1969 Major League Baseball season

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The 1969 major league baseball season began on April 7, 1969, while the regular season ended on October 2. The postseason began on October 4. The 66th World Series began with Game 1 on October 11 and ended with Game 5 on October 16, with the New York Mets of the National League defeating the Baltimore Orioles of the American League, four games to one, capturing the franchise's first championship in what is considered one of the greatest upsets in World Series history.[1] The season was celebrated as the 100th anniversary of professional baseball, honoring the first professional touring baseball team, the Cincinnati Red Stockings of 1869. The season also brought rule changes to counteract pitchers' dominance in recent seasons, such as lowering the pitcher's mound and shrinking the height of the strike zone.

DurationRegular season:
  • April 7 – October 2, 1969
Postseason:
  • October 4–16, 1969
Games162
Quick facts League, Sport ...
1969 MLB season
LeagueAmerican League (AL)
National League (NL)
SportBaseball
DurationRegular season:
  • April 7 – October 2, 1969
Postseason:
  • October 4–16, 1969
Games162
Teams24 (12 per league)
TV partnerNBC
Draft
Top draft pickJeff Burroughs
Picked byWashington Senators
Regular season
Season MVPAL: Harmon Killebrew (MIN)
NL: Willie McCovey (SF)
Postseason
AL championsBaltimore Orioles
  AL runners-upMinnesota Twins
NL championsNew York Mets
  NL runners-upAtlanta Braves
World Series
ChampionsNew York Mets
  Runners-upBaltimore Orioles
World Series MVPDonn Clendenon (NYM)
MLB seasons
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The 40th Major League Baseball All-Star Game was held on July 23 at the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Washington, D.C., home of the Washington Senators. The National League won, 9–3.

The season saw the third round of expansion of the decade (and second for each league), with the enfranchisement of the Kansas City Royals and Seattle Pilots in the American League and the Montreal Expos and San Diego Padres in the National League. Both leagues increased to 12 teams; the National League had last been so large in 1899.

This would be the only season for the Pilots, as stadium problems and bankruptcy would lead them to move to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to become the Milwaukee Brewers the following season.

The expansion launched the "Divisional Era", as each league split its teams into two six-team divisions and scheduled more games between division rivals and fewer between interdivision teams. Each league implemented their own League Championship Series, which saw division champions face off in a best-of-five series (increased to seven in 1985) to determine pennant winners and World Series contenders.

The Baltimore Orioles won the AL East with a major-league-best 109–53 record, and then defeated the AL West champion Minnesota Twins in three games in the first American League Championship Series. The New York Mets won the NL East with an NL-best 100–62 record, and then defeated the NL West champion Atlanta Braves in three games in the first National League Championship Series. The "Miracle Mets", having joined the league in 1962, were the first expansion team to win a pennant.

New commissioner

Bowie Kuhn was named the 5th commissioner of baseball at the start of the season replacing previous commissioner William Eckert. Eckert was forced out by the owners in December 1968 mainly because of his refusal to cancel games in the wake of the assassinations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. and for his refusal to help the owners during a player strike they anticipated was around the corner. Kuhn was named interim commissioner during that time and became the official commissioner by the start of the season. Kuhn remains the youngest ever commissioner of baseball, being only 42 when he took office.

Expansion

MLB called for a four-team expansion to take place in 1971 at the 1967 Winter Meetings, the first expansion since 1962. However, there was a complication: influential U.S. Senator Stuart Symington of Missouri was irate over the American League's approval of Kansas City Athletics owner Charles O. Finley's arrangement to move his team to Oakland, California, for the 1968 season. This happened even though Finley had just signed a deal to play at Municipal Stadium at AL president Joe Cronin's behest, and Jackson County, Missouri, had just issued public bonds to build a stadium, the future Royals Stadium (now Kauffman Stadium), which would be completed in 1973.

Symington drew up legislation to remove baseball's anti-trust exemption and threatened to pursue its passage if Kansas City did not get a new team. The leagues agreed and moved expansion up to 1969, with the AL putting one of its new franchises in Kansas City, Missouri. Ewing Kauffman won the bidding for that franchise, naming it the Kansas City Royals, after the local American Royal livestock show. The other AL team was awarded to Seattle, Washington. A consortium led by Dewey Soriano and William Daley won the bidding for the Seattle franchise and named it the Seattle Pilots, a salute to the harbor pilots of the Puget Sound maritime industry and to the city's place in the aviation industry.

In the NL, one franchise was awarded to San Diego, California; the other to Montreal, Quebec, resulting in the first MLB franchise outside the United States. C. Arnholdt Smith, former owner of the AAA Pacific Coast League's San Diego Padres, won the bidding for the San Diego franchise, and the new San Diego MLB team inherited the Padres moniker. Charles Bronfman, owner of Seagram, won the bidding for the Montreal franchise, naming them the Expos, in honor of the World's Fair that year. This was the last NL expansion until the 1993 season, and the last expansion for the major leagues overall until 1977.

Division play

As part of the 1969 expansion, each league was to be split into two divisions of six teams each, with each league holding a best-of-five League Championship Series to decide the pennant. The AL was divided purely along geographic lines, but when it came to assign divisions in the NL, the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals insisted on being placed in the same division with the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies, on the basis that a schedule with more games with eastern teams would create a more lucrative schedule. Thus, Atlanta and Cincinnati were placed in the NL West. This alignment also addressed concerns that putting the league's three strongest clubs at the time—St. Louis, San Francisco, and the Cubs—in the west would result in divisional inequity.

The Padres and Expos each finished with 110 losses and at the bottom of their respective divisions. The Royals did better, finishing 69–93 and in fourth in the AL West, ahead of the Chicago White Sox. Even though the Pilots managed to avoid losing 100 games (they finished 64–98, last in the AL West), financial trouble would lead to a battle for team control, ending with bankruptcy and the sale of the team to Bud Selig and its move to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, as the Milwaukee Brewers for the 1970 season. The legal fallout of the battle would lead eventually to another round of expansion for the AL in the 1977 season, with Seattle getting a new team called the Mariners.

Logo commissioned by the Major League Baseball Centennial Committee and introduced by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn to celebrate 100 years of professional baseball.

A special silhouetted batter logo, still in use by the league today, was created by Jerry Dior[2] to commemorate the 100th anniversary of professional baseball. Every player and official in Major League Baseball wore a jersey patch that featured the logo and the phrase "100th anniversary" in red letters. It has served as inspiration for logos for other sports leagues in the United States—most notably the National Basketball Association, which used the silhouette of Jerry West to create their current logo, unveiled after the 1968–69 season.

Schedule

The 1969 schedule consisted of 162 games for all teams in the American League and National League, each of which had twelve teams. Each league was split into two six-team divisions. Each team was scheduled to play 18 games against their five division rivals, totaling 90 games, and 12 games against six interdivision opponents, totaling 72 games. This format was implemented due to expansion of each league from ten to twelve teams, and the subsequent split of each league into two divisions. This format would be used until 1977 in the American League and 1993 in the National League.

Opening Day took place on April 7, featuring six teams. The final day of the regular season was on October 2, featuring 18 teams. Each League Championship Series took place between October 4 and October 6. The World Series took place between October 11 and October 16.

Rules changes

The 1969 season saw the following rule changes:

  • In an effort to counteract a trend of low-scoring games and pitching ruling overall, Major League Baseball adopted two measures during the Baseball Winter Meetings held in December 1968.
    • The strike zone was reduced to the area over home plate between the armpits and the top of the knees of a batter.[3]
    • The height of the pitcher's mound was reduced from 15 inches to 10 inches, and it was recommended that the slope be gradual and uniform in every park.[3][4]
  • A save became an official MLB statistic to reward relief pitchers who preserve a lead while finishing a game.[3][5]
  • For relievers entering a game mid-game, scorers were now allowed to charge relievers with earned runs allowed, including potential inning ending plays that instead ended with errors. Runs would be earned for the relief pitcher, but unearned for the team.[3]
  • A "temporary inactive list" was created for players for when they were injured or ill, unrelated to baseball activities. For 21 days, players would be removed from rosters and would go unpaid. However, players would still remain under contract.[3]
  • The American League continued to experiment with rules during spring training, further experimenting with a permanent designated hitter and permanent pinch runner, as well as the automatically awarding first base for intentional walks (a rule that would not be implemented until 2017.[3][6]
  • Mid-season, the National League ruled that if a second game of a doubleheader was called off due to darkness, the game would be a suspended game.[7]

Teams

An asterisk (*) denotes the ballpark a team played the minority of their home games at

More information League, Division ...
League Division Team City Ballpark Capacity Manager[8]
American League East Baltimore Orioles Baltimore, Maryland Baltimore Memorial Stadium 52,137 Earl Weaver
Boston Red Sox Boston, Massachusetts Fenway Park 33,375 Dick Williams
Eddie Popowski
Cleveland Indians Cleveland, Ohio Cleveland Stadium 76,966 Alvin Dark
Detroit Tigers Detroit, Michigan Tiger Stadium 54,226 Mayo Smith
New York Yankees New York, New York Yankee Stadium 67,000 Ralph Houk
Washington Senators Washington, D.C. Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium 43,500 Ted Williams
West California Angels Anaheim, California Anaheim Stadium 43,202 Bill Rigney
Lefty Phillips
Chicago White Sox Chicago, Illinois
Milwaukee, Wisconsin*
White Sox Park
Milwaukee County Stadium*
46,550
43,768*
Al López
Don Gutteridge
Kansas City Royals Kansas City, Missouri Municipal Stadium 34,164 Joe Gordon
Minnesota Twins Bloomington, Minnesota Metropolitan Stadium 45,182 Billy Martin
Oakland Athletics Oakland, California Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 50,000 Hank Bauer
John McNamara
Seattle Pilots Seattle, Washington Sick's Stadium 25,420 Joe Schultz Jr.
National League East Chicago Cubs Chicago, Illinois Wrigley Field 36,644 Leo Durocher
Montreal Expos Montreal, Quebec Jarry Park Stadium 28,456 Gene Mauch
New York Mets New York, New York Shea Stadium 55,300 Gil Hodges
Philadelphia Phillies Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Connie Mack Stadium 33,608 Bob Skinner
George Myatt
Pittsburgh Pirates Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Forbes Field 35,500 Larry Shepard
Alex Grammas
St. Louis Cardinals St. Louis, Missouri Civic Center Busch Memorial Stadium 49,450 Red Schoendienst
West Atlanta Braves Atlanta, Georgia Atlanta Stadium 51,383 Lum Harris
Cincinnati Reds Cincinnati, Ohio Crosley Field 29,603 Dave Bristol
Houston Astros Houston, Texas Houston Astrodome 44,500 Harry Walker
Los Angeles Dodgers Los Angeles, California Dodger Stadium 56,000 Walter Alston
San Diego Padres San Diego, California San Diego Stadium 50,000 Preston Gómez
San Francisco Giants San Francisco, California Candlestick Park 42,500 Clyde King
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Spring training boycott

After the 1968 season, the Major League Baseball Players' Association and the owners had concluded the first collective bargaining agreement in major league history. However, one point remained unresolved: the owners refused to increase their contribution to the players' pension plan commensurately with revenues from television broadcasts, which were increasing as more and more fans watched games that way. With the two sides at an impasse, at the beginning of the year the union called on players to refuse to sign contracts until the issue was resolved. Many did, including stars like Brooks Robinson.[9]

The owners did not change their position, so the players' union called for members to boycott spring training the following month if the issue had not been resolved by then. After the union rejected the owners' offer of a higher yet still fixed contribution on February 17, the day before spring training was to begin, 400 players refused to report. The owners expected the situation to resolve itself soon in their favor, since they usually lost money on training camps while the players were foregoing their pay in the meantime.[9]

The players remained united, and few changed their minds about the boycott as it progressed. After the first week only 11 of those who initially boycotted had reported; at the time many had off-season jobs which they continued to work at, and those who did report were in many cases not certain of their futures with their teams. Meanwhile, the owners were being pressured by the television broadcasters, who would also lose money without games to broadcast, or if teams played games with largely unknown rookies—one NBC executive said his company "would not pay major league prices for minor league games".[9]

After that first week, new commissioner Bowie Kuhn leaned on the owners to reach an agreement as well, and they soon sat down with the players again. By February 25 they had acceded to most of the players' demands: a higher contribution of approximately $5.45 million annually, an earlier age at which players could begin drawing pensions, a wider range of benefits and less playing time required for eligibility. By the end of the month, all players had reported to spring training.[9]

Standings

American League

More information Team, W ...
AL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(1) Baltimore Orioles 10953 .673 6021 4932
Detroit Tigers 9072 .556 19 4635 4437
Boston Red Sox 8775 .537 22 4635 4140
Washington Senators 8676 .531 23 4734 3942
New York Yankees 8081 .497 28½ 4832 3249
Cleveland Indians 6299 .385 46½ 3348 2951
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More information Team, W ...
AL West
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(2) Minnesota Twins 9765 .599 5724 4041
Oakland Athletics 8874 .543 9 4932 3942
California Angels 7191 .438 26 4338 2853
Kansas City Royals 6993 .426 28 3645 3348
Chicago White Sox 6894 .420 29 4140 2754
Seattle Pilots 6498 .395 33 3447 3051
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National League

More information Team, W ...
NL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(1) New York Mets 10062 .617 5230 4832
Chicago Cubs 9270 .568 8 4932 4338
Pittsburgh Pirates 8874 .543 12 4734 4140
St. Louis Cardinals 8775 .537 13 4238 4537
Philadelphia Phillies 6399 .389 37 3051 3348
Montreal Expos 52110 .321 48 2457 2853
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More information Team, W ...
NL West
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(2) Atlanta Braves 9369 .574 5031 4338
San Francisco Giants 9072 .556 3 5229 3843
Cincinnati Reds 8973 .549 4 5031 3942
Los Angeles Dodgers 8577 .525 8 5031 3546
Houston Astros 8181 .500 12 5229 2952
San Diego Padres 52110 .321 41 2853 2457
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Postseason

The postseason began on October 4 and ended on October 16 with the New York Mets defeating the Baltimore Orioles in the 1969 World Series in five games.

Bracket

League Championship Series
(ALCS, NLCS)
World Series
EastBaltimore3
WestMinnesota0
ALBaltimore1
NLNY Mets4
EastNY Mets3
WestAtlanta0

Managerial changes

League leaders

American League

More information Stat, Player ...
Hitting leaders[10]
Stat Player Total
AVG Rod Carew (MIN) .332
OPS Reggie Jackson (OAK) 1.018
HR Harmon Killebrew (MIN) 49
RBI Harmon Killebrew (MIN) 140
R Reggie Jackson (OAK) 123
H Tony Oliva (MIN) 197
SB Tommy Harper (SEP) 73
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More information Stat, Player ...
Pitching leaders[11]
Stat Player Total
W Denny McLain (DET) 24
L Luis Tiant (CLE) 20
ERA Dick Bosman (WAS) 2.19
K Sam McDowell (CLE) 279
IP Denny McLain (DET) 325.0
SV Ron Perranoski (MIN) 31
WHIP Fritz Peterson (NYY) 0.996
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National League

More information Stat, Player ...
Hitting leaders[12]
Stat Player Total
AVG Pete Rose (CIN) .348
OPS Willie McCovey (SF) 1.108
HR Willie McCovey (SF) 45
RBI Willie McCovey (SF) 126
R Bobby Bonds (SF)
Pete Rose (CIN)
120
H Matty Alou (PIT) 231
SB Lou Brock (STL) 53
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More information Stat, Player ...
Pitching leaders[13]
Stat Player Total
W Tom Seaver (NYM) 25
L Clay Kirby (SD) 20
ERA Juan Marichal (SF) 2.10
K Ferguson Jenkins (CHC) 273
IP Gaylord Perry (SF) 325.1
SV Fred Gladding (HOU) 29
WHIP Juan Marichal (SF) 0.994
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Regular season recap

The pennant races in the American League lacked drama. In the east, the Baltimore Orioles won 109 games and won the division by a whopping 19 games over the defending world champion Detroit Tigers. The surprise team was the "new" Washington Senators. Under new manager Ted Williams, they went 86–76; it was their first winning season since joining the league in 1961. The Western Division race was a little closer, but the Minnesota Twins led most of the season and were never really threatened in winning the division by 9 games over the Oakland Athletics (who were the only other west team to finish over .500). The National League, on the other hand, was very dramatic. The Chicago Cubs won 35 of their first 50 games, and on August 16, they led the New York Mets and St. Louis Cardinals by 9 games. But the Mets proceeded to win 37 of their last 48 games while the Cubs went 20–28 in the same time period and the Mets won the division by 8 games. In the West, with 3 weeks to play in the season, 5 teams were all within 2 games of each other. The Houston Astros were the first to drop out of the race, losing 8 of 10. With two weeks to play, the San Francisco Giants led the Los Angeles Dodgers and Atlanta Braves by ½ game while the Cincinnati Reds were 2 games back. The Dodgers then lost 8 in a row and 10 of 11 to fall to 4th place. The Braves then went on a 10-game winning streak, ultimately clinching the division over the Giants on the next to last day of the season with a 3–2 win over the Reds. For the Giants, it was the 5th year in a row they would finish in 2nd place.

Milestones

Batters

Miscellaneous

Awards and honors

Regular season

More information Baseball Writers' Association of America Awards, BBWAA Award ...
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Other awards

Monthly awards

Player of the Month

More information Month, National League ...
Month National League
April Willie McCovey (SF)
May Ken Holtzman (CHC)
June Ron Santo (CHC)
July Roberto Clemente (PIT)
August Willie Davis (LAD)
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Baseball Hall of Fame

Home field attendance

More information Team name, Wins ...
Team name Wins Home attendance Per game
New York Mets[25] 100 37.0% 2,175,373 22.1% 26,529
Boston Red Sox[26] 87 1.2% 1,833,246 −5.5% 22,633
Los Angeles Dodgers[27] 85 11.8% 1,784,527 12.9% 22,031
St. Louis Cardinals[28] 87 −10.3% 1,682,783 −16.3% 21,035
Chicago Cubs[29] 92 9.5% 1,674,993 60.5% 20,427
Detroit Tigers[30] 90 −12.6% 1,577,481 −22.4% 19,475
Atlanta Braves[31] 93 14.8% 1,458,320 29.5% 18,004
Houston Astros[32] 81 12.5% 1,442,995 9.9% 17,815
Minnesota Twins[33] 97 22.8% 1,349,328 18.0% 16,658
Montreal Expos[34] 52 1,212,608 14,970
New York Yankees[35] 80 −3.6% 1,067,996 −9.9% 13,350
Baltimore Orioles[36] 109 19.8% 1,062,069 12.5% 13,112
Cincinnati Reds[37] 89 7.2% 987,991 34.7% 12,197
Washington Senators[38] 86 32.3% 918,106 67.9% 11,335
Kansas City Royals[39] 69 902,414 11,005
San Francisco Giants[40] 90 2.3% 873,603 4.3% 10,785
Oakland Athletics[41] 88 7.3% 778,232 −7.1% 9,608
Pittsburgh Pirates[42] 88 10.0% 769,369 10.9% 9,498
California Angels[43] 71 6.0% 758,388 −26.1% 9,363
Seattle Pilots[44] 64 677,944 8,268
Cleveland Indians[45] 62 −27.9% 619,970 −27.7% 7,654
Chicago White Sox[46] 68 1.5% 589,546 −26.7% 7,278
Philadelphia Phillies[47] 63 −17.1% 519,414 −21.8% 6,413
San Diego Padres[48] 52 512,970 6,333
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Venues

The 1969 season saw four new teams across the major leagues, and with it, four new venues:

The Washington Senators' District of Columbia Stadium was announced to be renamed to Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium on January 18, in the last days of the Johnson Administration, Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall announced that the stadium would be renamed Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, in Kennedy's honor following his assassination in 1968.[49] The dedication ceremony at the stadium was held several months later on June 7.[49][50] The official renaming ceremony was held on June 7,[49][50] but by then many had already been referring to it as "RFK Stadium" or simply "RFK".[51]

In addition to their primary home at White Sox Park, the Chicago White Sox would continue to play at the former home of the Milwaukee Braves in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at Milwaukee County Stadium, playing 11 of 81 home games (one against every other American League team), on April 23, May 22, 28, June 11, 16, July 2, 7, August 6, 13, September 1, and 26.[52] Though accounting for only 14% of home games, these 11 games accounted for 34% of the all home games for the White Sox.

Media

Television

NBC was the exclusive national TV broadcaster of MLB, airing the weekend Game of the Week, the All-Star Game, both League Championship Series, and the World Series.

Retired numbers

See also

References

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