The following are the baseball events of the year 1942 throughout the world.
Champions
Major League Baseball
Other champions
Awards and honors
Ted Williams was MLB Triple Crown winner.
Major League Baseball final standings
American League final standings
National League final standings
Negro League Baseball final standings
Negro National League final standings
Events
January-March
April-June
July-September
October-December
Movies
Births
January-March
April-June
July-September
October-December
Deaths
- January 22 - Louis Santop, 52, star catcher in the Negro Leagues who was among the sport's earliest home run sluggers
- January 31 - Henry Larkin, 19th century first baseman/manager who hit .303 in 10 seasons with the Philadelphia Athletics, Cleveland Infants/Indians and Washington Senators
- April 11 - Norm McNeil, 49, catcher for the 1919 Boston Red Sox
- June 26 - Gene Stack, 24, minor league pitcher with the White Sox who was the first player on a major league roster to be drafted for WWII service
- July 20 - Rap Dixon, 39, All-Star outfielder in the Negro Leagues
- August 3 - Jack Hayden, 61, outfielder for the Philadelphia Athletics, Boston Americans and Chicago Cubs in the early 1900s
- August 6 - Gordon McNaughton, 32, pitched for the 1932 Boston Red Sox
- September 2 - Henry Thielman, pitched from 1902 to 1903 baseball for the New York Giants, Cincinnati Reds and Brooklyn Superbas
- September 26 - Joe Giannini, 54, shortstop for the 1911 Boston Red Sox
- October 3 - Pinky Hargrave, catcher for the Washington Senators, St. Louis Browns, Detroit Tigers and Boston Braves between 1923 and 1930
- November 8 - Birdie Cree, 60, outfielder who spent his entire career with the New York Highlanders/Yankees from 1908-1915, while hitting .292 in 742 games
- November 14 - Scrappy Carroll, 82, Outfielder for three teams from 1884-1887.
- November 24 - Frank Owen, 62, pitcher for the Detroit Tigers and Chicago White Sox from 1901-1908, who posted a 82-67 with a 2,55 ERA
- December 5 - Val Picinich, 46, catcher in 1307 games for the Philadelphia Athletics, Washington Senators, Boston Red Sox, Cincinnati Reds, Brooklyn Robins/Dodgers and Pittsburgh Pirates between 1916 and 1933
- December 6 - Amos Rusie, 71, pitcher who won 245 games by age 27 in a 10-year career (1889-98), mainly with the New York Giants; led NL in ERA twice and in strikeouts five times, twice topping 300; his powerful delivery was major reason for 1893 change in pitching distance from 50 feet to 60 feet 6 inches
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