1967 in baseball
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following are the baseball events of the year 1967 throughout the world.
Major League Baseball
- World Series: St. Louis Cardinals over Boston Red Sox (4–3); Bob Gibson, MVP
- All-Star Game, July 11 at Anaheim Stadium: National League, 2–1 (15 innings); Tony Pérez, MVP
Other champions
Awards and honors
- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Red Ruffing
- Lloyd Waner
- Branch Rickey (executive)
| Baseball Writers' Association of America Awards | ||
|---|---|---|
| BBWAA Award | National League | American League |
| Rookie of the Year | Tom Seaver (NYM) | Rod Carew (MIN) |
| Cy Young Award | Mike McCormick (SF) | Jim Lonborg (BOS) |
| Most Valuable Player | Orlando Cepeda (STL) | Carl Yastrzemski (BOS) |
| Gold Glove Awards | ||
| Position | National League | American League |
| Pitcher | Bob Gibson (STL) | Jim Kaat (MIN) |
| Catcher | Randy Hundley (CHC) | Bill Freehan (DET) |
| 1st Base | Wes Parker (LAD) | George Scott (BOS) |
| 2nd Base | Bill Mazeroski (PIT) | Bobby Knoop (CAL) |
| 3rd Base | Ron Santo (CHC) | Brooks Robinson (BAL) |
| Shortstop | Gene Alley (PIT) | Jim Fregosi (CAL) |
| Outfield | Roberto Clemente (PIT) | Paul Blair (BAL) |
| Curt Flood (STL) | Al Kaline (DET) | |
| Willie Mays (SF) | Carl Yastrzemski (BOS) | |
Statistical leaders
| American League | National League | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stat | Player | Total | Player | Total |
| AVG | Carl Yastrzemski1 (BOS) | .326 | Roberto Clemente (PIT) | .357 |
| HR | Harmon Killebrew (MIN) Carl Yastrzemski1 (BOS) |
44 | Hank Aaron (ATL) | 39 |
| RBI | Carl Yastrzemski1 (BOS) | 121 | Orlando Cepeda (STL) | 111 |
| W | Jim Lonborg (BOS) Earl Wilson (DET) |
22 | Mike McCormick (SF) | 22 |
| ERA | Joe Horlen (CWS) | 2.06 | Phil Niekro (ATL) | 1.87 |
| K | Jim Lonborg (BOS) | 246 | Jim Bunning (PHI) | 253 |
1 American League Triple Crown batting winner
Major league baseball final standings
American League final standings
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National League final standings
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Nippon Professional Baseball final standings
Central League final standings
| Central League | G | W | L | T | Pct. | GB |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yomiuri Giants | 134 | 84 | 46 | 4 | .646 | — |
| Chunichi Dragons | 134 | 72 | 58 | 4 | .554 | 12.0 |
| Hanshin Tigers | 136 | 70 | 60 | 6 | .538 | 14.0 |
| Taiyo Whales | 135 | 59 | 71 | 5 | .454 | 25.0 |
| Sankei Atoms | 135 | 58 | 72 | 5 | .446 | 26.0 |
| Hiroshima Carp | 138 | 47 | 83 | 8 | .362 | 37.0 |
Pacific League final standings
| Pacific League | G | W | L | T | Pct. | GB |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hankyu Braves | 134 | 75 | 55 | 4 | .577 | — |
| Nishitetsu Lions | 140 | 66 | 64 | 10 | .508 | 9.0 |
| Toei Flyers | 134 | 65 | 65 | 4 | .500 | 10.0 |
| Nankai Hawks | 133 | 64 | 66 | 3 | .492 | 11.0 |
| Tokyo Orions | 137 | 61 | 69 | 7 | .469 | 14.0 |
| Kintetsu Buffaloes | 132 | 59 | 71 | 2 | .454 | 16.0 |
Events
January
- January 12 – John McHale quits as president of the Atlanta Braves to become chief of staff to Commissioner of Baseball William Eckert. McHale replaces Lee MacPhail, who was named general manager of the New York Yankees in October 1966.
