The
Colorado Rockies are a Major League Baseball team based in
Denver
, Colorado
.
Established in 1991, they started play in
1993, the Rockies play in the
West Division of the
National League. The team is named after the
Rocky Mountains, which pass through
Colorado, just west of Denver.
The Rockies play their home games at Coors Field
in downtown Denver.
Following multiple losing seasons, the Rockies won the
National League pennant
for the first time in franchise history during the
2007 season. This team is
notable for being perfect in Championship Series games (4-0).
History
Creation of the Rockies
After previous failed attempts to bring the Major League Baseball
to Colorado (most notably the
Pittsburgh Pirates nearly relocating to
Denver following the
Pittsburgh
drug trials in 1985), by the early 1990s a team seemed to be a
possibility in Denver. The Colorado Baseball Commission, led by
banking executive Larry Varnell, was successful in getting Denver
voters to approve a 0.1 percent sales tax to help finance a new
baseball stadium. Also, an advisory committee was formed in 1990 by
then-Governor of Colorado
Roy Romer to
recruit an ownership group. The group selected was led by John
Antonucci, an Ohio beverage distributor, and Michael I. Monus, the
head of the
Phar-Mor drugstore chain.
Local and
regional companies—such as Erie Lake, Hensel Phelps Construction,
KOA
Radio
, and the Rocky
Mountain News—rounded out the group. On July 5, 1991, the
National League approved Denver and Miami
, Florida
, as the
sites for two expansion teams to begin play in 1993.
The Rockies joined the National League in 1993, along with the
Southern Florida franchise, the
Florida
Marlins. The Rockies' first pick in the
expansion draft was pitcher
David Nied from the
Atlanta Braves organization. Nied pitched 4
seasons for the Rockies.
Inaugural season
The first
game in Rockies history was played on April 5, 1993, against the
New York Mets at Shea Stadium
. David Nied was
the starting pitcher in a game the Rockies lost, 3–0.
The franchise's first
home game at Mile High
Stadium
, and first win in franchise history, came four days
later with an 11–4 win over the Montreal Expos. One of the
most memorable plays in the game, and in team history, occurred in
the bottom of the first inning when 2nd baseman,
Eric Young of the Rockies hit a
leadoff home
run. The game was played before more than 80,000 fans, to date
the largest crowd to see a single regular-season Major League
Baseball game.
As is the case with many expansion teams, the Rockies struggled in
their first year. During one stretch in May, the team went 2–17.
The team did not experience its first winning month until
September, when they went 17–9. Still, the team finished the season
with 67 wins, setting a record for a National League expansion
franchise. In addition, despite the losses, the club saw a home
attendance of 4,483,350 for the season, setting a Major League
record that stands to this day. Rockies first baseman
Andrés Galarraga won the batting title
after hitting .370 for the season after Manager
Don Baylor persuaded Galarraga to change from a
standard batting stance into an open one in which he squarely faced
the pitcher, allowing him to see incoming pitches properly.
Ownership issues
After a 1992 accounting and
embezzlement scandal at Phar-Mor tarnished the
reputation of Monus, both Monus and Antonucci were forced to sell
their stakes in the franchise. Trucking-company executive Jerry
McMorris became head of the ownership group and served as the
initial public face of management. His relationship with the other
partners was somewhat poor, and his role in the leadership of the
franchise diminished over time, until he was finally bought out in
2005 (his situation was not helped by the 1999 failure of his
trucking firm and subsequent related legal issues).
The team is currently controlled by chief executive officer Charlie
Monfort (a former executive with his family's beef-exporting firm
and also with
ConAgra), and his brother Dick
Monfort, who both bought out McMorris' stake.
The mid-1990s

The mascot "Dinger" dinosaur.
On April 17, 1994, the Rockies beat
Montreal 6–5, moving the team's
record to 6–5—the first time in franchise history that the club had
a winning record. However, that would be the only time during that
season that the club would have a record over .500, finishing at
53–64 and in last place in the National League West in the
strike-shortened season. Despite the club's
poor record, several Rockies hitters gained notoriety for their
exploits at the plate, assisted by the thin and dry air of Denver,
which allows balls to carry farther than they would at sea-level
ballparks. Andres Galarraga, a year after winning the batting
title, hit 31 homers, and teammate
Dante
Bichette hit 27; projected over a 162-game season, the two
would have hit 43 and 37 homers, respectively. The park's
characteristics did not affect just home runs either: 33-year-old
outfielder
Mike Kingery, a career .252
hitter who did not play in the majors in 1993, batted .349 in 301
at-bats. The club once again led the majors in attendance, drawing
3,281,511 fans for the season.
1995 playoff run and the opening of Coors Field
Prior to the 1995 season, the Rockies acquired free-agent
outfielder
Larry Walker, previously of
the
Montreal Expos.
