San Francisco Giants (1 – 107-55, .660) vs. Los Angeles Dodgers (4 – 106-56, .654) Best-of-Five Series
Dodgers win series 3-2, advance to their 6th NLCS in 9 years
PRE-SERIES CONTENT
➤ With 107 regular season wins (best record in baseball), the Giants beat their franchise record, to win the AL West title. The defending World Series Champion Dodgers tied theirs, at 106. The Dodgers had won the AL West every year since 2012, the year that the Giants went on to win the World Series in a four-game sweep against the Tigers.
➤ The Dodgers-Giants rivalry extends all the way back to New York in 1884—a quarter century before the dawn of the modern baseball era—when the Brooklyn Dodgers played at Ebbets Field, and the New York Giants played at the Polo Grounds, in Upper Manhattan. Both clubs moved to California in 1957. The National League owners voted unanimously to allow the moves, on the condition that that both clubs relocate at the same time.
Top moments in Dodgers-Giants rivalry
Dodgers-Giants rivalry on MLB Now
Dave Roberts on facing the Giants in the NLDS
Evan Longoria and Mike Yastrzemski on NLDS vs. the Dodgers
NLDS I – GAME 1
Friday, October 8, 2021 at 8:37 pm CDT Oracle Park Dodgers /Walker Buehler, RHP at Giants / Logan Webb, RHP On TBS
Walker Buehler on Dodgers momentum going into NLDS
Logan Webb on pitching Game 1
GAME HIGHLIGHTS AND POST-GAME CONTENT
Homegrown starter Logan Webb pitches brilliantly, striking out 10 with no walks (5 H) in 7⅔ scoreless innings. Watch highlights from mlb.com:
Gabe Kapler on Webb’s performance
Giants Game 1 battery – Buster Posey and Logan Webb
Analysts on Logan Webb’s stellar start on MLB Tonight
Will Smith and Walker Buehler on shutout loss
NLDS I – GAME 2
Urías
Gausman
Saturday, October 9, 2021 at 8:07 pm CDT Oracle Park Dodgers / Julio Urías, LHP at Giants / Kevin Gausman, RHP On TBS
Dodgers 9 – Giants 2 WP: Julio Urías (1-0, 1.80) | LP: Kevin Gausman (0-1, 6.75) MLB Headline: Belli brings LA bats to life in Game 2 win
PRE-GAME CONTENT
Julio Urías on pitching in Game 2
Kevin Gausman on starting Game 2
GAME HIGHLIGHTS AND POST-GAME CONTENT
Dodgers starter Julio Urías helps his own cause and opens the scoring with an RBI single, in the 2nd. Multiple epic defensive plays, on both sides! Giants catcher Buster Posey sets new club record for most postseason hits (54). Watch game highlights from mlb.com:
Analysts on Dodgers’ defense in Game 2 on MLB Tonight
NLDS I – GAME 3
Wood
Scherzer
Monday, October 11, 2021 at 8:37 pm CDT Dodger Stadium Giants / Alex Wood, LHP at Dodgers / Max Scherzer, RHP On TBS
Dodgers 0 – Giants 1 WP: Tyler Rogers (1-0, 0.00) | LP: Max Scherzer (0-1, 1.29) MLB Headline: Pitching, defense lead Giants to Game 3 win
PRE-GAME CONTENT
Alex Wood on getting the start for Game 3
Max Scherzer on starting Game 3
GAME HIGHLIGHTS AND POST-GAME CONTENT
Max Scherzer comes through, as Dodgers offense gets shut out
On a cool and unusually windy night in LA, a gust of wind knocks Max Scherzer off balance
Max Scherzer on impact of wind and Game 3 loss
NLDS I – GAME 4
DeSclafani
Buehler
Tuesday, October 12, 2021 at 8:07 pm CDT Dodger Stadium Giants / Anthony DeSclafani, RHP at Dodgers / Walker Beuhler, RHP On TBS
Giants 2 – Dodgers 7 WP: Joe Kelly (1-0, 5.40) | LP: Anthony DeSclafani (0-1, 10.80) MLB Headline: Dodgers’ stars rise to force decisive Game 5
GAME HIGHLIGHTS AND POST-GAME CONTENT
Walker Buehler on “asking” to pitch Game 4
Walker Buehler and Mookie Betts on big win
Gavin Lux and Will Smith post-game presser
Dave Roberts on huge Game 4 victory
Gabe Kepler on Game 4 loss and must-win Game 5
NLDS I – GAME 5
Knebel
Webb
Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 8:07 pm CDT Oracle Park Dodgers / Corey Knebel, RHP at Giants / Logan Webb, RHP On TBS
➤ Dodgers announce day-of that Corey Knebel will open Game 5, rather than the scheduled starter, Julio Urías. Presumably, Urías will take the mound at some later point and pitch for as long as he remains effective.
