THE FEDERAL LEAGUE

131 PRE-CUT DISCS

Cadaco Player Discs are created utilizing statistics from the Baseball-Reference which is the "Bible" of Major League Baseball.  They are created so that the odds of getting anything such as a home run or ground out is true to life.  Cadaco All-Star Baseball enthusiasts know that these discs are extraordinarily accurate!  Selection for this list required 150 at-bats.

Newly-made discs are more accurate than original Cadaco discs which include lifetime data as of when the discs are made.  So a 1968 disc for player like Hank Aaron who batted from 1954 to 1976 does not include data from 1969-1976. The newly-made discs include his entire lifetime career.

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I USE 80#-COVER (216 G/M2). IT IS THICKER, BRIGHTER AND SMOOTHER.

(Note: a few remaining sets were made with the original card stock)

To See What Other Disc Sets Are Available, See My List In My Pictures

OVER ¼ MILLION DISCS SOLD!

Every Item Is 100% Guaranteed to Be What YOU Expected.


THE FEDERAL LEAGUE
(1914-1915 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL)

The Federal League of Base Ball Clubs, known simply as the Federal League, was an American professional baseball league that played its first season in 1913 and operated as a "third major league", in competition with the established National and American Leagues, from 1914 to 1915.
The Federal League came together in early 1913 through the work of John T. Powers and immediately challenged the operations of organized baseball. Playing in what detractors called the "outlaw" league allowed players to avoid the restrictions of the organized leagues' reserve clause. The competition of another, better-paying league caused players' salaries to skyrocket, demonstrating the bargaining potential of free agency for the first time.
Interference by the National and American Leagues in their operations caused the Federal League to fold after the 1915 season. This resulted in a landmark federal lawsuit, Federal Baseball Club v. National League, in which the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the Sherman Antitrust Act did not apply to Major League Baseball.[1] The Federal League left its mark on baseball history in the field now known as Wrigley Field, which was originally built for the Chicago Whales Federal League team. The league itself and many sports writers considered it a major league during its existence; organized baseball recognized its major league status in 1968. It would be the last independent major league outside the established structure of professional baseball to make it to the playing field and would be the last serious attempt to create a third major league until the abortive Continental League of 1960.

Baltimore Terrapins (1914–15)
Brooklyn Tip-Tops (1914–15)
Buffalo Blues (1914–15)
Chicago Whales (1913–15)
Cleveland Green Sox (1913)
Covington Blue Sox (1913) (Transferred to Kansas City, mid-season.)
Indianapolis Hoosiers (1913–14) (Moved to Newark, 1915)
Kansas City Packers (1913–15) (Had been in Covington, until mid-season, 1913)
Newark Peppers (1915) (Had been in Indianapolis, 1914)
Pittsburgh Rebels (1913–15)
St. Louis Terriers (1913–15)