Atlanta Braves Franchise Top 10 outfielders: Hugh Duffy

BOSTON - 1891. The Boston Red Stockings Base Ball Club pose for portraits, constructed into a team collage for 1891. John Clarkson, at third row from the top, left, King Kelly, second row from top, left, and Kid Nichols, fourth row from the top, left, are the stars of the team. (Photo by Mark Rucker/Transcendental Graphics, Getty Images)
BOSTON - 1891. The Boston Red Stockings Base Ball Club pose for portraits, constructed into a team collage for 1891. John Clarkson, at third row from the top, left, King Kelly, second row from top, left, and Kid Nichols, fourth row from the top, left, are the stars of the team. (Photo by Mark Rucker/Transcendental Graphics, Getty Images) /
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Number six on my list of Atlanta Braves Franchise’s best outfielders is Hall of Fame Outfielder. (Photo by Mark Rucker/Transcendental Graphics, Getty Images) /

Changing the game

The 1891 Beaneaters weren’t chopped liver; they finished second the National League behind Brooklyn. Boston scored more runs a game while allowing fewer than the eventual NL champs, but they couldn’t seem to get it all together at the end.  The Heavenly Twins changed that, by solidifying the defense and energizing the attack.

Duffy’s first season in 1892 was the last of what we’d call pitchers’ years. Batting one-two in the order, the twins began a campaign of speed and aggressive base running to counter the pitchers’ superiority, and it worked.

The pair created a hit-and-run/stolen base-oriented offense that drove pitchers nuts. Duffy stole 51 bases, McCarthy stole 53, Herman Long stole 57, Bobby Lowe had 38 and Billy Nash chipped in with 31.

Flanked by Lowe in left and McCarthy in right, the Beaneaters outfield was among the fastest in the league and played it differently than other teams.

"… in the outfield the two developed defensive tactics (like close-in positioning and the trapped-ball double play) that ably supported (Boston’s) exceptional pitching. . ."

With Duffy and McCarthy igniting the offense, the pitching began to click too. Kid Nichols and Jack Stivetts won 35 games each, Harry Staley won 22, and the Beaneaters finished the season 102–48. Baseball-Reference credits he Beaneaters with an outright NL Championship because their overall record had then 8½ games ahead of Cleveland.  At the time Cleveland disagreed.

Related Story. Numbers seven and eight. light

The first NL expansion

Tired of arguing over players, the NL and AA agreed to a merger and four teams from the AA joined the NL; Baltimore, Louisville, St Louis, and Washington.  After the merger, Sporting Life editor Francis Richter coined the term “the big league,” a reference that remained even though the NL dropped to eight teams again in 1900.

The season jumped from 140 to 154 scheduled games in a split-season format much like the one later used in the strike-year of 1981.  The first half officially ended on July 15 and the second in October.  The league also hoped different teams would win each half and tentatively planned a postseason “world championship series.”

On July 15, the Beaneaters won the first half with a 52-22 record, 2½ games in front of Brooklyn, with Cleveland in fifth-place six games back.  The Beaneaters started the second half slowly but led by Duffy and Kid Nichols, bounced back to finish the second half 50-26. The Spiders roared into the second half, grabbing the lead at the end of July and holding on to finish 53-23, one game ahead of Boston.  The web-spinners also did a lot of trash-talking.

"Cleveland’s playermanager, Patsy Tebeau, suggested that “the Beaneaters fear the humiliation of possible defeat. Boston manager Frank Selee  . . . responded that “the Boston players are willing to go for broke on their ability to beat the club that has been ‘easy’ for [us] all year.”"

Slated for nine games, but after game one went 11 shutout innings, the Beaneaters crushed the Spiders in the next four games to win the the 1892 equivalent of the NLCS.  Duffy led the Boston attack, batting .462/.481/.846/1.328.