Analysts look ahead to win-or-go-home Game 5 on MLB Tonight
A look at the Game-5 Urías-Webb faceoff on MLB Network’s FastCast
Logan Webb on starting Game 5 on MLB Tonight
Dave Roberts on do-or-die Game 5
Gabe Kepler talks Game 5
GAME HIGHLIGHTS AND POST-GAME CONTENT
Logan Webb again pitches brilliantly through 7.0 innings, giving up 1 R/ER on 4 H (1 BB, 7 SO). The Dodgers, in contrast, deployed an opener-short-reliever-long-reliever-bullpen pitching strategy. Mookie Betts goes 4-for-4. In top 9th, with the score having been tied at 1 since the 6th inning, Dodgers first baseman Cody Bellinger knocks the game-winning RBI single, scoring Justin Turner (reached on HBP). The expensive and accomplished Max Scherzer closed, for the first save of his long career. But it was an ugly ending for a great season for both teams and a great division series. In bottom 9th, with two outs, and Giants outfielder Kris Bryant on 1B (reached on E5), on an 0-2 count, Giants second baseman Wilmer Flores is called out for a clearly checked swing that was not even close to an actual swing. Terrible way to win. Watch game highlights from mlb.com:
Mookie Betts on his big 4-for-4 night and advancing to NLCS
Max Scherzer on his first career save, advancing to NLCS
Cody Bellinger on rough season and game-winning RBI
Dave Roberts on Game 5 win and advancing to NLCS
Darin Ruf and Logan Webb on NLDS loss to the Dodgers
Gabe Kepler on Wilmer Flores’ checked swing and Game 5 loss
Mark DeRosa breaks down NLDS Game 5 on MLB Network
Brian Kenny on Dodgers use of an opener in Game 5 on MLB Network
Max Fried hurls like a champion, shutting out the Brewers on 3 hits, walking none and striking out 9. He goes above and beyond on defense, fielding several hit balls. Brewers get two men on with one out in each of the last three innings, but can’t get them home.
Max Fried strikes out 9 over 6 innings
Tyler Matzek and Max Fried discuss their outings in Game 2 win
NLDS II – GAME 3
Peralta
Anderson
Monday, October 11, 2021 at 12:07 pm CDT Truist Park Brewers / Freddy Peralta, RHP at Braves / Ian Anderson, RHP On TBS
PRE-GAME CONTENT
Braves 3 – Brewers 0 WP: Ian Anderson (1-0, 0.00) | LP: Adrian Houser (0-1, 12.00) MLB Headline: Joctober! Pinch HR lifts Braves to NLDS lead
Freddy Peralta on getting the nod for Game 3
Ian Anderson on starting Game 3
Craig Counsell on NLDS so far on MLB Tonight
GAME HIGHLIGHTS AND POST-GAME CONTENT
NLDS II – GAME 4
Lauer
Morton
Tuesday, October 12, 2021 at 4:07 pm CDT Truist Park Brewers / Eric Lauer, LHP at Braves / Charlie Morton, RHP On TBS
Brewers 4 – Braves 5 WP: Tyler Matzek (1-0, 0.00) | LP: Josh Hader (0-1, 4.50) | S: Will Smith MLB Headline: Freddie! Late HR send Braves back to NLCS
GAME HIGHLIGHTS AND POST-GAME CONTENT
Analysts break down Freddie Freeman’s clutch home run on MLB Tonight
New York Yankees (92-70, .568) at Boston Red Sox (92-70, .568)
Red Sox defeat Yankees, advance to NLDS
PRE-GAME CONTENT
The Red Sox will face the Yankees tonight without star slugger J.D. Martinez, who sprained his ankle tripping over second base, in the final game of the regular season. Martinez is day-to-day.
