1996 in baseball

The following are the baseball events of the year 1996 throughout the world.

List of years in baseball

Champions

Major League Baseball

  Division Series
Fox/NBC/ESPN
League Championship Series
Fox/NBC
World Series
Fox
                           
  East New York Yankees 3  
West Texas Rangers 1  
  East New York Yankees 4  
American League
  WC Baltimore Orioles 1  
WC Baltimore Orioles 3
  Cent. Cleveland Indians 1  
    AL New York Yankees 4
  NL Atlanta Braves 2
  East Atlanta Braves 3  
WC Los Angeles Dodgers 0  
  East Atlanta Braves 4
National League
  Cent St. Louis Cardinals 3  
West San Diego Padres 0
  Cent. St. Louis Cardinals 3  

Other champions

Awards and honors

MLB statistical leaders

  American League National League
TypeNameStatNameStat
AVGAlex Rodriguez SEA.358Tony Gwynn SDP.353
HRMark McGwire OAK52Andrés Galarraga COL47
RBIAlbert Belle CLE148Andrés Galarraga COL150
WinsAndy Pettitte NYY21John Smoltz ATL24
ERAJuan Guzmán TOR2.93Kevin Brown FLA1.89
KsRoger Clemens BOS257John Smoltz ATL276

Major league baseball final standings

  • The asterisk denotes the club that won the wild card for its respective league.

Events

January–April

May–August

September–December

  • September 2 – At the Kingdome, Mike Greenwell drives in all nine Boston Red Sox runs in his team's 9-8, 10-inning victory over the Seattle Mariners. The nine RBIs are the most by one player accounting for all of his team's runs in one game. Greenwell, whose evening includes two home runs, singles in the tenth to score Wil Cordero for the winning run.
  • September 6 – Eddie Murray of the Baltimore Orioles becomes the 15th player in major league history to hit 500 home runs. He homers off Felipe Lira in the seventh inning of the Orioles' 5-4, 12-inning loss to the Detroit Tigers at Camden Yards. Murray also joins Hank Aaron and Willie Mays as the only big leaguers to reach both this milestone and also the 3,000 hit mark.
  • September 6 – Brett Butler returns to the Los Angeles Dodgers line-up four months after having surgery for throat cancer. The 39-year-old center fielder scores the decisive run in a 3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
  • September 14 - The New York Mets' Todd Hundley hit his 41st home run of the season in a 6-5 win at home against the Braves to set a Major League record for home runs in a season by a catcher.
  • September 16 – Paul Molitor of the Minnesota Twins becomes the first DH with 3,000 career hits. He is the first player in history to reach the milestone by collecting a triple.
  • September 17 – Hideo Nomo pitches a no-hitter against the Colorado Rockies, leading the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 9-0 victory. Nomo walks four batters and strikes out eight.
  • September 18 – Roger Clemens of the Boston Red Sox ties his own Major League record for a nine inning game by striking out twenty Detroit Tigers en route to a 4-0 win.
  • September 27 – Barry Bonds steals his 40th base of the season, becoming the second member of Major League Baseball's 40–40 club. Bonds' San Francisco Giants defeat the Colorado Rockies, 9-3.
  • September 29 – Against the Toronto Blue Jays at the SkyDome, Brady Anderson of the Baltimore Orioles hits his 50th home run of the season. The home run, leading off the game, breaks Frank Robinson's single-season franchise record of 49 home runs in 1966. Anderson also becomes the first player to hit 50 home runs in one season and steal 50 bases in another, having stolen 52 in 1992. However, the Blue Jays give up no more runs and defeat the Orioles 4-1 for Pat Hentgen's 20th victory of the season. Hentgen, the eventual American League Cy Young Award winner, becomes only the second 20-game winner in Jays history, after Jack Morris winning 21 games in 1992.
  • October 24 – In Game 5 of the 1996 World Series, the Atlanta Braves play their final game at Fulton County Stadium vs. the New York Yankees. Andy Pettitte outduels eventual NL Cy Young winner John Smoltz as the Yankees win Game 5 1-0 to take a 3-2 series lead.
  • October 26 – The New York Yankees take their fourth victory in a row from the Atlanta Braves, 3-2, giving them the 1996 World Series and their 23rd World Championship. Starter Jimmy Key gets the win with help from closer John Wetteland, whose four saves earn him the MVP trophy.
  • November 12 – Pat Hentgen of the Toronto Blue Jays edges Andy Pettitte of the New York Yankees for the Cy Young Award in the closest American League voting since 1972 when Gaylord Perry tops Wilbur Wood by six points. Hentgen, who posts a 20-10 record with a 3.22 ERA and leads the Major Leagues in complete games (10), outpoints Pettitte (21-8, 3.87) by the narrow margin of 110-104. Yankees reliever Mariano Rivera, who goes 8-3 with a 2.09 ERA and five saves in 61 appearances, finishes third in the ballot and receives one first-place vote.
  • November 26 – Less than three weeks after major league owners vote 18-12 against ratification of baseball's new collective bargaining agreement, owners vote again and this time approve it by a vote of 26-4. The landmark agreement brings interleague play to the regular season for the first time as well as revenue sharing among owners and a payroll tax on players.
  • November 30 – Ken Caminiti of the San Diego Padres is the unanimous choice as National League Most Valuable Player. In 2002, he would be the first player of his era to admit that he uses steroids, specifically during this season, and dies in 2004 at age 41 of a heart attack thought to be drug-related. Mike Piazza is the runner-up for the award.

Movies

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

January

  • January   3 – Connie Ryan, 75, All-Star second baseman who played for five different clubs in span of 12 seasons from 1942–1954, spending much of his baseball career with the Braves franchise, working as a player in Boston for the 1948 National League champions, later as a coach in Milwaukee for the 1957 World Series champion team, while managing the Atlanta team in 1975, before joining the Texas Rangers as a manager in 1997 and as their coach through 1979.
  • January   5 – Elmer Singleton, 77, relief pitcher for the Boston Braves, Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates and Washington Senators in all or part of eight seasons spanning 1945–1959.
  • January   8 – Dutch McCall, 75, pitcher for the 1948 Chicago Cubs.
  • January   9 – Roger Freed, 49, outfielder who played from 1970 through 1979 with the Baltimore Orioles, Philadelphia Phillies, Cincinnati Reds, Montreal Expos and St. Louis Cardinals.
  • January   9 – Overton Tremper, 89, outfielder for the Brooklyn Robins in the 1927 and 1928 seasons.
  • January 10 – Joe Schultz, 77, backup catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates and St. Louis Browns in eight seasons between 1939 and 1948, who in 1969 became the manager for the American League expansion franchise Seattle Pilots in their inaugural and only season.
  • January 21 – Dan Monzon, 49, middle infielder and third baseman for the Minnesota Twins during the 1972 and 1973 seasons.
  • January 22 – Dick Rand, 64, backup catcher who played with the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1953 and 1955 seasons and for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1957.
  • January 25 – Mike Clark, 73, a highly touted pitching prospect in the St. Louis Cardinals minor league system in the 1940s, whose career was interrupted by three years of service during World War II, finally joining the Cardinals as a relief pitcher from 1952 to 1953, being undefeated in three decisions while recording one save in 35 relief appearances.
  • January 25 – Chuck Coles, 64, left fielder who played with the Cincinnati Redlegs in 1958.

February

  • February   7 – Red Webb, 71, pitcher for the New York Giants in the 1948 and 1949 seasons.
  • February   8 – Del Ennis, 70, three-time All-Star outfielder who finished in the top-20 in hits in the National League eight times with the Philadelphia Phillies from 1946–1956, as well in the top-10 in home runs, nine times, leading the league with 126 RBI in 1956 while batting .311 and hitting 31 home runs.
  • February 16 – Hank Gornicki, 86, pitcher who played for the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates in a span of four seasons from 1941–1946.
  • February 17 – Andy Lapihuska, 73, pitcher who played from 1942 to 1943 for the Philadelphia Phillies.
  • February 19 – Charles O. Finley, 77, controversial and colorful owner of the Oakland Athletics, who brought innovations to Major League Baseball likes the night time games at the World Series, the designated hitter rule, and the brightly-colored uniforms and white spikes for his players, while pushing the Athletics to three straight World Series titles from 1972–1974.
  • February 20 – Carolyn Morris, 70, All-Star female pitcher who hurled a perfect game and two no-hitters in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.
  • February 23 – Gordon Goldsberry, 68, first baseman who spent three seasons with the Chicago White Sox from 1949 through 1951 before being traded to the St. Louis Browns in 1952.
  • February 27 – Vic Janowicz, 66, backup catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1953–1954.

March

  • March   8 – Bill Nicholson, 81, five-time All-Star slugging right fielder for the Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies, who twice led the National League in home runs and RBI, finished 3rd in the MVP voting in 1943 and 2nd the next year, and collected 20 or more home runs seven times, including a career-high 30 homers in 1944.
  • March 13 – Dick West, 80, catcher over parts of six seasons from 1938–1943 with the Cincinnati Reds.
  • March 20 – Jim Pendleton, 72, Negro American League and Double-A American Association outfielder, who later enjoyed a 10-year major league career from 1953-1962 with the Milwaukee Braves, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Houston Colt .45s, becoming just the second rookie to hit three homers in a major league game, as Eddie Mathews did it in 1952.
  • March 21 – Ruby Stephens, 71, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League pitcher who posted a 61-53 record in six seasons and hurled a no-hitter in 1950.
  • March 22 – Pete Whisenant, 66, outfielder and utility man who played for eight teams in eight seasons spanning 1952–1961, primarily with the Cincinnati Reds and Redlegs.
  • March 24 – Ray Pepper, 90, outfielder who played from 1932 through 1936 for the St. Louis Cardinals and St. Louis Browns.
  • March 24 – Jerry Robertson, 52, pitcher who played with the Montreal Expos in 1969 and for the Detroit Tigers in 1970.
  • March 28 – Don Ross, 81, versatile infield-outfield utility who played for the Detroit Tigers, Brooklyn Dodgers and Cleveland Indians during eight seasons spanning 1938–1946.

April

  • April   1 – John McSherry, 51, National League umpire from 1971 until the time of his death, who umpired in the World Series in 1977 and 1987, and also officiated in eight NL Championship Series, two NL Division Games, and three All-Star Games, for which the umpiring crew consisted of three AL umpires and three NL umpires between 1949 and 1999.
  • April 14 – Clyde McNeal, 67, shortstop in the Negro leagues.
  • April 17 – Bill Serena, 71, third baseman who played from 1949 through 1954 for the Chicago Cubs.
  • April 20 – Hank Biasatti, 74, Italian first baseman for the 1949 Philadelphia Athletics.
  • April 21 – Walker Cress, 79, pitcher who played for the Cincinnati Reds in 1948 and 1949.
  • April 22 – Bob Brady, 73, catcher who played from 1946 to 1947 for the 1946 Boston Braves.
  • April 24 – Gary Geiger, 59, outfielder for the Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves and Houston Astros in twelve seasons between 1958 and 1970.
  • April 25 – Tommy Irwin, 83, shortstop for the Cleveland Indians in 1938.
  • April 26 – Milt Gaston, 100, pitcher for five American League clubs in eleven seasons from 1924 through 1934, who had 18 Hall of Fame teammates and managers, more than any player in Major League Baseball history.
  • April 28 – Johnny Bucha, 71, backup catcher for the St. Louis Cardinals and Detroit Tigers in part of three seasons spanning 1948–1953.
  • April 28 – Al Hollingsworth, 88, pitcher who played with the Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Phillies, Brooklyn Dodgers, Washington Senators, St. Louis Browns and the Chicago White Sox between 1935 and 1946, also a member of the Browns team that faced the Cardinals in the All-St. Louis 1944 World Series.

