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Washington Senators (1901–1960)

The Washington Senators baseball team was one of the American League's eight charter franchises. Now known as the Minnesota Twins, the club was founded in Washington, D.C. in 1901 as the Washington Senators.

Washington Senators
Washington Senators club logo
Information
LeagueAmerican League
BallparkGriffith Stadium (1911–1960)
Year established1901
Year folded1960 (relocated to Minnesota and became the Minnesota Twins)
Nickname(s)Grifs (1912–1920)
Nats (1905–1955)
American League pennant
World Series championships
Former name(s)Washington Nationals (19051955)
Former ballparksAmerican League Park (1901–1903)
Boundary Field (1904–1910)
ColorsBlue, red, white
     
OwnershipClark Griffith (1920–1955)
Calvin Griffith (1955–1960)
ManagerClark Griffith (1912–1921)
Bucky Harris (1924–1928, 1935–1942, 1950–1954)
Walter Johnson (1929–1932)
Joe Cronin (1933–1934)

The team was officially named the "Senators" during 19011904, the Nationals during 19051955 and the Senators again during 19561960, but nonetheless was commonly referred to as the Senators throughout its history (and unofficially as the "Grifs" during Clark Griffith's tenure as manager during 19121920).[1][2] The name "Nationals" appeared on the uniforms for only two seasons, and then was replaced with the "W" logo. However, the names "Senators," "Nationals" and shorter "Nats" were used interchangeably by fans and media throughout the team's history; in 2005, the latter two names were revived for the current National League franchise that had previously played in Montreal.

For a time, from 1911 to 1933, the Senators were one of the more successful franchises in Major League Baseball. The team's rosters included Baseball Hall of Fame members Goose Goslin, Sam Rice, Joe Cronin, Bucky Harris, Heinie Manush and one of the greatest players and pitchers of all time, Walter Johnson. But the Senators are remembered more for their many years of mediocrity and futility, including six last-place finishes in the 1940s and 1950s. Joe Judge, Cecil Travis, Buddy Myer, Roy Sievers and Eddie Yost were other notable Senators players whose careers were spent in obscurity due to the team's lack of success.[3][4]

History

A losing start for a charter franchise

When the American League declared itself a major league in 1901, the new league moved the previous minor league circuit Western League's Kansas City Blues franchise to Washington, a city that had been abandoned by the older National League a year earlier. The new Washington club, like the old one, was called the "Senators" (the second of three franchises to hold the name). Jim Manning moved with the Kansas City club to manage the first Senators team.

The Senators began their history as a consistently losing team, at times so inept that San Francisco Chronicle columnist Charley Dryden famously joked, "Washington: First in war, first in peace, and last in the American League,"[5] a play on the famous line in Henry Lee III's eulogy for President George Washington as "First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen". The 1904 Senators lost 113 games, and the next season the team's owners, trying for a fresh start, changed the team's name to the "Nationals" (and occasionally nicknamed the "Nats"). However, the "Senators" name remained widely used by fans and journalists — in fact, the two names were used interchangeably[6] — although "Nats" remained the team's nickname.[7] The Senators name was officially restored in 1956.[8]

A new era

The club continued to lose, despite the addition of a talented 19-year-old pitcher named Walter Johnson in 1907. Raised in rural Kansas, Johnson was a tall, lanky man with long arms who, using a leisurely windup and unusual sidearm delivery, threw the ball faster than anyone had ever seen. Johnson's breakout year was 1910, when he struck out 313 batters, posted an earned-run average of 1.36 and won 25 games for a losing ball club. Over his 21-year Hall of Fame career, Johnson, nicknamed the "Big Train", won 417 games and struck out 3,508 batters, a major-league record that stood for more than 50 years.

