1967 in baseball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following are the baseball events of the year 1967 throughout the world.

Major League Baseball

Awards and honors

Statistical leaders

Major league baseball final standings

American League final standings

National League final standings

Nippon Professional Baseball final standings

Central League final standings

Central League G W L T Pct. GB
Yomiuri Giants 13484464.646
Chunichi Dragons 13472584.55412.0
Hanshin Tigers 13670606.53814.0
Taiyo Whales 13559715.45425.0
Sankei Atoms 13558725.44626.0
Hiroshima Carp 13847838.36237.0

Pacific League final standings

Pacific League G W L T Pct. GB
Hankyu Braves 13475554.577
Nishitetsu Lions 140666410.5089.0
Toei Flyers 13465654.50010.0
Nankai Hawks 13364663.49211.0
Tokyo Orions 13761697.46914.0
Kintetsu Buffaloes 13259712.45416.0

Events

January

February

Red Ruffing

March

April

Rod Carew in 1975

May

June

Jim Lonborg

July

Bob Gibson in 2017

August

September

Joe Horlen in 1971
  • September 1 – Gaylord Perry of the San Francisco Giants throws 16 shutout innings against the Cincinnati Reds at Crosley Field before he turns the scoreless tie over to bullpen ace Frank Linzy. Goose-eggs dot the scoreboard until the top of the 21st, when Giants veteran Dick Groat coaxes a bases-loaded walk off the Reds' Bob Lee that enables the eventual winning run (and only tally of the contest) to score.
  • September 4 – With all the Labor Day action in the books, only 1½ games separate the four American League contenders: the Minnesota Twins hold first by a half-game over the Boston Red Sox, one full game over the Chicago White Sox and 1½ contests over the Detroit Tigers. In the National League, the St. Louis Cardinals boast a comfortable margin of 10½ lengths over the second-place Chicago Cubs.
  • September 6 – For the first time in the AL's hectic pennant scramble, all four contenders are tied (or virtually tied with only .001 separating them) for first place in the standings.
  • September 7 – St. Louis Cardinals ace starting pitcher Bob Gibson returns to action, going five innings and allowing two earned runs in a 9–2 romp over the New York Mets. Gibson, on the injured list since mid-July when a line drive broke his right fibula, improves to 11–6 on the season. Veteran Jack Lamabe saves the win with 323 innings of one-hit relief.
  • September 10 – Joe Horlen of the Chicago White Sox no-hits the Detroit Tigers 6–0, in the first game of a doubleheader at Comiskey Park. The White Sox also shut out the Tigers in the nightcap, with Cisco Carlos gaining his first Major League victory, and pull into a third-place tie with the Tigers and within 1½ games of the first-place Minnesota Twins.
  • September 12 – The Cincinnati Reds sign infielder Dave Concepción as an international free agent.
  • September 17 – At Comiskey Park, veteran Rocky Colavito delivers another extra-innings win for the White Sox when his RBI single drives in the game's only run in a 17-inning, 1–0 victory over Colavito's former club, the Cleveland Indians. The win enables the fourth-place Pale Hose to keep pace in the AL race.
  • September 18:
    • The St. Louis Cardinals clinch their 11th National League pennant and their second in four seasons behind Bob Gibson's three-hit, complete-game 5–1 triumph over the Philadelphia Phillies at Connie Mack Stadium.
    • At Tiger Stadium, late-inning solo homers by Carl Yastrzemski (in the ninth) and Dalton Jones (in the tenth) deliver a come-from-behind, 6–5 victory for the Boston Red Sox over host Detroit. Yastrzemski's home run is his 40th of the year. Boston pulls into a flat-footed, first-place tie with the Tigers; both clubs are 85–66. Denny McLain, the Tigers' starting pitcher tonight, earns a no-decision. He leaves the game in the third inning with the contest tied 3–3, no outs, and two men on base. His line on the night: two innings pitched, four hits, two bases on balls, and four earned runs allowed.[2]
      • Some time after the game ends, McLain, who has won 17 games (and lost 16) so far in 1967, suffers a mysterious, season-ending foot injury. Sports Illustrated will allege over two years later that McLain, a compulsive gambler, sustained the injury when a mob enforcer stomped on his foot as punishment for not paying back a $45,600 gambling debt.[3]
  • September 20:
  • September 27:
    • In the tight AL pennant race, the possibility of a four-way tie is eliminated as the Minnesota Twins and Boston Red Sox both lose (5–1 to California and 6–0 to Cleveland, respectively). Minnesota now has a 91–69 won-lost record and Boston is 90–70, and the only games left for those two teams are two games against each other.
    • In what will be their last-ever home games in Kansas City, the last-place Athletics sweep the contending Chicago White Sox in a twinight doubleheader, 5–2 and 4–0; the two defeats ignite a five-game, end-of-season losing streak that wrecks the ChiSox' pennant chances.
  • September 28 – The Atlanta Braves fire second-year manager Billy Hitchcock with three games remaining in the 1967 campaign. He is succeeded during the offseason by Lum Harris, skipper of Triple-A Richmond and a close associate of new general manager Paul Richards.
  • September 29:
    • The White Sox lose 1–0 to the Washington Senators and are eliminated from the AL pennant race. Chicago, now 89–71, can win a maximum of 91 games, and must finish behind the Twins or the Red Sox. The only remaining tie possibilities are Twins–Tigers or Red Sox–Tigers.
    • Ferguson Jenkins of the Chicago Cubs wins his 20th game of 1967 with a 4–1 decision over the Reds in Cincinnati. It's the first of seven 20-win seasons for Jenkins in his Hall-of-Fame career, six of which come with the Cubs.

October

Carl Yastrzemski
  • October 1:
    • One of the closest major league pennant races ever enters the season's final day with the Boston Red Sox and Minnesota Twins tied for first place and the Detroit Tigers one-half game back in the American League. At Fenway Park, the Red Sox and Twins play each other, with the winner clinching a tie for the pennant and the loser eliminated. Eventual AL MVP Carl Yastrzemski goes four for four as the Red Sox beat the Twins 5–3. In the season's final two games, Yastrzemski goes seven for eight, with a home run (his 44th) and six RBI (winning the Triple Crown in the process), and makes a key outfield assist on defense.
    • The Tigers can tie if they sweep a doubleheader from the California Angels in Detroit. The Bengals win the first game 6–4, but their bullpen fails in the finale and the Angels win, 8–5, to give the Red Sox the pennant with no playoff. The Bosox, ninth-place finishers in 1966, win their first American League championship since 1946 and eighth AL flag overall.
    • For the first time since 1937 both Chicago teams win at least 85 games during the regular season. For the Cubs it's only their second above-.500 season since 1946.
    • In the Minnesota Twins' loss today, their third baseman, César Tovar, sets an AL season record by playing in 164 games. Maury Wills holds the NL record at 165 (1962).
  • October 2:
  • October 5 – In Game 2 of the 1967 World Series, Boston's Jim Lonborg is brilliant as he retires the first 19 St. Louis Cardinals before walking Curt Flood with one out in the seventh inning. His no-hit bid is broken up with two out in the eighth by a Julián Javier double. Lonborg has to settle for pitching the fourth one-hitter in World Series history as the Red Sox even the series with a 5–0 win.
  • October 6 – Catcher Bob Uecker is released by the Atlanta Braves.
  • October 8 – The Atlanta Braves trade left-hander Denny Lemaster, a 1967 NL All-Star, and starting shortstop Denis Menke to the Houston Astros for Houston's shortstop, Sonny Jackson, and first baseman Chuck Harrison.
  • October 9 – In Game 5 of the World Series, Jim Lonborg follows his Game 2, one-hit complete game shutout by holding the Cardinals scoreless on two hits over eight innings at Busch Memorial Stadium. Roger Maris finally solves Lonborg via a ninth-inning solo homer, but the Red Sox climb back into the Series with a 3–1 win to send it back to Boston. Lonborg's line over two starts: 18 IP, one run, four hits allowed, a 2–0 record, two complete games, and 0.50 ERA.
  • October 10 – The Cincinnati Reds trade former starting first baseman Deron Johnson to the Atlanta Braves for pitcher Jay Ritchie and outfielders Mack Jones and Jim Beauchamp.
  • October 11 – Gil Hodges, the Brooklyn Dodgers' Hall-of-Fame first baseman of the 1950s, returns to New York City, his adopted home, as the third permanent manager in New York Mets' history. Because Hodges, 43, is still under contract to the Washington Senators, whom he has managed since May 23, 1963, compensation will be arranged during the interleague trading period that coincides with the winter meetings.
  • October 12 – In Game 7 of the World Series, the St. Louis Cardinals earn their second world championship in four seasons with a 7–2 victory over pitcher Jim Lonborg, hurling on only two days' rest, and the Boston Red Sox. Bob Gibson, the Series MVP, notches his third win in the Series with a three-hitter; he records ten strikeouts and a fifth-inning home run, while outfielder Lou Brock has two hits and three stolen bases for a record seven steals in a seven-game World Series. It's the Cardinals' eighth World Series triumph in their history.
  • October 13 – The Pittsburgh Pirates name Larry Shepard, 48, their manager for 1968. Shepard, a former minor-league pitcher, spent 14 seasons managing in the Pirates' farm system.
  • October 14 – The Washington Senators name former two-time American League All-Star Jim Lemon, 39, to fill their managerial opening. Lemon is still popular in Washington as a slugging outfielder for the District's previous Senators franchise, now the Minnesota Twins.
  • October 16 – The Chicago White Sox release Smoky Burgess, 40, a portly former catcher who has become one the era's top pinch-hitting specialists. Burgess retires with a career .295 average in 1,691 games over 18 seasons. A nine-time National League All-Star during his catching days, he also holds the MLB record for career pinch hits with 145, a mark broken by Manny Mota in 1979.
  • October 18 – City officials from Kansas City, Oakland and Seattle are invited by American League president Joe Cronin to discuss the Athletics' relocation plans. United States Senator Stuart Symington of Missouri attends the meeting and threatens to revoke baseball's antitrust exemption if the A's are allowed to leave Kansas City. The owners began deliberation and after the first ballot, only six are in favour of relocation, Baltimore voting against, while Cleveland, New York and Washington abstain.[4] In the second ballot, the Yankees vote in favour of relocation. To appease all interested parties, the league announces that it will expand to Kansas City and Seattle no later than the 1971 MLB season—later accelerated to 1969.[5]
  • October 22 – Oakland Athletics owner Charlie Finley hires Hall of Famer Joe DiMaggio as the team's vice president. DiMaggio will also serve as a coach for the newly transplanted team. DiMaggio needed two more years of baseball service to qualify for the league's maximum pension allowance.[6]
  • October 25 – The Houston Astros sign outfielder César Cedeño as an international free agent.

November

Orlando Cepeda in 2017

December

Births

Deaths

References

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