Former Major League Baseball team of the National League in Buffalo, New York from 1879–1885
Este artículo trata sobre la franquicia de béisbol de la Liga Nacional. Para otros equipos llamados Buffalo Bisons, consulte Buffalo Bisons (desambiguación) .
El club de béisbol Buffalo Bisons original jugó en la Liga Nacional entre 1879 y 1885 . Los Bisons jugaron sus juegos en Riverside Park (1879-1883) y Olympic Park (1884-1885) en Buffalo, Nueva York . Los Bisontes de la Liga Nacional están incluidos en la historia del equipo de ligas menores del mismo nombre que todavía juega en la actualidad; por lo tanto, es el único equipo de la Liga Nacional del siglo XIX que todavía existe y ya no juega en las Grandes Ligas .
Brouthers, Galvin, O'Rourke, Radbourn y White son miembros del Salón de la Fama del Béisbol .
Destacados y momentos memorables [ editar ]
1877 : Un precursor de los Bisons jugó en la League Alliance , [1] terminando con un récord de 79-28-3. Posteriormente, el equipo se unió a la Liga Nacional. [1]
1880 : El futuro lanzador del Salón de la Fama Charlie Radbourn debutó como segunda base el 5 de mayo.
1880 : Pud Galvin lanzó un juego sin hits contra Worcester Ruby Legs el 20 de agosto
1881: 2B Davy Force recorded 12 putouts, seven assists, two unassisted double plays, participated in a triple play, and made just one error in 20 chances in a 12-inning game against Worcester, on September 15.
1882: Ireland-born Curry Foley became the first major league player ever to hit for the cycle (including a grand slam), on May 25, and Dan Brouthers led the National League with a .368 batting average
1883: Brouthers won his second consecutive NL batting title with a .374 average and Galvin posted 46 wins
1884: Brouthers hit triples in four consecutive games, set a season team-record with 14 home runs, and Galvin won 46 games for the second year in a row. Galvin threw another no-hitter, on August 4. The Bisons' 18–0 score remains the greatest margin of victory in a no-hitter in Major League history. Two years after Foley, Jim O'Rourke became the fourth player in MLB history to hit for the cycle, on June 16.
1885: Brouthers hit .359, ending second in the NL batting race behind Roger Connor (.371)
^"Buffalo Baseball Hall of Fame." Buffalo Bisons. Retrieved on August 19, 2018.
External links[edit]
Baseball Almanac
Team index page at Baseball Reference
Buffalo Bisons history
vteBuffalo Bisons
Based in Buffalo, New York
Notable players
Dan Brouthers
Davy Force
Pud Galvin
Jim O'Rourke
Hardy Richardson
Jack Rowe
Deacon White
The franchise
Managers
Players
Ballparks
Riverside Park
Olympic Park
Seasons
1879
1880
1881
1882
1883
1884
1885
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