1990 in baseball
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following are the baseball events of the year 1990 throughout the world.
Major League Baseball
- World Series: Cincinnati Reds over Oakland Athletics (4-0); José Rijo, MVP
| League Championship Series (ALCS, NLCS) | World Series | ||||||||
| East | Boston | 0 | |||||||
| West | Oakland | 4 | |||||||
| AL | Oakland | 0 | |||||||
| NL | Cincinnati | 4 | |||||||
| East | Pittsburgh | 2 | |||||||
| West | Cincinnati | 4 | |||||||
- American League Championship Series MVP Dave Stewart
- National League Championship Series co-MVPs: Rob Dibble and Randy Myers
- All-Star Game, July 10 at Wrigley Field: American League, 2–0; Julio Franco, MVP
Other champions
- Baseball World Cup: Cuba
- Caribbean World Series: Leones del Escogido (Dominican Republic)
- College World Series: Georgia
- Japan Series: Seibu Lions defeated the Yomiuri Giants (4–0)
- Korean Series: LG Twins over Samsung Lions
- Big League World Series: Taipei, Taiwan
- Junior League World Series: Yabucoa, Puerto Rico
- Little League World Series: San-Hua, Tainan County, Taiwan
- Senior League World Series: Taipei, Taiwan
- Taiwan Series: Wei Chuan Dragons defeated the Mercuries Tigers
Awards and honors
- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Most Valuable Player
- Cy Young Award
- Bob Welch, Oakland Athletics (AL)
- Doug Drabek, Pittsburgh Pirates (NL)
- Rookie of the Year
- Sandy Alomar Jr., Cleveland Indians (AL)
- David Justice, Atlanta Braves (NL)
- Manager of the Year Award
- Jeff Torborg, Chicago White Sox (AL)
- Jim Leyland, Pittsburgh Pirates (NL)
- Woman Executive of the Year (major or minor league): Leanne Pagliai, Riverside Red Wave, California League
- Gold Glove Award
- Mark McGwire (1B) (AL)
- Harold Reynolds (2B) (AL)
- Kelly Gruber (3B) (AL)
- Ozzie Guillén (SS) (AL)
- Ellis Burks (OF) (AL)
- Ken Griffey Jr. (OF) (AL)
- Gary Pettis (OF) (AL)
- Sandy Alomar Jr. (C) (AL)
- Mike Boddicker (P) (AL)
- Andrés Galarraga (1B) (NL)
- Ryne Sandberg (2B) (NL)
- Tim Wallach (3B) (NL)
- Ozzie Smith (SS) (NL)
- Barry Bonds (OF) (NL)
- Tony Gwynn (OF) (NL)
- Andy Van Slyke (OF) (NL)
- Benito Santiago (C) (NL)
- Greg Maddux (P) (NL)
MLB statistical leaders
| American League | National League | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Name | Stat | Name | Stat |
| AVG | George Brett KC | .329 | Willie McGee STL | .335 |
| HR | Cecil Fielder DET | 51 | Ryne Sandberg CHC | 40 |
| RBI | Cecil Fielder DET | 132 | Matt Williams SF | 122 |
| Wins | Bob Welch OAK | 27 | Doug Drabek PIT | 22 |
| ERA | Roger Clemens BOS | 1.93 | Danny Darwin HOU | 2.21 |
| Ks | Nolan Ryan TEX | 232 | David Cone NYM | 233 |
Major League Baseball final standings
- American League
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boston Red Sox | 88 | 74 | .543 | — | 51–30 | 37–44 |
| Toronto Blue Jays | 86 | 76 | .531 | 2 | 44–37 | 42–39 |
| Detroit Tigers | 79 | 83 | .488 | 9 | 39–42 | 40–41 |
| Cleveland Indians | 77 | 85 | .475 | 11 | 41–40 | 36–45 |
| Baltimore Orioles | 76 | 85 | .472 | 11½ | 40–40 | 36–45 |
| Milwaukee Brewers | 74 | 88 | .457 | 14 | 39–42 | 35–46 |
| New York Yankees | 67 | 95 | .414 | 21 | 37–44 | 30–51 |
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oakland Athletics | 103 | 59 | .636 | — | 51–30 | 52–29 |
| Chicago White Sox | 94 | 68 | .580 | 9 | 49–31 | 45–37 |
| Texas Rangers | 83 | 79 | .512 | 20 | 47–35 | 36–44 |
| California Angels | 80 | 82 | .494 | 23 | 42–39 | 38–43 |
