Michigan State League Charles Lucas C Dayton Ducks Middle Atlantic League Paul ChervinkoHoward HolmesWilliam McWilliams C Troy Dodgers Tuskegee Airmen Alabama State League Orace Powers D Elizabethton Betsy Red Sox Appalachian League Hobe Brummitt D Valdosta Trojans Georgia Florida League Stew Hofferth D Newport Dodgers Northeast Arkansas League Merle Settlemire D Johnstown Johnnies Pennsylvania State Association George Treadwell D Olean Oilers Pennsylvania Ontario New York League Jake Pitler D Big Spring Bombers West Texas New Mexico League Joe Tate LEAGUE CHAMPIONS Montreal Durham Santa Barbara Elizebethton NewportNotes edit Baseball Reference a b Vito Tamulis at Baseball Reference Tot Pressnell at Baseball Reference Boze Berger at Baseball Reference Glen Stewart at Baseball Reference Gus Mancuso at Baseball Reference Pep Young at Baseball Reference Pep Rambert at Baseball Reference a b Lefty Mills at Baseball Reference Wally Westlake at Baseball Reference Roxie Lawson at Baseball Reference Newt Kimball at Baseball Reference a b Mace Brown at Baseball Reference Johnny Hudson at Baseball Reference Joe Becker at Baseball ReferenceReferences editBaseball Reference season page Baseball Almanac season pageExternal links edit1941 Brooklyn Dodgers uniform Brooklyn Dodgers reference site Acme Dodgers page Archived September 13 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrosheet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers season amp oldid 1217461514, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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