In 1911, the Senators' wooden ballpark burned to the ground, and they replaced it with a modern concrete-and-steel structure on the same location. First called National Park, it later was renamed Griffith Stadium, after the man who was named Washington manager in 1912 and whose name became almost synonymous with the ball club: Clark Griffith. A star pitcher with the National League's Chicago Colts in the 1890s, Griffith jumped to the AL in 1901 and became a successful manager with the Chicago White Sox and New York Highlanders. Walter Johnson blossomed in 1911 with 25 victories, although the Senators still finished the season in seventh place.[9] In 1912, the Senators improved dramatically, as their pitching staff led the league in team earned run average and in strikeouts. Johnson won 33 games while teammate Bob Groom added another 24 wins to help the Senators finish the season in second place behind the Boston Red Sox.[10] The Senators continued to perform respectably in 1913 with Johnson posting a career-high 35 victories, as the team once again finished in second place, this time to the Philadelphia Athletics.[11] Starting in 1916, the Senators settled back into mediocrity. Griffith, frustrated with the owners' penny-pinching, bought a controlling interest in the team in 1920 and stepped down as field manager a year later to focus on his duties as team president.

1924: World champions

 
Washington's Bucky Harris scores on his home run in the fourth inning of Game 7 of the 1924 World Series.

In 1924, Griffith named 27-year-old second baseman Bucky Harris player-manager. Led by the hitting of Goose Goslin and Sam Rice, and a solid pitching staff headlined by the 36-year-old Johnson, the Senators captured their first American League pennant, two games ahead of Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees.

The Senators faced John McGraw's heavily favored New York Giants in the 1924 World Series.[12] Despite Johnson losing both of his starts, the Senators kept pace to tie the Series at three games apiece and force Game 7. The Senators trailed the Giants 3–1 in the eighth inning of Game 7, when Bucky Harris hit a routine ground ball to third which hit a pebble and took a bad hop over Giants third baseman Freddie Lindstrom. Two runners scored on the play, tying the score at three.[13] In the ninth inning with the game tied, 3–3, Harris brought in an aging Johnson to pitch on just one day of rest – he had been the losing pitcher in Game 5. Johnson held the Giants scoreless into extra innings. In the bottom of the 12th inning, Muddy Ruel hit a high foul ball near home plate.[14] The Giants' catcher, Hank Gowdy, dropped his protective face mask to field the ball but, failing to toss the mask aside, stumbled over it and dropped the ball, thus giving Ruel another chance to bat.[14] On the next pitch, Ruel hit a double and, then proceeded to score the winning run when Earl McNeely hit a ground ball that took another bad hop over Lindstrom's head.[13][14] It was the only World Series triumph for the franchise during their 60-year tenure in Washington.

Building a winning tradition

 
On behalf of the Elks of Washington, Joe Judge (front left), captain of the Senators, was presented with a floral tribute for the team before the start of a game in 1929

The Senators repeated as American League champions in 1925 but lost the World Series to the Pittsburgh Pirates. After Johnson's retirement in 1927, the Senators endured a few losing seasons until returning to contention in 1930, this time with Johnson as manager. But after the Senators finished third in 1931 and 1932, behind powerful Philadelphia and New York, Griffith fired Johnson, a victim of high expectations.[15]

For his new manager in 1933, Griffith returned to the formula that worked for him in 1924, and 26-year-old shortstop Joe Cronin became player-manager. The change worked, as Washington posted a 99–53 record and swept to the pennant seven games ahead of the Yankees. But the Senators lost the World Series to the Giants in five games, and after that, the city would not host another World Series until 2019, when the Washington Nationals, its current National League team, defeated the Houston Astros.

Fading fortunes

The Senators sank all the way to seventh in 1934. Attendance plunged as well, and after the season Griffith traded Cronin to the Red Sox for journeyman shortstop Lyn Lary and $225,000 in cash (even though Cronin was married to Griffith's niece, Mildred). Despite the return of Harris as manager in 1935–42 and 1950–54, Washington remained mostly a losing ball club for the next 25 years, contending for the pennant only in the talent-thin war years of 1943 and 1945.

In the fall of 1953, the second major baseball franchise shift of the mid-20th century took place (after the Boston Braves moved to Milwaukee in 1952), with long suffering Baltimore civic and business interests purchasing the perennially cellar-dwelling St. Louis Browns from controversial but enterprising owner Bill Veeck and moving them 40 miles (64 km) northeast of Washington to the Chesapeake Bay port city. In the spring of 1954, the Browns moved to a newly renovated and modernized Memorial Stadium on the site of their former northeastern city collegiate football bowl, and replacing the earlier minor league level "Triple A" "Orioles" (also sometimes nicknamed the "Birds") of the International League where they had been consistent champions since the 1910s. The additional competition in the same League for Maryland and Virginia area baseball fans added to the complexion around the nation's capital for the rest of the 1950s as the new "Baltimore Orioles" swiftly built their team prospects with astute trades and farm system output during the rest of the decade, finally becoming pennant contenders by 1960. They continued their winning ways as one of the most dominant teams in professional baseball for the next two decades overpowering even the hapless third Senators franchise in 1961–1971.

The Senators were also the butt of many nationwide jokes during the 1950s, with the debut and running of a Broadway musical play in 1955 in New York City called "Damn Yankees" (based on an earlier best-selling novel and later movie in 1958), which followed a hapless elderly D.C. fan being given a "Faustian" or "devil's bargain," selling his soul to transform the team by becoming a young powerful new Senators player (played in the movie version by heart-throb leading-man actor Tab Hunter) and lead the lowly team to a pennant versus the Yankees.

In 1954, Senators scout Ossie Bluege, with help from longtime third base coach Alan Rupprecht, signed a 17-year-old Harmon Killebrew. Because of his $30,000 signing bonus, an enormous amount for that time, baseball rules required Killebrew to spend the rest of 1954 with the Senators as a "bonus baby." Killebrew bounced between the Senators and the minor leagues for the next few years. He became the Senators' regular third baseman in 1959, leading the League with 42 home runs and earning a starting spot on the American League All-Star team.

Relocation

Clark Griffith died in 1955, and his nephew and adopted son Calvin took over the team presidency. He sold Griffith Stadium to the city of Washington and leased it back, leading to speculation that the team was planning to move, as the Braves, Browns and Athletics had done in the early 1950s, and the Giants and Dodgers would do later in the decade. After an early flirtation with San Francisco (with a "Triple A" Pacific Coast League team, the San Francisco Seals), by 1957 Griffith was courting Minneapolis–St. Paul in the Upper Midwest state of Minnesota, a prolonged process that resulted in his rejecting the Twin Cities' first offer[16] before agreeing to relocate. The American League opposed the move at first, but in 1960, in the face of the Continental League's proposed Minnesota franchise, a deal was reached. The Senators moved and were replaced with an expansion Senators team for 1961. The old Washington Senators became the new Minnesota Twins; the expansion Senators would become the Texas Rangers in 1972, and baseball would not return to the city until 2005, when the former Montreal Expos became the Washington Nationals.

Photos

The Washington Senators in popular culture

The longtime competitive struggles of the team were fictionalized in the 1954 book The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant, which became the 1955 Broadway musical Damn Yankees and the 1958 film starring then "heart-throb" leading-man actor Tab Hunter). The plot centers on Joe Boyd, a middle-aged real estate salesman and long-suffering fan of the Washington Senators baseball club. In this musical comedy-drama of the Faust legend, Boyd sells his soul to the Devil and becomes slugger Joe Hardy, the "long ball hitter the Senators need that he'd sell his soul for" (as spoken by him in a throwaway line near the beginning of the drama). His hitting prowess enables the Senators to win the American League pennant over the then-dominant Yankees. One of the songs from the musical, "You Gotta Have Heart", is frequently played at baseball games.

