Thursday 13 March 2014

How Each MLB Team Got Its Name

How Each MLB Team Got Its Name: Download Photo Gallery For Free, you can download free Photo Gallery Images, Download Shocking Pics, Health Images, Funny Photos, Science Online, Sports News Online, weird Pictures, Food/Beverages Free Online and Images, And Top 10 Pictures Download, and much more.


Two of the only days in the year where no major professional sport is played in the United States (MLB/NBA/NFL/NHL/MLS) are occurring now: the day before and the day after the MLB All-Star Game. So since you’ll have nothing else to do to get your sports fix, why not learn a little bit about where your favorite team got its name- (for the National League team name origins, click here)

AL East
Boston Red Sox (58-39)
2013 All-Stars: David Ortiz (DH)*, Clay Buchholz (RHP), Dustin Pedrola (2B)
Origins: Established as an American League team in 1901, this club originally had blue socks because the National League team (which eventually became the Braves) was called the Boston Red Stockings; so for years, the AL team was known as alternately the Bostons, the Americans, the Boston Americans or just Boston.
In 1907, when the NL team dropped all color from its uniform and was called the Doves, the AL team snatched up the name. The next year, the team appeared in Red Socks as well.
So why sox instead of socks? At the time the Red Sox (and the White Sox) were named, many Americans, including the editor of the Chicago Tribune, were pushing for simplified spelling of American English; it was common at the time to see socks spelled s-o-x.

Tampa Bay Rays (55-41)
2013 All-Stars: Matt Moore (RHP), Ben Zobrist (2B)
Origins: An expansion franchise in 1998, the Rays were originally named the Devil Rays after the manta rays found just off shore in the bay. In 2007, the club dropped Devil from the name. Some ascribe the change to efforts by Christians, while others say it was to change the reference to the sun’s rays in the Sunshine State, rather than the animal.
Baltimore Orioles (53-43)
2013 All-Stars: Chris Davis (1B)*, J.J. Hardy (SS)*, Adam Jones (OF)*, Manny Machado (3B)
Origins: Clubs in Baltimore have been called the Orioles, after Maryland’s state bird, since at least 1882. In 1901-1902, the team that eventually became the Yankees played in Baltimore as the Orioles. In addition, a successful minor league club by that name played for several decades in the 20th century.
The current MLB team was originally the St. Louis Browns. When the Browns moved to Baltimore in 1954, the club adopted the Orioles name.
New York Yankees (51-44)
2013 All-Stars: Robinson Cano (2B)*, Mariano Rivera (RHP),
Origins: The Yankees began as the Orioles in Baltimore in 1901. Although originally intended for NYC, the upstart American League was unable to secure permission for an AL team in the city due to political pressure from the NL New York Giants.
Rather than wait to start play, the team installed itself in Baltimore and adopted that region’s popular Orioles name. Notably, their first uniform simply had a large orange “O” on the shirt, which was easily mistaken for a big zero. The team played two seasons as the Orioles before the two leagues resolved their dispute.
In 1903, the club moved to NYC. At first, as part of the agreement with the Giants, the team was known by the catchy nickname of “the Greater New York Baseball Club.” Clever sportswriters immediately began filling the creativity void. Within a year or two the team was sometimes called the Gordon Highlanders, after the team’s president and the location of the team’s ballpark which was on high ground (compared to the Giants’ park, the Polo Grounds, which were on lowland). Very quickly, that nickname was shortened to the Highlanders.
Simultaneously, the nickname Yankees appeared; while some claim it was chosen to reference Americans, and thus, the American League, others note that the song “Yankee Doodle Dandy” was popular at the time.
By 1913 when the team left its hilltop ballpark and started playing at the Polo Grounds, the nickname Highlanders was discarded, and team became known exclusively as the Yankees.