He would form the
group known as the "Blake Street Bombers"—named after the street on
which the new ballpark (Coors Field
) was located—along with Galarraga, Bichette, and
third baseman Vinny Castilla, who had
played sparingly with the major-league club during the previous
season. The quartet combined to hit 139 homers in the
1995 season, with
Bichette leading the way with 40 (45 projected over a 162-game
season.) The team debuted in its new ballpark on April 26, 1995, in
an 11–9 win over the
New York
Mets, and proceeded to win seven of their first eight games in
the new season. The season ended with a 77–67 record, good for
second place in the West division and the club's first playoff
appearance as the Wild Card winner. Although much of the attention
focused on the power-hitting lineup, much of the club's success was
due to a strong bullpen, as relievers
Darren Holmes,
Curt
Leskanic,
Steve Reed, and
Bruce Ruffin all
posted earned-run averages below 3.40. The pitching staff's ERA of
4.97 was the lowest in club history until the 2006 team had a 4.66
ERA. The Rockies lost in the
NLDS to the eventual
1995 World Series champion
Atlanta Braves, 3 games
to 1. The Rockies once again led the league in attendance for the
season.
Post-1995
In 1996, with all four Blake Street Bombers returning, the Rockies
expected to contend, but an injury to Walker hurt the team. Walker
played in only 83 games and batted .276 with 18 homers. However,
outfielder
Ellis Burks picked up the
slack with an All-Star season, batting .344 with 40 homers and 128
RBI—one of three Rockies to hit forty or more homers that season,
along with Galarraga and Castilla. The team set a major-league
record by scoring 658 runs at home on the season, and Burks and
Bichette became the first pair of teammates since
Darryl Strawberry and
Howard Johnson of the 1987
New York Mets to both steal 30 bases
and hit 30 homers in the same season. However, the pitching staff—a
strong point for the team in 1995—was beset by injuries:
Bill Swift, who went 9-3 in 1995, started just
three games, and the staff ERA ballooned to 5.60. As a result, the
Rockies fell back to third place in the West with an 83-79
record.
A healthy Walker became the first player in club history to win the
NL
Most Valuable
Player award in 1997, batting .366 with 49 homers and 130 RBI.
Walker came very close to winning the Triple Crown that year,
leading the league in home runs but finishing second to
Tony Gwynn in batting average and third in RBI
(teammate Galarraga led the league.) Once again, three Rockies
(Walker, Galarraga, and Castilla) hit 40 or more homers; Walker
also won the first
Gold Glove in
franchise history. As in 1996, though, the team's pitchers
struggled in the high elevation and had a 5.25 ERA, and the Rockies
could not improve upon their finish from the previous season.
The beginning of the Helton era
The Rockies were broken up after the 1997 season when an aging
Galarraga signed with the
Atlanta
Braves as a free agent.
His replacement was Todd Helton, who had been the club's first-round
draft pick in 1995 out of the University of Tennessee
. After a 4–1 start, the club lost its next
eight games and struggled to a 77–85 record, finishing only ahead
of the expansion
Arizona Diamondbacks in the
NL West. Pitcher
Darryl Kile, signed as
a free agent in the offseason, struggled in Colorado, going 13–17
with a 5.20 ERA—a far cry from his numbers the prior year as a
member of the
Houston Astros, when he
went 19–7 with a 2.57 ERA. Kile would become one of a long line of
free-agent pitchers who struggled after signing with the Rockies.
The team's struggles led to the firing of manager
Don Baylor, the only manager in franchise
history, following the season.
Jim Leyland, a two-time NL
Manager of the Year who had won the
World Series with the
Florida Marlins two years earlier, was
expected to bring the Rockies back into contention in
1999. Instead, the Rockies
dropped even further, finishing 72–90 and in last place in the West
as the
Diamondbacks
won the division in just their second year of existence. Helton was
blossoming into a young developed hitter, batting .320 with 35
homers and 113 RBI; Castilla, Walker, and Bichette also hit more
than 30 homers each. Once again, though, the team's pitching was a
glaring weakness, as the staff had an ERA of 6.02. Kile, who was
being paid over $8 million for the season, struggled mightily,
going 8-13 with a 6.61 ERA, and he wound up being traded to the
St. Louis Cardinals following
the season. Interestingly, Kile would go on to finish fifth in
voting for the
Cy Young Award the
following year, as he had in 1997 (the year before he joined the
Rockies). The Leyland era lasted just one year, as a frustrated
Leyland retired following the season, not to manage in the majors
again until 2006, when he won an AL Pennant with the
Detroit Tigers.
On April
4, 1999, the Rockies made history as they played their Opening Day game against the defending National
League champion San Diego
Padres at Estadio de Beisbol Monterrey
in Monterrey
, Mexico - marking the first time Major League
Baseball opened the regular season outside the United States or
Canada. Colorado beat San Diego, 8–2, in front of a crowd of
27,104 people.