- January 23 – Future Baseball Hall of Famer Stan Musial is named general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, replacing Bob Howsam, who one day earlier took a similar position with the Cincinnati Reds. Musial will spend only one season as the Redbirds' GM, but it results in a World Series championship. Howsam will turn around the fortunes of the Reds into a 1970s dynasty as "The Big Red Machine," which will win four National League pennants and two World Series titles between 1970 and 1976.
- January 28 – The Boston Red Sox select future Baseball Hall of Fame catcher and native New Englander Carlton Fisk in the first round, fourth overall, of the January 1967 amateur draft. Fisk, 19, is a sophomore at the University of New Hampshire.
- January 29 – Executive Branch Rickey and outfielder Lloyd Waner are elected to the Hall of Fame by a unanimous vote of the Special Veterans Committee.
February

- February 10 – The New York Mets purchase the contract of veteran relief pitcher Ron Taylor from the Houston Astros.
- February 16 – Pitcher Red Ruffing is selected for the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers' Association of America through a special runoff election, since no one received the required 75 percent vote in January.
March
- March 1 – Commissioner of Baseball William Eckert approves a proposal by the Baseball Writers' Association of America that the annual Cy Young Award, given since 1956 to a single pitcher in MLB regardless of league, be separated into American League and National League awards. Recently retired Sandy Koufax won the all-MLB CYA three times in those 11 years.
- March 23 – Young Boston Red Sox first baseman George Scott, a future eight-time Gold Glove Award winner, knocks himself unconscious running into the right field wall chasing a fly ball during a spring training contest. The Red Sox' rookie manager, Dick Williams, who has been playing Scott in the outfield to improve his versatility, immediately announces an end to the experiment.
April
- April 1 – New York Mets general manager Bing Devine, on the job since last autumn, makes a five-player trade with his former team, acquiring pitcher Art Mahaffey and infielders Jerry Buchek and Tony Martínez from the St. Louis Cardinals for infielder Eddie Bressoud, outfielder Danny Napoleon and cash.
- April 2 – The Mets re-sign pitcher Ralph Terry, who had been released by them the previous November. Terry, 31, will appear in two early-season games then be released again on May 16, ending his MLB career.
- April 3 – The New York Yankees trade pitcher Jack Cullen, outfielder/first baseman John Miller and $25,000 to the Los Angeles Dodgers for third baseman John Kennedy. As part of the deal, the Yanks option young outfielder Roy White to the Dodgers' Spokane Indians Triple-A affiliate. White—who remains Yankee property—will bat .343 in 84 games with Spokane and be recalled to New York in mid-July.
- April 7 – The Detroit Tigers purchase the contract of rookie catcher Jim Price, 25, from the Pittsburgh Pirates. After spending five years as the Tigers' reserve backstop, he will eventually join their broadcast team and work for them from 1993 until his 2023 death.
- April 10 – The contract of first baseman/outfielder Tito Francona, 33, is purchased by the Philadelphia Phillies from the St. Louis Cardinals.

- April 11:
- Future Hall-of-Famer Rod Carew of the Minnesota Twins makes his MLB debut by singling in his first at bat off the Baltimore Orioles' Dave McNally at Memorial Stadium. Carew, now 21, will compile 3,053 hits over the course of his 19-season career.
- In their season opener, the Chicago Cubs beat the Philadelphia Phillies 4–2 before 16,642 at Wrigley Field. Ferguson Jenkins tosses a complete game and Glenn Beckert hits a home run.
- April 14 – In his MLB debut, Billy Rohr of the Boston Red Sox has a no-hitter broken up with two out—and one strike to go—in the ninth inning a 3–0 victory over the New York Yankees and Whitey Ford at Yankee Stadium. A single by Elston Howard breaks up the bid, the only hit Rohr will allow. Exactly one week later, Rohr again defeats the Yankees in a complete game victory, this time at Fenway Park—the second of: 1) the only two games Rohr will win this season, and 2) the only three contests he will win as a major-leaguer.
