Calendar
Major League Baseball
Champions
Major League Baseball
Click on any series score to link to that series'
page.
Higher seed had home field advantage during Division
Series and League Championship Series.
The American League champion has home field advantage during the
World Series as a result of the AL victory in the
All-Star
Game.
Other champions
Awards and honors
Others
- Hank Aaron Award - Kevin Youkilis (AL, BOS) / Aramis Ramírez (NL, CHC)
- Hutch Award - Jon Lester (BOS)
- Players Choice Award -
Albert Pujols (STL)
- Roberto Clemente Award -
Albert Pujols (STL)
- Tony Conigliaro Award -
Rocco Baldelli (TBR)
- TSN Awards
- MLB Player of the Year - Albert
Pujols (STL)
- Pitcher of the Year - Cliff Lee (AL,
CLE) / Tim Lincecum (NL, SFG)
- Reliever of the Year - Francisco Rodriguez (AL, LAA)
/ Brad Lidge (NL, PHI)
- Rookie of the Year - Evan Longoria
(AL, TBR) / Geovany Soto (NL, CHC)
- Comeback Player of the Year - Cliff
Lee (AL, CLE) / Fernando Tatis
(NL, NYM)
- Manager of the Year - Joe Maddon (AL,
TBR) / Fredi Gonzalez (NL, FLO)
Events
January
February
March
- March
15 - The Los Angeles Dodgers and
San Diego Padres play to a 3-3 tie
in the first major league game ever played in China
.
The game
is played at Wukesong Stadium
in Beijing, site of the
baseball competition for the 2008 Olympics.
The teams meet again the next day, with the Padres winning
6-3.
- March
17 - The Dodgers depart their Dodgertown
complex in Vero Beach, Florida
after 60 years of use. Hall of Fame manager
Tommy Lasorda manages the team in its
final week's games, as regular manager Joe
Torre is with the portion of the club that traveled to
China.
- March
18 - The New York Yankees play an
exhibition at Virginia Tech
's English
Field
to commemorate the April 2007
campus shootings
.
- March
25 - Opening Day takes place on the
earliest date in history, with the Boston
Red Sox defeating the Oakland
Athletics 6-5 in 10 innings in Tokyo
, Japan
.
- March
29 - Celebrating the 50th anniversary of their move to Los Angeles,
the Dodgers play an exhibition against the Red Sox at their first
Los Angeles home, the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
, losing 7-4 before an announced crowd of
115,300.
- March
30 - In the first ever game played at Nationals Park
, on Opening Night,
President George W. Bush throws out the first pitch and Ryan Zimmerman hits a walk-off home run to
give the Washington Nationals a
3-2 win over the Atlanta Braves.
- March 31:
- A
statue of Chicago Cubs great Ernie Banks is unveiled outside Wrigley Field
.
- Japanese sensation Kosuke
Fukudome makes his major league debut with the Cubs, hitting a
double on his first pitch. He later ties the game with a three-run
homer in the 9th inning.
- The independent South Coast
League suspends its operations after only one season of
play.
April
- April 2 - With his 194th consecutive game without an error, Red
Sox first baseman Kevin Youkilis
surpasses Steve Garvey's major league
record (set from 1983 to 1985) for an errorless streak at first
base; the streak began on July 5, . He is given the first base bag
from the game against the Athletics.
- April 4 - the Florida State
League's Fort Myers Miracle
take the field in Lee County
Sheriff's Office caps in a game against the Sarasota Reds in honor of fallen Lieutenant
Mark Niedermeyer. On March 21, Lieutenant Niedermeyer, a 14-year LCSO
veteran, collapsed and died on the field during LCS's annual
charity arena football game against
Lee County firefighters. Following the game (won 6–3 by the
Miracle), the team autographed the hats, and they were auctioned
off. The auction raised $2,500, with all proceeds raised from the
hat auction going directly to Lieutenant Niedermeyer's family.
- April 8:
- Chase Utley of the Phillies ties a
major league record by being hit by pitches three times in a 5-2
win over the Mets.
- Plácido Polanco's record
streaks of 186 games and 911 chances at second base without an
error come to an end with a throwing error in the third inning of
the Tigers' 5-0 loss to the Red Sox; his last error was on July 1,
.
- April 9 - Iván
Rodríguez becomes the first catcher in major league history to
collect 2,500 hits, reaching the milestone with a single in the
eighth inning of the Tigers' 7-2 win over the Red Sox.
- April 11 - The Florida Marlins
set a team record by hitting six home runs in their 10-6 win over
the Astros.
- April 12 - The home run ball which Barry
Bonds hit for his record 762nd (and possibly final) home run is
auctioned for $376,612 to an anonymous bidder.
- April 13 - Joe Crede and Paul Konerko both hit grand slams as the White
Sox beat the Tigers 11-0.
- April 15 - José
López becomes the 12th player in major league history to
collect three sacrifice flies in one game, in the Mariners' 11-6
win over the Royals.
- April 17:
- At
Petco
Park
, the Colorado
Rockies defeat the San Diego
Padres 2-1 in 22 innings, in a game that lasts 6 hours 16
minutes and ends at 1:21 am after Troy
Tulowitzki's RBI double with two out in the top of the inning
drives in an unearned run. Inning-wise, the game is the
longest in the majors since another 22-inning contest on August 21,
, the longest in the history of both teams and the longest in Petco
Park's 5-year history.
- Chipper Jones, Mark Teixeira and Brian McCann hit consecutive home
runs in the fifth inning of the Braves' 8-0 win over the
Marlins.
- April 21 - Chase Utley ties a
Phillies record by homering in his fifth consecutive game.
- April
22 - John Smoltz becomes the 16th major
league pitcher to record 3,000
strikeouts, retiring Nationals pitcher John Lannan in the third inning at Turner Field
, but Lannan earns the victory as Washington wins
6-0.
- April 23 - The Chicago Cubs become
the second major league franchise to record 10,000 victories
(joining the Giants), with a 7-6 win over the Rockies in 10
innings.
- April
24 - A David Ortiz Red Sox jersey which
was exhumed from the construction site of New Yankee
Stadium
eleven days earlier after a foiled jinx attempt is
auctioned for $175,100, with the proceeds going to a Red
Sox-affiliated charity.
May
- May 2:
- Miguel Tejada, Lance Berkman and Carlos
Lee hit consecutive home runs in the sixth inning of the
Astros' 7-4 win over the Brewers.
- José Reyes falls a
home run short of the cycle when he is thrown out at the plate,
while trying to stretch his second triple of the game into an
inside-the-park home run, in the eighth inning of the Mets' 7-2 win
over the Diamondbacks.
