Athletic Base Ball Club of Philadelphia

Athletic Base Ball Club of Philadelphia
League Mid-Atlantic Vintage Base Ball League (Eastern Division)
Location Philadelphia, PA
Ballpark "Athletic Field", behind the Please Touch Museum at 41st and Landsdowne and Avenue of the Republic, Philadelphia, PA 19131
Year founded 2009
Nickname(s) Athletics, A's
Colors Navy and white
2011 season 3-29
Ownership Not for profit organization
Management Scott "Step-Right-Up" Alberts (President)
T. James "Mouth" Ford (Captain)
Tim "Ironsides" Sweeney (Vice-Captain)
Ryan "Hurleigh" Berley (Vice President Quartermaster)
Dan "Victory" Gordon (Vice President of Operations)
Greg "Dandy Horse" Grigonis (Treasurer)
Edward "Lighthouse" Skirkie (Secretary)

Athletic Base Ball Club of Philadelphia is a vintage base ball team based in Philadelphia, which plays by 1864 National Association Rules. Athletic is a member of the Mid Atlantic Vintage Base Ball League, competing in the Eastern Division. The club made its debut on the diamond in April 2010 and plays many of its home matches at Memorial Hall in Fairmount Park, located in the West Philadelphia section of the city.

Inspiration

The original Athletic Base Ball Club was founded in 1859 when several members of the Handel & Haydn Society (a singing club) came together with the express purpose of playing “the New York game." They would go on to dominate amateur play in Philadelphia through the early and mid-1860s. The team went professional in the late 1860s and helped establish the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players, winning the first pennant in 1871.[1] Athletic went on to be a charter member in the National League until folding in 1877. The name Athletic was then adopted by three subsequent major league teams, including two American Association teams in Philadelphia, and the current Oakland Athletics of the American League.

Athletic’s uniforms are based on descriptions in The Book of American Pastimes by Charles Peverelly, and images in Harper’s Weekly.

The team was founded by Philadelphia native Scott Alberts. He came to learn about vintage base ball clubs playing on the East Coast from a magazine article and found that Philadelphia did not have its own club. Alberts founded the Athletic Base Ball Club of Philadelphia in October 2009, with assistance from Ryan & Eric Berley, ice cream purveyors in Old City in Philadelphia, and members of the Society for American Baseball Research.[2]

Philadelphia Base Ball Fair & Exhibition

Athletic hosts an annual Philadelphia Base Ball Fair & Exhibition at the Naval Yard Marine Parade Ground. The inaugural event in August 2011 drew twelve MAVBBL teams.[3]

Seasons & Records

2014 Season: 6-12 (34 games pending)

Captain: T. James "Mouth" Ford Vice Captain: Tim "Ironsides" Sweeney

2013 Season: 6-32

Captain: T. James "Mouth" Ford Vice Captain: Steven "Love Seat" Couch

2012 Season: 4-24

Captain: T. James "Mouth" Ford

2011 Season: 3-29

Co-Captains: David "Sticky" Frank & Steven "Love Seat" Couch

2010 Season: 1-12

Captain President: Scott "Smooth Bore" Alberts

2009 Season: Founding. No matches played. One practice/scrimmage with the Diamond State BBC of Delaware.

References

  1. "1871 Philadelphia Athletics Schedule, Box Scores and Splits". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 24 August 2011.
  2. Frank Fitzpatrick (31 July 2011). "Philadelphia side resurrects 19th century "base ball"". philly.com. Retrieved 25 August 2011.
  3. Georgina Gozum (24 August 2011). "Vintage baseball enthusiasts gather in Philadelphia". The Weekly Press. Retrieved 25 August 2011.

Coordinates: 39°58′34″N 75°12′21″W / 39.9760°N 75.20578°W / 39.9760; -75.20578

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.