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1953 Major League Baseball season

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The 1953 major league baseball season began on April 13, 1953. The regular season ended on September 27, with the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees as the regular season champions of the National League and American League, respectively. In a rematch of the previous season, the postseason began with Game 1 of the 50th World Series on September 30 and ended with Game 6 on October 5. In the fifth iteration of this Subway Series World Series matchup (and a rematch of the previous year), the Yankees defeated the Dodgers, four games to two, capturing their 16th championship in franchise history, concluding their 5-year World Series winning streak, an all-time record.

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Locations of teams for the 1942–1953 American League seasons
American League

The 20th Major League Baseball All-Star Game was held on July 14 at Crosley Field in Cincinnati, Ohio, home of the Cincinnati Reds. The National League won, 5–1.

The Cincinnati Reds changed their name to the Cincinnati Redlegs due to the escalating Cold War and resulting red scare; as Cincinnati's general manager, Gabe Paul, noted later, "We wanted to be certain we weren't confused with the 'Russian Reds'."[1]

The 1953 season would see the first relocation in professional baseball since the Milwaukee Brewers moved from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to St. Louis, Missouri, as the St. Louis Browns, with the Boston Braves, coincidentally, relocating to Milwaukee as the Milwaukee Braves. It would be the first National League relocation since the St. Louis Maroons moved to Indianapolis, Indiana, and became the Indianapolis Hoosiers. This season began a trend of relocation which would occur several times throughout the 1950s and 1960s. The season would also prove to be the last season of the Browns franchise in St. Louis, moving to Baltimore, Maryland, the following season as the Baltimore Orioles.

On September 13, the Philadelphia Athletics became the seventh team in professional baseball to break the color line when they fielded Bob Trice; the Chicago Cubs became the eighth team just four days later when they fielded future Hall-of-Famer Ernie Banks.[2]

This was also the first regular season of the televised Major League Baseball Game of the Week, originally broadcast on ABC.

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Schedule

The 1953 schedule consisted of 154 games for all teams in the American League and National League, each of which had eight teams. Each team was scheduled to play 22 games against the other seven teams of their respective league. This continued the format put in place since the 1904 season (except for 1919) and would be used until 1961 in the American League and 1962 in the National League.

National League Opening Day took place on April 13, featuring the newly relocated Milwaukee Braves and Cincinnati Reds, while American League Opening Day took place the following day, featuring six teams. This was the first season since 1951 that both leagues opened on different days. The final day of the scheduled regular season was on September 27, which saw all sixteen teams play, continuing the trend from 1946. The World Series took place between September 30 and October 5.

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Rule changes

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The 1953 season saw the following rule changes:

  • Players involved in waiver transactions after the June 15 deadline now had to pass through waivers in both leagues, not just in their respective leagues.[3]
    • In addition, waiver claims were prioritized in reverse order of the team’s record to give less-competitive teams the first opportunity to acquire a player.[3]
  • Rules regarding signing bonus players were amended:[3]
    • Previously, what defined a bonus player in the majors was $6,000 (equivalent to $70,500 in 2024), Triple-A was $4,000 (equivalent to $47,000 in 2024), and lower level leagues were progressively less. Now, all leagues classified above Class B (including majors) considered more than $4,000 as the line for being considered a bonus player, while Class B and lower placed this line at $3,000 (equivalent to $35,300 in 2024).
    • Bonus players signed to major-league contract were required to spend the first two years on the parent team before he could farmed out; if signed to minor-league contract, the player could not be moved up or down in the farms system for one year.
    • The commissioner was granted the authority to levy fines of $2,000 (equivalent to $23,500 in 2024) or more on clubs and $500 (equivalent to $5,900 in 2024) or more on officials who violated the rule, as well as suspend any guilty parties.
  • Rules regarding high-school players were amended. Players would be allowed to sign at any time, but could not play until their original class graduated. A student who left school early could be granted permission to play at any time.[4] Violation of the high-school signing rule could lead to the commissioner declaring the illegally signed player a free agent and levying a fine on the team.[3]
  • A new amendment regarding players being optioned or recalled to and from minor leagues was implemented. A major-league player optioned to the minor leagues was required to remain with the minor-league team for at least 10 days (and must be physically fit to play). In addition, any player optioned after July 31 must remain with the minor-league team until the minor-league's season concluded (with an exception granted in case of an open roster spot on the major-league team due to an emergency injury, allowing immediate recalls only in this situation).[3]
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Teams

Standings

American League

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National League

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Postseason

The postseason began on September 30 and ended on October 5 with the New York Yankees defeating the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1953 World Series in six games.

Bracket

World Series
   
AL New York Yankees 4
NL Brooklyn Dodgers 2

Managerial changes

Off-season

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In-season

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League leaders

American League

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National League

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Awards and honors

Regular season

More information Baseball Writers' Association of America Awards, BBWAA Award ...

Other awards

Baseball Hall of Fame

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Home field attendance

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Broadcasting rights

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All American League teams (except for the St. Louis Browns) signed a two-year reciprocal agreement that guaranteed the visiting team a percentage of the radio and television broadcast revenue. The result of the Browns not signing said agreement, was that the team was shut out of the television and radio market at home and on the road.[3]

In the National League, while the St. Louis Cardinals forged agreements with the Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati Redlegs, other teams could continue to broadcast games with opponents, even if they had not signed an agreement to do so.[3]

Television

ABC executive Edgar J. Scherick approached MLB with a Saturday Game of the Week. With fewer outlets than CBS or NBC, ABC needed paid programming (or "anything for bills" as Scherick put it). At first, ABC hesitated at the idea of a nationally televised regular season baseball program, but gave Scherick the green light to sign up teams. Prior to the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961, antitrust laws only allowed the networks to make deals with individual teams instead of pooling rights directly from a central league authority. Unfortunately, only three (the Philadelphia Athletics, Cleveland Indians,[31] and Chicago White Sox[32][33] were interested.[34] To make matters worse, Major League Baseball barred the Game of the Week from airing within fifty miles of any big-league city.[35]

The All-Star Game and World Series aired exclusively on NBC.

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See also

References

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