- May 6:
- Gavin Floyd of the White Sox takes a
no-hitter into the ninth inning against the Twins before giving up
a double to Joe Mauer with one out; Floyd
and Bobby Jenks settle for a combined
7-1 one-hitter.
- Lance Berkman has five hits in the
Astros' 6-5 win over the Nationals, tying the team record for a
nine-inning game.
- May 7:
- Carlos Gómez of the Twins hits
for the cycle in a 13-1 win against the White Sox.
- The Cincinnati Reds hit seven
home runs, including three by Joey Votto,
in a 9-0 victory over the Cubs; Jon
Lieber surrenders four homers in the second inning.
- May 9:
- James Shields of the
Rays pitches a 2-0 one-hitter against the Angels, allowing only
Brandon Wood's one-out single in the
third inning; Evan Longoria provides
the scoring with a two-run walk-off home run.
- Kenny Rogers picks off
his 92nd career baserunner, setting a major league record since the
statistic was first kept in 1974, in the Tigers' 6-5 win over the
Yankees, catching Wilson Betemit in
the second inning; the mark was previously held by Mark Langston.
- May 10:
- In his fifth try, Greg Maddux of the
Padres becomes the ninth pitcher to win 350 career games, with a
3-2 decision against the Rockies.
- Ben Sheets breaks Teddy Higuera's team record of 1,081 career
strikeouts in the Brewers' 5-3 loss to the Cardinals.
- May 11 - The Cincinnati Reds bat
out of order in the ninth inning of their 8-3 loss to the Mets;
David Ross mistakenly hits
instead of Corey Patterson to lead
off the inning, and Patterson is ruled out after Ross lines out to
right field. Ross then bats correctly, singling to center.
- May 12 - Indians second baseman Asdrúbal Cabrera turns the 14th
unassisted triple play in
major league history in the second game of a home doubleheader
against the Blue Jays. He makes a diving catch of Lyle Overbay's fifth-inning line drive for the
first out, steps on second to double up Kevin Mench, then tags out Marco Scutaro, who had just passed second
base. Cleveland loses, 3-0, in 10 innings. Ron Hansen, who accomplished the feat
in 1968, is in attendance as a scout.
- May 16:
- Jayson Werth hits three home runs,
including a grand slam, in the Phillies' 10-3 win over the Blue
Jays, tying a team record with eight runs batted in.
- Josh Hamilton gets five
hits in the Rangers' 16-8 win over the Astros, tying a team record
for a nine-inning game, and misses the cycle by hitting two home
runs but no double. In the same game, the Astros' Shawn Chacón sets a major league record by
getting no decision in his ninth consecutive start to begin the
season; the streak ends when he wins his next start against the
Cubs five days later.
- May 17 - Chan Ho Park of South
Korea, Hong-Chih Kuo of Taiwan and
Takashi Saito of Japan combine to
pitch the Dodgers to a 6-3 win over the Angels, marking the first
time that pitchers from three different Asian countries have
appeared in a game for one team.
- May 18:
- After tying the record the previous night, Ichiro Suzuki sets a Mariners record with his
291st stolen base for the team, breaking the mark held by Julio Cruz.
- The
Cardinals rededicate the statue of Stan
Musial at the west entrance to Busch Stadium
, five days after the 50th anniversary of his
3,000th hit, with an adjacent street being renamed Stan Musial
Drive.
- May 19:
- Jon Lester of the Red Sox pitches a
7-0 no-hitter against the Royals. His first complete game in the majors, it
is the fourth no-hitter by a Red Sox pitcher since 2001, the first
by a Red Sox left-hander since Mel
Parnell in 1956, the fourth ever by a left-hander at Fenway Park
(and the first since Parnell's), and only the
second against the Royals (Nolan Ryan,
1973). It is also the fourth no-hitter caught by Jason Varitek, who homers in the game; he also
caught the Red Sox' three previous no-hitters: Hideo Nomo (2001), Derek
Lowe (2002) and Clay Buchholz
(2007). Varitek's feat set a major league record (under the rules
in force during his career Ray Schalk
caught four, but one was disallowed in 1991 when the definition of
a no-hitter was changed).
- Adam Dunn ties a Reds record by
homering in his fifth consecutive game, a 6-5 loss to the
Dodgers.
- May 20 - 12-time All-Star catcher Mike
Piazza announces his retirement.
- May 22 - J. D. Drew and Mike Lowell both hit grand slams in the Red Sox'
11-8 win over the Royals.
- May 24 - Oakland's Justin
Duchscherer and Huston Street
combine for a 3-0 one-hitter over the Red Sox, with Duchsherer
allowing only a single by David Ortiz
with one out in the seventh inning.
- May 25 - Playing in both games of a doubleheader as the Giants
are swept by the Marlins, Omar Vizquel
breaks Luis Aparicio's major league
record of 2,583 career games as a shortstop.
- May 27:
- In a 9-6 win over the Pirates, Adam
Dunn hits a three-run home run, his 252nd home run for the
Reds, breaking Ted Kluszewski's team
record for homers by a left-handed hitter.
- In their 8-2 win over the White Sox, the Indians pull off the
first triple steal in the major leagues since October 1, . With the
bases loaded in the sixth inning, pitcher Ehren Wasserman fakes a throw to third
before throwing to first, catching Jamey
Carroll in a rundown. First baseman Paul Konerko tries to gun down David Dellucci at the plate, but his throw to
catcher Toby Hall is off target, allowing
Dellucci to score and Carroll and Grady
Sizemore to advance.
- Hunter Pence gets five hits in the
Astros' 8-2 win over the Cardinals, tying the team record for a
nine-inning game.
- May 30 - The Red Sox set a team record with six stolen bases in
their 5-2, 13-inning win over the Orioles.
- May 31:
June
- June 5 - Chipper Jones of the
Braves hits his 400th career home run in their 7-5 win over the
Marlins, joining Mickey Mantle and
Eddie Murray as the third switch hitter
to reach the milestone.
- June 7:
- In the Red Sox' game against the Marlins, Kevin Youkilis' record streak of errorless
games at first base ends at 238 games.
- In the sixth inning of their 2-1 loss to the Padres, Mets
pitchers tie a modern major league record by hitting three batters
in one inning: Brian Giles, Kevin Kouzmanoff and Khalil Greene. The Padres also set a major
league record with their fourth consecutive 2-1 win.
- June 9:
- June 16 - The final Hall of Fame Game, between
the Cubs and Padres, is cancelled due to rain.
- June 17:
- At 3:15 AM Eastern Time, the New York
Mets announce the firing of manager Willie Randolph and two coaches while the
team is on the West Coast, and name Jerry
Manuel interim manager.