Nathan Eovaldi on starting against the Yankees:
Gerrit Cole on starting in the AL Wild Card:
Cole
Eovaldi
Tuesday, October 5, 2021 at 7:08 pm CDT Fenway Park Yankees / Gerrit Cole, RHP at Red Sox / Nathan Eovaldi, RHP On ESPN
The momentum is with the home team all night. Yankees $324 MM starter Gerrit Cole is off, giving up a 2-run HR to Xander Bogaerts and a solo shot to Kyle Schwarber, in the shortest outing of his career (2 BB, 3 SO in 2.0 IP). Red Sox starter Nathan Eovaldi is razor sharp, giving up just a solo HR to Anthony Rizzo on 4 hits (0 BB, 8 SO) in 5⅓ IP. Both bullpens perform similarly to their respective starters. Collectively, Yankees pitching issues 7 BB, to the Red Sox 0 BB. Alex Verdugo RBI 2B for the Red Sox, in the 6th. Alex Verdugo is out at 2B on his own 2-RBI 1B that also advances Xander Bogaerts to 3B, in the 7th. Giancarlo Stanton solo HR for the Yankees, in the 9th, is not enough to bend the arc of destiny. Watch game highlights from mlb.com:
This spectacular defensive play by the Red Sox is not to be missed:
This is the third time that the Red Sox and the Yankees have faced off in a winner-take-all postseason game. The first was a tiebreaker game for the AL East title, in 1978. The Yankees won 5-4. The second was Game 7 of the ACLS, in 2003—a 6-5 Yankees win on an Aaron Boone walk-off in the 11th inning.
National League Wild Card Game
St. Louis Cardinals (90-72, .556) at Los Angeles Dodgers (106-56, .654)
Dodgers defeat Cardinals, advance to ALCS
PRE-GAME CONTENT
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts on Max Muncy and Clayton Kershaw injuries:
Max Scherzer’s mindset ahead of NL Wild Card:
Adam Wainwright on starting against the Dodgers:
Wainwright
Scherzer
Wednesday, October 6, 2021 at 7:10 pm CDT Dodger Stadium Cardinals / Adam Wainwright, RHP at Dodgers / Max Scherzer, RHP On TBS
That’s a relief! Los Dodgers won 106 games—16 more than the Cards!
A tense low-scoring night, marked by great defense and missed opportunities (Cardinals strand 11, Dodgers leave 7 on). Both starters are shaky, especially Dodgers starter Max Sherzer, yet both manage to escape multiple close calls. There is not a single 1-2-3 inning in the game.Tommy Edman scores for the Cardinals, in the 1st, on a wild pitch by Sherzer. It takes Dave Roberts a minute to pull the future Hall-of-Famer-er, but with two on and one out in the 5th, he sends in Joe Kelly, who retires the next two to end the inning. Sherzer gives up the 1 R/ER, on 3 H (3 BB, 4 SO) in 4⅓ IP. In the 4th, Cardinals starter Adam Wainwright gives up a solo shot to Justin Turner (1) to tie the game at 1. Mike Schildt keeps Wainwright in through 5⅓ (4 H, 1 R/ER, 2 BB, 5 SO). Although he allows Tommy Edman a base hit, Kenley Jansen pitches brilliantly for the Dodgers, in the 9th, striking out three of four (2 Ks). The game ends in high drama, in the bottom of the 9th. With one on and two outs, center fielder and struggling hitter Chris Taylor delivers in the clutch with a 2-run walk-off HR (1)—the fourth in Dodgers postseason history. He doesn’t start the game—subbing in to last in the lineup, in the 7th—but he sure finishes it! Watch game highlights from mlb.com:
Kenley Jansen fans 3 in the 9th:
Chris Taylor enjoys his walk-off HR, Wild Card win:
Max Scherzer high fives fellow 2019 World Series Champion and former Nationals teammate Juan Soto, and Nationals hitting coach Kevin Long to celebrate the win:
The Cleveland Indians have played their last game as the Indians—a 6-0 shutout of the Texas Rangers today at Globe Life Field in Arlington.
