1984 San Diego Padres season

Major League Baseball season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1984 San Diego Padres season was the 16th season in franchise history. San Diego won the National League (NL) championship and advanced to the World Series, which they lost to the Detroit Tigers four games to one. The Padres were led by manager Dick Williams and third-year player Tony Gwynn, who won the NL batting title and finished third in voting for the NL Most Valuable Player Award.

Quick facts San Diego Padres, League ...
1984 San Diego Padres
National League champions
National League West champions
LeagueNational League
DivisionWest
BallparkJack Murphy Stadium
CitySan Diego, California
Record92–70 (.568)
Divisional place1st
OwnersJoan Kroc
General managersJack McKeon
ManagersDick Williams
TelevisionKCST
San Diego Cable Sports Network
(Dave Campbell, Jerry Coleman, Bob Chandler, Ted Leitner)
RadioKFMB (AM)
(Dave Campbell, Jerry Coleman)
XEXX
(Gustavo Lopez, Mario Thomas Zapiain)
 1983
1985 
Close

In their first 15 seasons, the Padres had an overall won–lost record of 995–1372 for a .420 winning percentage,[1] and finished with a winning record just once (1978).[2] They had never finished higher than fourth in the National League West, and eight times they had finished in last place.[2] However, they were coming off consecutive 81–81 seasons in Williams' two years as San Diego's manager.[3] They won the NL West in 1984 with a 92–70 record, and set a then-franchise record in attendance, drawing nearly two million fans (1,983,904).[4] They defeated the Chicago Cubs in the NLCS, three games to two, becoming the first NL team to win the pennant after being down 2–0. Steve Garvey was named the NLCS Most Valuable Player.

Owner Ray Kroc died on January 14, making this the Padres' first season under the sole ownership of Kroc's widow Joan. Joan Kroc would continue to own the team until 1990. This would be the final season that the team wore mustard yellow & chocolate brown uniforms, which had been in place since 1969, the year they joined the National League. They would switch to a more traditional buttoned down look with pinstripes the next season.

Offseason

Regular season

After spending $6 million to acquire free-agent first baseman Steve Garvey in 1983, the Padres signed free-agent reliever Goose Gossage to a five-year contract for $6.25 million in January 1984.[12][13] The deal made Gossage the highest-salaried pitcher in baseball at the time.[13] Manager Dick Williams, who had asked general manager Jack McKeon to obtain a strikeout-type reliever, declared that the acquisition made San Diego a playoff contender.[14] Eight days after signing Gossage, Padres owner Ray Kroc died at the age of 81.[15] The season was dedicated to his memory with the team wearing his initials, "RAK" on their jersey's left sleeve during the entire season.[3][16] Ownership of the team passed to his wife, Joan Kroc.[15]

In February, All-Star catcher Terry Kennedy underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left knee after being bothered by continuous inflammation since the middle of 1983.[17] During spring training, Alan Wiggins was named the team's new second baseman over incumbent Juan Bonilla, who was subsequently waived.[10] In a gamble to generate offense, Wiggins had been moved from the outfield to make room in left field for Carmelo Martínez, who was moved from first base after being acquired in the offseason from the Chicago Cubs.[18] The Padres were hoping to bolster their starting outfield, which produced just 23 homers in 1983.[19] The rookie Martinez and center fielder Kevin McReynolds, whose 140 at-bats during the prior season disqualified him from being considered a rookie in 1984, were hyped by the media as the M&M Boys, alluding to the Yankees' 1960s power-hitting duo of Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris.[16][20] The two Padre outfielders along with Garvey, Nettles, and Kennedy supplied San Diego with five regulars who had the potential to hit at least 20 home runs. Third-year right fielder Tony Gwynn entered the season with a .302 lifetime batting average, the highest on the club.[16] Gwynn, McReynolds, and Martinez formed the youngest outfield in the majors.[21] Shortstop Garry Templeton was relieved of pain from a left knee that had bothered him for years and was expected to anchor the infield, especially with Wiggins moving to second base.[22] Templeton was also projected to bat leadoff for the Padres,[22] but he was dropped to No. 8 in the order after he took a spike to his right knee toward the end of spring training.[23] Three days before the season opener, 39-year-old third baseman Graig Nettles, a San Diego native, approved a trade from the New York Yankees to the Padres.[15][21][24] A left-handed batter who had hit 333 career home runs, he was open to platooning with incumbent Luis Salazar, although Nettles was expected to get the majority of playing time given the larger number of right-handed starting pitchers in the majors.[25] Heading into the season, Williams' biggest concern was their pitching.[26] The starters largely relied on finesse and off-speed pitches, and none of them had ever won more than 16 games.[1][26]