- Marcus Thames ties a Tigers record
by hitting a home run in his fifth consecutive game, in a 5-1 win
over the Giants.
- June 18 - Francisco
Rodriguez of the Angels allows the tying run in the ninth
inning against the Mets, ending his club record streak of 25
consecutive saves; the Mets win 5-4 in 10 innings.
- June 20 - Elijah Dukes ties a
Nationals record with five hits in their 4-3 win over the Rangers,
with his fifth hit driving in the winning run with two out in the
bottom of the 14th and the bases loaded.
- June 21:
- Jim Edmonds hits two home runs in
the fourth inning of the Cubs' 11-7 win over the White Sox.
- Scot Shields records four
strikeouts in the eighth inning of the Angels' 6-2 win over the
Phillies; after he retires Greg Dobbs and
Jimmy Rollins, Shane Victorino reaches first on a wild
pitch in the dirt. After issuing a walk, Shields strikes out
Ryan Howard to end the inning.
- June 22 - Mark Teixeira hits three
home runs in the Braves' 8-3 win over the Mariners.
- June 23 - Félix
Hernández of the Seattle Mariners became the first American
League pitcher since the designated
hitter rule went into effect in to hit a grand slam, off New York Mets ace
Johan Santana, in Seattle's 5–2
victory. it is also the first home run ever by a Mariners
pitcher.
- June 24:
- The
Baseball Hall
of Fame
dedicates a revised plaque for Jackie Robinson to include recognition of
his cultural impact.
- The Pirates beat the Yankees 12-5, becoming the final major
league team to get its first regular season win against the
Yankees.
- June 25:
- Fresno State defeats
Georgia to win the 2008 College World Series,
becoming the lowest seeded team to win an NCAA postseason
tournament and bringing the school its first NCAA men's team title.
With a final record of 47-31, they finish with the most losses of
any CWS champion.
- Shawn Chacón of the Astros
grabs general manager Ed Wade by the neck
and throws him to the ground during a confrontation, resulting in
his release five days later.
- In a 5-4 loss to the Nationals, Garret Anderson breaks Tim Salmon's Angels record of 986 career runs; he
had tied the mark five days earlier. Also in the game, Washington's
Aaron Boone becomes the fourth member of
his family to collect 1,000 hits, joining his grandfather Ray,
father Bob and brother Bret.
- June 26 - Matt Garza of the Rays
pitches a 6-1 one-hitter over the Marlins, giving up only a home
run by Hanley Ramírez to lead
off the seventh inning.
- June 27:
- Carlos Delgado sets a Mets record
with nine RBI in their 15-6 win at Yankee Stadium over the Yankees,
in the first game of a crosstown split doubleheader; the second
game is played at Shea Stadium. The previous mark of eight RBI was
set by Dave Kingman in a 1976
game.
- The Seattle Mariners set a team
record with 18 runners left on base, but still beat the Padres
5-2.
- June 28 - Jered Weaver and José Arredondo of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
combine to no-hit the Los Angeles
Dodgers over eight innings, but lose 1-0 when the Dodgers score
in the fifth inning on two errors, a stolen base and a sacrifice
fly. The game is not officially recognized by Major League Baseball
as a no-hitter.
- June 30 - Nick Swisher homers from
both sides of the plate for the second time in the month, including
a grand slam batting right-handed, as the White Sox beat the
Indians 9-7.
July
- July 2 - Dustin Pedroia has four
hits as the Red Sox lose 7-6 to the Rays, missing the cycle when he
hits his second double of the game in the eighth inning, forgoing
the necessary single.
- July 3 - Jon Lester of the Red Sox
pitches a 7-0 shutout over the Yankees, becoming the first Boston
left-hander since July 27, to throw a shutout at Yankee
Stadium.
- July 4:
- Ken Griffey, Jr. homers in the
Reds' 3-0 win over the Nationals, becoming the 18th major leaguer
to hit for over 5,000 total bases.
- The Rockies come back from trailing 13-4 in the fourth inning
to beat the Marlins 18-17 on Chris
Iannetta's single in the bottom of the ninth; the game sets a
record for most combined runs in a contest decided on a walk-off
hit, and the Marlins become the sixth team since 1900 to score 17
runs but lose.
- In Boston's 6-4 win over the Yankees, Kevin Youkilis hits a drive to left field
that pops out of Johnny Damon's glove,
bounces a few times on top of the wall and then stops there for a
few seconds before rolling onto the field for a two-run
triple.
- Albert Pujols hits his 300th home
run in the Cardinals' 2-1 loss to the Cubs.
- July 5 - In the Yankees' 2-1 win over the Red Sox, a combined
seven batters are hit, tying the modern major league record;
Manny Ramírez is hit three times,
tying the individual mark.
- July 6:
- The
Braves beat the Astros 7-6 in 17 innings, the longest game ever at
Turner
Field
; Mark Teixeira's
single with the bases loaded and none out drives in the winning
run.
- The Brewers tie club records with nine doubles and twelve extra
base hits in their 11-6 win over the Pirates.
- July 7:
- Hiroki Kuroda of the Dodgers
pitches a 3-0 one-hitter against the Braves; Mark Teixeira, leading off the eighth inning
with a double, is the only baserunner.
- Francisco
Rodriguez earns his record 35th save before the All-Star break
in the Angels' 9-6 win over the Rangers, breaking John Smoltz's 2003 mark.
- July 8 - Ian Kinsler ties a Rangers
record by scoring in his 11th consecutive game.
- July 10 - John Lackey of the Angels
gives up 15 hits in the team's 11-10, 11-inning win over the
Rangers, tying the team record set by Paul
Hartzell on September 9, .
- July 12:
- July 13 - CC Sabathia hits a home
run in the Brewers' 3-2 win over the Reds, becoming the first
pitcher since Earl Wilson in
1970 to hit home runs in both leagues in one season; Sabathia had
previously homered on June 21 during an Indians road win against
the Dodgers.
- July
15 - The American League wins the
79th All-Star
Game at Yankee
Stadium
, 4-3; the AL puts the winning run in scoring
position in every inning from the 10th through 13th, finally
scoring Justin Morneau on Michael Young's sacrifice fly with
the bases loaded in the 15th inning. The game ties the
All-Star record for most innings, and is the longest All-Star Game
by time at 4 hours, 50 minutes. NL second baseman Dan Uggla sets an All-Star record with three
errors, and the teams combine for record totals of stolen bases
(7), pitchers (23) and strikeouts (34). It is the AL's first
victory in the 11 All-Star Games which have gone to extra
innings.
- July 19 - Jeff Kent homers in the
Dodgers' 3-2 loss to the Diamondbacks, making him the 48th major
league player to collect 1,500 RBI, with Nap
Lajoie and Rogers Hornsby being
the only other second basemen to reach the milestone.
