1983 in baseball
Appearance
The following are the baseball events of the year 1983 throughout the world.
Champions
[edit]Major League Baseball
[edit]- World Series: Baltimore Orioles over Philadelphia Phillies (4–1); Rick Dempsey, MVP
1983 Major League Baseball season
- American League Championship Series MVP: Mike Boddicker
- National League Championship Series MVP: Gary Matthews
- All-Star Game, July 6 at Comiskey Park: American League, 13–3; Fred Lynn, MVP
Other champions
[edit]- Caribbean World Series: Lobos de Arecibo (Puerto Rico)
- College World Series: Texas
- Japan Series: Seibu Lions over Yomiuri Giants (4–3)
- Korean Series: Haitai Tigers over MBC Chungyong
- Big League World Series: Taipei, Taiwan
- Junior League World Series: Manatí, Puerto Rico
- Little League World Series: East Marietta National, Marietta, Georgia
- Senior League World Series: Pingtung, Taiwan
- Pan American Games: Cuba over Nicaragua
Awards and honors
[edit]- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Most Valuable Player
- Cal Ripken Jr., Baltimore Orioles, SS (AL)
- Dale Murphy, Atlanta Braves, OF (NL)
- Cy Young Award
- LaMarr Hoyt, Chicago White Sox (AL)
- John Denny, Philadelphia Phillies (NL)
- Rookie of the Year
- Ron Kittle, Chicago White Sox, OF (AL)
- Darryl Strawberry, New York Mets, OF (NL)
- Manager of the Year Award
- Woman Executive of the Year (major or minor league)
- Karen Paul, El Paso Diablos, Texas League
- Gold Glove Award
- (P) Ron Guidry, New York Yankees (AL); Phil Niekro, Atlanta Braves (NL)
- (C) Lance Parrish, Detroit Tigers (AL); Tony Peña, Pittsburgh Pirates (NL)
- (1B) Eddie Murray, Baltimore Orioles (AL); Keith Hernandez, New York Mets (NL)
- (2B) Lou Whitaker, Detroit Tigers (AL); Ryne Sandberg, Chicago Cubs (NL)
- (3B) Buddy Bell, Texas Rangers (AL); Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia Phillies (NL)
- (SS) Alan Trammell, Detroit Tigers (AL); Ozzie Smith, St. Louis Cardinals (NL)
- (OF) Dwight Evans, Boston Red Sox (AL); André Dawson, Montreal Expos (NL)
- (OF) Dwayne Murphy, Oakland Athletics (AL); Willie McGee, St. Louis Cardinals (NL)
- (OF) Dave Winfield, New York Yankees (AL); Dale Murphy, Atlanta Braves (NL)
MLB statistical leaders
[edit]American League | National League | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Type | Name | Stat | Name | Stat |
AVG | Wade Boggs BOS | .361 | Bill Madlock PIT | .323 |
HR | Jim Rice BOS | 39 | Mike Schmidt PHI | 40 |
RBI | Cecil Cooper MIL Jim Rice BOS |
126 | Dale Murphy ATL | 121 |
Wins | LaMarr Hoyt CHW | 24 | John Denny PHI | 19 |
ERA | Rick Honeycutt TEX | 2.42 | Atlee Hammaker SFG | 2.25 |
Major league baseball final standings
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Events
[edit]January
[edit]- January 10 – New York Supreme Court Justice Richard Lane issues a preliminary injunction barring the Yankees from playing their season-opening series with the Detroit Tigers in Denver. The club had sought to move the games because it feared off-season renovations to Yankee Stadium would not be completed for the series April 11–13.
- January 11
- For the third time in eight years, New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner hires Billy Martin as his manager. Martin's most recent job was his three-year stint (1980–1982) implementing "Billy Ball" while at the helm of the Oakland Athletics. Martin replaces Clyde King, who will move to the Bombers' front office.
- In the January edition of the 1980 Major League Baseball Draft, the Boston Red Sox select outfielder and future All-Star and Gold Glove Award-winner Ellis Burks, 18, in the first round, the 20th overall. The Chicago Cubs take outfielder and future MLB manager Dave Martinez, also 18, in the third round, 53rd overall.

- January 12 – Brooks Robinson and Juan Marichal are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Robinson becomes the 14th player to be elected in his first year of eligibility.
- January 13 – Right-hander Mike Torrez' five-year tenure with the Boston Red Sox ends when he's sent to the New York Mets for a minor-league player to be named later (PTBNL), third baseman Mike Davis. Torrez, 36, is a 16-year veteran who will forever be known in Boston for allowing Bucky Dent's decisive home run in the 1978 American League East tie-breaker game.
- January 14 – Outfielder Al Cowens, granted free agency from the Seattle Mariners last November 10, opts to return to Seattle, signing a three-year, $1.2 million contract.[1]
- January 18 – The Oakland Athletics sign shortstop Bill Almon, granted free agency from the Chicago White Sox last November 10.
- January 19 – The Los Angeles Dodgers trade third baseman Ron Cey, 34, to the Chicago Cubs for southpaw pitching prospect Vance Lovelace and minor-league outfielder Dan Cataline. The deal leaves shortstop Bill Russell as the last remaining member of the Dodgers' fabled 1970s infield of Cey, Russell, Davey Lopes and Steve Garvey. Russell will retire to a coach's job with Los Angeles after the 1986 season.
- January 20 – In the second-ever Type A free agent compensation draft, implemented after the 1981 MLB strike, the Seattle Mariners select 20-year-old outfield prospect Danny Tartabull from the Cincinnati Reds. The Mariners gain the draft pick after losing starting pitcher Floyd Bannister to the Chicago White Sox in free agency. Tartabull is selected from a pool of players provided by teams, such as Cincinnati, who have "opted in" to pursuing free-agent talent.[2]
- January 26
- Chicago's cross-town rivals make a deal: the Cubs trade shortstop Scott Fletcher, pitchers Randy Martz and Dick Tidrow, and first baseman Pat Tabler to White Sox in exchange for pitchers Steve Trout and Warren Brusstar.
- The White Sox, who lost Type A free-agent outfielder Steve Kemp to the New York Yankees last December 9,[2] select St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Steve Mura as compensation. Six days earlier, the ChiSox had picked southpaw Rudy May from the Yankees out of the compensation pool, but May's selection was voided because the veteran left-hander has a no-trade provision in his contract.[3]
- January 31 – The Philadelphia Phillies sign two veteran free-agents: first baseman and future Hall of Famer Tony Pérez, released by the Boston Red Sox on November 1, 1982; and outfielder Bill Robinson, who returns for a final season with the Phils after being granted free-agency last November 10.
February
[edit]- February 5 – The Kansas City Royals trade 19-year-old first-base prospect Cecil Fielder to the Toronto Blue Jays for 32-year old outfielder Leon Roberts, who will retire after two mediocre seasons in Kansas City. "Big Daddy" Fielder will go on to enjoy several MVP-caliber seasons during his 13-year tenure in the major leagues, having his best years (1990–1996) playing with the Detroit Tigers.
- February 7 – The San Francisco Giants sign outfielder Joel Youngblood, granted free agency from the Montreal Expos last November 10. On June 15, 1982, Youngblood made history as the only player in MLB history to get a hit for two different teams on the same day.
- February 9 – Mike Ferraro, 38, the first-year manager of the Cleveland Indians, undergoes successful surgery to remove his cancerous left kidney 12 days before spring training begins. He's able to take the Indians' helm for their first Cactus League exhibition game a month later.[4]
- February 16 – The St. Louis Cardinals sign utility player Jamie Quirk, granted free agency from the Kansas City Royals the previous November.
- February 23 – The San Diego Padres sign free agent and reserve catcher Bruce Bochy, 27, who one month earlier had been released by the New York Mets.
- February 24 – Veteran free-agent outfielder John Lowenstein, enjoying the most productive period of his 13-year MLB career, remains a member of the Baltimore Orioles, signing a new, three-year $1 million contract. Lowenstein, 36, will bat .385 in the 1983 World Series and earn a championship ring.[5]
- February 28 – Outfielder Jerry Turner, who appeared in over 600 games during his first eight big-league seasons (1974–1981) with the San Diego Padres, returns to San Diego as a free agent. He had spent 1982 with the Detroit Tigers.
March
[edit]- March 1 – The Philadelphia Phillies sign infielder Kiko Garcia, granted free agency from the Houston Astros last November 10.
- March 24
- The Detroit Tigers acquire outfielder Johnny Grubb from the Texas Rangers in exchange for pitcher Dave Tobik.
- The New York Yankees release veteran first baseman/DH John Mayberry, 34, ending his 15-year MLB career after 255 home runs.
- March 25 – The Tigers release pitcher Kevin Saucier. He had gone 3–1 in 1982, but developed a case of the Yips, which prevented Saucier from making simple throws to the catcher or even the bases. Saucier will never again pitch in the major leagues.
- March 31 – The Seattle Mariners purchase the contract of 28-year-old first baseman Ken Phelps from the Montreal Expos. Phelps will establish himself as a major-leaguer in Seattle, slugging 105 homers before he's swapped to the New York Yankees in July 1988 in a one-sided exchange that nets the Mariners future All-Star Jay Buhner.
April
[edit]- April 5
- Tom Seaver pitches six scoreless innings in his return to the New York Mets in front of 46,687 fans at Shea Stadium. He does not, however, factor in the decision, as he's matched by Philadelphia Phillies ace Steve Carlton. The Mets break through for two runs in the seventh, to make Doug Sisk the winner of their season opener.
- At Candlestick Park on Opening Day, hitters are in midseason form, as the San Diego Padres and San Francisco Giants combine for 33 hits and 29 runs. The Giants hit four homers to the Padres' one, but San Diego triumphs, 16–13.
- April 7 – Major League Baseball, ABC, and NBC agree to terms of a six-year television package worth in excess of $1.1 billion.[6] The two networks will continue alternative coverage of the All-Star Game, the playoffs and the World Series through the 1989 season with each of the 26 clubs receiving $7 million per year in return. The last package gave each club $1.9 million per year.
- April 9 – Houston Astros knuckleballer Joe Niekro surrenders an unearned run on a passed ball in the first inning and the Pittsburgh Pirates' Larry McWilliams makes the tally stand up, hurling a two-hit shutout for a 1–0 Pittsburgh victory at the Astrodome. Niekro allows only three hits himself.
- April 13 – Philadelphia Phillies catcher Bo Díaz accomplishes something that only 11 other Major League players have in the 150-plus year history of the sport: a game-winning "Sayonara Slam" (a walk off grand-slam home run in the bottom of the ninth inning with two outs and his team trailing by three runs). With the New York Mets leading, 9–6, and the Phillies down to their last out, Díaz drives a 2–1 Neil Allen pitch out of Veterans Stadium to win the game, 10–9.
- April 15
- Against the Chicago White Sox at Comiskey Park, Milt Wilcox of the Detroit Tigers has his bid for a perfect game broken up with two outs in the ninth by a Jerry Hairston single. The hit is the only one Wilcox allows in defeating the White Sox 6–0. Wilcox was also bidding to pitch the first no-hitter by a Tiger since Jim Bunning in 1958. The perfect game would also have made the White Sox and Tigers the first teams to record perfect games against each other; the Tigers were on the losing end of Charlie Robertson's perfect game on April 30, 1922.
- Steve Garvey returns to Dodger Stadium as a member of the San Diego Padres and earns cheers before 53,392 fans as he ties Billy Williams' National League record for most consecutive games (1,117). Garvey will break the record the following night, when, in his 1,118th straight game, he goes 2 for 4 in the Padres' 8–5 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.
- April 16 – The Montreal Expos' Charlie Lea one-hits the Houston Astros, taking a no-hitter into the bottom of the eighth with two out before pinch hitter and native Canadian Terry Puhl singles. Montreal's 2–0 win is the Astros' tenth loss in their first 11 games of 1983.[7]

- April 17
- At Fenway Park, the Texas Rangers and Boston Red Sox are locked in a scoreless tie until two out in the visitors' 14th inning, when an error by Boston shortstop Glenn Hoffman enables Larry Biittner to score the game's only run. Three Ranger pitchers combine for the shutout victory.
- Nolan Ryan whiffs seven Expos in a 6–3 Houston win, becoming the second pitcher in MLB recorded history with 3,500 strikeouts.
- April 20 – Tom Seaver throws a complete-game, three-hit shutout, registers nine strikeouts, and hits an RBI triple in a vintage, 6–0 triumph for his New York Mets over the Pittsburgh Pirates in the opener of a twi-night doubleheader at Shea Stadium. It's the first victory in Seaver's homecoming season in New York, and lowers his ERA to 0.82.[8]
- April 27 – Nolan Ryan strikes out Brad Mills of the Montréal Expos for the 3,509th strikeout of his career, breaking the long-time record established by Walter Johnson.
- April 29 – Frustrated by his 5–14 Chicago Cubs' late-game one-run loss at Wrigley Field—and incensed at the abuse of his players coming from spectators in the left-field bleachers as the Cubs exit the field—manager Lee Elia launches into a profanity-laced, three-minute-long tirade against Chicago fans during a postgame media interview. A tape recording of Elia's outburst made by a radio reporter spreads like wildfire, and the blowback almost costs Elia his job. He apologizes at a press conference soon after,[9] and later says: "It was terrible. It was immature of me. But if you can get through the cursing, which I’m ashamed of, you'll see I was supporting my players. I just didn’t say it right."[10]
- April 29–30 – A marathon night game between the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals is suspended in the top of the 14th inning when, with the contest tied five-all, the arc lights fail at Busch Memorial Stadium. When the game resumes on April 30, the teams play into the bottom of the 16th, when the Cardinals score an unearned run for a 6–5 triumph.[11]
May
[edit]- May 1 – Robin Yount hits his 100th career home run in the Milwaukee Brewers' 8–4 win over the Minnesota Twins at the Metrodome. The blow comes off Albert Williams. Yount, 27 and the incumbent American League MVP, is in his tenth season with the Brewers, but didn't discover his "power stroke" and reach double figures in home runs until 1980. He'll win a second MVP award in 1989 and finish with 3,142 hits and 251 homers before his Hall-of-Fame career ends in 1993.
- May 2 – José Oquendo makes his MLB debut with the New York Mets. Born on July 4, 1963, Oquendo is the first player in Mets' history to be younger than the franchise, which began play in 1962.
- May 6 – At Shea Stadium, Mets prospect Darryl Strawberry goes 0-for-4 with three strikeouts in his MLB debut. However, New York defeats the Cincinnati Reds 7–4 on George Foster's "walk-off" three-run homer in the 13th inning.[12]
- May 9 – The Los Angeles Dodgers trade two pitching prospects, lefty John Franco and right-hander Brett Wise, to the Reds for infielder Rafael Landestoy. Franco, 22, is a future four-time NL All-Star.
- May 18 – At Memorial Stadium, starting pitcher Richard Dotson of the Chicago White Sox allows only one hit—but it's "Disco Danny" Ford's solo home run, and it provides the winning margin in the Baltimore Orioles' 1–0 triumph. Dotson walks seven over his eight-inning stint.[13]
- May 22 – The Philadelphia Phillies, currently 18–14 and a half-game behind the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL East, make two key trades: they acquire southpaw relief pitcher Willie Hernández from the Chicago Cubs for starter Dick Ruthven and pitching prospect Bill Johnson; then, they obtain outfielder Joe Lefebvre from the San Diego Padres for hurler Sid Monge. Hernández is due to become a free agent in November, but he gives the Phils eight wins and seven saves in 63 appearances over the regular season, and shuts down the Baltimore Orioles in a losing cause in the 1983 World Series. Lefebvre bats .310 with eight homers in 101 games to help the Phillies capture their division title.
- May 23 – Davey Lopes belts two solo homers off ex-teammate Don Sutton, including the tying blow in the ninth inning, sending his Oakland Athletics into extras tied, 4–4, with Sutton's Milwaukee Brewers. Then, in the home half of the 17th, Lopes bunts the winning run into scoring position as Oakland triumphs, 5–4.[14]
- May 24 – The Kansas City Royals and visiting Texas Rangers are tied 2–2 when rain halts play after 5½ innings. When the game is cancelled the contest goes into the books as the American League's only tie game of 1983. Statistics will count, however. The National League will experience its only tie on June 28 at Veterans Stadium when the Montreal Expos and Philadelphia Phillies play to 5–5 deadlock that's ended by rain in the 12th inning.
- May 27
- Left-hander John Tudor allows only one hit, a fourth-inning single to Dave Collins, in the Boston Red Sox' 2–0 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays at Exhibition Stadium.[15]
- In the season's longest game so far, the St. Louis Cardinals tally twice in the visitors' half of the 18th inning to defeat the Houston Astros, 3–1. The Cardinals had been held scoreless since the second inning by four Houston pitchers.[16]
- May 29 – Los Angeles Dodgers reliever Steve Howe checks himself into drug rehabilitation for cocaine addiction. The Dodgers fine him $54,000. He will return in June and Commissioner of Baseball Bowie Kuhn will place him on three years probation.
June
[edit]- June 2 – Saying "I've probably suffered enough," second-year New York Mets manager George Bamberger quits with his club 16–30, last in the NL East, and 10½ games out of the lead. First-base coach Frank Howard will take the helm for the remainder of 1983. Noted pitching guru Bamberger had compiled an 81–127 (.389) mark since Opening Day 1982 and failed to improve the mound staff's performance.[17]
- June 6
- A day initially intended for the Boston Red Sox to honor their 1967 "Impossible Dream" pennant-winners and raise money to defray medical costs for disabled former star Tony Conigliaro ends in embarrassment and acrimony when the Red Sox' ownership group publicly ruptures. As media and fans arrive at Fenway Park for "Tony C Night" and a game against the Detroit Tigers, general partner Buddy LeRoux announces that, backed by a bloc consisting of holders of 16 of the club's 30 limited partnerships, he's taking over the team from the two other general partners, Jean R. Yawkey and Haywood Sullivan. Furthermore, LeRoux fires Sullivan as the Red Sox' general manager. Yawkey and Sullivan respond by filing suit against LeRoux. On the field, the 28–22 Red Sox bow, 11–6, the second setback in what will be a six-game losing streak. As the ownership battle enters the legal system, the takeover attempt is branded "the Coup LeRoux."[18][19]
- The distraction caused by their ownership feud obscures the news that the Red Sox today select University of Texas–Austin right-hander Roger Clemens in the first round (19th overall) in the 1983 MLB amateur draft. The future 354-game-winner will go 192–111 and win three Cy Young Awards and the 1986 American League Most Valuable Player Award in 13 seasons in a Boston uniform.
