August 23
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Today in Baseball History |
Events, births and deaths that occurred on August 23.
Events[edit]
- 1903 - Before 21,400 in St. Louis the Americans sweep St. Louis, 5 - 3 and 4 - 2. Boston executes a triple play in the nitecap.
- 1906 - At American League Park in Washington, DC, the White Sox win their 19th consecutive game, beating the Senators, 4 - 1.
- 1907 - The Pirates top the Giants, 4 - 2 in ten innings, then win the second game, 1 - 0, when Howie Camnitz spins a five-inning no-hitter. The Bucs score when Ed Abbaticchio singles home Honus Wagner, who had singled and stolen second base. The Giants also lose Frank Bowerman, hit on the head by a Camnitz pitch. The doctors predict that the burly catcher will miss the season, but he is back in action in three days.
- 1909:
- In the first game of a doubleheader, Brooklyn swipes six bases in a 7 - 0 win over the Cards, who steal two bases. With lefthander Jim Pastorius pitching in the second game, Brooklyn C Bill Bergen then throws out six (erroneously listed as seven) of eight base-stealing Cardinals in a 9 - 1 St. Louis victory. Bergen's mark is a 20th century high, twice tied in 1915.
- It's a day for thievery as the Cubs steal home three times in a game at Boston, tying a major league mark. They waste no time, as Johnny Evers and Del Howard do it in the 1st inning, and Solly Hofman in the 2nd. Chicago wins, 11 - 6.
- 1910:
- Left fielder Fred Clarke makes a record-tying four OF assists for Pittsburgh against the Phils, as the Bucs win 6 - 2. The Pirates get one more for a National League record five outfield assists.
- Chicago's Ed Walsh tops Walter Johnson, 1 - 0, the third straight time Walsh has beaten the Big Train and Washington by that score.
- At St. Louis, Frank Corridon outpitches Christy Mathewson for a 4 - 1 Cardinals win. The Cards tag Matty for 11 hits.
- 1912 - The Tigers fall to Walter Johnson, 8 - 1, Big Train's 16th win in a row. He is now 29-7.
- 1914 - The Giants lose their fifth straight, to Cincinnati, 3 - 2, and the idle Braves move into a tie for first place. Herbie Moran, playing his last game for Cincy before being sold to the Braves, doubles in the game-winner in the 9th.
- 1915 - At the Polo Grounds, the Cardinals sweep two from the Giants, winning 5 - 4 and 4 - 3. New York is in seventh place, 8 1/2 games back of the leading Phillies.
- 1916:
- Babe Ruth picks up his only save of the season, relieving Dutch Leonard in the 8th with Boston leading the Indians, 6 - 3. Babe strikes out three in the 8th and doubles and scores in his trip to the plate. He shuts out Cleveland in the 9th as Boston completes a four-game sweep of the Tribe.
- Ty Cobb goes from first to third on a teammate's single to left field, then swoops home when A's 3B Charlie Pick holds the ball. Detroit wins, 10 - 3.
- 1923 - Reds 2B Sam Bohne and OF Pat Duncan deny under oath that they have been approached to throw games with the Giants.
- 1928 - The Yankees pick up lefty Tom Zachary on waivers from Washington.
- 1929 - The Cubs buy Lon Warneke, 20, from Alexandria (Cotton States League) for $100.
- 1930:
- The Giants' Fred Lindstrom singles to extend his hitting streak to 24 games, but Pat Malone tops Carl Hubbell for a 4 - 2 Cubs win.
- The Yankees buy Frank Crosetti from the San Francisco Seals but allow him to play another season in the Pacific Coast League before reporting. The Yankees will make a similar arrangement for Joe DiMaggio, buying him from the Seals but waiting a year before acquiring him in 1936.
- 1931:
- In St. Louis, the league-leading Cardinals go to 78-44 by sweeping the Braves. The Birds pound Boston, 16 - 1, in the opener as Chick Hafey drives in eight runs on 5 for 5 hitting, including two home runs. One of the homers is a grand slam. St. Louis takes the nitecap, 1 - 0, in 11 innings, winning on Jim Bottomley's home run.
- Lefty Grove is frustrated in his effort to win a record-breaking 17th game in a row, as Jimmy Moore misjudges a routine fly ball by Ski Melillo, turning it into a two-out double, to allow the game's lone run. The volatile Grove is outraged and unforgiving, not at Moore, but that Al Simmons, the regular OF, missed the game. Dick Coffman of the Browns allows just three hits to win, 1 - 0. The A's win the nightcap, 10 - 0, behind Waite Hoyt's six-hitter.
