1871 in baseball



Champions

National Association final standings


The tenth founding member, the National club of Washington, did not enter a team for the championship until 1872.

Notable seasons

Events

January–March

April–June

  • May 4 – In the first major league game ever played, the National Association begins play at Kekionga Ball Grounds in Fort Wayne, Indiana, with Cleveland Forest Citys season|Forest City of Cleveland] visiting the 1871 [Fort Wayne Kekiongas season|Kekiongas of Fort Wayne]. Fort Wayne wins 2–0 behind the pitching of Bobby Mathews, the lowest scoring game of the season. Deacon White gets the first hit, while Joe McDermott, who will only have 11 hits and four runs batted in his career, drives in the first run in professional baseball history with a single in the second inning, scoring Bill Lennon. In the seventh inning, Lennon also became the first catcher in major league history to throw a runner out trying to steal second. Neither McDermott, Lennon, nor even the Kekiongas would finish the season.
  • May 6 – Future Hall of Famer Cap Anson makes his professional debut with the Rockford Forest Citys season|Rockford Forest Citys].
  • May 8 – Ezra Sutton of the Cleveland Forest Citys hits the first home run in professional baseball history in the fourth inning against the Chicago White Stockings season|Chicago White Stockings]. For good measure, Sutton adds a second home run in the seventh inning, but Cleveland falls to the White Stockings, 14–12.
  • May 9 – Esteban Enrique Bellán becomes the first Hispanic player in Major League Baseball history. The 21-year-old Cuban infielder will play as Steve Bellan for the Troy Haymakers season|Troy Haymakers] of the National Association.
  • May 20 – In Boston, Mort Rogers introduces a scorecard with a picture of Harry Wright on the front. Each 1871 [Boston Red Stockings season|Red Stockings] home game would feature a different player so that spectators could collect them and have a full set of Boston's players by season's end. This marketing strategy would be used throughout the 19th century and would ultimately evolve into Tobacco cards and, eventually, Baseball cards.
  • May 25 – Lip Pike of the Troy Haymakers season|Troy Haymakers] collects six hits in a 25–10 victory over the New York Mutuals season|New York Mutuals].
  • June 1 – Opening their National Association season, The Mutuals beat the Forest City club of Rockford, Illinois 7–3 before 2,000 at Union Grounds in Brooklyn.
  • June 19 – The Fort Wayne Kekiongas, leading the Troy Haymakers 6–3 after six innings at Troy, refuse to allow another ball to be used after the game ball becomes ripped because of the reputation of the Haymakers using illegal balls in the past. The umpire, after five full minutes of ordering Fort Wayne back on the field, calls the game a 9–0 forfeit in favor of the Haymakers.
  • June 28 – In an era of high scoring games being the norm, the Philadelphia Athletics season|Philadelphia Athletics] defeat the Troy Haymakers by the amazing score of 49–33. Both pitchers go the distance in the four-hour slugfest in which both teams score in each inning, to set the highest-scoring contest in National Association history. The 42 hits made by the Athletics, including a 7-for-7 day by John Radcliff and 6-for-8 performances by Al Reach and Levi Meyerle, is also a league record.

July–September

October–December

Births