The Tribe’s last-ever home game was an 8-3 win against the Kansas City Royals, on September 27, in which Cleveland center fielder Bradley Zimmer homered off his brother, Kansas City reliever Kyle Zimmer, to lead off the bottom of the 8th.
I have lived in Chicago since coming here for undergrad in 1985. But I grew up in suburban Cleveland and, though I raised a son here and have since become a passionate White Sox fan, I have never lost my deeply felt love for my boyhood team, the Cleveland Indians.
My father’s father emigrated to the United States from southern Italy and settled in Cleveland in 1919—four years after the ballclub elected to call itself the Indians. The team and its name have meant something now to four generations of Ricchettis, including some who have never lived anywhere near The Land. I carry with me many cherished memories of outings to Cleveland Municipal Stadium, and later, to “the Jake,” with my father, middle school, high school and college buddies, and my extended family.
I heartily support the name change and accept that it is long past time to move on from imagery and nomenclature that have been harmful. Whether or not and to what extent the harm was intended is not the point. Harm is harm.
Nonetheless, I am feeling sad and nostalgic today, as I watch the Indians Era come to a close.
A Club by Any Other Name
The Cleveland franchise dates back to 1901, when the American League, hitherto a minor league, declared itself a major. The minor-league forerunner to the 1901 ballclub had competed in the league, making Cleveland one of the eight charter members of the “upgraded” American League.[1]
In its early years, the team experimented with several monikers, starting with the “Bluebirds,” often shortened to the “Blues.” The players disliked the name and tried, unsuccessfully, to change it to the “Bronchos.” Inexplicably, some sportswriters continued to use the extremely unpopular name “Spiders” for several more years after the formation of the new major league franchise (see below, and Endnote 1).
In 1902, Napoleon “Nap” Lajoie, star second baseman with the Philadelphia Phillies, defected to the new American League, playing briefly for Connie Mack’s Philadelphia Athletics. But early in the season, he moved over to the Cleveland ballclub, lured by a three-year contract for $25,000—more than double what the Athletics were paying.
Nap was an immediate hit with Cleveland fans, and it wasn’t long before the team was renamed the “Naps.” In 1905, he became the club’s player-manager. The team struggled in the late oughts and early 1910s, leading some reporters to refer to them as the “Napkins.”
Baseball Hall of Fame Napoleon “Nap” Lajoie
Between 1912 and 1914, the team was known (unofficially) to some as the “Molly McGuires,” a reference to a group of Irish-American immigrants prone to violent retaliation against their employers over exploitive and dangerous working conditions. Whoever invoked the “Molly McGuires” as an alternative to the “Naps” must have been “trolling” club co-owner Charley Somers, who had made his fortune in the coal business—the industry in which the majority of real-life Molly McGuires unhappily labored.
After the 1914 season, Lajoie, very much past his prime, returned to the Athletics, precipitating the search for a new team name. With input from sportswriters, the team was renamed the “Indians” in 1915.
The Controversy
Baseball historians and fans have long debated whether the Indians were so named, at least in part, as a tribute to Louis Sockalexis, a Native-American who played the entirety of his brief, major league career (1897-1899) as an outfielder for the Cleveland Spiders—a National League team that found itself no longer able to compete at the major league level, following a dismal 1899 season.[2] Sockalexis, a member of the Penobscot Nation, was among the first Native Americans (many believe he was the first) to play major league baseball.
