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Baseball In 1930: “What in the World Happened??”

Wrigley Field exterior in about 1930

Wrigley Field in the 11930’s

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The 1930 Baseball Season  Photo Gallery
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1930: The Year Offense In Baseball Went “Off the Charts!”

It was a good year to be a hitter in the major leagues…but not a pitcher. The hitters went absolutely wild!

Does anyone have an explanation for what happened in baseball in 1930? There has never been a season in modern baseball history to match the offensive bombardment of 1930. We all know that the 1920s was a decade of increased offense due to the livelier ball, the banning of the spitball and other trick pitchers, and the offensive evolution of the game due Babe Ruth’s emergence as the “Sultan of Swat.” But none of that can account for what happened in the single year of 1930.

In the first photo above, we see Wrigley Field in approximately 1930, from www.Baseballpronewscast.com

The massive hitting that year resulted in scores that looked more like football scores than baseball scores. Just to give an example, consider Cub pitcher Guy Bush. He pitched 225 innings that year and gave up an all-time National League record of 153 runs on 291 hits, 22 home runs, and 86 walks. Opponents batted .316 against him. His ERA was 6.20.

So with stats like that, what do you think Guy Bush’s record was for the year? Are you ready for this? Fifteen wins and ten losses!! And he wasn’t the only one with lopsided numbers: Ray Kremer of the Pirates won 20 games in 1930—and had an ERA of 5.02!

Here’s a few of the offensive anomalies recorded in the remarkable year of 1930. Never before or since has baseball seen such exploitation in hitting (edited from article “The Online Book of Baseball”):

Now check out some of the things that happened to the lowly Phillies in 1930, playing in the bandbox known as the Baker Bowl:

And then there was the 1930 pennant-winning Cardinals:

Considering the hitting spree that year, Brooklyn Robin Dazzy Vance’s ERA 0f 2.61 is truly remarkable. The second best ERA in the National League was registered by Carl Hubbell at 3.87. The 1.26 margin between the two is the most in major league history.

For whatever reason —maybe a deader ball, maybe better pitching, or maybe just the pendulum swinging back the other way —batting averages would plummet in 1931. The American League would drop ten points, while the National League fell a remarkable 26 points to a still-potent .277 average.

-Gary Livacari

Photo Credits: The Charles Conlon Collection, The Leslie Jones Collection, Ballparks of Baseball, ESPN Sports Travel, 90 Feet of Perfection, and public domain

Information: Excerpts edited from “The Online Book of Baseball,”: http://www.thisgreatgame.com/1930-baseball-history.html; and from article by George Bryson,” What Happened to the Hitters in 1930,” in the book, “The 24-Inch Home Run,” page 175.

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