1985 in baseball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following are the baseball events of the year 1985 throughout the world.

Major League Baseball

Awards and honors

MLB statistical leaders

Major league baseball final standings

Events

January

Lou Brock in 2008

February

Jack Clark in 1983

March

April

Dan Quisenberry

May

Steve Rogers in 1977

June

Barry Bonds (1993)
Barry Larkin (1990)

July

  • July 1 – After almost two full years as interim CEO/president of the Cincinnati Reds, Bob Howsam retires. One of the principal architects of the 1970s' "Big Red Machine," Howsam, 67, has helped revitalize the franchise during his second tour of duty as its front-office boss. With Pete Rose in command as player-manager, veteran former free-agent Dave Parker returning to All-Star and MVP-candidate form, and young players like Eric Davis maturing into stardom, the 1985 Reds will win 89 games—after three terrible seasons during which they averaged only 68 victories.
  • July 2 – Pitcher Joe Niekro of the Houston Astros wins his 200th career game, 3–2 over the San Diego Padres. Joe and Phil Niekro join Jim Perry and Gaylord Perry as the only pitching brother combinations to each win at least 200 games.
  • July 4 – The Los Angeles Dodgers sever ties with left-hander Steve Howe after the 1979 NL Rookie of the Year and former All-Star, known for struggling with cocaine addiction, reports late or fails to show up for games.[32] Howe, 27, will sign with the Minnesota Twins as a free agent August 12.
  • July 4–5 – In a holiday night game twice delayed by rain at Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium, the New York Mets outlast the Atlanta Braves 16–13 in a 19-inning contest that features Keith Hernandez hitting for the cycle, Mets slugger Darryl Strawberry and manager Davey Johnson being ejected, 28 hits by the visitors,[16] and the Braves coming back to tie the game twice in extra innings—most notably in the bottom of the 18th. Pitcher Rick Camp, a career .074 hitter batting only because the Braves have no position players left, hits a solo home run in the 18th to re-tie the game at 11. In his next at bat an inning later, Camp fans to end the game after six hours and ten minutes.[33] Even though the date/time is July 5 and 3:15 a.m., the Braves shoot off their scheduled Fourth of July post-game fireworks for fans who endure to the end.[34]
  • July 7 – Just three days after the Mets–Braves' marathon, the visiting Montreal Expos and Houston Astros struggle for 19 innings before Montreal emerges victorious, 6–3. Each team had scored a run in the 18th to preserve the tie before the Expos tally three times in the final frame for the win.[35] The two 19-inning contests are MLB's longest extra inning games of the year.[16]
  • July 11 – The Houston Astros' Nolan Ryan becomes the first pitcher to record 4,000 strikeouts, fanning Danny Heep in the sixth inning of Houston's 4–3 win over the New York Mets.
  • July 12 – The Oakland Athletics sign free-agent lefty Tommy John, 42, who had been released by the California Angels on June 19.
Wade Boggs in 1988

August

Dwight Gooden

September

Pete Rose, left, with Tom Lasorda (1985)
John Tudor

October

Frank White
World Series MVP Bret Saberhagen (2008 photo)
  • October 19 – When he takes the field for the Kansas City Royals in Game 1 of the 1985 World Series, Lonnie Smith becomes the first player in major league history to play in the World Series against the team (the St. Louis Cardinals) that traded him away during that same season.
  • October 22 – Just six days after his AL East-champion Toronto Blue Jays were eliminated from the postseason, manager Bobby Cox quits his post to lead the re-building of his former team, the Atlanta Braves, as their general manager. A resident of nearby Marietta, Georgia, Cox, 44, signs a five-year, $1.8 million contract to replace John Mullen, who'll stay on as Cox' assistant GM.[68]
  • October 24 – Kansas City Royals pitcher Danny Jackson throws an "Immaculate Inning" in Game 5 of the World Series, the first such inning in the Fall Classic's 82-year history. Jackson needs just nine pitches to retire Cardinals hitters Terry Pendleton, who fans, Tom Nieto, who's caught looking, and Brian Harper, who also strikes out swinging.
  • October 26 – With champagne on ice in their clubhouse, the St. Louis Cardinals—ahead 1–0 in the bottom of the ninth of Game 6 at Royals Stadium and three-games-to-two in the 1985 World Series—are poised to capture the franchise's tenth Fall Classic, when an umpire's decision drastically changes momentum. American League arbiter Don Denkinger mistakenly calls Kansas City's Jorge Orta safe at first base while television replays conclusively show the runner out on a close play. Manager Whitey Herzog disputes the call, but it opens the floodgates: the Cardinals misplay a foul pop up and allow a base hit and a passed ball to put the tying and winning runs in scoring position; then pinch hitter Dane Iorg bloops a two-RBI single to right field and forces a Game 7 with a 2–1 Royals' victory.[69][70]
  • October 27
    • For only the sixth time in MLB history and the second time in less than two weeks,[71] a team—in each case, the 1985 Kansas City Royals—overcomes a three-games-to-one deficit to win a best-of-seven postseason series, when the Royals overwhelm the St. Louis Cardinals, 11–0, in Game 7 of the World Series. Bret Saberhagen fires a five-hitter, Darryl Motley starts the scoring with a two-run homer in the second inning, and Kansas City turns its third straight triumph into a rout with a six-run fifth inning.[72] It's the Royals' first world championship; Saberhagen (2–0, 0.50, with 11 hits and one run allowed in 18 innings pitched) takes home Series MVP honors.
      • The Cardinals' fury at umpire Don Denkinger's "safe" call during the ninth inning of the previous night boils over during the Royals' six-run fifth. Manager Whitey Herzog is ejected by Denkinger, now working home plate, for arguing balls and strikes; then, one pitch later, hurler Joaquín Andújar is also tossed after he flies into a rage over a ball/strike call and charges at Denkinger before being restrained. Afterward, Herzog says: "When you get something taken away from you, you get teed off ... I wasn't arguing balls and strikes. I did yell, 'We shouldn't even be out here tonight. We should be home celebrating'."[73]
    • New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner dismisses manager Billy Martin for the fourth time. Martin's Yankees had compiled a stellar 91–54 (.628) record since he took over from Yogi Berra on April 28; however, late in the season, Steinbrenner was known to be displeased with Martin's off-field behavior and on-field decisions.[74] Lou Piniella, 42, who won two World Series rings during his 11 seasons as a Yankees' outfielder and the team's hitting coach since his June 1984 retirement, is named Martin's replacement.

November

NL MVP Willie McGee
AL MVP Don Mattingly

December

Movies

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI