1946 in sports
See also: \n
1945 in sports, \n
other events of 1946, \n
1947 in sports and the \n
list of 'years in sports'.
Baseball
\n* January 23: Hall of Fame election: The writers' vote again fails to select an inductee, despite a newly revamped voting process. Voting again favors earlier candidates from the 1900s and 1910s, but none is able to gain 75% of the vote.
- A year before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball, Vincent "Manny" McIntyre from Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada became the first Black Canadian to sign a professional baseball contract (with the Sherbrooke Canadians).
- April 23: The Hall of Fame Committee clears the deadlock at the top of the writers' ballot by selecting 11 new inductees, primarily from the popular candidates of the 1900s and 1910s: Jesse Burkett, Frank Chance, Jack Chesbro, Johnny Evers, Clark Griffith, Tommy McCarthy, Joe McGinnity, Eddie Plank, Joe Tinker, Rube Waddell and Ed Walsh. Selections of 19th century players are largely postponed. It is decided that the writers will henceforth select only players retired within the more recent past, rather than from the entire 20th century.
- June 15: When some ballplayers jumped to the Mexican League, MLB Commissioner Happy Chandler mentions a lifetime suspension for them, but his penalty is later reduced (1949).
- July 14: Player-manager Lou Boudreau of Cleveland Indians hits four doubles and one home run, but Ted Williams wallops three HRs and drives in eight runs, as the Boston Red Sox top the Indians 11-10. In the Sox second-game win, the famous "Boudreau Shift" is born. Boudreau shifts all his players, except the third baseman and left fielder, to the right side of the diamond in an effort to stop Williams. Ted grounds out and walks twice while ignoring the shift.
Basketball
\nNational Basketball Association formed as the
Basketball Association of America
Football (soccer)
England - FA Cup:
Derby County won 4-1 over
Charlton Athletic after extra time
Snooker
\n*World Snooker Championship:
Joe Davis beats
Horace Lindrum 78-67, then announces his retirement from the event after this, his 15th consecutive victory.
Births
\n* December 29 - Laffit Pincay, Jr, jockey
Deaths