Owned by Al Johnson, the Infants finished 1890, their lone season, with 55 wins and 75 losses.
[1] The team included future Baseball Hall of Famer Ed Delahanty, and the league's batting champion, Pete Browning.
Browning had defected to the Players' League from the American Association's Louisville Colonels, who had finished the 1889 season with a 27–111 win–loss record.
[2] Browning hit for a .373 batting average in 1890, leading the Players' League.
At one point during the season, he was running the bases and broke up a no-hitter by pitcher Ad Gumbert in the ninth inning of a game.