- July
20 - The White Sox unveil a statue of Harold Baines at U.S.
Cellular Field
, the seventh statue on the ballpark's outfield
concourse.
- July 21 - In the Diamondbacks' 2-0 win over the Cubs, Randy Johnson records his 2,000th strikeout
with the team, becoming the first pitcher in history to do so with
two different clubs; he also runs his career record against the
Cubs to 13-0, with Sal Maglie being the
only other pitcher to post 10 wins without a defeat against
Chicago.
- July 22:
- July 23 - In the Angels' 14-11 win over the Indians, Casey Kotchman gets five hits, tying the team
record for a nine-inning game, and Howie
Kendrick ties another team mark with three doubles among his
four hits; Jeff Mathis also collects
four hits, including his first career grand slam, marking the first
time in team history that three players have done so in a
nine-inning contest.
- July 24 - The Milwaukee
Brewers break their 1996 club record by getting a home run in
their 20th consecutive game; the streak ends in the next day's 3-1
loss to the Astros.
- July 26 - Skip Schumaker ties a
Cardinals record with six hits in their 10-8, 14-inning win over
the Mets, and is on base when Albert
Pujols provides the winning margin with a two-run home run in
the top of the 14th, his fifth hit of the game.
- July 27:
- Two days after tying the previous mark, Brad Ziegler of the A's sets a major league
record with 27 consecutive shutout innings to begin his career,
breaking the record of 25 set by George
McQuillan with the Phillies.
- The Phillies allow the Braves to take a 5-0 lead, then move
ahead 12-5 before holding off a rally to win 12-10; it is the first
time since August 3, that a team has scored the game's first five
runs and last five runs yet lost.
- July 28 - Greg Maddux of the Padres
earns an 8-5 win over the Diamondbacks, ending his career-worst
streak of 14 starts without a victory.
- July 29 - John Lackey of the Angels
takes a no-hitter into the ninth inning against the Red Sox before
allowing a Dustin Pedroia single and
Kevin Youkilis home run with one out,
and settles for a two-hit 6-2 win.
- July 30 - Kelly Shoppach of the
Indians hits two home runs and three doubles in a 14-12, 13-inning
loss to the Tigers, tying the major league record of five extra
base hits in a game; his 9th-inning homer ties the game, though he
strikes out with the bases loaded and none out in the bottom of the
12th. The game also ties the modern record for most combined
players collecting four or more hits, with the Tigers' Curtis Granderson also collecting five
while Ben Francisco and Asdrúbal Cabrera of the Indians and
Gary Sheffield of the Tigers each get
four.
- July 31:
- Major deals made before the trading deadline include Manny Ramirez being sent from the Red Sox to
the Dodgers, and Ken Griffey, Jr.
being traded from the Reds to the White Sox, one day after Iván Rodríguez was sent from the
Tigers to the Yankees.
- Twins manager Ron Gardenhire is
ejected for arguing a strikeout call in the seventh inning of a
10-6 win over the White Sox, prompting a game delay of several
minutes as fans throw baseballs and hats onto the field; Gardenhire
is later suspended for one game.
August
- August 2 - In their 9-7 win over the White Sox, the Royals tie
a club record by having five players collect three hits each:
Mike Aviles, Esteban Germán, Billy Butler, Miguel Olivo and Ross
Gload.
- August 3 - Royals catcher Miguel
Olivo charges White Sox pitcher D. J. Carrasco on the mound after being hit by a
pitch in the fifth inning; although the Royals were leading 6-0 and
had the bases loaded, forcing in a run, Olivo insists that it was
an intentional move. A brawl ensues, followed by a hit Chicago
batter in the seventh inning, resulting in ejections for Olivo,
both pitchers and both managers, and suspensions for all but
Carrasco; although he states that it was not the case in this
instance, Chicago manager Ozzie
Guillén draws criticism afterward for indicating that he
sometimes has ordered batters to be hit.
- August 4 - The Mariners score ten runs in the seventh inning,
coming back to beat the Twins 11-6; Raúl Ibáñez ties an AL record
with six RBIs in the inning, including a grand slam, breaking the
Mariners record of five set by Ken
Griffey, Jr. on April 29, .
- August 5 - In Tampa Bay's 8-4 win over the Indians, Evan Longoria sets a team record for rookies
with his 22nd home run, breaking Jonny
Gomes' mark set in 2005.
- August 6 - Ryan Ludwick ties a
Cardinals record by homering in his fifth consecutive game, in
their 9-6 win over the Dodgers.
- August 10:
- With 45 games remaining in the season, the Tampa Bay Rays set a franchise reocrd with
their 71st victory, an 11-3 road win over the Mariners.
- Ian Kinsler gets five hits in the
Rangers' 15-7 win over the Orioles, tying the team record for a
nine-inning game.
- Greg Dobbs of the Phillies collects
his 21st pinch hit of the season, breaking the team record set by
Doc Miller in 1913.
- August 12:
- The Red Sox beat the Rangers 19-17, blowing a 10-0 first-inning
lead when the Rangers take a 15-14 lead in the sixth inning but
coming back to win with four runs in the eighth. David Ortiz hits a pair of three-run homers in
the first-inning barrage, Marlon Byrd
ties a Texas record with five hits in a nine-inning game, and
Scott Feldman of the
Rangers becomes the first pitcher since August 3, to give up 12
runs without being charged with the loss.
- Four days after tying the record, Brad
Ziegler sets an Oakland record with 38 consecutive shutout
innings, breaking Mike Torrez's 1976
mark of 37.
- August 13 - In the sixth inning of their 6-2 loss to the
Astros, Giants pitchers tie a modern major league record by hitting
three batters in one inning: Humberto
Quintero, Ty Wigginton and Mark Loretta.
- August 14:
- In the Rays' 7–6 victory over the host Athletics, B. J. Upton hits an RBI double in the ninth inning off
reliever Brad Ziegler to end his record
scoreless streak at 39 innings. Ziegler, who began the season in
the minors, posted numerous records including the most shutout
innings by any pitcher to start a major league career (including
the eighth inning of this game), and ties the major league
single-season record for consecutive scoreless innings by a
reliever, set by Cleveland's Al Benton in
1949.
- In their 9–2 win over the visiting Royals, the White Sox become
the sixth team in major league history to hit four consecutive home
runs, with Jim Thome, Paul Konerko, Alexei Ramírez and Juan Uribe connecting in the sixth inning.
Chicago's Carlos Quentin is hit by a
pitch for the sixth straight game, marking the longest such streak
in the major leagues since at least 1920; the streak ends the next
day.
