Saturday, August 27, 2022

What Actually Happened

 I've decided to run a Out of the Park Baseball simulation based on the alternate reality in which the St. Louis Browns relocate to Los Angeles, becoming the Los Angeles Browns. To understand what could have happened, you must know what actually happened during late 1941.

I decided to copy and paste, a SABR article that was shared to me from a member on the OOTP Forums. Also mentioned is the Sporting News article in 1957, mentioning the details of the plan.



Over the years Barnes persistently wooed potential investors to the Browns. One, Harry Arthur, was the head of Fanchot and Marco Amusement Company, a Southern California entertainment company. Arthur, who divided his time between Los Angeles and St. Louis, and was fully aware of the Browns’ financial woes, approached Barnes and, as Barnes recalled, urged that “something be done to revive interest in the Browns, such as transferring the club’s franchise to Los Angeles.” Barnes initially demurred, thinking Arthur was just bragging on his California connections. Over time, however, as the Browns situation did not improve, Barnes decided to take Arthur’s idea more seriously.

This, on its face, was a daunting challenge. No franchise had moved since the Orioles went from Baltimore to New York for the 1903 season. And no team then played west of St. Louis. Creation of a cross-country schedule presented challenges. Rail and bus were the chosen mode of transportation. Cross-country air travel was in its infancy, and not until the 1950s would it become a functional form of transportation for sports teams.

As Barnes subsequently shared in one of several interviews given years later in TSN, he asked Arthur to explore investment opportunities in Southern California. Arthur almost immediately advised that A.P. Giannini, co-founder of the Bank of America, was willing to give considerable financial backing to a Los Angeles-based major-league team. The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce guaranteed a minimum season attendance of 500,000 for the first five years, offering to underwrite the difference if the guarantee was not met.

Barnes was sold on exploring the opportunity. He flew to Los Angeles at Arthur’s suggestion to meet with potential investors. The endeavor proved a complicated process. Not only did Barnes have to gain approval of American League owners, but because he was moving into Pacific Coast League territory, Barnes had to deal with Los Angeles’s then resident team, the Angels, owned by Phil Wrigley, also owner of the Chicago Cubs.

Wrigley offered to sell the team and Los Angeles’s Wrigley Field to Barnes for approximately $1 million, based on a down payment of $250,000 with annual installments of $30,000 over the next 25 years. Assurances were gained that a street bordering Wrigley Field would be condemned, allowing enlargement of the ballpark, double-decking it, and enlarging the bleachers to increase attendance capacity from 21,000 to 30,000 seats.

Upon completion of the transaction, Barnes would transfer the Angels to Long Beach, Arthur having gained assurances from civic leaders in the city that this was acceptable. All was contingent on gaining major-league approval for shifting the Browns to California.

In reviewing minor-league considerations as part of the deal, Barnes noted that at that time a major-league team could move into a minor-league territory and pay the league $5,000 plus damages to the club. As the Browns would take over the Angels, these costs would be avoided. A further complexity involved the Hollywood Stars. Discussions with the Stars involved arranging the schedule to avoid playing date conflicts. Incursion into their territory was not an issue as the Stars were then operating under a 20-year arrangement with the Angels, who had full territorial rights.

Having set plans in motion to secure rights to play in Los Angeles, Barnes sought concurrence for the move from his fellow club owners. While eager to improve revenue by moving from the perpetual money hole in St. Louis, they were concerned over whether a viable schedule could be created. Particular worries were raised about the safety of air travel.

This was resolved by arranging to have two of the then existing three East-West swings made by rail and one by air. Fears concerning air travel were further minimized by having players take different flights. Plans called for Chicago to be set up as the Eastern hub because of multiple daily flights. This satisfied safety concerns, and judicious use of open dates allowed creation of a workable schedule. Resolution of this and the possibility for more lucrative opportunities gained Barnes preliminary approval to shift the Browns.

Another factor at play involved the Cardinals. Eager to have St. Louis to himself, Cardinals owner Sam Breadon committed to giving Barnes $250,000 for the Browns to depart. In all of the components of this pending transaction Commissioner Landis was kept informed. While sympathetic to the Browns’ financial situation, he did not get directly involved, telling Barnes, “That is a matter you boys (club executives) must settle among yourselves.”

