"Pop" Williams; in the winter of 1912–13 he sold the team for $2,000 to the Twin Cities Athletic Association, headed by Dr. F. H.
[6] The 1911 team easily won the Canadian League pennant with a record of 70–40, 11 games ahead of second-place London.
Their shortstop, Raymond "Scotty" Cameron, was described as the "fastest man in the league", and was compared with Joe Tinker; he hit .341 and stole 48 bases.
[2] After the season, the Canadian League dropped the Berlin franchise, replacing it with a team in Toronto, and moved the Guelph franchise to Erie, Pennsylvania, as the bid to upgrade the league to Class B status.
[13] After the season, catcher Wickey McAvoy was drafted by the Philadelphia Athletics.