- Mark Kotsay becomes the first Braves
player to hit for the cycle since Albert Hall in 1987. His 7th-inning
double that completes the cycle against the Cubs is also Kotsay's
1,500th career hit.
- In the Reds' 3-1 win over the Pirates, Francisco Cordero becomes the 37th pitcher
to earn 200 career saves.
- August 15 - In the Rockies' 4-3 win over the Nationals,
Willy Taveras steals his 54th base of
the year, breaking Eric
Young's team record set in 1996.
- August 16 - Miguel Montero and
Chris Young both hit grand
slams in the Diamondbacks' 11-5 win over the Astros, marking the
first such occurrence in team history.
- August 17:
- Needing only a triple to hit for the cycle, Melvin Mora instead hits an additional double
and home run in his last two at bats as the Orioles win 16-8 at
Detroit.
- Alex Ríos gets five hits in the
Blue Jays' 15-4 win over the Red Sox, tying a team record with four
doubles; Toronto also sets a new team record with ten doubles.
- After Craig Biggio's number is
retired by the Astros in a pre-game ceremony, Roy Oswalt and José
Valverde combine for a 3-0 two-hitter against the Diamondbacks,
with Stephen Drew's singles in the
third and ninth innings being the only blemishes.
- In the Mariners' 11-8 loss at Minnesota, Seattle's R. A. Dickey ties a modern major league record by
throwing four wild pitches in the fifth inning.
- In the Rays' 7-4 win at Texas, Josh
Hamilton of the Rangers is walked intentionally with the bases
loaded in the ninth inning, only the fifth known use of the
strategy since 1900.
- August 19 - Ricky Nolasco of the
Florida Marlins pitches a 6-0
two-hitter against the Giants, ending Florida's major league record
streak of 301 games without a complete game since September 16, ;
he allows only a disputed infield single off the shortstop's glove
in the first inning, as well as a ninth-inning double.
- August 20 - Francisco
Rodriguez earns his 48th save in the Angels' 5-4 win over the
Rays, breaking his own 2006 team record.
- August 23 - South
Korea upsets Cuba
3-2 to win the gold medal at the Summer Olympics in
Beijing. The sport will not return at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London
.
- August 28 - The use of instant
replay begins in Major League
Baseball.
September
- September 1 - The Diamondbacks' Stephen Drew becomes the first player to
hit for the cycle at Chase Field
, helping Arizona rally past the Cardinals
8-6. Hours later in Texas, the Mariners' Adrián Beltré duplicates the feat in
Seattle's 12-6 win over the Rangers. Both Drew and Beltré collect
five hits in their respective efforts. This marks the first time
two players hit for the cycle on the same day since September 17,
1920, when Bobby Veach of the Tigers and George Burns of the New York
Giants did it, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
- September 3 - In the Yankees' 8-4 win over the Rays, a home run
hit by New York's Alex Rodriguez is
the first ever to be reviewed by instant replay. Though
the ball is initially ruled a home run, Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon argues the ball was close enough to
the left field foul pole to necessitate a review. After a
conversation among the umpires, crew chief Charlie Reliford agree to the review and
eventually uphold the home run call.
- September 8:
- Pinch-hitting for Houston, Mark
Saccomanno homers on the first pitch he sees in the major
leagues to help the Astros beat the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates,
3–2. Saccomanno becomes the 22nd player to hit a home run on his
first pitch in the majors. The Cleveland Indians' Kevin Kouzmanoff was the last to do it,
according to the Elias Sports
Bureau. Kouzmanoff accomplished the feat against the Texas
Rangers on September 2, 2006,
becoming the only major leaguer to hit a grand slam on his first pitch.
- Gary Sheffield, four home runs
short of the coveted 500 mark, provides another milestone for Major
League Baseball. His second home run of the night is the 250,000th
in major league history, and the Tigers beat the visiting Athletics
14–8. Sheffield collects five RBI, including his 13th career grand
slam. Both homers come against Gio
Gonzalez; the rookie pitcher also puts himself in the history
books when he hit Mike Hessman with
pitches twice in the second inning. It is only the fifth time in
modern baseball history that a batter has been hit twice in the
same inning, the second time in the American League. The first was
Brady Anderson on May 23, 1999, when he was hit twice in the first
inning by Mike Morgan.
- Angels center fielder Torii Hunter
gets caught in a rundown between third and
home, and is tagged out relatively easily by Yankees catcher
Ivan "Pudge" Rodriguez. Hunter trips
slightly over the bat at home plate, and bumps Pudge after the
play. Rodriguez, in turn, shoves Hunter while walking toward the
mound. That prompts Hunter to shove Rodriguez, resulting in a
bench-clearing brawl. Both
Hunter and Rodriguez are suspended two games by Major League
Baseball, and neither appeals the suspension. Angels pitcher
John Lackey receives an undisclosed fine
by MLB for his involvement.
- September 10 - With a 4-2 win over the Yankees and an 8-7 loss
by the second-place Rangers to the Mariners, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
clinch their seventh American
League West division title, becoming the earliest team to
clinch that division in its history.
- September 12 - Marlins third baseman
Jorge Cantú launches his team into
the record books at Dolphin Stadium
, when he connects for his 25th home run of the
season off pitcher Shairon Martis in
a 2–1 Marlins victory over the Nationals. Cantú joins first
baseman Mike Jacobs
(32), second baseman Dan Uggla (30) and
shortstop Hanley Ramírez (29) as
the Marlins became the first team in major league history to boast
four infielders with at least 25 homers apiece during a regular
season.
- September 13:
- Angels closer Francisco Rodriguez records
his 58th save of the season, breaking the single-season record set
by Bobby Thigpen in .
- At
Fenway
Park
, Dustin Pedroia goes
3 for 5 with two doubles in the Red Sox' 7-5 victory over the Blue
Jays in the second game of a doubleheader. Pedroia becomes
the third player in Red Sox history to accumulate 200 hits and 50
doubles in a season. The others were Tris
Speaker ( ) and Wade Boggs ( ).
Pedroia also becomes the eighth player in team's history with 50
doubles in a season, giving him 69 extra-base hits this season, to
move into a first-place tie with Bobby
Doerr ( ) on Boston's all-time list for extra bases in a season
by a second baseman.
- Hanley Ramírez hits his 30th
home run, which combine with his 33 stolen bases to make him the
second player in Marlins history to have a 30-30 season. Ramírez and the Marlins rolled to
their fourth consecutive victory, a 4–2 win over the visiting
Nationals. Preston Wilson was the
first Marlin player to achieve the feat, with 31 homers and 36
steals in .