| Seattle Mariners | 77 | 85 | .475 | 26 | 38–43 | 39–42 |
| Kansas City Royals | 75 | 86 | .466 | 27½ | 45–36 | 30–50 |
| Minnesota Twins | 74 | 88 | .457 | 29 | 41–40 | 33–48 |
- National League
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pittsburgh Pirates | 95 | 67 | .586 | — | 49–32 | 46–35 |
| New York Mets | 91 | 71 | .562 | 4 | 52–29 | 39–42 |
| Montreal Expos | 85 | 77 | .525 | 10 | 47–34 | 38–43 |
| Chicago Cubs | 77 | 85 | .475 | 18 | 39–42 | 38–43 |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 77 | 85 | .475 | 18 | 41–40 | 36–45 |
| St. Louis Cardinals | 70 | 92 | .432 | 25 | 34–47 | 36–45 |
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cincinnati Reds | 91 | 71 | .562 | — | 46–35 | 45–36 |
| Los Angeles Dodgers | 86 | 76 | .531 | 5 | 47–34 | 39–42 |
| San Francisco Giants | 85 | 77 | .525 | 6 | 49–32 | 36–45 |
| Houston Astros | 75 | 87 | .463 | 16 | 49–32 | 26–55 |
| San Diego Padres | 75 | 87 | .463 | 16 | 37–44 | 38–43 |
| Atlanta Braves | 65 | 97 | .401 | 26 | 37–44 | 28–53 |
Managers
American League
| Team | Manager | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Baltimore Orioles | Frank Robinson | |
| Boston Red Sox | Joe Morgan | Won AL East title |
| California Angels | Doug Rader | Second season as Angels manager |
| Chicago White Sox | Jeff Torborg | AL Manager of the Year |
| Cleveland Indians | John McNamara | First season as Indians manager |
| Detroit Tigers | Sparky Anderson | 12th season as Tigers manager |
| Kansas City Royals | John Wathan | |
| Milwaukee Brewers | Tom Trebelhorn | |
| Minnesota Twins | Tom Kelly | |
| New York Yankees | Bucky Dent | Replaced during the season by Stump Merrill |
| Oakland Athletics | Tony La Russa | Won AL Pennant |
| Seattle Mariners | Jim Lefebvre | |
| Texas Rangers | Bobby Valentine | |
| Toronto Blue Jays | Cito Gaston |
National League
| Team | Manager | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Atlanta Braves | Russ Nixon | Replaced during the season by Bobby Cox |
| Chicago Cubs | Don Zimmer | |
| Cincinnati Reds | Lou Piniella | Won the World Series |
| Houston Astros | Art Howe | 2nd season with the Astros |
| Los Angeles Dodgers | Tommy Lasorda | |
| Montreal Expos | Buck Rodgers | |
| New York Mets | Davey Johnson | Replaced during the season by Bud Harrelson |
| Philadelphia Phillies | Nick Leyva | |
| Pittsburgh Pirates | Jim Leyland | NL East Division title |
| St. Louis Cardinals | Whitey Herzog | Replaced during the season by Joe Torre |
| San Diego Padres | Jack McKeon | Replaced during the season by Greg Riddoch |
| San Francisco Giants | Roger Craig | 6th season with the Giants |
Events
January
- January 2 – The Chicago Cubs release Vance Law.
- January 9:
- Jim Palmer, a three-time American League Cy Young Award winner, and Joe Morgan, a two-time National League MVP, are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers' Association of America in their first year of eligibility.
- The Major League Baseball Players Association sends a letter to all clubs advising them that spring camps will not be opened.
- January 15 – The Detroit Tigers sign Cecil Fielder as a free agent. Fielder returns to the states after playing the previous season for the Hanshin Tigers of the Japan Central League.
- January 19 – After being released by the New York Mets, Gary Carter signs a free agent contract with the San Francisco Giants.
- January 28 – Dan Quisenberry is signed as a free agent by the San Francisco Giants.
February
- February 15:
- A thirty-two-day lockout begins as Major League Baseball owners refuse to open spring training camp without reaching a new Basic Agreement with the players. The regular season is delayed one week due to the lockout.
- After spending the previous seasons with the California Angels and Kansas City Royals, Bill Buckner returns to the Boston Red Sox as a free agent. A combination of injuries and fans that wouldn't forgive him for his error that ultimately cost the Red Sox the 1986 World Series send Buckner into retirement mid way through the season.
- February 17 – The New York Yankees sign free agent pitcher Mariano Rivera.
March
- March 19 – MLB commissioner Fay Vincent announces a new four-year agreement between 1990 and 1993 (CBA-7). The agreement may be reopened by either the players association or teams owners after three years, as well as the minimum salary is raised to $100,000 from $68,000. Besides, the pension/benefit plan contribution by the owners increases to an average of $55 million over the four years while the salary arbitration eligibility stays at three years, but the top 17% of two-year players by service time are also now eligible as free agents. Better known as Super Two, this eligibility represents about 15 players per year.
- March 26 – Hoping to duplicate the success the New York Yankees had with Deion Sanders, the New York Mets sign Minnesota Vikings running back D.J. Dozier, who was also looking to become a two sport star. The Dozier experiment fails as he only plays 25 games at the major league level.
April
- April 3 – The Chicago White Sox release pitcher Jerry Reuss. Reuss would sign two weeks later with the Houston Astros.
- April 9 – Glenn Davis of the Houston Astros reaches base three times after he's hit by a pitch. Davis is plucked by Reds pitchers Randy Myers, Rob Dibble, and Norm Charlton. Interaction with a Houston sports writer after the game Myers replies, "We're Nasty Guys", was led to the Reds trio of relievers being called "The Nasty Boys".
- April 10 – U.S. President George H. W. Bush throws out the first pitch at a game in Toronto, making him the first U.S. President to toss the first pitch in a foreign country.
- April 11 – At Anaheim Stadium, California Angels pitchers Mark Langston (seven innings) and Mike Witt (two innings) combine to no-hit the Seattle Mariners, 1–0, for the first combined no-hitter in the major leagues since 1976. It is Langston's first start for the Angels since signing as a free agent in the off-season. Angels first baseman Wally Joyner makes an error in the fifth inning when he overthrows Langston on Pete O'Brien's grounder. O'Brien tries for second base‚ not realizing that catcher Lance Parrish backs up the play, and he is out.
- April 14 – CBS officially assumes the role as Major League Baseball's network broadcast partner (succeeding both ABC and NBC under a four-year deal through the end of the 1993 season) with coverage of the Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh[1] and Los Angeles at Houston.[2][3][4]
- For the first time in MLB history, two Cy Young Award winners contribute to the victory. Bret Saberhagen, gets the win, while the reigning CY Young Award winner, relief pitcher Mark Davis, picks up the save in the Royals win over the Toronto Blue Jays.
- April 20:
- Pete Rose pleads guilty to two charges of filing false income tax returns not showing income he receives from selling autographs, memorabilia, and from horse racing winnings.
- After retiring the first 26 Oakland Athletics batters, Brian Holman loses a perfect game when Ken Phelps hits a home run in an eventual 6–1 Seattle Mariners win.
- April 23 – During an in-season exhibition game against the cross-town rival Chicago Cubs, Steve Lyons of the Chicago White Sox plays all nine positions during the game. However, because it is an exhibition, Lyons is not officially credited with the feat.
- April 26 – Nolan Ryan pitches a one-hitter and sets a Texas Rangers record with 16 strikeouts in a 1–0 win over the Chicago White Sox. It is also the 12th career one-hitter for Ryan, which ties him with Major League Baseball leader Bob Feller, as well as his 200th career game with at least 10 strikeouts. Ron Kittle of the White Sox had the only hit for Chicago, a single.
- April 27 – The Milwaukee Brewers release first baseman Terry Francona.
- April 29 – Opting to not be placed on the disabled list, Dan Quisenberry announces his retirement. He only appeared in five games for the Giants.
- April 30 – In a game between the New York Mets and Atlanta Braves, Braves hitter Mark Lemke hits a ball that is fielded by Mets infielder Gregg Jeffries, who then tosses the ball to Mets pitcher David Cone. Lemke is ruled safe by first base umpire Charlie Williams. Cone has a meltdown on the field, and begins to argue with Williams, thus allowing two Braves runners to score in the process. The Mets would go on to lose the game 7–4.