Ongoing negotiations were conducted with the utmost secrecy. Barnes was referred to as MISTER X in all documented meetings. DeWitt and Browns manager Luke Sewell were two of the very limited number of Browns employees who knew of these developments.

The myriad details for the transfer were settled. Barnes had received tacit approval of his fellow club owners and the minor-league teams in the Los Angeles area, secured the monetary incentive from the Cardinals and created a workable schedule. All Barnes needed was formal approval at a meeting of American League team owners set to take place at the Palmer House in Chicago — on December 8, 1941.

Barnes, DeWitt and Sewell arrived in Chicago on December 7 and were attending a Chicago Cardinals football game when they heard over the public-address system that the Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor. With war imminent and an invasion of the West Coast regarded as possible, Barnes realized that all plans were off. The next day, as President Franklin Roosevelt asked Congress to declare war on Japan, Barnes asked his fellow AL club owners to drop consideration of the proposed move. With Barnes joining in, the motion to shelve the motion received unanimous approval.

Also here is a snippet from a December 1st, 2021 article by The Guardian on the day after the attack:

One day after the attack, Major League Baseball’s owners were expected to approve the move of the American League’s St Louis Browns to Los Angeles for 1942 – 16 years before Walter O’Malley’s former Brooklyn Dodgers played their first season on the West Coast. The Browns felt so confident that they even scheduled a press conference in Los Angeles to announce the move on the afternoon of Monday 8 December 1941.

But in the aftermath of the attack in Hawaii 24 hours earlier – and with the radio broadcast of US president Franklin D Roosevelt’s declaration of war resonating vividly in the nation’s consciousness – the owners unanimously rejected the move, at the Browns’ insistence.

Had the owners approved the move, it would have changed the landscape of American professional sports, and might have generated more sweeping social, cultural and economic shifts.

Friday, August 26, 2022

The Butterfly Effect

On December 1st, 1941, during a scheduled press conference located at the Lyman's Cafe in Los Angeles, California, the St. Louis Browns' Owner Donald Barnes with a majority approval by the owners of Major League Baseball, announced to the sports world that the Browns, would be moving out further west to Los Angeles. As we all know this relocation gave the city of Los Angeles, its first professional sports team, and gave Barnes & the Browns to tap into an unexplored, eager market which the Los Angeles Browns would definitely benefit off.

The move was also thanks to Bank of America Co-founder A.P. Giannini, who agreed with Barnes' vision. Giannini would supply the much-needed additional funding that would transform this vision into a reality. As part of the deal, the Browns purchased the Pacific Coast League's Los Angeles Angels, moved the Angels down to Long Beach momentarily, while the Browns moved into Los Angeles' Wrigley Field, enlarging the stadium with the additional seating and modifications needed to field a big league team. The Angels would also work as an minor league affiliation strictly for the Browns, serving as the Browns' top farm team. 

The St. Louis Cardinals' Owner Sam Breadon excited about the idea of not sharing a city with another pro baseball team, added $250,000 to help make this move a reality. The deal also answered travel concerns, as the Browns' ownership struck a partnership with TWA Airlines and the Chicago-to-Los Angeles Sante Fe Railroad.

The Browns' relocation to Los Angeles was the first relocation in 40 years for Major League Baseball. Little did we know at the time, that there would be plenty of relocations and expansion over the next decades to come.

The Browns would be the only Los Angeles professional sports team for the next four years, until the National Football League's Cleveland Rams relocated to L.A. and became the Los Angeles Rams. The Rams were coming off a victory in the 1945 NFL Championship Game, but saw the potential and financial possibilities in moving out west. For Cleveland fans, they would eventually welcome Paul Brown's Cleveland Browns of the All-America Football Conference.

The Browns struggled physically and mentally those first few years -- suffering through plenty of three-week road trips, mostly by train, occasionally by air. The team needed a same-league franchise, a league foe to help take the burden off the Browns. That's where the Philadelphia Athletics came in. The Athletics know exactly how the Browns felt in St. Louis, playing in the same city with another team was frustrating. Both Philadelphia teams were horrible during the 1940's, and it simply didn't make sense to have two teams. The Macks were already in the process of selling, and the decision by MLB to allow the Athletics the likelihood to move compared to the Phillies was easy... The Browns needed to steady their own ship, cutting back on some travel, and that could benefit the next relocating team as well, case in point, the Athletics.

