1913 Major League Baseball season

The 1913 major league baseball season began on April 9, 1913. The regular season ended on October 5, with the New York Giants and Philadelphia Athletics as the regular season champions of the National League and American League, respectively. The postseason began with Game 1 of the tenth World Series on October 7 and ended with Game 5 on October 11. In the third iteration of this World Series matchup, the Athletics defeated the Giants, four games to one, capturing their third championship in franchise history, since their previous in 1911. Going into the season, the defending World Series champions were the Boston Red Sox from the 1912 season.

1913 MLB season
LeagueAmerican League (AL)
National League (NL)
SportBaseball
DurationRegular season:
  • April 10 – October 5, 1913 (AL)
  • April 9 – October 5, 1913 (NL)
World Series:
  • October 7 – October 11, 1913
Games154
Teams16 (8 per league)
Regular Season
Season MVPAL: Walter Johnson (WSH)
NL: Jake Daubert (BRO)
AL championsPhiladelphia Athletics
  AL runners-upBoston Red Sox
NL championsNew York Giants
  NL runners-upPhiladelphia Phillies
World Series
ChampionsPhiladelphia Athletics
  Runners-upNew York Giants
MLB seasons
1914 →
Red Sox
White Sox
Naps
Tigers
Athletics
Browns
Yankees
Senators
Locations of teams for the 1913–1914 American League seasons
American League
Braves
Dodgers
Cubs
Reds
Giants
Phillies
Pirates
Cardinals
Locations of teams for the 1913 National League season
National League

This was the third of four seasons that the Chalmers Award, a precursor to the Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award (introduced in 1931), was given to a player in each league.

The Brooklyn Trolley Dodgers shortened its name to the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Highlanders renamed as the New York Yankees.

Schedule

The 1913 schedule consisted of 154 games for all teams in the American League and National League, each of which had eight teams. Each team was scheduled to play 22 games against the other seven teams of their respective league. This continued the format put in place for the 1904 season. This format would last until 1919.

National League Opening Day took place on April 9 with a game between the Philadelphia Phillies and Brooklyn Dodgers, while American League Opening Day took place the following day, with all AL teams but the Chicago White Sox and Cleveland Naps, playing. The final day of the regular season was on October 5. The World Series took place between October 7 and October 11.

Rule change

The National League ruled that umpires could no longer scout for teams, as was the case when Umpire Cy Rigler was being paid $2,200 (equivalent to $70,000 in 2024) by the Philadelphia Phillies for his role in having the team sign a pitcher, Eppa Rixey.

Teams

An asterisk (*) denotes the ballpark a team played the minority of their home games at

League Team City Stadium Capacity Manager
American League Boston Red Sox Boston, Massachusetts Fenway Park 27,000 Jake Stahl
Bill Carrigan
Chicago White Sox Chicago, Illinois Comiskey Park 28,000 Jimmy Callahan
Cleveland Naps Cleveland, Ohio League Park 21,414 Joe Birmingham
Detroit Tigers Detroit, Michigan Navin Field 23,000 Hughie Jennings
New York Yankees New York, New York Brush Stadium 34,000 Frank Chance
Philadelphia Athletics Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Shibe Park 23,000 Connie Mack
St. Louis Browns St. Louis, Missouri Sportsman's Park 18,000 George Stovall
Jimmy Austin
Branch Rickey
Washington Senators Washington, D.C. National Park 27,000 Clark Griffith
National League Boston Braves Boston, Massachusetts South End Grounds 11,000 George Stallings
Fenway Park* 27,000*
Brooklyn Dodgers New York, New York Ebbets Field 18,000 Bill Dahlen
Chicago Cubs Chicago, Illinois West Side Park 16,000 Johnny Evers
Cincinnati Reds Cincinnati, Ohio Redland Field 20,696 Joe Tinker
New York Giants New York, New York Brush Stadium 34,000 John McGraw
Philadelphia Phillies Philadelphia, Pennsylvania National League Park 18,000 Red Dooin
Pittsburgh Pirates Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Forbes Field 23,000 Fred Clarke
St. Louis Cardinals St. Louis, Missouri Robison Field 21,000 Miller Huggins

Standings

American League

American League
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Philadelphia Athletics 96 57 .627 50‍–‍26 46‍–‍31
Washington Senators 90 64 .584 42‍–‍35 48‍–‍29
Cleveland Naps 86 66 .566 45‍–‍32 41‍–‍34
Boston Red Sox 79 71 .527 15½ 41‍–‍34 38‍–‍37
Chicago White Sox 78 74 .513 17½ 40‍–‍37 38‍–‍37
Detroit Tigers 66 87 .431 30 34‍–‍42 32‍–‍45
New York Yankees 57 94 .377 38 27‍–‍47 30‍–‍47
St. Louis Browns 57 96 .373 39 31‍–‍46 26‍–‍50

National League

National League
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
New York Giants 101 51 .664 54‍–‍23 47‍–‍28
Philadelphia Phillies 88 63 .583 12½ 43‍–‍33 45‍–‍30
Chicago Cubs 88 65 .575 13½ 51‍–‍25 37‍–‍40
Pittsburgh Pirates 78 71 .523 21½ 41‍–‍35 37‍–‍36
Boston Braves 69 82 .457 31½ 34‍–‍40 35‍–‍42
Brooklyn Dodgers 65 84 .436 34½ 29‍–‍47 36‍–‍37
Cincinnati Reds 64 89 .418 37½ 32‍–‍44 32‍–‍45
St. Louis Cardinals 51 99 .340 49 25‍–‍48 26‍–‍51

Tie games

21 tie games (5 in AL, 16 in NL), which are not factored into winning percentage or games behind (and were often replayed again) occurred throughout the season.

