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1945 Washington Senators season


FieldValue
nameWashington Senators
season1945
imageWashington Senators Primary Logo (1938 to 1947).svg
leagueAmerican League
ballparkGriffith Stadium
cityWashington, D.C.
record
league_place2nd
ownersClark Griffith and George H. Richardson
managersOssie Bluege
radioWOL (AM)/WWDC (FM)
(Arch McDonald, Russ Hodges)
season_listList of Minnesota Twins seasons

(Arch McDonald, Russ Hodges) The 1945 Washington Senators won 87 games, lost 67, and finished in second place in the American League. They were managed by Ossie Bluege and played their home games at Griffith Stadium, where they drew 652,660 fans, fourth-most in the eight-team league. The 1945 Senators represented the 45th edition of the Major League Baseball franchise and were the last of the 20th-century Senators to place higher than fourth in the American League; the team moved to Minneapolis–Saint Paul in 1961 to become the modern Minnesota Twins.

When the regular season ended on September 30, Washington trailed the pennant-winning Detroit Tigers (88–65) by 1 games. But because of World War II travel restrictions and the need to convert Griffith Stadium's playing field to host its autumn football tenants, the NFL Washington Redskins and Georgetown University, the Senators' 1945 schedule had actually ended seven days before, on Sunday, September 23. On that day, the "Griffs" stood one full game behind 86–64 Detroit. As the idle Senators waited, the Tigers had four games to play, two each against the fifth-place Cleveland Indians and third-place St. Louis Browns. After splitting against the Indians, Detroit was rained out for three days in St. Louis. When the Tigers defeated the Browns 6–3 in the first game of the doubleheader on September 30 (on a come-from-behind, grand slam home run by Hank Greenberg), the Senators were mathematically eliminated and Detroit clinched the pennant. The second game of the twin bill was rained out.

Outstanding pitching drove the 1945 Senators' success. Washington led the American League in team earned run average (2.92). Its starting rotation featured four knuckleball artists—Roger Wolff, Dutch Leonard, Johnny Niggeling and Mickey Haefner—who combined for 60 victories. Wolff and Leonard posted sterling 2.12 and 2.13 earned run averages, third and fourth in the league.

Regular season

  • August 4, 1945: Amputee and World War II veteran Bert Shepard pitches in an official American League game against the Boston Red Sox. Shepard, a United States Army Air Forces fighter pilot who lost his right leg 11 inches below the knee when his plane was shot down over Germany on May 21, 1944, was fitted with an artificial leg. In spring 1945, the Senators signed the former minor league hurler as a coach and batting practice pitcher and activated him in August. Called into a one-sided contest in the second game of a doubleheader at Griffith Stadium on August 4, Shepard gave up only one run in innings while striking out two Red Sox batters.
  • September 7, 1945: Washington first baseman Joe Kuhel homers off the Browns' Bob Muncrief to provide the winning margin in a 3–2 Senator victory at Griffith Stadium. It is the only four-bagger struck all season by the Senators in 78 home games in their spacious ballpark—and it was an inside-the-park job. Opposing teams hit only six home runs themselves in 1945 at Washington's home field.

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Notable transactions

  • July 26, 1945: The Senators sell the contract of outfielder Jake Powell to the Philadelphia Phillies.
  • August 8, 1945: The Senators purchase the contract of outfielder Mike Kreevich from the St. Louis Browns.
  • August 30, 1945: The Senators sign veteran free-agent pitcher Pete Appleton.

Roster

1945 Washington Senators
**Roster**
**Pitchers**

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
C9128676.266138
1B142533152.285275
2B133490145.296139
SS147562133.237048
3B11937579.211853
OF6925886.333237
OF145550153.278681
OF123504148.294131

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
8026863.235125
4515844.278123
5115039.260219
6014744.299114
5613829.210115
5413138.290013
319819.19403
185812.20702
155413.241010
204912.24501
18446.13605
6111.09102

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
33250.020102.12108
37238.116143.4783
31216.01772.1396
26176.27123.1690

Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
44233.114133.3266
35122.2752.7138
2881.1334.5426
425.0121.0814
621.1103.3812

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGWLSVERASO
151102.3014
30000.000
20006.000
10001.692
1000189.001

Farm system

Notes

References

References

  1. "1945: Hank's Heroic Rescue". This Great Game: The Online Book of Baseball.
  2. Neyer, Rob. "A Last Great Season: The Senators in '45". ESPN.com.
  3. Bedingfield, Gary. "Bert Shepard". [[Baseball in Wartime]].
  4. . (August 4, 1945). ["Boston Red Sox 15, Washington Senators 2"](https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1945/B08042WS11945.htm). *[[Retrosheet]]*.
  5. ''Great Baseball Feats, Facts and Figures'', 2008 Edition, p. 193, David Nemec and Scott Flatow, A Signet Book, Penguin Group, New York, {{ISBN. 978-0-451-22363-0
  6. [[Retrosheet]] [https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1945/B09070WS11945.htm box score: 1945-09-07]
  7. [https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1945/TM_WS11945.htm "Transactions for 1945 Washington Senators." Retrosheet]
  8. [http://www.baseball-almanac.com/players/player.php?p=wolffro01 "Baseball Almanac" entry]
  9. Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., ''The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball'', 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007
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