- 1932 - The Cubs have only one assist in a 5 - 1 win, sweeping the Phillies in four straight. The fielding mark equals the major-league record.
- 1935 - National League President Ford Frick announces an undisclosed punishment of umpires Beans Reardon and Ziggy Sears for arguing with Cincinnati fans on July 11th.
- 1936:
- Seventeen-year-old Bob Feller makes his first start after six relief outings to begin his career and strikes out 15, one shy of the American League record, as Cleveland beats St. Louis, 4 - 1.
- The East uses a balanced offense to thump the West, 10 - 2, in the 1936 East-West Game. Leroy Matlock gets the win and Sug Cornelius the loss while Cool Papa Bell goes 3 for 3.
- 1940 - The Reds purchase Jimmy Ripple from the Dodgers.
- 1942:
- Seven of 16 games played today are shutouts. A near-miss is by White Sox veteran Ted Lyons. Taking a regular Sunday start, he wins his 256th career game, a three-hitter 3 - 1 complete game victory over Cleveland. Cub pitchers Claude Passeau and Lon Warneke each toss 3 - 0 shutouts against the Reds while Red Sox hurlers Tex Hughson and Joe Dobson whitewash the A's, winning 2 - 0 and 7 - 0.
- Walter Johnson pitching to Babe Ruth is the pregame attraction that draws 69,000 for the New York-Washington game at Yankee Stadium that provides $80,000 for Army-Navy relief. Ruth hits the fifth pitch into the right-field stands, and then adds one more shot before circling the bases. Sixteen relief games contribute $523,000 during the season. In the doubleheader between the Senators and the Yankees, the Senators win the opener, 7 - 6 and New York cops the nitecap, 3 - 0, in 5 1/2 innings.
- At Ebbets Field, the Dodgers sweep two from their cross-town rivals. In the first game, the Giants take a 4 - 2 lead in the 10th on Johnny Mize's two-run home run, only to see Dolph Camilli hit reliever Harry Feldman's first pitch for a grand slam and give Dem Bums a 6 - 4 win. In the second game, the Dodgers score two in the 5th to take a 7 - 5 lead in a game halted by darkness. The Dodgers now lead St. Louis by 7 1/2 games.
- 1951 - At Ebbets Field, the Cards finally beat the Dodgers, 4 - 2. Max Lanier allows seven hits, including Roy Campanella's 27th homer, in beating Don Newcombe. Newk won't lose again to the Birds till 1957, winning 12 straight.
- 1952 - Bob Elliott of the Giants is tossed from the Cardinal game for protesting a strike two call and his replacement, Bobby Hofman, is also thrown out for arguing the third strike of the same at-bat.
- 1953:
- Chattanooga OF Don Grate betters his 1952 record by throwing a baseball 443 feet 3 ½ inches. Glen Gorbous will beat it in 1957.
- Phil Paine, a former Boston Braves pitcher on military service with the U.S. Air Force in Japan, becomes the first ex-major league player to play in Japan. He pitches in nine games for the Nishitetsu Lions: four wins, three losses, ERA 1.77.
- 1956 - Led by Nellie Fox's seven straight hits, the White Sox sweep the Yankees. Mickey Mantle has a bunt single, triple and home run in the 6 - 4 nightcap loss but trails Fox in season hits, 158 to 155. But the Mick still leads in the Triple Crown race.
- 1957 - Angel Macias, a 12-year-old righthander from Monterrey, Mexico, hurls a perfect 12-inning game over La Mesa, CA, striking out 11 to win the Little League World Series in Williamsport, PA. In the tourney before Williamsport, Macias also pitched lefthanded.
- 1958 - In a 10 - 1 win over Milwaukee, Gil Hodges hits his 14th career grand slam to establish a new National League record.
- 1959 - The Pirates take a doubleheader from the Dodgers, beating Don Drysdale in both games. As a starter, Drysdale loses the opener, then relieves in the second game. In the 10th inning, with runners on first and third and two out, Drysdale hands out an intentional pass to get to Dick Groat, who singles in the winning run.
- 1960 - Following up his no-hitter, Lew Burdette fires his third shutout in a row, pitching the Braves to a 7 - 0 win over the Dodgers. The Braves stroke five homers.
