July 16, 1936 – It is hard to fathom in any era of baseball, but when an MLB team is in the double digits behind the division leaders, that is usually “all she wrote.” However, the New York Giants are one of the rare teams that staged a back half of the season comeback.
On this date, the Giants were 10½ games back in NL, and they went on a roll to go on to win the NL pennant. Bill Terry was the manager and he guided the squad to face the Yankees in a subway series. The Giants went on to lose to the New York Yankees in the 1936 World Series, four games to two.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

Bracket Busters: Upsets to Watch in March Madness
As the calendar flips to March, college basketball fans brace themselves for the annual

The Story of the 1967 Los Angeles Rams
From 1956 to 1965, the LA Rams were not a good football team, posting

Great Wide Receivers From The 70s Before the 1978 Rule Change
Pro football has provided a showcase for the many different wide receivers who buckled

In The Beginning: An Interview With Joseph T. Sternaman
And, you may ask, who is Joseph T. Sternaman? Sternaman was more commonly known

Michael Jordan: Domination Through March Madness
Widely regarded as the greatest basketball player ever, Michael Jordan first captivated fans across

Triumph and Tragedy: The 1936 Olympics in Berlin
In the annals of Olympic history, few editions have been as impactful and controversial

The Pine Tar Incident: George Brett’s Legendary Home Run
The Pine Tar Game stands as a monumental moment in baseball history, encapsulating the

NCAA’s Men’s Basketball Teams With Perfect Records (A Brief Overview)
The quest for perfection in college basketball has been an elusive one. Since Bill