- April 16:
- At Busch Memorial Stadium, in the St. Louis Cardinals' fourth game of the season, Lou Brock hits two home runs in an 11–8 victory over the Houston Astros. With two homers against the Los Angeles Dodgers the day before and a fifth against the San Francisco Giants on Opening Day, Brock becomes the first player to hit five home runs in his team's first four games of the regular season.
- Two marathon games mark American League play. In New York, the Boston Red Sox and the Yankees go 18 innings before Joe Pepitone's RBI single delivers a 7–6 victory for the Bombers. At Comiskey Park, Jerry Adair draws a bases-loaded walk in the 16th to seal a 4–3 triumph for his Chicago White Sox over the Washington Senators.
- April 20 – Tom Seaver of the New York Mets earns his first major league victory, 6–1, over the visiting Chicago Cubs. It's the second start of his MLB career.
- April 21 – The Los Angeles Dodgers run of 737 consecutive games without a game being rained out ends.[1]
- April 25 – The Cubs acquire relief pitcher Dick Radatz from the Cleveland Indians for a player to be named later ("PTBNL"), minor-league outfielder Bob Raudman.
- April 30 – At Memorial Stadium, Steve Barber and Stu Miller combine for a no-hitter, but the Detroit Tigers score twice in the ninth on three bases on balls, a wild pitch, and an error (by rookie Mark Belanger, playing second base as a late-inning replacement) for a 2–1 win over the Baltimore Orioles. Barber walks ten men and throws two wild pitches in 82⁄3 innings and absorbs the defeat.
May
- May 8 – The Houston Astros sell the contract of veteran pitcher Turk Farrell to the Philadelphia Phillies. Now 33, Farrell returns to his original (1956–1961) MLB team, where he was a National League All-Star and a member of the "Dalton Gang," a group of high-living young Phillies known for late-night, curfew-challenging antics.
- May 10:
- The New York Mets make two deals. They acquire veteran third baseman Ed Charles from the Kansas City Athletics for outfielder Larry Elliot and $50,000. Charles will be an important piece of the 1969 "Miracle Mets". In the second transaction, they purchase the contracts of pitcher John Miller and utilityman/pinch hitter Bob "Rocky" Johnson from the Baltimore Orioles.
- Mike Epstein, the Orioles' rookie backup first baseman and The Sporting News' and Topps' 1966 Minor Year Player of the Year, refuses to return to Triple-A Rochester on option to gain more playing time. Instead, the heralded 23-year-old prospect goes on what The Sporting News describes as a "sit-down strike."
- May 14 – The New York Yankees' Mickey Mantle becomes the sixth member of the 500-home run club in New York's 6–5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium. Mantle connects while batting left-handed off Baltimore's Stu Miller.
- May 16 – Carl Yastrzemski hits his 100th career home run in an 8–5 Boston Red Sox loss to the Baltimore Orioles at Fenway Park.
- May 29 – Mike Epstein's sit-down strike ends after 19 days when the Orioles trade him to the Washington Senators with left-handed pitcher Frank Bertaina for southpaw Pete Richert. Epstein becomes Washington's regular first baseman.
- May 30 – New York Yankees pitcher Whitey Ford announces his retirement after pitching 16 seasons, all of them with the Yankees. He would be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in his second year of eligibility in 1974 alongside his longtime teammate Mickey Mantle.
June

- June 2 – The Boston Red Sox acquire veteran infielder Jerry Adair from the Chicago White Sox for relief pitcher Don McMahon and minor-league hurler Rob Snow. Adair will fill in at third base, shortstop and second base and bat .291 in 89 games, proving vital to the Red Sox during the pennant drive.
- June 4:
- The Washington Senators and Baltimore Orioles battle into the 19th inning before Oriole catcher Andy Etchebarren barrels a two-run, walk-off home run to give Baltimore a 7–5 triumph.
- The surprising Boston Red Sox, who are 24–22 and hanging close to the American League leaders, add starting pitching, obtaining right-hander Gary Bell from the Cleveland Indians for young first baseman Tony Horton and outfielder Don Demeter.
