The Buffalo Blues were a team in the short-lived Federal
League of professional baseball from 1914
to 1915. The team folded after
the 1915 season before the league itself decided to enter peace
negotiations with the other leagues.
The Blues outbid the Brooklyn FL franchise for the services of Hal
Chase. Chase was one of the bad boys of baseball and played up to his
considerable talent only when he felt like doing so. He might well be in
the Hall of Fame today were it not for his attitude.
"Prince Hal" was traded to the Chicago White Sox by the New
York Highlanders (later Yankees) in July of 1913 after his lackluster play
left the slugger with a Mario Mendoza-like .212 average.
Chase got along with Charles Comiskey for a while, but gave 10 days
notice on June 15, 1914 and soon joined the Buf-Feds (a number of players
jumped their American or National League contracts during the 1914
season). He led the league with 17 home runs in 1915, a rather staggering
total in the Dead Ball Era (only Babe Ruth, Vic Saier, Frank Schulte,
Gavvy Cravath, and Fred Luderus hit more home runs in a season from
1900-1919). Chase later lead the National League in hitting in 1916 with
the Cincinnati Reds.
Despite the presence of Chase and his .347 batting average, the biggest
offensive contributor to the success (80-71 record) of the Blues was 33
year old Charlie Hanford. The career minor leaguer was 5th in the league
in hits and total bases, third in home runs and 6th in RBIs in 1914. He
was perhaps too old to capitalize on his FL success and never played in
either the American or National League.
Russ Ford lead the pitching staff with a 21-6 record in 1914 and was
second in the league with a 1.82 ERA. Al Schultz with a 21-14 record and
Fred Anderson with a 19-13 record and a 2.51 ERA were the leaders of the
1915 Blues staff.
The Blues owners wanted the citizens of Buffalo to buy in to the team -
literally. They sold preferred shares of the club for $10 each. The team
never finished better than 7 games out.
Have any questions about the Buffalo Blues or the Federal League? Want to add to the league's story by sharing your recollections? Want to leave a comment about this article? Check out our Federal League forums!
--Patrick Mondout
BLUES
Prince Hal Chase jumped his Chicago White Sox contract during the 1914 season and signed with the Chicago Federals. The moody Chase was hitting .267 for Comiskey, but rebounded to hit .347 in the FL.
Logos and team names may be trademarks of their respective franchises or leagues. This site is not recognized, approved, sponsored by, or endorsed by Major League Baseball nor any sports league or team. Any marks, terms, or logos are used for editorial/identification purposes and are not claimed as belonging to this site or its owners. Any statistical data provided courtesy of Retrosheet (see credits).