- 1961 - Third-place San Francisco pulls within four games of first place with a 14 - 0 rout of the Reds, putting the game away with a record-tying salvo of five home runs in the 12-run 9th inning. Home runs by six different Giants tie the major-league record for a nine-inning game. San Francisco's 27 total bases in the 9th inning are a modern major league record. Juan Marichal is the winner in the cakewalk, his seventh straight win.
- 1962:
- The Reds rack up 21 hits in routing the Cubs, 14 - 3.
- Steve Boros matches the American League record for most errors in an inning by a third baseman with 4, but Detroit beats Cleveland, 8 - 5, as Al Kaline hits two home runs.
- 1963:
- 1B Lee Thomas of the Angels ties a major-league record by participating in six double plays in a 17 - 0 romp at Washington. 3B Felix Torres starts four of them to tie a record. Ken McBride is the recipient of the outburst while Steve Ridzik is the loser.
- Milwaukee's Warren Spahn sets a modern National League record — his 601st start surpassing Grover Alexander — while going all the way to defeat the Dodgers for his 343rd career win, but only after spending the better part of the day in Los Angeles filming what will prove to be the first and last performance of his acting career, on the popular World War II-set TV series, Combat. Spahn, himself a decorated veteran and avowed fan of the series, appears in an uncredited but heavily publicized bit part as a German patrolman. As one refreshingly frank TV critic will warn us prior to the November 5 air date, "This is Warren Spahn's much-heralded appearance as a German soldier. If the National League saw as little of him as you will, he probably never would have won a game."
- 1964:
- Mets pitcher Willard Hunter picks up half his career wins (4) today as New York sweeps the Cubs, 2 - 1, in ten innings, and 5 - 4 in the nitecap. No one has ever won a pair more efficiently as he totals 1 2/3 innings of work. Bob Buhl and Don Elston pick up the losses. The Cubs lose Ernie Broglio, who woke up with a locked elbow and will need surgery to repair the ulnar lateral ligament damage in his elbow. He'll be 1-6 in 1965.
- New York tops host Boston, 4 - 3, as Mickey Mantle starts the scoring with a two-run homer in the 3rd inning off Earl Wilson. The Yankees will win 26 of their next 33 games to secure their last pennant of the decade.
- 1968 - Stan Bahnsen outpitches Earl Wilson to give the host Yankees a 2 - 1 win over Detroit. The two teams then battle for 19 innings, before the second game is suspended by curfew with the score 3 - 3. The game will be finished tomorrow. In the long tie, Lindy McDaniel retires 21 straight Tiger batters, six on strikeouts. In his last three relief appearances, he has retired 30 batters in a row.
- 1970:
- Roberto Clemente compiles his second straight five-hit game during an 11 - 0 pasting of Los Angeles. He is the first major leaguer this century to collect ten hits in two consecutive games. Quoth Pirates manager Danny Murtaugh: "Ten hits in two games! When I was playing, that was my quota for a month."
- Don Gullett strikes out six straight batters and pitches four innings with no runners reaching base in beating the host Mets, 7 - 5. Gullett strikes out eight in the last four innings. The Reds win on Jimmy Stewart's three-run pinch homer off Tom Seaver.
- 1972:
- Chicago's Dick Allen becomes the fourth major league player (Jimmie Foxx, Hank Greenberg, and Alex Johnson are the others) to hit one into the center field bleachers in Comiskey Park when he connects off New York's Lindy McDaniel. The two-run homer in the 7th ices the 5 - 2 win for the Sox. This year, all the Chicago Wednesday games are in the afternoon, and Harry Caray announces them while sitting in the bleachers. Allen's drive misses Caray by just a few rows.
- Kansas City's Roger Nelson shuts out the Red Sox, 3 - 0. Ben Oglivie's single in the 8th is the only hit off Nelson.
- 1975:
- The Reds score eight times in the 5th inning to wipe out a 4 - 0 deficit and whip the Padres, 12 - 7.
- Champ Summers and Rick Monday hit pinch home runs for the Cubs, but the Astros win the game, 14 - 12.
- 1977:
- Behind Mickey Rivers' 5-for-5 contribution to an 8 - 3 whipping of the White Sox, the Yanks take over first place in the American League East. With the Red Sox losing, the Yankees go ahead by a half game and will stay in first place to the end.
- Dave Goltz one-hits the Red Sox to give the Twins a 7 - 0 win. Jim Rice hits a single in the 4th for the only safety.
- 1979:
- At Cleveland, the A's Rick Langford gives up six hits and six runs in the 1st inning, including a grand slam to Andre Thornton and a solo blast by Ron Hassey. He then allows just one hit over the next eight innings, and the A's come back to win, 8 - 6.