Toronto Blue Jays (45-49)
2013 All-Stars: Jose Bautista (OF)*, Brett Cecil (LHP), Steve Delabar (RHP), Edwin Encarnacion (DH)

Origins: Since Toronto was awarded an expansion team in 1977, the club has been known as the Blue Jays. There are two different stories about how the name came about.
In the first, the name supposedly came from a former Premier of Ontario, John Robarts, who said at a director’s meeting, “I saw a blue jay out my window;” in this version, the fact that its principal owner at the time, Labatt’s Brewing, was known for its blue label is also cited.
In the second version, they say a panel of 14 judges chose 10 finalist names from some 30,000 submissions in a name-the-team contest. The club’s board is said to have chosen Blue Jays from that list.

AL Central
Detroit Tigers (52-42)
2013 All-Stars: Miguel Cabrera (3B)*, Max Scherzer (RHP), Justin Verlander (RHP), Prince Fielder (1B), Jhonny Peralta (SS), Torii Hunder (OF)
Origins: The Tigers began as the Detroit Wolverines in the Western League (which changed to the American League in 1900). However, by some accounts, the team had always also been known as the Tigers.
In Detroit, there is a well-known military unit, as old as the Civil War, called the Detroit Light Guard, but better known as the Tigers. Because of the unit’s popularity, sports teams in the city were sometimes called the Tigers, especially in newspapers.
In any event, the team was wearing orange and black striped stockings by 1900, and in 1901, the club asked for permission to use the name, Tigers, from the Guard.
Cleveland Indians (51-44)
2013 All-Stars: Justin Masterson (RHP), Jason Kipnis (2B)
Origins: Formed in 1900, the club was originally nicknamed the Blues in reference to their dark blue uniforms. Shortly after, the team was sometimes called the Molly Maguires, after manager Deacon McGuire, as well as the Naps in honor of their manager Nap Lajoie.
Naps stuck, but became a pejorative during a bad streak in the 1910s. Accounts differ on how the team chose the name Indians. Some say it was to play on the success of the Miracle Boston Braves of the 1914 World Series. Others say it was in honor of Louis Sockalexis, during whose tenure the team had sometimes been called the Indians.
Kansas City Royals (43-49)
2013 All-Stars: Salvador Perez (C), Alex Gordon (OF)
Origins: In the past, KC’s only major league teams (1884, 1886, 1888, 1889) were named the Cowboys, reflecting the region’s cattle culture. When the city was awarded an expansion team in 1969, a name-the-team contest produced over 17,000 entries. Ownership chose the name Royals, in honor of the annual American Royal Livestock Show held there.
Minnesota Twins (39-53)
2013 All-Stars: Joe Mauer (C)*, Glen Perkins (LHP)

Origins: Prior to acquiring the Senators from D.C. in 1961, Minneapolis and St. Paul each had distinct, well-loved minor league teams. To accommodate the inter-city rivalry, the new club, formally the Twin Cities Baseball Club, became known as the Twins.

Chicago White Sox (37-55)
2013 All-Stars: Jesse Crain (RHP), Chris Sale (LHP)
Origins: In the late 1800s, Chicago had a National League team, named the White Stockings, led by baseball’s first superstar, Cap Anson. That team eventually became the Colts, the Orphans, the Remnants and then, much to the chagrin of many a Sox fan, the Cubs by 1906.
Today’s Sox began as the Sioux City Cornhuskers as part of the Western League. In 1895, Charles Comiskey bought the team and moved it to St. Paul Minnesota where it became known as the Saints. When the Western League morphed into the American League in 1900, Comiskey moved the club to Chicago’s South Side and adopted the nickname the White Stockings, which was shortened to Socks. Substituting “x” for “cks” was common practice in the day, as mentioned, and the Socks became the Sox.

AL West
Oakland Athletics (56-39)
2013 All-Stars: Bartolo Colon (RHP)
Origins: With the oldest nickname in baseball, the Athletics history spans the continent. The name was first used by the amateurs of the Athletic Club of Philadelphia in 1860. In 1875, the team turned pro and ultimately became known as the Philadelphia Athletics. In 1955, the organization and the name moved to Kansas City. The A’s (named for the sole “A” that has often appeared on various incarnations of the uniform), moved with the nickname to Oakland in 1968.

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