1925 in baseball



Champions


Awards and honors

Statistical leaders

1 National League Triple Crown batting winner
2 Eastern Colored League Triple Crown batting winner

Negro leagues final standings

All Negro leagues standings below are per Seamheads.

Negro National League final standings

This was the sixth season of the first Negro National League. This was the first season in which a playoff was held to determine the pennant, for which the first half leader would be matched against the second half winner. Kansas City won the first half while St. Louis won the second half. As such, they met for a best-of-seven Championship Series. Kansas City would win the series in seven games to win their first pennant.

Eastern Colored League final standings

This was the third of six seasons for the Eastern Colored League. According to the Center for Negro League Baseball Research, it was common practice for the teams in the league to all play a different number of games during the season. The Wilmington Potomacs dropped out of the league in July 1925. Hilldale Club faced the Kansas City Monarchs in the second overall Colored World Series.

Independent teams final standings

The Homestead Grays were not a part of any league but were considered major-league tier.

Events

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

January–February

March–April

  • March 4 – John Montgomery Ward, 65, Hall of Fame pitcher who posted 164–102 record and a 2.10 earned run average in 293 games, including 47 wins for 1879 champion Providence Grays and a perfect game in 1880. He then became a shortstop, batting over.325 three times, to become the fifth player to reach the 2000 hit club. In addition, he organized the first players' union in 1888, and formed the Players' League in 1890.
  • March 21 – Harry Raymond, 63, infielder who played with the Louisville Colonels of the American Association and for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Washington Senators of the National League.
  • March 23 – Tom Evers, 72, second baseman for the 1882 Baltimore Orioles of the American Association and the 1884 Washington Nationals of the Union Association.
  • April 18 – Charles Ebbets, 65, owner of Brooklyn's National League franchise since 1897 and the builder and namesake of Ebbets Field.
  • April 19 – Suter Sullivan, 52, infielder/outfielder who played from 1898 to 1899 for the Cleveland Spiders and Baltimore Orioles of the National League.
  • April 23 – Ad Gumbert, 56, pitcher who collected a 123–102 record for the Chicago Cubs, Boston Reds, Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies from 1888 through 1896.
  • April 27 – Fred Crane, 84, first baseman for the Elizabeth Resolutes and the Brooklyn Atlantics of the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players.
  • April 29 – Ed McKeever, 66, co-owner of Brooklyn Robins since 1912 who succeeded Charles Ebbets as team president, but died from influenza only 11 days after Ebbets.

May–June

  • May 9 – Ed Beatin, 58, National League pitcher for the Detroit Wolverines and Cleveland Spiders from 1887 to 1891, and a member of the 1887 champion Wolverines.
  • May 10 – Tod Brynan, 61, National League pitcher/left fielder for the Chicago White Stockings and the Boston Beaneaters.
  • May 31 – Harry Deane, 79, National Association outfielder for the Fort Wayne Kekiongas and the Baltimore Canaries, who also managed briefly the Fort Wayne team.
  • June 5 – Sam Trott, 66, National League catcher for the Boston Red Caps, Detroit Wolverines and Baltimore Orioles, who later managed the Washington Statesmen in 1891.
  • June 26 – Sam Crane, 71, 19th century second baseman in seven seasons for the New York Metropolitans, Cincinnati Outlaw Reds, Detroit Wolverines, St. Louis Maroons, New York Giants and Pittsburgh Alleghenys, who also managed and later went on to a long career as a sportswriter.

July–August

  • July 4 – George Derby, 87, pitcher for the Detroit Wolverines and Buffalo Bisons of the National League, who led the circuit for the most strikeouts in 1881.
  • August 2 – Patrick T. Powers, 63, founder of the minor leagues' governing body and its first president from 1901 to 1909.
  • August 13 – Arthur Soden, 82, American Civil War veteran and owner or co-owner of the National League's Boston Red Stockings/Red Caps/Beaneaters franchise from 1876 to 1906, who also served as NL president in 1882; under his ownership, Boston won seven NL pennants between 1876 and 1898.
  • August 14 – Asa Stratton, 72, shortstop who played for the 1881 Worcester Ruby Legs.

September–October

  • September 5 – Emil Huhn, 33, first baseman and catcher for the Federal League's Newark Pepper and the National League's Cincinnati Reds.
  • September 11 – Pat Duff, 50, pinch-hitter for the 1906 Washington Senators of the American League.
  • September 21 – Charlie Irwin, 56, third baseman who played from 1893 through 1902 for the Chicago Colts, Cincinnati Reds and Brooklyn Superbas of the National League.
  • September 22 – Dave Beadle, 61, catcher/outfielder for the 1884 Detroit Wolverines of the National League.
  • October 7 – Christy Mathewson, 45, Hall of Fame pitcher for the New York Giants, whose 373 victories and a 2.13 earned run average included two no-hitters and thirteen 20-win seasons. Notably, Mathewson reached 30 wins four times and posted an ERA under 2.00 five times, including a National League record of 37 wins in 1908, while leading the circuit in ERA and strikeouts five times each; in wins and shutouts four times, setting league's career records for wins, strikeouts, games and shutout. Other of his highlights includes having pitched three shutouts in a six-day span to lead the Giants to the 1905 World Series title.
  • October 19 – Jack Carney, 58, National League first baseman for the Washington Nationals, Buffalo Bisons and Cleveland Infants from 1889 to 1890.
  • October 21 – Marv Goodwin, 34, former pitcher for the Washington Senators, St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds between 1916 and 1925, and one of the original spitballers who was grandfathered when that pitch was deemed illegal.
  • October 28 – Willy Wilson, 41, pitcher for the 1906 Washington Senators of the American League.

November–December

  • November 1 – Roy Clark, 51, backup outfielder for the 1902 New York Giants of the National League.
  • November 1 – Billy Serad, 62, National League pitcher who played between 1884 and 1888 with the Buffalo Bisons and Cincinnati Red Stockings.
  • November 3 – Sam Frock, 42, National League pitcher for the Boston Doves/Rustlers and Pittsburgh Pirates between 1907 and 1911.
  • November 6 – Hervey McClellan, 30, backup infielder for the Chicago White Sox from 1919 to 1924.
  • November 7 – Sam Kimber, 73, pitcher for the 1884 Brooklyn Atlantics and the 1885 Providence Grays of the National League, who hurled a no-hitter in his first season.
  • November 9 – Ralph Frary, 49, saloon-keeper and ex-minor league player who umpired 17 National League games during the 1911 season.
  • November 20 – Walter Coleman, 52, pitcher for the 1895 St. Louis Cardinals.
  • November 23 – Henry Lynch, 59, outfielder for the 1893 Chicago Colts of the National League.
  • November 23 – Guerdon Whiteley, 66, backup outfielder for the Cleveland Blues and the Boston Beaneaters of the National League.
  • December 19 – Corty Maxwell, 74, National Association umpire during the 1875 season.
  • December 31 – Denny Sullivan, 67, third baseman for the Providence Grays 1879 National League champions and the 1880 Boston Red Caps.