- Commissioner Bowie Kuhn slaps Padres owner Ray Kroc with a $100,000 fine for tampering, following remarks Kroc made about potential free agents Joe Morgan and Graig Nettles.
- 1980 - A's owner Charlie Finley sells the club for $12.7 million to the Haas family of San Francisco, CA, owners of the Levi Strauss clothing empire, thus keeping the team in Oakland.
- 1982:
- Gaylord Perry of the Mariners is ejected from the game for applying a foreign substance to the ball. Although the right-hander has been suspected for years of loading up the baseball, it is the first time he has been caught by the umpires.
- Days after challenging the Reds' "no facial hair" policy, P Jim Kern finds himself a member of the Chicago White Sox. The Reds receive IF Wade Rowdon and OF Leo Garcia in return.
- 1983:
- At Wrigley Field, Reds rookie Jeff Russell beats Fergie Jenkins and the Cubs, 4 - 2. Russell adds his only career home run. Dave Concepcion is called out on a steal attempt, and then is tossed out for arguing with umpire Dave Pallone. He also gets suspended for three days for allegedly spitting on Pallone during the argument.
- Kansas City's Amos Otis notches his 2,000th career hit, a single in a 10 - 2 win over the White Sox.
- 1985 - Joaquin Andujar becomes baseball's first 20-game winner this season, beating Atlanta 6 - 2 for the Cardinals. Andujar is the first National League pitcher to post consecutive 20-win seasons since Joe Niekro in 1979-1980.
- 1989 - Rick Dempsey homers off Dennis Martinez in the top of the 22nd inning to break up a scoreless tie and give the Dodgers a 1 - 0 win over the Expos. The game features one thumbing - the umps toss the Expos' mascot, Youppi!, in the 11th for annoying Tommy Lasorda after he carries a pillow and sleeps on the home dugout roof, where the umps have restricted him. In the 16th, Larry Walker apparently scores the game-winner on a sacrifice fly, but the Dodgers appeal that he left his base early - with two umps in the tunnel - and get the play reversed. Eddie Murray in the 18th moves the second base ump and slams a drive that Walker traps off the padding in RF. Fans stand for three "seventh-inning stretches" during the major-league record (in time, and for a 1 - 0 game) 6 hours, 14 minute game. Other club records are set and several major league records are noted: most innings (22) without a walk by the Expos tops the Pirates (who used one pitcher) against the Giants, July 17, 1914.
- 1991 - The Rangers' 6 - 1 win over the Royals is marked by an unusual play in the 8th inning. Kansas City 2B Terry Shumpert is charged with a four-base error when he collides with RF Danny Tartabull while going back on a short fly hit by Juan Gonzalez. Gonzalez and the two runners in front of him score as the ball rolls all the way to the warning track.
- 1992:
- In a Class A Florida State League game, Andy Carter of the Clearwater Phillies defeats Scott Bakkum of the Winter Haven Red Sox, 1 - 0. Neither team gets a hit in what is believed to be the first double no-hitter in the minors in 40 years.
- In his last outing as a Met, David Cone (13-7) gives up four runs in seven innings in losing to the Padres, 4 - 3. Cone gives up just three hits. Mets Bobby Bonilla homers in his fourth consecutive game, tying the club mark.
- 1993 - Toronto OF Joe Carter slugs three home runs in the Blue Jays' 9 - 8 loss to the Indians. It is the fifth time in his career that he has homered three times in a game, setting an American League record.
- 1994 - The Butte Copper Kings end Billings' 15-game winning streak in a Pioneer League game by a score of 22 - 21. The game sees a total of 43 runs, 53 hits, and seven errors recorded.
- 1996 - The Yankees obtain P Graeme Lloyd and former Rookie of the Year Pat Listach from the Brewers in exchange for OF Gerald Williams and pitcher Bob Wickman. Lloyd is put to work and provides late-inning relief as the first-place Yankees beat the A's, 5 - 3. The Yanks will officially complain to the American League that the Brewers sent damaged goods in the two players, but the complaint is ignored. However, the Brewers will take back Listach and send Ricky Bones to the Yanks on the 29th. The Yanks will file a grievance over Lloyd's injury next month.
- 1997 - For the second day in a row, Rangers LF Rusty Greer hits a pair of home runs and posts six ribbies, doing so in today's 13 - 8 win over Chicago.