- June 5 – The Atlanta Braves acquire veteran backup catcher Bob Uecker from the Philadelphia Phillies for catcher/first baseman Gene Oliver. Uecker, 33, is in the process of batting .150 in 80 total games during his sixth and final MLB campaign.
- June 7 – Willie Stargell hits his 100th career home run helping Pittsburgh Pirates beat New York Mets 3–0.
- June 9:
- Less than two years removed from leading the Minnesota Twins to the 1965 American League pennant, Sam Mele is replaced by veteran minor-league manager Cal Ermer as Minnesota's pilot. Mele had posted a 524–436 (.546) mark since June 1961. Under Ermer, the slow-starting, 25–25 Twins will rebound to join a furious, four-team 1967 pennant race that isn't decided until the final day of the regular season.
- In the top of the fifth inning of the second game of a twi-night doubleheader at Kansas City's Municipal Stadium, the Athletics' 21-year-old rookie and top prospect Reggie Jackson enters his first MLB contest playing right field in place of Mike Hershberger. In the bottom of the frame, in his first big-league at bat, Jackson triples off the Cleveland Indians' Orlando Peña. Kansas City sweeps the twin bill, 2–0 and 6–0.
- In a cash transaction, the Athletics reacquire 25-year-old first baseman Ken Harrelson from the Washington Senators. Back with his original team, Harrelson will come alive at the plate, hitting .305 in 61 games into mid-August.
- June 10 – The New York Mets trade journeyman right-hander Jack Hamilton to the California Angels for southpaw Nick Willhite.
- June 11 – At Wrigley Field, the Chicago Cubs pound the Mets 18–10 in a contest that features 11 home runs between the two teams. The Cubs' Adolfo Phillips slugs three homers, and Randy Hundley adds two.
- June 15 – At the Astrodome, Jimmy Wynn becomes the first Houston Astro to hit three home runs in one game. The shots, all with the bases empty, come in the fourth, sixth and eighth innings of the Astros' 6–2 victory over the San Francisco Giants.
- June 17 – It takes 19 innings for the Detroit Tigers and visiting Kansas City Athletics to settle matters in the second game of a Saturday doubleheader. Kansas City catcher Dave Duncan, later known as an influential, longtime pitching coach, homers off Detroit's Mike Marshall in the top of the 19th, then left-hander Bill Edgerton holds Detroit scoreless in the bottom half to give the Athletics a 6–5 win and a split of the twin bill. It's Edgerton's only MLB victory.
- June 18 – At the Astrodome, Don Wilson of the Houston Astros no-hits the Atlanta Braves 2–0, the first no-hitter ever pitched either in a domed stadium or on artificial turf. Along the way, he records 15 strikeouts, including Hank Aaron for the final out.
- June 21 – At Yankee Stadium, the Yanks' Thad Tillotson sparks a beanball war with the Boston Red Sox' Jim Lonborg. In the second inning, Tillotson hits Bosox third baseman Joe Foy in the batting helmet with a fastball; Foy had slugged a grand slam the night before. When Tillotson comes to bat, Lonborg, a Stanford University alumnus known as "Gentleman Jim," throws a fastball that hits the Bombers' hurler between the shoulder blades, and the benches empty. Joe Pepitone injures his left wrist in the melee, but no one is ejected. The brushback pitches continue from both sides, culminating, in the fifth inning, when Lonborg hits Yankee pinch-hitter Dick Howser in the helmet with a fastball—the last shot fired in today's duel. The Red Sox win 8–1, the incident is cited as galvanizing the Bosox into a pennant contender, and Lonborg (whose willingness to throw inside will enable him to lead American League moundsmen in hit batsmen (with 19), wins 22 games, and captures the 1967 AL Cy Young Award.