Only a little over 2 weeks later, the
Columbine
High School massacre
postponed a home game with the Montreal Expos (it was made up as part of a
doubleheader in August).
The Dan O'Dowd era
On August 20, 1999,
Bob Gebhard, the
only general manager in franchise history, announced his
resignation. A month later, the Rockies named
Dan O'Dowd as his replacement. After hiring
Buddy Bell as the club's third manager,
O'Dowd proceeded to make a series of offseason deals that would
change the face of the franchise. Popular outfielder
Dante Bichette was traded to the
Cincinnati Reds. Later, he traded Kile to
the Cardinals and, in a four-team trade, sent
Vinny Castilla to the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays. With those two deals,
Larry Walker remained as the only
player from the Blake Street Bombers still with the team. Walker
wound up playing in only 87 games in 2000 due to injuries and hit
just nine homers, as the Rockies had a completely different look
from prior years. Perhaps not surprisingly given the injury to
Walker and the trading of two of the team's most popular players,
the Rockies finished third in the National League in attendance in
2000, marking the first time in club history that it did not lead
the league in attendance.
Despite the major changes made to the team in the offseason, the
team wound up with its first winning season since 1997. Helton, in
his third full year in the majors, was becoming a bona fide
superstar, winning the batting title with a .372 average and also
leading the league with 147 RBI while hitting 42 homers.
However,
he finished just fifth in MVP voting, perhaps because the team
finished fourth in the division and also possibly due to bias by
voters because he played half of his games in hitter-friendly
Coors
Field
. 2000 also marked the first of five
consecutive
All-Star
Game appearances for Helton. The pitching staff also improved
its ERA to 5.26, helping the team to an 82–80 record.
Although previous big-name pitchers, including
Bill Swift,
Bret
Saberhagen, and
Darryl Kile, had
struggled in Colorado, following the 2000 season O'Dowd made two
very splashy signings in the free-agent market, signing
Denny Neagle to a five-year contract worth $51
million, followed five days later by signing
Mike Hampton to an eight-year, $121 million
contract. Two years earlier, Hampton had won 22 games and finished
second in voting for the
Cy Young
Award as a member of the
Houston
Astros, while Neagle had been a 20-game winner in 1997 for the
Atlanta Braves and had won fifteen
games in 2000. The two star pitchers were expected by the Rockies
to change the team's fortunes.
Instead, the two flopped, much as their predecessors had. Hampton,
after a strong first half in 2001, completely fell apart in 2002,
going 7–15 with a 6.15 ERA and demanding a trade following the
season. Neagle went 19–23 in three years with the Rockies; he was
injured in 2003 and never pitched in the majors again before the
Rockies released him after the 2004 season. The Rockies went 73-89
in both years that Hampton and Neagle were in Colorado, and the
amount of money owed them (the Rockies paid a sizable portion of
Hampton's salary even after he was traded to the
Atlanta Braves) crippled the team for the
next several years.
Under previous general manager Gebhard, the Rockies had largely
neglected their farm system and mostly relied on signing veteran
free agents from other clubs; this was possible due to the high
attendance numbers in the club's first few years of attendance.
However, as attendance began to dwindle—the Rockies fell to just
sixth in the National League in attendance in 2002, and ninth in
2003 and 2004—the club could no longer afford to build through
big-name free agents.
In 1999, the Rockies spent their first-round
draft pick on Baylor
University
pitcher Jason
Jennings; three years later, Jennings went 16–8 with a 4.52
ERA. In the process, Jennings became the first Rockies
player to win the National League
Rookie of the Year award.
With Hampton out of town and Neagle injured much of the year,
Jennings became the centerpiece of the Rockies' pitching staff in
2003. Despite a fourth straight All-Star season by Helton and 36
homers by outfielder
Preston Wilson,
the Rockies finished just 74–88. In addition to Jennings, though,
young pitchers
Shawn Chacon and
Aaron Cook showed
promise.
In 2004, the Rockies acquired
Vinny
Castilla, who had been with the club for its inaugural 1993
season, once again, and he hit 35 homers. However, Wilson and
Larry Walker spent much of the season
on the disabled list, forcing the Rockies to play
Matt Holliday, who had been slated to start
the season at Triple-A. While the Rockies struggled to a 68–94
record—the second worst record in club history—the club's Triple-A
affiliate, the
Colorado Springs
Sky Sox, went 78–65. Declining attendance meant that the club's
payroll could no longer support a franchise stocked largely with
veterans from other clubs. In addition, Walker, who had been with
the team since 1995 and was widely regarded as the best player in
team history, was now 37 years old, and injuries prevented him from
playing much of the time. Because he could still be useful to a
contending team, the Rockies traded him to the
St. Louis Cardinals in August for three
minor-leaguers.
Generation-R

Colorado Rockies on June 19, 2007 in
Coors Field.
