1954 Caribbean Series
The sixth edition of the Caribbean Series was played in 1954. It was held from February 18 through February 23, featuring the champion baseball teams from Cuba, Alacranes del Almendares; Panama, (Carta Vieja Yankees; Puerto Rico, Criollos de Caguas, and Venezuela, Lácteos de Pastora. The format consisted of 12 games, each team facing the other teams twice. The games were played at Sixto Escobar Stadium in San Juan, P.R..Summary
Puerto Rico won the Series with a 4-2 record en route for a second straight championship. The Caguas club was managed by Mickey Owen and led by center fielder and Series MVP Jim Rivera, who posted a.400 batting average to lead the hitters. Caguas also received offensive support from 1B Víctor Pellot Power and 2B Jack Cassini. Meanwhile, the pitching staff surrendered only 10 earned runs, being led by starters Corky Valentine, Brooks Lawrence and Rubén Gómez, while reliever Luis Arroyo added depth coming out of the bullpen. Puerto Rico also had Jack Sanford in addition to Félix Mantilla, Charlie Neal and Luis Márquez.
Cuba, piloted by Bobby Bragan, had a 3-3 record to tie the second place with Panama. The Cuban squad got fine work of P Conrado Marrero, CF Sam Chapman and RF Angel Scull. Other roster members included Julio Bécquer, Joe Hatten, Cholly Naranjo and Héctor Rodríguez.
Panama was managed by Al Kubski and received a heroic pitching effort by starter Victor Stryska, who allowed just one earned run in 18 innings pitched. The attack was guided by 3B Joe Tuminelli and LF Bobby Prescott, in an anemic lineup who batted a collective.255 average and scored 17 runs.
Venezuela was guided by Napoleón Reyes and finished in last place with a 2-4 record. Ramón Monzant and Ralph Beard got the victories, while Howie Fox collected a 2.58 ERA in two appearances but lose a decision. Bad luck starter Thornton Kipper dropped two decisions, losing his duels against Gómez and Stryska, while allowing four earned runs in 17 innings. Besides, Emilio Cueche made two strong relief appearances and allowed just one earned run in 8⅔ innings of work. 3B Luis García provided the lone offensive threat with a.348 BA and a.563 SLG, including nine RBI to lead the Series hitters. Venezuela included Ed Bailey, Vernon Benson, Tommy Byrne, Wally Moon, Johnny Temple and rookie Luis Aparicio, among others.Final standings
Individual leaders
All-Star team
Scoreboards
Game 1, February 18
Game 2, February 18
Game 4, February 19
Game 6, February 20
Game 8, February 21
Game 10, February 22
Game 11, February 23
Game 12, February 23