The Padres won their first four games of the season, and were 9–2 before leaving on their first road trip.[15] They were 18–11 before losing seven in a row, their longest losing streak of the season. The streak was snapped on May 17, when Wiggins tied an NL record with five stolen bases, and the club swiped a team record of seven in a 5–4 home win over Montreal.[27] They were tied for first in the West at the end of May, and were 2+12 games up by the end of June.[15] After moving back into first place on June 9, they did not relinquish the lead the rest of the season.[27] San Diego played at a steady pace, never falling below .500, while their longest winning streak was only six.[28] For much of the final two months, they led the division by eight to ten games.[29] San Diego clinched the division on September 20, when they beat San Francisco 5–4 behind a three-run homer by pitcher Tim Lollar, and Houston lost to Los Angeles 6–2 three hours later.[30] The Padres finished the season with a 92–70 record, winning the NL West division by 12 games.[31] It was just the second winning season in the franchise's history.[32] The future Hall-of-Famer Gwynn batted .351 to capture the first of his eight NL batting titles, while also gathering 213 hits to shatter the Padres record of 194 established by Gene Richards in 1980.[31] Eric Show (15–9, 3.40 ERA) was the only starting pitcher with 15 wins, though the four main starters all recorded at least 11.[32][33] The acquisition of Gossage, who finished the season 10–6 with a 2.90 ERA and 25 saves, was a strong factor in San Diego's 34–24 record in one-run games.[15][33]

The team relied on small ball and moving runners from base to base.[32] With the exception of Gwynn, who finished third in balloting for the NL Most Valuable Player Award, no Padre enjoyed an outstanding season individually.[31][34] McReynolds led the team with a .465 slugging percentage and was tied with Nettles for the team lead in home runs with 20.[35] Only two other Padres exceeded 10 homers.[32] Garvey led the club with 86 RBIs, the only Padre with more than 75.[2] Coming off his thumb injury from 1983, he hit only eight home runs and drew just 24 walks, but had 175 hits and did not commit an error.[35][36] Wiggins' move to second base proved successful, as he exhibited excellent range with his quickness in spite of his 32 fielding errors.[37][38] Offensively as the leadoff hitter, he batted .258 and drew 75 walks for an on-base percentage of .342, while setting club records by stealing 70 bases and scoring 106 runs.[15][32][37] Benefitting from the higher number of fastballs opposing pitchers threw in response to Wiggins' speed,[39] Gwynn batted above .400 when his speedy teammate was on base.[15] According to Williams, Wiggins "was absolutely the most valuable player in the National League in 1984."[40] No longer a .300 hitter like in his earlier days with St. Louis, Templeton enjoyed his most successful season since 1981. Hitting eighth in the lineup, he did not receive many pitches to hit. He batted .258 with 24 extra-base hits and six game-winning RBI, and was praised by Williams for his defense.[41] Both Templeton and Gwynn were honored by The Sporting News with Silver Slugger Awards, and Martinez (.249, 13 HR, 68 walks) was named to the Topps All-Star Rookie Team.[35][42] Martinez however, hit only three homers in the second half, and just one after July 18, after hitting 10 in the first half. Troubled by his knees, Kennedy slumped to .240 while his RBIs fell to 57 from 98 a year earlier. Nettles hit .222, which was 29 points below his career average, and most of his homers came in two hot streaks.[36] However, his averages of .252/.355/.469 against right-handed pitching were near his career norms.[35]

San Diego's pitching staff was last in the league in strikeouts per nine innings, and were among the team leaders in most home runs allowed and walks allowed. Still, they were adept at forcing fly balls and had a low ground ball/fly ball ratio.[35] In addition to Show, the starting rotation included fellow 28-year-old Mark Thurmond (14–8, 2.97), as well as veterans Ed Whitson (14–8, 3.24) and Lollar (11–13, 3.91). Andy Hawkins (8–9, 4.68) and Dave Dravecky (9–8, 2.93) split time as the fifth starter. In the bullpen, Gossage and Craig Lefferts (2.13 ERA and 10 saves) each appeared in 62 games and logged over 100 innings apiece. Unlike modern closers, Gossage often entered games in the seventh or eighth innings, with Lefferts filling in as the stopper when Gossage needed a game off after working successive long stints. Dravecky also recorded eight saves.[32] At age 33, Gossage experienced a decline in his fastball, and did not record a save after August 25.[36]

Williams led the team with a tough, no-nonsense approach.[33] He cited the advantage of having the experience of veterans Garvey, Nettles, and Gossage on the team.[43] Prior to joining the Padres, Garvey and Nettles had advanced to the World Series four times, while Gossage had participated in two.[44] Throughout the season, they stressed the value of consistency and an even temperament to youngsters like Gwynn, McReynolds, and Martinez, who were among the 11 players on the team with less than four years of major league experience.[28][45] Gossage and Nettles, in particular, would stay after games and talk baseball and have a beer with the youngsters.[28] Additionally, Templeton befriended Wiggins, helping his transition from the outfield to second base.[41]

