When Minor League Baseball Almost Went Bust: 1946-1963, edited by George Pawlush

SABR Digital Library: When Minor League Baseball Almost Went Bust: 1946-1963

When Minor League Baseball Almost Went Bust: 1946-1963, edited by George PawlushAdd a new baseball book to your collection from the SABR Digital Library:

When Minor League Baseball Almost Went Bust: 1946-1963
Edited by George Pawlush
Associate editors: Marshall Adesman, Mike Huber, Len Levin, and Bill Nowlin
ISBN (ebook): 978-1-960819-28-4, $9.99
ISBN (paperback): 978-1-960819-29-1, $24.95
8.5″ x 11″, 165 pages

When Minor League Baseball Almost Went Bust is about the epic transformation the minor leagues underwent from the end of World War II to the onset of America’s space race with the Soviet Union. By 1949, the minors’ boom would reach its peak, with 59 leagues and 448 teams, but their downfall was just around the corner.

This book, three years in the making, with contributions from 39 SABR members, contains stories about minor-league teams, individuals, and leagues that thrived, struggled, and mostly went defunct, because of changing cultural and economic trends beyond their control from 1946 through 1963. The fabled Newark Bears of the International League announced after the 1949 season that they would leave New Jersey for Springfield, Massachusetts, because of poor attendance. This was a sign of things to come as fans in medium-sized cities began fleeing to the suburbs.

Few minor-league teams made money during this era. Most teams traveled by bus, and owners, scrimping and saving, compromised the safety of their players by buying buses from their second or third owners, some beyond their normal life span. There were many reports of carbon monoxide poisonings and brake malfunctions. Tragic accidents in 1946 and 1948 claimed the lives of 14 players.

There were bright spots and historic feats, of course. Jackie Robinson would integrate an affiliated team for the first time when he played for the Montreal Royals in 1946. Phenom Ron Necciai, playing for Bristol of the Appalachian League, accomplished a pitching feat on May 21, 1952, that most likely will never be challenged—pitching a nine-inning no-hitter in which he struck out all 27 batters. Unfortunately for Necciai, his arm went dead the next season, ending his career.

By 1963, hundreds of minor-league teams had folded and minor-league baseball was at a critical crossroads. The American and National Leagues couldn’t afford to let such a key resource for player development disappear. After extensive meetings, the AL and NL introduced a Player Development plan in which each major-league team would provide and pay the salaries of a full player and coaching roster to at least five minor-league teams. This stabilized the minors and set the way the minors would operate for the rest of the twentieth century and until 2020.

When Minor League Baseball Almost Went Bust is a collaborative effort of 39 members of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR). 

Contributors include: Marshall Adesman, John Bauer, Chris Betsch, Kurt Blumenau, Matt Clever, Will Christensen, Alan Cohen, Robert Cvornyek, Ray Danner, Anthony Escobedo, Vince Guerrieri, Mike Huber, Thomas Kern, Cathy Kreyche, Martin Lacoste, Kevin Larkin, Tom Larwin, Len Levin, Norman L. Macht, Joe Marren, Bill Nowlin, Chad Osborne, Len Pasculli, George Pawlush, Laura H. Peebles, Jim Price, Bill Pruden, Thomas Rathkamp, Mark Richard, Carl Riechers, Michael Rinehart Jr., Joel Rippel, C. Paul Rogers III, David Siegel, Steve Smith, Douglas Stark, Allen Tait, Christian Trudeau, and Brian Williams.

 

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About the SABR Digital Library

For more than 50 years, SABR and its members have led the way in publishing the best baseball historical and statistical research. Our publications program is shifting to take advantage of new methods of publishing. Not only will we continue to publish new books like Can He Play? A Look At Baseball Scouts and Their Profession (2011); Inventing Baseball: The 100 Greatest Games of the 19th Century (2013); Scandal on the South Side: The 1919 Chicago White Sox (2015); Jackie Robinson: Perspectives on 42 (2021), ¡Arriba! The Heroic Life of Roberto Clemente (2022); and Nichibei Yakyu: US Tours of Japan (2023); which showcase the best efforts of SABR’s members, chapters and committees, but new technology makes it possible for us to bring out-of-print titles like When Boston Still Had the Babe: The 1918 World Champion Red Sox (2018); Green Cathedrals (2020); and The Miracle Has Landed: The Amazin’ Story of How the 1969 Mets Shocked the World (2021) back again.

Visit SABR.org/ebooks to find all past titles and download your favorites. Books will be available in digital formats as well as paperbacks produced by “print on demand” (POD).

SABR members can download all Digital Library e-book editions for free and save 50% on purchase of the paperback editions. If you’re not a member, click here to join SABR.

Stay tuned throughout the year for new (and old!) titles that we’ll be adding to the SABR Digital Library. To learn more about SABR Publications, contact Publications Editor Cecilia Tan at ctan@sabr.org.


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Originally published: January 7, 2025. Last Updated: January 6, 2025.