The Macks would sell to San Francisco businessman Paul Fagan. Fagan already purchased the PCL San Francisco Seals in 1945, and spent millions upgrading their stadium of one day hosting a Major League Baseball team. The deal pays off, and the San Francisco Athletics were born. The Athletics, just like the Browns, benefit with their move out west. The Athletics would eventually move into Candlestick Park and then their beautiful park on the harbor in Oracle Park.

The Boston Braves, another two-teams-in-a-town team, would leave the city of Boston to the Boston Red Sox, moving out to the Midwest, to play in Milwaukee, starting in 1954. The Milwaukee Braves would be a huge hit, as Milwaukee's attendance during the 1950's would set records in sharp contrast to the downward MLB attendance trend that was happening during that time. Despite the great attendance the Braves' ownership flirted with the idea of moving the team to a bigger city, particularly Atlanta. Thanks to a brief, but ugly, public legal trial with the state of Wisconsin, and thanks to a narrow vote margin, the Braves stay in Milwaukee.

The New York Giants moved out to Minnesota in 1956, moving into the new Metropolitan Stadium. The deal to move the Giants out to Minnesota was struck in 1954, when the Giants couldn't get an exact agreement on a possible new stadium deal in New York, while playing at an eroding Polo Grounds was past its purpose. For Giants legend, Willie Mays, he was familar with Minneapolis, playing for the Minneapolis Millers (the Triple-A Affiliate to the Giants).

Prior to the 1958 MLB Season, Brooklyn Dodgers' Owner Walter O'Malley, frustrated with an outdated Ebbets Field, and not keen on settling in Queens, New York -- moves the Dodgers to Dallas, to become the Dallas Dodgers. The Dodgers enjoy immediate success, as Texas falls in love with Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale, and the voice of Vin Scully

Expansion first comes to Major League Baseball in 1961, with the Baltimore Orioles joining the American League, and the Los Angeles Angels joining the National League. The following 1962 season, introduced the American League's Houston Colt 45's (who would become the Astros years later), and the New York Mets would join the National League, starting out at the Polo Grounds before moving into Shea Stadium.

The struggling Washington Senators move to Atlanta in time for the 1966 MLB Season. The Senators move into the new Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium. Long-time Atlanta Crackers Owner Earl Mann had been looking to add a team to the south for many years. Working in tandem with Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen Jr, the Senators are lured from Washington.

Four Major League teams join in 1969 -- The Kansas City Royals and Seattle Pilots of the American League, and the Montreal Expos and San Diego Padres of the National League. The Padres wouldn't stay in San Diego for long, as they would relocate to Washington D.C. and become the Washington Stars in 1974. The good news for Padres fan, they would return once again as an expansion team in 1977 along with the Toronto Blue Jays, both members of the American League.

Expansion would not come around for another 16 years, as the Colorado Rockies and Florida Marlins would join the National League in 1993. The last season of expansion took place in 1998 with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays joining the American League, and the Arizona Diamondbacks joining the National League. The Montreal Expos were able to strike a miraculous stadium deal to keep them in Montreal, while the Rays (minus Devil) are a team continuously circulating in relocation to this day. 

Among these rumors are also the potential for future expansion cities such as Portland, Charlotte, San Antonio, and Nashville. These cities are also speculated relocation sites for the Rays as well. There is even talk of baseball returning to Brooklyn, thanks to the National Basketball Association's Brooklyn Nets.

But of course, you know...

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That most of the above has never happened. For fictional purposes, I chose the date December 1st, 1941 instead of the actual date of the vote on December 8th -- because if the date was any earlier, the original plan would have succeeded, and all the fiction above could have happened. 

Most of the fiction was truly the vision from a writer for MLB.com named Mike Petriello, who wrote this great piece. The article details what actually happened and what could have happened. Simply put, any chance of the Los Angeles Browns happening ended when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor & the United States on December 7th.

There is plenty of back-and-forth debate from baseball experts, bloggers or casual fans on the chances of the Los Angeles Browns chances at becoming a reality. Some say it wasn't close, and there are some that say it came closer than anyone could have imagined. To understand the situation, you will have to understand how what actually happened -- which I will post in tomorrow night's post "What Actually Happened."