American League

  • Boston Red Sox, 1
  • Chicago White Sox, 1
  • Cleveland Naps, 3
  • New York Yankees, 2
  • St. Louis Browns, 2
  • Washington Senators, 1

National League

  • Boston Braves, 3
  • Brooklyn Dodgers, 3
  • Chicago Cubs, 2
  • Cincinnati Reds, 3
  • New York Giants, 4
  • Philadelphia Phillies, 8
  • Pittsburgh Pirates, 6
  • St. Louis Cardinals, 3

Postseason

The postseason began on October 7 and ended on October 11 with the Philadelphia Athletics defeating the New York Giants in the 1913 World Series in five games.

Bracket

World Series
   
AL Philadelphia Athletics 4
NL New York Giants 1

Managerial changes

Off-season

Team Former Manager New Manager
Boston Braves Johnny Kling George Stallings
Chicago Cubs Frank Chance Johnny Evers
Cincinnati Reds Hank O'Day Joe Tinker
New York Yankees Harry Wolverton Frank Chance
St. Louis Cardinals Roger Bresnahan Miller Huggins

In-season

Team Former Manager New Manager
Boston Red Sox Jake Stahl Bill Carrigan
St. Louis Browns George Stovall Jimmy Austin
Jimmy Austin Branch Rickey

League leaders

American League

Hitting leaders
Stat Player Total
AVG Ty Cobb (DET) .389
OPS Joe Jackson (CLE) 1.011
HR Home Run Baker (PHA) 12
RBI Home Run Baker (PHA) 117
R Eddie Collins (PHA) 125
H Joe Jackson (CLE) 197
SB Clyde Milan (WSH) 75
Pitching leaders
Stat Player Total
W Walter Johnson1 (WSH) 36
L Jim Scott (CWS) 21
ERA Walter Johnson1 (WSH) 1.14
K Walter Johnson1 (WSH) 243
IP Walter Johnson (WSH) 346.0
SV Charles Bender (PHA) 13
WHIP Walter Johnson (WSH) 0.780

1 American League Triple Crown pitching winner

National League

Hitting leaders
Stat Player Total
AVG Jake Daubert (BRO) .350
OPS Gavvy Cravath (PHI) .974
HR Gavvy Cravath (PHI) 19
RBI Gavvy Cravath (PHI) 128
R Max Carey (PIT)
Tommy Leach (CHC)
120
H Gavvy Cravath (PHI) 179
SB Max Carey (PIT) 61
Pitching leaders
Stat Player Total
W Tom Seaton (PHI) 27
L Dan Griner (STL) 22
ERA Christy Mathewson (NYG) 2.06
K Tom Seaton (PHI) 168
IP Tom Seaton (PHI) 322.1
SV Larry Cheney (CHC) 11
WHIP Christy Mathewson (NYG) 1.020

Milestones

Batters

  • Harry Hooper (BOS):
    • Became the first player to hit a home run as the lead-off hitter in both games of a doubleheader, against the Washington Senators on May 30.

Pitchers

  • Washington Senators:
    • The Washington Senators used eight pitchers including infielder Germany Schaefer, catcher Eddie Ainsmith, outfielder Joe Gedeon and manager Clark Griffith, against the Boston Red Sox on October 4. Despite the use of these non-pitchers, the Senators win the game 10–9.

Awards and honors

  • Chalmers Award: Jake Daubert (BRO, National); Walter Johnson (WSH, American)

Home field attendance

Team name Wins Home attendance Per game
Chicago White Sox 78 1.3% 602,241 3.3% 7,721
New York Giants 103 4.0% 638,000 −5.5% 8,395
Philadelphia Athletics 90 −10.9% 517,653 −14.5% 6,723
Cleveland Naps 75 −6.3% 336,844 −17.1% 4,375
Philadelphia Phillies 73 −7.6% 250,000 −39.9% 3,333
Boston Red Sox 105 34.6% 597,096 18.5% 7,655
Chicago Cubs 91 −1.1% 514,000 −10.8% 6,590
Detroit Tigers 69 −22.5% 402,870 −16.9% 5,301
New York Yankees 50 −34.2% 242,194 −19.9% 3,187
Brooklyn Dodgers 58 −9.4% 243,000 −9.7% 3,197
Washington Senators 91 42.2% 350,663 43.2% 4,496
Pittsburgh Pirates 93 9.4% 384,000 −11.1% 5,120
Cincinnati Reds 75 7.1% 344,000 14.7% 4,468
St. Louis Browns 53 17.8% 214,070 2.9% 2,710
Boston Braves 52 18.2% 121,000 4.3% 1,532
St. Louis Cardinals 63 −16.0% 241,759 −46.0% 3,140

Venues

The 1913 season saw two teams move to two venues.

  • The Brooklyn Dodgers leave Washington Park (where they played for 15 seasons) and opened Ebbets Field, where they would go on to play for 45 seasons through 1957.
  • The New York Highlanders leave Hilltop Park (where they played for ten seasons) and moved into the home of the New York Giants, where they would go on to play for ten seasons through 1922. The move prompted the official name of the team to change from the Highlanders to the New York Yankees.

The Chicago White Sox renamed White Sox Park to Comiskey Park, named after team owner Charles Comiskey.

The Boston Braves play two doubleheaders on April 19 and May 30 at the home of the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park to accommodate large crowds.

See also

  • 1913 in baseball (Events, Births, Deaths)

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