American Indian Magazine Louis Sockalexis
St. Paul Globe St. Paul Globe March 11, 1897
For decades, the Cleveland Indians organization propagated the narrative that the team’s name was meant to honor Sockalexis, who, they insisted, was a “fan favorite.” It is true that, during his time with the Spiders, reporters and fans—with the encouragement of the club’s owners—often referred to the team as “Tebeau’s Indians,” purportedly in deference to both player-manager Oliver “Patsy” Tebeau and Sockalexis.
Skeptics have argued that because so many white people looked down upon Native Americans, it’s implausible that white owners of the early twentieth century would have named their team in honor of one. In a 2007 blog post, former Sports Illustrated writer and Cleveland native Joe Posnanski wonders, “Why exactly would people in Cleveland—this in a time when Native Americans were generally viewed as subhuman in America—name their team after a relatively minor and certainly troubled outfielder?”
Reporting on the name change in 1915, a writer for Cleveland newspaper The Plain Dealer opines that the name “also serves to revive the memory of a single great player who has been gathered to his fathers in the happy hunting grounds of the Abenakis,” perhaps reflecting both appreciation for Sockalexis’ athletic talent and insensitivity toward his indigenous heritage.[3]
NYU Professor Emeritus of Education and History Jonathan Zimmerman contends that, far from being a player beloved by fans, Sockalexis was the player that fans quite literally loved to hate. According to Zimmerman, the Indians moniker was intended not to honor Sockalexis, but to mock him. During his short stint in major league baseball, he endured constant taunts—frequently, but by no means exclusively—from opposing-team fans, for whom abusing Sockalexis apparently was an integral part of the “fun” of rooting against the Spiders. References to the “Cleveland Indians,” Zimmerman asserts, were intentionally sarcastic and demeaning.
Ed Rice, author of the Sockalexis biography, Baseball’s First Indian, agrees: “They called [the Cleveland Spiders] ‘Tebeau’s Indians.’ But it wasn’t meant to be flattering, of course. It was meant to make fun of the spectacle that Cleveland was going to be in 1897, putting an American Indian on the field.”
To muddy the waters further—because, why not?!—the Cleveland Spiders were sometimes referred to as “Tebeau’s Indians” and “Tebeau’s Braves” well before the club signed Sockalexis.
Nashville Tennessean Nashville Tennessean October 3, 1895
Baltimore Sun Baltimore Sun February 23, 1897
Moreover, a bunch of Cleveland players and managers have been referred to as “Chief” or “Chief Wahoo,” both before and after the 1915 name change. And the “Chief (manager) / Indians (players)” metaphor has been used in reference to many teams, and may be as old as baseball itself.
Apart from any historical connection to Sockalexis, the name “Indians” may have appealed to white baseball fans of the time because it conveyed the supposed ferocity of a group that many regarded as “savages.” Shortly after the name change was announced, on January 17, 1915, the Cleveland Leader published this commentary: “In place of the Naps, we’ll have the Indians, on the warpath all the time, and eager for scalps to dangle at their belts.”
That same day, The Plain Dealer published a cartoon loaded with stereotypes and racist tropes, captioned “Ki Yi Waugh Woop! They’re Indians!”
The Plain Dealer
Beneath the cartoon, the paper reported the decision of the name selection committee convened by co-owner Charley Somers to solicit the input of sportswriters from Cleveland’s four[4] daily newspapers: “The title of ‘Indians’ was their choice, it having been one of the names applied to the old National League club of Cleveland many years ago.” Notably, the name was not intended to be permanent. The writer continues
The nickname, however, is but temporarily bestowed, as the club may so conduct itself during the present season as to earn some other cognomen which may be more appropriate. The choice of a name that would be significant just now was rather difficult with the club itself anchored in last place.
