<!-- "none" is preferred when the title is sufficiently descriptive; see WP:SDNONE -->
Champions
Major League Baseball
- World Series: Oakland Athletics over San Francisco Giants (4–0); Dave Stewart, MVP
- American League Championship Series MVP: Rickey Henderson
- National League Championship Series MVP: Will Clark
- All-Star Game, July 11 at Anaheim Stadium: American League, 5–3; Bo Jackson, MVP
Other champions
- Caribbean World Series: Águilas del Zulia (Venezuela)
- College World Series: Wichita State
- Japan Series: Yomiuri Giants over Kintetsu Buffaloes (4–3)
- Korean Series: Haitai Tigers over Binggrae Eagles
- Big League World Series: Taipei, Taiwan
- Junior League World Series: Manatí, Puerto Rico
- Little League World Series: Trumbull National, Trumbull, Connecticut
- Senior League World Series: Pingtung, Taiwan
Awards and honors
- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Al Barlick
- Johnny Bench
- Red Schoendienst
- Carl Yastrzemski
- Most Valuable Player
- Robin Yount, Milwaukee Brewers (AL)
- Kevin Mitchell, San Francisco Giants (NL)
- Cy Young Award
- Bret Saberhagen, Kansas City Royals (AL)
- Mark Davis, San Diego Padres (NL)
- Rookie of the Year
- Gregg Olson, Baltimore Orioles (AL)
- Jerome Walton, Chicago Cubs (NL)
- Manager of the Year Award
- Frank Robinson, Baltimore Orioles (AL)
- Don Zimmer, Chicago Cubs (NL)
- Woman Executive of the Year (major or minor league): Pat Hamilton, Toledo Mud Hens, International League
- Gold Glove Award
- Don Mattingly (1B) (AL)
- Harold Reynolds (2B) (AL)
- Gary Gaetti (3B) (AL)
- Tony Fernández (SS) (AL)
- Gary Pettis (OF) (AL)
- Kirby Puckett (OF) (AL)
- Devon White (OF) (AL)
- Bob Boone (C) (AL)
- Bret Saberhagen (P) (AL)
- Andrés Galarraga (1B) (NL)
- Ryne Sandberg (2B) (NL)
- Terry Pendleton (3B) (NL)
- Ozzie Smith (SS) (NL)
- Eric Davis (OF) (NL)
- Tony Gwynn (OF) (NL)
- Andy Van Slyke (OF) (NL)
- Benito Santiago (C) (NL)
- Ron Darling (P) (NL)
MLB statistical leaders
{| cellpadding="1" style="width:auto;font-size: 90%; border: 1px solid gray;"
|- align="center" style="font-size: larger;"
|
! colspan=2 | American League
! colspan=2 | National League
|- style="background:lightblue;"
! Type || Name || Stat || Name || Stat
|- align="center" style="vertical-align: middle;" style="background:lightblue;"
|-
| AVG || Kirby Puckett MIN || .339 || Tony Gwynn SD || .336
|-
| HR || Fred McGriff TOR || 36 || Kevin Mitchell SF || 47
|-
| RBI || Rubén Sierra TEX || 119 || Kevin Mitchell SF || 125
|-
| Wins || Bret Saberhagen KC || 23 || Mike Scott HOU || 20
|-
| ERA || Bret Saberhagen KC || 2.16 || Scott Garrelts SF || 2.28
|}
Major League Baseball final standings
{| cellpadding="1" style="width:auto;font-size: 90%; border: 1px solid gray;"
|- align="center" style="font-size: larger;"
! colspan=6 | American League
|- style="background:lightblue;"
! Rank || Club || Wins || Losses || Win % || GB
|- align="center" style="vertical-align: middle;" style="background:lightblue;"
! colspan=6 | East Division
|-
| 1st || Toronto Blue Jays || 89 || 73 || .549 || --
|-
| 2nd || Baltimore Orioles || 87 || 75 || .537 || 2.0
|-
| 3rd || Boston Red Sox || 83 || 79 || .512 || 6.0
|-
| 4th || Milwaukee Brewers || 81 || 81 || .500 || 8.0
|-
| 5th || New York Yankees || 74 || 87 || .460 || 14.5
|-
| 6th || Cleveland Indians || 73 || 89 || .451 || 16.0
|-
| 7th || Detroit Tigers || 59 || 103 || .364 || 30.0
|-
|- align="center" style="vertical-align: middle;" style="background:lightblue;"
! colspan=6 | West Division
|-
| 1st || Oakland Athletics || 99 || 63 || .611 || --
|-
| 2nd || Kansas City Royals || 92 || 70 || .568 || 7.0
|-
| 3rd || California Angels || 91 || 71 || .562 || 8.0
|-
| 4th || Texas Rangers || 83 || 79 || .512 || 16.0
|-
| 5th || Minnesota Twins || 80 || 82 || .494 || 19.0
|-
| 6th || Seattle Mariners || 73 || 89 || .451 || 26.0
|-
| 7th || Chicago White Sox || 69 || 92 || .429 || 29.5
|-
|}
{| cellpadding="1" style="width:auto;font-size: 90%; border: 1px solid gray;"
|- align="center" style="font-size: larger;"
! colspan=6 | National League
|- style="background:lightblue;"
! Rank || Club || Wins || Losses || Win % || GB
|- align="center" style="vertical-align: middle;" style="background:lightblue;"
! colspan=6 | East Division
|-
| 1st || Chicago Cubs || 93 || 69 || .574 || --
|-
| 2nd || New York Mets || 87 || 75 || .537 || 6.0
|-
| 3rd || St. Louis Cardinals || 86 || 76 || .531 || 7.0
|-
| 4th || Montreal Expos || 81 || 81 || .500 || 12.0
|-
| 5th || Pittsburgh Pirates || 74 || 88 || .457 || 19.0
|-
| 6th || Philadelphia Phillies || 67 || 95 || .414 || 26.0
|-
|- align="center" style="vertical-align: middle;" style="background:lightblue;"
! colspan=6 | West Division
|-
| 1st || San Francisco Giants || 92 || 70 || .568 || --
|-
| 2nd || San Diego Padres || 89 || 73 || .549 || 3.0
|-
| 3rd || Houston Astros || 86 || 76 || .531 || 6.0
|-
| 4th || Los Angeles Dodgers || 77 || 83 || .481 || 14.0
|-
| 5th || Cincinnati Reds || 75 || 87 || .463 || 17.0
|-
| 6th || Atlanta Braves || 63 || 97 || .394 || 28.0
|}
Events
January
thumb|upright|285px|[[National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum|Cooperstown plaques of Cincinnati teammates Johnny Bench (left) and Joe Morgan]]
- January 5 – ESPN and Major League Baseball agree to a $400 million deal enabling the cable sports network to telecast 175 MLB regular-season games a year from through and paving the way for its long-running Sunday Night Baseball programming. The contract follows last month's mammoth $1.1 billion deal with over-the-air broadcast network CBS for the MLB All-Star Game, League Championship Series, World Series, and Saturday Game of the Week.
- January 6:
- The bizarre, bitter and ongoing feud between George Steinbrenner and his All-Star (and future Hall-of-Fame) outfielder Dave Winfield flares again when Winfield's foundation, to which the New York Yankees' owner is contractually bound to contribute, sues Steinbrenner in U.S. District Court for failure to make $450,000 in payments since September 1, 1987. The suit is the third that Winfield's foundation has filed since against Steinbrenner, who reveals that he has initiated a private investigation of the organization's practices. The owner will also file a countersuit against Winfield on January 9.
- The Texas Rangers re-sign relief pitcher Cecilio Guante, 28, and veteran catcher Jim Sundberg, 37, both of whom had been granted free agency on November 4, 1988.
- January 9:
- Johnny Bench and Carl Yastrzemski are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers' Association of America in their first year of eligibility. Bench is named on 96.4 percent of the ballots, the third-highest figure in history behind Ty Cobb and Hank Aaron.
- The Texas Rangers bring back third baseman Buddy Bell, 37, unconditionally released by the Houston Astros last December 21. Bell was a six-time Gold Glove Award winner and 3x AL All-Star during his first term (–) with the Rangers.
- January 10 – The New York Yankees trade veteran starting pitcher Rick Rhoden to the Astros for outfielder John Fishel and minor league pitchers Pedro DeLeón and Mike Hook. Rhoden, 35, made 30 starts and won 12 games for the 1988 Yankees.
- January 13 – The Detroit Tigers bring back 38-year-old right-hander Doyle Alexander, who won 14 games for them last season. Alexander had been granted "new look" free agency last October 24 by an arbitrator in the "Collusion II" grievance settlement.