Brawl with the Atlanta Braves

The Padres' regular season is most remembered for an August 12 Sunday afternoon game at Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium against the Atlanta Braves. From the start, the game was tense and erupted into a series of brawls which ended with a total of 13 ejections and 5 arrests. All fans who participated in the taunting and brawls were detained and arrested. The Braves eventually won the game by a score of 5–3.[46]

Fines and suspensions were issued four days later on August 16 to Williams ($10,000, ten days) and Summers, Brown, Torre ($1,000), Perry ($700), Bedrosian ($600) and Mahler ($700) who each received three-day suspensions. Virgil, Krol, Whitson, Booker, Lefferts, Bevacqua, Flannery, Nettles and Gossage for the Padres (all undisclosed) and Moore ($350) and Pérez ($300) for the Braves were all fined but not suspended.[47]

Opening Day starters

Season standings

More information Team, W ...
NL West
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
San Diego Padres 9270 .568 4833 4437
Atlanta Braves 8082 .494 12 3843 4239
Houston Astros 8082 .494 12 4338 3744
Los Angeles Dodgers 7983 .488 13 4041 3942
Cincinnati Reds 7092 .432 22 3942 3150
San Francisco Giants 6696 .407 26 3546 3150
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Record vs. opponents

More information Team, ATL ...

Sources:
Team ATL CHC CIN HOU LAD MON NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL
Atlanta 3–913–512–66–125–74–87–58–47–1110–85–7
Chicago 9–37–56–67–510–712–69–98–106–69–313–5
Cincinnati 5–135–78–107–117–53–95–77–57–1112–64–8
Houston 6–126–610–89–97–54–86–66–66–1212–68–4
Los Angeles 12–65–77–119–96–63–93–94–810–810–86–6
Montreal 7–57–105–75–76–67–1111–77–117–57–59–9
New York 8–46–129–38–49–311–710–812–66–64–87–11
Philadelphia 5-79–97–56–69–37–118–107–117–58–48–10
Pittsburgh 4–810–85–76–68–411–76–1211–74–86–64–14
San Diego 11–76–611–712–68–105–76–65–78–413–57–5
San Francisco 8–103–96–126–128–105–78–44–86–65–137–5
St. Louis 7–55–138–44–86–69–911–710–814–45–75–7
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Notable transactions

  • July 20, 1984: Al Newman was traded by the San Diego Padres to the Montreal Expos for Greg Harris.[49]