Perhaps the name was chosen to take advantage of the excitement surrounding the 1914 “Miracle Braves” of Boston, who had come from last place in midseason to win the National League Pennant. Perhaps the name “Indians” could replicate for Cleveland the “magic” of the Boston club’s sanitized Native American ethos (see comments over the phallus in the center of the cartoon above).
According to sport sociologist and Ithaca College Professor of Sports Media Ellen Staurowsky, there were no references to Sockalexis in any accounts of the name selection process published in any of the four Cleveland newspapers—compelling evidence that the choice of the name “Indians” in January 1915 was not a direct reference to Sockalexis. In a 1998 scholarly article on the subject, Staurowsky writes
As seen in the 1915 accounts, when the team faced the mammoth task of moving out of the basement in league standings while forging a new identity, there was no need to mention Sockalexis because it was the generic, plural "Indians" signifier that provided the marketing angle club President Charley Somers and the sportswriters sought.
However, use of the moniker in connection with the Cleveland Spiders, some eighteen years earlier, had been directly referential to Sockalexis, as evidenced by dozens of contemporaneous sources referencing “Indians” or “Tebeau’s Indians.” This one, about the newly-signed outfielder’s arrival in Cleveland, is from the March 27, 1897 issue of Sporting Life:
Sockalexis, the Indian, came to town on Friday, and in 24 hours was the most popular man about the Kennard House, where he is stopping... Why he has not been snatched up by some League club looking for a sensational player is beyond my comprehension... They're Indians now.
Perhaps something like the transitive property of equality (i.e., A=B and B=C. Therefore, A=C.) is applicable here:
➤ The 1897 Spiders were called Indians because of Sockalexis,
and
➤ The name Indians was chosen in 1915 because of the 1897 Spiders.
Therefore,
➤ The 1915 Indians were so named (indirectly) because of Sockalexis.
Cleveland-based sports historian Morris Eckhouse seems to agree: “Without Sockalexis, it’s unlikely the team would be called the Cleveland Indians.”
Of course, this tidy simplification leaves unresolved the question of why Sockalexis’ “Indian” heritage was evoked as a nickname for the Cleveland Spiders—was it out of disdain for him, or in celebration of his remarkable skill as an outfielder and as a hitter, or a confounding mixture of attitudes and beliefs that were characteristic of the time?
If, over these many years, anyone associated with Cleveland baseball—from owners, to managers and coaches, to players, to fans—has had any heartfelt intent to bestow honor upon Native Americans as a group and/or upon any specific Native American, or to empathize with their actual lived experience, it seems clear that none of us have done so very well.
Chief Wahoo
A precursor to the Native American caricature that came to represent the Cleveland Indians first appeared in 1932, on the front page of The Plain Dealer. For years thereafter, the “Little Indian,” as he came to be known, made regular appearances in the newspaper’s sports section, drawing readers’ attention to the latest Cleveland baseball news.
The first version actually commissioned by the Indians ballclub was designed by seventeen-year-old Walter Goldbach in 1947. The logo continued to evolve, culminating in the 1951 redesign that remained (with periodic minor design changes) until it was abandoned altogether after the 2018 season.
The Plain Dealer The Plain Dealer – May 3, 1932
Cleveland Indians 1947
Cleveland Indians 1951
Cleveland Indians 2014-2018
Use of the nicknames “Chief” and “Chief Wahoo” in connection with certain Cleveland players predates the logo by several decades. In 1952, the nickname and the caricature were united, and Chief Wahoo became the official name of the Cleveland Indians mascot.
Some have noted that Chief Wahoo is actually a brave, not a chief, because his head is adorned with a single feather, whereas a chief would have worn a full headdress. Earlier team logos had included the full headdress.
Today, the twenty-eight-foot, neon-illuminated representation of Chief Wahoo stepping into his swing, that for thiry-one seasons (1962-1993) was mounted high above Gate D at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, is on exhibit in the Reinberger Gallery at the Western Reserve Historical Society.