The (expansion) Washington Senators were mentioned several times in Tom Clancy's book Without Remorse. As they performed even worse than the team they replaced, they were the subject of an updated joke: "Washington: First in war, first in peace, and still last in the American League." When the current Nationals had their own struggles, the joke was updated once again, this time to "Washington: First in war, first in peace, and last in the National League."

See also

References

  1. ^ Fleming, Frank. "Sports Encyclopedia". Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Minnesota Twins Team History & Encyclopedia". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 2008-09-24.
  3. ^ Grosshandler, Stan (February 1981). 13 Most Forgotten Stars In Major League History. Baseball Digest. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  4. ^ Vass, George (August 1999). 20th Century All-Overlooked Stars. Baseball Digest. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  5. ^ Dryden, Charles (June 27, 1904). "untitled". Washington Post.
  6. ^ Kelly, John (6 October 2012). "Picking the National's team name all by design". The Washington Post.
  7. ^ "Tigers Climb Into Second Place - Defeat Nats Twice, A's Upset Tribe". St. Petersburg Times. Associated Press. 1940-06-16. p. 19. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
  8. ^ "Washington Senators (Nationals) (1901-1960)". www.sportsecyclopedia.com.
  9. ^ "1911 Washington Senators". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  10. ^ "1912 Washington Senators". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  11. ^ "1913 American League Team Statistics and Standings". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  12. ^ "1924 World Series". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  13. ^ a b "1924 World Series Game 7 box score". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  14. ^ a b c Ruel, Muddy (October 1964). How Senators' Strategy Won for Johnson. Baseball Digest. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  15. ^ Thomas, Henry W.: "Walter Johnson: Baseball's Big Train", page 319. Bison Books, 1998
  16. ^ "Senators Reject Bids to Move to Minneapolis or St. Paul". New York Times. Associated Press. October 27, 1957. Retrieved 2008-05-02.