Roster

1984 San Diego Padres
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Game log

More information #, Date ...
1984 regular season game log: 92–70 (Home: 48–33; Away: 44–37)[50]
April: 15–8 (Home: 13–5; Away: 2–3)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox
Streak
1April 3Pirates51Show (1–0)Rhoden (0–1)44,5531-0W1
2April 5Pirates86DeLeón (1–0)Scurry (0–1)Gossage (1)19,3612-0W2
3April 6Cubs32 (wo)Monge (1–0)Smith (0–1)15,8343-0W3
4April 7Cubs76Dravecky (1–0)Trout (0–1)Gossage (2)27,7994-0W4
5April 8Cubs58Smith (1-1)Thurmond (0–1)24,2854-1L1
6April 10Cardinals73Hawkins (1–0)Forsch (0–1)Dravecky (1)15,1155-1W1
7April 11Cardinals75Lollar (1–0)Andújar (1-1)15,8356-1W2
8April 12Braves61Whitson (1–0)Falcone (0–2)Dravecky (2)12,4197-1W3
9April 13Braves52Show (2–0)Barker (1–2)Gossage (3)22,6148-1W4
10April 14Braves15Camp (1–0)Thurmond (0–2)Dedmon (1)46,3228-2L1
11April 15Braves64Monge (2–0)McMurtry (1–2)Gossage (4)27,9739-2W1
12April 17@ Giants21Lollar (2–0)Davis (0–3)Gossage (5)13,99810-2W2
13April 19@ Dodgers04Peña (2–1)Whitson (1-1)46,59510-3L1
14April 20@ Dodgers28Valenzuela (1–2)Show (2–1)50,91610-4L2
15April 21@ Dodgers96Thurmond (1–2)Reuss (1-1)Gossage (6)43,78411-4W1
16April 22@ Dodgers715Honeycutt (3–0)Lollar (2–1)47,93811-5L1
17April 23Giants82Hawkins (2–0)Robinson (2-2)25,56912-5W1
18April 24Giants61Whitson (2–1)Krukow (1–3)12,34113-5W2
19April 25Giants30Show (3–1)Laskey (0–2)Gossage (7)13,05914-5W3
20April 26Dodgers56Diaz (1–0)Dravecky (1-1)Niedenfuer (4)39,60914-6L1
21April 27Dodgers01 (7)Honeycutt (4–0)Lollar (2-2)34,22214-7L2
22April 28Dodgers51Hawkins (3–0)Welch (2–3)42,57615-7W1
23April 29Dodgers06Peña (4–1)Whitson (2-2)36,14715-8L1
May: 10–13 (Home: 3–7; Away: 7–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox
Streak
24May 1@ Braves32Show (4–1)McMurtry (2–3)Gossage (8)10,74816-8W1
25May 3@ Braves56Bedrosian (2–1)Gossage (0–1)Forster (2)8,07216-9L1
26May 4@ Cubs67 (wo)Smith (2-2)Monge (2–1)6,53316-10L2
27May 5@ Cubs56 (10/wo)Brusstar (1–0)Lefferts (0–1)28,44116-11L3
28May 6@ Cubs85Show (5–1)Ruthven (2–3)31,70017-11W1
29May 9@ Cardinals32Thurmond (2-2)Stuper (0–2)Gossage (9)14,73418-11W2
30May 10@ Cardinals07Andújar (5–3)Lollar (2–3)20,92618-12L1
31May 11Phillies46Holland (1–2)Dravecky (1–2)18,00918-13L2
32May 12Phillies23Campbell (3–0)Hawkins (3–1)Holland (6)36,91618-14L3
33May 13Phillies38Denny (3-3)Whitson (2–3)38,64518-15L4
34May 14Expos67 (10)Reardon (1-1)Dravecky (1–3)9,38918-16L5
35May 15Expos46Smith (5–2)Lollar (2–4)Schatzeder (1)11,02518-17L6
36May 16Expos23Lea (6–2)Show (5–2)Reardon (6)11,46218-18L7
37May 17Expos54Gossage (1-1)McGaffigan (2-2)Lefferts (1)17,06619-18W1
38May 18Mets54Whitson (3-3)Gooden (3-3)Gossage (10)17,31920-18W2
39May 19Mets83Thurmond (3–2)Lynch (4–1)Dravecky (3)20,01721-18W3
40May 20Mets24 (10)Orosco (4–1)Lefferts (0–2)20,26321-19L1
41May 22@ Expos23Lea (7–2)Show (5–3)19,84721-20L2
42May 23@ Expos21 (11)Dravecky (2–3)McGaffigan (3-3)8,57322-20W1
43May 25@ Phillies73Whitson (4–3)Hudson (5–3)25,96423-20W2
44May 26@ Phillies27Bystrom (2–1)Thurmond (3-3)32,89823-21L1
45May 27@ Phillies40Lollar (3–4)Koosman (4–6)Lefferts (2)34,35224-21W1
46May 28@ Mets54Show (6–3)Gaff (0–1)Gossage (11)36,20425-21W2
June: 19–10 (Home: 10–6; Away: 9–4)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox
Streak
47Jun 1@ Giants711Williams (2–0)Hawkins (3–2)Minton (2)10,08725-22L1
48Jun 2@ Giants32Gossage (2–1)Garrelts (1-1)12,66226-22W1
49Jun 3 (1)@ Giants75Lollar (4-4)Cornell (0–1)Dravecky (4)27-22W2
50Jun 3 (2)@ Giants76Show (7–3)Lavelle (2-2)Gossage (12)22,86328-22W3
51Jun 4Astros30Whitson (5–3)Scott (2–4)Dravecky (5)9,92229-22W4
52Jun 5Astros30Hawkins (4–2)Ruhle (0–4)11,79930-22W5
53Jun 6Astros43 (10/wo)Gossage (3–1)Smith (0–2)11,08731-22W6
54Jun 7Reds112Berenyi (3–6)Show (7–4)Cato (1)15,50731-23L1
55Jun 8Reds60Lollar (5–4)Price (2–4)14,00232-23W1
56Jun 9Reds122Whitson (6–3)Russell (2–7)Lefferts (3)48,80533-23W2
57Jun 10Reds75Chiffer (1–0)Hume (3–6)Dravecky (6)18,72334-23W3
58Jun 11Braves54 (wo)Dravecky (3-3)Bedrosian (4–3)9,27135-23W4
59Jun 12Braves76 (12/wo)Lefferts (1–2)Bedrosian (4-4)19,92036-23W5
60Jun 14Giants25Davis (3–6)Lollar (5-5)Lavelle (7)17,31036-24L1
61Jun 15Giants32Whitson (7–3)Robinson (3–7)Gossage (13)20,35337-24W1
62Jun 16Giants36Laskey (3–6)Hawkins (4–3)Minton (4)48,37537-25L1
63Jun 17Giants35 (15)Williams (4–0)Lefferts (1–3)24,18337-26L2
64Jun 19@ Astros20Show (8–4)Knepper (6–7)12,76538-26W1
65Jun 20@ Astros62Lollar (6–5)Madden (2-2)Dravecky (7)12,54339-26W2
66Jun 21@ Astros511Niekro (6–7)Whitson (7–4)LaCoss (3)12,93439-27L1
67Jun 22@ Reds78 (wo)Franco (3–0)Gossage (3–2)23,55239-28L2
68Jun 23@ Reds52Thurmond (4–3)Puleo (0–1)22,19240-28W1
69Jun 24@ Reds83 (13)Dravecky (4–3)Hume (3–7)19,18341-28W2
70Jun 25@ Dodgers94Lollar (7–5)Zachry (4–2)36,62942-28W3
71Jun 26@ Dodgers50Whitson (8–4)Welch (6–8)48,28743-28W4
72Jun 27@ Dodgers45Valenzuela (8-8)Dravecky (4-4)Niedenfuer (9)49,13243-29L1
73Jun 28Cardinals73Thurmond (5–3)Dayley (0–5)14,09744-29W1
74Jun 29Cardinals05Horton (4–1)Show (8–5)45,46844-30L1
75Jun 30Cardinals14Andújar (13–6)Lollar (7–6)Sutter (19)31,43244-31L2
July: 19–11 (Home: 12–5; Away: 7–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox
Streak
76Jul 1Cardinals31Whitson (9–4)LaPoint (6–8)Gossage (14)17,66445-31W1
77Jul 2Cubs51Dravecky (5–4)Reuschel (4-4)13,44446-31W2
78Jul 3Cubs23Trout (9–3)Thurmond (5–4)Stoddard (5)20,28746-32L1
79Jul 4Cubs12Sutcliffe (7–6)Show (8–6)Smith (16)52,13446-33L2
80Jul 5Pirates21 (wo)Gossage (4–2)Scurry (1–5)14,90747-33W1
