1917 in baseball

{{See also|1917 Major League Baseball season}}

{{Year in baseball top |

this year = 1917 |

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{{Year nav sports topic5|1917|baseball|sports}}

Champions

=Major League Baseball=

MLB statistical leaders

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
! colspan=2 | American League

! colspan=2 | National League

Stat

! Player

! Total

! Player

! Total

AVG

| Ty Cobb (DET)

| .383

| Edd Roush (CIN)

| .341

HR

| Wally Pipp (NYY)

| 9

| Gavvy Cravath (PHP)
Dave Robertson (NYG)

| 12

RBI

| Bobby Veach (DET)

| 110

| Heinie Zimmerman (NYG)

| 100

W

| Eddie Cicotte (CWS)

| 28

| Grover Alexander (PHP)

| 30

ERA

| Eddie Cicotte (CWS)

| 1.53

| Fred Anderson (NYG)

| 1.44

K

| Walter Johnson (WSH)

| 188

| Grover Alexander (PHP)

| 200

Major league baseball final standings

=American League final standings=

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{{1917 American League standings|highlight=Chicago White Sox}}

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{{AL Team Maps (1915–1922)}}

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=National League final standings=

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{{1917 National League standings|highlight=New York Giants}}

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{{NL Team Maps (1916–1919)}}

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Events

File:EddieCicotte55.jpg

Births

=January=

=February=

=March=

=April=

=May=

=June=

=July=

=August=

=September=

=October=

=November=

=December=

Deaths

=January–March=

  • January 3 – Rynie Wolters, 74, Dutch pitcher and outfielder who hit .318 and posted a 19–23 record with the New York Mutuals, Cleveland Forest Citys and Elizabeth Resolutes between 1871 and 1873.
  • January 10 – Jack McFetridge, 47, pitcher who played in 1890 and 1903 with the Philadelphia Phillies of the National League.
  • January 13 – Jim Garry, 47, pitcher for the 1893 Boston Beaneaters.
  • January 16 – Charlie Geggus, 54, pitcher who posted a 10–9 record and a 2.54 ERA for the 1884 Washington Nationals of the Union Association.
  • January 17 – Pat McCauley, 46, backup catcher who played between 1893 and 1903 for the St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators and New York Highlanders.
  • January 19 – Charlie Enwright, 29, shortstop who played for the 1909 St. Louis Cardinals.
  • January 26 – Jim McGuire, 41, shortstop for the 1901 Cleveland Blues of the American League.
  • January 30 – Cyclone Ryan, 51, Irish pitcher and first baseman who played for the 1887 New York Metropolitans and the 1891 Boston Beaneaters.
  • January 31 – Pete O'Brien, 39, second baseman for the Cincinnati Reds, St. Louis Browns, Cleveland Naps and Washington Senators between 1901 and 1907.
  • February 7 – Tim Murnane, 64, first baseman and center fielder in the early years of professional baseball who became president of the New England League and went on to a distinguished tenure as sports editor of The Boston Globe for over 30 years, serving as one of the sport's leading advocates.
  • February 18 – Charlie Fisher, 64, third baseman who played for the Kansas City Cowboys and the Chicago Browns of the Union Association in the 1884 season.
  • February 18 – William Kerr, 69, co-owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates (1893–1900).
  • February 23 – Art Weaver, 37, catcher and infielder who played with the Cardinals, Pirates, Browns and White Sox between 1902 and 1908.
  • February 28 – Parson Nicholson, 53, second baseman who played for the Detroit Wolverines, Toledo Maumees and Washington Senators between 1888 and 1895.
  • March 4 – Joe Dowie, 51, backup outfielder for the 1889 Baltimore Orioles of the National League.
  • March 9 – Cooney Snyder, 45, Canadian catcher who played for the 1898 Louisville Colonels.
  • March 15 – John Munce, 69, outfielder for the 1884 Wilmington Quicksteps of the Union Association.
  • March 27 – Willie Jensen, 27, American League pitcher who played for the 1912 Detroit Tigers and the 1914 Philadelphia Athletics.

=April–June=

  • April 5 – Frank McLaughlin, 60, utility infielder and outfielder who played from 1882 through 1884 for five teams in three different leagues.
  • April 9 – Charlie Gould, 69, first baseman for the original Cincinnati Red Stockings of 1869 and 1870, the first team consisting entirely of professional players.
  • May 19 – Pat McManus, 54, who pitched for the Indianapolis Hoosiers (1889) and Philadelphia Phillies (1894) of the National League.
  • May 25 – Willie Sudhoff, 42, pitcher for six different teams from 1897 to 1906, who became the first to play for all St. Louis clubs both in the National and American leagues.
  • May 27 – Tom Ford, 50, American Association pitcher and shortstop for the Columbus Solons and the Brooklyn Gladiators during the 1890 season.
  • June 10 – Jack Fanning, 54, pitcher for the 1889 Indianapolis Hoosiers and 1894 Philadelphia Phillies.

=July–September=

  • July 1 – Al Buckenberger, 56, manager for four teams between 1889 and 1904, mainly for the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Boston Beaneaters of the National League.
  • July 1 – Henry Mathewson, 30, pitcher for the National League New York Giants in the 1906 and 1907 seasons.
  • July 16 – Dick Butler, 47, backup catcher for the 1897 Louisville Colonels and the 1899 Washington Senators.
  • July 27 – John Schappert, [?], who pitched for the St. Louis Brown Stockings of the American Association in the 1882 season.
  • July 28 – Whitey Ritterson, 62, catcher for the 1876 Philadelphia Athletics.
  • August 7 – Bill Loughran, 55, catcher for the 1884 New York Gothams of the National League.
  • August 24 – Al McCauley, 54, first baseman and pitcher for the Indianapolis Hoosiers, Philadelphia Phillies and Washington Statesmen between the 1884 and 1891 seasons.
  • August 27 – Cy Alberts, 35, pitcher for the 1910 St. Louis Cardinals.
  • September 13 – Gene Derby, 57, catcher for the 1885 Baltimore Orioles of the American Association.

=October–December=

  • October 12 – Bill Clay, 42, backup outfielder for the 1902 Philadelphia Phillies.
  • November 1 – Steve Brady, 66, outfielder who played between 1874 and 1886 for the Hartford Dark Blues, Washington Nationals and New York Metropolitans.
  • November 19 – King Bailey, 47, pitcher for the 1895 Cincinnati Reds.
  • December 2 – Mike Hooper, 67, National Association outfielder for the Baltimore Marylands between 1868 and 1873, who led his team in runs scored from 1868 to 1870.
  • December 17 – Frank Burlingame, 64, National League and Union Association umpire
  • December 20 – Will Calihan, 48, American Association pitcher who played from 1890 to 1891 with the Rochester Broncos and Philadelphia Athletics.

{{Year in baseball|this year=1917}}

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