I was inspired by this article to create an alternate timeline playing Out of the Park Baseball 22, creating uniforms even for the Los Angeles Browns (pictured below). I am already through the 1942 and 1943 seasons, which have been reported in full detail on the OOTP Forums



I will bring this story to life on here as well, as you will witness an alternate baseball history, which I decided to call 'The L.A. Browns Butterfly Effect'. In my alternate reality, the Los Angeles Browns did become a reality, and I will show how it would have changed the baseball landscape.


Tuesday, August 23, 2022

The Ever-Changing Plan

 When my Grandma passed, she left each of us grandkids some inheritance money. With some of that money, Becky and I decided to purchase concert tickets to go see her absolute favorite (and a favorite of mine) Red Hot Chili Peppers since they were reunited with lead guitarist John Frusciante. We were extra excited when we found out that one of their opening bands are one of my favorite bands was The Strokes. I have always wanted to see them.

When we went on the site, we noticed that tickets in our regions were already sold out, and the tickets that were available had possible obstructions or were simply lousy seats. We would purchase the tickets in November, but there was one catch, we were seeing the bands in the city of Philadelphia. 

Why Philadelphia? My sister and her husband live there, and it would be a good chance to visit possibly while we were in town. The concert wasn't until September 2022, and we felt we had a good 10 months to prepare for such a date. 

Numerous things happened in between that time, and this upcoming September...

  • My sister and husband announced the wonderful news at Christmas that they were expecting in August 2022, which was great news. 
  • Russia invaded the Ukraine.
  • Inflation & Gas prices started making life a bitch. 
  • Our kitten Neptune that we got from my folks' property in November, started having having health problems in March 2022. 
  • Plenty of vet appointments, new diet for the kitten.
  • Airports have been horrendous, and looking for hotel, airline combinations were not looking good once we got to June.
So we made some changes to the plan, we didn't like the idea of driving into such a major city like Philadelphia, plus gun-shootings and violence going up also made that less desirable. We decided to kick the concert to the curb (sell the tickets), make plans to visit one of her best friends in West Virginia, and on the way down go to the Toledo Zoo, maybe make it down to Harper's Ferry (W.Va) or even Cumberland Gap much further down in east Tennessee. We started getting weary of Neptune's health, and decided to scratch, Harpers and the Gap, scratching a couple days, making trip shorter in which now I would be passing back through the Toledo area which now had me possibly going to the Glass City APBA Baseball Tournament. Asked the wife, and we decided to do that, while also visiting her friend Melissa, as planned.

Neptune's health gets dramatically worse. He was born with Cerebellar Hypoplasia, and over the past couple months started having seizures, and the vet also believed he probably had a brain tumor on top of that. So they gave us medication that he had to give him two times a day. With that, Becky decided to cancel visiting Melissa, because one of us had to stay to give him the medicine.

A couple weeks ago, we started the meds, at first it seemed to help, and noticed a sliver of improvement, but in a few days it goes to absolute bad. A week ago from today we decided that the next day we would say goodbye to 'Neppy', he was only 10 months old.

My wife decides that she won't let me go down to Glass City alone, and the two older cats, can do well with two nights alone. 

With all that, my sister was due any day now, and her due date was August 13th I believe. We found out on August 19th, that my soon-to-be niece kept breaching and twisting in my sister's stomach, so they decided to plan a C-Section on August 22nd.

So yesterday, my sister and her husband welcomed their beautiful daughter Vivian into the world, all 8 lbs and 12 ounces of her -- and that she would have my grandma's middle name for her middle name. My folks waited a long time to become grandparents, you would figure with four kids that their chances would be great. I was the oldest, but Becky and I weren't blessed to bring a child into the world, but my sister 9 years younger finally made the reality of my folks becoming grandparents a reality at the ages of 65 years young. 

So that's how this ever-changing plan resulted in my first APBA tournament appearance (coming this upcoming Saturday) in three years came to be. Lots has happened since my last tournament (which was also Glass City) with millions of motions in between, and it now all comes full circle. 

Oh, and believe me, this was all the short version.

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