1919 Philadelphia Athletics season
The 1919 Philadelphia Athletics season involved the A's finishing last in the American League with a record of 36 wins and 104 losses. It was their fifth consecutive season in the cellar after owner-manager Connie Mack sold off his star players. Philadelphia led the AL in fewest runs scored and most runs allowed, and they did so by wide margins. Their team ERA was 4.26, nearly a full run higher than the second worst team in the league that year. The A's team batting average of .244 was the lowest in both leagues. The pitching staff pitched only one shutout in the entire season.
primaryTopic
1919 Philadelphia Athletics season
The 1919 Philadelphia Athletics season involved the A's finishing last in the American League with a record of 36 wins and 104 losses. It was their fifth consecutive season in the cellar after owner-manager Connie Mack sold off his star players. Philadelphia led the AL in fewest runs scored and most runs allowed, and they did so by wide margins. Their team ERA was 4.26, nearly a full run higher than the second worst team in the league that year. The A's team batting average of .244 was the lowest in both leagues. The pitching staff pitched only one shutout in the entire season.
has abstract
The 1919 Philadelphia Athletic ...... s in full charge of the team."
@en
thumbnail
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
12,568,656
Wikipage revision ID
711,655,186
ballpark
city
current league
American League
managers
name
Philadelphia Athletics
owners
Connie Mack, Benjamin Shibe, Tom Shibe and John Shibe
season
comment
The 1919 Philadelphia Athletic ...... shutout in the entire season.
@en
label
1919 Philadelphia Athletics season
@en