- June 27 – Trying to break up a double play, the Baltimore Orioles' Frank Robinson slides hard into Chicago White Sox second baseman Al Weis. Robinson's head collides violently with Weis' knee, and the reigning AL MVP, batting .337 with 21 home runs so far in 1967, is knocked unconscious from a concussion; he misses over a month of action. Weis, meanwhile, limps from the field and undergoes season-ending knee surgery. The Orioles, already a disappointing 32–36, fall further out of contention during Robinson's absence and well short of defending their 1966 world championship.
July
- July 2 – The surprising Chicago Cubs move into a tie for first place with the St. Louis Cardinals by defeating the Cincinnati Reds 4–1 before 40,464 at Wrigley Field. After the game, many in the crowd wait until the flags of the ten National League teams flying over the scoreboard are rearranged to show the Cubs' flag at the top. It's the first time the Cubs are in first place this late in a season since 1945, when they won the NL title.
- July 4:
- The Niekro brothers face each other for the first time, with Phil Niekro pitching for the homestanding Atlanta Braves and Joe Niekro hurling for the Cubs. Phil beats Joe, 8–3, in the first game of a double-header. The Braves also take the second game, 4–2.
- At the MLB season's "traditional" half-way point, the St. Louis Cardinals (46–30) and Chicago Cubs (46–31) are still neck-and-neck in the National League pennant race, with the slumping Cincinnati Reds (44–36) now four games back; Cincinnati had set the NL pace until falling into a funk in mid-June. It's a good year for baseball in the "Windy City," because, in the American League, the Chicago White Sox (44–30) stand three games in front of the Minnesota Twins (42–34) and 3½ ahead of the Detroit Tigers (41–34).
- July 11 – At Anaheim Stadium, Tony Pérez decides the longest All-Star Game (15 innings, three hours and 41 minutes) with a home run off Catfish Hunter in a 2–1 National League victory over the American League. Solo homers by Richie Allen and the AL's Brooks Robinson account for the other runs, as Pérez is named MVP.
- July 14 – Future Hall of Famer Eddie Mathews, now with the Houston Astros, becomes the seventh member of the 500 home run club. Juan Marichal of the San Francisco Giants, also a future Hall of Famer, serves up the "gopher ball".

- July 15 – In a battle between two other future Baseball Hall of Famers, a line drive off the bat of the Pittsburgh Pirates' Roberto Clemente breaks the right fibula of St. Louis Cardinals' pitcher Bob Gibson in the fourth inning of a game at Busch Memorial Stadium. After a visit from the team trainer, Gibson doesn't leave the game immediately; he faces three more batters before collapsing in pain. Gibson misses almost eight weeks of the season before returning to the mound September 7. He will make four more September starts, as the Cardinals run away with the National League race. Then, in the 1967 World Series, he dominates the Boston Red Sox with three complete game triumphs to give St. Louis a seven-game Series championship.
- July 18 – The disappointing Pirates, expected to contend for the NL pennant but sitting at 42–42 and in sixth place, fire skipper Harry Walker and replace him with former Buc manager Danny Murtaugh. In the second of what will be four separate terms as the Pirates' manager, Murtaugh leads them to a 39–39 mark in 1967, then returns to the front office.
- July 22 – The Chicago White Sox, their American League lead dwindling, move to add offensive punch by acquiring veteran third baseman Ken Boyer, 36, the 1964 National League MVP, from the New York Mets, for minor league third baseman Bill Southworth. The four-player trade includes two "PTBNLs," with the White Sox also acquiring infielder Sandy Alomar Sr. on August 15, then completing the transaction on November 27 by sending backup catcher J. C. Martin to the Mets.
- July 23:
- The red-hot Boston Red Sox win their ninth and tenth consecutive games by sweeping a doubleheader from the Indians at Cleveland Stadium, jumping into pennant contention. When their flight to Boston lands that night at Logan International Airport, the Red Sox are greeted by an estimated 10,000 fans. On April 12, only 8,324 had attended their Opening Day game at Fenway Park.
- With the California Angels also in the midst of a seven-game winning streak, the American League race is now a five-headed affair at the end of today's action. Only 3½ games now separate the top five AL teams: in order, the White Sox (53–40), Red Sox (52–40), Angels (53–44), Tigers (50–43) and Twins (49–43).
- July 25 – The Chicago Cubs lose 4–3 to the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Memorial Stadium in a battle between two teams deadlocked at the top of the National League standings. Veteran Ray Washburn goes eight strong innings for the victory. The Cardinals grab, and will hold onto, undisputed possession of first place in the Senior Circuit; the Cubs ultimately finish third, 14 games behind. Nevertheless, with 87 victories in 161 games, 1967 stands as their most successful season since 1945.
- July 29 – The Chicago White Sox trade for more right-handed punch, acquiring slugger Rocky Colavito from the Cleveland Indians for fellow veteran outfielder Jim King and a "PTBNL" (infielder Marv Staehle).
August
- August 2 – The Boston Red Sox obtain catcher Elston Howard from the New York Yankees for cash and two players to be named later, young pitchers Ron Klimkowski and Pete Magrini. The 38-year-old Howard will play a part in the Red Sox winning the 1967 American League pennant.
- August 8 – Johnny Callison's two-out single in the tenth inning scores John Briggs from third base and gives the Philadelphia Phillies a 5–4 win over the San Francisco Giants, extending the Phillies' winning streak to eight, their longest since 1963. Nevertheless, they remain in sixth place in the National League, ten full games behind the runaway St. Louis Cardinals.
- August 9 – In 20 innings at Metropolitan Stadium, the Washington Senators outlast the Minnesota Twins 9–7. Two relievers, one from each side, Darold Knowles (10 innings) and Al Worthington (82⁄3), turn in shutout performances, and Ken McMullen's homer breaks the deadlock. The win brings the seven-year-old expansion Senators to .500 after 110 games—their best later-season showing so far in their history. Every defeat will be costly for Minnesota, which will miss out on a pennant by a single game in October.
- August 11 – Joe Torre's 16th-inning homer enables the Atlanta Braves to "walk off" with a 6–5 triumph over the visiting Houston Astros.
- August 13 – With their 3–2 victory today, the Minnesota Twins complete a three-game series sweep over the visiting Chicago White Sox and replace the ChiSox at the top of the American League leader board. Feisty White Sox manager Eddie Stanky is ejected in the ninth inning after Tommie Agee is called out at third base trying to stretch a double. In the airtight AL race, only three games separate the top five teams.
- August 17 – The Detroit Tigers, three lengths behind in the AL derby, add left-handed punch by acquiring future Hall-of-Fame slugger Eddie Mathews from the Houston Astros for two "PTBNLs," pitchers Fred Gladding and Leo Marentette.
- August 18:
- Tony Conigliaro of the Boston Red Sox is beaned by the California Angels' Jack Hamilton. Hit on the left cheekbone, just below the eye socket, Conigliaro will miss the rest of 1967 and all of 1968. He was hitting .287 with 20 home runs and 67 RBIs in 95 games in 1967, and had been selected an American League All-Star. Despite the loss of "Tony C", the Red Sox will sweep the four-game series with the Angels. The four losses extend the Halos' losing streak to seven games, effectively knocking them out of the pennant race, and leaves the Minnesota Twins in first place, with Boston, the Detroit Tigers and the Chicago White Sox all within two games.
- Kansas City Athletics owner Charles O. Finley suspends pitcher Lew Krausse for alleged misconduct on an early-August team flight. Today's suspension kicks off a chain reaction of events in which Krausse's teammates formally and publicly protest Finley's decision (August 19), Finley fires manager Alvin Dark for failing to fully back the suspension (August 22), and then releases hard-hitting first baseman and Dark supporter Ken Harrelson for calling the owner "a menace to baseball" (August 25). Meanwhile, batting coach Luke Appling, the Hall-of-Fame former shortstop, takes over the managerial reins of the last-place Athletics.
- August 20 – In the first game of a doubleheader, Al Kaline hits his 300th career home run helping the Detroit Tigers beat the Cleveland Indians, 4–2. Kaline has another home run in the second game with Detroit winning, 4–0.
