Caruthersville Pilots
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The Caruthersville Pilots were a
minor league Minor leagues are professional sports leagues which are not regarded as the premier leagues in those sports. Minor league teams tend to play in smaller, less elaborate venues, often competing in smaller cities/markets. This term is used in Nor ...
baseball team located in Caruthersville, Missouri. The Pilots played as exclusively members of the Class D level Northeast Arkansas League from 1936 to 1940 after a Caruthersville team had played in the 1910 league. Caruthersville won league championships in 1910, 1936 and 1939. For their duration, the Caruthersville Pilots were a minor league affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals and hosted home games at the American Legion Park.


History

Minor league baseball first came to Caruthersville, Missouri when the 1910 Caruthersville team became members of the Class D level Northeast Arkansas League. Playing in the four–team league under manager Al Ritter, Caruthersville finished with a 68–48 overall record, best in the league and won the first–half title in the league. The 1910 team was possibly called the "Alfalfas." At the end of the 1910 season, the playoff series between Caruthersville and the Paragould Scouts was tied at 2–games each, when the final game was cancelled after a "riot" broke out during the game. After a decades long hiatus, minor league baseball returned in 1936, when Caruthersville again became a franchise in the reformed Class D level Northeast Arkansas League during the season. On June 11, 1936, the West Plains Badgers franchise moved to Caruthersville with an 18–10 record and became the "Caruthersville Pilots." Caruthersville became an affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals, a partnership that continued for the duration of the franchise. Playing in two cities, the West Plains/Caruthersville team won the 1936 league title, playing the season under the direction of manager
Harrison Wickel Harrison Paine "Muck" Wickel (September 6, 1912 – March 25, 1989) was a minor league baseball player, manager as well as a scout and World War II veteran. He was also inducted into the Bucks County Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame. ...
. The Pilots ended the regular season with a 51–48 record, placing fourth in the standings. In the playoffs, the Pilots defeated the Jonesboro Giants 2 games to 1, playing for the first half title. In the Finals, the Pilots defeated the Newport Cardinals 3 games to 2 to claim the 1936 Northeast Arkansas League championship. Continuing play in the 1937 Northeast Arkansas League, Caruthersville finished in second place overall. The Pilots finished the season with a 59–47 record under returning manager Harrison Wickel. Caruthersville finished behind the first place Blytheville Giants, who won both halves of the season standings, so no playoffs were held. In 1938, Caruthersville finished in second place in the Northeast Arkansas League standings with a 62–42 record. The Pilots' managers were Wilson Koewing, Al Iezzi and Joseph Simmons. In the 1938 playoffs, the Newport Cardinals defeated the Caruthersville Pilots 2 games to 1. In 1939, the Caruthersville Pilots won the Northeast Arkansas League championship. With a regular season of 79–39, the Pilots placed first in the standings under returning manager Joseph Simmons, winning both half–season titles, so no playoff was held. The Caruthersville Pilots played their final season in 1940, relocating during the season. In a partial season, the Caruthersville franchise moved to become the
Batesville Pilots This team began as the West Plains Badgers, based in West Plains, Missouri in 1936. They were an affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals in the Northeast Arkansas League. The team moved to Caruthersville, Missouri on June 11, 1936, and became the ...
on July 10, 1940, with a 31–32 record at the time of the move. The team finished the season with an overall record of 47–73 , placing last in the four–team Northeast Arkansas League under manager Ernie Stefani. Caruthersville, Missouri has not hosted another minor league team.


The ballpark

Beginning in 1936, the Caruthersville Pilots were noted to have played minor league home games at the American Legion Park. The field had dimensions of (left–center–right) 357–351–337 in 1939 and 350–351–350 in 1940.


Timeline


Year–by–year records


Notable alumni

*
Fats Dantonio John James "Fats" Dantonio (December 31, 1918 – May 28, 1993) was a Major League Baseball catcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1944 and 1945. "Fats" was tall and weighed only 165 pounds. Dantonio is one of many ballplayers who only appeared i ...
(1939) * Whitey Kurowski (1937) *
Hank Robinson John Henry (Hank) Robinson (born John Henry Roberson; August 16, 1887 - July 3, 1965) was a Major League Baseball pitcher who played from to and again in with three teams. He batted right and threw left-handed. He was born in Floyd, Arkansas ...
(1910) *
Tom Turner Tom Turner is an English landscape architect, garden designer and garden historian teaching at the University of Greenwich in London London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and t ...
(1936–1937) *
Harrison Wickel Harrison Paine "Muck" Wickel (September 6, 1912 – March 25, 1989) was a minor league baseball player, manager as well as a scout and World War II veteran. He was also inducted into the Bucks County Chapter of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame. ...
(1936–1937, MGR) *
Caruthersville Pilots players Caruthersville is a city in and the county seat of Pemiscot County, Missouri, United States, located along the Mississippi River in the Bootheel region of the state's far southeast. The population was 5,562, according to the 2020 census. Histo ...
* Caruthersville (minor league baseball) players


References

{{Reflist, 2


External links


Caruthersville - Baseball Reference
Defunct baseball teams in Missouri St. Louis Cardinals minor league affiliates Baseball teams disestablished in 1940 Baseball teams established in 1936 Pemiscot County, Missouri Northeast Arkansas League teams