Professional baseball as we know it today began in 1871 with 10 teams forming the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players. But U.S. baseball had a rich tradition prior to this date. From 1857 to 1870 there were amateur teams organized as the National Association. In 1858 there were 25 teams, which grew to more than 80 by 1860. Play was curtailed during the Civil War, but by 1869 there were nearly 1,000 amateur teams in the association. This volume details the history of those teams.Each chapter covers one year and includes an introduction to baseball events for that year. Following the overview are statistics that the author compiled from a variety of historical sources. Each team is listed with dates of each game, score, and whether the game was a win, loss, or tie (a possible outcome during this point in baseball's development). Also included is a listing of players and such individual information as position(s) played, games played, hands lost (otherwise known as outs), average and over, and runs with average and over. The "average and over" statistics are holdovers from the game of cricket. Beginning in 1868, hits and total bases are added, and statistics are presented in decimal form, familiar to modern fans. Beginning in 1869 and 1870, pitching totals are available, including innings pitched, hits or runs allowed, and average hits or runs per inning. At the end of each chapter are team totals with games played, wins, losses, ties, winning percentage, runs scored, and runs scored against. The later years have more detailed individual statistics than the early years, and as rules changed the game, so did they change the type of statistics that were reported in the newspapers and guides of the time.This well-researched, if specialized, book on America's favorite pastime in its earliest years is recommended for large reference collections. RBB
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Review
"engaging...valuable...meticulous, year-by-year statistical listi