- The Minnesota Twins, who possess the first picks in both the regular and secondary phases, are rebuffed by each selection (Tim Belcher and Oddibe McDowell), who refuse to sign with Calvin Griffith's low-paying franchise.[20]
- The Cleveland Indians trade outfielder Rick Manning and pitcher Rick Waits to the Milwaukee Brewers in exchange for pitchers Ernie Camacho and Jamie Easterly and outfielder Gorman Thomas.
- June 7 – The Kansas City Royals obtain left-hander Charlie Leibrandt from the Cincinnati Reds for fellow southpaw Bob Tufts. Currently pitching in Triple-A after a poor 1982 campaign with the Reds, Leibrandt, 26, will join the Royals' starting rotation in 1984 and win 17 regular-season games for their 1985 world championship team.
- June 9 – The New York Yankees release veteran pitcher Rick Reuschel. Recovering from shoulder surgery, Reuschel, 34, hasn't pitched in the majors since Game 6 of the 1981 World Series and is struggling with Triple-A Columbus. On June 28, he'll sign as a free agent with his original team, the Chicago Cubs, and continue his comeback in the Class A Midwest League. On September 11, 1983, Reuschel will return to the Wrigley Field mound as the starting pitcher and allow only one run in six innings against the St. Louis Cardinals.[21][22]
- June 10
- At Shea Stadium, Dave Kingman's two-run, walk-off home run delivers a 17-inning, 4–2 victory for his New York Mets over the Montreal Expos.
- The visiting Chicago White Sox and Oakland Athletics go almost as long, battling for almost 16 innings to a 1–1 deadlock before the A's push across the winning run in the home half of the 16th on an error committed by Chicago shortstop Jerry Dybzinski.

- June 14 – The New York Mets trade Steve Senteney and outfielder Marvell Wynne to the Pittsburgh Pirates in exchange for 23-year-old catcher Junior Ortiz and minor-league pitcher Arthur Ray.
- June 15
- In a more consequential transaction, the Mets acquire 1979 National League Co-MVP and two-time NL All-Star Keith Hernandez from the St. Louis Cardinals for pitchers Neil Allen and Rick Ownbey. First baseman Hernandez, 29, is in the prime of his career: he's in the process of winning the sixth of his 11 consecutive NL Gold Glove Awards (1978–1988); as a Met he will make three more All-Star squads, bat over .300 five times (including during the rest of 1983), and win his second World Series ring.
- The Seattle Mariners and Chicago White Sox swap starting second basemen, with the Mariners dealing Julio Cruz for Tony Bernazard. Cruz, 28, will help spark the ChiSox to the 1983 American League West Division championship.
- June 20 – Former four-time All-Star outfielder Bobby Murcer, 37, is released by the New York Yankees, retiring after 17 MLB seasons in order to take a job as an analyst on the Yankees' broadcast team. Murcer appeared in nine games for 1983 Bombers as a designated hitter.
- June 23 – Right-hander Doyle Alexander, released by the Yankees on May 31, signs with the Toronto Blue Jays. Alexander, 32 and a 13-year MLB veteran, grossly underperformed during his second stint in the Bronx, posting a 1–9 (6.16 ERA) record in 24 games and 95 innings pitched during 1982–1983. He turns things around in Toronto—going 7–6 (3.93) for the rest of this season, then winning 17 games in both 1984 and 1985.
- June 24 – At County Stadium, Don Sutton of the Milwaukee Brewers records his 3,000th career strikeout during the eighth inning of a 6–2 victory; his victim is Cleveland Indians left-fielder Alan Bannister.[23]
- June 25 – In last place in the AL West with the worst record (26–47, .356) in the major leagues, and losers of eight games in a row, the Seattle Mariners shake up their field leadership and playing roster. The Mariners replace manager Rene Lachemann, 38, with former standout MLB catcher Del Crandall, 53, whose Albuquerque Dukes are the three-time reigning Pacific Coast League champions. They also place veteran pitcher Gaylord Perry, 44, and shortstop Todd Cruz on waivers and recall rookie shortstop Spike Owen from their PCL affiliate, the Salt Lake City Gulls.[24] Perry clears waivers and is released June 27; Cruz is claimed by the Baltimore Orioles on June 30.
July
[edit]- July 4
- Left-handed pitcher Dave Righetti throws the New York Yankees' first no-hitter since Don Larsen's perfect game in the 1956 World Series, handcuffing the Boston Red Sox 4–0 before a holiday crowd of 41,077 at Yankee Stadium. It's the first no-hitter by a Bombers' southpaw since George Mogridge in 1917. Righetti fans future Hall-of-Fame hitter Wade Boggs for the final out.
- As the July 4 weekend ends and the All-Star break begins, the midpoint of the 1983 season witnesses four tight races, with the two Canadian franchises holding first place in their divisions. In the AL East, the Toronto Blue Jays, 43–33 in Bobby Cox' second season as manager, hold a one-game lead over the Baltimore Orioles (42–34); the Detroit Tigers and the Yankees are nipping at their heels, two games behind. In the AL West, the Texas Rangers (44–34) lead the California Angels (42–36) by two and the Chicago White Sox (40–37) by 3½. The Montreal Expos (41–36) lead a closely bunched NL East by a game over the Philadelphia Phillies (38–36) and two over the defending world champion St. Louis Cardinals (40–39). In the NL West, the Atlanta Braves (49–31) and Los Angeles Dodgers (47–31) are battling for the top, with the Braves ahead by a single game.
- July 6
- In the 50th anniversary All-Star Game, played at its original venue, Chicago's Comiskey Park, the American League routs the National League 13–3 for its first win since 1971. The AL breaks the game open with seven runs in the fourth inning, highlighted by Fred Lynn's grand slam — the first ever in an All-Star competition. It is Lynn's fourth All-Star homer, tying him with Ted Williams for the AL record.
- The 25-year, 898-game MLB career of left-hander Jim Kaat ends when he's released by the St. Louis Cardinals. Kaat, 44, won 283 games over that quarter-century, principally as a member of the Washington Senators/Minnesota Twins, and captured 16 Gold Glove Awards. He'll remain in baseball as a coach and broadcaster, and be elected to the Hall of Fame in 2022.
- Another 44-year-old, future Hall of Famer, right-hander Gaylord Perry, changes address for the seventh and last time in his 22-year career when he's signed by the Kansas City Royals, nine days after being cut loose by the Seattle Mariners. He's go 4–4 (4.27) in 14 starts for Kansas City—and play a bizarre role in the "Pine Tar Game" later this month—before retiring with 314 career wins in September.
- July 11 – The Cincinnati Reds, 36–49 and last in the NL West, fire embattled club president and general manager Dick Wagner.[25] Wagner's highly successful predecessor, Bob Howsam, 65, in semi-retirement since February 1978, agrees to return to full-time service as interim chief executive officer and general manager.[26]
- July 15 – Consecutive 0-for-3 days, yesterday against the Detroit Tigers and today against the Baltimore Orioles, drop Rod Carew's batting average to .397. The California Angels first baseman has finished every day over the .400 mark since April 21; his on-base percentage (.451) trails Wade Boggs by .001.
- July 18 – Philadelphia Phillies' general manager Paul Owens replaces Pat Corrales as manager and takes over the team himself. The Phillies are a disappointing 43–42, but they're virtually tied for first place in the NL East with the 44–43 St. Louis Cardinals under second-year skipper Corrales.[27] Says club president Bill Giles, who ordered the firing: "When you see ballplayers hitting 40 points below where they've been hitting, something is wrong. It's the job of the manager to motivate and get the players to play up to their capabilities."[28] Owens will snap the Phillies out of their funk and lead them to the NL pennant.
- July 24 – At Yankee Stadium, in what's soon famous as the "Pine Tar Game," George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hits an apparent, go-ahead two-run home run off Goose Gossage in the ninth inning against the New York Yankees. However, New York manager Billy Martin challenges that Brett's bat has more than the 18 inches (460 mm) of pine tar allowed, and home plate umpire Tim McClelland upholds Martin's challenge, nullifies the homer, and calls Brett out—seemingly ending the game in a 4–3 Yankee triumph. A furious Brett charges out of the dugout and confronts McClelland; he's ejected, along with his manager, Dick Howser. On July 28, AL president Lee MacPhail's office upholds Kansas City's protest, restoring the home run, and the game will be completed on August 18.[29][30][31][32]
- July 29
- Steve Garvey, first baseman for the San Diego Padres dislocates his thumb, ending his streak of 1,207 consecutive games played. It is still the National League record for consecutive games played.
- The Philadelphia Phillies purchase the contract of right-handed pitcher Larry Andersen from the Seattle Mariners. Andersen, 30, becomes an effective middle reliever/set-up man in the National League known for his playful demeanor and, eventually, a longtime and popular member of the Phillies' broadcast team.[33]
- July 30 – The Cleveland Indians, 40–60 and last in the AL East, dismiss first-year manager Mike Ferraro and replace him with Pat Corrales, fired July 18 as skipper of the Phillies. Says Ferraro, who survived kidney cancer earlier in 1983: "I feel like I was shot in the back."[30]
- July 31 – The 39–63 New York Mets have their day in the sun, winning a double-header, 7–6 and 1–0, at Shea Stadium over the first-place, 54–47 Pittsburgh Pirates—but they have to work overtime to do it. Each contest is won in the bottom half of the 12th inning. Lefty reliever Jesse Orosco wins both games. In the nightcap, Mike Torrez goes 11 shutout innings but leaves without a decision.
August
[edit]- August 2 – At Exhibition Stadium, the New York Yankees blast eight home runs in a doubleheader, but lose both contests to the Toronto Blue Jays, 10–9 and 13–6.
- August 3 – Nolan Ryan of the Houston Astros—who will author a record seven no-hitters over a 27-year MLB pitching career—fires what will be the ninth of his 12 career one-hitters. Today's effort comes in a home game against the San Diego Padres, with Tim Flannery's third-inning single the spoiling blow.
- August 5 – The Kansas City Royals release pitcher Vida Blue. The 1971 Cy Young Award winner and American League MVP is 0–5, (6.01) in 14 starts this season. He will become embroiled in a team-wide drug abuse scandal in October when he and three former Royals teammates are charged with possessing, or attempting to possess, cocaine.[34][35]
- August 6 – Royals starter Eric Rasmussen tosses a 4–0 shutout against the Boston Red Sox in his first ever start in the American League. Having already shut out the San Diego Padres in his major league debut for the St. Louis Cardinals on July 21, 1975, Rasmussen becomes the only major league pitcher to ever pitch a shutout in his first National League start and his first American League start.
- August 10 – The Houston Astros acquire Jerry Mumphrey from the New York Yankees for fellow outfielder Omar Moreno. Mumphrey, 30, bats .336 for the remainder of 1983 and is selected to the 1984 NL All-Star team.
- August 13
- Commissioner of Baseball Bowie Kuhn, whose second, seven-year term expires today, agrees to remain in office on an interim basis until December 31 or until a new commissioner is elected. Kuhn was denied a contract extension by MLB owners last November 1. Bud Selig, owner of the Milwaukee Brewers, is appointed to chair an eight-member search committee.
- The Philadelphia Phillies cut ties with disappointing pitcher Ed Farmer, who has gone 2–12 (5.12) in 64 games since he rejoined them last season as a free agent; he's 0–6 (5.35) in 1983 alone. Farmer will sign with the Oakland Athletics on August 23, where he finishes his MLB mound career in October. In 1991, he begins a 29-year tenure as a broadcaster for the Chicago White Sox.
- August 17 – Manny Trillo is traded by the Cleveland Indians to the Montreal Expos in exchange for minor league outfielder Don Carter and $350,000 in cash. Trillo started at second base for the American League in July's All-Star game.
- August 18 – The infamous "Pine Tar Game" of July 24 concludes at 6 p.m. at a near-empty Yankee Stadium. The run-up is marked by legal challenges, with a New York Supreme Court justice reversing an injunction that would have barred the event less than 2½ hours before game time. When the ninth inning resumes, Yankee manager Billy Martin shows his contempt for the proceedings by stationing Don Mattingly, who throws left-handed, at second base and pitcher Ron Guidry in centerfield. He also tells his pitcher, George Frazier, to throw to every base, as an appeal in case George Brett failed to touch them on July 24. Frazier retires the only hitter he faces, then Royals closer Dan Quisenberry sets down the Yankees in order, sealing a 5–4 Kansas City triumph.[29][30][31][32]
- August 19 – Preparing for the stretch run, the Los Angeles Dodgers acquire left-handed starting pitcher Rick Honeycutt from the Texas Rangers for pitchers Dave Stewart and Ricky Wright ("PTBNL") and $200,000. Although Honeycutt doesn't contribute much to the 1983 Dodgers' eventual NL West title, the 2.42 earned run average in 1742⁄3 innings pitched he's left behind with the Rangers will be good enough to lead the American League.
- August 22 – Losers of 12 of 16, the Chicago Cubs drop second-year manager Lee Elia and name veteran baseball man Charlie Fox his interim replacement. Chicago (54–69) is fifth in the NL East, 10½ games behind the Philadelphia Phillies.
- August 24
- Against the Cincinnati Reds at Wrigley Field, the Cubs' Chuck Rainey has a no-hitter broken up with two out in the ninth on an Eddie Milner single. The hit is the only one Rainey allows in defeating the Reds, 3–0. A no-hitter would have been the first by a Cub since Milt Pappas in 1972.
- Don Sutton (nine innings) and Jim Slaton (five) combine on a 14-inning, 1–0 Milwaukee Brewers white-washing against the California Angels at County Stadium. Robin Yount collects the game-winning RBI. The Angels collect ten hits and the two teams strand a total of 29 baserunners.
- August 26 – The New York Yankees, only three games out in the AL East race, acquire right-hander John Montefusco from the San Diego Padres for two players to be named later (pitcher Dennis Rasmussen and infielder Edwin Rodríguez) and $200,000. Montefusco has become the Padres' closer after being banished to the bullpen by manager Dick Williams, but as a Yankee he will return to the rotation and go 5–0 (3.32) in six starts.
- August 28 – The Atlanta Braves, now only a half-game ahead of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West, acquire right-handed starting pitcher and perfect game-author Len Barker from the Cleveland Indians for three players to be named later: pitcher Rick Behenna (added to the deal September 2) and third baseman Brook Jacoby and the Braves' starting center-fielder, Brett Butler, who are sent to Cleveland after their regular season ends.
- August 31 – At Veterans Stadium, the Philadelphia Phillies—in the thick of a tight NL East race—conclude a five-game series with the San Diego Padres by winning the rubber game, 4–3, and then acquiring the Padres' starting right-fielder, Sixto Lezcano, in a six-player mega-deal that includes five players to be named later. In addition to Lezcano, 29, the Phils get pitcher Steve Fireovid (PTBNL), and send four PTBNLs to San Diego in exchange: pitchers Darren Burroughs, Marty Decker, Lance McCullers and Ed Wojna.
September
[edit]- September 13 – Dan Quisenberry, the Kansas City Royals' All-Star relief pitcher, saves his 39th game of the season—breaking John Hiller's MLB record by recording the final two outs in a 4–3 victory over the California Angels. He'll finish 1983 with 45 saves and place second in the AL Cy Young Award balloting.
- September 17 – The Chicago White Sox defeat the Seattle Mariners 4–3 at old Comiskey Park, clinching their first division title. It secures their first post season berth since 1959, and the last the team has at old Comiskey.
- September 19 – Steve Howe misses a Dodgers' team flight to Atlanta and refuses a drug test. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn convenes an investigation and it is revealed that Howe was being treated by a doctor but not in drug rehab. Howe sits out the remainder of the season.
- September 20 – In the first inning of a 14–1 rain-shortened five-inning victory over the Baltimore Orioles, the Detroit Tigers stroke 10 consecutive hits and score 11 runs. Detroit's opening offense ties the American League record for runs scored to start the game, which was established by the Boston Americans in 1901.
- September 23 – Steve Carlton of the Philadelphia Phillies records his 300th career win: a 6–2 defeat of the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Memorial Stadium.
- September 26 – Bob Forsch of the St. Louis Cardinals no-hits the Montreal Expos 3–0 at Busch Memorial Stadium. The no-hitter is the second of his career; he pitches his first in 1978.
- September 27
- Tim Raines becomes the first player since Ty Cobb in 1915 to steal 70 bases and drive in 70 runs in the same season.
- Jim Campbell, 59, general manager of the Detroit Tigers since September 1962, turns over those responsibilities to his top lieutenant, vice president/baseball and former director of scouting Bill Lajoie, 49. Campbell remains club president.[36] The Tigers are on the verge of a pennant and World Series championship
- September 28 – The Philadelphia Phillies clinch the National League East championship with the 7,000th win in their history, 13–6, over the Chicago Cubs.
- September 29 – Rookie Mike Warren of the Oakland Athletics no-hits the Chicago White Sox 3–0 at Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum.
October
[edit]- October 1 – As he appears in his 3,307th and next-to-last game as a member of the Boston Red Sox, Carl Yastrzemski is feted with "Yaz Day" at Fenway Park. During the ceremony, the 44-year-old future Hall of Famer laps the entire field to thank the cheering fans for their support. Tomorrow, after his final game, Yastrzemski will take another lap around the field to again express his appreciation.