The trade of Walker set in motion a series of moves that would lead
to a complete overhaul of the club's roster. Castilla and
Jeromy Burnitz, who led the team with 37
homers in 2004, were allowed to leave as free agents following the
season. Catcher
Charles
Johnson, who had been acquired along with Wilson in the Hampton
trade, was traded to the
Boston Red
Sox.
Royce Clayton, the club's
starting shortstop in 2004, also was allowed to leave. Along with
Holliday, who had performed ably while Wilson and Walker were out,
the club promoted
Garrett Atkins,
Brad Hawpe,
Clint
Barmes, and
J.D. Closser, who spent most of 2004 in Triple-A.
Jennings and Chacon combined with
Joe Kennedy,
Byung-Hyun Kim, and top prospect
Jeff Francis to form the team's starting
rotation. Other than Helton and Wilson, virtually all of the team's
regular players were under the age of 30; the Rockies dubbed this
group "Generation-R."
2005 season
The result of all the moves was a 67–95 record in
2005, which tied for the
worst record in franchise history, as the young players—many of
whom had never been everyday players in the majors prior to that
season—struggled. Helton and Wilson—virtually the only experienced
players on the team—struggled as well; Helton hit just 20 homers,
the fewest of his career, and missed the All-Star Game for the
first time since 1999 and also went on the disabled list for the
first time in his career. Wilson also spent time on the disabled
list and, as the Rockies fell out of contention, was traded to the
Washington Nationals. After
starting the season 15–35, though, the team had some success later
in the year, going a respectable 30–28 in August and September as
the youngsters became more experienced. However, perhaps because of
the trade of Walker and several consecutive losing seasons, the
team fell all the way to fourteenth in the National League in
attendance; for the first time in team history, the Rockies drew
under 2 million fans for the season.
2006 season
The
2006 season
started with some promise; the Rockies were 44–43 in the first half
of the season and were in contention in the NL West for much of the
season. However, the team faded in the second half and wound up at
76–86, tied for fourth place in the division. Despite this, several
of the young players showed promise.
Matt
Holliday hit 34 homers and was named to the
All-Star Game;
Garrett Atkins batted .329 and hit 29
homers. In addition, the pitching staff posted a 4.66 ERA—the best
in team history—and starters
Jason
Jennings,
Aaron Cook, and
Jeff Francis had good seasons.
2007: "The Matt Holiday Era" - A World Series berth
The Rockies trailed the
Los Angeles Dodgers, the
Arizona
Diamondbacks and the
San Diego Padres for most of
2007 Major League
Baseball season season - however - by August, Colorado showed a
steady series of wins, while the Division-leading Dodgers began to
struggle.
By September, the Dodgers were eliminated by the Rockies from
playoff contention, and the Diamondbacks were expected to clinch
the
National League West
division title. The Padres held a steady lead on the
National League wild card spot. The Diamondbacks
eventually clinched the NL West division title, but the Rockies
shot up with one of the greatest comebacks in baseball history.
They were a major-league best 20–8 in September, after trailing 6
games on September 1. They won their last 14 of 15 games, including
11 in a row, the most of any team in the 2007 season and an
all-time franchise record. The only loss during that streak was to
the Arizona Diamondbacks, a loss that clinched the Diamondbacks'
playoff spot. Their 90–73 regular season mark set a franchise
record. They also finished ahead of the Dodgers in the division for
the first time in franchise history. Furthermore, Colorado set the
single-season MLB record for fielding percentage by one team
(.98925). Despite the Rockies record-setting performance, the
National League coaches and players
didn't vote in any of Colorado's players for the NL
Gold Glove award. The two most puzzling omissions
were
first baseman Todd Helton and
shortstop Troy
Tulowitzki. Both players had a better fielding percentage, more
total chances, better zone rating, more putouts, more double plays
turned, better range factor and more assists than their
counterparts who won the award instead (
Chicago Cubs first baseman
Derrek Lee and
Philadelphia Phillies shortstop
Jimmy Rollins). Helton also had fewer
errors (2) than Lee (7), while Tulowitzki had as many errors as
Rollins (11), but did so on 834 total chances compared to Rollins'
717.
As a result of the Rockies' remarkable September run, the team
finished the regular season tied with the Padres for the National
League
wild card spot in the
playoffs.
The two teams played a wild card
tie-breaker game at Coors Field
on October 1 to determine the wild card. A
Colorado home run was called back early in the game despite the
fact that it clearly cleared the fence, hit a chair, and bounced
back onto the field. The game lasted 13 innings, and although the
Padres got two runs off of a
Scott
Hairston home run in the top of the
13th inning to break a 6–6 tie, the Rockies came back in the bottom
of the 13th by scoring three runs off of
closer Trevor
Hoffman to win 9–8.
Second
baseman Kazuo Matsui started off
the inning by hitting a double. Tulowitzki followed with a double
of his own, thus, allowing Matsui to score.