washington, senators, 1901, 1960, current, washington, nationals, washington, nationals, american, association, washington, senators, washington, senators, 1891, 1899, 1961, 1971, american, league, washington, senators, texas, rangers, baseball, washington, se. For the current Washington Nationals see Washington Nationals For the American Association Washington Senators see Washington Senators 1891 1899 For the 1961 1971 American League Washington Senators see Texas Rangers baseball The Washington Senators baseball team was one of the American League s eight charter franchises Now known as the Minnesota Twins the club was founded in Washington D C in 1901 as the Washington Senators Washington SenatorsWashington Senators club logoInformationLeagueAmerican LeagueBallparkGriffith Stadium 1911 1960 Year established1901Year folded1960 relocated to Minnesota and became the Minnesota Twins Nickname s Grifs 1912 1920 Nats 1905 1955 American League pennant192419251933World Series championships1924Former name s Washington Nationals 1905 1955 Former ballparksAmerican League Park 1901 1903 Boundary Field 1904 1910 ColorsBlue red white OwnershipClark Griffith 1920 1955 Calvin Griffith 1955 1960 ManagerClark Griffith 1912 1921 Bucky Harris 1924 1928 1935 1942 1950 1954 Walter Johnson 1929 1932 Joe Cronin 1933 1934 The team was officially named the Senators during 1901 1904 the Nationals during 1905 1955 and the Senators again during 1956 1960 but nonetheless was commonly referred to as the Senators throughout its history and unofficially as the Grifs during Clark Griffith s tenure as manager during 1912 1920 1 2 The name Nationals appeared on the uniforms for only two seasons and then was replaced with the W logo However the names Senators Nationals and shorter Nats were used interchangeably by fans and media throughout the team s history in 2005 the latter two names were revived for the current National League franchise that had previously played in Montreal For a time from 1911 to 1933 the Senators were one of the more successful franchises in Major League Baseball The team s rosters included Baseball Hall of Fame members Goose Goslin Sam Rice Joe Cronin Bucky Harris Heinie Manush and one of the greatest players and pitchers of all time Walter Johnson But the Senators are remembered more for their many years of mediocrity and futility including six last place finishes in the 1940s and 1950s Joe Judge Cecil Travis Buddy Myer Roy Sievers and Eddie Yost were other notable Senators players whose careers were spent in obscurity due to the team s lack of success 3 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 A losing start for a charter franchise 1 2 A new era 1 3 1924 World champions 1 4 Building a winning tradition 1 5 Fading fortunes 1 6 Relocation 2 Photos 3 The Washington Senators in popular culture 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory EditA losing start for a charter franchise Edit When the American League declared itself a major league in 1901 the new league moved the previous minor league circuit Western League s Kansas City Blues franchise to Washington a city that had been abandoned by the older National League a year earlier The new Washington club like the old one was called the Senators the second of three franchises to hold the name Jim Manning moved with the Kansas City club to manage the first Senators team The Senators began their history as a consistently losing team at times so inept that San Francisco Chronicle columnist Charley Dryden famously joked Washington First in war first in peace and last in the American League 5 a play on the famous line in Henry Lee III s eulogy for President George Washington as First in war first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen The 1904 Senators lost 113 games and the next season the team s owners trying for a fresh start changed the team s name to the Nationals and occasionally nicknamed the Nats However the Senators name remained widely used by fans and journalists in fact the two names were used interchangeably 6 although Nats remained the team s nickname 7 The Senators name was officially restored in 1956 8 A new era Edit The club continued to lose despite the addition of a talented 19 year old pitcher named Walter Johnson in 1907 Raised in rural Kansas Johnson was a tall lanky man with long arms who using a leisurely windup and unusual sidearm delivery threw the ball faster than anyone had ever seen Johnson s breakout year was 1910 when he struck out 313 batters posted an earned run average of 1 36 and won 25 games for a losing ball club Over his 21 year Hall of Fame career Johnson nicknamed the Big Train won 417 games and struck out 3 508 batters a major league record that stood for more than 50 years In 1911 the Senators wooden ballpark burned to the ground and they replaced it with a modern concrete and steel structure on the same location First called National Park it later was renamed Griffith Stadium after the man who was named Washington manager in 1912 and whose name became almost synonymous with the ball club Clark Griffith A star pitcher with the National League s Chicago Colts in the 1890s Griffith jumped to the AL in 1901 and became a successful manager with the Chicago White Sox and New York Highlanders Walter Johnson blossomed in 1911 with 25 victories although the Senators