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1940 Amateur World Series


FieldValue
country
dates14 September – 6 October
num_teams7
venues1
cities1
defending_championCuba
championCuba
num_championships2
games84
mvpCUB Connie Marrero
prevseason[1939](1939-amateur-world-series)
nextseason[1941](1941-amateur-world-series)

| second-flagvar = | third-flagvar = | fourth-flagvar =

The 1940 Amateur World Series was the third Amateur World Series (AWS), an international men's amateur baseball tournament. The tournament was sanctioned by the International Baseball Federation (which titled it the Baseball World Cup as of the 1988 tournament). The tournament took place, for the second consecutive time, in Cuba. It was contested by seven national teams playing twelve games each from September 14 through October 6 in Havana.

Cuba won its second, and second consecutive, Amateur World Series title. The runners-up were, also for the second consecutive year, Nicaragua and the United States; though the U.S. had finished in third place in 1939, the 1940 tournament saw a marked improvement as it tied with Nicaragua for the silver medal.

Participants

Though only three of the fourteen teams that had been invited to the second Amateur World Series in Havana managed to attend the previous year, many of them participated in the 1940 edition, leading to a robust field of seven teams.

Mexico, Venezuela, and Puerto Rico all made their debuts at the Amateur World Series, as did Hawaii (which at the time was a U.S. territory), becoming the first team from Oceania to participate. However, all of those nations had previously participated in regional competitions; Mexico at the 1926 Central American and Caribbean Games, Venezuela and Puerto Rico at the 1938 Central American and Caribbean Games, and Hawaii at the tri-national tournament held in Paris during the 1937 World's Exhibition.

Invited teams

Caribbean (2)

  • (hosts)

Oceania (1)

North America (3)

South America (1)

Venue

Havana, Cuba
{{Location map+Cubawidth=500float=centercaption=places=
Gran Stadium Cervecería Tropical
Capacity: **15,000**
[[File:Estadio La Tropical 1937.jpg250px]]

Results

Highlights

Some players of note who took part in the tournament include:

{{bb|CUB}}

  • Connie Marrero (3-2, 1.15 ERA), winner of the tournament most valuable player award
  • Pedro Orta (.282), father of journeyman Jorge Orta
  • Nap Reyes (.297), future major league player
  • Segundo Rodriguez (.433), team batting leader

{{bb|NIC|1908}}

  • Stanley Cayasso led the tournament in hits with 19
  • Juan Manuel Vallecillo led the tournament in RBIs with 10, and tied for second with doubles 4
  • José "Chino" Meléndez had a record of 3-0
  • Jonathan Robinson (.444) led the tournament in batting average, as well as runs with 14

{{bb|USA|1912}}

  • Stubby Overmire, future major league player

{{bb|Hawaii}}

  • Lawrence Kunihisha led the tournament with 7 stolen bases
  • Herb North was a former professional who played with the Nagoya Golden Dolphins in the first Japanese Baseball League game in 1936

Final standings

Pos.TeamWL
102
93
93
457
57
6210
7210

Honors and awards

Statistical leaders

StatisticNameTotalBatting averageHitsRunsHome runsRuns batted inStolen bases
Jonathan Robinson.444
Stanley Cayasso19
Jonathan Robinson14
Jonathan Robinson1
Juan Manuel Vallecillo10
Lawrence Kunihisha7
StatisticNameTotalWinsEarned run averageStrikeouts
L. Sinclair3
Jonathan Robinson0.00
Cliff McClanahan29

Awards

AwardPlayerRef.
Most Valuable Player

All-Star team

PositionPlayerC1B2B3BSSOFP
Bill Krywicki
Carlos Colás
Virgilio Arteaga
Joe McDonough
David K. Richards
Lawrence Kunihisa
Héctor Benítez
Antonio Ruiz
Jonathan Robinson
Stubby Overmire
Cliff McClanahan
Conrado Marrero
Tomás Hechevarría
José "Chino" Meléndez
Al Nalua

Source:

References

  • Bjarkman, Peter, A History of Cuban Baseball

References

  1. "Historia de la Copa Mundial/World Cup History I-X (1938-1948)".
  2. (8 October 1940). ""Hoy" selecciona su Team Estelar correspondiente a la Serie Mundial Amateur".
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