- August 22 – The Tigers sweep another twin bill at their home ballpark—this time against fellow contenders, the Minnesota Twins, 7–3 and 2–1 (11 innings). The nightcap is decided when second baseman Dick McAuliffe triples and scores on a wild pitch. One game now separates the American League's four top teams, with the Chicago White Sox (68–53, .562) and Boston Red Sox (69–54, .561) virtually tied for first, and the Twins (67–54, .554) and Tigers (68–55, .553) virtually tied for third.
- August 25 – Minnesota Twins pitcher Dean Chance no-hits the Cleveland Indians. He walks five and allows one run. Nineteen days earlier, Chance had thrown five perfect innings against the Red Sox to defeat Boston 2–0 in a game shortened by rain.
- August 27 – Rocky Colavito's bases-loaded walk in the 11th inning drives in the game's only run, as the Chicago White Sox gain a split of their doubleheader with the Red Sox, 1–0, at Comiskey Park. In Game 1, an unexpectedly strong throw from right fielder José Tartabull cuts down Ken Berry at home plate in the bottom of the ninth to preserve a 9–8 Boston victory.
- August 28:
- The Philadelphia Phillies rise to a virtual tie for second place in the National League after another winning streak—eight straight games—with a 3-2 win over the Cincinnati Reds. The Phillies capture 21 of their last 29 games in 1967 to finish with 82 wins, their last winning season until 1975.
- After a three-day bidding war for his services, free agent Ken Harrelson signs a $75,000 contract to join the contending Boston Red Sox—a 600 percent salary increase from his pre-August 25 annual salary. Boston will plug Harrelson into Tony Conigliaro's right field position during the pennant drive.
- August 29 – The first-place Red Sox and ninth-place Yankees play another marathon tilt at Yankee Stadium: a 20-inning affair won by the Yankees 4–3 to split a Tuesday twi-night doubleheader. Future author Jim Bouton goes five shutout innings to gain the win.
September

- 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 32⁄3 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:
- Steve Carlton, the Cardinals' 22-year-old southpaw, strikes out 16 Philadelphia Phillies in eight innings, but drops a 3–1 decision.
- Wes Westrum resigns as manager of the last-place New York Mets with 11 games remaining in the regular season.
- 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

- 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:
- Alvin Dark, fired by the Kansas City Athletics on August 22, signs a two-year contract as manager of the Cleveland Indians, replacing Joe Adcock.
- Former NL MVP (1960) Dick Groat, now 37 and playing for the San Francisco Giants, announces his retirement after 14 seasons and 1,929 games played.
- 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

- November 7 – Orlando Cepeda is the unanimous choice for the National League Most Valuable Player Award. Known to his teammates as "Cha Cha," Cepeda is the on- and off-field leader of the world-champion Cardinals, whom Cepeda nicknames El Birdos. He's the first unanimous NL MVP since 1936 (Carl Hubbell).
- November 8 – The New York Mets acquire outfielder Art Shamsky from the Cincinnati Reds for utility infielder Bob "Rocky" Johnson. Shamsky will be a key figure on the 1969 "Miracle Mets", batting .300 in 100 regular-season games and .538 in the Mets' 1969 NLCS sweep.
- November 15 – Capturing all but one first-place vote, Triple-Crown-winner Carl Yastrzemski is a near-unanimous choice for the 1967 American League Most Valuable Player Award. Minneapolis baseball writer Max Nichols' strongly criticized vote for hometown player César Tovar is the lone dissenting tally.
- November 20:
- Tom Seaver of the New York Mets wins the 1967 National League Rookie of the Year Award. With 11 first-place votes, he outdistances fellow pitchers Gary Nolan and Dick Hughes.
- The Minnesota Twins release stalwart veteran catcher Earl Battey, a five-time American League All-Star. Until he was slowed by injuries, Battey, 32, was the franchise's first-string receiver for seven seasons.
- November 21 – Ohio's big-league clubs make an interleague trade when the Cleveland Indians obtain outfielder Tommy Harper from the Cincinnati Reds for pitcher George Culver, first baseman Fred Whitfield and outfielder Bob Raudman.