81Jul 6Pirates73Whitson (10–4)Rhoden (6–7)18,36848-33W2
82Jul 7Pirates10Dravecky (6–4)McWilliams (4–8)Gossage (15)28,99549-33W3
83Jul 8Pirates34Candelaria (7–6)Thurmond (5-5)Tekulve (7)17,95049-34L1
84Jul 12@ Cardinals41Show (9–6)Andújar (13–7)Lefferts (4)27,41950-34W1
85Jul 13@ Cardinals47 (10/wo)Allen (5–3)DeLeón (1-1)29,95450-35L1
86Jul 14@ Cardinals67LaPoint (7–8)Lollar (7-7)Sutter (22)41,26050-36L2
87Jul 15@ Cardinals61Dravecky (7–4)Kepshire (1-1)33,20551-36W1
88Jul 16@ Cubs40Thurmond (6–5)Ruthven (2–6)23,64252-36W2
89Jul 17@ Cubs65Show (10–6)Trout (9–4)Gossage (16)29,49953-36W3
90Jul 18@ Cubs14Sutcliffe (10–6)Whitson (10–5)27,47153-37L1
91Jul 19@ Pirates15Candelaria (9–6)Lollar (7–8)10,04853-38L2
92Jul 20 (1)@ Pirates34Rhoden (8–7)Dravecky (7–5)Robinson (5)53-39L3
93Jul 20 (2)@ Pirates32Hawkins (5–3)Tudor (5–8)Gossage (17)18,00754-39W1
94Jul 21@ Pirates64Thurmond (7–5)Walk (1-1)Gossage (18)11,59355-39W2
95Jul 22 (1)@ Pirates51Whitson (11–5)DeLeón (6-6)56-39W3
96Jul 22 (2)@ Pirates23 (11/wo)Winn (1–0)Gossage (4–3)22,97156-40L1
97Jul 24Reds24Soto (11–3)Lollar (7–9)18,38156-41L2
98Jul 25Reds65 (wo)Gossage (5–3)Owchinko (3–5)16,24857-41W1
99Jul 26Reds82Thurmond (8–5)Russell (4–12)20,92458-41W2
100Jul 27Astros73Whitson (12–5)Ruhle (1–8)Lefferts (5)28,86859-41W3
101Jul 28 (1)Astros13Niekro (11–8)Hawkins (5–4)59-42L1
102Jul 28 (2)Astros10Show (11–6)Ryan (8–7)Gossage (19)34,73060-42W1
103Jul 29Astros90Lollar (8–9)LaCoss (5–2)23,08461-42W2
104Jul 30Dodgers120Dravecky (8–5)Valenzuela (9–12)40,56862-42W3
105Jul 31Dodgers10Thurmond (9–5)Honeycutt (8–6)Gossage (20)35,70463-42W4
August: 15–14 (Home: 5–4; Away: 10–10)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox
Streak
106Aug 1Dodgers43Lefferts (2–3)Peña (11–6)Gossage (21)39,07664-42W5
107Aug 3@ Astros26Ryan (9–7)Show (11–7)16,45664-43L1
108Aug 4@ Astros52Lollar (9-9)LaCoss (5–3)Lefferts (6)19,48265-43W1
109Aug 5@ Astros95Hawkins (6–4)Niekro (11–9)11,63766-43W2
110Aug 6@ Reds10Gossage (6–3)Price (5–8)10,79867-43W3
111Aug 7@ Reds78 (wo)Power (7–5)Harris (0–2)11,76767-44L1
112Aug 8@ Reds24 (wo)Soto (12–5)Gossage (6–4)11,22267-45L2
113Aug 9@ Reds08Russell (5–12)Lollar (9–10)10,88167-46L3
114Aug 10 (1)@ Braves13Bedrosian (8–6)Dravecky (8–6)Moore (14)67-47L4
115Aug 10 (2)@ Braves104Hawkins (7–4)Falcone (5–7)Gossage (22)41,28768-47W1
116Aug 11@ Braves41Thurmond (10–5)Mahler (8–7)Lefferts (7)45,09969-47W2
117Aug 12@ Braves35Pérez (11–4)Whitson (12–6)23,91269-48L1
118Aug 14Phillies32Show (12–7)Koosman (12–10)Lefferts (8)23,79970-48W1
119Aug 15Phillies43 (wo)Gossage (7–4)Holland (5–7)21,07871-48W2
120Aug 16Phillies38Denny (5–3)Hawkins (7–5)23,12571-49L1
121Aug 17Expos48Rogers (4–12)Thurmond (10–6)Reardon (17)17,13671-50L2
122Aug 19Expos03Hesketh (1–0)Whitson (12–7)Reardon (18)21,69771-51L3
123Aug 20Mets31Show (13–7)Fernandez (4–2)Gossage (23)50,86972-51W1
124Aug 21Mets74Lollar (10-10)Lynch (8-8)Gossage (24)20,99873-51W2
125Aug 22Mets25Gooden (12–8)Hawkins (7–6)25,25073-52L1
126Aug 24 (1)@ Expos14Rogers (5–12)Thurmond (10–7)Reardon (19)x73-53L2
127Aug 24 (2)@ Expos54Gossage (8–4)Reardon (5-5)Harris (3)34,62674-53W1
128Aug 25@ Expos43 (13)Harris (1–2)Reardon (5–6)Gossage (25)29,66575-53W2
129Aug 26@ Expos21Show (14–7)Schatzeder (6–5)31,77876-53W3
130Aug 27@ Phillies19Koosman (14–10)Lollar (10–11)26,30276-54L1
131Aug 28@ Phillies811Rawley (9–6)Hawkins (7-7)Holland (28)25,67976-55L2
132Aug 29@ Phillies20Thurmond (11–7)Denny (6–5)Lefferts (9)25,13177-55W1
133Aug 31 (1)@ Mets51Whitson (13–7)Fernandez (4–3)78-55W2
134Aug 31 (2)@ Mets04Berenyi (10–13)Dravecky (8–7)38,32378-56L1
September: 14–14 (Home: 5–6; Away: 9–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox
Streak
135Sep 1 (1)@ Mets47Gooden (14–8)Hawkins (7–8)Orosco (28)78-57L2
136Sep 1 (2)@ Mets610Gorman (4–0)Show (14–8)Orosco (29)35,68878-58L3
137Sep 2@ Mets23 (12/wo)Gaff (3–2)Gossage (8–5)36,91578-59L4
138Sep 3@ Dodgers43Thurmond (12–7)Reuss (2–7)Lefferts (10)43,17679-59W1
139Sep 4@ Dodgers12 (wo)Howell (3–4)Hawkins (7–9)31,98879-60L1
140Sep 5Reds1511Lefferts (3-3)Hume (4–13)17,75980-60W1
141Sep 6Reds310Price (7–11)Show (14–9)Owchinko (2)11,98680-61L1
142Sep 7Astros46Niekro (14–10)Lollar (10–12)DiPino (13)23,71380-62L2
143Sep 9Astros84Thurmond (13–7)LaCoss (7–4)14,15381-62W1
144Sep 11Dodgers25Valenzuela (12–15)Whitson (13–8)24,50581-63L1
145Sep 12Dodgers18Hooton (3–4)Dravecky (8-8)28,56081-64L2
146Sep 14@ Astros42Gossage (9–5)DiPino (4–9)13,11982-64W1
147Sep 15@ Astros23Dawley (9–4)Lefferts (3–4)15,45682-65L1
148Sep 16@ Astros910Smith (4–3)Gossage (9–6)10,39782-66L2
149Sep 17@ Reds32 (11)Gossage (10–6)Power (8–6)7,72883-66W1
150Sep 18@ Reds20Dravecky (9–8)Price (7–12)10,41484-66W2
151Sep 19Giants54 (10/wo)Hawkins (8–9)Garrelts (1–3)32,96485-66W3
152Sep 20Giants54Lollar (11–12)Krukow (10–12)Dravecky (8)15,76686-66W4
153Sep 21Braves13Mahler (12–9)Thurmond (13–8)46,13786-67L1
154Sep 22Braves25Pérez (13–7)DeLeón (1–2)Garber (10)47,21786-68L2
155Sep 23Braves21 (11/wo)Booker (1–0)Moore (4–5)40,91087-68W1
156Sep 24 (1)@ Giants71Harris (2-2)Robinson (7–15)88-68W2
157Sep 24 (2)@ Giants86 (11)DeLeón (2-2)Lacey (1–3)3,29689-68W3
158Sep 25@ Giants34Krukow (11–12)Lollar (11–13)Minton (19)4,19989-69L1
159Sep 26@ Giants40Show (15–9)Laskey (9–14)5,63490-69W1
160Sep 28@ Braves42Thurmond (14–8)Murtry (9–17)15,73391-69W2
161Sep 29@ Braves62Whitson (14–8)Mahler (13–10)30,13192-69W3
162Sep 30@ Braves34Pérez (14–7)Booker (1-1)Garber (11)13,48992-70L1
Legend:        = Win        = Loss        = Postponement
Bold = Padres team member
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Postseason game log

