1927 New York Yankees season

1927 New York Yankees
World Series Champions
American League Champions
LeagueAmerican League
BallparkYankee Stadium
CityNew York City, New York
Record110–44 (.714)
League place1st
OwnersColonel Jacob Ruppert
General managersEd Barrow
ManagersMiller Huggins
← 1926 Seasons 1928 →

The 1927 New York Yankees season was the 25th season of the New York Yankees of the American League. The team finished with a record of 110–44–1, winning their fifth pennant and finishing 19 games ahead of the Philadelphia Athletics and were tied for first or better for the whole season.[1] New York was managed by Miller Huggins, and played at Yankee Stadium. They won the 1927 World Series, sweeping the Pittsburgh Pirates. This Yankees team was known for its feared lineup, which was nicknamed "Murderers' Row", and is widely considered to be the greatest baseball team in MLB history.[2][3][4]

Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig finished the 1927 season with 12.6 and 11.9 Wins Above Replacement (WAR), respectively. These totals are among the top ten highest single-season WAR by a player in MLB history, with Ruth’s 12.6 ranking third (behind his 12.8 WAR in 1921 and 14.1 WAR in 1923) and Gehrig’s 11.9 ranking sixth.[5]

Regular season

[edit]
Yankee Stadium in 1927.

The Yankees' 110 victories broke the previous American League mark of 105 (set by the 1912 Boston Red Sox) and would stand as the American League single-season record until it was broken by the Cleveland Indians in 1954. But counting their World Series sweep, the 1927 Yankees had a total record of 114–44 --- which is still the all-time highest single-season winning percentage (.721) in American League history. The 1998 Yankees, who also won their World Series in a sweep, are second with a full-season mark of 125–50 (.714).[citation needed]

This was the first year the Yankees acknowledged their team nickname on their uniforms, albeit their road uniforms. Their home uniforms remained free of any kind of logo except for the "NY" on their caps.

The roster included nine future Hall of Famers: Pitchers Herb Pennock and Waite Hoyt, Infielders Lou Gehrig and Tony Lazzeri, outfielders Babe Ruth and Earle Combs, Manager Miller Huggins, Team President Ed Barrow and Owner Colonel Jacob Ruppert.

Babe Ruth

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With the race long since decided, the nation's attention turned to Babe Ruth's pursuit of his own home run mark of 59, set in 1921. Early in the season, Ruth expressed doubts about his chances: "I don't suppose I'll ever break that 1921 record. To do that, you've got to start early, and the pitchers have got to pitch to you. I don't start early, and the pitchers haven't really pitched to me in four seasons. I get more bad balls to hit than any other five men...and fewer good ones." Ruth was also being challenged for his slugger's crown by teammate Lou Gehrig, who nudged ahead of Ruth's total in midseason, prompting the New York World-Telegram to anoint Gehrig the favorite. But Ruth caught Gehrig (who would finish with 47), and then had a remarkable last leg of the season, hitting 17 home runs in September. His 60th came on September 30, in the Yankees' next-to-last game against the Washington Senators at Yankee Stadium. Tied 2–2, he hit a 2-run home run in the bottom of the 8th inning off of Tom Zachary, where they won the game 4–2. Ruth was exultant, shouting after the game, "Sixty, count 'em, sixty! Let's see some other son of a bitch match that!"[6] In later years, he would give Gehrig some credit: "Pitchers began pitching to me because if they passed me they still had Lou to contend with." In addition to his career-high 60 home runs, Ruth batted .356, drove in 165 runs and slugged .772.