still finished the season in seventh place 9 In 1912 the Senators improved dramatically as their pitching staff led the league in team earned run average and in strikeouts Johnson won 33 games while teammate Bob Groom added another 24 wins to help the Senators finish the season in second place behind the Boston Red Sox 10 The Senators continued to perform respectably in 1913 with Johnson posting a career high 35 victories as the team once again finished in second place this time to the Philadelphia Athletics 11 Starting in 1916 the Senators settled back into mediocrity Griffith frustrated with the owners penny pinching bought a controlling interest in the team in 1920 and stepped down as field manager a year later to focus on his duties as team president 1924 World champions Edit Washington s Bucky Harris scores on his home run in the fourth inning of Game 7 of the 1924 World Series In 1924 Griffith named 27 year old second baseman Bucky Harris player manager Led by the hitting of Goose Goslin and Sam Rice and a solid pitching staff headlined by the 36 year old Johnson the Senators captured their first American League pennant two games ahead of Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees The Senators faced John McGraw s heavily favored New York Giants in the 1924 World Series 12 Despite Johnson losing both of his starts the Senators kept pace to tie the Series at three games apiece and force Game 7 The Senators trailed the Giants 3 1 in the eighth inning of Game 7 when Bucky Harris hit a routine ground ball to third which hit a pebble and took a bad hop over Giants third baseman Freddie Lindstrom Two runners scored on the play tying the score at three 13 In the ninth inning with the game tied 3 3 Harris brought in an aging Johnson to pitch on just one day of rest he had been the losing pitcher in Game 5 Johnson held the Giants scoreless into extra innings In the bottom of the 12th inning Muddy Ruel hit a high foul ball near home plate 14 The Giants catcher Hank Gowdy dropped his protective face mask to field the ball but failing to toss the mask aside stumbled over it and dropped the ball thus giving Ruel another chance to bat 14 On the next pitch Ruel hit a double and then proceeded to score the winning run when Earl McNeely hit a ground ball that took another bad hop over Lindstrom s head 13 14 It was the only World Series triumph for the franchise during their 60 year tenure in Washington Building a winning tradition Edit On behalf of the Elks of Washington Joe Judge front left captain of the Senators was presented with a floral tribute for the team before the start of a game in 1929 The Senators repeated as American League champions in 1925 but lost the World Series to the Pittsburgh Pirates After Johnson s retirement in 1927 the Senators endured a few losing seasons until returning to contention in 1930 this time with Johnson as manager But after the Senators finished third in 1931 and 1932 behind powerful Philadelphia and New York Griffith fired Johnson a victim of high expectations 15 For his new manager in 1933 Griffith returned to the formula that worked for him in 1924 and 26 year old shortstop Joe Cronin became player manager The change worked as Washington posted a 99 53 record and swept to the pennant seven games ahead of the Yankees But the Senators lost the World Series to the Giants in five games and after that the city would not host another World Series until 2019 when the Washington Nationals its current National League team defeated the Houston Astros Fading fortunes Edit The Senators sank all the way to seventh in 1934 Attendance plunged as well and after the season Griffith traded Cronin to the Red Sox for journeyman shortstop Lyn Lary and 225 000 in cash even though Cronin was married to Griffith s niece Mildred Despite the return of Harris as manager in 1935 42 and 1950 54 Washington remained mostly a losing ball club for the next 25 years contending for the pennant only in the talent thin war years of 1943 and 1945 In the fall of 1953 the second major baseball franchise shift of the mid 20th century took place after the Boston Braves moved to Milwaukee in 1952 with long suffering Baltimore civic and business interests purchasing the perennially cellar dwelling St Louis Browns from controversial but enterprising owner Bill Veeck and moving them 40 miles 64 km northeast of Washington to the Chesapeake Bay port city In the spring of 1954 the Browns moved to a newly renovated and modernized Memorial Stadium on the site of their former northeastern city collegiate football bowl and replacing the earlier minor league level Triple A Orioles also sometimes nicknamed the Birds of the International League where they had been consistent champions since the 1910s The additional competition in the same League for Maryland and Virginia area baseball fans added to the complexion around the nation s capital for the rest of the 1950s as the new Baltimore Orioles swiftly built their team prospects with astute trades and farm system output during the rest of the decade finally becoming pennant contenders by 1960 They continued their winning ways as one of the most dominant teams in professional baseball for the next two decades overpowering even the hapless third Senators franchise in 1961 1971 The Senators were also the butt of many nationwide jokes