1970 Boston Red Sox season

The 1970 Boston Red Sox season was the 70th season in the franchise's Major League Baseball history. The Red Sox finished third in the American League East with a record of 87 wins and 75 losses, 21 games behind the Baltimore Orioles, who went on to win the AL championship and the 1970 World Series.

1970 Boston Red Sox
Major League affiliations
Location
Results
Record87–75 (.537)
Divisional place3rd (21 GB)
Other information
Owner(s)Tom Yawkey
General manager(s)Dick O'Connell
Manager(s)Eddie Kasko
Local televisionWHDH-TV, Ch. 5
Local radioWHDH-AM 850
(Ken Coleman, Ned Martin, Johnny Pesky)
StatsESPN.com
BB-reference
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Offseason

Regular season

The 1970s began with a new manager for the Red Sox. After the firing of Dick Williams near the end of the 1969 season, general manager Dick O'Connell reached down into the farm system again for a replacement and came up with Eddie Kasko, who had managed the Red Sox Triple-A farm team, the Louisville Colonels, to a second-place finish in 1969. Kasko had been a major league infielder from 1957 to 1966, with the St. Louis Cardinals, Cincinnati Reds, Houston Astros, and the Red Sox.

Record by month[2]
MonthRecordCumulativeAL EastRef.
WonLostWonLostPositionGB
April1181183rd (tie)2[3]
May91720255th11 12[4]
June141134364th10 12[5]
July181352494th11[6]
August161468634th17[7]
September191287753rd20 12[8]
October0087753rd21[9]
Several other teams finished their season on October 1.

Kasko took over a team in transition in 1970. Its leading pitcher was Ray Culp, with 17 wins. Jim Lonborg, the superstar of 1967, still was not back in form and went 4–1. Carl Yastrzemski led the American League with a .329 batting average, and Tony Conigliaro appeared to have recovered from the horrible beaning of 1967, hitting .266, with 36 home runs and 116 RBIs. Reggie Smith hit .303, and George Scott had a banner year at .296, with 16 homers and 63 RBIs. Unfortunately, the Red Sox finished 21 games behind the rampaging Baltimore Orioles, who won 108 games and then went on to defeat the Cincinnati Reds in the 1970 World Series.

There were no scheduled doubleheaders this season at Fenway Park.[10]

Season standings

AL East W L Pct. GB Home Road
Baltimore Orioles 10854 0.667 59–22 49–32
New York Yankees 9369 0.574 15 53–28 40–41
Boston Red Sox 8775 0.537 21 52–29 35–46
Detroit Tigers 7983 0.488 29 42–39 37–44
Cleveland Indians 7686 0.469 32 43–38 33–48
Washington Senators 7092 0.432 38 40–41 30–51

Record vs. opponents

1970 American League Records

Sources:
Team BAL BOS CAL CWS CLE DET KC MIL MIN NYY OAK WSH
Baltimore 13–57–59–314–411–712–07–55–711–77–512–6
Boston 5–135–78–412–69–97–55–77–510–87–512–6
California 5–77–512–66–66–610–812–68–105–78–107–5
Chicago 3–94–86–126–66–67–117–116–125–72–164–8
Cleveland 4–146–126–66–67–118–47–56–68–107–511–7
Detroit 7–119–96–66–611–76–68–44–87–116–69–9
Kansas City 0–125–78–1011–74–86–612–65–131–117–116–6
Milwaukee 5–77–56–1211–75–74–86–125–133–9–18–105–7
Minnesota 7–55–710–812–66–68–413–513–55–713–56–6
New York 7–118–107–57–510–811–711–19–3–17–56–610–8
Oakland 5–75–710–816–25–76–611–710–85–136–610–2
Washington 6–126–125–78–47–119–96–67–56–68–102–10

Notable transactions

Opening Day lineup

  2Mike Andrews2B
  7Reggie SmithCF
  8Carl Yastrzemski    LF
  5George Scott1B
  6Rico PetrocelliSS
25Tony ConigliaroRF
  1Luis Alvarado3B
10Jerry MosesC
43Gary PetersP

Source:[12]

Roster

1970 Boston Red Sox
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Statistical leaders

CategoryPlayerStatistic
Youngest playerRoger Moret20
Oldest playerDucky Schofield35
Wins Above ReplacementCarl Yastrzemski9.5

Source:[13]

Batting

Abbr.CategoryPlayerStatistic
GGames playedCarl Yastrzemski161
PAPlate appearancesCarl Yastrzemski698
ABAt batsMike Andrews589
RRuns scoredCarl Yastrzemski125
HHitsCarl Yastrzemski186
2BDoublesReggie Smith32
3BTriplesReggie Smith7
HRHome runsCarl Yastrzemski40
RBIRuns batted inTony Conigliaro116
SBStolen basesCarl Yastrzemski23
CSCaught stealingCarl Yastrzemski13
BBBase on ballsCarl Yastrzemski128
SOStrikeoutsGeorge Scott95
BABatting averageCarl Yastrzemski.329
OBPOn-base percentageCarl Yastrzemski.452
SLGSlugging percentageCarl Yastrzemski.592
OPSOn-base plus sluggingCarl Yastrzemski1.044
OPS+Adjusted OPSCarl Yastrzemski177
TBTotal basesCarl Yastrzemski335
GIDPGrounded into double playRico Petrocelli16
HBPHit by pitchTony Conigliaro8
SHSacrifice hitsRay Culp5
SFSacrifice fliesRico Petrocelli10
IBBIntentional base on ballsCarl Yastrzemski12

Source:[13]

Pitching

Abbr.CategoryPlayerStatistic
WWinsRay Culp17
LLossesRay Culp14
W-L %Winning percentageVicente Romo.700 (7–3)
ERAEarned run averageRay Culp3.04
GGames pitchedSparky Lyle63
GSGames startedGary Peters34
GFGames finishedSparky Lyle40
CGComplete gamesRay Culp15
SHOShutoutsGary Peters4
SVSavesSparky Lyle20
IPInnings pitchedRay Culp251 13
SOStrikeoutsRay Culp197
WHIPWalks plus hits per inning pitchedSonny Siebert1.199

Source:[13]

Awards and honors

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Louisville Colonels International League Billy Gardner
AA Pawtucket Red Sox Eastern League Matt Sczesny
A Winston-Salem Red Sox Carolina League Bill Slack
A Winter Haven Red Sox Florida State League John Butler
A Greenville Red Sox Western Carolinas League Rac Slider
A-Short Season Jamestown Falcons New York–Penn League Jackie Jensen

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Winston-Salem, Greenville

Source:[15]

References

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