- October 2 – Spoofing the weekend of accolades lavished on Yastrzemski, the Boston phone-in radio show The Sports Huddle airs a satirical tribute to Vern Rapp, a Montreal Expos coach and former manager (1977–1978) of the St. Louis Cardinals who also retired today after a lengthy baseball career, most of it in the minor leagues. The radio hosts interview Rapp, Cardinals broadcaster Mike Shannon, and Cincinnati Reds farm system director Sheldon "Chief" Bender as part of the tongue-in-cheek "tribute." But the intended parody has unexpected consequences: at a front-office meeting the following day, Bender suggests Rapp to Cincinnati club president Bob Howsam as a candidate for the Reds' 1984 managerial job—and his retirement is postponed when Rapp, 55, is hired on October 4 to succeed Russ Nixon at the Cincinnati helm. Says Bender: "Vern wasn't a candidate for the job until the station called."[37][38]
- October 3 – The Milwaukee Brewers fire manager Harvey Kuenn only a year after he led "Harvey's Wallbangers" to the World Series. The 1983 Brewers held first place in the AL East as late as August 25, but a disastrous 6–18 stretch through September 19 plunged them all the way to fifth place, 14 games behind the Baltimore Orioles. Kuenn will be replaced by Rene Lachemann, fired as skipper of the Seattle Mariners on June 25.[39]
- October 6 – In the second game of the 1983 American League Championship Series, Oriole hurler Mike Boddicker throws a five-hitter to defeat the Chicago White Sox at Memorial Stadium, 4–0. Boddicker's performance evens the series, and he establishes a new LCS record by striking out 14 batters.
- October 7 – The Chicago Cubs fill their managerial vacancy by hiring Jim Frey, 52, to replace acting skipper Charlie Fox. In 1980, Frey led the Kansas City Royals to the American League pennant, but was fired the following August after posting a cumulative record of 127–105 (.547). Frey also spent a decade on Earl Weaver's coaching staff in Baltimore (1970–1979) and was the Mets' hitting coach in 1982–1983.
- October 8 – In front of 64,494 fans at Veterans Stadium, the Philadelphia Phillies defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers, 7–2, to win the 1983 NLCS, three games to one. In today's Game 4, the Phils are sparked by the pitching of Steve Carlton and the power of Gary Matthews and Sixto Lezcano, who both hit homers. The Phillies make the World Series for only the fourth time in their 101-year-long franchise history.
- October 13 – The New York Mets hire Davey Johnson, 40, as their 1984 manager. The former four-time Gold Glove Award-winning and 3x AL All-Star second baseman is promoted from Triple-A Tidewater, where he managed prospects like Darryl Strawberry, Ron Darling and Walt Terrell and won a Governors' Cup. Johnson succeeds interim manager Frank Howard. This past season, the Mets finished 68–94, sixth and last in the NL East.
- October 16 – Eddie Murray slams a pair of home runs and Scott McGregor pitches a five-hitter as the Baltimore Orioles beat the Philadelphia Phillies 5–0 and win the 1983 World Series in Game 5. Baltimore catcher Rick Dempsey, who hits .385 with four doubles and a home run, is named the Series MVP.
- October 18 – Free-agent pitcher and six-time All-Star Vida Blue pleads guilty in a Kansas City federal court to possession of 3g of cocaine. He will be sentenced at a November 17 hearing, along with former Kansas City Royals teammates Willie Aikens, Willie Wilson and Jerry Martin, who earlier this month pled guilty to attempting to possess cocaine.[34][35]
- October 30 – Boston Red Sox farmhands John Mitchell, Anthony Latham and Scott Skripko,[40] are deep-sea fishing off the coast of Florida when their boat capsizes. Boat owner Mark Zastrowmy and Latham drown. Skripko and Mitchell survive over 20 hours in the water by clinging to debris; Skripko holds onto a cooler for 20 hours and Mitchell a bucket for 22 hours.[41] The Red Sox will memorialize 21-year-old outfielder Latham by presenting the "Tony Latham Award" to the most enthusiastic player in their Florida Instructional League program.
November
[edit]- November 2 – John Denny who tallied 20 of the 24 writers' first-place votes to win The National League Cy Young Award, easily out-distancing runners-up Mario Soto and Jessie Orosco. The Prescott, Arizona native posted a 19–6 record and a 2.37 ERA for The National League Champion Phillies.
- November 8
- Mets reliever Jessie Orosco received four votes for the National League Most Valuable Player Award, ending a six-year drought in which not one player on the team received a single vote for the award. The last time a writer cast an MVP vote for a New York National Leaguer was on the 1976 ballot when Tom Seaver was given consideration.
- Dale Murphy (.302, 36 homers and 121 RBIs) joins Ernie Banks, Joe Morgan and Mike Schmidt as one of the four players to win the National League MVP in consecutive years. The soft-spoken Atlanta Braves outfielder receives 21 of the 24 votes cast by the writers.
- November 16 – Cal Ripken Jr. of the World Champions of 1983 Baltimore Orioles was named American League MVP. He got 322 votes to earn that award.
- November 17 – Three current Kansas City Royals players (Willie Wilson, Willie Aikens, Jerry Martin) and former Royal Vida Blue are convicted of attempting to purchase cocaine, and sentence to short prison terms. It is a foreshadowing of the coming drug scandal that rocks the sport world throughout the 1980s.
- November 21 – Darryl Strawberry of the New York Mets was named the National League Rookie of the Year award. That season, he hit 26 home runs, stole 19 bases, and had 74 RBIs while hitting .257.
- November 22
- Ron Kittle of the Chicago White Sox, who hits 35 home runs with 100 RBIs, wins the American League Rookie of the Year Award beating out Cleveland infielder Julio Franco and Baltimore pitcher Mike Boddicker.
- The MLB Players Association dismisses their executive director Ken Moffett and chooses Donald Fehr as his successor.
December
[edit]- December 16:
- Commissioner Bowie Kuhn announces a one-year suspension from Major League Baseball for Steve Howe of the Dodgers and Willie Wilson, Willie Aikens, Vida Blue, and Jerry Martin of the Kansas City Royals for illegal purchase and use of cocaine.
- Billy Martin is fired as New York Yankees manager after a 91–71 record and second-place finish to the Orioles, but George Steinbrenner keeps him under contract as a Yankee scout. Yogi Berra is hired as Martin's replacement.
Movies
[edit]- Tiger Town (TV)
Births
[edit]January
[edit]- January 2 – J. D. Martin
- January 7 – Edwin Encarnación
- January 9 – Brandon Boggs
- January 9 – Freddy Dolsi
- January 13 – Andrew Sisco
- January 16 – Eider Torres
- January 20 – Matt Albers
- January 20 – Geovany Soto
- January 22 – José Valdez
- January 26 – Ryan Rowland-Smith
- January 27 – Gavin Floyd
- January 27 – Mike Zagurski
- January 28 – Elizardo Ramírez
February
[edit]- February 1 – Dane De La Rosa
- February 2 – Ronny Cedeño
- February 2 – Jason Vargas
- February 4 – William Bergolla
- February 7 – Scott Feldman
- February 8 – Burke Badenhop
- February 8 – Chase Wright
- February 8 – Mauro Zárate
- February 13 – Mike Nickeas
- February 14 – Callix Crabbe
- February 15 – Russell Martin
- February 16 – Ramón Troncoso
- February 19 – Brad Kilby
- February 20 – José Morales
- February 20 – Justin Verlander
- February 21 – Franklin Gutiérrez
- February 22 – Brian Duensing
- February 22 – Carlos Fisher
- February 22 – Casey Kotchman
- February 22 – Arturo López
- February 22 – Daniel Nava
- February 23 – Édgar González
- February 25 – Jay Marshall
- February 26 – Joe Martinez
- February 26 – José Reyes
- February 26 – Francisco Rodríguez
- February 28 – Tug Hulett
- February 28 – Jeff Niemann
- February 28 – Trent Oeltjen
March
[edit]- March 1 – Blake Hawksworth
- March 2 – Glen Perkins
- March 3 – Brent Dlugach
- March 4 – Sergio Romo
- March 7 – Drew Macias
- March 7 – Taylor Tankersley
- March 8 – Chris Lambert
- March 8 – Mark Worrell
- March 9 – Willy Aybar
- March 10 – Donnie Murphy
- March 10 – Steven Shell
- March 16 – Stephen Drew
- March 16 – Brandon League
- March 16 – Rusty Ryal
- March 18 – Andy Sonnanstine
- March 18 – Craig Tatum
- March 24 – Chad Gaudin
- March 24 – Devon Lowery
- March 26 – Eric Hacker
- March 30 – Davis Romero
- March 31 – Jeff Mathis
April
[edit]- April 1 – John Axford
- April 1 – Will Rhymes
- April 6 – Thomas Diamond
- April 6 – Bronson Sardinha
- April 7 – Wes Whisler
- April 8 – Chris Iannetta
- April 8 – Eric Patterson
- April 8 – Bobby Wilson
- April 11 – Zack Segovia
- April 13 – Steve Pearce
- April 13 – Hunter Pence
- April 14 – Jeff Fiorentino
- April 14 – Adam Russell
- April 16 – Tommy Manzella
- April 18 – Miguel Cabrera
- April 18 – Alberto González
- April 18 – Mike Parisi
- April 19 – Alberto Callaspo
- April 19 – Zach Duke
- April 19 – Joe Mauer
- April 19 – Curtis Thigpen
- April 20 – Tommy Everidge
- April 23 – Fernando Pérez
- April 24 – Daniel Barone
- April 25 – J. P. Howell
- April 25 – Juan Miranda
- April 25 – Garrett Mock
- April 28 – David Freese
May
[edit]- May 4 – John Tumpane
- May 10 – George Kottaras
- May 12 – Jack Egbert
- May 12 – Blake Lalli
- May 12 – Evan Meek
- May 13 – Zach Jackson
- May 13 – Clay Timpner
- May 15 – Clint Sammons
- May 16 – Steven Register
- May 17 – Nobuhiro Matsuda
- May 17 – Jeremy Sowers
- May 20 – Adam Rosales
- May 21 – Kan Otake
- May 25 – Adam Hamari
- May 28 – Humberto Sánchez
- May 28 – Cory Wade
- May 30 – Jairo Asencio
- May 30 – Jae Kuk Ryu
June
[edit]- June 2 – Josh Geer
- June 4 – Cla Meredith
- June 5 – Bill Bray
- June 6 – Irving Falu
- June 7 – Mark Lowe
- June 7 – Doug Mathis
- June 9 – Danny Richar
- June 10 – Matt Chico
- June 10 – Radhames Liz
- June 11 – José Reyes
- June 17 – David Pauley
- June 18 – Jarrett Hoffpauir
- June 20 – Kendrys Morales
- June 27 – Jim Johnson
- June 29 – Pedro Viola
- June 29 – Mike Wilson
- June 30 – Drew Sutton
July
[edit]- July 2 – Samuel Deduno
- July 3 – Edinson Vólquez
- July 4 – Sergio Santos
- July 5 – Marco Estrada
- July 7 – Brandon McCarthy
- July 7 – Luke Montz
- July 7 – R. J. Swindle
- July 8 – John Bowker
- July 9 – Robert Manuel
- July 9 – Miguel Montero
- July 11 – Zach Clark
- July 12 – Howie Kendrick
- July 12 – Tony Sipp
- July 14 – Juan Gutiérrez
- July 17 – Steve Delabar
- July 17 – Adam Lind
- July 19 – Tim Dillard
- July 19 – Wilton López
- July 24 – Guilder Rodríguez
- July 31 – René Rivera
August
[edit]- August 2 – Huston Street
- August 3 – Mark Reynolds
- August 9 – Drew Butera
- August 13 – Dallas Braden
- August 14 – Juan Carlos Oviedo
- August 17 – Tuffy Gosewisch
- August 17 – Tyler Greene
- August 17 – Dustin Pedroia
- August 20 – Lance Broadway
- August 21 – Jesse Chavez
- August 21 – Jeff Clement
- August 24 – Brett Gardner
- August 24 – Alan Johnson
- August 27 – Billy Buckner
- August 29 – Anthony Recker
- August 30 – Mike Ekstrom
- August 30 – Chris Getz
- August 31 – Armando Gabino
September
[edit]- September 1 – José Constanza
- September 2 – Gaby Sánchez
- September 3 – Matt Capps
- September 5 – Jeff Stevens
- September 5 – Chris Young
- September 6 – Jerry Blevins
- September 8 – Nick Hundley
- September 9 – Mike Costanzo
- September 9 – Kyle Davies
- September 9 – Rhyne Hughes
- September 9 – Edwin Jackson
- September 9 – Alex Romero
- September 10 – Lance Pendleton
- September 10 – Joey Votto
- September 11 – Jacoby Ellsbury
- September 12 – Clayton Richard
- September 13 – Andy LaRoche
- September 14 – John Hester
- September 15 – Luke Hochevar
- September 16 – Brandon Moss
- September 18 – Brent Lillibridge
- September 19 – Joey Devine
- September 19 – Robinzon Díaz
- September 19 – Charlie Haeger
- September 19 – John Jaso
- September 20 – Ángel Sánchez
- September 24 – Travis Ishikawa
- September 25 – Miguel Pérez
- September 26 – Scott Lewis
- September 28 – Jay Buente
October
[edit]- October 4 – Kurt Suzuki
- October 5 – Alexi Ogando
- October 5 – Felipe Paulino
- October 6 – Radhames Liz
- October 7 – Ryan Rohlinger
- October 8 – Antoan Richardson
- October 9 – Jason Pridie
- October 12 – Nolan Reimold
- October 13 – Chris Seddon
- October 14 – Alberto Arias
- October 17 – Mitch Talbot
- October 18 – Garrett Olson
- October 21 – Casey Fien
- October 21 – Zack Greinke
- October 21 – Andy Marte
- October 24 – Chris Colabello
- October 26 – Francisco Liriano
- October 27 – Brent Clevlen
- October 27 – Martín Prado
- October 28 – Esmailin Caridad
- October 29 – Dana Eveland
- October 31 – Luis Mendoza
November
[edit]- November 1 – Steve Tolleson
- November 5 – Juan Morillo
- November 6 – Justin Maxwell
- November 7 – Esmerling Vásquez
- November 8 – Chihiro Kaneko
- November 9 – Tony Barnette
- November 10 – Brian Dinkelman
- November 10 – Ryan Mattheus
- November 12 – Charlie Morton
- November 14 – Guillermo Moscoso
- November 14 – Clete Thomas
- November 15 – Craig Hansen
- November 17 – Ryan Braun
- November 17 – Trevor Crowe
- November 17 – Nick Markakis
- November 17 – Scott Moore
- November 18 – Travis Buck
- November 20 – Brock Peterson
- November 23 – Wes Bankston
- November 24 – José López
- November 26 – Matt Garza
- November 27 – Jason Berken
- November 28 – Carlos Villanueva
- November 29 – Craig Gentry
December
[edit]- December 10 – Brandon Jones
- December 16 – Tom Wilhelmsen
- December 18 – Jordan Brown
- December 21 – John Mayberry Jr.
- December 21 – Taylor Teagarden
- December 22 – Blake Davis
- December 22 – Greg Smith
- December 23 – Hanley Ramírez
- December 24 – Gregor Blanco
- December 26 – Yohan Pino
- December 27 – Cole Hamels
Deaths
[edit]January
[edit]- January 8 – Dave Barnhill, 69, five-time All-Star pitcher who appeared for New York Cubans of the Negro National League between 1941 and 1948.
- January 9 – Eddie Palmer, 89, third baseman and pinch hitter in 16 games for the 1917 Philadelphia Athletics.
- January 9 – Stan Spence, 67, four-time All-Star outfielder who played for the Boston Red Sox, Washington Senators and St. Louis Browns for nine seasons between 1940 and 1949.
- January 10 – Gil Torres, 67, Cuban shortstop and third baseman who played in 346 games for the Senators (1940 and 1944–1946).
- January 23 – Cookie Cuccurullo, 64, left-handed pitcher who hurled in 62 total games for the wartime Pittsburgh Pirates (1943–1945).
- January 23 – Phil Piton, 80, president of the Minor League Baseball from 1964 through 1971.
- January 26 – Chet Laabs, 70, All-Star outfielder for the St. Louis Browns who hit two home runs in 1944's final game to clinch the Browns' only American League pennant; his 11-season (1937–1947) career also included service with the Detroit Tigers and Philadelphia Athletics.
- January 26 – Del Rice, 60, catcher who appeared in 1,309 games over 17 MLB seasons (1945–1961) for five clubs, principally the St. Louis Cardinals and Milwaukee Braves; two-time (1946, 1957) World Series champion and 1953 All-Star; coach for Los Angeles/California Angels (1962–1966) who managed 1972 Angels to a 75–80 record.
- January 28 – Joe Chamberlain, 72, infielder and pinch hitter who got into 41 games for the 1934 Chicago White Sox.
- January 31 – Sam Gibson, 83, pitcher who worked in 131 career games for the Detroit Tigers (1926–1928), New York Yankees (1930) and New York Giants (1932).
February
[edit]- February 3 – Trader Horne, 83, relief pitcher for the 1929 Chicago Cubs.
- February 6 – Mal Moss, 77, left-handed pitcher who worked in 12 games for 1930 Cubs.
- February 8 – Rufe Clarke, 82, pitcher who worked seven games, all in relief, for the 1923–1924 Detroit Tigers.
- February 9 – Jackie Hayes, 76, second baseman who played in 1,091 games in 14 seasons for the Washington Senators and Chicago White Sox from 1927 to 1940.
- February 12 – Bob Saunders, 81, pitcher for the Kansas City Monarchs and Detroit Stars of the Negro National League in 1926.
- February 16 – Melba Alspaugh, 58, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League outfielder.
- February 16 – Everett Fagan, 65, pitched who compiled a 2–7 won–lost record (5.47 ERA) in 38 games for the Philadelphia Athletics (1943, 1946).
- February 19 – Frank Colman, 64, outfielder who appeared in 271 career games for Pittsburgh Pirates (1942–1946) and New York Yankees (1946–1947); member of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.
- February 26 – Ford Smith, 64, pitcher in 26 games (14–6, 2.29 ERA) and position player/pinch hitter in 33 more (.221 with 32 hits) for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro American League (1941, 1946–1948).
March
[edit]- March 3 – Jennings Poindexter, 72, pitcher for the Red Sox and Cardinals in the 1930s.
- March 4 – Kiddo Davis, 81, outfielder who appeared in 575 games over eight seasons (1926 and 1932–1938) for five clubs, principally the New York Giants and Philadelphia Phillies; batted .368 with seven hits, helping Giants win 1933 World Series.
- March 10 – Connie Desmond, 75, play-by-play broadcaster for the New York Yankees and Giants (1942) and Brooklyn Dodgers (1943–1956).
- March 12 – Bob Hall, 59, pitcher for the Boston Braves (1949–1950) and Pittsburgh Pirates (1953).
- March 13 – Bill Anderson, 87, southpaw relief pitcher who got into two games for the Boston Braves in September 1925.
- March 16 – Eudie Napier, 70, catcher for the Homestead Grays between 1939 and 1948, beginning as a backup to Josh Gibson before becoming a regular; member, 1948 Negro World Series champions.
- March 18 – Frank Oceak, 70, longtime minor-league infielder and manager who spent 11 years in MLB as a coach for the Pittsburgh Pirates (1958–1964 and 1970–1972) and Cincinnati Reds (1965); third-base coach of 1960 and 1971 World Series champions.
- March 20 – Ed Stone, 73, outfielder in the Negro Leagues who was known for his solid fielding and heavy bat.
- March 24 – George Darrow, 79, left-hander who pitched in 17 games for the 1934 Philadelphia Phillies.
- March 30 – Joe Cicero, 72, shortstop who played for the 1929–1930 Boston Red Sox as a teenager, disappeared into the minor leagues for over a decade, then returned to the majors at age 34 for the 1945 Philadelphia Athletics during the World War II manpower shortage.
- March 30 – Jack Roche, 92, who appeared in 59 games as a catcher and pinch hitter for the St. Louis Cardinals (1914–1915, 1917).
April
[edit]- April 1 – Calvin Chapman, 72, outfielder, second baseman and shortstop who appeared in 111 games for the 1934–1935 Cincinnati Reds.
- April 3 – Mickey Livingston, 68, catcher who played in 561 career games over ten seasons between 1938 and 1951 for six MLB clubs; batted .364 in 22 at bats with four RBI in a losing cause as a Chicago Cub during the 1945 World Series.
- April 9 – Jake Freeze, 82, pitcher who appeared in two July 1925 games for the White Sox.
- April 9 – Bill Kennedy, 62, southpaw pitcher for the Cleveland Indians, St. Louis Browns, Chicago White Sox, Boston Red Sox and Cincinnati Redlegs over eight seasons between from 1948 and 1957.
- April 10 – Chet Johnson, 65, left-handed pitcher who appeared in 586 games during an 18-year minor-league career, but only five contests for 1946 St. Louis Browns; brother of fellow southpaw pitcher Earl Johnson.
- April 11 – Mike Menosky, 88, outfielder for the Pittsburgh Rebels (of the "outlaw" Federal League), Washington Senators and Boston Red Sox between 1914 and 1923.
- April 12 – Carl Morton, 39, pitcher with the Montréal Expos (1969–1972) and Atlanta Braves (1973–1976); 1970 National League Rookie of the Year after winning 18 games for second-year Expos club; also had seasons of 15, 16 and 17 wins for Braves.
- April 15 – Bill Sarni, 55, catcher for the St. Louis Cardinals (1951–1952, 1954–1956) and New York Giants (1956) who appeared in 390 big-league games before suffering a heart attack at age 29 that ended his playing career.
- April 17 – Emil "Dutch" Leonard, 74, five-time All-Star pitcher who employed the knuckleball in earning 191 wins over 20 seasons between 1933 and 1953 with the Brooklyn Dodgers, Washington Senators, Philadelphia Phillies and Chicago Cubs; one of four flutter-ball artists who were regular starting pitchers for the 1945 Senators.
- April 18 – Woody Rich, 77, left-handed pitcher who worked in 33 career games for 1939–1941 Boston Red Sox and 1944 Boston Braves; won 249 games over 22 minor-league seasons.
- April 22 – Mike Schemer, 65, first baseman who played 32 games for 1945–1946 New York Giants.
- April 25 – Carlos Paula, 55, Cuban outfielder, first black player in Washington Senators history (September 6, 1954); batted .271 in 157 games over all or part of three seasons through June 1956.
May
[edit]- May 2 – Dewitt Owens, 82, shortstop/second baseman for the Cleveland Elites and Birmingham Black Barons of the Negro National League from 1926 to 1930.
- May 2 – Archie Yelle, 90, catcher who got into 87 games for the 1917–1919 Detroit Tigers.
- May 6 – Nelson Greene, 83, southpaw pitcher who worked in 15 games for 1924–1925 Brooklyn Robins.
- May 13 – Lerton Pinto, 84, left-hander who pitched in 12 games for the 1922 and 1924 Philadelphia Phillies.
- May 16 – Mel Wright, 55, relief pitcher in 58 career games for St. Louis Cardinals (1954–1955) and Chicago Cubs (1960–1961), then a coach for five MLB clubs for 13 seasons between 1962 and 1983; member of Montreal Expos' staff at the time of his death.
- May 20 – Fred Schulte, 82, center fielder for St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators and Pittsburgh Pirates from 1927 to 1937 who batted .291 in 1,179 games.
- May 24 – Oscar Levis, 84, Jamaican-born pitcher for the Cuban Stars East of the Eastern Colored League (1923–1928); also played for the Hilldale Club and in the Cuban League.
- May 26 – Dutch Romberger, 56, who pitched for 13 pro seasons (1948–1959, 1961), all of them in the Athletics' organization, but spent only ten games in MLB on the staff of the 1954 A's during their final season in Philadelphia.
- May 30 – Harry Weaver, 91, pitcher who appeared in 19 games for the Philadelphia Athletics (1915–1916) and Chicago Cubs (1917–1919).
June
[edit]- June 2 – Chancelor Edwards, 82, catcher who appeared in ten games for the Cleveland Tigers of the Negro National League in 1928.
- June 10 – Jim Cronin, 77, infielder who appeared in 23 games for the 1929 World Series champion Philadelphia Athletics.
- June 11 – Dick Aylward, 58, catcher and 14-year minor league veteran who played in four MLB games in May 1953 for the Chicago Cubs.
- June 14 – Speed Martin, 89, pitcher who compiled a 29–42 won–lost mark and an ERA of 3.78 in 126 career games for the St. Louis Browns (1917) and Chicago Cubs (1918–1922)
- June 20 – Gil Britton, 91, shortstop who appeared in three games for the Pittsburgh Pirates in September 1913.
- June 21 – Kit Carson, 70, outfielder who played in 21 games for the 1934–1935 Cleveland Indians.
- June 23 – Jimmy Newberry, 64, pitcher in 41 games in the Negro American League between 1943 and 1948, and one of the first two African-Americans to play in Nippon Professional Baseball.
- June 26 – Don Rader, 89, a shortstop who appeared in nine career games as a member of the 1913 Chicago White Sox and 1921 Philadelphia Phillies.
- June 27 – Doc Carroll, 91, catcher and dentistry school graduate who played in ten games for the hapless 1916 Philadelphia Athletics.
- June 27 – Jesse Landrum, 70, second baseman who appeared in four games for the Chicago White Sox during the early weeks of the 1938 season; later, a longtime scout.
July
[edit]- July 7 – Vic Wertz, 58, All-Star right fielder and first baseman for five AL teams over 17 years (1947–1963) who had five 100-RBI seasons, but was best remembered for his long fly ball caught spectacularly by Willie Mays in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series.
- July 19 – Joe Beggs, 72, pitcher who led National League in saves in 1940 as standout reliever for the World Series champion Cincinnati Reds; also hurled for New York Yankees and New York Giants during his nine-year (1938, 1940–1944, 1946–1948) MLB career.
- July 19 – George Sweatt, 89, outfielder/infielder who played in 343 Negro National League games for the Kansas City Monarchs (1922–1925) and Chicago American Giants (1926–1927).
- July 20 – Chick Sorrells, 86, appeared in two games for the 1922 Cleveland Indians as a pinch hitter and shortstop.
- July 23 – Neil Robinson, 75, nine-time All-Star as a stalwart of the Memphis Red Sox of the Negro American League between 1938 and 1948, primarily playing as a center fielder.
August
[edit]- August 4 – Ed Wheeler, 68, infielder who appeared in 46 games for the Cleveland Indians during the wartime 1945 season.
- August 6 – Tip Tobin, 76, outfielder who played one game (with one at bat) for the New York Giants on September 22, 1932.
- August 6 – Jimmy Wasdell, 69, outfielder/first baseman who appeared in 888 games for five MLB teams over 11 seasons (1937–1947).
- August 13 – Charlie Gilbert, 64, outfielder for three NL clubs over six seasons (1940–1943 and 1946–1947); son and brother of big leaguers.
- August 16 – Earl Averill, 81, Hall of Fame center fielder for the Cleveland Indians who batted .318 lifetime and had five 100-RBI seasons; his line drive off Dizzy Dean's foot in the 1937 All-Star game led to the end of Dean's career; his son had a seven-year MLB career in 1950s and 1960s.
- August 29 – Francis "Steve" O'Neill, 83, Cleveland trucking industry magnate who was principal owner of the Indians from 1978 until his death; prior to that, a limited partner in George Steinbrenner's New York Yankees ownership group from 1973 to 1978.
September
[edit]- September 5 – Sam Woods, right-hander who pitched in five games in the Negro American League during the 1946 and 1948 seasons.
- September 11 – Bill McCarren, 87, third baseman who appeared in 69 games for the 1923 Brooklyn Robins; longtime scout after his playing days.
- September 28 – Walter Thomas, 71, outfielder/pitcher who played in the Negro leagues between 1935 and 1946; brother of Orrel Thomas and great-uncle of Richie Martin.
October
[edit]- October 5 – George Turbeville, 69, left-hander who posted a 2–12 won–lost mark and an ERA of 6.14 in 62 career games for 1935–1937 Philadelphia Athletics.
- October 12 – Charlie Engle, 80, infielder who played in 87 games for the Philadelphia Athletics (1925–1926) and Pittsburgh Pirates (1930).
- October 18 – Willie "Puddin' Head" Jones, 58, "Whiz Kid" and All-Star third baseman for the Philadelphia Phillies (1947–1959), who led the National League in fielding percentage five times and in putouts seven times.
- October 23 – Buck Crouse, 86, lefty-swinging backup catcher who appeared in 470 games over eight years (1923–1930) with Chicago White Sox.
- October 28 – Ray Sanders, 66, first baseman for St. Louis Cardinals (1942–1945) and Boston Braves (1946 and 1948–1949); member of 1942 and 1944 world champion Redbirds, and 1943 and 1948 NL champs in St. Louis and Boston respectively.
- October 31 – George Halas, 88, outfielder who played in 12 games for the 1919 New York Yankees before becoming a legendary coach and owner of the Chicago Bears of the National Football League.
November
[edit]- November 1 – Art Ruble, 80, outfielder who appeared in 75 MLB games as a member of the 1927 Detroit Tigers and 1934 Philadelphia Phillies.
- November 2 – Hal Wiltse, 80, pitcher for the Boston Red Sox (1926–28), St. Louis Browns (1928) and Philadelphia Phillies (1931).
- November 4 – Clarence Pickrel, 72, pitcher who appeared in 19 total games for the 1933 Phillies and 1934 Boston Braves.
- November 6 – Bob Lawrence, 83, pitcher who appeared in one game and pitched one inning as a member of the Chicago White Sox on July 19, 1924.
- November 15 – Charlie Grimm, known as "Jolly Cholly", 85, good-natured first baseman (1925–1936) and manager (all or parts of 14 years over three terms between 1932 and 1960) of the Chicago Cubs who batted .300 five times and led the Cubs to three National League pennants (1932, 1935 and 1945); also played for Philadelphia Athletics, St. Louis Cardinals and Pittsburgh Pirates, and managed Boston/Milwaukee Braves; in addition, served Cubs as a coach, broadcaster and front-office executive.
- November 18 – Hilton Smith, 76, pitcher for the Negro leagues' Kansas City Monarchs who was known for his outstanding curveball and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame posthumously in 2001.
- November 22 – Dave Short, 66, outfielder who played seven games for Chicago White Sox in 1940 and 1941.
- November 24 – Ed Leip, 72, second baseman and pinch runner in 30 career games for the Washington Senators and Pittsburgh Pirates between 1939 and 1942.
- November 28 – Chet Boak, 48, who appeared in ten games as a pinch hitter and second baseman—five for the 1960 Kansas City Athletics and five for the 1961 expansion Washington Senators.
- November 30 – Bill Evans, 69, relief pitcher for the Chicago White Sox and Boston Red Sox between 1949 and 1951.
December
[edit]- December 2 – Mike Powers, 77, pinch hitter and right fielder for 1932–1933 Cleveland Indians, appearing in 38 total games.
- December 12 – Jim Weaver, 80, known as "Big James", 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) pitcher who appeared in 189 games over eight seasons for six MLB clubs, chiefly the Pirates, between 1928 and 1939; led NL in shutouts (4) in 1935.
- December 14 – Roy Hamey, 81, longtime executive; general manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Philadelphia Phillies and New York Yankees for 12 seasons between 1947 and 1963; won three pennants and two World Series titles in his three seasons (1961–1963) as head of the Yankees' front office.
- December 19 – Zip Collins, 91, outfielder who played 281 games for the Pirates (1914–1915), Boston Braves (1915–1917) and Philadelphia Athletics (1921).
- December 25 – Babe Young, 68, first baseman who appeared in 728 games for the New York Giants (1936, 1939–1942 and 1946–1947), Cincinnati Reds (1947–1948) and St. Louis Cardinals (1948); twice topped 100-RBI mark.
- December 29 – Bob Neal, 77, Cleveland play-by-play announcer who called Indians' games on radio or television for 18 seasons spanning 1952 to 1972.
References
[edit]- ^ Al Cowens (salaries) at Baseball Reference
- ^ a b Minkoff, Randy (January 1, 1983). "White Sox Are Preparing for Compensation Pick". upi.com. United Press International. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ Chass, Murray (January 26, 1983). "Ruling Keeps May a Yankee". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ Anderson, Dave (March 8, 1983). "Sports of the Times: Mike Ferraro's Trauma". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
- ^ Muder, Craig. "#Card Corner: 1977 John Lowenstein". baseballhall.org. National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ Amdur, Neil (April 8, 1983). "Baseball Gets Billion-Dollar TV Deal". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 2, 2025.
- ^ "Montreal Expos 2, Houston Astros 0." Retrosheet box score (April 16, 1983)
- ^ "New York Mets 6, Pittsburgh Pirates 0 (1)." Retrosheet box score (April 20, 1983)
- ^ Stone, Larry (April 27, 2008). "Elia's Rant One for the Ages". seattletimes.com. The Seattle Times. Retrieved May 6, 2025.
- ^ Carig, Marc (April 28, 2023). "On Lee Elia: Forty Thoughts on the 40th Effin' Anniversary of Baseball's Best Rant". nytimes.com. The Athletic/The New York Times. Retrieved May 6, 2025.
- ^ "St. Louis Cardinals 6, San Francisco Giants 5 (16 innings)." Retrosheet box score (April 29–30, 1983)
- ^ "New York Mets 7, Cincinnati Reds 4 (13 innings)." Retrosheet box score (May 6, 1983)
- ^ "Baltimore Orioles 1, Chicago White Sox 0." Retrosheet box score (May 18, 1983)
- ^ "Oakland Athletics 5, Milwaukee Brewers 4 (17 innings)." Rerosheet box score (May 23, 1983)
- ^ "Boston Red Sox 2, Toronto Blue Jays 0." Retrosheet box score (May 27, 1983)
- ^ "St. Louis Cardinals 3, Houston Astros 1 (18 innings)." Retrosheet box score (May 27, 1983)
- ^ Durso, Joseph (June 4, 1983). "Bamberger Quits as Mets' Manager; Howard Named". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 5, 2025.
- ^ Wulf, Steve (June 20, 1983). "The Fight is Over the Red Sox, Not in Them". vault.si.com. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ "Fenway Park Living Museum: Red Sox Ownership". mlb.com. Major League Baseball. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ Reusse, Patrick (June 10, 2013). "Ignorant of Top MLB Draftees? That's Your Fault". startribune.com. Minneapolis Star-Tribune. Retrieved May 6, 2025.
- ^ Muder, Craig. "Rick Reuschel". baseballhall.org. National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Retrieved May 6, 2025.
- ^ "St. Louis Cardinals 2, Chicago Cubs 1." Retrosheet box score (September 11, 1983)
- ^ "Milwaukee Brewers 6, Cleveland Indians 2." Retrosheet box score (June 24, 1983)
- ^ United Press International (June 26, 1983). "Mariners Drop Their Manager". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 6, 2025.
- ^ "Cincinnati Reds President Dick Wagner Fired". upi.com. United Press International. July 11, 1983. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ United Press International (July 12, 1983). "Wagner Dismissed as Reds' President". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ The Associated Press (July 19, 1983). "Corrales is Dismissed by Phils". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
- ^ Juliano, Joe (July 19, 1983). "The Fact That Phillies Manager Pat Corrales Was Fired is a Shock..." upi.com. United Press International. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
- ^ a b Randhawa, Manny (August 18, 2024). "The Story Behind the 'Super Weird' Ending to the Pine Tar Game". mlb.com. Major League Baseball. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
- ^ a b c Weiskopf, Herm (July 31, 1983). "Inside Pitch". vault.si.com. Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
- ^ a b "Kansas City Royals 5, New York Yankees 4." Retrosheet box score (July 24 & August 18, 1983)
- ^ a b Slutsky, Bruce. "July 24, 1983: The Pine Tar Game". sabr.org. Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
- ^ Allen, Malcolm. "Larry Andersen". sabr.org. Society for American Baseball Research Biography Project. Retrieved May 8, 2025.
- ^ a b Puerzer, Rich. "Vida Blue". sabr.org. Society for American Baseball Research Biography Project. Retrieved May 9, 2025.
- ^ a b Litsky, Frank (October 18, 1983). "Blue Pleads Guilty to Cocaine Charge". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 9, 2025.
- ^ Shook, Richard L. (September 27, 1983). "Bill Lajoie Will Call Baseball Shots for Detroit Tigers". upi.com. United Press International. Retrieved May 4, 2025.
- ^ "The Week (September 2–8)". Sports Illustrated. 1979-09-17. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011.
- ^ "The Cincinnati Reds today hired Vern Rapp". The New York Times. 1983-10-05.
- ^ United Press International (October 3, 1983). "Kuenn is Dismissed from Brewer Post". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved May 9, 2025.
- ^ "Scott Skripko Minor League Stats". Retrieved 2009-11-11.
- ^ "NFL Players' Boating Accident Stirs Memories of Anthony Latham". CNN. 2009-03-04. Archived from the original on March 9, 2009.