May
- May 4 – The Boston Red Sox trade relief pitcher Lee Smith to the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for outfielder Tom Brunansky.
- May 5 – The St. Louis Cardinals sign free agent Terry Francona.
- May 11 – The California Angels trade pitcher Mike Witt to the New York Yankees in exchange for outfielder Dave Winfield.
- May 22 – Andre Dawson of the Chicago Cubs is intentionally walked by Cincinnati Reds' pitching five times, becoming the first player to do so in Major League Baseball history.
- May 26 – The Philadelphia Phillies retire eventual Baseball Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt's number 20.
- May 29 – Oakland Athletics outfielder Rickey Henderson steals third base in the sixth inning of a game versus the Toronto Blue Jays. The steal allows Henderson to pass Ty Cobb for most bases stolen in American League history.
June
- June 2 – At the Kingdome, Randy Johnson of the Seattle Mariners no-hits the Detroit Tigers 2-0. The no-hitter is the first in both Mariner and Kingdome history.
- June 6 – The highest-profile managerial firing of 1990 season happens when the New York Yankees fire Bucky Dent before a game against their rivals at Fenway Park, where he hit his famous three-run home run in a one-game playoff game in 1978, making Fenway Park the scene of his greatest moment as a player and worst moment as manager. Prior to the game, Yankees broadcaster Tony Kubek blasts owner George Steinbrenner before a television audience, saying the firing of Dent was "mishandled" and calling Steinbrenner a "loser", "bully", and a "coward".
- June 11 – Nolan Ryan pitches the sixth no hitter of his career by defeating the Oakland Athletics in Oakland, 5-0.
- June 12 – The Pittsburgh Pirates' Sid Bream and Kansas City Royals' Bill Pecota each went 4-for-4, but neither one scored or drove in a run.
- June 14 – It is announced that the National League expands by two teams for the 1993 season.
- June 22 – The Atlanta Braves fire manager Russ Nixon and replace him with general manager Bobby Cox.
- June 29 – For the first time in major league history, two no-hitters are thrown on the same day in both leagues. Dave Stewart for the Oakland Athletics, no-hits his future team, the Toronto Blue Jays, at SkyDome. Hours later, Dodger pitcher Fernando Valenzuela no-hit the St. Louis Cardinals at Dodger Stadium.
July
- July 1 – While no longer recognized as such, the New York Yankees' Andy Hawkins pitches a no-hitter at old Comiskey Park. However, walks and errors lead to four unearned runs as the Chicago White Sox win 4-0. Hawkins pitches for the visiting team, and pitches only 8 innings since there is no bottom of the 9th.
- July 5 – Whitey Herzog quits in his eleventh year as manager of the St. Louis Cardinals. He has a 1,281-1,125 (.532) record in 18 years as a manager, including stints with the Texas Rangers, California Angels and Kansas City Royals..
- July 10 – Six American League pitchers combine for a two-hitter and a 2–0 victory over the National League in a rain-delayed All-Star Game at Wrigley Field. Texas Rangers second baseman Julio Franco drives in both runs in the 7th inning and is named MVP.
- July 12:
- Barry Bonds hits his 100th career home run.
- Mélido Pérez of the Chicago White Sox no-hits the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium 8-0. However, the game is called after six innings by rain. Perez's no-hitter avenges Andy Hawkins no-no back on July 1; coincidentally, Hawkins is the losing pitcher for New York in Perez's game.
- July 17 – The Minnesota Twins turn two triple plays in a single game – the first time that's been accomplished in the major leagues – against the Boston Red Sox, yet still lose the game 1–0 on an unearned run. The following night, the two clubs tie a major league record by turning a combined ten double plays in their game, another Boston victory. Boston ties an American League record by grounding into six double plays in the nine-inning game.
- July 19 – Pete Rose is sentenced to five months in the medium security Prison Camp at the United States Penitentiary in Marion, Illinois and fined $50,000 following his April 20 guilty plea to two charges of filing false income tax returns not showing income he receives from selling autographs, memorabilia, and from horse racing winnings.[5]
- July 28 – The Cleveland Indians retire longtime coach and former player Mel Harder's number 18.
- July 31 – Nolan Ryan of the Texas Rangers earns his 300th career win, against the Milwaukee Brewers.
August
- August 3 – Against the Philadelphia Phillies at Veterans Stadium, Doug Drabek of the Pittsburgh Pirates has a no-hitter broken up with two out in the ninth. Sil Campusano, who had not even been in the starting lineup, breaks up the bid with a single to right; the hit is the only one Drabek will allow in the Pirates' 11-0 victory. The no-hitter would have been the Pirates' first since John Candelaria in 1976.
- August 15 – At Veterans Stadium, Terry Mulholland of the Philadelphia Phillies no-hits the San Francisco Giants 6-0.
- August 21 – At Dodger Stadium, the Philadelphia Phillies overcome a 10-run deficit to defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers 12-11. After the Dodgers score eight runs in the fifth inning to take an 11-1 lead, the Phillies score twice in the eighth, then five more runs in the ninth before John Kruk ties the game with a three-run home run; a double by Carmelo Martínez scores Rod Booker to complete the comeback.
- August 25 – In the fourth inning of a 14-4 victory over the Oakland Athletics at Tiger Stadium, Cecil Fielder of the Detroit Tigers, batting against Dave Stewart, hits a home run that clears the left-field roof. The home run is the third overall, and the first by a Tiger, to clear the left-field roof. Harmon Killebrew hits a home run over the roof in 1962 and Frank Howard in 1968.
- August 27 – At Cleveland Stadium, Boston Red Sox outfielder Ellis Burks hit two home runs in an eight-run 4th inning of a 12–4 victory over the Indians. It is only the second time a Red Sox hitter homers twice in an inning. Bill Regan is the first, on June 16, 1928.
- August 31 – Ken Griffey and his son Ken Griffey Jr. start for the Seattle Mariners in a game against the Kansas City Royals. It marks the first time a father and son ever play in the same Major League game.
September
- September 2 – After coming close on numerous occasions, Dave Stieb of the Toronto Blue Jays hurls his team's first (and so far only) no-hitter, blanking the Cleveland Indians 3–0 at Cleveland Stadium.
- September 3 – Reliever Bobby Thigpen sets a major league season-record with his 47th save of the year in a 4–2 Chicago White Sox victory over the Kansas City Royals. The previous record was set by Dave Righetti of the New York Yankees in the 1986 season.
- September 14 – Ken Griffey and Ken Griffey Jr. hit back-to-back home runs in a 7–5 loss to the California Angels. Pitcher Kirk McCaskill gives up the historic home runs.
- September 15 – Bobby Thigpen of the Chicago White Sox saves his fiftieth game, becoming the first pitcher to reach that mark. The White Sox defeat the Boston Red Sox 7-5.
- September 19 – At Wrigley Field, Barry Bonds of the Pittsburgh Pirates becomes a first-time member of the 30–30 club. Batting in the fifth inning of the Pirates' 8-7 victory over the Chicago Cubs, Bonds, who had stolen his 49th base earlier in the game, hits his 30th home run off Cub pitcher Bill Long. Bonds will go on to tie his father Bobby for most 30 home run/30 stolen base seasons with five.
- September 22 – Andre Dawson of the Chicago Cubs steals his 300th base in an 11–5 loss to the New York Mets, becoming only the second player in major league history with 300 home runs, 300 steals and 2,000 hits; Willie Mays is the first, though they are later joined by Barry Bonds.
- September 29 – While waiting through a rain delay, the Cincinnati Reds watch the Los Angeles Dodgers lose to the San Francisco Giants 4-3, which clinches the National League West Division for the Reds, their first Western Division title since the 1979 season. The Reds are the first National League team to lead their division wire-to-wire since the inception of the 162-game season.
- September 30:
- Harold Reynolds of the Seattle Mariners grounds out; second baseman Scott Fletcher to first baseman Steve Lyons, giving the Chicago White Sox a 2-1 victory in the final game to ever be played at historic Comiskey Park. Bobby Thigpen is on the mound to earn his 57th save, establishing a Major League record for saves in a season.
- In St. Louis, Pirates pitcher Doug Drabek threw only 80 pitches as he gave up only 3 hits and retiring the final 13 batters as the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the St. Louis Cardinals 2-0 to clinch their first National League East title since their famed 1979 world championship team.
October
- October 3: A day for batting champions:
- George Brett became the first player to win a batting title in three straight decades. Brett went 1-for-1 in a 5-2 Kansas City loss to Cleveland. Brett also won the AL batting titles in 1976 and 1980.
- Willie McGee became the first player to win a batting title in a league he didn't finish. He was in Oakland when he won the title when Dave Magadan of the New York Mets failed to catch him on the season's final day.
- October 10 – The Oakland Athletics beat the Boston Red Sox 3–1 in Game 4 of the ALCS to sweep the series and win their 3rd consecutive American League pennant. Dave Stewart is named Series MVP. Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens is ejected in the 2nd inning by plate umpire Terry Cooney for arguing balls and strikes, and infielder Marty Barrett is ejected for throwing objects onto the field.
- October 12 – The Cincinnati Reds beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 2–1 in Game 6 of the NLCS to win their first National League pennant since 1976. Rob Dibble and Randy Myers are named co-MVPs of the Series.
- October 20 – The talk of an Oakland Athletics dynasty is proven premature, as the Cincinnati Reds beat Oakland 2–1 to complete one of the most stunning sweeps in World Series history. Series MVP José Rijo (2–0, 0.59 ERA) retires 20 batters in a row, Randy Myers getting the last two outs to give the Reds their first World Championship since 1976. Not joining the celebration at the end is Eric Davis, who ruptures his kidney diving for a ball during the game and is taken to the hospital. It takes Davis several years to fully recover.
November
- November 6 – Atlanta Braves outfielder David Justice was named National League Rookie of the Year.
- November 7 – Cleveland Indians catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. was named American League Rookie of the Year.
- November 8 – After 8 up and down years with The New York Mets, Darryl Strawberry signs a 5-year contract with The Los Angeles Dodgers.
- November 19 – Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Barry Bonds won his first National League MVP.
- November 20 – Oakland Athletics outfielder Rickey Henderson was named American League MVP.
- November 23 – Former Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia Phillies and Cincinnati Reds catcher Baudilio (Bo) Díaz is crushed to death when a rooftop satellite dish topples over at his home in Venezuela. He was 37.
December
- December 5 – In a blockbuster deal, the Toronto Blue Jays send Tony Fernández and Fred McGriff to the San Diego Padres for Roberto Alomar and Joe Carter.
- December 6 – At Herman Darvick Autograph Auctions in New York City, Shoeless Joe Jackson's signature is sold for $23,100, the most money ever paid for a 19th- or 20th-century signature. Jackson, who did not read or write, copied the signature from one written out by his wife. The signature, which is resold within hours, is cut from a legal document.
- December 18 – The National League announces the six finalist cities for the two expansion clubs that join the league in 1993: Buffalo, Denver, Miami, Orlando, Tampa-St. Petersburg and Washington, D.C.
Births
January
- January 1 – Xavier Avery
- January 3 – Hunter Cervenka
- January 3 – Alex Meyer
- January 3 – Mike Wright
- January 4 – Raisel Iglesias
- January 5 – C. J. Cron
- January 5 – José Iglesias
- January 5 – Danny Ortiz
- January 11 – Danny Salazar
- January 14 – J. R. Graham
- January 16 – Warwick Saupold
- January 17 – Frank Garcés
- January 18 – Anthony Bemboom
- January 18 – Brett Lawrie
- January 18 – Gift Ngoepe
- January 21 – José Ramírez
- January 21 – Joe Wieland
- January 22 – Jon Berti
- January 22 – Mike Hauschild
- January 27 – Tim Beckham
- January 30 – Eddy Alvarez
- January 30 – C. J. Riefenhauser
February
- February 1 – Nate Orf
- February 1 – Stolmy Pimentel
- February 2 – Dan Winkler
- February 8 – Andrew McKirahan
- February 9 – Randall Delgado
- February 9 – O'Koyea Dickson
- February 9 – Henry Rodríguez
- February 10 – Tim Hill
- February 10 – Allen Webster
- February 13 – Nathan Eovaldi
- February 13 – Beau Taylor
- February 15 – Michael Roth
- February 18 – Joe Colón
- February 18 – Didi Gregorius
- February 21 – Brad Goldberg
- February 23 – Jaff Decker
- February 24 – Jason Coats
- February 24 – Eury De La Rosa
- February 25 – Félix Peña
- February 27 – Adam Morgan
- February 27 – Carlos Triunfel
March
- March 1 – Kyle Skipworth
- March 1 – José Valdez
- March 2 – Wilking Rodríguez
- March 4 – Richard Rodríguez
- March 5 – L. J. Hoes
- March 11 – Ryan Rua
- March 12 – Cole Sulser
- March 13 – Scott Oberg
- March 15 – Nick Ahmed
- March 17 – Andrew Kittredge
- March 17 – Jean Segura
- March 20 – Brad Hand
- March 22 – Brett Marshall
- March 22 – Andrew Susac
- March 24 – Starlin Castro
- March 25 – Erisbel Arruebarrena
- March 26 – Jett Bandy
- March 27 – Jake Esch
- March 27 – Junior Lake
- March 27 – Jake Odorizzi
- March 28 – Fernando Cruz
April
- April 3 – Destin Hood
- April 12 – Edgar Olmos
- April 12 – Burch Smith
- April 14 – Jacob Barnes
- April 16 – Travis Shaw
- April 17 – Chris O'Grady
- April 18 – Henderson Álvarez
- April 18 – Anthony DeSclafani
- April 18 – Evan Marshall
- April 19 – Jackie Bradley Jr.
- April 19 – Brian Flynn
- April 20 – Kyle Higashioka
- April 21 – Zack Godley
- April 22 – Kevin Kiermaier
- April 22 – Colton Murray
- April 23 – Louis Head
- April 26 – Johnny Davis
- April 26 – Joey Wendle
- April 27 – Aaron Brooks
May
- May 1 – Scooter Gennett
- May 1 – A. J. Jiménez
- May 2 – Erasmo Ramírez
- May 6 – Jose Altuve
- May 7 – Keon Broxton
- May 8 – Sean Gilmartin
- May 9 – Jace Peterson
- May 10 – Salvador Pérez
- May 13 – Mychal Givens
- May 20 – Chris Reed
- May 22 – Sam Gaviglio
- May 23 – Kyle Barraclough
- May 23 – César Hernández
- May 24 – Adam Conley
- May 24 – Wilmer Font
- May 25 – Jarred Cosart
- May 25 – Ryan Sherriff
- May 26 – Alex Dickerson
- May 26 – Paul Sewald
- May 28 – Aaron Northcraft
- May 28 – Matt Stites
- May 29 – Joe Biagini
- May 29 – Tyler Pill
- May 29 – Trevor Rosenthal
- May 30 – John Brebbia
- May 30 – Eury Pérez
- May 30 – Zack Wheeler
June
- June 2 – Jake Smith
- June 6 – Tyler Collins
- June 6 – Anthony Rendon
- June 9 – John Andreoli
- June 12 – Jed Bradley
- June 13 – James McCann
- June 14 – Trent Baker
- June 16 – Kelby Tomlinson
- June 17 – Matt Barnes
- June 17 – Andrew Chafin
- June 18 – Lisalverto Bonilla
- June 19 – Logan Verrett
- June 22 – Darrell Ceciliani
- June 26 – Ray Black
- June 26 – Drew Gagnon
- June 27 – Nick Martini
- June 30 – Jesús Aguilar
- June 30 – Cody Asche
July
- July 1 – Colin Rea
- July 2 – Jerad Eickhoff
- July 3 – Brandon Maurer
- July 4 – Matt Dermody
- July 5 – Nick Anderson
- July 6 – Preston Tucker
- July 10 – John Lamb
- July 12 – Chasen Shreve
- July 13 – Casey Sadler
- July 14 – Jack Leathersich
- July 15 – Sherman Johnson
- July 15 – Kyle Kubitza
- July 15 – Peter O'Brien
- July 15 – Mac Williamson
- July 17 – Matt Purke
- July 19 – Jonathan Pettibone
- July 20 – Tyler Webb
- July 24 – Sebastián Valle
- July 25 – Román Méndez
- July 29 – Jacob Wilson
August
- August 1 – Aledmys Díaz
- August 1 – Kennys Vargas
- August 4 – Brian Ellington
- August 5 – Nick Martínez
- August 7 – Andy Burns
- August 7 – Carter Capps
- August 7 – José Domínguez
- August 7 – Tony Zych
- August 8 – Webster Rivas
- August 10 – Anthony Gose
- August 11 – Mayckol Guaipe
- August 12 – Ryan Weber
- August 13 – Joe Ortiz
- August 13 – Hansel Robles
- August 14 – Chris Rowley
- August 15 – Adam Cimber
- August 16 – Adrián Sánchez
- August 17 – Kyle Farmer
- August 18 – Yimi García
- August 18 – Eric Yardley
- August 21 – Christian Vázquez
- August 22 – Alan Busenitz
- August 22 – Ryan Carpenter
- August 22 – Drew Hutchison
- August 22 – Chris Stratton
- August 23 – Mike Yastrzemski
- August 25 – Matt Marksberry
- August 25 – Deven Marrero
- August 25 – Max Muncy
- August 26 – Daniel Corcino
- August 27 – Nick Tropeano
- August 29 – Chris Taylor
September
- September 3 – Shae Simmons
- September 4 – Chris Beck
- September 6 – Donnie Hart
- September 7 – Dusten Knight
- September 8 – Gerrit Cole
- September 9 – Billy Hamilton
- September 11 – Shawn Armstrong
- September 13 – Steve Hathaway
- September 14 – Cody Anderson
- September 14 – David Kandilas
- September 14 – Derek Law
- September 15 – Parker Markel
- September 17 – Brady Rodgers
- September 17 – Marcus Semien
- September 18 – Juan Minaya
- September 20 – Ken Giles
- September 24 – Wynton Bernard
- September 26 – Brooks Pounders
- September 27 – Cameron Perkins
- September 28 – Slade Heathcott
- September 30 – Jack Mayfield
October
- October 6 – Scott Schebler
- October 8 – Robbie Erlin
- October 9 – Jake Lamb
- October 10 – Jonathan Aro
- October 10 – Shelby Miller
- October 10 – Kolten Wong
- October 14 – William Cuevas
- October 16 – Kyle Lloyd
- October 17 – Rafael Montero
- October 19 – Jordan Lyles
- October 19 – Tyler Matzek
- October 20 – Ty Blach
- October 22 – Drew VerHagen
- October 27 – Carlos Pérez
- October 27 – Jason Wheeler
- October 28 – Justin Hancock
- October 29 – Ender Inciarte
- October 29 – Tyler White
- October 30 – Joe Panik
- October 30 – Patrick Schuster
November
- November 2 – Brian Goodwin
- November 2 – Matt Koch
- November 2 – Melvin Mercedes
- November 3 – Madison Younginer
- November 5 – Josh Lucas
- November 7 – Danny Santana
- November 11 – Vinny Nittoli
- November 12 – Hideto Asamura
- November 12 – Marcell Ozuna
- November 13 – Luke Bard
- November 13 – Chris Devenski
- November 13 – Arodys Vizcaíno
- November 14 – Sam Selman
- November 14 – Yasmany Tomás
- November 17 – Elías Díaz
- November 20 – David Washington
- November 23 – Enrique Burgos
- November 23 – Jeff Ferrell
- November 28 – Roemon Fields
December
- December 3 – J. T. Chargois
- December 3 – Miguel González
- December 3 – Matt Reynolds
- December 3 – Mike Tauchman
- December 4 – Ángel Nesbitt
- December 7 – Steve Baron
- December 7 – Brian Johnson
- December 7 – Yasiel Puig
- December 9 – Bruce Rondón
- December 10 – Wil Myers
- December 10 – Austin Wynns
- December 14 – Mike Ohlman
- December 15 – Trevor Hildenberger
- December 17 – Taylor Rogers
- December 17 – Tyler Rogers
- December 18 – Micah Johnson
- December 19 – Tim Cooney
- December 20 – Bruce Maxwell
- December 21 – Mike Clevinger
- December 21 – Kendall Graveman
- December 23 – Mitch Haniger
- December 25 – Garrett Cooper
- December 27 – Tyler Duffey
- December 27 – Brady Feigl
- December 27 – Dylan Floro