1919 MLB season | |
---|---|
League | Major League Baseball |
Sport | Baseball |
Duration | April 19, 1919 – October 9, 1919 |
Pennant Winners | |
AL champions | Chicago White Sox |
AL runners-up | Cleveland Indians |
NL champions | Cincinnati Reds |
NL runners-up | New York Giants |
World Series | |
Champions | Cincinnati Reds (5) |
Runners-up | Chicago White Sox (3) |
The 1919 Major League Baseball Season, is best remembered for the Black Sox Scandal, in which the Chicago White Sox threw (purposely lost) the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds, 5–3, in order to illegally gain money from gambling. This scandal resulted in commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis banning six players from baseball for life. The season began on April 19, 1919, when the Brooklyn Robins defeated the Boston Braves 5–2 at Braves Field in the first game of a double header. The regular season ended on September 29 with the New York Yankees defeating the Philadelphia Athletics 4–2 at Shibe Park, with the infamous 1919 World Series opening two days later in Cincinnati.
NL Cincinnati Reds (5) vs. AL Chicago White Sox (3)
Only one team announced a new manager in the offseason:
One team replaced their manager during the season: