1986 in baseball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following are the baseball events of the year 1986 throughout the world.

Major League Baseball

Awards and honors

MLB statistical leaders

Major league baseball final standings

Draft

Events

January

Kirk Gibson in 1983

February

Dave Parker in 1989

March

Hal McRae

April

Roger Clemens

May

Dave Stewart in 2009

June

Don Sutton

July

Dick Howser at the White House (1985)

August

Bert Blyleven
Darryl Strawberry

September

October

World Series MVP Ray Knight
  • October 2 – The Kansas City Royals claim outfielder Jim Eisenreich on waivers from the Minnesota Twins. The highly talented, 27-year-old Eisenreich has missed the 1985 and 1986 seasons recovering from Tourette Syndrome. He will resume his playing career in 1987 by batting .382 in 70 games at Double-A Memphis, and will play almost 1,400 MLB games until his final appearance on September 26, 1998.[60]
  • October 4 – At the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Greg Gagne of the Twins hits two inside-the-park home runs in a 7–3 victory over the Chicago White Sox. In the same game, Bert Blyleven—who goes the distance for the victory—allows his 50th homer of the season (to Daryl Boston) to set a major league record. Coincidentally, Blyleven had given up Dick Allen's two inside-the-park homers in a July 31, 1972 game against the White Sox, the last game prior to today's in which one player hits a pair of inside-the-park blows. That game had been played in the Metrodome's predecessor, Metropolitan Stadium.
  • October 5 – On the regular season's final day, the New York Mets beat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 9–0 at Shea Stadium, for their 108th win of the year. The 1986 Mets set franchise records for wins, home wins (55), road wins (53), home runs (148), batting average (.263) and attendance (2,762,417), all for a team that this year is celebrating its 25th anniversary.
  • October 6 – Cal Ripken Sr., the widely rumored successor to Earl Weaver as manager of the Baltimore Orioles, is officially appointed the club's 1987 pilot. A career member of the Baltimore organization, and the father of the Orioles' superstar and future Hall of Famer, Ripken, 50, has been the team's third-base coach since late June 1977. Weaver retired for good after yesterday's season finale with a career mark of 1,480–1,060 (.583), four AL pennants and one World Series title.[61]
  • October 10 – Clyde King, general manager of the New York Yankees since April 10, 1984, is replaced by former MLB infielder Woody Woodward. King, 62, remains with the Bombers as a special assistant to George Steinbrenner. Woodward, 44, had been the Yanks' vice president, baseball administration. Field manager Lou Piniella, meanwhile, is invited to return for 1987.[62]
  • October 12 – In Game 5 of the American League Championship Series, the Boston Red Sox, trailing three games to one to the California Angels and two outs away from elimination, are rescued when Don Baylor delivers a two-run home run off Mike Witt to trim the Angel lead from 5–2 to 5–4. After Witt retires Dwight Evans for the second out, Gary Lucas relieves him and promptly hits Rich Gedman with his first (and only) pitch. Donnie Moore then relieves Lucas and, with one strike away from elimination, Dave Henderson crushes a pitch from Moore into the left-field stands for a 6–5 lead. The Red Sox win, 7–6 in 11 innings (a Henderson sacrifice fly providing the winning run), and extend the series to a sixth game.[63]
  • October 14 – At Shea Stadium, Dwight Gooden and Nolan Ryan hook up in a scintillating pitchers' duel in Game 5 of the National League Championship Series with the host New York Mets and Houston Astros tied, two games apiece. Houston loses a potential lead run in the second on a disputed out call at first base; each team scores in the fifth, New York on Darryl Strawberry's homer; Ryan goes nine innings and fans 12 before leaving for a pinch hitter in the visitors' tenth; Gooden works ten innings before leaving in a double-switch. But the game remains knotted 1–1 until the Mets' 12th, when future Hall of Famer Gary Carter singles home Wally Backman with the winning run, to give New York a one-game series edge.[64]
  • October 15
    • In the longest game in post-season history (until the 2005 National League Division Series), the visiting Mets defeat the Astros, 7–6 in 16 innings, in Game 6 of the NLCS to earn their first trip to the World Series since 1973, four games to two. New York scores three runs in the top of the ninth to force extra innings, then each team scores a run in the 14th to preserve the deadlock. In the top of the 16th, the Mets tally three more runs, then Houston answers with two of its own before Jesse Orosco fans Kevin Bass to end the game. It's the Mets third NL pennant.[65][66]
    • At Fenway Park, the Red Sox rout the Angels, 8–1, in Game 7 of the ALCS to complete their comeback from trailing three games to one. Boston wins its tenth-ever AL pennant, and first since 1975.[67]
  • October 25 – Leading 5–3 in Game 6 of the World Series, and just one out away from winning their first championship since 1918, the Red Sox surrender singles to Gary Carter, Kevin Mitchell and Ray Knight, and pitcher Bob Stanley throws a wild pitch that allows Mitchell to tie the game. Then Mookie Wilson's slow grounder bounces between the legs of first baseman Bill Buckner, allowing Knight to score to give the New York Mets an improbable 6–5 win. Boston's Calvin Schiraldi absorbs the loss.[68]
  • October 27 – At Shea Stadium, the Mets come from behind again, overcoming a three-run Boston lead with six unanswered runs in the sixth and seventh innings and winning Game 7 of the World Series over the Red Sox by a final of 8–5. The Mets capture their second Fall Classic championship and first since 1969. Third baseman Ray Knight, whose homer broke a 3–3 deadlock in the seventh, is chosen Series MVP.[69]
  • October 28 – Larry Bowa becomes the tenth manager in the San Diego Padres' 18-year history, replacing Steve Boros. Bowa, 40, the fiery former five-time NL All-Star shortstop, had retired from the playing ranks in 1985 and managed Triple-A Las Vegas to an 80–62 record in 1986. Boros' term in San Diego lasts only one full season after taking over the Padres upon Dick Williams' sudden resignation in February.
  • October 29 – The Chicago White Sox make a course correction in their front office, naming Larry Himes, 46, vice president and general manager, and accepting the resignation of GM Tom Haller, a left-over from the failed Ken Harrelson experiment. Harrelson, who quit as the ChiSox' baseball operations czar September 26 after less than a year in the job, had purged veteran baseball people from the club's management team and major-league staff, and replaced most of them with retired MLB players with "presence" but limited executive resumés.[28] A former minor-league catcher, Himes has an extensive scouting and player development background, and for the past six years has headed the California Angels' efforts in those areas.
  • October 30 – The Baltimore Orioles trade 24-year-old right-handed starter Storm Davis to the San Diego Padres for reliever Mark Williamson and catcher Terry Kennedy.

November

Mike Scott

December

Danny Tartabull

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

References

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