1982 in baseball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following are the baseball events of the year 1982 throughout the world.

Major League Baseball

Awards and honors

MLB statistical leaders

Major league baseball final standings

Events

January

Hank Aaron in 1974

February

March

Travis Jackson

April

Whitey Herzog

May

Gaylord Perry in 1977

June

July

Tony Gwynn in 1983
  • July 19 – Tony Gwynn of the San Diego Padres makes his Major League debut. His double and single will be the first two hits of the 3,141 he will accumulate in his Hall of Fame career.
  • July 20 – The sudden, shocking decline of the Cincinnati Reds—who today are 34–58 (.370) and last in the NL West—costs fourth-year manager John McNamara his job. Coach Russ Nixon takes the helm. Cincinnati had compiled the best overall record (66–42, .611) in MLB during 1981's strike-disrupted season.
  • July 28 – The Texas Rangers fire manager Don Zimmer and appoint coach Darrell Johnson acting pilot. The Rangers are 38–58, in sixth place and 16½ games out of first. Zimmer departs with a 95–106 (.473) record in 1+ seasons. Ironically, in July 1976, the scenario was reversed when the Boston Red Sox fired Johnson as skipper and named Zimmer, then a coach, to succeed him.
  • July 29 – The Atlanta Braves were in first place in the National League West, 9 games ahead of the San Diego Padres when owner Ted Turner decides to remove the elevated tipi of mascot Chief Noc-A-Homa from the stands to allow more seats to be sold for the Braves' run at the division title. The Braves, however, lose 19 of their next 21 games, falling into third place before the tipi is restored.

August

September

Dale Murphy in 1984

October

Earl Weaver in 1977
Darrell Porter in 1988

November

Robin Yount in 2006

December

Tom Seaver during his early Mets' career

Births

Deaths

References

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