2000s |
2009 • 2008 • 2007 • 2006 • 2005
|
1990s |
1999 • 1998 • 1997 • 1996 • 1995 |
1980s |
1989 • 1988 • 1987 • 1986 • 1985 |
1970s |
1979 • 1978 • 1977 • 1976 • 1975
|
1960s |
1969 • 1968 • 1967 • 1966 • 1965 |
1950s |
1959 • 1958 • 1957 • 1956 • 1955 |
1940s |
1949 • 1948 • 1947 • 1946 • 1945 |
1930s |
1939 • 1938 • 1937 • 1936 • 1935 |
1920s |
1929 • 1928 • 1927 • 1926 • 1925 |
1910s |
1919 • 1918 • 1917 • 1916 • 1915 |
1900s |
1909 • 1908 • 1907 • 1906 • 1905 |
1890s |
1899 • 1898 • 1897 • 1896 • 1895 |
1880s |
1889 • 1888 • 1887 • 1886 • 1885 |
1870s |
1879 • 1878 • 1877 • 1876 • 1875 |
Early Years |
See also |
|
Sources |
The following are the baseball events of the year 1932 throughout the world.
Champions[]
- World Series: New York Yankees over Chicago Cubs (4-0)
- Negro League World Series: Pittsburgh Crawfords over Monroe Monarchs (5-1)
Awards and honors[]
Major League Baseball final standings[]
American League final standings[]
American League | ||||
Club | Wins | Losses | Win % | GB |
New York Yankees | 107 | 47 | .695 | -- |
Philadelphia Athletics | 94 | 60 | .610 | 13 |
Washington Senators | 93 | 61 | .604 | 14 |
Cleveland Indians | 87 | 65 | .572 | 19 |
Detroit Tigers | 76 | 75 | .503 | 29.5 |
St. Louis Browns | 63 | 91 | .409 | 44 |
Chicago White Sox | 49 | 102 | .325 | 56.5 |
Boston Red Sox | 43 | 111 | .279 | 64 |
National League final standings[]
National League | ||||
Club | Wins | Losses | Win % | GB |
Chicago Cubs | 90 | 64 | .584 | -- |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 86 | 68 | .558 | 4 |
Brooklyn Dodgers | 81 | 73 | .526 | 9 |
Philadelphia Phillies | 78 | 76 | .506 | 12 |
Boston Braves | 77 | 77 | .500 | 13 |
New York Giants | 72 | 82 | .468 | 18 |
St. Louis Cardinals | 72 | 82 | .468 | 18 |
Cincinnati Reds | 60 | 94 | .390 | 30 |
Events[]
Births[]
- September 30 - Johnny Podres
- October 2 - Maury Wills
- November 7 - Dick Stuart
Deaths[]
- February 5 - Barney Dreyfuss, 66, owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates since 1900 who was principal force in creation of the World Series; Pirates won six NL pennants and two World Series (1909, 1925) under his leadership; built Forbes Field, first modern steel and concrete stadium, in 1909
- March 23 - Charles F. Daniels, 83, one of the NL's original 1876 umpires; career of 25 years included ten major league seasons
- April 2 - Honest John Morrill, 79, first baseman and manager of Boston's 1883 NL champions who batted .300 twice and was among first ten players to reach 1000 hits
- April 10 - Fred Pfeffer, 72, second baseman for Chicago and Louisville who in 1884 was one of first players to hit 20 home runs; led league in putouts nine times and double plays seven times
- April 23 - Lon Knight, 78, right fielder and manager of Philadelphia's 1883 American Association champions
- August 2 - Dan Brouthers, 74, first baseman who was 19th century's greatest slugger, winning five batting titles and retiring with a .342 lifetime average; .519 career slugging percentage was record until 1920s, led NL in HRs twice and doubles three times; third player to hit 100 home runs and fourth to reach 2000 hits; batted .338 with league-leading 153 runs for 1887 Detroit champions