Early baseball in California/Game 10
From SABR Encyclopedia
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|Year=1860 | |Year=1860 | ||
|Month=2 | |Month=2 | ||
+ | |Date=22 | ||
|Date-note=No later than the 22nd | |Date-note=No later than the 22nd | ||
|City=San Francisco | |City=San Francisco | ||
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|First=No | |First=No | ||
|Approved=Yes | |Approved=Yes | ||
- | |Pagetext= | + | |Pagetext= |
- | |Sources=California Spirit of the Times, February 22, 1860. | + | "According to John E. Spalding in his book Always on Sunday, among the early [San Francisco] residents was a group of cricket players who organized the first base ball team -- late in 1859. Called the San Franciscos, the members issues a challenge in January 1860, to 'any nine base ball players, to a match game' on February 22at the Center Bridge. A group called the Red Rovers accepted." "Using a ball made of woolen yarn from a sock and rubber from a pair of overshoes, teams battled to a 33-33 tie over nine innings in the Washington's birthday holiday contest." |
+ | |||
+ | Note -- Angus MacFarlane reports that the Red Rovers refused to play extra innings because they thought the SFBBC pitcher was pitching illegally. | ||
+ | |Sources= | ||
+ | William F. McNeil, The California Winter League (McFarland, 2002), page 9. | ||
+ | |||
+ | California Spirit of the Times, February 22, 1860. | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 02:47, 8 May 2012
Spread of baseball: Home -> California -> Early baseball in California/Game 10 |
Location | California |
---|---|
Year | 1860 |
Month | 2 |
Date | 22 |
Note on date | No later than the 22nd |
City | San Francisco |
State | CA |
Country | US |
Was NY rules baseball | Yes |
Played by | Locals |
Team 1 | SFBBC |
Team 2 | Red Rovers |
Team 1 Score | 33 |
Team 2 Score | 33 |
Length | 9 innings |
Found by | Angus Macfarlane |
"According to John E. Spalding in his book Always on Sunday, among the early [San Francisco] residents was a group of cricket players who organized the first base ball team -- late in 1859. Called the San Franciscos, the members issues a challenge in January 1860, to 'any nine base ball players, to a match game' on February 22at the Center Bridge. A group called the Red Rovers accepted." "Using a ball made of woolen yarn from a sock and rubber from a pair of overshoes, teams battled to a 33-33 tie over nine innings in the Washington's birthday holiday contest."
Note -- Angus MacFarlane reports that the Red Rovers refused to play extra innings because they thought the SFBBC pitcher was pitching illegally.
Sources
William F. McNeil, The California Winter League (McFarland, 2002), page 9.
California Spirit of the Times, February 22, 1860.