1997 Major League Baseball season explained
1997 MLB season |
League: | Major League Baseball |
Sport: | Baseball |
Duration: | April 1 – October 26, 1997 |
No Of Games: | 162 |
No Of Teams: | 28 |
Tv: | Fox/FSN/FX, ESPN, NBC |
Draft: | Draft |
Draft Link: | 1997 Major League Baseball draft |
Top Pick: | Matt Anderson |
Top Pick Link: | List of first overall MLB draft picks |
Picked By: | Detroit Tigers |
Season: | Regular Season |
Mvp: | AL Ken Griffey Jr. (SEA) NL: Larry Walker (COL)
|
Mvp Link: | Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award |
Playoffs: | Postseason |
Playoffs Link: | 1997 Major League Baseball postseason |
Conf1: | AL |
Conf1 Link: | 1997 American League Championship Series |
Conf1 Champ: | Cleveland Indians |
Conf1 Runner-Up: | Baltimore Orioles |
Conf2: | NL |
Conf2 Link: | 1997 National League Championship Series |
Conf2 Champ: | Florida Marlins |
Conf2 Runner-Up: | Atlanta Braves |
Finals: | World Series |
Finals Link: | 1997 World Series |
Finals Champ: | Florida Marlins |
Finals Runner-Up: | Cleveland Indians |
World Series Mvp: | Liván Hernández (FLA) |
World Series Mvp Link: | World Series MVP Award |
Seasonslist: | List of MLB seasons |
Seasonslistnames: | MLB |
Prevseason Link: | 1996 Major League Baseball season |
Prevseason Year: | 1996 |
Nextseason Link: | 1998 Major League Baseball season |
Nextseason Year: | 1998 |
The 1997 Major League Baseball season was the inaugural season for Interleague play, as well as the final season in the American League for the Milwaukee Brewers before moving to the NL the following season. The California Angels changed their name to the Anaheim Angels. The Florida Marlins ended the season (their fifth season in the majors) as the World Champions defeating the Cleveland Indians in a seven-game World Series, four games to three.
Standings
National League
Postseason
See main article: article and 1997 MLB Postseason.
Bracket
Awards and honors
Other awards
Edgar Martínez (SEA)
Randy Myers (BAL, American); Jeff Shaw (CIN, National).
Player of the Month
Pitcher of the Month
MLB statistical leaders
1 American League Triple Crown Pitching Winner
Managers
American League
National League
Home field attendance and payroll
Team name | Wins | | Home attendance | | | Est. payroll | |
---|
Colorado Rockies[1] | 83 | 0.0% | 3,888,453 | -0.1% | 48,006 | $43,559,667 | 8.0% |
Baltimore Orioles[2] | 98 | 11.4% | 3,711,132 | 1.8% | 45,816 | $58,516,400 | 7.2% |
Atlanta Braves[3] | 101 | 5.2% | 3,464,488 | 19.4% | 42,771 | $52,278,500 | 5.2% |
Cleveland Indians[4] | 86 | -13.1% | 3,404,750 | 2.6% | 42,034 | $56,802,460 | 17.8% |
Los Angeles Dodgers[5] | 88 | -2.2% | 3,319,504 | 4.1% | 40,982 | $45,380,304 | 28.4% |
Seattle Mariners[6] | 90 | 5.9% | 3,192,237 | 17.2% | 39,410 | $41,540,661 | 0.5% |
Texas Rangers[7] | 77 | -14.4% | 2,945,228 | 1.9% | 36,361 | $53,448,838 | 36.9% |
St. Louis Cardinals[8] | 73 | -17.0% | 2,634,014 | -0.8% | 32,519 | $45,456,667 | 12.9% |
Toronto Blue Jays[9] | 76 | 2.7% | 2,589,297 | 1.2% | 31,967 | $47,079,833 | 54.1% |
New York Yankees[10] | 96 | 4.3% | 2,580,325 | 14.6% | 32,254 | $62,241,545 | 14.9% |
Florida Marlins[11] | 92 | 15.0% | 2,364,387 | 35.4% | 29,190 | $48,692,500 | 56.4% |
Boston Red Sox[12] | 78 | -8.2% | 2,226,136 | -3.8% | 27,483 | $43,558,750 | 2.7% |
Chicago Cubs[13] | 68 | -10.5% | 2,190,308 | -1.3% | 27,041 | $42,155,333 | 27.4% |
San Diego Padres[14] | 76 | -16.5% | 2,089,333 | -4.5% | 25,794 | $37,363,672 | 31.8% |
Houston Astros[15] | 84 | 2.4% | 2,046,781 | 3.6% | 25,269 | $34,777,500 | 22.1% |
Chicago White Sox[16] | 80 | -5.9% | 1,864,782 | 11.2% | 23,022 | $57,740,000 | 27.5% |
Cincinnati Reds[17] | 76 | -6.2% | 1,785,788 | -4.1% | 22,047 | $49,768,000 | 17.0% |