More information #, Date ...
1984 postseason game log: 4–6 (Home: 4–1; Away: 0–5)
National League Championship Series: 3–2 (Home: 3–0; Away: 0–2)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceSeries
1Oct 2@ Cubs013Sutcliffe (1–0)Show (0–1)36,2820–1
2Oct 3@ Cubs24Trout (1–0)Thurmond (0–1)Smith (1)36,2820–2
3Oct 4Cubs71Whitson (1–0)Eckersley (0–1)58,3461–2
4Oct 6Cubs75 (wo)Lefferts (1–0)Smith (0–1)58,3542-2
5Oct 7Cubs63Lefferts (2–0)Sutcliffe (1-1)Gossage (1)58,3593–2
World Series: 1–4 (Home: 1–1; Away: 0–3)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceSeries
1Oct 9Tigers23Morris (2–0)Thurmond (0–2)57,9080–1
2Oct 10Tigers53Hawkins (1–0)Petry (0–1)Lefferts (1)57,9111-1
3Oct 12@ Tigers25Wilcox (2–0)Lollar (0–1)Hernández (2)51,9701–2
4Oct 13@ Tigers24Morris (2–0)Show (0–2)52,1301–3
5Oct 14@ Tigers48López (2–0)Hawkins (1-1)Hernández (3)51,9011–4
Legend:        = Win        = Loss        = Postponement
Bold = Padres team member
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Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