Left fielder Matt
Holliday then came up to bat and hit a triple, scoring
Tulowitzki. After an intentional walk to Helton, the Padres pitched
to
utility infielder Jamey Carroll, who then hit a
sacrifice fly, allowing Holliday to score from
third base. Holliday's winning run came off of a controversial
slide in which home plate umpire
Tim
McClelland called Holliday safe, despite replays showing
Holliday may have never touched the plate. The Rockies completed
the fifth greatest
regular season
comeback in Major League Baseball history.
Playoffs
With the win, the Rockies made the playoffs for the first time
since 1995, and went on to face the
Philadelphia Phillies in
the
NLDS.
Colorado won the first game in Philadelphia, 4–2. The Rockies also
won the second game in Philadelphia, 10–5, with the help of
Kazuo Matsui's 4th inning
grand slam. On October 6, 2007, the
Rockies completed a three-game sweep of the Phillies by winning 2–1
in Colorado. The three-game sweep was Colorado's first post-season
series win in team history. The Rockies went on to play in the
NLCS
against the
Arizona
Diamondbacks, who swept their own NLDS against the
Chicago Cubs. Colorado won the first two games
of the NLCS against the Diamondbacks in Phoenix, then won their
third game against the Diamondbacks in Denver on Sunday, October
14. That pushed the Rockies' combined late-season (September 16 and
after) and post-season run to 20 wins and just 1 loss, the single
loss coming against Arizona on September 28, 2007 - the 160th game
of the regular season. This made Colorado only the third team in
the last half-century, and the first in the National League since
the 1936
New York Giants, to
have a 20-1 stretch at any point of a season. The fourth game of
the NLCS was won by the Rockies by a score of 6–4, completing a
four-game sweep of Arizona. Holliday was named the NLCS MVP, as he
hit .333 with two home runs and four RBIs during the series. The
NLCS sweep earned the Rockies their first National League pennant
in franchise history. The Rockies became the first team ever to
sweep both the division series and league championship series in
the same postseason. The club moved to 21–1 over all games played
after September 15. By then, the amazing streak of wins became
known among fans as Rocktober. In the
2007 World Series, the Rockies faced the
Boston Red Sox, and were
swept in four games; the first game was 13–1, the second game was
2–1, the third game was 10–5, and the fourth and final game was
4–3.
Baseball America named the
Colorado Rockies the "Organization of the Year" for their
accomplishments during the 2007 season. "We knew they were bringing
great talent through their farm system, but we certainly didn't
expect it to pay off with big-league success so quickly," said Will
Lingo, editor of
Baseball America. "They won with
homegrown players, have more talent on the way and have maintained
stability in their front office, so they had pretty much everything
we look for in an organization."
2008: Defending the National League crown
The Colorado Rockies began the 2008 season after few offseason
changes from the
National League champion
squad of
2007. Major
losses were all to free agency (
second
baseman Kaz Matsui went to the
Houston Astros and
pitcher Josh Fogg went to
the
Cincinnati Reds). The Rockies
season was scheduled to begin on March 31 against the
St. Louis Cardinals at St.
Louis, however, the game was rescheduled to the next day because of
foul weather. Colorado began the season on a high note, winning
their opener on April 1, in a 2–1 comeback victory over the
Cardinals.
On April 17, 2008, Colorado beat the
San Diego Padres, 2–1, in a
22-inning road game that spanned 6 hours and 16 minutes. It was the
longest game in Rockies history, in terms of both total innings and
total length of time. 659 total pitches were thrown in the game by
15 different pitchers (eight Rockies pitchers and seven Padres
pitchers). The 22-inning affair was the longest since August 31,
1993, when the
Minnesota
Twins, at home, defeated the
Cleveland Indians, 5–4, in 22
innings.
On July 1, 2008, the Rockies defeated the San Diego Padres, 4–0, in
the shortest nine-inning game in Coors Field history - one hour and
58 minutes.
On July 4, 2008, Colorado defeated the
Florida Marlins, 18–17, after at
one point being down, 13–4. The nine-run deficit that the Rockies
overcame made it the largest comeback win in team history.
The Rockies ended the season finishing third in the
National League West with a 74–88
record, failing to make the playoffs. The team got rid of hitting
coach
Alan Cockrell, third base coach
Mike Gallego and bench coach
Jamie Quirk after the disappointing season. The
Rockies also traded away
Matt Holliday
to the
Oakland Athletics for
pitchers
Huston Street and
Greg Smith, and outfielder
Carlos González.
2009: The Jim Tracy Era and A Return To The Playoffs
After a poor start (19-28) to the 2009 season,
Clint Hurdle was fired on May 29. His successor
as manager is
Jim Tracy, who was
originally hired as bench coach for the Colorado Rockies in
November 2008. In June 2009, the team rapidly improved and by the
end of June, the Rockies set a franchise record for victories in a
month with 21 in a 28 game stretch (one win better than the
September 2007 Rocktober run). This improved their record from
20-29 and nine games under .500, to 41-36 and 5 games over .500.