- As a
consequence of Hurricane Ike striking
the Houston
area, two games of a series between the Astros and
Cubs, originally scheduled to be played at Houston's Minute Maid
Park
, are relocated to Milwaukee's Miller
Park
, to be played September 14 and 15.
- September 14 - Carlos Zambrano of the Cubs
pitches a 5–0 no-hitter against the Astros in a game relocated to
Miller
Park
in Milwaukee. This is the first no-hitter in
MLB history thrown at a neutral site, the second no-hitter of the
2008 season, the first of Zambrano's career, and the first for the
Cubs since 1972. Zambrano had been
diagnosed with rotator cuff tendinitis on September 4.
- September 15:
- September 17 - Ichiro Suzuki of
the Mariners records his 200th hit of the season. This marked the
eighth consecutive season he reached the milestone, breaking the AL
record previously held by Wade Boggs and
tying the major league record set by "Wee"
Willie Keeler from - .
- September 19 - Rays first baseman Carlos Peña is awarded a home run after the
original ruling of a ground-rule double due to fan
interference is overturned by umpire Gerry Davis following an instant replay
consultation during an 11-1 Rays victory over the Twins. This marks
the first time in major league history that the instant replay rule
is used to overturn a call.
- September 20:
- The Chicago Cubs win their second
straight National League
Central division championship with a 5-4 victory over the
arch-rival Cardinals.
- The Tampa Bay Rays clinch their
first postseason berth in franchise history with a 7-2 victory over
the Twins.
- September 21 - The Yankees defeat the
Orioles 7–3, in the final game played at Yankee Stadium
. Andy Pettitte
is the winning pitcher and teammate José Molina belts the last home
run in the storied ballpark.
- September 23 - The Boston Red
Sox' 5-4 victory over the Indians eliminates the Yankees from
AL Wild Card contention and assures the Red Sox of a playoff berth.
The Yankees' elimination ends a streak of 13 consecutive postseason
appearances, the second longest such streak in MLB history.
- September 24 - The Los Angeles
Dodgers clinch the National
League West title when the second-place Diamondbacks are
defeated by the Cardinals 12-3.
- September 26 - The Tampa Bay Rays
clinch the American League East division title when the
second-place Red Sox lose 19-8 to the Yankees. The Red Sox
simultaneously clinch the Wild Card spot.
- September 27 - The Philadelphia Phillies clinch the
National League East divisional title when they beat the Nationals
4-3. Brad Lidge earns his 41st save in 41
attempts.
- September 28
- The Milwaukee Brewers win the
National League wild card berth by defeating the Cubs 3-1 while the
Mets simultaneously lose 4-2 to the Marlins. It is the first
postseason appearance by the Brewers since 1982. The Mets, in their
final game ever at Shea
Stadium
, are eliminated from the postseason on the final
day of the regular season for the second straight year.
- Mike Mussina of the Yankees wins
his 20th game of the season. At 39, he is the oldest pitcher to get
his first 20-win season.
- The Los Angeles Angels
of Anaheim finish with a 100-62 record, to finish the regular
season with the majors' best record. The Angels also enter in the
baseball record books as the only team since to win 100 games in a
season without a 30-home run hitter, a 100-RBI producer, or a
20-game winning pitcher, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
- September 29 - One day after the originally scheduled final day
of the regular season, the White Sox, one-half game behind the
Twins in the AL Central standings, are forced to make up a game with the
Tigers that had previously been cancelled earlier in the season.
The White Sox defeat the Tigers 8-2, forcing a one game playoff
with the Twins for the division title.
- September 30 - The Chicago White
Sox defeat the Twins 1-0 in a one-game playoff for the AL
Central division title. The White Sox and crosstown Cubs both reach
the postseason in the same year for the first time since .
October
- October 4 - The Los Angeles
Dodgers complete a three-game sweep of the Chicago Cubs to advance to the NLCS. Because of that,
the Chicago Cubs extend their World Series victory drought to 100
years, making it a first in American sports history.
- October 5
- The Philadelphia Phillies
defeat the Milwaukee Brewers to
win their best-of-five NLDS 3-1.
- Boston Red Sox CF Jacoby Ellsbury hits the first three-run
single in major league postseason history off of P Joe Saunders of the Angels of Anaheim. The hit
comes with two outs and the bases loaded in the bottom of the
second inning of Game 3 of the ALDS. Ellsbury hit a
blooper on the shallow center field grass just behind second base
that three Angels fielders let drop between them. Since the runners
were moving with two outs, all three come in to score and Ellsbury
stops at first base. Anaheim went on to win the game, however, 5–4
in 12 innings. The win for the Angels snaps an 11-game postseason
losing streak to Boston, a major league record.
- October 8 - The Yomiuri Giants
defeat the Hanshin Tigers 3-1 in
between their last regular season meet. The Giants, which never
lead in the league in this season and once was 13 game-behind of
Hanshin Tigers (in July 9), take the lead for the first time.
Giants was in M2 after the game. Giants won the League Champion two
days later after they won a game against Tokyo Yakult Swallows while Tigers
lost to Yokohama BayStars. It was
the grestest comeback victory since 1996.
- October 26 - Pitcher Joe Blanton of
the Phillies hits a home run in Game 4 of the World Series, becoming the first pitcher
to hit a home run in the World Series since 1974.
- October 27 - Game 5 of the 2008
World Series in Philadelphia is suspended due to rain in the
middle of the sixth inning with the Phillies and Rays tied 2-2 and
the Phillies leading the series 3 games to 1. It is the first
suspended game in World Series history.
- October 29 - Game 5 of the World Series is
resumed at Citizens
Bank Park
in the bottom of the sixth inning after having been
suspended October 27 because of rain. The Phillies win the
game 4-3 to win their first title since 1980. Pitcher Cole Hamels is named World Series
MVP.
November
- November 12:
- Manager of the Year honors go to Joe
Maddon of the Tampa Bay Rays and Lou
Piniella of the Chicago Cubs. Maddon had led the American
League team not just to the first winning record in franchise
history, but also to the World Series. Piniella had guided Chicago
to the best record in the National League. It is Piniella's third
time winning the honor, having been honored in and while in the
American League.
- The Oakland Athletics trade former closer Huston Street, starter Greg Smith and prospect Carlos González to the
Colorado Rockies for former batting champion Matt Holliday.
- November 16
- The Saitama Seibu Lions beat
the Uni-President Lions 1-0 in
the finals of Asia Series. The Japan's side retains the title
four years in a row. This is also the last game of the brief
history of Asia Series, as the series has been replaced by a single
exhibition game between Japan and Korea's Champion in 2009 due to
profit issue.
- The Kobe 9 Cruise, a team from the Kansai Independent Baseball
League launching in 2009, drafts 16-year-old knuckleballer
Eri Yoshida with the 7th pick. She is
the first ever female player playing at a professional level
baseball league in Japan alongside male players; she officially
signs with the team on December 2.