Dan Meek via Pinterest Chief Wahoo Exhibit
Wahoo is a switch hitter. He is the same on both sides and, back in the day, he rotated. Depending upon which side of Wahoo you looked at, he would appear to be batting righty or lefty. In his new home at the museum, it seems that he’ll be batting lefty forevermore.
Not All Heroes Are White
It is worth remembering that professional baseball in the 19th and early 20th centuries was an entirely different animal than the orderly, tightly-controlled product we see on our 4K and 8K televisions today.
In Sockalexis’ time, baseball was a rowdy, unsportsmanlike, often lawless, often violent brawl, played mostly by gritty, hardened, working-class immigrants, in which “might made right” and “winning at any cost” were both the expectation and the norm. Bullying, threats, intimidation, bribery, and flagrant physical assault were everyday occurrences. The game was a little cleaner by 1915, but not much.
Few players of that era were “honored” by sportswriters, teammates, or fans in the ways that decades of sports marketing have conditioned us to think that Sockalexis was “honored.” It simply was not part of the zeitgeist. It was raucous, take-no-prisoners entertainment, and the dignity of many was sacrificed in the production of it. In any such environment, people who are seen as “other” inevitably bear the worst of the pain. There is no reason to believe that Sockalexis would have been spared. As a Native American playing major league baseball just seven years after the Massacre at Wounded Knee, he was an American hero, simply for having had the courage to step onto the field.
The Dawn of a New Era
Screen capture by Ted Berg, USA Today If nothing else, we can all understand that lots of different people see lots of different things in images such as this.
The Indians Era has come to an end. Cleveland’s Major League Baseball club will henceforth be known as the “Guardians,” a name inspired by the eight statues (“Guardians of Traffic”) capping the pylons of the Hope Memorial Bridge that spans the Cuyahoga River, leading to the ballpark from the west.
MLB Advanced Media, LP
Hope Memorial Bridge – Cleveland
Endnotes
The 1901 Cleveland ballclub was an amalgam of two existing Cleveland teams. One of these, the Cleveland Lake Shores, were a minor league club affiliated with the American League, which promoted itself to major league status, effective for the 1901 season. Charley Somers, co-owner of the Lake Shores, was a driving force in the early development of the American League. He purchased the Lake Shores ballclub (formerly the Grand Rapids Rustlers) and moved it to Cleveland, in anticipation of the American League’s ascension to major league status. American League President Ban Johnson, Somers, and the other AL club owners were determined to break the National League’s near monopoly in professional baseball. The other existing Cleveland team, the Cleveland Spiders, were a major league club that competed in the National League. The Spiders roster had been decimated in 1899 when most of their star talent migrated to the National League club in St. Louis, at the direction of the Robison brothers—Frank and Stanley—who were the owners of both the Cleveland and the St. Louis National League teams. St. Louis was a larger market, and the Robisons had decided to go “all in” with their St. Louis team. They sold the Spiders remaining player contracts and other assets to the Cleveland Lake Shores. The combined club was thus a charter member of the new American League, calling itself the Cleveland “Bluebirds,” or “Blues,” for short. ↑
The Spiders performed miserably in 1899 because owners Frank and Stanley Robison (brothers) had bought the St. Louis Browns out of bankruptcy and transferred most of Cleveland’s star talent—including Cy Young and other eventual Hall-of-Famers—to the St. Louis club, renamed the “Perfectos.” ↑
According to Joe Posnanski and others, this lone sportswriter was the only reporter in any of the Cleveland newspapers to suggest an explicit connection with Sockalexis in the months after the name change was announced, in January 1915. Posnanski claims that Sockalexis was not named in The Plain Dealer a single time during the next ten years. ↑
Cleveland’s four daily newspapers of the time were the Cleveland Leader, the Cleveland News, the Cleveland Press, and The Plain Dealer. ↑
October 1—Right-hander Mike Wright, Jr. has been designated for assignment. Wright Jr. threw 18 innings across 13 games (0-1, 5.50, 11) for the White Sox in 2021.
Wright Jr. was sent outright to the Charlotte Knights (AAA) on October 3. He elected free agency on October 8.