1930: The Story of a Baseball Season When Hitters Reigned Supreme
By (Author) Lew Freedman
Sports Publishing LLC
Sports Publishing LLC
21st September 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
796.357
Hardback
320
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 27mm
528g
The 1930 Major League baseball season was both marvelous and horrendous, great for hitters, embarrassing for pitchers. In totality it was just this side of insane as an outlier among all seasons.
Major League Baseball began with the founding of the National League in 1876. In the 145 seasons since then, one season stands out as unique for the astounding nature of hitting: 1930.
A flipside of 1968s Year of the Pitcher, when the great St. Louis Cardinals Bob Gibson compiled a 1.12 earned run average and Detroit Tigers Denny McLain won 31 games, the 1930 season was when the batters reigned supreme. During this incredible season, more than one hundred players batted .300, the entire National League averaged .300, ten players hit 30 or more home runs, and some of the greatest individual performances established all-time records. From New York Giants Bill Terrys .401 averagethe last National Leaguer to hit over .400to the NL-record 56 home runs and major leaguerecord 192 runs batted in by Chicago Cubs Hack Wilson, the 1930 season is a wild, sometimes unbelievable, often wacky baseball story.
Breaking down the anomaly of the season and how each team fared, veteran journalist Lew Freeman tells the story of a one-off year unlike any other. While the greats stayed great, and though some pitchers did hold their ownwith seven winning 20 or more games, including 28 by Philadelphia Athletics Lefty Grove and 25 by Cleveland Indians Wes FerrellFreedman shares anecdotes about those players that excelled in 1930, and only 1930. More than ninety years later, 1930 offers insight into a season that still stands the test of time for batting excellence.
Lew Freedman is the author of more than one hundred books on sports, including Clouds over the Goalpost, The Original Six, and A Summer to Remember, and is the winner of more than 300 journalism awards. A veteran sportswriter, Freedman was formerly a staff writer for the Philadelphia Inquirer and Chicago Tribune, as well as other papers across the country, and currently resides in Columbus, Indiana.