During June, the Rockies led all of major league baseball with 151
total runs. The Rockies had two players selected to the All-Star
game: right fielder Brad Hawpe and starting pitcher Jason Marquis.
On August 10 Troy Tulowitzki hit the team's 5th franchise cycle. He
became the second player in major league history to hit for the
cycle and have an unassisted triple play, which he did on April 29,
2007, in his career.
On August 24, the Rockies faced the San Francisco Giants in what
ended up being a 14 inning game which lasted close to 5
hours(4:57), the second longest game in Rockies history. After
multiple scoreless innings, the Giants managed to score three runs
in the top of the the 14th to place them ahead of the Rockies, 4-1.
After several Colorado at-bats, the bases were loaded and
Ryan Spilborghs stepped up to the plate.
Spilborghs hit the first walk-off grand slam in Rockies history,
his second career grand slam, and his first walk-off homer in the
14th inning to squeak by the Giants, 6-4, Monday in front of about
half of the 27,670 fans who remained at Coors Field.
This particular win expanded the Rockies' Wild Card lead to four
games over Giants. In an ecstatic interview after the game,
Jim Tracy stated that he told the Rockies'
preceding batter—relief pitcher
Adam
Eaton--not to swing:
"I don't care if he throws three right
down the middle, don't swing because I want Spilborghs to have a
shot with the bases loaded." The strategy worked in the
Rockies' favor; Eaton walked with the bases loaded, scoring
Dexter Fowler to cut the Giants' lead
to 4-2.
Following the win, Colorado hosted Los Angeles with a chance to
pull into a tie for the division lead if they could sweep. On
August 25, the Rockies won 5-4 on another walk-off thanks to Troy
Tulowitzki's bases loaded, one out single in the bottom of the
10th. Los Angeles, however, would win the next two games, and with
their wildcard lead down to 3, the Rockies traveled to San
Francisco for another 3-game set. After losing each of the first
two games by two runs, the Rockies opened up a 5-2 lead against
Matt Cain in the finale of the series on August 30. But with two
outs and the bases loaded in the 7th, in a scene eerily similar to
the Spilborghs walk-off, Edgar Rentaria hit a go-ahead grand slam
off of Rafael Betancourt, propelling the Giants to a 9-5 win and a
tie in the wild card standings entering September.
Colorado responded by winning 10 of their first 11 games in
September, including a 9-1 home stand. When they returned to San
Francisco for their final series with the Giants on September 14,
the Rockies had once again built a large wild card lead. But as in
the previous series, San Francisco won the first two games behind
Tim Lincecum and Barry Zito, cutting the Rockies wild card lead to
2.5. In a pivotal swing game that would either see the Rockies
leave San Francisco with a 1.5 game lead or a 3.5 game lead,
Colorado once again built a large lead against Matt Cain in the
finale of the series on September 16. Thanks to 8 brilliant innings
from Jorge DeLaRosa, and home runs from Troy Tulowitzki and Ian
Stewart, the Rockies took a 4-0 lead into the bottom of the 9th.
With closer Huston Street hurt, the Rockies turned to Franklin
Morales, but the Giants started the inning with 3 straight hits to
pull to within 4-1. Betancourt was summoned once again, and induced
a ground ball from Juan Uribe. However, an errant throw by
Tulowitzki sailed past Clint Barmes and into right field, scoring
another run and putting runners at 1st and 3rd. Pinch runner
Eugenio Velez would then steal 2nd, putting the tying run in
scoring position. In a rematch of their August matchup, Betancourt
got Rentaria to pop-out on the infield for the first out. However,
pinch hitter Randy Winn followed with an RBI groundout, cutting the
deficit to 4-3 and moving the tying run to 3rd. With a full count,
Betancourt struck out pinch hitter Nate Schierholtz to secure the
save.
As the Giants began to fade, the Atlanta Braves started making a
run at the Rockies that was starting to look similar to Colorado's
2007 run. From September 8 through September 28, the Braves won 16
of 19 to pull from nearly 7 back to just 2 back in the season's
final week. It would take a series of dramatic wins for Colorado to
hang on to its lead. On September 25, the Rockies played host to
the St. Louis Cardinals. With Aaron Cook returning from injury, the
Rockies won 2-1 in the bottom of the 9th on a Yorvit Torrealba
sacrifice fly. Two days later, the Rockies took a 4-3 lead into the
bottom of the 9th. Back from injury, Huston Street attempted to
close out a two inning save, but got into a jam. The Cardinals put
runners on the corners with one out for Ryan Ludwick. Ludwick
flared a flyball into shallow right. Rockies second baseman Clint
Barmes, playing in, made a miraculous over the shoulder diving
catch after a long run, and doubled off Albert Pujols, who thought
the ball would drop and was nearly at 3rd base, to end the game.