May

  • May   1 – Jim Gleeson, 84, outfielder for the Cleveland Indians, Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati Reds in five seasons between 1936 and 1942, who later managed in the minor leagues, coached for the New York Yankees, and worked as a coach and scout for the Kansas City Athletics.
  • May   2 – Pinky Jorgensen, 81, outfielder for the 1937 Cincinnati Reds.
  • May   3 – Alex Kellner, 71, an All-Star pitcher who played for the Athletics, Reds and Cardinals between 1948 and 1959.
  • May   4 – Gus Keriazakos, 64, pitcher who played for the Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators and Kansas City Athletics in a span of three seasons from 1950–1955.
  • May 10 – Joe Holden, 82, catcher who played from 1934 through 1936 for the Philadelphia Phillies.
  • May 19 – Johnny Berardino, 79, middle infielder and third baseman for the St. Louis Browns, Cleveland Indians and Pittsburgh Pirates in eleven seasons spanning 1939–1952, who later became a prolific actor, being best known for his role of Dr. Steve Hardy on the soap opera General Hospital.
  • May 26 – Don Bollweg, 75, first baseman and member of the 1953 World Series Champion New York Yankees, who also played with the St. Louis Cardinals and for the Philadelphia and Kansas City Athletics.
  • May 26 – Mike Sharperson, 34, versatile infield/outfield utility man mostly used at third base and second, who was selected for the 1992 All Star Game and won World Series rings with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1988 and for the Atlanta Braves in 1995.

June

  • June   2 – Gene Snyder, 65. pitcher for the 1959 Los Angeles Dodgers.
  • June   7 – Buddy Blair, 85, third baseman for the Philadelphia Athletics during the 1942 season.
  • June 13 – Al Piechota, 82, pitcher who played from 1940 to 1941 for the Boston Bees and Braves.
  • June 16 – Mel Allen, 83, legendary broadcaster who spent over 35 years with the New York Yankees, still promoted as having been The Voice of the Yankees, while in his later years he gained a second professional life as the first host of the syndicated TV series This Week in Baseball.
  • June 26 – Buck Frierson, 78, outfielder for the 1941 Cleveland Indians.
  • June 30 – Jerry May, 52, catcher who played from 1964 through 1973 for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Kansas City Royals and New York Mets.

July

  • July   8 – Jim Baumer, 65, second baseman who played with the Chicago White Sox in the 1949 season and for the Cincinnati Reds in 1961, working later as a general manager for the Seattle Pilots and the Milwaukee Brewers.
  • July   8 – Jim Busby, 69, All-Star and speedy center fielder who played from 1950 through 1962 for the Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, Cleveland Indians, Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox and Houston Colt .45's, ranking among the top five in stolen bases four times and leading the American League in putouts twice, while recording three of the top 20 single-season outfield putout totals in major league history.
  • July 14 – Hank Camelli, 81, backup catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Boston Braves in part of three seasons from 1943–1947, who later spent 16 seasons in the minor leagues as a player and playing/manager.
  • July 19 – Dan Lewandowski, 68, pitcher who played for the 1951 St. Louis Cardinals.
  • July 21 – Walt Moryn, 70, All-Star corner outfielder who played from 1954 through 1961 for the Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, St. Louis Cardinals and Pittsburgh Pirates, also a member of the 1955 World Series Champion Dodgers.
  • July 23 – Clara Cook, 75, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League pitcher, member of the 1944 Milwaukee Chicks champion team.
  • July 23 – Red Munger, 77, three time All-Star pitcher who played for the St. Louis Cardinals and Pittsburgh Pirates during ten seasons spanning 1943–1956, while helping the Cardinals clinch two National League pennants and the 1946 World Series.
  • July 23 – Ed Wineapple, 90, pitcher for the 1929 Washington Senators.
  • July 31 – Howie Goss, 61, center fielder who played with the Pittsburgh Pirates and Houston Colt .45s from 1962 to 1963.