during the 1950s with the debut and running of a Broadway musical play in 1955 in New York City called Damn Yankees based on an earlier best selling novel and later movie in 1958 which followed a hapless elderly D C fan being given a Faustian or devil s bargain selling his soul to transform the team by becoming a young powerful new Senators player played in the movie version by heart throb leading man actor Tab Hunter and lead the lowly team to a pennant versus the Yankees In 1954 Senators scout Ossie Bluege with help from longtime third base coach Alan Rupprecht signed a 17 year old Harmon Killebrew Because of his 30 000 signing bonus an enormous amount for that time baseball rules required Killebrew to spend the rest of 1954 with the Senators as a bonus baby Killebrew bounced between the Senators and the minor leagues for the next few years He became the Senators regular third baseman in 1959 leading the League with 42 home runs and earning a starting spot on the American League All Star team Relocation Edit Clark Griffith died in 1955 and his nephew and adopted son Calvin took over the team presidency He sold Griffith Stadium to the city of Washington and leased it back leading to speculation that the team was planning to move as the Braves Browns and Athletics had done in the early 1950s and the Giants and Dodgers would do later in the decade After an early flirtation with San Francisco with a Triple A Pacific Coast League team the San Francisco Seals by 1957 Griffith was courting Minneapolis St Paul in the Upper Midwest state of Minnesota a prolonged process that resulted in his rejecting the Twin Cities first offer 16 before agreeing to relocate The American League opposed the move at first but in 1960 in the face of the Continental League s proposed Minnesota franchise a deal was reached The Senators moved and were replaced with an expansion Senators team for 1961 The old Washington Senators became the new Minnesota Twins the expansion Senators would become the Texas Rangers in 1972 and baseball would not return to the city until 2005 when the former Montreal Expos became the Washington Nationals Photos Edit The Washington Senators led by star Walter Johnson and owner Clark Griffith hoist their championship banner at the 1925 opening day Washington Senators in the 1920s Washington Senators Team Picture in the early 1930sThe Washington Senators in popular culture EditThe longtime competitive struggles of the team were fictionalized in the 1954 book The Year the Yankees Lost the Pennant which became the 1955 Broadway musical Damn Yankees and the 1958 film starring then heart throb leading man actor Tab Hunter The plot centers on Joe Boyd a middle aged real estate salesman and long suffering fan of the Washington Senators baseball club In this musical comedy drama of the Faust legend Boyd sells his soul to the Devil and becomes slugger Joe Hardy the long ball hitter the Senators need that he d sell his soul for as spoken by him in a throwaway line near the beginning of the drama His hitting prowess enables the Senators to win the American League pennant over the then dominant Yankees One of the songs from the musical You Gotta Have Heart is frequently played at baseball games The expansion Washington Senators were mentioned several times in Tom Clancy s book Without Remorse As they performed even worse than the team they replaced they were the subject of an updated joke Washington First in war first in peace and still last in the American League When the current Nationals had their own struggles the joke was updated once again this time to Washington First in war first in peace and last in the National League See also EditList of Minnesota Twins seasonsReferences Edit Fleming Frank Sports Encyclopedia Retrieved 8 September 2020 Minnesota Twins Team History amp Encyclopedia Baseball Reference com Retrieved 2008 09 24 Grosshandler Stan February 1981 13 Most Forgotten Stars In Major League History Baseball Digest Retrieved 3 May 2012 Vass George August 1999 20th Century All Overlooked Stars Baseball Digest Retrieved 3 May 2012 Dryden Charles June 27 1904 untitled Washington Post Kelly John 6 October 2012 Picking the National s team name all by design The Washington Post Tigers Climb Into Second Place Defeat Nats Twice A s Upset Tribe St Petersburg Times Associated Press 1940 06 16 p 19 Retrieved September 6 2012 Washington Senators Nationals 1901 1960 www sportsecyclopedia com 1911 Washington Senators Baseball Reference com Retrieved 30 April 2012 1912 Washington Senators Baseball Reference com Retrieved 30 April 2012 1913 American League Team Statistics and Standings Baseball Reference com Retrieved 30 April 2012 1924 World Series Baseball Reference com Retrieved 29 April 2012 a b 1924 World Series Game 7 box score Baseball Reference com Retrieved 29 April 2012 a b c Ruel Muddy October 1964 How Senators Strategy Won for Johnson Baseball Digest Retrieved 29 April 2012 Thomas Henry W Walter Johnson Baseball s Big Train page 319 Bison Books 1998 Senators Reject Bids to Move to Minneapolis or St Paul New York Times Associated Press October 27 1957 Retrieved 2008 05 02 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Washington Senators 1901 1960 amp oldid 1095343340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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