Babe Ruth's 60 home runs

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HR Date Pitcher Threw Team Location Result Score Inning Type of HR
1 April 15, 1927 Howard Ehmke Right Philadelphia Athletics Yankee Stadium Won 6–3 Bottom of the 1st Solo
2 April 23, 1927 Rube Walberg Left Philadelphia Athletics Shibe Park Lost 3–4 Top of the 1st Solo
3 April 24, 1927 Sloppy Thurston Right Washington Senators Griffith Stadium Won 6–2 Top of the 6th Solo
4 April 29, 1927 Slim Harriss Right Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Won 9–0 Top of the 5th Solo
5 May 1, 1927 Jack Quinn Right Philadelphia Athletics Yankee Stadium Won 7–3 Bottom of the 1st 2-Run HR
6 May 1, 1927 Rube Walberg Left Philadelphia Athletics Yankee Stadium Won 7–3 (2nd HR) Bottom of the 8th Solo
7 May 10, 1927 Milt Gaston Right St. Louis Browns Sportsman's Park Won 8–7 Top of the 1st 3-Run HR
8 May 11, 1927 Ernie Nevers Right St. Louis Browns Sportsman's Park Won 4–2 Top of the 1st 2-Run HR
9 May 17, 1927 Rip Collins Right Detroit Tigers Navin Field Won 9–2 Top of the 8th Solo
10 May 22, 1927 Benn Karr Right Cleveland Indians Dunn Field Won 9–2 Top of the 6th 2-Run HR
11 May 23, 1927 Sloppy Thurston Right Washington Senators Griffith Stadium Lost 2–3 Top of the 1st Solo
12 May 28, 1927 Sloppy Thurston Right Washington Senators Yankee Stadium Won 1st Game 9–2 Bottom of the 7th 3-Run HR
13 May 29, 1927 Danny MacFayden Right Boston Red Sox Yankee Stadium Won 15–7 Bottom of the 8th Solo
14 May 30, 1927 Rube Walberg Left Philadelphia Athletics Shibe Park Won 2nd Game 6–5 in extra innings Top of the 11th Solo
15 May 31, 1927 Jack Quinn Right Philadelphia Athletics Shibe Park Won 1st Game 10–3 Top of the 1st 2-Run HR
16 May 31, 1927 Howard Ehmke Right Philadelphia Athletics Shibe Park Won 2nd Game 18–5 Top of the 5h 2-Run HR
17 June 5, 1927 Earl Whitehill Left Detroit Tigers Yankee Stadium Won 5–3 Bottom of the 6th Solo
18 June 7, 1927 Tommy Thomas Right Chicago White Sox Yankee Stadium Won 4–1 Bottom of the 4th Solo
19 June 11, 1927 Garland Buckeye Left Cleveland Indians Yankee Stadium Won 6–4 Bottom of the 3rd 2-Run HR
20 June 11, 1927 Garland Buckeye Left Cleveland Indians Yankee Stadium Won 6–4 (2nd HR) Bottom of the 5th Solo
21 June 12, 1927 George Uhle Right Cleveland Indians Yankee Stadium Lost 7–8 Bottom of the 7th Solo
22 June 16, 1927 Tom Zachary Left St. Louis Browns Yankee Stadium Won 8–1 Bottom of the 1st 2-Run HR
23 June 22, 1927 Hal Wiltse Left Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Won 1st Game 7–4 Top of the 5th Solo
24 June 22, 1927 Hal Wiltse Left Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Won 1st Game 7–4 (2nd HR) Top of the 7th 2-Run HR
25 June 30, 1927 Slim Harriss Right Boston Red Sox Yankee Stadium Won 13–6 Bottom of the 4th 2-Run HR
26 July 3, 1927 Hod Lisenbee Right Washington Senators Griffith Stadium Lost 5–6 Top of the 1st Solo
27 July 8, 1927 Don Hankins Right Detroit Tigers Navin Field Won 2nd Game 10–8 Top of the 2nd 3-Run HR (Inside The Park)
28 July 9, 1927 Ken Holloway Right Detroit Tigers Navin Field Won 1st Game 19–7 Top of the 1st 2-Run HR
29 July 9, 1927 Ken Holloway Right Detroit Tigers Navin Field Won 1st Game 19–7 (2nd HR) Top of the 4th 3-Run HR
30 July 12, 1927 Joe Shaute Left Cleveland Indians Dunn Field Won 7–0 Top of the 9th 2-Run HR
31 July 24, 1927 Tommy Thomas Right Chicago White Sox Comiskey Park Won 3–2 Top of the 3rd Solo
32 July 26, 1927 Milt Gaston Right St. Louis Browns Yankee Stadium Won 1st Game 15–1 Bottom of the 1st 2-Run HR
33 July 26, 1927 Milt Gaston Right St. Louis Browns Yankee Stadium Won 1st Game 15–1 (2nd HR) Bottom of the 6th Solo
34 July 28, 1927 Lefty Stewart Left St. Louis Browns Yankee Stadium Won 9–4 Bottom of the 8th 2-Run HR
35 August 5, 1927 George Smith Right Detroit Tigers Yankee Stadium Won 5–2 Bottom of the 8th Solo
36 August 10, 1927 Tom Zachary Left Washington Senators Griffith Stadium Won 4–3 Top of the 3rd 3-Run HR
37 August 16, 1927 Tommy Thomas Right Chicago White Sox Comiskey Park Won 8–1 Top of the 5th Solo
38 August 17, 1927 Sarge Connally Right Chicago White Sox Comiskey Park Won 3–2 in extra innings Top of the 11th Solo
39 August 20, 1927 Jake Miller Left Cleveland Indians Dunn Field Lost 8–14 Top of the 1st 2-Run HR
40 August 22, 1927 Joe Shaute Left Cleveland Indians Dunn Field Lost 4–9 Top of the 1st Solo
41 August 27, 1927 Ernie Nevers Right St. Louis Browns Sportsman's Park Won 14–4 Top of the 8th 2-Run HR
42 August 28, 1927 Ernie Wingard Left St. Louis Browns Sportsman's Park Won 10–6 Top of the 1st 2-Run HR
43 August 31, 1927 Tony Welzer Right Boston Red Sox Yankee Stadium Won 10–3 Bottom of the 8th Solo
44 September 2, 1927 Rube Walberg Left Philadelphia Athletics Shibe Park Won 12–2 Top of the 1st Solo
45 September 6, 1927 Tony Welzer Right Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Won 1st Game 14–2 Top of the 6th 3-Run HR
46 September 6, 1927 Tony Welzer Right Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Won 1st Game 14–2 (2nd HR) Top of the 7th 2-Run HR
47 September 6, 1927 Jack Russell Right Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Lost 2nd Game 2–5 Top of the 9th Solo
48 September 7, 1927 Danny MacFayden Right Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Won 12–10 Top of the 1st Solo
49 September 7, 1927 Slim Harriss Right Boston Red Sox Fenway Park Won 12–10 (2nd HR) Top of the 8th 2-Run HR
50 September 11, 1927 Milt Gaston Right St. Louis Browns Yankee Stadium Lost 2–6 Bottom of the 4th Solo
51 September 13, 1927 Willis Hudlin Right Cleveland Indians Yankee Stadium Won 1st Game 5–3 Bottom of the 7th 2-Run HR
52 September 13, 1927 Joe Shaute Left Cleveland Indians Yankee Stadium Won 2nd Game 5–3 Bottom of the 4th Solo
53 September 16, 1927 Ted Blankenship Right Chicago White Sox Yankee Stadium Won 7–2 Bottom of the 3rd Solo
54 September 18, 1927 Ted Lyons Right Chicago White Sox Yankee Stadium Won 2nd Game 5–4 Bottom of the 5th 2-Run HR
55 September 21, 1927 Sam Gibson Right Detroit Tigers Yankee Stadium Lost 1–6 Bottom of the 9th Solo
56 September 22, 1927 Ken Holloway Right Detroit Tigers Yankee Stadium Won 8–7 Bottom of the 9th 2-Run HR
57 September 27, 1927 Lefty Grove Left Philadelphia Athletics Yankee Stadium Won 7–4 Bottom of the 6th Grand Slam
58 September 29, 1927 Hod Lisenbee Right Washington Senators Yankee Stadium Won 15–4 Bottom of the 1st Solo
59 September 29, 1927 Paul Hopkins Right Washington Senators Yankee Stadium Won 15–4 (2nd HR) Bottom of the 5th Grand Slam
60 September 30, 1927 Tom Zachary Left Washington Senators Yankee Stadium Won 4–2 Bottom of the 8th 2-Run HR

