| Québec a
remporté le championnat des deux demi-saisons. Au cours de la
première moitié, six équipes rivalisaient entre elles, mais les deux
clubs américains de Rutland et Montpellier ne sont pas revenus pour
l'autre moitié de la saison. Selon le guide Spalding, quatre ou cinq
joueurs étaient du calibre des ligues majeures. Jean Dubuc, un
ancien lanceur de la Ligue nationale, était la grande vedette du
circuit. |
|
|
Ligue
Quebec- Ontario-Vermont |
| Saison
1924 - First half |
V |
D |
Diff. |
Séries |
|
|
Québec |
35 |
20 |
--- |
| Pas
de séries, car Québec remporte les
deux demi-saisons. |
|
|
|
Rutland (VT) |
34 |
20 |
0.5 |
|
Ottawa-Hull |
26 |
25 |
7 |
|
Royals de
Montréal |
28 |
29 |
8 |
|
Canadiens de Montréal |
25 |
32 |
11 |
|
Montpellier (VT) |
16 |
37 |
18 |
|
| Source:
1925 Spalding Baseball Guide |
| |
|
|
|
| Source:
1925 Spalding Baseball Guide |
| |
|
History of Quebec-Ontario-Vermont League
From 1925 Spalding's Official Baseball Guide. Quebec
won the championship of both halves of the season of the
Quebec-Ontario-Vermont League. In the first half, six
teams competed, two of them being located in the United
States. It was a new venture in a new baseball
territory. In the second half, the Vermont teams dropped
out, but the league made a plucky fight and went through
the season. There was more baseball interest in the
province of Quebec than had been known there before
baseball started to be played in the Dominion. The
individual records for the league are not accurate, as
some official scorers did not realize the necessity for
sending them to the president. For that reason, it's
hardly worth while to attempt any comparisons from the
figures at hand. Four or five of the players seemed good
enough to be tried in the majors and will find their way
to the training camps in the spring of 1925, to see
whether they can remain in the broader field.
Largely through the efforts of Jean Dubuc, the former
National League player who made a fair record as a
pitcher, many players have been acquired who have
perfected their play by gaining the experience of his
career in the States. Dubuc has been foremost at all
times in baseball in the Dominion, and a valuable
assistant to the president of the league.
The Province of Quebec, in which baseball made headway
slower than it did in Ontario, is better alive to the
interests of the American game than it ever has been.
During the 1924 season, queries were numerous from towns
and cities of Quebec seeking to obtain correct
interpretation of the rules.
|
|
|
| Les
joueurs |
| P Photo
C Carte
/ Card |
|
| De
la QOV aux majeures |
|
Wild Bill Hunnefield
(1924 Royals) |
|
Joe O'Rourke
(1924 Royals) |
|
Ed Barney
(1924, Qc) |
|
Mickey Corcoran
(1924, Qc) |
|
Jean Dubuc
(1924, Ott) |
|
Joe Evers
(1924, Mpr) |
|
Al Grabowski
(1924, Mpr) |
|
Joe Graves
(1924, MtlR) |
|
Sid Graves
(1924, MtlR) |
|
Robert Lawrence
(1924, MtlR) |
|
Bill McCorry
(1924, Rut) |
|
Al Moore
(1924, Mpr, MtlC) |
|
Buck O'Brien
(1924, Mpr) |
|
Monk Sherlock
(1924, Qc) |
|
Johnnie
Williams
(1924, Qc) |
|
| Nos
documents |
|
1924.
Photo des Bulldogs de Québec |
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lectures |
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