New York Knickerbockers (1912)

The New York Knickerbockers was one of 8 teams in the short-lived United States Baseball League, which collapsed after just over a month of play.[1] The Knickerbockers were owned by Charles White and managed by William Jordon.[2]

New York Knickerbockers
Information
LeagueUnited States Baseball League
LocationNew York, NY
BallparkBronx Oval
Founded1912
Disbanded1912
League championshipsNone
Former name(s)Knickerbockers (1912)
ColorsCream, white, gray, black
OwnershipCharles White
ManagerWilliam Jordon

1912 Standings

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Team Win Loss Pct
Pittsburgh Filipinos 19 7 .731
Richmond Rebels 15 11 .577
Reading (no nickname) 12 9 .571
Cincinnati Cams 12 10 .545
Washington Senators 6 7 .462
Chicago Green Sox 10 12 .455
Cleveland Forest City 8 13 .381
New York Knickerbockers 2 15 .118

New York finished dead last in the standings at the end at 2–15. They were the first USBL team to fold, doing so on May 28.[3]

1912 New York Knickerbockers season

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1912 New York Knickerbockers
LeagueUnited States Baseball League
BallparkBronx Oval
CityNew York, NY
OwnersCharles White[4]
ManagersAmbrose Hussey Jr. and Sr.

The 1912 New York Knickerbockers season was the first and only season for the club. They folded with the United States Baseball League after about a month of play.

Regular season

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Of the few individual game results known from that season, it is known that on opening day, May 1, 1912, the Knickerbockers battled with Reading to a 10–10 tie in 10 innings. The game was called due to darkness.[5] New York eventually ended up last in the USBL standings.

Standings

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United States Baseball League Win Loss Pct
Pittsburgh Filipinos 19 7 .731
Richmond Rebels 15 11 .577
Reading (no name) 12 9 .571
Cincinnati Cams 12 10 .545
Washington Senators 6 7 .462
Chicago Green Sox 10 12 .455
Cleveland Forest City 8 13 .381
New York Knickerbockers 2 15 .118

Roster

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1912 New York Knickerbockers
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Managers
  • Ambrose Hussey, Jr. & Ambrose Hussey, Sr.

Notable players

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References

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  1. ^ "CONTENTdm" (PDF).
  2. ^ "New York Knickerbockers".
  3. ^ Daniel, W. Harrison (2011). Baseball & Richmond: a history of the Professional game, 1884-200. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-7864-1489-5.
  4. ^ "New York Knickerbockers".
  5. ^ Macgranachan, Brendan (January 8, 2010). "The United States Baseball League". Retrieved December 23, 2022.