Much like the 2007 play-in game when it was not clear whether or
not Matt Holliday had touched home plate with the game winning run,
there was question as to whether Barmes actually caught the ball,
as photos later emerged showing the ball apparently sliding down
his arm as he went to the ground. Ironically Holliday, traded from
Oakland to St. Louis in July, was in the opposing dugout watching
the play.

230pix
On September 29, their lead down to 2 games and their magic number
at 5, the Rockies opened their final home series against Milwaukee.
During the game, Atlanta had their 7-game win streak snapped by
Florida 5-4, meaning the Rockies could reduce their magic number to
3 with a win. Colorado built a 5-2 lead and turned the ball to
Street. However, with one out and two on, Street blew his first
save of the season, allowing a game-tying home run to Jason
Kendall. In the bottom of the 11th, Chris Iannetta pinch hit with
the winning run on first. Seldom used and having batted only 12
times in the month, Iannetta hit a 3-2 pitch from David Weathers
deep and gone to right for a walk-off 2-run home run, propelling
Colorado to a 7-5 win. The win combined with the Braves loss seemed
to once again shift momentum. The Braves would lose again the
following night, and the Rockies 10-6 win set their magic number at
1.
On October 1, the Rockies beat the
Milwaukee Brewers 9-2, completing a season
sweep of the Brewers and clinching the Rockies' second playoff
appearance in three years. The victory also marked the club's 91st
win of the season, breaking the franchise record set in 2007. The
team broke its record of 22 games over .500 in this victory also.
Despite making the race very close, in the 161st game of the
season, the Dodgers snapped their five-game losing streak - and the
Rockies' five-game winning streak - to clinch the West title. The
Rockies entered the playoffs against the
Philadelphia Phillies as the NL Wild
Card for the second time in three years. They lost to the Phillies
3-1 in the NLDS.
Controversies
2006 controversy over Christian rules
On June 1, 2006,
USA Today
reported that Rockies management, including manager
Clint Hurdle, had instituted an explicitly
Christian code of conduct for the team's
players, banning men's magazines (such as
Maxim and
Playboy) and sexually explicit music from the
team's clubhouse. The newspaper reported:
- Behind the scenes, [the Rockies] quietly have become an
organization guided by Christianity — open to other religious
beliefs but embracing a Christian-based code of conduct they
believe will bring them focus and success.
- From ownership on down, it's an approach the Rockies are
proud of — and something they are wary about publicizing.
"We're nervous, to be honest with you," Rockies general manager
Dan O'Dowd says. "It's the first time we ever talked about
these issues publicly. The last thing we want to do is
offend anyone because of our beliefs."
The article sparked controversy, including criticism in a column
from
The Nation, where
Dave Zirin stated:
- San Francisco Giants first baseman-outfielder Mark Sweeney,
who spent 2003 and 2004 with the Rockies, said, "You wonder if some
people are going along with it just to keep their jobs.
Look, I pray every day. I have faith. It's
always been part of my life. But I don't want something
forced on me. Do they really have to check to see whether
I have a Playboy in my locker?"
Soon after the
USA Today article appeared,
The Denver Post published an article
featuring many Rockies players contesting the claims made in the
USA Today article. Former Rockies pitcher
Jason Jennings said:
- "[The article in USA Today] was just bad. I am not
happy at all. Some of the best teammates I have ever had
are the furthest thing from Christian," Jennings said.
"You don't have to be a Christian to have good character.
They can be separate. [The article] was
misleading."
2007 World Series ticket controversy
On October 17, 2007, a week before the first game of the
2007 World Series against the Boston Red
Sox, the Colorado Rockies announced that tickets would be made
available to the general public via online sales only, despite
prior arrangements to sell the tickets at local retail outlets.
Five days later on October 22, California-based ticket vendor
Paciolan, Inc., the sole contractor authorized by the Colorado
Rockies to distribute tickets, was forced to suspend sales after
less than an hour due to an overwhelming number of attempts to
purchase tickets.
An official release from the baseball organization claimed that
they were the victims of a
denial of service attack. These
claims, however, were unsubstantiated and neither the Rockies nor
Paciolan have sought investigation into the matter.
The United States
Federal
Bureau of Investigation
started its own investigation into the
claims. Ticket sales resumed the next day, with all three
home games selling out within two and a half hours.
As a result of the decision to sell tickets solely online, local
fans of the Rockies were placed at a disadvantage, forced to
compete with
ticket brokers and
ticket scalpers from around the world. Also at a disadvantage were
the disabled and those unable to access or afford an internet
connection. Within an hour of tickets selling out, the average
price had inflated to over five times
face
value, and by the next day, soared to over 100 times face
value.