- 1998:
- Giants OF Barry Bonds hits his 26th homer, the 400th of his career, off Kirt Ojala of the Marlins in the Giants' 10 - 5 victory. He thus becomes the first player in major league history with more than 400 career home runs and 400 career steals.
- The Pirates defeat the Cardinals, 4 - 3, despite five hits, including a home run, by St. Louis 3B Fernando Tatis. Mark McGwire also hits his 53rd homer for the Cards.
- Leadoff man Craig Biggio's double, two home runs, and six RBIs pace the Astros to a 13 - 3 victory over the Cubs. C Brad Ausmus also contributes to the cause with four hits and five ribbies for Houston. OF Sammy Sosa hits a pair of homers for Chicago, giving him 51 on the year.
- At County Stadium against the Padres, Bob Hamelin hits his fourth pinch-hit home run of the season. It is the most pinch-hit home runs hit by a Brewer player in a season.
- 1999:
- The Padres defeat the Phillies, 7 - 6. Philadelphia 3B Scott Rolen strikes out five times in the game.
- Joining Babe Ruth and Mark McGwire, Mariner outfielder Ken Griffey, Jr. becomes the third player in major league history to hit 200 homers in a four-season span. Junior's 39th helps Seattle beat the Indians, 4 - 1.
- The Yankees score six runs in the 1st inning on their way to a 21 - 3 victory over the Rangers. 3B Scott Brosius (6) and C Joe Girardi (7) - the eighth and ninth batters in the New York lineup - drive in 13 of the Yankee runs. Derek Jeter scores his 100th run of the year, the first Yank to string together four straight seasons of 100+ runs since Mickey Mantle did it in nine straight seasons (1953-1961).
- Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig announces that Pete Rose will be invited to the World Series if he is elected to the All-Century Team. Rose has been banned from baseball since 1989.
- 2000:
- Los Angeles Dodgers team president Bob Graziano apologizes to a female couple who were asked to leave Dodger Stadium on August 8th because the two shared a kiss during a game. The pair felt the action of the eight security guards was discriminatory because the couple's friends, a man and a woman, also kissed but were not ejected.
- At Comerica Park, fans flee their seats as swarms of small insects invade the stands during the 1st inning. The six-legged pests do not affect the players, and the game continues uninterrupted with the Tigers edging the Mariners, 6 - 5.
- 2001:
- In a 6 - 2 loss to the Blue Jays, it is a busy night for Twins CF Torii Hunter. Hunter throws out consecutive runners Darrin Fletcher and Homer Bush, both trying to stretch singles. Later in the inning he bobbles a ball for an error. Roy Halladay is the winning pitcher.
- Barry Bonds and Shawon Dunston of the San Francisco Giants become just the 12th pair of teammates to hit back-to-back homers as pinch hitters when they go deep in the top of the 9th. Bonds' pinch homer is his first since 1989 and snaps a 5 - 5 tie. It is also his 549th home run, moving him ahead of Mike Schmidt into eighth place. The Giants win, 10 - 5.
- The Pirates defeat the Diamondbacks, 5 - 1, despite a 16-strikeout performance in seven innings of work by Randy Johnson. In doing so, Johnson ties Nolan Ryan as the only ones in history to fan 300 in three straight seasons.
- 2002:
- Cleveland's rookie C Josh Bard hits a game-winning two-run home run in the bottom of the 9th inning against Seattle in his first major league appearance. He has two hits and three RBIs as the Tribe wins, 4 - 2.
- The Padres score nine runs in the 5th inning on their way to an 18 - 2 win over the Marlins. Bubba Trammell, who has two homers in the game, starts the scoring in the 5th with a homer. Seven players have RBIs in the 5th, and the last 11 hitters come up with the bases loaded. Jake Peavy is the easy winner.
- Bobby Abreu hits a solo homer in the 14th to give the Phillies a 5 - 4 win over the Cards in 5 hours, 13 minutes. Scott Rolen is 4 for 5 in his first appearance against his old team.
- The Orioles spot the Blue Jays six runs and then roar back with four homers to win, 11 - 7. The win puts Baltimore (63-63) at .500. From here on it will be all downhill.
- 2003 - In front of a full house at Yankee Stadium, Ron Guidry's uniform number 49 is retired on the lefty's special day. "Louisiana Lightning", who played his entire career with New York posting a 170-90 record for the Bronx Bombers, is surprised the club hasn't just honored him with a day but has retired his jersey and placed a plaque in Monument Park in his honor.