August

  • August   4 – Willard Brown, 81, Hall of Fame Negro leagues outfielder, one of the greatest power hitters of his generation, who later became the first African American ballplayer to hit a home run in the American League, while playing for the St. Louis Browns in 1947.
  • August 13 – Ray Shore, 75, pitcher for the St. Louis Browns in a span of three seasons between 1946 and 1949, who later became one of the most respected scouts in baseball while working for the Cincinnati Reds, serving as both the advance scout analyzing upcoming opponents and as a special assignment scout who evaluated playing talent at the Major League level for potential acquisition in trades.
  • August 24 – Ethel Boyce, 79, Canadian ballplayer who performed in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.
  • August 28 – Al Zarilla, 77, All-Star right fielder who played for the St. Louis Browns, Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox in all or part of ten seasons from 1943–1953, being also a member of the Browns team that won the 1944 American League pennant.
  • August 31 – Gil English, 87, third baseman who played for the New York Giants, Detroit Tigers, Boston Bees and Brooklyn Dodgers during six seasons spanning 1931–1944.

September

  • September   2 – Wes Livengood, 88, pitcher for the 1939 Cincinnati Reds.
  • September   4 – Babe Dahlgren, 84, All-Star and slick fielding first baseman who played for eight teams in a 12-year career from 1939–1953, best remembered for replacing Lou Gehrig in the New York Yankees roster in 1939, ending his 14-year consecutive games streak at 2,130.
  • September   6 – Barney McCosky, 79, outfielder who posted a .312 average for four teams in an 11-season career, leading the American League with 200 hits and 19 triples while helping the Detroit Tigers to the 1940 pennant.
  • September   7 – Willy Miranda, 70, Cuban slick fielding shortstop who played from 1951 through 1959 for the Washington Senators, Chicago White Sox, St. Louis Browns and Baltimore Orioles.
  • September   9 – Harry Hanebrink, 68, backup second baseman and left fielder who played for the Milwaukee Braves and Philadelphia Phillies in four seasons spanning 1953–1959, also a member of the Braves team that lost the 1958 World Series to the New York Yankees in seven games.
  • September 22 – Joanne Winter, 71, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League All-Star pitcher and later a master teacher of golf for 30 years.
  • September   9 – Johnny Pramesa, 71, catcher who played from 1949 to 1952 for the Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati Reds.
  • September 15 – Andy Pilney, 83, who made three appearances as a pinch hitter for the Boston Bees in 1936.
  • September 17 – Billy Bowers, 74, outfielder for the 1949 Chicago White Sox.
  • September 19 – Nanny Fernandez, 77, third baseman who played with the Boston Braves in 1942 and for the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1946-1947.
  • September 24 – Red Embree, 79, pitcher for the Cleveland Indians, New York Yankees and St. Louis Browns in a span of eight seasons from 1941–1949.
  • September 27 – Bruce Konopka, 77, first baseman who played for the Philadelphia Athletics over part of three seasons from 1942–1946.

