Photo by: Everett Collection
An even dozen
People tend to assume that, once the male big-leaguers returned from the war, the AAGBL shriveled up and died. It did, in a way, but not until the early '50s, and the culprit wasn't men's baseball but league decentralization -
and TV, which cut into women's- and minor-league attendance as more and more people watched MLB games in their living rooms.
Here, the Kenosha Comets play the Muskegie Lassies, ...
more Photo by: Everett Collection
An even dozen
People tend to assume that, once the male big-leaguers returned from the war, the AAGBL shriveled up and died. It did, in a way, but not until the early '50s, and the culprit wasn't men's baseball but league decentralization -
and TV, which cut into women's- and minor-league attendance as more and more people watched MLB games in their living rooms.
Here, the Kenosha Comets play the Muskegie Lassies, April 1948.
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