- November 17
- Albert Pujols wins his second NL
MVP Award for the Cardinals. He had won the award in .
- It is announced that baseball's legends and old-timers will
play in a new Hall of Fame Classic game beginning in 2009. The
inaugural Hall of Fame Classic will be held on Father's Day, June
21. The game replaces the Hall of Fame Game, which was discontinued
this year after 68 years.
- November 18
- Red Sox second baseman Dustin
Pedroia wins the AL MVP Award, after establishing single-season
franchise records by a second baseman for runs, hits, doubles,
batting average, total bases, and extra-base hits. Pedroia also
becomes just the eighth player in AL history to earn MVP, Gold
Glove, and Silver Slugger awards in the same season.
- The Mariners appoint Don Wakamatsu
as their new manager for the season; he becomes the first Asian-American to manage a major league
team.
December
- December 22 - A California appeals court has ruled against the
city of Anaheim in its battle to restore the name Anaheim Angels to its major league baseball
team. The 4th District Court of Appeal ruled late Friday against
the city, which claimed that team owner Arte
Moreno violated the city-owned stadium lease agreement when he
changed the name to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Deaths
January-March
- January 1 - Chuck Daniel, 74,
pitcher for the 1957 Detroit Tigers, and the only major leaguer to
come out of the University of the Ozarks
- January 2 - Gerry Staley, 87,
All-Star pitcher for six teams from 1947-1961 who won 19 games for
the 1951 Cardinals and led AL in games as a reliever for the 1959
White Sox
- January 2 - Richard J.
Thompson, 52, baseball historian
and author who was a SABR member for more than 25 years and
authored the book The Ferrell Brothers of Baseball
- January 4 - Bill Ramsey, 87,
outfielder for the 1945 Boston Braves
- January 8 - Steve Ridzik, 78,
pitcher for five teams from 1950 to 1966
- January 13 - Johnny Podres, 75,
All-Star pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers who was MVP of the 1955
World Series and also pitched for the Los Angeles Dodgers' 1959 and
1963 World Series champions; led NL in ERA, shutouts and winning
percentage once each
- January 14 - Don Cardwell, 72,
pitcher for five NL teams who threw a no-hitter in his first start
with the Cubs in 1960
- January 17 - John McHale, 86,
executive who served as general manager of the Tigers, Braves and
Expos between 1957 and 1986; previously a reserve first baseman on
Detroit's 1945 World Series champions
- January 22 - Lance Clemons, 60,
relief pitcher for the Royals, Cardinals and Red Sox from 1971 to
1974
- January 24 - Art Frantz, 86, American
League umpire from 1969 to 1977 who was crew chief for the 1975
World Series; also worked the 1972 and 1976 ALCS and 1974 All-Star
Game
- January 27 - Bing Devine, 90, who
transformed the St. Louis Cardinals and the New York Mets into
World Series champions in the 1960s in a career spanning seven
decades as a baseball executive
- January 27 - Ken Hunt, 69,
pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds 1961 NL champions who won the
TSN Rookie Pitcher Award in the same season
- February 2 - Ed Vargo, 79, National
League umpire from 1960 to 1983 who officiated in the World Series,
NLCS and All-Star Game four times each
- February 14 - Hal Erickson, 88,
star pitcher in the minors for the Quebec Braves in the late 1940s
who later became a 33-year-old rookie with the 1953 Tigers
- February 19 - Bob Howsam, 89, general
manager of the Reds from 1967 to 1977 who built the "Big Red
Machine" dynasty that won four NL pennants; previously general
manager of the Cardinals, and owner of minor league teams in
Denver
- March 6 - Deacon Donahue, 87,
pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies from 1943-44
- March 8 - Ossie Alvarez, 74, Cuban
infielder for the Washington Senators and Detroit Tigers from 1958
to 1959 who later became a minor league manager
- March 15 - Niles Jordan, 84,
pitcher in 1951 and 1952 with the Philadelphia Phillies and
Cincinnati Reds
- March 16 - Bob Purkey, 78, All-Star
pitcher for the Reds who was 23-5 in 1962 after losing 3-2 in Game
3 of the 1961 World Series
- March 21 - Roy
Foster, 62, outfielder for the Indians from 1970 to 1972 who
won the 1970 TSN Rookie of the Year Award
- March 27 - Billy Consolo, 73,
shortstop for five teams from 1953 to 1962 who later served as the
Tigers dugout coach for 14 seasons
April-June
- April 4 - Jerry Crider, 66, pitcher
for the 1969 Twins and 1970 White Sox
- April 5 - Walt Masterson, 87,
All-Star pitcher for the Senators and Red Sox from 1939 to 1953 who
started the 1948 All-Star Game; baseball coach at George Mason
University in 1980-81
- April 8 - Hersh Lyons, 92, pitcher
who appeared in one game for the 1941 Cardinals
- April 14 - Tommy Holmes, 91,
All-Star right fielder for the Boston Braves from 1942 to 1951 who
hit .302 lifetime and set a modern NL record in 1945 with a 37-game
hitting streak; later a New York Mets executive
- April 19 - John Marzano, 45, backup
catcher for the Red Sox and Mariners who played for division
champions with both teams, batting .287 for the 1997 Mariners;
member of the 1984 US Olympic team
- April 27 - Art
Johnson, 88, pitcher for the Boston Bees/Braves from 1940 to
1942
- May 1 - Buzzie Bavasi, 93, general
manager of the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers from 1951-68 who
assembled teams that won eight NL pennants and the club's first
four World Series titles; later the first GM of the San Diego
Padres, and GM of the California Angels teams that won the club's
first two division titles
- May 5 - Cal Howe, 83, pitcher who
played briefly for the 1952 Chicago Cubs
- May 20 - Herb Hash, 97, pitcher for
the Boston Red Sox in 1940 and 1941
- May 25 - Geremi González,
33, Venezuelan pitcher for five teams between 1997 and 2006, who
led the 1997 Cubs with 11 wins in his rookie season
- May 30 - Ray Hoffman, 90, third
baseman for the 1942 Washington Senators
- June 10 - Eliot Asinof, 88, writer
on baseball best known for his nonfiction book 8 Men Out
about the 1919 Black Sox scandal
- June 13 - Tim Russert, 58, broadcast
journalist who was a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame's board of
directors since 2003
- June 15 - John Buzhardt, 71,
pitcher for five teams from 1958 to 1968 who earned 49 of his 71
victories with the White Sox
- June 16 - Bert Shepard, 87, pitcher
who appeared in one game for the 1945 Senators despite having had