October

  • October   2 – Tom Hafey, 83, third baseman who played with the New York Giants in the 1939 season and for the St. Louis Browns in 1944.
  • October   2 – Les Tietje, 86, pitcher who played with the Chicago White Sox and St. Louis Browns in six seasons between 1933 and 1938.
  • October   4 – Joe Hoerner, 59, All-Star left handed reliever who played for seven teams in a span of 14 seasons from 1963-1977, most prominently for the 1967 World Series Champion St. Louis Cardinals.
  • October   5 – Joe Walsh, 79, backup infielder for the 1938 Boston Bees.
  • October 15 – Mike Balas, 86, pitcher who played for the Boston Bees in the 1938 season.
  • October 15 – Tom Ferrick, 81, relief pitcher who played for five clubs in a span of nine seasons from 1941–1952, as well as a member of the New York Yankees team that won the World Series championship in 1950.
  • October 17 – Bob Adams, 95, pitcher for the 1925 Boston Red Sox.
  • October 18 – Elmer Klumpp, 90, catcher who played with the Washington Senators in 1934 and for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1937.
  • October 23 – Bob Grim, 66, All-Star pitcher who played for five teams in eight seasons from 1954–1962, the last American League rookie to win 20 games, after going 20-6 with a 3.26 ERA for the New York Yankees en route to winning the 1954 AL Rookie of the Year Award; also a member of the 1956 World Series champion Yankees, as well as earning a save after retiring the final out of the 1957 MLB All-Star Game, with the American League leading 6–5, and getting pinch-hitter Gil Hodges on a game-ending fly out to left field.
  • October 25 – Harry Shuman, 81, pitcher who played from 1942 through 1944 for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies.
  • October 28 – Joe Samuels, 91, pitcher for the 1930 Detroit Tigers.
  • October 29 – Ewell Blackwell, 74, six-time All-Star with the Cincinnati Reds and also the starting pitcher in the 1947 MLB All-Star Game, who posted in that season a 22-8 record with a National League-high 193 strikeouts and 2.47 ERA, winning 16 consecutive games and pitching a no-hitter against the Boston Braves on June 18, coming within two outs of the ninth inning of throwing consecutive no-hitters, earning a two-hit shutout win over the Brooklyn Dodgers, as he came close to matching Johnny Vander Meer's feat of back-to-back no-no's.
  • October 30 – Bob Thorpe, 69, right fielder who played with the Boston Braves in 1951 and for the Milwaukee Braves from 1952 to 1953.

November

  • November   7 – Eddie Lukon, 76, outfielder who played for the Cincinnati Reds during four seasons between 1941 and 1947.
  • November 11 – Luman Harris, 81, pitcher for the Philadelphia Athletics and Washington Senators in all or part of six seasons spanning 1941–1946, who later coached for the Chicago White Sox, Baltimore Orioles and Houston Colt .45's, serving also as the interim manager for the Orioles in 1961 and for the Colts .45's in 1962, while managing the Atlanta Braves in 1968 and leading the club to the postseason for the first time in Atlanta history in 1969.
  • November 13 – Roger McCardell, 64. catcher for the 1959 San Francisco Giants.
  • November 14 – Jim Baxes, 68, third baseman who spent the 1959 season with the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Cleveland Indians.
  • November 16 – Joe Gonzales, 81, pitcher for the 1937 Boston Red Sox.
  • November 18 – Charlie Neal, 65, three-time All-Star and Gold Glove Award winner at second base, whose career included stints with the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Mets and Cincinnati Reds in a span of eight seasons from 1956–1963, while hitting .370 for the Dodgers in their 1959 World Series victory over the Chicago White Sox, and driving in the first Met run in their inaugural season of 1962.
  • November 18 – John Michaels, 89, pitcher for the Boston Red Sox in the 1932 season.
  • November 20 – Bill Sayles, 79, pitcher who played with the Boston Red Sox in the 1939 season, and for the New York Giants and Brooklyn Dodgers in 1943.
  • November 21 – Earl Cook, 87, Canadian pitcher who played for the 1941 Detroit Tigers.
  • November 24 – Loren Bain, 74, pitcher for the 1945 New York Giants.
  • November 30 – Ted Petoskey, 85, three-sport All-American athlete and coach at the University of Michigan, who also played in the majors as an outfielder for the Cincinnati Reds from 1934 to 1935.

December

Sources

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