A new
Reds franchise was formed as an
American Association club in
1882. This club is the same Reds team that exists today. The AA had no such rules against Sunday play or beer sales. Indeed, the American Association was known informally as "the beer and
whiskey league". According to
Lee Allen, Cincinnati writer and eventual director of the
Baseball Hall of Fame, the
Worcester club had been especially instrumental in having the Reds expelled after 1880. In his 1948 book,
The Cincinnati Reds, Allen took some satisfaction in pointing out that when the Reds re-formed in 1882, it was the same year that Worcester's days as a major league franchise, as well as its influence, came to an end. The Reds won the inaugural season of the AA, and as such participated in a
World Series, of sorts, with the NL champions, the
Chicago White Stockings. The exhibition Series was informally arranged, and ended after two games with each team having won one. Both games were staged at the Bank Street Grounds, or "Bank-Street Grounds" as the local papers stylized it. == Union Association ==