Anaheim Angels[18] | 84 | 20.0% | 1,767,330 | -2.9% | 21,553 | $31,135,472 | 7.9% |
New York Mets[19] | 88 | 23.9% | 1,766,174 | 11.2% | 21,805 | $39,800,400 | 62.6% |
San Francisco Giants[20] | 90 | 32.4% | 1,690,869 | 19.6% | 20,875 | $35,592,378 | -4.2% |
Pittsburgh Pirates[21] | 79 | 8.2% | 1,657,022 | 24.4% | 20,457 | $10,771,667 | -53.2% |
Kansas City Royals[22] | 67 | -10.7% | 1,517,638 | 5.7% | 18,970 | $34,810,000 | 71.6% |
Montreal Expos[23] | 78 | -11.4% | 1,497,609 | -7.4% | 18,489 | $19,295,500 | 18.6% |
Philadelphia Phillies[24] | 68 | 1.5% | 1,490,638 | -17.3% | 18,403 | $36,656,500 | 6.8% |
Milwaukee Brewers[25] | 78 | -2.5% | 1,444,027 | 8.8% | 18,050 | $23,655,338 | 8.9% |
Minnesota Twins[26] | 68 | -12.8% | 1,411,064 | -1.8% | 17,421 | $34,072,500 | 47.4% |
Detroit Tigers[27] | 79 | 49.1% | 1,365,157 | 16.8% | 16,854 | $17,272,000 | -26.3% |
Oakland Athletics[28] | 65 | -16.7% | 1,264,218 | 10.1% | 15,608 | $24,018,500 | 13.1% | |
Television coverage
This was the second season under the five-year rights agreements with ESPN, Fox, and NBC. ESPN continued to air Sunday Night Baseball and Wednesday Night Baseball. In addition to Fox Saturday Baseball broadcasts, Fox's coverage extended to Thursday night games on sister network Fox Sports Net, and selected Monday and Tuesday primetime games on sister network FX. Fox also aired the All-Star Game. During the postseason, ESPN, Fox, and NBC split the four Division Series. Fox then televised the American League Championship Series while NBC aired both the National League Championship Series and the World Series.
Events
January–March
- January 5 – Boston Red Sox pitcher Tim Wakefield escapes serious injury when he is hit by a car while out jogging. He is released from the hospital after being treated for bruises.
- January 6 – Knuckleballer Phil Niekro is elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Niekro receives 80.34% of the vote. Pitcher Don Sutton falls nine votes short of election.
- February 20 – The Philadelphia Phillies sign free agent outfielder Danny Tartabull. Tartabull broke his foot on Opening Day and sat out the year before retiring.
- March 5 – Nellie Fox, Tommy Lasorda and Negro leaguer Willie Wells are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee.
April–May
- April 15 – In an unprecedented move, Commissioner of Baseball Bud Selig announces on the 50th Anniversary of Jackie Robinson's debut that the number he wore with the Brooklyn Dodgers, number 42, would be unilaterally retired throughout all of Major League Baseball during a mid-game ceremony in a game between the Dodgers and the New York Mets at Shea Stadium. Rachael Robinson, Jackie's widow and President Bill Clinton attended the event as well. The number would be worn by players during the anniversary of his major league debut, and would still be worn by players who started wearing the number before the announcement, most famously the New York Yankees' Mariano Rivera, until he retired after the 2013 season, thus officially retiring number 42, as he was the last player to wear the number 42 jersey on a regular basis.
- April 29 – Chili Davis' 300th home run, leading off the 10th inning, snaps a 5–5 tie and gives the Kansas City Royals a 6–5 win over the Toronto Blue Jays.
- May 7 – The Montréal Expos score a National League-record 13 runs in the 6th inning of their game against the San Francisco Giants on the way to a 19–3 win. The Expos send 17 batters to the plate. Mike Lansing homers twice in the inning to drive in five runs, becoming the third Expos player to perform the feat, and the first NL second baseman to do so since Bobby Lowe in 1894.
- May 8 – At home, the Baltimore Orioles stop Randy Johnson's 16-game win streak with a decisive 13–3 pasting of the Seattle Mariners. Baltimore is led by catcher Chris Hoiles, who collects six RBI on two homers and a double. Johnson strikes out 10 in six innings, but gives up five runs on six hits and two walks in his attempt to become the first AL pitcher since Dave McNally (1968–69) to win 17 straight.
- May 13 – Eddie Murray gets two hits in Anaheim's 8–7 win over the Chicago White Sox. The game is the 3,000th of Murray's career, making him only the sixth player in history to reach that mark, joining Pete Rose, Carl Yastrzemski, Hank Aaron, Ty Cobb and Stan Musial.
- May 21 – Roger Clemens fires the Toronto Blue Jays past the New York Yankees 4–1, for his 8th win of the year against no losses. The Rocket wins his 200th game, the 94th pitcher to reach the 200 victories mark.
- May 25 – The Minnesota Twins retire Kirby Puckett's uniform number 34 in a 90-minute pregame ceremony.
- May 26 – In the Chicago Cubs' 2–1 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates, Cub Sammy Sosa and Pirate Tony Womack both hit inside-the-park home runs in the sixth inning. It is the first time two inside-the-park homers are hit in the same NL game since Lou Brock and Héctor Cruz of the St. Louis Cardinals did it against the San Diego Padres on June 18, 1976. Greg Gagne of the Twins had two for Minnesota on October 4, 1986.
- May 26 – In Toronto, Roger Clemens allows one run and four hits in seven innings and strikes out seven to beat the Rangers 8–1. The Rocket is now 9–0, his best start since beginning 1986 at 14–0.
- May 26 – Andrés Galarraga hits a 469-foot two-run homer and Vinny Castilla adds a solo shot as the Colorado Rockies overcome a six-run deficit to beat the Cardinals 9–7. Galarraga has four RBI, and his moon shot off Mark Petkovsek is the third-longest homer in the three-season history of Coors Field.
- May 27 – Barry Larkin's streak of consecutively reaching base 13 times is stopped by Curt Schilling, who goes all the way to beat Cincinnati 2–1. Larkin singles in the first inning, but flies out in the 3rd to end his streak one shy of Pedro Guerrero's NL record, set in 1985.
- May 30 – The Orioles' Mike Mussina retires the first 25 Indian batters before Sandy Alomar Jr. ruins his no-hit bid with a one-out single in the 9th. Mussina then strikes out the final two batters for a 3–0 victory.
- May 31 – Cal Ripken Jr. snaps a 7th-inning tie with a record-breaking home run as the Baltimore Orioles rally from a 4-run deficit to beat the Cleveland Indians 8–5. Ripken's homer gives him 4,274 total bases with Baltimore, breaking the franchise mark for total bases in a career. Baltimore also place Eric Davis on the disabled list. Davis is suffering from colon cancer and will be operated on in early June.
- May 31 – In Miami, Andrés Galarraga golfs a 529-foot grand slam, the longest home run ever at Pro Player Stadium. His homer gives the Colorado Rockies a 7–0 lead over the Florida Marlins, and they eventually win 8–4. Galarraga has three home runs in the past three games against Florida that traveled 1,435 feet, an average of 478 feet. He hit a 455-foot homer two days before and a 451-foot homer the previous day. The longest previous homer at the stadium was 482 feet by Pete Incaviglia of the Phillies off Al Leiter on May 1, 1996.
- May 31 – Unbeaten Roger Clemens is the first 10-game winner in the majors, as the Toronto Blue Jays romp 13–3 over the Oakland Athletics.
- May 31 – Ila Borders of the St. Paul Saints of the Northern League faces three Sioux Falls Canaries batters, and surrenders three earned runs, in her professional baseball debut. The Canaries, who led 4–0 when she entered the game, go on to defeat St. Paul 11–1.
June–July
August–September
October–December
- October 26 – The Florida Marlins beat the Cleveland Indians in Game 7 to become the first Wild Card team to win the World Series.
- October 27 – The Detroit Tigers break ground on their new ballpark.
- November 4 - Voters in 11 counties in southwestern Pennsylvania reject the Regional Renaissance Initiative, a voter referendum to raise sales taxes to fund new stadiums for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Pittsburgh Steelers. The public funding necessary to ensure their construction would eventually be approved legislatively in an alternate proposal colloquially known as "Plan B".
- November 6 – The Milwaukee Brewers switch leagues, joining the National League Central Division, after the Kansas City Royals reject the invitation. With the 1998 addition of the Arizona Diamondbacks (NL) and Tampa Bay Devil Rays (AL), the move will maintain an even number of teams in each league.
- November 18 — The expansion draft starts with several transactions. Two pitchers who appeared in the World Series a month earlier, Tony Saunders (Florida Marlins) and Brian Anderson (Cleveland Indians), are the first players taken. Saunders, the first player chosen overall, heads a list of new Tampa Bay Devil Rays team that includes Quinton McCracken, Bubba Trammell, Albie López and Terrell Wade. Tampa Bay also obtain John Flaherty from the San Diego Padres in exchange for Brian Boehringer and Andy Sheets; Kevin Stocker from the Philadelphia Phillies for Bobby Abreu; Fred McGriff from the Atlanta Braves in exchange for a player to be named, and sign free agent Roberto Hernández. The Arizona Diamondbacks, meanwhile, who signed free agent Jay Bell to a five-year contract yesterday, select Jeff Suppan, Jorge Fábregas and Karim García, and acquire Travis Fryman from the Detroit Tigers in exchange for Joe Randa, Gabe Alvarez and a minor leaguer. They also obtain Devon White from the Florida Marlins for a prospect.
Deaths
- January 6 – Dick Donovan, 69, All-Star pitcher, mainly with the White Sox and Indians, who led AL in ERA in 1961 and won 20 games in 1962
- January 20 – Curt Flood, 59, All-Star center fielder who won seven Gold Gloves and batted .300 six times; challenged baseball's reserve clause all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, unsuccessfully, after refusing a trade
- February 7 – Manny Salvo, 83, Boston pitcher who tied for the National League lead in shutouts in 1940
- February 13 – Bobby Adams, 75, third baseman for the Cincinnati Reds/Redlegs, Chicago White Sox, Baltimore Orioles and Chicago Cubs between 1946 and 1959
- June 1 – Mickey Rocco, 81, Cleveland first baseman who led the American League in fielding percentage at his position in 1943 and 1945
- June 9 – Thornton Lee, 90, All-Star pitcher who won over 100 games for the White Sox; won 22 games and led AL in ERA in 1941
- July 31 – Eddie Miller, 80, 7-time All-Star shortstop for four NL teams who led league in fielding five times
- August 23 – Guy Curtright, 84, White Sox outfielder who finished sixth in 1943 American League batting race with a .291 average
- September 9 – Richie Ashburn, 70, Hall of Fame center fielder for the Phillies who batted .308 lifetime, winning two batting titles, and led NL in putouts nine times, hits three times, triples twice and steals once; retired with six of the top eight single-season putout totals in history
- September 22 – Eddie Sawyer, 87, manager who led the Phillies' "Whiz Kids" to the 1950 pennant, later a scout
- September 26 – Woody English, 91, All-Star infielder for the Cubs who batted .300 twice
- October 6 – Johnny Vander Meer, 82, All-Star pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds who in 1938 became the only player to pitch two consecutive no-hitters; led NL in strikeouts three times
- October 21 – Dolph Camilli, 90, All-Star first baseman who was the NL's MVP in 1941, leading the Brooklyn Dodgers to the pennant; had five 100-RBI seasons
- November 2 – Roy McMillan, 68, All-Star shortstop for the Reds, Braves and Mets who won the NL's first three Gold Gloves; minor league manager, coach and scout
- November 20 – Dick Littlefield, 71, well-traveled pitcher who played for nine teams, earning 15 of his 33 wins with the Pirates
- November 27 – Buck Leonard, 90, Hall of Fame first baseman of the Negro leagues regularly among the league leaders in batting average and home runs
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Colorado Rockies Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Baltimore Orioles Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Atlanta Braves Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Cleveland Indians Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Los Angeles Dodgers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Seattle Mariners Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Texas Rangers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: St. Louis Cardinals Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Toronto Blue Jays Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: New York Yankees Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Florida Marlins Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Boston Red Sox Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Chicago Cubs Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: San Diego Padres Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Cleveland Indians Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Chicago White Sox Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Cincinnati Reds Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Los Angeles Angels Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: New York Mets Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: San Francisco Giants Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Pittsburgh Pirates Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Kansas City Royals Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Washington Nationals Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Philadelphia Phillies Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. July 16, 2024. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Milwaukee Brewers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Minnesota Twins Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Detroit Tigers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Web site: Oakland Athletics Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors. September 8, 2020. Baseball-Reference.com.