- January 17 – The California Angels sign former Yankees' outfielder Claudell Washington, 34, also granted "new look" free agency on October 24, 1988, in the Collusion II finding. The Angels' three-year, $2.63 million offer doubles Washington's annual pay.
- January 18 – Outgoing U.S. President Ronald Reagan pardons Yankees owner George Steinbrenner relating to his conviction for illegally contributing to the campaign of Richard Nixon in 1972.
- January 23 – The Cleveland Indians trade third baseman Eddie Williams, 24, to the Chicago White Sox for right-handed pitchers Joel Davis, 23, and Ed Wojna, 28.
- January 24 – The Baltimore Orioles trade catcher Terry Kennedy to the San Francisco Giants in exchange for catcher Bob Melvin.
- January 27 – The Philadelphia Phillies purchase the contract of shortstop Dickie Thon, 30, from the San Diego Padres. Former NL All-Star Thon has battled back from a beaning that compromised his vision to have a productive big-league career. He had filed for arbitration earlier this month, forcing the Padres to trade him.
February
thumb|upright|150px|[[Bill White (first baseman)|Bill White]]
- February 3 – Bill White, former eight-time All-Star first baseman and 7x Gold Glove Award winner, primarily as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals, becomes the highest-ranking Black executive in MLB history when he is unanimously elected the 13th president of the National League. White, 55, is also the first African-American to head a major sports league. He succeeds A. Bartlett Giamatti, who will become the seventh Commissioner of Baseball on April 1.
- February 6:
- The Boston Red Sox sign outfielder/first baseman Danny Heep, 31, unconditionally released by the Los Angeles Dodgers last December 21. Heep will hit .300 with 96 hits in 113 games for the 1989 Bosox.
- The resurgent Pittsburgh Pirates, whose 85–75, second-place record in 1988 was their best since the Bucs' world-championship, 1979 season, announce that their April 11, 1989, home opener against the New York Mets is already sold out—believed to be the first Opening Day advance sell-out in the team's 107-year history. Led by stars Barry Bonds, Bobby Bonilla and Andy Van Slyke, the 1988 Pirates set a franchise record by attracting 1.867 million fans to Three Rivers Stadium.
- February 20 – Cincinnati Reds manager Pete Rose is called to New York City from the club's Florida spring training camp by Commissioner of Baseball Peter Ueberroth and NL president Giamatti for "questioning." Although the details of the meeting are meant to be secret, it proves to be the start of an investigation into Rose's gambling habits and allegations that he is betting on baseball.
- February 28 – Red Schoendienst, 66, a ten-time All-Star second baseman and World Series-winning manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, and Al Barlick, 73, who umpired in the National League for 28 seasons, are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Special Veterans Committee.
March
- March 12 – The Los Angeles Dodgers acquire starting pitcher Mike Morgan from the Baltimore Orioles for centerfielder Mike Devereaux.
- March 17 – Julie Croteau, an 18-year-old freshman first baseman at Division III St. Mary's College of Maryland, becomes the first woman to play in an NCAA baseball game. She grounds out three times and handles six chances without a miscue in the field during a 4–1 loss to Spring Garden College.
- March 19:
- George W. Bush, the 42-year-old son of the sitting U.S. President, future governor of Texas, and future 43rd Chief Executive of the U.S., acquires a controlling 58 percent interest in the Texas Rangers from oilman Eddie Chiles for a reported $46 million. Bush's ownership group includes two Dallas–Fort Worth businessmen and Bill DeWitt Jr., future managing partner and chairman of the St. Louis Cardinals. Chiles, 78, has owned the franchise since .
- The Cleveland Indians trade outfielder Mel Hall to the New York Yankees in exchange for catcher Joel Skinner and outfielder Turner Ward.
- March 21:
- Sports Illustrated reports that Major League Baseball is investigating allegations that Cincinnati Reds manager Pete Rose is betting on baseball games, which could lead to punishment ranging from a year's suspension to a lifetime ban for the all-time hits leader, surefire Hall of Famer, and Cincinnati icon. Outgoing Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth, scheduled to depart in ten days, confirms a probe of "serious allegations" against Rose.
- The Yankees' Byzantine front office gains another strong personality and opinionated voice when owner George Steinbrenner—known for making most baseball decisions on his own—hires recently fired Pittsburgh Pirates general manager Syd Thrift as vice president, baseball operations, to work under, over or alongside incumbent GM Bob Quinn. Thrift, 60, rebuilt the Pirates' roster between and , but was sacked by the Bucs' board of directors for his brazen management style last October. He'll last only five months with the Bombers before he resigns, August 29.
- Steve Lombardozzi, the 1987 world-champion Minnesota Twins' light-hitting, starting second baseman who batted .412 in that year's Fall Classic, is traded to the Houston Astros for two players to be named later, pitcher Gordon Farmer and outfielder Ramón Cedeño.
- March 23:
- The Yankees remain on the back page of New York's tabloids when star right-fielder Dave Winfield, publicly battling with Steinbrenner, undergoes successful surgery to repair a herniated disk in his back. Winfield, 37, will be sidelined for the entire 1989 season.
- The Chicago White Sox trade outfielder/third baseman Kenny Williams to the Detroit Tigers for pitcher Eric King. Williams, now 24, will return to the White Sox in a front-office job in 1994, and serve as the club's general manager between and —including during its 2005 world-championship season.
- The Tigers send third baseman Tom Brookens to the Yankees for right-hander Charles Hudson.
- March 25 – The Atlanta Braves purchase the contract of second baseman Jeff Treadway from the Cincinnati Reds.
- March 26:
- The Cleveland Indians trade outfielder Carmelo Castillo to the Minnesota Twins for relief pitcher Keith Atherton.
- The Baltimore Orioles send outfielder Ken Gerhart to the San Francisco Giants for first baseman Francisco Meléndez.
- March 27 – DH Steve "Bye Bye" Balboni is reacquired by the New York Yankees from the Seattle Mariners for minor-league hurler Dana Ridenour. The free-swinging Balboni, 32, has averaged 28 homers and 76 runs batted in over the past five seasons, primarily for the Kansas City Royals, since the Yanks traded him on December 8, 1983.
- March 28:
- The Montreal Expos make two deals with NL East rivals. They send southpaw Neal Heaton to the Pittsburgh Pirates for right-hander Brett Gideon, and they acquire rookie left-hander Steve Frey from the New York Mets for catcher Mark Bailey and third baseman Tom O'Malley.
- The St. Louis Cardinals sign veteran right-hander Ted Power, unconditionally released by the Detroit Tigers on March 25.
- March 29 – The Toronto Blue Jays sell the contract of "submariner" and setup man Mark Eichhorn to the Atlanta Braves.
- March 30:
- The Cincinnati Reds restore Ken Griffey Sr. to their active roster; the 38-year-old outfielder had been released on December 21. The Reds also sign relief pitcher Kent Tekulve, 42, released by the Philadelphia Phillies last December 7.
- The Milwaukee Brewers sign first baseman Terry Francona, granted free agency from the Cleveland Indians last November 4.
April
thumb|upright|[[Pete Rose during the 1970s]]
- April 1 – A. Bartlett Giamatti, former president of the National League (and, before that, president of Yale University), becomes the seventh Commissioner of Baseball. He inherits MLB's investigation, now headed by John M. Dowd, into gambling allegations against Pete Rose.
- April 3 – On Opening Day in Cincinnati, Pete Rose's Reds shrug off the media frenzy over the gambling rumors swirling around their manager and defeat the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers, 6–4, before 55,385 at Riverfront Stadium. Paul O'Neill's three-run homer off Dodger starter Tim Belcher seals the game in the third inning; O'Neill goes four for four on the day.—allowing only a third-inning single to Jamie Quirk in an 8–0 blanking of the New York Yankees in The Bronx. Stieb had tossed one-hitters in his final two outings of , with both those potential no-hitters spoiled with two out in the ninth inning.
- At Jack Murphy Stadium, Bruce Hurst of the San Diego Padres permits only one hit in his second National League start, with Lonnie Smith's third-inning, two-run homer the only knock recorded by the Atlanta Braves in Hurst's 5–2 complete-game victory. Hurst and Stieb's one-hit efforts today will be followed by nine similar outings by MLB hurlers this season; there will be no no-hit games in the majors this year.
- April 14 – The San Francisco Giants sign future Hall-of-Fame relief pitcher Goose Gossage as a free agent; he'd been released by the Chicago Cubs on March 28.
- April 16 – Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Kelly Gruber becomes the first player in the franchise's 12-year history to hit for the cycle. will drop out of professional baseball completely after this season at age 25. Dunne, 26, runner-up in 's NL Rookie of the Year balloting, is struggling to regain his effectiveness on the mound.
- April 29 – In the first Saturday night game at Wrigley Field, the San Diego Padres and the Chicago Cubs combine to make 11 errors: six by the Padres, five by the Cubs. San Diego wins 5–4.
- April 30 – The New York Yankees trade pitcher Al Leiter to the Toronto Blue Jays in exchange for outfielder Jesse Barfield, whose 40 home runs led the AL in . Barfield, 29, is unhappy with his "platoon" status in Toronto.
May
thumb|upright|[[Cito Gaston]]
- May 1 – The Cincinnati Reds rebound from a 6–3, seventh-inning deficit to score 16 runs over the game's final three frames and overwhelm the Montreal Expos, 19–6, at Olympic Stadium. The 19 runs are the most scored in a National League game this season.
- May 7 – Chicago mayor Richard M. Daley presides over the groundbreaking of the new Comiskey Park, to be built adjacent to its 79-year-old namesake in the Armour Square district of the city's South Side.
- May 10:
- Tempers flare and benches clear in the sixth inning of the visiting Montreal Expos' 10–1 victory over the Houston Astros. The ruckus starts when Houston's Larry Andersen throws a high-and-inside pitch that strikes the bat of Expo hitter Spike Owen, and the Montreal shortstop charges the mound. Umpire Tom Hallion ejects Owen, Wallace Johnson and Tim Raines of the Expos, and Danny Darwin and coach Ed Ott of the Astros.
- The San Francisco Giants acquire veteran infielder Ken Oberkfell from the Pittsburgh Pirates for southpaw relief pitcher Roger Samuels. Oberkfell, 33, will be a valuable pinch hitter and role player on the 1989 Giants.
- May 11 – The Houston Astros release catcher Alan Ashby, 37, who has appeared in 965 games for the team since and was its longest-tenured player.
- May 14 – Expected to contend for the AL East crown but saddled with a 12–24 record, second-worst in the league, the Toronto Blue Jays fire fourth-year manager Jimy Williams and name batting coach Cito Gaston, 45, interim skipper. Given permanent status on May 31, Gaston will lead a Toronto turnaround—a 77–49 record that will deliver the Jays the second division title in their 13-year history.
- May 16 – The New York Yankees release veteran utilityman Jamie Quirk. The 34-year-old will sign with the Oakland Athletics on May 27, spend two months on their roster, then draw another unconditional release July 24 before finishing the 1989 campaign as a member of the Baltimore Orioles.
- May 18 – The Pittsburgh Pirates sell the contract of first baseman Orestes Destrade to the Seibu Lions of the Japanese Pacific League.
- May 19:
- At the urging of the Detroit Tigers' team physician, future Hall-of-Fame manager Sparky Anderson takes a leave of absence for exhaustion and returns to his Thousand Oaks, California, home to rest. The 1989 Tigers have lost 24 of their first 37 games, although they're only five games behind in the AL East, where all seven teams have losing records. Coach Dick Tracewski takes the reins until Anderson, 55, rejoins the club on June 4.
- The Tigers release third baseman Chris Brown. The 27-year-old Brown was a 1986 National League All-Star but off-season shoulder surgery has since curtailed his productivity. Although the Pittsburgh Pirates will sign him to a free-agent contract in June, they do not call him up from Triple-A, and Brown's MLB career is over.
- May 20 – The Minnesota Twins score late and often, piling up 19 runs (tied for tops in an American League or MLB game this season), 15 of them in the final four innings, and defeating the host Texas Rangers, 19–3. Randy Bush's two home runs and eight RBI power the Twins' onslaught.
- May 22 – The Baltimore Orioles, who lost 107 games in 1988, defeat the Chicago White Sox, 5–1, to improve this season's record to 19–21. But the victory kicks off a 23–7 hot streak over the next month, and by June 22, the Orioles, now 41–28, will lead the AL East by seven full games.
- May 25 – In what will prove to be one of the most lopsided trades in baseball history, the Montreal Expos send pitching prospects Randy Johnson, Gene Harris, and Brian Holman to the Seattle Mariners in exchange for pitcher Mark Langston. Seattle will also send pitcher Mike Campbell to Montreal as a "PTBNL" to complete the deal. Johnson will have a Hall-of-Fame career, while Langston bolts the Expos for the California Angels as a free agent at the end of the season.
- May 28 – George Bell ends the Toronto Blue Jays' 12-year stay at Exhibition Stadium with a walk-off home run to seal Toronto's 7–5 win over the Chicago White Sox—the same team the Jays faced in their first game at the stadium (and in franchise history) in April 1977.
- May 29 – Future Hall-of-Fame third baseman Mike Schmidt of the Philadelphia Phillies tearfully announces his retirement, effective immediately, after 2,404 games played, 548 home runs, three MVP Awards, ten Gold Gloves, and a World Series ring and MVP award. Despite his retirement, fans will vote him to the NL All-Star team—his 12th such selection—and he'll be permitted to appear in uniform at July's Midsummer Classic.
- May 30 – The New York Yankees release 46-year-old pitcher Tommy John, bringing an end to an MLB career that started in 1963. John retires with 288 victories, winning 164 of them after coming back from ground-breaking 1974 elbow surgery that now bears his name.
thumb|upright|[[Tommy John]]
June
- June 2:
- The Philadelphia Phillies acquire first baseman/outfielder John Kruk and infielder Randy Ready from the San Diego Padres for outfielder Chris James. Kruk will be selected to three National League All-Star teams from through and help the Phillies win the '93 NL pennant.
- Eric Davis, All-Star outfielder of the Cincinnati Reds, hits for the cycle and drives in six runs in Cincinnati's 9–4 home triumph over the Padres.
- June 3–4 – The longest continuously played night game in MLB history ends in the Astrodome at 2:50 a.m. after seven hours, 14 minutes, and 21<small></small> innings with third baseman Jeff Hamilton on the mound, hurler Fernando Valenzuela playing first base, and a game-winning hit from Rafael Ramírez, as the Houston Astros defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers, 5–4. Sixteen pitchers are used, nine by the Dodgers, who waste a scoreless, seven-inning relief stint from Orel Hershiser.
- June 5:
- The 1989 June amateur draft yields five future members of the Baseball Hall of Fame: first baseman/DH Frank Thomas (first round, seventh overall, by the Chicago White Sox), infielder Jeff Bagwell (fourth round, 110th overall, Boston Red Sox), infielder and future ace closer Trevor Hoffman (11th round, 290th, Cincinnati Reds), first baseman Jim Thome (13th round, 333rd, Cleveland Indians), and second baseman Jeff Kent (20th round, 523rd, Toronto Blue Jays). The first overall selection is right-hander Ben McDonald of Louisiana State University, chosen by the Baltimore Orioles.
- Just eight days after leaving Exhibition Stadium, the Toronto Blue Jays open their new home: "SkyDome" (now known as Rogers Centre), the first stadium in major league history with a functioning retractable roof. As he did in the final game at his old ballpark, Toronto slugger George Bell hits a home run. The Blue Jays, however, fall 5–3 to the Milwaukee Brewers before 48,378 fans.
- June 8:
- At Veterans Stadium, the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates score ten runs in the top of the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies, three of them on a Barry Bonds home run. As Philadelphia comes to bat in the bottom of the first, Pirates broadcaster Jim Rooker says on the air, "If we lose this game, I'll walk home." Then, two home runs each from the Phils' Von Hayes and Steve Jeltz trigger a comeback; the light-hitting Jeltz, who will homer only five times in his 727-game MLB career, becomes the first Phillie to homer from both sides of the plate in the same game. The Phils finally tie the game in the eighth on a wild pitch, then take the lead on Darren Daulton's two-run single and go on to win 15–11; they become the first team to win a game after allowing ten runs in the first inning. Beginning October 5, Rooker will lead a 23-day, 320-mile charity walk from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh.
- At Arlington Stadium, Nolan Ryan gives up four homers to the Chicago White Sox—including two to fellow future Hall of Famer Harold Baines—but prevails in the contest, 11–7, for his seventh victory since joining the Texas Rangers prior to this season.
- June 16 – The San Francisco Giants, currently holding a one-game lead in the NL West, swap outfielders with the Detroit Tigers, acquiring Pat Sheridan for Tracy Jones.
- June 18:
- The pre-season favorite New York Mets, a disappointing 34–31 but only two games behind the NL East-leading Chicago Cubs, trade outfielder Lenny Dykstra and pitchers Roger McDowell and Tom Edens (player to be named later) to the Philadelphia Phillies for outfielder Juan Samuel.
- The Phillies make a second headline deal, sending the NL Cy Young Award winner, closer Steve Bedrosian, along with outfielder Rick Parker (as a PTBNL), to the Giants for pitchers Dennis Cook and Terry Mulholland and third baseman Charlie Hayes.
- June 21 – The New York Yankees, 33–36 and 7½ games of first in the AL East, trade outfielder Rickey Henderson back to the Oakland Athletics for pitchers Eric Plunk and Greg Cadaret and outfielder Luis Polonia. Henderson, 30, is hitting only .247 in 65 games with 25 stolen bases in New York, and will become a free agent this November.
- June 29 – "Trader Jack" McKeon, general manager and field manager of the San Diego Padres, deals his son-in-law, pitcher Greg Booker, to the Minnesota Twins for fellow right-hander Freddie Toliver.
July
thumb|upright|200px|Multi-sport athlete [[Bo Jackson during his debut season in pro baseball]]
- July 1 – Days after he's released by the New York Yankees, free-agent pitcher Richard Dotson signs with the Chicago White Sox, returning to the team he played for before joining the Bombers.
- July 2 – The Atlanta Braves, 32–47 and 14½ games out of first in the National League West, make two trades:
- They send left-hander Zane Smith to the Montreal Expos for pitchers Nate Minchey and Sergio Valdéz and outfielder Kevin Dean. Smith, 28, a former staff ace who won 15 games in , is only 1–12 with the 1989 Braves.
- The Braves also acquire Oddibe McDowell from the Cleveland Indians for fellow outfielder Dion James.
- July 4:
- Against the Philadelphia Phillies at Veterans Stadium, Cincinnati Reds pitcher Tom Browning, having already pitched a perfect game a year earlier, misses becoming the first pitcher in Major League history to throw two perfectos. Dickie Thon's leadoff double in the ninth breaks up today's bid; Thon later scores on a Steve Jeltz single. John Franco then relieves Browning and induces Lenny Dykstra to hit into a game-ending double play for a Reds 2–1 victory.
- There are three races among MLB's four divisions at the season's half-way point. Three of the NL East's six teams are within 3½ games of first-place Montreal (46–37); in the NL West, the San Francisco Giants (48–34) lead by 1½ over the Houston Astros (47–36). In the American League, the defending league champion Oakland Athletics (50–33) are being challenged by the California Angels (48–32), who are just a half-game behind in the West; in the East, the surprising Baltimore Orioles (46–34) remain the only above-.500 outfit and enjoy a 6½-length cushion.
- July 5:
- Mark McGwire hits his 100th career home run.
- Cincinnati Reds outfielder Paul O'Neill kicks a ball to the infield to prevent Steve Jeltz of the Philadelphia Phillies from scoring the game winning run. Moments later Jeltz scores the winning run on a wild pitch as the Phillies defeat the Reds 3–2.
- July 11 – Bo Jackson's elite power and speed gives the American League a 5–3 victory over the National League in the All-Star Game at Anaheim Stadium. In the bottom of the first, lead-off man Jackson bashes a , tape-measure home run to center field off Rick Reuschel. Then, in the second, the Kansas City Royals' star beats out a double-play grounder to enable the AL to take the lead, 3–2, then swipes second base. His performance earns Jackson MVP honors.
- July 13:
- A game between the Montreal Expos and Los Angeles Dodgers at Olympic Stadium is rained out because the roof, ripped by 62 mile per hour winds on June 27, cannot be lowered from its retracted position. Zambonis are used in an attempt to remove the water.
- After missing just over half the season with a broken wrist, Jose Canseco returns to the Oakland Athletics' lineup; he homers and drives in three runs in an 11–7 win over the Toronto Blue Jays.
- July 14 – At Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, the New York Mets' Sid Fernandez enters the bottom of the ninth against the Atlanta Braves with 16 strikeouts, but the Braves' Lonnie Smith hits a walkoff solo home run on Fernandez' second pitch to give the Braves a 3–2 victory.
- July 16 – When he takes his lineup card to home plate before a game against the Baltimore Orioles, California Angels manager Doug Rader is ejected by burly umpire Ken Kaiser for continuing his argument from the night before that Mike Devereaux's disputed game-ending home run was a foul ball.
- July 18:
- Donnie Moore, the Angels' former All-Star closer, shoots and critically wounds his wife, then turns his gun on himself and ends his own life at the family home near Anaheim. Mrs. Moore survives and the couple's three children, who witness the shootings, are not injured. Moore, 35, had been released by the Triple-A Omaha Royals on June 12, seemingly ending his baseball career. Moore's widow, while citing over a decade of physical violence she suffered from Moore, will later blame fan abuse stemming from his role in the Angels' losing the 1986 American League Championship Series for his actions; others cite Moore's financial and legal woes, and his battles with depression and substance abuse, as contributing factors.
- The Los Angeles Dodgers obtain hard-hitting outfielder Kal Daniels and infielder Lenny Harris from the Cincinnati Reds for pitcher Tim Leary and infielder Mariano Duncan.
- July 20 – The Baltimore Orioles send right-hander John Habyan to the division-rival New York Yankees for outfielder Stan Jefferson.
- July 22:
- The Yankees deal third baseman Mike Pagliarulo and pitcher Don Schulze to the San Diego Padres for pitchers Walt Terrell and Freddie Toliver (PTBNL).
- The Houston Astros acquire outfielder Javier Ortiz from the Los Angeles Dodgers for pitcher Ed Vosberg (PTBNL).
- July 28 – The Baltimore Orioles pick up right-handed power for the stretch drive, acquiring Keith Moreland, 35, now primarily a designated hitter, from the Detroit Tigers for pitcher Brian Dubois.
- July 29:
- At Olympic Stadium, Vince Coleman of the St. Louis Cardinals is called out twice for interference on the base paths.
- The Texas Rangers send fan favorite Scott Fletcher, along with pitcher Wilson Alvarez and a young outfielder named Sammy Sosa, to the Chicago White Sox for outfielder Harold Baines, a future Hall of Famer, and infielder Fred Manrique.
- July 31:
- The New York Mets, 53–49, losers of seven straight games and six games out in the NL East, acquire prized left-handed starter Frank Viola, the reigning AL Cy Young Award-winner, from the Minnesota Twins for five pitchers: right-handers Rick Aguilera, Tim Drummond, Jack Savage (PTBNL), and Kevin Tapani, and lefty David West. Viola, 29 and an alumnus of nearby St. John's University, is only 8–12 (3.79) in 24 starts for the Twins after a lengthy contract dispute during spring training.
- In two separate transactions, the Toronto Blue Jays, still below .500 at 51–53 and four games behind Baltimore in the AL East, obtain outfielders Mookie Wilson and Lee Mazzilli from the Mets. Wilson, who will patrol right field for Toronto during the pennant stretch, costs the Blue Jays pitchers Jeff Musselman and Mike Brady; Mazzilli, who will DH for the Jays, is claimed off waivers.
August
- August 3 – The Cincinnati Reds score 14 first inning runs in an 18–2 rout of the Houston Astros, just missing the major league record of 15, which ironically was set against the Reds by the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1952.
- August 4 – Dave Stieb, pitching for the Toronto Blue Jays, loses a perfect game with two outs in the ninth inning when Roberto Kelly doubles, and later scores. Stieb wins a 2–1 two-hitter, but it is the third no-hitter that he has lost in the ninth inning in the past 11 months.
- August 10:
- A little over 10 months removed from surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from his pitching arm, Dave Dravecky of the San Francisco Giants starts and beats the Cincinnati Reds 4–3, pitching eight innings.
- For the fifth time in his career, five-time no-hit pitcher Nolan Ryan has a no-hitter broken up in the ninth. His Texas Rangers leading the Detroit Tigers 4–0 at Arlington Stadium, Ryan has the bid broken up by a Dave Bergman single with one out. After Matt Nokes doubles home Bergman, Ryan is relieved by Jeff Russell, who retires the two batters he faces, striking out Doug Strange for the final out. Ryan had four other no-hit bids broken up in the ninth in , , , as well as April 23 of this season; coincidentally, all four had also been broken up with one out in the ninth. Ryan will go on to pitch two more no-hitters, in and .
- August 15 – After his miraculous comeback game against the Reds, Dave Dravecky starts against the Montreal Expos and, in the sixth inning, the humerus bone in his pitching arm snaps, ending his season. While celebrating the Giants' clinching the NL West division title, Dravecky would break the arm once again. Doctors would later discover that the cancer in his arm had returned. Eighteen days later, Dravecky would retire from baseball.
- August 17 – Bruce Hurst of the San Diego Padres becomes the first pitcher in MLB history to defeat both reigning Cy Young Award winners in the same season. In the Padres' 6–2 victory over the New York Mets at Shea Stadium, he bests Frank Viola, traded July 31 from the Minnesota Twins after winning 1988's American League Cy Young Award. On July 28, Hurst had defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers and National League CYA winner Orel Hershiser, 2–1, at Jack Murphy Stadium.
- August 18 – Eleven years after his heroics in the 1978 American League East tie-breaker game and MVP turn in the World Series that would follow, Bucky Dent becomes the 17th manager of the New York Yankees in George Steinbrenner's 17 years as owner. Dent, 37, is promoted from Triple-A Columbus to replace Dallas Green. The sixth-place Yankees are a dismal 56–65, but only 7½ games out of first in their tightly bunched division.
- August 21 – Cal Ripken hits his 200th career home run, helping the Baltimore Orioles beat the Milwaukee Brewers 5–0.
- August 22:
- Fellow future Cooperstown inductee Rickey Henderson becomes Nolan Ryan's 5,000th strikeout victim in the third inning of Ryan's complete game effort against the visiting Oakland Athletics. Ryan and his Texas Rangers fall to Bob Welch and Dennis Eckersley, however, 2–0.
- George Argyros, owner of the Seattle Mariners since , sells them to a consortium of Indianapolis businessman led by Jeff Smulyan for a reported $76 million. Smulyan vows to keep the 12-year-old club in Seattle.
- August 23 – The Los Angeles Dodgers edge the Montreal Expos 1–0 in 22 innings, the longest game in Expos franchise history. During the game, Expos mascot Youppi! is ejected by umpire Bob Davidson after manager Tommy Lasorda complains that the furry creature is pounding on the top of the dugout. Rick Dempsey hit a solo home run off of Dennis Martínez for the game's winning and only run.
- August 24 – Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti announces in a press conference that Pete Rose is banned from baseball for life, in the wake of evidence that has come to light regarding Rose's alleged gambling history.
September
- September 1 – The sudden death of Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti—exactly five months into the job—stuns baseball. Giamatti, 51, a heavy smoker, succumbs to a heart attack at his vacation home on Martha's Vineyard. Twelve days from now, his top aide, Francis "Fay" Vincent, also 51, will be officially named Giamatti's successor.
- September 12 – The slumping Cleveland Indians, losers of 11 of their last 35 games, fire manager Doc Edwards. Special assignment scout John Hart, 41, the future front-office executive, takes the team's reins for the remainder of the regular season. Cleveland is 66–78, sixth in the AL East.
- September 14 – Jeff Reardon of the Minnesota Twins earns his 30th save of the season in a 2–0 win over the Toronto Blue Jays. He becomes the first pitcher to save 30 games in five consecutive seasons.
- September 26 – At Olympic Stadium in Montreal, the "Boys of Zimmer"—the 1989 Chicago Cubs—beat the Montreal Expos, 3-2, to win their second NL East title of the 1980s.
- September 30 – NBC broadcasts its final Major League Baseball Game of the Week (before the program is transferred to CBS). NBC had broadcast the Game of the Week since 1957 and exclusively since 1966. Bob Costas and Tony Kubek called the action from Toronto's SkyDome, as the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Baltimore Orioles to clinch the American League Eastern Division title.
October
- October 3 – Kirby Puckett wins an unlikely, at the time, batting title taking advantage of an off year by Wade Boggs due to marital issues. Puckett would clinch the title in Seattle on a double in the final game of the season.
- October 9 – After 43 years on the air, NBC concludes its run (coinciding with the San Francisco Giants defeating the Chicago Cubs in Game 5 of the National League Championship Series to insure their first trip to the World Series since 1962) as the number one over-the-air network television broadcaster for Major League Baseball games.
- October 13 – The impulsive owners of the New York Yankees and Cincinnati Reds, George Steinbrenner and Marge Schott, shake up their front offices on the same day. Bob Quinn, 53, general manager of the Steinbrenner's Yankees since June 1988, quits to succeed Murray Cook, fired as GM of Schott's Reds. Harding "Pete" Peterson, 60, former general manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates, will officially succeed Quinn on the Yankees' org chart on November 11. Peterson is the 13th man to hold the GM job description since Steinbrenner bought the storied Yankees in January 1973.
- October 17 – Game 3 of the World Series is postponed due to the Loma Prieta earthquake, which struck immediately before the game was set to begin. It would be rescheduled for ten days later, October 27.
- October 28 – The Oakland Athletics complete a four-game sweep of the San Francisco Giants in the 1989 World Series. It's the first WS sweep since 1976. Oakland pitcher Dave Stewart, who won two games, is named MVP. It is also the latest in the calendar year that a World Series game has ever been played up to this point. This was also ABC's final Major League Baseball telecast until July 1994, when The Baseball Network was launched. ABC, who had broadcast Major League Baseball games since 1976 was like NBC was about to lose the television rights to CBS.
November
- November 1:
- Frank Robinson, who led the 1989 Baltimore Orioles to within two games of the American League East Division title, is selected his circuit's Manager of the Year by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. He receives 23 of 28 first place votes. Baltimore's 87–75 record this past season represented a 32½-game improvement, year over year.
- Don Zimmer of the Chicago Cubs is a landslide winner in the National League's Manager of the Year derby, garnering 23 of 24 possible first-place votes.
- The other MLB franchise in Ohio, the Cleveland Indians, select veteran pilot John McNamara as its 1990 skipper, succeeding interim boss John Hart. For McNamara, 57, Cleveland is the sixth stop in a big-league managerial career that began in . He last helmed the Boston Red Sox to a 297–273 (.521) mark from through July 10, 1988—winning the 1986 AL pennant.
- November 14 – Southpaw Mark Davis, ace closer of the San Diego Padres, is voted 1989's National League Cy Young Award winner, taking 19 of a possible 24 first-place nods. Davis, 29, led the Senior Circuit in saves (44) and games finished (65), and posted a low 1.85 earned run average in 70 appearances last season.
December
- December 5 – The Mets traded reliever Randy Myers to the Reds for fellow closer John Franco and on the same day Cleveland traded Joe Carter to San Diego for Chris James, Sandy Alomar and Carlos Baerga and free agent closer Jeff Reardon to the Boston Red Sox.
- December 25 – Five-time New York Yankees manager and former second baseman Billy Martin is killed in a pickup truck accident near his home in upstate New York. Martin was 61.
Movies
- Major League
- Field of Dreams
Births
January
- January 1 – Jarrett Parker
- January 4 – Kevin Pillar
- January 5 – Eduardo Escobar
- January 7 – Phillippe Aumont
- January 10 – Ariel Miranda
- January 11 – Rico Noel
- January 13 – Heath Hembree
- January 14 – Adam Kolarek
- January 17 – Darío Álvarez
- January 17 – Blake Beavan
- January 17 – Taylor Jordan
- January 18 – Michael Pineda
- January 19 – James Beresford
- January 20 – Travis Taijeron
- January 23 – Robert Carson
- January 24 – Whit Merrifield
- January 24 – José Quintana
- January 26 – Branden Pinder
- January 30 – Keith Butler
- January 31 – Tommy La Stella
February
- February 2 – Logan Darnell
- February 2 – Shuhei Fukuda
- February 6 – Matt Duffy
- February 6 – Donald Lutz
- February 9 – Danny Muno
- February 9 – Jake Smolinski
- February 10 – Travis d'Arnaud
- February 10 – Dayán Díaz
- February 10 – Liam Hendriks
- February 11 – César Cabral
- February 14 – Juan Graterol
- February 14 – Derek Norris
- February 15 – Mark Canha
- February 16 – John Gast
- February 16 – Eduardo Sánchez
- February 19 – Fabio Castillo
- February 22 – Chris Bassitt
- February 23 – Wilin Rosario
- February 24 – Miguel Rojas
- February 28 – Chad Bell
- February 28 – Neftalí Soto
March
- March 4 – Rubby De La Rosa
- March 5 – Mauricio Robles
- March 10 – Tyler Holt
- March 10 – Dayán Viciedo
- March 12 – Taylor Hill
- March 13 – Sandy León
- March 14 – Marwin González
- March 15 – Keith Hessler
- March 16 – Michael Blazek
- March 16 – Andrew Triggs
- March 17 – Juan Lagares
- March 18 – David Freitas
- March 20 – Todd Cunningham
- March 27 – Ryne Harper
- March 27 – Matt Harvey
- March 30 – Chris Sale
- March 31 – Alfredo Marte
- March 31 – Josmil Pinto
April
- April 1 – Chris Withrow
- April 2 – Rob Rasmussen
- April 6 – Alexi Amarista
- April 7 – Kevin Shackelford
- April 8 – Lendy Castillo
- April 10 – Charlie Culberson
- April 11 – José Cisnero
- April 11 – Yoshihiro Maru
- April 12 – Pedro Hernández
- April 12 – Raudel Lazo
- April 15 – Adeiny Hechavarria
- April 17 – Deolis Guerra
- April 21 – Josh Rutledge
- April 24 – Steven Souza
- April 26 – Chad Bettis
- April 30 – Phil Klein
May
- May 1 – Maikel Cleto
- May 4 – Nick Noonan
- May 6 – José Alvarez
- May 8 – Steven Kent
- May 8 – Wily Peralta
- May 11 – David Buchanan
- May 12 – Bradin Hagens
- May 14 – Christian Colón
- May 16 – Drew Maggi
- May 17 – John Cornely
- May 17 – Jordan Jankowski
- May 18 – Jared Hoying
- May 20 – Ariel Peña
- May 22 – Drake Britton
- May 22 – Corey Dickerson
- May 24 – Aaron Wilkerson
- May 25 – Pat Dean
- May 25 – Neil Ramirez
- May 31 – Edgar Ibarra
June
- June 3 – Nefi Ogando
- June 5 – Jimmy Nelson
- June 5 – Layne Somsen
- June 6 – Ethan Martin
- June 7 – Dean Kiekhefer
- June 7 – Seiji Kobayashi
- June 8 – T. J. McFarland
- June 9 – Joel De La Cruz
- June 10 – Zoilo Almonte
- June 12 – Dallas Beeler
- June 13 – Drew Smyly
- June 14 – Héctor Neris
- June 14 – Chase Whitley
- June 18 – Matt Moore
- June 22 – Ryan Searle
- June 23 – Deck McGuire
- June 24 – Robbie Ross
- June 27 – Abraham Almonte
- June 27 – A. J. Schugel
- June 28 – Jason Krizan
July
- July 1 – Mike Montgomery
- July 1 – Brett Oberholtzer
- July 4 – Jabari Blash
- July 5 – Tony Cingrani
- July 10 – Scott Alexander
- July 10 – Will Smith
- July 13 – Tyler Cravy
- July 14 – Rob Brantly
- July 18 – Derek Dietrich
- July 19 – Luis Avilán
- July 19 – Patrick Corbin
- July 20 – Mike Marjama
- July 20 – Tyler Saladino
- July 20 – Steve Selsky
- July 20 – Kevin Siegrist
- July 20 – Matt Szczur
- July 23 – Stephen Pryor
- July 29 – Eric Jokisch
- July 30 – Jesse Hahn
- July 30 – Matt Skole
August
- August 1 – Madison Bumgarner
- August 1 – Nick Ramirez
- August 2 – Onelki Garcia
- August 3 – Roberto Goméz
- August 5 – Chasen Bradford
- August 5 – Guido Knudson
- August 7 – Tommy Kahnle
- August 7 – Brock Stassi
- August 8 – Greg Garcia
- August 8 – Anthony Rizzo
- August 9 – Dustin Antolin
- August 9 – Jason Heyward
- August 12 – Kyle Lobstein
- August 18 – Daichi Suzuki
- August 18 – Daniel Webb
- August 20 – Taylor Cole
- August 21 – Ehire Adrianza
- August 21 – Tim Collins
- August 21 – Elliot Soto
- August 27 – Josh Vitters
- August 28 – Matt Andriese
- August 28 – Matt Dominguez
- August 29 – Robby Scott
- August 29 – Brent Suter
- August 29 – Logan Watkins
- August 30 – Billy Burns
- August 30 – D. J. Johnson
- August 31 – John Hicks
- August 31 – Austin Pruitt
September
- September 4 – Cody Martin
- September 4 – Andrelton Simmons
- September 5 – Nick Maronde
- September 5 – Zach Walters
- September 9 – Anthony Ranaudo
- September 11 – Zeke Spruill
- September 11 – Nik Turley
- September 12 – Freddie Freeman
- September 14 – Francisco Arcia
- September 16 – Robbie Grossman
- September 17 – Yuhei Nakaushiro
- September 18 – Taylor Motter
- September 19 – George Springer
- September 20 – Scott Snodgress
- September 23 – Trevor May
- September 24 – Jake Buchanan
- September 24 – Matt Ramsey
- September 25 – Tyler Wilson
- September 26 – Colin Walsh
- September 27 – Mike Miller
- September 29 – T. J. House
- September 30 – Kyle Parker
October
- October 2 – Ryan Dull
- October 2 – Aaron Hicks
- October 2 – Tyler Olson
- October 2 – Chad Smith
- October 4 – Casey Kelly
- October 6 – Josh Tols
- October 8 – Taylor Featherston
- October 8 – Albert Suárez
- October 9 – Tim Melville
- October 10 – Jeurys Familia
- October 10 – Isaac Galloway
- October 11 – Jenrry Mejía
- October 11 – Josh Smith
- October 11 – Tomoyuki Sugano
- October 12 – Francisco Peña
- October 15 – Huascar Brazobán
- October 17 – Chris Mazza
- October 18 – Carson Blair
- October 18 – Brad Miller
- October 19 – Cory Mazzoni
- October 19 – Carson Smith
- October 21 – Danny Barnes
- October 24 – Eric Hosmer
- October 26 – Wilfredo Boscán
- October 26 – Daniel Coulombe
- October 27 – Rubén Tejada
- October 31 – Scott McGough
November
- November 1 – Engel Beltré
- November 5 – Ramón Cabrera
- November 7 – Tim Atherton
- November 7 – Sonny Gray
- November 8 – Giancarlo Stanton
- November 10 – Michael Choice
- November 10 – Matt Magill
- November 12 – Adrián Nieto
- November 13 – Lane Adams
- November 13 – Carlos Frías
- November 14 – Freddy Galvis
- November 16 – Juan Centeno
- November 17 – Seth Lugo
- November 17 – Héctor Sánchez
- November 19 – Michael Tonkin
- November 21 – José Pirela
- November 21 – Robert Stock
- November 23 – Shinya Kayama
- November 23 – Ross Stripling
- November 28 – Taylor Davis
- November 28 – Danny Hultzen
- November 28 – Jesús Montero
- November 28 – Ángel Sánchez
- November 30 – Mikie Mahtook
December
- December 5 – Ryan Garton
- December 7 – Kyle Hendricks
- December 13 – Tyler Pastornicky
- December 14 – Donn Roach
- December 16 – Tyler Chatwood
- December 18 – Taylor Jungmann
- December 19 – Ian Parmley
- December 19 – James Ramsey
- December 21 – David Rollins
- December 22 – Patrick Kivlehan
- December 22 – Rey Navarro
- December 22 – Noe Ramirez
- December 22 – Jacob Stallings
- December 26 – Sean Nolin
- December 28 – Austin Barnes
- December 28 – Austin Nola
- December 30 – Tyler Anderson
- December 30 – Erik Johnson
- December 31 – Kelvin Herrera
Deaths
January
- January 9 – Bill Terry, 90, Hall of Fame first baseman for the New York Giants from 1923 to 1936 and a .341 career hitter, who was the last National League player to hit .400 (.401 in 1930); succeeded legendary John McGraw as manager on June 4, 1932, and led Giants to 1933 World Series title, NL pennants in 1936 and 1937, and an 822–661 (.554) overall record through 1941.
- January 12 – Clise Dudley, 85, pitcher who posted a 17–33 record for the Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Chicago National League teams from 1929 to 1933.
- January 13:
- Pat Ankenman, 76, backup second baseman who played for the 1936 St. Louis Cardinals and the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1943 and 1944.
- Ray Morehart, 89, backup infielder for the Chicago White Sox in 1924 and 1926, also a member of the "Murderers' Row" 1927 New York Yankees.
- January 16 – Frank Trechock, 73, shortstop for the 1937 Washington Senators; in lone MLB game on September 19, he went two-for-four (.500).
- January 18:
- Buster Clarkson, 72, batted .308 in major-league career that included five seasons in the Negro leagues (1938–1940, 1942, 1945) and 14 games as a utility infielder for the 1952 Boston Braves.
- Jim Odom, 67, American League umpire, 1965 to 1974; also worked the 1968 MLB All-Star Game and the 1971 World Series.
- January 21 – Carl Furillo, 66, All-Star right fielder who played from 1946 through 1960 for the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers, who hit over .300 five times and over .290 five other times, winning the National League batting crown in 1953, and owner of a strong arm in the outfield that earned him the name The Reading Rifle.
- January 22 – Willie Wells, 83, Negro leagues All-Star in a 22-season career between 1928 and 1948, as well as a flashy shortstop and forceful slugger, who also played four seasons in the Mexican League, won two Cuban League MVP Awards, and was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee in 1997.
- January 23 – George Case, 73, four-time All-Star outfielder for the Washington Senators (1937–1945, 1947) and Cleveland Indians (1946); led the American League in stolen bases six times (1939–1943, 1946), and in runs scored (1943); after playing career, head baseball coach of Rutgers University (1950–1960), coach for expansion Senators (1961–1963) and Minnesota Twins (1968), and minor league manager.
- January 24 – Earl Jones, 69, relief pitcher for the 1946 St. Louis Browns.
- January 28 – Stan Partenheimer, 66, pitcher who played for the Boston Red Sox in 1945 and the St. Louis Cardinals in 1946.
February
- February 3 – Dick Bass, 82, pitcher for the 1939 Washington Senators.
- February 10 – Dan Kelly, 52, Canadian sportscaster who, though known best as a legendary hockey announcer, spent five seasons (1980 to 1984) on the broadcast team of the St. Louis Cardinals.
- February 12 – Euel Moore, 80, pitcher who played from 1934 through 1936 with the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Giants.
- February 17 – Lefty Gómez, 80, Hall of Fame pitcher for the New York Yankees from 1930 to 1943, who had four 20-win seasons and a .649 career winning percentage, while leading the American League in strikeouts three times, in wins and ERA twice each, and also posted a 6–0 record with a 2.86 ERA in five World Series.
- February 21 – Chet Ross, 70, backup outfielder who hit .241 with 34 home runs and 170 RBI in 413 games for the Boston Bees/Braves from 1939 to 1944.
- February 24 – Sparky Adams, 94, middle infielder/third baseman and a .286 career hitter in 1,424 games, who played from 1922 to 1934 for the Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds; led the National League second basemen in putouts and assists in the 1925 season.
March
- March 3 – Bill Harvey, 80, southpaw pitcher, first baseman and outfielder who played between 1932 and 1946, chiefly for the Pittsburgh/Toledo Crawfords and Baltimore Elite Giants of the Negro National League.
- March 8 – Dale Coogan, 58, first baseman who played 53 games for the 1950 Pittsburgh Pirates.
- March 13 – Tice James, 74, infielder for four Negro American League teams (1941–1942, 1946).
- March 19 – Joe Malay, 83, backup first baseman for the New York Giants in the 1933 and 1935 seasons.
- March 21 – Otis Douglas, 77, college and professional American football player who spent the 1961 and 1962 seasons in MLB as conditioning and morale coach for the Cincinnati Reds.
- March 28
- Nick Bremigan, 43, American League umpire since 1974 through the time of his death, who officiated in the 1980 World Series, four ALCS, and the All-Star games of 1979 and 1985.
- William D. Cox, 79, New York businessman and briefly the owner of the Philadelphia Phillies from March 15 through November 23, 1943, when he was suspended for life by Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis for betting on his own team.
April
- April 6 – Carlos Bernier, 62, Puerto Rican outfielder who hit .213 in 105 games for the 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates.
- April 8:
- Andy Karl, 75, pitcher who posted an 18–23 record and a 3.51 ERA for the Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia Phillies and Boston Braves from 1943 to 1946.
- Bus Saidt, 68, sportswriter who covered the Philadelphia Phillies, New York Mets and New York Yankees for the Trentonian and the Trenton Times for a long time, which made him a recipient of the J. G. Taylor Spink Award in 1992.
- April 9 – Otto Huber, 75, backup infielder for the 1939 Boston Bees.
- April 12 – Arnold Carter, 71, pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds from 1944 to 1945, one of many players who only appeared in the majors during World War II, who posted a 13–11 record with a 2.72 ERA in 46 games.
- April 14 – Carr Smith, 88, backup outfielder for the Washington Senators from 1923 to 1924.
- April 16 – Jocko Conlan, 89, outfielder (Chicago White Sox, 1934–1935) turned Hall-of-Fame umpire who worked in the National League from 1941 to 1964, including 3,621 NL games, five World Series, and six All-Star contests; began career as an arbiter in American League by working two July 1935 games while still an active White Sox player.
- April 19 – Gale Staley, 89, backup second baseman who hit .429 in seven games for the 1925 Chicago Cubs.
- April 23 – Howie Krist, 73, pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals in 128 games over six seasons between 1937 and 1946; member of World Series championship teams in 1942 and 1946; fashioned a 37–11 career record for winning percentage of .771.
May
- May 3 – Virgil Stallcup, 67, shortstop for the Cincinnati Reds and the St. Louis Cardinals from 1947 through 1953, who led all National League players at his position in fielding percentage during the 1950 and 1951 seasons.
- May 5 – Joe Batchelder, 90, southpaw pitcher who got into 11 games for the Boston Braves between 1923 and 1925.
- May 7 – Howie Moss, 69, backup outfielder/third baseman for the New York Giants, Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians in parts of two seasons spanning 1942–1946, also a prodigious slugger in the minor leagues, who is the only player in International League history to lead the circuit in home runs four times, including 53 in 1947, to set a single-season mark not reached since then.
- May 13 – Al Reiss, 80, shortstop for the 1932 Philadelphia Athletics.
- May 17 – Specs Toporcer, 90, middle infielder and third baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals from 1921 to 1928, who is regarded as the first position player to wear corrective eyeglasses in major league history; later a minor league manager and MLB farm system director.
- May 20 – Mike Reinbach, 39, corner outfielder who hit .250 in 12 games for the 1974 Baltimore Orioles.
- May 21 – Harry Cozart, 72, pitcher/outfielder in 11 games for Newark Eagles (Negro National League, 1939 and 1944).
June
- June 6 – Whitey Glazner, 95, pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies from 1920 to 1924, who led the National League with a .737 Win–loss % in the 1921 season.
- June 8:
- Bibb Falk, 90, sure-handed outfielder who hit a .314 average for the Chicago White Sox and Cleveland Indians, and later coached Texas to two College World Series titles.
- Glenn McQuillen, 74, reserve outfielder who hit .274 for the St. Louis Browns (1938, 1941–1942, 1946–1947), and later spent 10 years playing and managing in the minor leagues.
- Emil Verban, 73, three-time All-Star second baseman for four National League teams from 1944 to 1950 and the batting hero of the 1944 World Series with a .412 average, leading the St. Louis Cardinals over the St. Louis Browns in the historic Trolley Series; played all or part of three years (1948–1950) with the Chicago Cubs, "lending" his name to the Emil Verban Memorial Society, a long-standing club for Cubs' fans who live in Washington, D.C.
- June 10 – Joe Stripp, 86, fine defensive third baseman and a .294 hitter during 11 seasons with four National League teams from 1928 through 1938.
- June 14 – Pat Capri, 70, second baseman and pinch runner in seven games for the 1944 Boston Braves; fanned in his only MLB at bat.
- June 15 – Judy Johnson, 89, Negro leagues All-Star third baseman who eventually was able to apply his baseball knowledge in the majors, becoming the first African American to coach in Major League Baseball and one of the most accomplished talent scouts in baseball, being inducted to the Hall of Fame in 1975, as the sixth Negro leaguer honored that way.
- June 18 – Steve Senteney, 33, relief pitcher for the 1982 Toronto Blue Jays.
- June 23 – Rick Anderson, 35, relief pitcher for the New York Yankees and Seattle Mariners from 1979 to 1980, who in 1979 was named International League Pitcher of the Year, after going 13–3 with a 1.63 ERA and a league-leading 21 saves.
July
- July 13 – Vern Olsen, 71, pitcher who posted a 30–26 record and a 3.40 ERA in 112 games for the Chicago Cubs over five seasons spanning 1939–1946.
- July 15 – Naomi Meier, 62, fine outfielder for the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League who collected over 25 stolen bases in five of her eight seasons in the league.
- July 18 – Donnie Moore, 35, All-Star relief pitcher for five teams between 1975 and 1988, most prominently with the California Angels, who is best remembered for giving up a pivotal home run in the 1986 ALCS. (See Events for this date, above.)
- July 19 – Joe Greene, 77, three-time All-Star catcher in the Negro American League for the Kansas City Monarchs, for whom he played from 1939 to 1943 and in 1946–1947; U.S. Army combat veteran of World War II.
- July 24 – Wally Kimmick, 92, backup infielder who hit .261 in 163 games with the St. Louis Cardinals, Cincinnati Reds and Philadelphia Phillies from 1919 to 1926.
August
- August 1 – Don Heffner, 78, who spent two decades in the majors between 1934 and 1968 as an infielder, coach and manager; notably, skipper of the Cincinnati Reds from Opening Day to July 10, 1966.
- August 4 – Wayne LaMaster, 82, southpaw pitcher who won 19 games for the Philadelphia Phillies and the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1937 to 1938; led National League in games lost (19) in 1937.
- August 5 – Max Macon, 73, pitcher, first baseman and outfielder who posted a 17–18 record and hit .265 for the St. Louis Cardinals, Brooklyn Dodgers and Boston Braves in parts of six seasons from 1938 to 1947.
- August 8 – Bob Harris, 74, pitcher who won 30 games for the Detroit Tigers, St. Louis Browns and Philadelphia Athletics from 1938 to 1942.
- August 10 – Tom Hughes, 82, backup outfielder who hit .373 in 17 games for the 1930 Detroit Tigers.
- August 17 – Fred Frankhouse, 85, National League All-Star pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals, Boston Braves and Brooklyn Dodgers from 1927 to 1939, collecting a 106–97 record and a 3.92 ERA, who outpitched New York Giants ace and future Hall of Famer Carl Hubbell in 1937, snapping Hubbell's historical 24-game winning streak.
- August 21 – Ted Wilks, 73, relief pitcher who posted a 59–30 record with a 3.26 ERA and 46 saves for the St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates and Cleveland Indians from 1944 through 1953.
- August 25 – Jim Brideweser, 62, backup shortstop who hit .252 in 329 games for the New York Yankees, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox and Detroit Tigers from 1951 through 1956.
- August 27 – Hal Kelleher, 76, pitcher who posted a 4–9 record with the Philadelphia Phillies in part of four seasons from 1935 to 1938.
- August 28 – Fred Waters, 62, relief pitcher who went 2–2 with a 2.89 ERA in 25 games for the 1955–1956 Pittsburgh Pirates; longtime minor-league manager.
- August 29 – Buddy Dear, 83, second baseman and pinch-runner who appeared in two games for the 1927 Washington Senators.
- August 30:
- Buddy Burbage, 82, outfielder whose career in black baseball extended from 1929 to 1943; hit .438 for 1934 Newark Dodgers to capture Negro National League batting title.
- Joe Collins, 66, first baseman for the New York Yankees from 1950 to 1957 and a member of five world champion teams, who hit four home runs and drove in 10 runs in 36 World Series games.
- August 31 – Skeeter Newsome, 78, shortstop for the Philadelphia Athletics, Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Phillies in 12 seasons from 1935 to 1947; later became a successful minor league manager from 1949 through 1960, with a won–lost record of 806–645 and four championship titles.
September
- September 1 – A. Bartlett Giamatti, 51, incumbent Commissioner of Baseball since April 1 whose five-month term (ended by a fatal heart attack) was known for the banishment of Pete Rose on gambling allegations; previously National League president from June 10, 1986 to March 31, 1989; former Yale University president and author of numerous writings on baseball.
- September 3 – Rip Sewell, 82, four-time All-Star pitcher credited with inventing the eephus pitch, who posted a 143–97 record and a 3.48 ERA in 390 games for the 1932 Detroit Tigers and the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1938 through 1949, while leading the National League pitchers with 21 wins in 1943 and a .833 winning percentage in 1948.
- September 4 – Hal Lee, 84, outfielder for the Brooklyn Robins, Philadelphia Phillies and Boston Braves from 1930 to 1936, who replaced Babe Ruth in Braves left field in what turned out to be Ruth's last game on May 30, .
- September 17 – Leon Culberson, 71, outfielder for the Washington Senators and Boston Red Sox from 1943 to 1948, who led American League center fielders with 13 assists and six double plays in 1945, while collecting a .313 average in 1946 to help the Red Sox win its first American League pennant in 28 years.
- September 21 – Murry Dickson, 73, All-Star pitcher who spent 18 major league seasons with six teams from 1939 to 1959; member of 1946 St. Louis Cardinals and 1958 New York Yankees World Series champions (as well as for last-place teams for most of his career); won 20 games for 1951 Pittsburgh Pirates and twice lost 20 games; overall, posted a 172–181 record and 3.66 ERA in 625 pitching appearances.
- September 29 – August A. Busch Jr., 90, brewery magnate who owned St. Louis Cardinals from 1953 until his death; oversaw three World Series (1964, 1967, 1982) titles and credited with keeping the Redbirds from moving to Houston by purchasing them in 1953.
- September 30 – Roy Weir, 78, pitcher who posted a 6–4 record for the Boston Bees/Braves from 1936 to 1939.
October
- October 11 – Bill Phebus, 80, pitcher who posted a 3–2 record and a 3.31 ERA in 13 games for the Washington Senators from 1936 through 1938.
- October 12 – Joe Foy, 46, third baseman for the Boston Red Sox, Kansas City Royals, New York Mets and Washington Senators from 1966 to 1971, who also won the International League batting title, MVP award and Rookie of the Year during the 1965 season.
- October 15 – Lou Guisto, 94, backup first baseman who hit .196 in 156 games for the Cleveland Indians in five seasons from 1916 to 1923.
- October 17 – John Mackinson, 65, pitcher who played briefly for the 1953 Philadelphia Athletics and the 1955 St. Louis Cardinals.
- October 24 – Ollie O'Mara, 98, shortstop/third baseman for the Detroit Tigers and the Brooklyn Robins in parts of six seasons spanning 1912–1919, and also a member of the Brooklyn National League champion team that faced the Boston Red Sox in the 1916 World Series.
- October 30 – Willie Cornelius, 83, pitcher who hurled in black baseball between 1929 and 1946, chiefly for Chicago American Giants; in 1938, led Negro American League in wins (going 9–1), complete games (8) and saves (3).
November
- November 1 – Elise Harney, 64, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League All-Star pitcher and one of the sixty founding members of the circuit in 1943.
- November 2 – Steve Simpson, 41, relief pitcher who posted a 0–2 record in nine games for the 1972 San Diego Padres.
- November 4 – Pancho Coimbre, 80, native of Puerto Rico and two-time Negro National League All-Star outfielder who batted .337 lifetime for the New York Cubans (1940–1941, 1943–1944).
- November 7 – Tommy Tatum, 70, center fielder for the Brooklyn Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds in two seasons spanning 1941–1947, who served in World War II and later managed in the minor leagues.
- November 8 – Johnny Lanning, 79, pitcher who posted a 58–60 record and a 3.58 ERA in 278 games for the Boston Bees/Braves and Pittsburgh Pirates in a span of 11 seasons from 1936 to 1947.
- November 9 – Clemente Carreras, 75, Havana-born infielder for the 1940–1941 New York Cubans of the Negro National League; managed in the Mexican League for five seasons between 1962 and 1976.
- November 15 – Rocky Ellis, 78, pitcher and occasional outfielder for the Philadelphia Stars (1934–1940) and Homestead Grays (1940) of the Negro National League.
- November 17 – Jack Cusick, 61, shortstop for the Chicago Cubs and Boston Braves from 1951 through 1952.
- November 20 – Dolan Nichols, 59, relief pitcher for the 1958 Chicago Cubs, who had one career save and surrendered only one home run in 41.0 innings.
- November 26 – Lew Fonseca, 90, valuable and versatile fielder as well as a solid hitter, who played from 1921 through 1933 for the Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Phillies, Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox, topping the .300 mark six times and winning the American League batting crown with a .369 average in 1929; manager of White Sox from 1932 to May 8, 1934; his long-term contribution to baseball was pioneering the use of film to analyze and promote the game.
- November 27 – Ray Boggs, 84, relief pitcher who appeared in four games for the 1928 Boston Braves.
- November 28 – "Barnacle Bill" Posedel, 83, pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers and Boston Braves between 1938 and 1946 who posted a 41–43 mark; served in U.S. Navy before his baseball career and during World War II; later pitching coach for six big-league clubs between 1949 and 1974 who was instrumental in developing stellar Oakland Athletics' mound staff; coach for 1972 World Series champions.
December
- December 4 – Steve Lembo, 63, backup catcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers during the 1950 and 1952 seasons.
- December 6 – Art Parks, 78, outfielder who hit .275 in 78 games for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1937 and 1939 seasons.
- December 17 – Zeb Eaton, 69, relief pitcher for the Detroit Tigers from 1944 to 1945, and also a member of the Tigers 1945 World Champions.
- December 21 – Ralph Schwamb, 63, pitcher for the 1948 St. Louis Browns, who later became the first major league player to ever be convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
- December 22 – Archie Campbell, 86, relief pitcher who posted a 2–6 record with a 4.50 ERA and six saves for three teams from 1928 to 1930, being also a member of the Yankees 1928 World Champions.
- December 25 – Billy Martin, 61, All-Star second baseman for the New York Yankees and member of five world championship teams between 1950–1957, who appeared in 1,021 MLB games for seven teams in all through 1961; known for his tempestuous behavior off the field, he managed Yankees on five occasions between 1975 and 1988, leading the team to the 1976 AL pennant and the 1977 World Series title; also guided the 1969 Minnesota Twins, 1972 Detroit Tigers and 1981 Oakland Athletics to playoff appearances, and received four Manager of the Year awards.
- December 26 – Roy Joiner, 83, pitcher for the Chicago Cubs from 1934 to 1935 and the New York Giants in 1940, who pitched another 15 minor league seasons and also served during World War II.
References
External links
- Major League Baseball official website
- Minor League Baseball official website
- Baseball Almanac – Major League Baseball Players Who Died in 1989