Season standings

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American League
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
New York Yankees 110 44 .714 57‍–‍19 53‍–‍25
Philadelphia Athletics 91 63 .591 19 50‍–‍27 41‍–‍36
Washington Senators 85 69 .552 25 51‍–‍28 34‍–‍41
Detroit Tigers 82 71 .536 27½ 44‍–‍32 38‍–‍39
Chicago White Sox 70 83 .458 39½ 38‍–‍37 32‍–‍46
Cleveland Indians 66 87 .431 43½ 35‍–‍42 31‍–‍45
St. Louis Browns 59 94 .386 50½ 38‍–‍38 21‍–‍56
Boston Red Sox 51 103 .331 59 29‍–‍49 22‍–‍54

Record vs. opponents

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Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
Team BOS CWS CLE DET NYY PHA SLB WSH
Boston 11–11 15–7 5–17 4–18 6–16 6–16 4–18
Chicago 11–11 8–14 13–8 5–17 8–14 15–7 10–12
Cleveland 7–15 14–8 7–15 10–12 10–12 10–11 8–14
Detroit 17–5 8–13 15–7 8–14 9–13 14–8–1 11–11–2
New York 18–4 17–5 12–10 14–8 14–8–1 21–1 14–8
Philadelphia 16–6 14–8 12–10 13–9 8–14–1 16–6 12–10
St. Louis 16–6 7–15 11–10 8–14–1 1–21 6–16 10–12–1
Washington 18–4 12–10 14–8 11–11–2 8–14 10–12 12–10–1


Roster

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1927 New York Yankees
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Player stats

[edit]
= Indicates team leader

Batting

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Starters by position

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

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
C Pat Collins 92 251 69 .275 7 36
1B Lou Gehrig 155 584 218 .373 47 173
2B Tony Lazzeri 153 570 176 .309 18 102
3B Joe Dugan 112 387 104 .269 2 43
SS Mark Koenig 123 526 150 .285 3 62
OF Earle Combs 152 648 231 .356 6 64
OF Babe Ruth 151 540 192 .356 60 165
OF Bob Meusel 135 516 174 .337 8 103

Other batters

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

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Johnny Grabowski 70 195 54 .277 0 25
Ray Morehart 73 195 50 .256 1 20
Cedric Durst 65 129 32 .248 0 25
Mike Gazella 54 115 32 .278 0 9
Benny Bengough 31 85 21 .247 0 10
Ben Paschal 50 82 26 .317 2 16
Julie Wera 38 42 10 .238 1 8

Pitching

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Starting pitchers

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Waite Hoyt 36 256.1 22 7 2.63 86
Herb Pennock 34 209.2 19 8 3.00 51
Urban Shocker 31 200.0 18 6 2.84 35
Dutch Ruether 27 184.0 13 6 3.38 45
George Pipgras 29 166.1 10 3 4.11 81

Other pitchers

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Wilcy Moore 50 213.0 19 7 2.28 75
Myles Thomas 21 88.2 7 4 4.87 25

Note: Wilcy Moore led the Yankees and the American League with 13 saves.

Relief pitchers

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

Player G W L SV ERA SO
Bob Shawkey 19 2 3 4 2.89 23
Joe Giard 16 0 0 0 8.00 10
Walter Beall 1 0 0 0 9.00 0

1927 World Series

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Game Date Visitor Score Home Score Record

(NYY-PIT)

Attendance
1 October 5 New York Yankees 5 Pittsburgh Pirates 4 1–0 41,467
2 October 6 New York Yankees 6 Pittsburgh Pirates 2 2–0 41,634
3 October 7 Pittsburgh Pirates 1 New York Yankees 8 3–0 60,695
4 October 8 Pittsburgh Pirates 3 New York Yankees 4 4–0 57,909
New York Yankees win 4–0

Awards and honors

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Since a voter could select only one player per team, two good candidates from the same team could find their votes split and both of their chances of winning hurt. In addition, the clause prohibiting repeat winners led to unusual results like Babe Ruth's 1927 (one of the greatest offensive seasons of all time) not being eligible for the award. As The New York Times wrote in 1925, "[T]he purpose, of course, is to pass the honor around, but the effect is to pass an empty honor around."[7]

League leaders

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Franchise records

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  • Earle Combs, Yankees single season record, triples in a season (23)
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In 2016, ESPN announced 1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas, part of a new genre of storytelling known as "real-time historical fiction."[9] The core of the project is a historical novel in the form of a diary of Myles Thomas, written by Douglas Alden, complemented by a wealth of fact-based content from the season, all published along the same timeline as the events unfolded almost 90 years ago. Through Myles Thomas's diary entries, additional essays and real-time social-media components (including Twitter[10]) "re-living" that famous Yankees season, the goal is to explore the rarefied nexus of baseball, jazz and Prohibition — defining elements of the remarkable world that existed in 1927. The diary runs the length of the full 1927 season, from April 13 through October 10, 1927.[11]

Notes

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  1. ^ "1927 New York Yankees Schedule".
  2. ^ "Tom Verducci's Top 10 Teams of All Time". SportsIllustrated.com https://www.si.com/mlb/photos/2010/03/30tom-verduccis-top-10-teams-of-all-time/1
  3. ^ "The Best Major League Baseball Team Ever from 1902–2005". BaseballAlmanac.com. http://www.baseball-almanac.com/articles/best_major_league_teams_ever.shtml
  4. ^ Bryson, Bill (2013), One Summer: America 1927, Doubleday, ISBN 978-0767919401, OCLC 841198242
  5. ^ "Most WAR by a player in a single season". Stathead. Archived from the original on November 10, 2024. Retrieved November 10, 2024.
  6. ^ Creamer, Robert W. (1974). Babe: The Legend Comes to Life. Holtzman Press. p. 400. ISBN 978-0671760700. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
  7. ^ "Review-The Week In Sports-Outlook". (September 28, 1925). The New York Times, Sports, p. 17.
  8. ^ Great Baseball Feats, Facts and Figures, 2008 Edition, p.98, David Nemec and Scott Flatow, A Signet Book, Penguin Group, New York, ISBN 978-0-451-22363-0
  9. ^ 1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas
  10. ^ 1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas on Twitter
  11. ^ About the Diary of Myles Thomas

References

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