Saturday, September 27, 2025

Once the Champion Chicago White Stockings Couldn’t Draw Flies in Troy

 

Almost all of this 1880 Championship team was back for another romp to the crown a year later.  Cap Anson front and center. 

My beloved Chicago Cubs have had an exciting season this year with a stellar roster that seemed invincible until the All Star break.  Since then key injuries have taken their toll as did an inexplicable extended team batting slip.  Pitching, spectacular defense, and base path daring-do kept the team in the playoff race.  They secured a National League Wildcard slot but have struggled to nail down the top spot which would assure all first round games would be played at home.  But no matter what the most loyal fans in baseball not only packed Wrigley Field but turned out in big numbers on the road sometimes even out numbering the home teams wherever they went. 

That perspective makes todays baseball yarn even more of a head scratcher.

On September 27, 1881 the Chicago White Stockings (now known as the Cubs) played a game before the smallest “crowd” in their long history—12.  Probably also the smallest crowd for any Major League regular season game.  Which was strange.  Under legendary player/coach Cap Anson the Chicago Nine had been the top professional team for some time and dominated the early seasons of the National League.  On that Tuesday afternoon in Troy, New York, the team was coasting to another championship with an eight game lead.

 

Chicago player/manager Cap Anson was not only the biggest star in early Major League Baseball but a major player in shaping the National Pass Time. 

Perhaps it was because the Troy Trojans—you didn’t expect any other nickname did you—were a lousy team.  They struggled in 5th place and finished the season 39-45, 17 games behind Chicago.  But the White Stockings were so laden with talent that they were a draw everywhere, even when the host teams were certified mopes. The Trojans would be disbanded after the next losing season.  More than half of their players jumped to a brand new franchise in New York City, the Gothams—later known as the Giants.

 

The hapless Troy Trojans, soon to go out of business.

Perhaps the low attendance was due to the weather.  My attempts to ascertain conditions that day in Troy have been unsuccessful.  But it can get a mite nippy and/or rainy and raw in Upstate New York.  My guess is that is what kept the crowd below the combined number of players on the field.

The Cubs would go on to have their own attendance problems, even in beautiful Wriggly Field when they seemed mired in particular futility in the early 1950’s.  But they have gone on to become one of the most successful teams in baseball in terms of selling tickets.  Home games have routinely sell out.  Compared to the nearly empty stadiums you see on television for some teams—looking at you White Sox—they are the envy of baseball.

Oh, by the way, back to that game in Troy—the White Stockings won 10-8.

 

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