- 2008:
- South Korea beats Cuba, 3 - 2, in the Gold Medal game at the 2008 Olympics to take the title. Seung-yeop Lee hits a two-run homer for South Korea while Michel Enríquez and Alexei Bell deliver solo shots for Cuba. Yong-kyu Lee doubles home Jin-man Park in the 7th for the key run. Hyun-jin Ryu lasts into the 9th but leaves with the bases loaded, one out and slugger Yulieski Gourriel at the plate. Tae-hyun Chong relieves and retires Gourriel on a double play to end it.
- Team USA tops the Japanese national team, 8 - 4, in the Bronze Medal game, the second time in the last three Olympics that Japan's stars failed to take a medal of any kind. Home runs by Matt LaPorta, Matthew Brown and Jason Donald provide six of the US runs but Taylor Teagarden's two-run double is the big blow. Norichika Aoki and Masahiro Araki homer for Japan. Kenshin Kawakami takes the loss against Brett Anderson.
- 2009:
- 2B Eric Bruntlett snags a line drive from Jeff Francoeur and turns an unassisted triple play in the bottom of the 9th inning of the Philadelphia Phillies' 9 - 7 win over the New York Mets at Citi Field. It is only the second game ever to end on such a defensive gem, after Johnny Neun pulled off the feat on May 31, 1927.
- Michael Cuddyer hits two home runs in the same inning, becoming the first member of the Minnesota Twins and the 53rd major league player to do so. The Twins defeat Kansas City, 10 - 3.
- Down 6 - 5 in the 9th, the US rallies to beat Cuba in the 2009 World Youth Championship. The US ties Cuba at four Gold Medals, the most in the history of the World Youth Championship to this point. LF Austin Cousino is named MVP.
- 2010:
- The Rangers come within two outs of throwing the sixth no-hitter of the season with a collective effort against the Twins. Rich Harden, Matt Harrison, Darren O'Day and Neftali Feliz keep Minnesota hitless into the 9th inning, until Joe Mauer singles with one out. Feliz then finishes the 4 - 0 win. Harden has to leave the game after 6 2/3 innings as he is coming off the disabled list and has already thrown 111 pitches by that point.
- Brandon Morrow, no stranger himself to having a no-hitter broken up in the 9th, has another strong outing against the Yankees, although reliever Scott Downs is credited with the 3 - 2 Blue Jays win. The game is decided in the 8th when José Bautista hits his second home run of the game, off David Robertson, to break a 2 - 2 tie. Bautista is the first player to reach 40 homers this year.
- The Rays take advantage of the Yankees' loss to catch them for the AL East lead, by defeating the Angels, 4 - 3. Rafael Soriano strikes out the side on 9 pitches in the 9th to earn his 38th save.
- 2011:
- In a trade of infielders, the Diamondbacks send their starting 2B, Kelly Johnson, to the Blue Jays in return for 2B Aaron Hill and veteran John McDonald. Both Johnson and Hill have struggled with low batting averages this year; Johnson has shown more power, but Hill and McDonald are both outstanding defensive players.
- The Braves ride a five-run 5th inning, highlighted by Jason Heyward's first career grand slam, to a 5 - 4 win over the Cubs. Craig Kimbrel ties the major league rookie record for saves, set last season by Neftali Feliz, by notching his 40th. Aramis Ramirez has the first five-hit game of his career in a losing effort.
- 2012:
- The Rays move within 2 1/2 games of the Yankees in the AL East as Alex Cobb pitches a four-hitter for his first major league shutout, beating the Athletics, 5 - 0. Tyson Ross is called up from AAA to start for Oakland in place of Bartolo Colon, who was handed a 50-game suspension for PED use yesterday.
- The Angels win a Fenway Park slugfest, 14 - 13, with a pair of 10th-inning runs. Boston grabs a 6 - 0 lead against C.J. Wilson after two innings, but Los Angeles replies with an eight-run 3rd inning, chasing Franklin Morales. The Red Sox then blow a 9 - 8 lead in the 7th, and an 11 - 9 lead in the 9th. In that frame, closer Alfredo Aceves surrenders a lead-off homer to Vernon Wells that bounces on the line marking the top of the Green Monster and back onto the field; replays clearly show it never left the park, but Boston fails to ask for a review. In the 10th, Kendrys Morales hits a solo homer off Aceves to start the inning, but it's an insurance run scored by Erick Aybar on a double by Wells that proves to be the difference, as Boston claws back a run and the game ends with Dustin Pedroia, representing the tying run, on first base.
- 2014 - Less than a week after the first successful protest in 28 years, the Rays file one of their own after today's 5 - 4, extra innings loss to the Blue Jays. Rays manager Joe Maddon objects to a ruling by crew chief Bob Davidson in the 4th inning, who allows a video review on a pick-off play even though Blue Jays P Mark Buehrle has already stepped on the pitching rubber and the batter was in the batter's box. The review is successful, giving the Jays a key out. The rule states that a play should no longer be reviewable at that point, although the final decision is left to the crew chief. Major League Baseball Vice-President Joe Torre agrees to hear the protest - a rare step in itself - but on August 26th, it will be denied as the umpires acted within the margin of discretion granted them.
- 2017 - Rich Hill of the Dodgers pitches nine no-hit innings against the Pirates at PNC Park - but has nothing to show for it. Carrying a perfect game through eight innings, Hill loses that bid when the Pirates' lead-off batter in the 9th, Jordy Mercer hits a hard smash to third that Logan Forsythe fails to field, being charged with an error. Hill retires the next three batters however, but with the Dodgers having failed to score all day, he is back on the mound for the start of the 10th and Josh Harrison hits a walk-off homer that barely reaches the seats, handing him a 1 - 0 loss instead of a place in history.
- 2019 - For the second time this year, Jacob deGrom strikes out at least 13 batters and also homers in a game, limiting the Braves to one run over seven innings. However, his long ball is the only offense for the Mets tonight, who go on to lose the game, 2 - 1, in 14 innings on Billy Hamilton's first hit with Atlanta. DeGrom records his 200th K of the year in the game, as New York's pitchers combine for a total of 26, tying the major league record for an extra-inning game. Before deGrom did it twice in a season, no pitcher had ever struck out 13 or more batters and homered in the same game more than once in his career. For Atlanta, Ronald Acuna becomes the second youngest player to record a 30-30 season, after Mike Trout.
- 2021 - The two hottest teams in the majors meet in an interleague game when the Braves host the Yankees at Truist Park, with both teams having won their last nine games, something that had not happened in 120 years. It's the visitors who have the upper hand, winning, 5 - 1. Giancarlo Stanton and Dansby Swanson trade solo homers in the 2nd, then Stanton drives in two runs with a two-out double in the 6th to provide the winning margin.
- 2023:
- With the first three-homer game of his career, Aaron Judge single-handedly leads the Yankees to a 9 - 1 win over the Nationals. His second homer of the night is a grand slam and he drives in six runs as the Bronx Bombers put an end to a nine-game losing streak.
- The Angels get a double dose of bad news as they announce that two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani will not pitch again this year after being diagnosed with a ligament tear in his elbow, and that OF Mike Trout will need to return to the injured list after only one game back from a broken hamate bone in his left hand that had sidelined him since early July.
- 2024 - Shohei Ohtani becomes the sixth member of the highly exclusive 40-40 club and does so in 21 fewer games than anyone before him and in truly spectacular fashion. Facing the Rays in the Dodgers' 126th game this year, he first steals his 40th base in the 4th inning, then comes up in the bottom of the 9th with the bases loaded and hits a walk-off grand slam off Colin Poche for his 40th home run, giving L.A. a 6 - 3 come-from-behind win.