- November 22 – Minnesota Twins second baseman Rod Carew wins the American League Rookie of the Year Award. Receiving 19 of 20 first place votes, Carew easily surpasses Reggie Smith of the Boston Red Sox.
- November 27 – The New York Mets trade pitcher Bill Denehy and $100,000 to the Washington Senators for Washington's manager, Gil Hodges, who on October 11 became the third permanent skipper in the Mets' seven-year history. The former Brooklyn Dodgers great and eventual Hall of Famer will lead the 1969 "Miracle Mets" to the world championship.
- November 28 – Foes in the seven-game 1965 World Series, the Los Angeles Dodgers and Minnesota Twins collaborate for a five-player interleague trade. The Dodgers send pitchers Bob Miller and Ron Perranoski and longtime starting catcher John Roseboro to the Twins for pitcher Mudcat Grant and shortstop Zoilo Versalles, who had been the 1965 AL MVP.
- November 29:
- The Chicago White Sox reacquire Hall-of-Fame shortstop Luis Aparicio, along with outfielder Russ Snyder and outfielder/first baseman John Matias, from the Baltimore Orioles in exchange for pitchers Bruce Howard and Roger Nelson and infielder/outfielder Don Buford. The trade opens the Baltimore shortstop job for slick-fielding Mark Belanger, 23, a future eight-time Gold Glove Award winner.
- The Cleveland Indians and California Angels swap outfielders, with Chuck Hinton going to the Angels for José Cardenal.
- November 30:
- The Chicago Cubs trade right-hander Ray Culp to the Boston Red Sox for outfielder Rudy Schlesinger and second baseman Al Montreuil (PTBNL). Culp, 25, will average 16 victories a season for the Bosox between 1968 and 1971.
- The Los Angeles Dodgers trade outfielder Lou Johnson to the Cubs for infielder Paul Popovich and outfielder Jim Williams.
- The New York Yankees purchase utility infielder Gene "Stick" Michael, 29, from the Dodgers, beginning Michael's long association with the Bombers as a player, coach, scout, manager and executive.
December
- December 2 – The Pittsburgh Pirates acquire veteran right-hander Ron Kline from the Minnesota Twins for rookie outfielder Bob Oliver. It's Kline's second stint with the Pirates: after breaking in with terrible Pittsburgh teams in 1952 (and leading the National League in games lost in both 1956 and 1958), Kline will sparkle in 1968 coming out of the Bucs' bullpen (12–5, seven saves, 1.68 ERA).
- December 6 – Bing Devine returns to the St. Louis Cardinals as general manager, succeeding Stan Musial, who resigns. A major builder of the Redbirds' 1964 and 1967 world champions, Devine had been prematurely fired by owner Gussie Busch in mid-August 1964. He then spent three years with the New York Mets, including one as president/general manager, positioning them for their remarkable 1969 season. Johnny Murphy succeeds Devine as the Mets' front-office boss.
- December 7 – The Atlanta Braves trade minor-league third baseman Bobby Cox to the New York Yankees for pitcher Dale Roberts and catcher Bob Tillman. Ten years later, Cox will return to the Braves for his first term as their manager and kick off a Baseball Hall of Fame career as their dugout leader.
- December 15:
- On the last day of the three-week interleague trading period then in force, the New York Mets trade pitchers Jack Fisher and Billy Wynne, catcher Buddy Booker and outfielder Tommy Davis to the Chicago White Sox for infielder Al Weis and centerfielder Tommie Agee. Both Weis and Agee will prove integral to the Mets' 1969 World Series championship.
- The Philadelphia Phillies trade future Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Bunning, 36, to the Pittsburgh Pirates for left-hander Woodie Fryman and three minor-leaguers, one of whom is prized third base prospect Don Money.
- The American League champion Boston Red Sox acquire left-hander Dick Ellsworth and catcher/first baseman Gene Oliver from the Phillies for catcher Mike Ryan and cash.