History of Team Names Topic



I thought this this was interesting and figured some of you might too.

by Craig Calcaterra at NBC Sports.

Baseball team names are trademarked things. New team names are focus-grouped and then established and trademarked. The key thing is that they are immutable. The Yankees are and always will be the Yankees. The Dodgers are and always will be the Dodgers. It’s something you can bank on.

But it’s also something that was not always the case. Not by a long shot. Indeed, from the advent of the game itself there an element of true nicknaming — names being applied informally — has almost always been involved.

The alleged first recorded game of baseball took place between teams called “New York” and “Knickerbocker,” both of which were from New York City, with the latter assuming a distinctive name, likely to keep it being confused with its rival. Many pre-National League amateur or semi-professional teams had names such as “Atlantic,” “Olympic,” and “Forest City,” but they were not formally named pursuant to the current convention such as “The Brooklyn Atlantics” or the “Philadelphia Olympics.” The legal names were “Atlantic Base Ball Club” and “Olympic Base Ball Club,” etc., with the cities just being additional descriptors.

The Cincinnati “Red Stockings,” acknowledged as the first fully-professional team, were given their name by sportswriters due to the actual clothes they happened to wear — uniforms with red stockings — as opposed to having the name applied to them first, and thus was a nickname in the most literal sense of the term. Soon other professional teams, first in the National Association and then in the National League, assumed their own distinctive colors as well. In 1882 the National League passed a rule requiring specific stocking colors, as follows:

  • Boston: Red
  • Buffalo: Gray
  • Chicago: White
  • Cleveland: Navy blue
  • Detroit: Old Gold
  • Providence: Light Blue
  • Troy: Green
  • Worcester: Brown

Teams would be known as the “Reds” or “Grays” in popular parlance, even if only the colors, not the names, were mandated.

If there were two teams in a city — a bigger consideration when a competing league popped up or, eventually, when the American League went major — some teams would simply be known by their league. Thus the Boston Nationals (later the Braves) and the Boston Americans (later the Red Sox) or the New York Nationals (Giants) and New York Americans (the Highlanders or, eventually, the Yankees). This could lead to some confusion, later, when that convention fell out of favor. The Washington team, for example, was initially called the Washington Senators but, for a long time, was known interchangeably as the “Washington Nationals” despite playing in the American League. We now, of course, have the modern Washington Nationals which have no connection to that old club at all and, in fact, trace their franchise history to a team that was founded in a completely different country.

Got it?

Any semblance of across-league nicknaming by color or league was out the window by the late 19th and early 20th century thanks to the rise in prominence of sports reporting, with the most notable local sportswriters applying nicknames to local baseball teams seemingly at will.

The Boston team came to be called the Beaneaters, after Boston’s nickname of “Beantown.” The Chicago White Stockings transitioned into the Chicago Colts or, sometimes, “Anson’s Colts,” after their leader, Cap Anson. The New York team had been the “Gothams” and then transitioned into “Giants” through popular usage and a likely apocryphal story about the team’s manager referring to his “big men,” and his “giants” in exuberance after a win. The Spiders got their name, the story goes, because the club had a lot of skinny, gangly players. The Brooklyn team was alternatively known as the Grays, the Bridegrooms, the Subperpas and, eventually, the “Trolley Dodgers,” after trolleys in Brooklyn changed over from being horse-pulled to electric, thus becoming more dangerous. It’d change back and forth to other things many times.

The Braves, and all that spun off of them and their name, are one of the more notable examples of how that process worked.

From the Red Stockings to the Beaneaters, Boston’s NL team soon came to be called the Doves due the fact that they switched to all-white jerseys one year. Oh, and due to the fact that the team owner’s last name was Dovey. When he sold the team to a guy named Russell, they became “the Rustlers” for a time. The name “Braves” was applied to the club when James E. Gaffney — a politician from the Tammany Hall political machine, which used Native American iconography to forge its identity — became club president. The “Miracle Braves” were a surprise World Series winner in 1914, capturing the imagination of the nation, and giving rise to a new national fascination with Indian names and symbols. That led to another team being named after them, at least in a sense.

Contrary to the old legend, the Cleveland baseball team was not named after Native American player Louis Sockalexis. For several years they had been named the “Naps” after player-manager Napoleon Lajoie. By 1915 he was gone and so was his name. A big reason the Indians became the Indians was to ride on the popularity of the Miracle Braves and the country’s fascination with Native America stuff. The Sockalexis story was told much later and now most people believe it was the actual reason the team assumed the name.

The Braves, however, fell to the bottom of the NL in the 1930s. Looking for a way to reinvent themselves, they became the Bees following a fan vote. They never put a bee or a hive on their caps or jerseys, though. Just the letter B. By 1941 they had reverted back to the Braves, and for a few years still just had the B, as opposed to the tomahawk and headdress-wearing Indian figure they’d later assume, leading a lot of fans to still call them the Bees/B’s. This back and forth stuff happened with the Dodgers too, who were the Dodgers in 1912, the Subperbas in 1913, and the Robins, after manager Wilbert Robinson, from 1914 through the early 30s, when they went back to being the Dodgers for good.

Almost all of the names of the original sixteen currently-existing major league franchises became standardized between the late teens and the early 30s, with the Bees/Braves and the Cincinnati Reds being later exceptions. The Reds were only an exception by virtue of the name “Reds” being associated with communism during the Red Scare and thus changed to the “Redlegs” between 1953 and 1960. It was back to being the Reds in 1961. Every team that moved cities from the 1950s on — and every expansion team from 1961-on — has had a standardized name from the outset as opposed to a true nickname applied willy-nilly. There’s a lot of merchandising money to be made these days. You can’t allow for confusion in the market, you know.

This feature is called Today in Baseball History, but none of the above refers to anything that happened today. But, on this date in 1902 the an un-bylined column in the Chicago Daily News notes that, Frank Selee, the manager of the Chicago Orphans — formally the Colts, formerly the White Stockings — would “devote his strongest efforts on the team-work of the new cubs” this year.

It was the first time anyone had referred to the Cubs as the Cubs. It would take about four years for that name to stick, and another six years before the team started putting bears on its uniform, but the name would eventually stick.



3/27/2020 11:42 PM
nice
3/28/2020 4:27 AM
Very nice piece for the uninitiated.

He should have mentioned that the Yankees were not always the Yankees: they were the Highlanders. The famous NY logo with the N and Y intersected originated with the Highlanders. I see it all over the streets in Italy. Or, at least, I did back when there were people on the streets in Italy.

Anyway, I have a pet peeve about team names: sports teams should change their names when the name is specific to the previous home town.

There is NO WAY that the Dodgers can still be called the Dodgers in LA ! It is a name describing their fans, as the article notes, who dodged trolleys in the streets of Brooklyn to get to Ebbets Field to see the game, so described their dedication and willingness to even risk their necks for their team.

There are no trolleys in Los Angeles, it is the city in the world most famous for not having public transportation. Giants is generic, Dodgers is not. The Los Angeles Freeways maybe. Or the Los Angeles Road Rages. Not the Dodgers.

The Astros are called that because the space program is in Houston. Imagine if they moved to Terre Haute, Indiana. Can't call them Astros anymore. (this is not a knock, my hero in all of US history was from Terre Haute).

So the Twins changing their name was right, it refers to the twin cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul and so is regionally in context, where "Senators" would not have been, since it was clearly DC-focused in nature. Likewise the Texas Rangers, when the second iteration of the Washington Senators moved there. Left behind the DC name, and got one linked inexorably to Texas. (By the way, anyone see the very good "Highwaymen" with Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson on Netflix? About the former Texas Rangers that tracked down Bonnie and Clyde. One of the best recent movies I have seen in a long time. Better than Scorcese's "The Irishman" in my book. But I digress.)

Thinking about the Twins brings up a team that did start in Minnesota, the Land O'Lakes, namely the Lakers of basketball. You cannot move from a state known for lakes to a place on the Pacific Ocean and keep the Lakers name.

Worse: The Utah Jazz. They were the New Orleans Jazz. Because Jazz was invented in New Orleans. Utah is not known for Jazz. It is known for Mormons, the Church of Latter-Day Saints. Call the team the Saints. It even keeps a reference to the team's historical past in New Orleans, a city whose anthem is "When the Saints go Marching in".

Compliments to the Kansas City Royals - it is a reference to the great Kansas City Monarchs of the old Negro Leagues. Keeping a KC tradition, while distinguishing the new team at the same time. Nice.

The St. Louis Browns becoming the Baltimore Orioles, a name that was hallowed in baseball history from the 19th Century, was also a good move.

The Mariners in their own way paid a little tribute to the old Seattle Pilots of 1969 keeping the seafaring theme. Luckily they were founded when they were or people there would have to root for the Seattle Mochachinos or the Seattle Softwares or some goddarn thing.

Finally, heat is not specific to Miami. A lot of places are hot. Houston could call its basketball team the Heat, so could San Diego, Santa Fe, or Arizona.

Call the team "The Miami Humidity".
3/28/2020 2:32 PM
Bring back the Houston Colt 45's!
3/28/2020 2:34 PM
Posted by bronxcheer on 3/28/2020 2:34:00 PM (view original):
Bring back the Houston Colt 45's!
It was more fun as a name, it's true.
3/28/2020 3:58 PM
Posted by bronxcheer on 3/28/2020 2:34:00 PM (view original):
Bring back the Houston Colt 45's!
Too similar to our football rivals the Indianapolis Colts tbh
3/28/2020 5:16 PM
3/28/2020 5:28 PM
Utah Jazz never made any sense good one
syracuse narionals became Phila 76ers coincidental but smooth transition .
3/28/2020 5:39 PM
History of Team Names Topic

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