From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the 1936 Major League Baseball season only. For information on all of baseball, see
1936 in baseball .
Sports season
The 1936 Major League Baseball season was contested from April 14 to October 6, 1936. The
New York Giants and
New York Yankees were the regular season champions of the
National League and
American League , respectively. The Yankees then defeated the Giants in the
World Series , four games to two.
The
Boston Braves changed their nickname to "Bees" this season; they would revert to the Braves in 1941.
Awards and honors
Statistical leaders
Standings
American League
National League
Postseason
Bracket
Managers
American League
National League
Feats
The New York Yankees set a Major League record for the most
runs batted in during a season, with 995.
[1]
Home field attendance
Team name
Wins
%±
Home attendance
%±
Per game
New York Yankees
[2]
102
14.6%
976,913
48.6%
12,687
Detroit Tigers
[3]
83
-10.8%
875,948
-15.4%
11,376
New York Giants
[4]
92
1.1%
837,952
11.9%
10,743
Chicago Cubs
[5]
87
-13.0%
699,370
1.0%
9,083
Boston Red Sox
[6]
74
-5.1%
626,895
12.2%
8,141
Cleveland Indians
[7]
80
-2.4%
500,391
25.8%
6,178
Brooklyn Dodgers
[8]
67
-4.3%
489,618
4.1%
6,198
Cincinnati Reds
[9]
74
8.8%
466,345
4.0%
6,136
St. Louis Cardinals
[10]
87
-9.4%
448,078
-11.5%
5,819
Chicago White Sox
[11]
81
9.5%
440,810
-6.3%
5,877
Washington Senators
[12]
82
22.4%
379,525
48.8%
4,929
Pittsburgh Pirates
[13]
84
-2.3%
372,524
5.6%
4,902
Boston Bees
[14]
71
86.8%
340,585
46.3%
4,311
Philadelphia Athletics
[15]
53
-8.6%
285,173
22.3%
3,704
Philadelphia Phillies
[16]
54
-15.6%
249,219
21.3%
3,195
St. Louis Browns
[17]
57
-12.3%
93,267
15.3%
1,211
Events
References
^
"Runs Batted In – Single Season RBI Records" . baseball-almanac.com . Retrieved June 6, 2012 .
^
"New York Yankees Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Detroit Tigers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"San Francisco Giants Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Chicago Cubs Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Boston Red Sox Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Cleveland Indians Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Los Angeles Dodgers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Cincinnati Reds Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"St. Louis Cardinals Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Chicago White Sox Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Minnesota Twins Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Pittsburgh Pirates Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Atlanta Braves Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Oakland Athletics Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Oakland Athletics Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"Baltimore Orioles Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors" .
Baseball-Reference.com . Retrieved September 8, 2020 .
^
"THT Live" . hardballtimes.com . Retrieved July 17, 2012 .
^ Pellowski, Michael J (2007).
The Little Giant Book of Baseball Facts . United States: Sterling Publishing Co. pp.
352 .
ISBN
9781402742736 .
External links
Pre-modern era
Beginnings Competition NL monopoly
Modern era
See also