his right leg amputated after his fighter plane was shot down
during World War II
July-September
- July 10 - Steve Mingori, 64,
relief pitcher for the Indians and Royals from 1970 to 1979 who
saved Game 4 of the 1976 ALCS
- July 11 - Chuck Stobbs, 79, pitcher
who played for the Red Sox, White Sox, Senators, Twins and
Cardinals from 1947-60
- July 12 - Bobby Murcer, 62, 5-time
All-Star outfielder, best known for his years with the Yankees, who
led the AL in runs, total bases and on base percentage once each;
later a popular broadcaster with the Yankees
- July 13 - Dave Ricketts, 73,
catcher and longtime coach for the Cardinals who played on their
1967 World Series champions and was a coach on the 1982 World
Series winners
- July 14 - Red Foley,
79, sportswriter for the New York Daily News for 34 years
who was also an official scorer in 10 World Series, more than any
other scorer in modern history
- July 19 - Jerome Holtzman, 82,
sportswriter for Chicago newspapers from 1957 to 1999 who went on
to serve as Major League Baseball's official historian until his
death; instigator of the save statistic in the late 1950s, he was
honored with the Hall of Fame's Spink Award in 1990
- July 27 - Russ Gibson, 69, catcher
for the Red Sox and Giants who was a reserve on Boston's 1967
pennant winners
- August 3 - Skip Caray, 68,
broadcaster for the Atlanta Braves from 1976 to 2007
- August 6 - Karl Kuehl, 70, scout and
player development executive who managed the Expos for most of the
1976 season
- August 12 - George Gick, 92, relief
pitcher in two games for the White Sox in 1937 and 1938
- August 12 - Dottie Wiltse
Collins, 84, female pitcher for the Fort Wayne Daisies from 1944 to 1950 who
led the AAGPBL in
strikeouts in 1945
- August 15 - Darrin Winston, 42,
relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies from 1997 to 1998
- September 2 - Todd Cruz, 52, infielder
for six different major league teams from 1978 to 1984 and a member
of the 1983 World Champion Baltimore Orioles
- September 7 - Don Gutteridge, 96,
infielder for four major league teams, mainly the Cardinals and
Browns, who coached for the White Sox from 1955 to 1966 and managed
the team in 1969-70; was the last living Browns player from the
1944 pennant winners, and the oldest living major league
manager
- September 24 - Mickey Vernon, 90,
seven-time All-Star first baseman and two-time AL batting champion
with the Washington Senators who set several fielding records
during a 20-year major league career
- September 30 - Ed Brinkman, 66,
All-Star shortstop, primarily with the Senators, who held record of
72 straight errorless games by a shortstop from 1972 to 1990 and
won the 1973 Gold Glove with the Tigers
October-December
- October 7 - Bruce Dal Canton,
66, relief pitcher for the Pirates, Royals, Braves and White Sox
(1967-1977) who later worked for the Braves as their pitching coach
(1987-1990) and as an instructor in the Atlanta farm system
(1991-2008)
- October 7 - George Kissell, 88,
who had been with the St. Louis Cardinals since 1940, including a
major league stint as a coach from 1969 to 1975
- October 8 - Les McCrabb, 93, pitcher
for the Philadelphia Athletics from 1939-50 who continued coaching
for the team until 1954
- October 10 - Sid Hudson, 93, All-Star
pitcher for the Washington Senators and Boston Red Sox from
1940-54; later a coach for the Senators and scout for the Rangers
and Red Sox
- October 11 - Kevin Foster, 39, hard
thrower and good-control pitcher who played from 1993 through 2001
for the Phillies, Cubs and Rangers
- October 15 - Tom Tresh, 71, outfielder
for the New York Yankees from 1961-1969, and hometown Detroit
Tigers in 1970, who won AL Rookie of the Year Award in 1962 and
Gold Glove in 1965
- October 19 - Lou Stringer, 91,
second baseman for the Cubs and Red Sox between the 1941 and 1950
seasons
- October 25 - Rafael Batista, 61,
Dominican first baseman for the Astros and Japan's Lotte
Orions
- October 28 - Jake Crawford, 80,
outfielder for the 1952 St. Louis Browns
- November 9 - Preacher Roe, 93,
All-Star pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the late 1940s and
early 1950s who posted a 22-3 record for a .880 winning percentage
in 1951, setting a Dodgers record that still stands for the highest
WP for a 20-game winner
- November 11 - Herb Score, 75,
All-Star pitcher for the Cleveland Indians in 1955-56 who won the
1955 Rookie of the Year Award after striking out 245 batters to set
a rookie record (broken by Dwight
Gooden in 1984), and later went on to a career in broadcasting
with the Indians
- November 17 - Floyd Weaver, 67,
pitcher for the Indians, White Sox and Brewers from 1962 to 1971,
who struck out 21 batters in a nine-inning game at Grand Junction,
Colorado, which still a collegiate record
- November 23 - Fred McAlister, 80,
scouting director for the St. Louis Cardinals organization,
1980-1993
- November 24 - Tom
Burgess, 81, Canadian first baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals
(1954) and Los Angeles Angels (1962), who later managed in the
minors and coached for the New York Mets (1977) and Atlanta Braves
(1978)
- November 25 - Randy Gumpert, 90,
All-Star pitcher for the Philadelphia Athletics, New York Yankees,
Chicago White Sox,Boston Red Sox and Washington Senators from 1936
to 1952, better known as the man who gave up Mickey Mantle's first home run in
- November 27 - Andy Tomasic, 90,
pitcher for the 1949 New York Giants
- November 28 - Red Murff, 87, relief
pitcher for the Milwaukee Braves from 1956 to 1957, who later, as a
scout for the New York Mets, discovered future Hall of Fame pitcher
Nolan Ryan
- December 2 - Ted Rogers,
75, owner of the Toronto Blue Jays, and founder of Rogers
Communications Inc., Canada's largest cable television and mobile
phone company
- December 10 - Sal Yvars, 84, catcher
for the New York Giants and St. Louis Cardinals from 1947 to 1954,
well known for his outstanding defensive skills
- December 14 - Nick Willhite, 67,
pitcher who posted a 6-12 record with a 4.55 ERA in 58 games for
four teams from 1963-67, and a member of the 1963 and 1965 Dodgers World championship teams
- December 17 - Dave
Smith, 53, All-Star closer whose 563 outings with the Houston
Astros is tops on the club's list, and his 199 saves ranks him
second
- December 19 - Dock Ellis, 63,
All-Star pitcher who posted 138-119 with a 3.46 ERA from 1968-1979,
spending most of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates, including
a no-hitter against the San Diego Padres in 1970
References
See also