More information Pos, Player ...
Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
CTerry Kennedy148530127.2401457
1BSteve Garvey161617175.284886
2BAlan Wiggins158596154.258334
3BGraig Nettles12439590.2282065
SSGarry Templeton148493127.258235
LFCarmelo Martínez149488122.2501366
CFKevin McReynolds147525146.2782075
RFTony Gwynn158606213.351571
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[51]

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

More information Player, G ...
Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Luis Salazar9322855.241317
Bobby Brown8517143.251329
Tim Flannery8612835.273210
Bruce Bochy379221.228415
Kurt Bevacqua598016.20019
Mario Ramírez48597.11929
Champ Summers475410.185112
Ron Roenicke12206.30012
Eddie Miller13144.28612
Doug Gwosdz782.25001
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[51]

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

More information Player, G ...
Player G IP W L ERA SO
Eric Show32207.01593.40104
Tim Lollar31195.211133.91131
Ed Whitson31189.01483.24103
Mark Thurmond32178.21482.9757
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Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

More information Player, G ...
Player G IP W L ERA SO
Dave Dravecky50156.2982.9371
Andy Hawkins36146.0894.6877
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Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

More information Player, G ...
Player G W L SV ERA SO
Goose Gossage62106252.9084
Craig Lefferts6234102.1356
Greg Booker321103.3028
Luis DeLeón322205.4844
Greg Harris192112.7030
Floyd Chiffer151007.7120
Sid Monge132104.807
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NLCS

Cub-Busters T-shirts were popular with Padres fans.

In the 1984 NLCS, the Padres faced the NL East champion Chicago Cubs, who were making their first post-season appearance since 1945 and featured NL Most Valuable Player Ryne Sandberg and Cy Young Award winner Rick Sutcliffe. The Cubs would win the first two games at Wrigley Field, but the Padres swept the final three games at then-Jack Murphy Stadium (the highlight arguably being Steve Garvey's dramatic, game-winning home run off of Lee Smith in Game 4) to win the 1984 National League pennant.[52] They became the first National League team to win a playoff series after being down 2–0.[15] Garvey finished the series batting .400 with seven RBIs,[53][54] and was named the NLCS Most Valuable Player for the second time in his career.[55]

After returning from Chicago on a delayed flight, the team boarded buses from the airport, and was boosted by the surprising 2,000 fans waiting to greet them at the Jack Murphy Stadium parking lot at about 9:45 P.M.[21][27][28] Goose Gossage, a former New York Yankee, said the San Diego crowd at Game 3 was "the loudest crowd I've ever heard anywhere."[56] Gwynn agreed as well.[57] Jack Murphy Stadium played "Cub-Busters", a parody of the theme song from the 1984 movie Ghostbusters.[56][57] Cub-Busters T-shirts inspired from the movie were popular attire for Padres fans.[58][59]

San Diego won the series, 3–2.

More information Game, Date ...
GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 2San Diego Padres – 0, Chicago Cubs – 13Wrigley Field2:4936,282[60] 
2October 3San Diego Padres – 2, Chicago Cubs – 4Wrigley Field2:1836,282[61] 
3October 4Chicago Cubs – 1, San Diego Padres – 7Jack Murphy Stadium2:1958,346[62] 
4October 6Chicago Cubs – 5, San Diego Padres – 7Jack Murphy Stadium3:1358,354[63] 
5October 7Chicago Cubs – 3, San Diego Padres – 6Jack Murphy Stadium2:4158,359[64]
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World Series

In the 1984 World Series, the Padres faced the powerful Detroit Tigers, who steamrolled through the regular season with 104 victories (and had started out with a 35–5 record, the best ever through the first 40 games). The Tigers were managed by Sparky Anderson and featured shortstop and native San Diegan Alan Trammell and outfielder Kirk Gibson, along with Lance Parrish and DH Darrell Evans. The pitching staff was bolstered by ace Jack Morris (19–11, 3.60 ERA), Dan Petry (18–8), Milt Wilcox (17–8), and closer Willie Hernández (9–3, 1.92 ERA with 32 saves).[65] Jack Morris would win games 1 and 4 and the Tigers would go on to win the Series in five games.[66]

San Diego's starting pitchers crumbled in the postseason with a combined ERA of 9.09, including 13.94 against Detroit, surpassing the Cubs mark of 9.50 in 1932 as the worst in the then-82-year history of the World Series.[21][67] Show, Thurmond, Lollar, and Whitson combined to throw only 10+23 innings versus the Tigers while surrendering 25 hits, eight walks, and 16 earned runs.[68] Only once did a starter pitch at least five innings.[67] Whitson (NLCS Game 3) was the only starter to earn a win in the playoffs.[36] Out of the bullpen, Lefferts was excellent in the postseason with 10 scoreless innings in six appearances, while Hawkins and Dravecky pitched well in the playoffs as well.[67]

After a disappointing season for 37-year-old journeyman Kurt Bevacqua, he hit .412 in the World Series as the Padres designated hitter, hitting the game-winning home run in Game 2 as well as an eighth-inning homer in the finale, which had cut San Diego's deficit to 5–4.[21][67] Playing in place of the injured McReynolds, Bobby Brown had the team's only two RBIs by Padres outfielders against the Tigers, but he batted just 1-for-15.[36]

Reporter Barry Bloom of MLB.com wrote in 2011 that "the postseason in '84 is still the most exciting week of Major League Baseball ever played in San Diego."[69] Gossage, who is mostly remembered as a Yankee, called it "special being a part of turning on a city for the first time, going to the World Series for the first time".[33]

AL Detroit Tigers (4) vs. NL San Diego Padres (1)

More information Game, Date ...
GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 9Detroit Tigers – 3, San Diego Padres – 2Jack Murphy Stadium3:1857,908[70] 
2October 10Detroit Tigers – 3, San Diego Padres – 5Jack Murphy Stadium2:4457,911[71] 
3October 12San Diego Padres – 2, Detroit Tigers – 5Tiger Stadium3:1151,970[72] 
4October 13San Diego Padres – 2, Detroit Tigers – 4Tiger Stadium2:2052,130[73] 
5October 14San Diego Padres – 4, Detroit Tigers – 8Tiger Stadium2:5551,901[74]
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Award winners

  • Tony Gwynn, National League Batting Champion (.351)
  • Tony Gwynn, National League Leader in Hits (213)

1984 Major League Baseball All-Star Game

Farm system

References

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