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Replay some of the Best Teams of the 40's now with our
Baseball simulation dice game

1940s Baseball - Rations and Spoils

 

Feast and famine was never more defined within baseball than in the 1940s. After a few glorious years to start the decade, the major leagues had to play it lean, leaner and leanest through 1945 as America diverted all of its resources to winning World War II. The majority of major leaguers became absent from the game, enlisted or drafted into the armed forces to aid in the war effort. In their place, ballplayers who under normal circumstances might had been laughed out of spring training—low-level minor leaguers, semi-pros and even a few men hampered by physical handicaps—joined the scarce supply of veterans technically unfit for service and provided the nation with a brand of baseball far removed from the glamour days that began the 1940s, though the fans that took their mind off war to watch them understood. 

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World War II stripped many of the game’s greats of up to four years of their prime in baseball. If not for armed conflict, Ted Williams—arguably the best pure hitter the game has ever seen—might have finished his career with 3,200 hits and 650 home runs. Warren Spahn, the game’s most productive southpaw, quite possibly would have topped 400 wins. Bob Feller, armed with a supersonic fastball, could have won 300 games and struck out 3,500. Hank Greenberg might have joined the 500-home run club, while Washington’s Mickey Vernon could have made it to 3,000 hits. But from the heart and to a man, every ballplayer would have considered such a relatively trivial loss of statistics as a small sacrifice compared to helping America defeat the Axis powers.

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When peace returned and the stars suited back up for baseball in 1946, the game enjoyed a fertile period lasting the rest of the decade that may have made for the most satisfying time of its long existence.

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Attendance boomed as the game basked in a highly popular postwar glow, but the watershed moment during this pocket of time came in 1947 with baseball’s monumental breaking of the color barrier, as the Brooklyn Dodgers brought on Jackie Robinson to become the majors’ first black ballplayer since the 1880s. Having to endure the painful litmus test of peacefully overcoming the racism so long inherent within the majors, Robinson didn’t evolve into an American sports hero, but a heroic American—thriving as well as surviving on the playing field, and opening the door for a slow but sure stream of fellow African-Americans who would filter into the majors late in the 1940s, including Larry Doby, Satchel Paige, Roy Campanella and Don Newcombe.

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The spoils of victory and the foresight of integration fueled the majors’ resurgence, making the sport as popular as ever. Now it was up to the lords of baseball to maintain and grow within the ever-changing vision of postwar America’s new frontier.

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The teams we have included in this set are:

  1. 1940 Cincinnati Reds [100-53]

  2. 1941 Boston Red Sox [84-70]

  3. 1944 St. Louis Browns [89-65]

  4. 1945 Chicago Cubs [98-56]

  5. 1945 Detroit Tigers [88-65]

  6. 1946 St. Louis Cardinals [98-58]

  7. 1947 New York Yankees [97-57]

  8. 1948 Boston Braves [91-62]

  9. 1948 Cleveland Indians [97-58]

  10. 1949 Brooklyn Dodgers [97-57]

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**Note: this list also lets you replay the 1945 and 1948 World Series.

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With World Series Dice Baseball you can replay the teams of the 40's as many times as you want.  To order visit our Product Page. It is only $6.99 and we will be adding more great teams soon.
 

Visit our How to Play page to see how the game is played
 

 

WSBB picture of 4 players per team on a sheet. Click for a larger view
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