Season record
Uniform
- See also: Major League Baseball#MLB
uniforms (including image of baseball-cap logos of the 30 MLB
franchises)
Quick facts
- Founded: 1991
- Began play: 1993 (National League expansion)
- Uniform colors: Black, Purple, Silver, and
White
- Logo design: Purple mountain with
baseball
- Team mascot: Dinger, a purple
anthropomorphized triceratops
- Playoff appearances (3): 1995, 2007, 2009
- Owners: Linda G. Alvarado, Pete Coors, Lee Larson, Marne Obernauer Sr.,
Marne Obernauer Jr., Denver Newspaper Agency, Coors Brewing Co.,
Clear Channel
Communications, and Beverage Distributors Corp., Dick and
Charlie Monfort
- Chairman & CEO: Charles Monfort
- Vice Chairman: Richard Monfort
- President: Keli
McGregor
- General Manager: Dan O'Dowd
- Special Assistant to the GM: Vinny
Castilla
- Local Television: FSN Rocky Mountain
- Spring Training Facility:
Hi Corbett
Field
, Tucson,
AZ
Baseball Hall of Famers
As of the
2009 Baseball
Hall of Fame
election, no inducted members have played or
managed for the Rockies.
Retired numbers
Jackie Robinson's number was retired
throughout Major League Baseball.
Individual awards
DHL Hometown Heroes (2006)
- Larry Walker — voted by MLB fans as the most outstanding player
in the history of the franchise, based on on-field performance,
leadership quality and character value
Team award
Team records (single-game, single-season, career)
Championships
Current roster
Minor league affiliations
Radio and television
As of
2007, Rockies' flagship radio
station is KOA
850AM, with
some late-season games broadcast on KKZN
760 AM due
to conflicts with Denver Broncos
games.Jeff Kingeryand
Jack Corriganare the radio announcers. The
Rockies Radio Network is composed of 38 affiliate stations in eight
states. Toward the end of the 2009 season, Kingery announced that
he would step down at the conclusion of the season. The club will
search for a successor in the offseason.
As of 2009, all games will be produced and televised by
FSN Rocky Mountain. All 150 games
produced by FSN Rocky Mountain will be broadcast in HD.
Jeff Huson,
Drew
Goodmanand
George
Frazierform the TV broadcast team.
See also
References
- The Official Site of The Colorado Rockies: News:
Colorado Rockies News
-
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070721&content_id=2101421&vkey=news_col&fext=.jsp&c_id=col
- The Official Site of Major League Baseball: Events:
Opening Day
- ESPN - Baseball Tonight Clubhouse: Looking Up -
MLB
- BASEBALL; Bichette and Castilla Spark Rockies in
Opener in Mexico - New York Times
- The Official Site of The Colorado Rockies: News:
Rockies month-by-month recap
- Padres-Rockies Preview - MLB - Yahoo!
Sports
- The Official Site of The Colorado Rockies: News:
Rockies' hard work rewarded big-time
- ESPN - Recapping the Rockies' run to the World
Series - MLB
- ESPN - Rockies 11-game winning streak has city
thinking playoffs - MLB
- The Official Site of The Colorado Rockies: News:
Colorado Rockies News
- Sure hands + strong arms = winning edge : Rockies :
The Rocky Mountain News
- ESPN - MLB Baseball Fielding Statistics and League
Leaders - Major League Baseball
- ESPN - Padres vs. Rockies - Recap - October 01,
2007
- The Official Site of The Colorado Rockies: News:
Colorado Rockies News
- Nate Silver,
"The Greatest Pennant Race Comebacks," BaseballProspectus.com, October 4, 2007.
- ESPN - Phillies vs. Rockies - Recap - October 06,
2007
- ESPN - Rockies receive many contributions, but
Holliday tops - MLB
- 2007's organization of the year : Rockies : The
Rocky Mountain News
- ESPN - Rockies vs. Cardinals - Recap - March 31,
2008
- ESPN - Rockies vs. Cardinals - Recap - April 01,
2008
- ESPN - Rockies vs. Padres - Recap - April 17,
2008
- ESPN - Weary Rockies hang on vs. Padres in 22nd
inning for historic win - MLB
- August 31, 1993 Cleveland Indians at Minnesota
Twins Box Score and Play by Play - Baseball-Reference.com
- ESPN - Padres vs. Rockies - Recap - July 01,
2008
- ESPN - Marlins vs. Rockies - Recap - July 04,
2008
- http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3631604
- Rockies, A's complete Holliday deal
- FBI Looking Into 'Malicious Attack' During Ticket
Sales - Denver Sports News Story - KMGH Denver
- ESPN - FBI opens investigation into 'attack' on
Rockies ticket system - MLB
- Ringolsby, Tracy. "2007's organization of the year:
Baseball America award celebrates 'fulfilling' season," Rocky
Mountain News; Dec. 4, 2007
External links