Births[edit]
- 1849 - John O'Rourke, outfielder (d. 1911)
- 1850 - Fred Andrus, outfielder (d. 1937)
- 1870 - George Davis, infielder, manager; Hall of Famer (d. 1940)
- 1874 - Cowboy Jones, pitcher (d. 1958)
- 1876 - Bob Lawson, pitcher (d. 1952)
- 1879 - Red Andreas, minor league infielder and manager (d. 1959)
- 1883 - Lew Richie, pitcher (d. 1936)
- 1886 - Sled Allen, catcher (d. 1959)
- 1888 - Ed Hallinan, infielder (d. 1940)
- 1888 - Paul Meloan, outfielder (d. 1950)
- 1890 - Roy Crabb, pitcher (d. 1940)
- 1890 - Heinie Elder, pitcher (d. 1958)
- 1890 - Hal Schwenk, pitcher (d. 1955)
- 1893 - Sam White, catcher (d. 1929)
- 1894 - Rube Henderson, outfielder (d. 1978)
- 1894 - Roy Leslie, infielder (d. 1972)
- 1896 - Cedric Durst, outfielder (d. 1971)
- 1901 - Guy Bush, pitcher (d. 1985)
- 1905 - Phil Page, pitcher (d. 1958)
- 1908 - Ollie Vanek, minor league outfielder and manager (d. 2000)
- 1909 - Mike Sime, minor league outfielder (d. 1978)
- 1910 - Lonny Frey, infielder; All-Star (d. 2009)
- 1911 - Cannonball Berry, pitcher (d. 1992)
- 1911 - Nels Potter, pitcher (d. 1990)
- 1915 - Carl Pohlad, owner (d. 2009)
- 1915 - Gil Torres, infielder (d. 1983)
- 1917 - Charlie Cuellar, pitcher (d. 1994)
- 1917 - Jim Prendergast, pitcher (d. 1994)
- 1918 - Ken Holcombe, pitcher (d. 2010)
- 1918 - Ed Murphy, infielder (d. 1991)
- 1918 - Rocky Stone, pitcher (d. 1986)
- 1918 - Woody Williams, pitcher (d. 1990)
- 1921 - Dale Mitchell, outfielder; All-Star (d. 1987)
- 1922 - George Kell, infielder; All-Star, Hall of Famer (d. 2009)
- 1924 - Sherm Lollar, catcher; All-Star (d. 1977)
- 1928 - Harry Dalton, general manager (d. 2005)
- 1930 - Zeke Bella, outfielder (d. 2013)
- 1930 - Manny Guerra, scout (b. 2018)
- 1933 - Masayoshi Miura, NPB pitcher
- 1934 - Johnny Romano, catcher; All-Star (d. 2019)
- 1941 - Marty Martinez, infielder, manager (d. 2007)
- 1941 - John Morris, pitcher
- 1942 - Dave Dowling, pitcher
- 1942 - Danny Murphy, pitcher
- 1943 - Ed Barnowski, pitcher (d. 2017)
- 1943 - Al Montreuil, infielder (d. 2008)
- 1948 - Ron Blomberg, designated hitter
- 1948 - Toshoku Uda, NPB pitcher
- 1949 - Hal Baird, college coach
- 1952 - Jerry White, outfielder
- 1957 - Mike Boddicker, pitcher; All-Star
- 1957 - Yi-Hsin Chen, Taiwan national team infielder
- 1957 - Tim Welke, umpire
- 1958 - Julio Franco, infielder; All-Star
- 1960 - Ed Hearn, catcher
- 1960 - Randy St. Claire, pitcher
- 1960 - Jim Thomas, minor league infielder
- 1961 - Tony Ghelfi, pitcher
- 1961 - Kris Kline, scout
- 1962 - CB Bucknor, umpire
- 1963 - Ken Adderley, minor league outfielder
- 1964 - Fred Carter, minor league outfielder
- 1964 - Chris Isaacson, minor league catcher
- 1964 - Jeff Manto, infielder
- 1966 - Felipe Castillo, minor league pitcher
- 1967 - Bert Hunter, minor league outfielder and manager
- 1968 - David Carter, college coach
- 1968 - Scott Holcomb, minor league pitcher
- 1970 - Ju-hyen Kim, South Korean womens' national team infielder
- 1971 - Allen McDill, pitcher
- 1972 - Raul Casanova, catcher
- 1973 - Casey Blake, infielder
- 1973 - Miguel Bonilla, minor league pitcher
- 1973 - Anthony Iapoce, coach
- 1974 - Mark Bellhorn, infielder
- 1974 - Bobby Estalella, catcher
- 1974 - Alejandro Freire, infielder
- 1975 - Ryan Missler, minor league infielder (d. 2014)
- 1976 - Mark DiFelice, pitcher
- 1976 - Cole Liniak, infielder
- 1976 - Hitoshi Ono, NPB pitcher
- 1976 - Cy Leon Simonton, minor league outfielder
- 1979 - Tommy Nicholson, college coach
- 1979 - Prentice Redman, outfielder
- 1979 - Chris Roberson, outfielder
- 1980 - Bo-myung Jeong, KBO infielder-outfielder
- 1980 - Yusuke Kurita, NPB pitcher
- 1980 - Marcus McBeth, pitcher
- 1980 - Pat Strange, pitcher
- 1981 - Mayo Santana, minor league player
- 1982 - Serhiy Holovko, Ukrainian national team catcher
- 1982 - Keiji Ikebe, Japanese national team outfielder
- 1983 - Carlos Richetti, Serie A1 pitcher
- 1985 - Jhonny Caraballo, minor league pitcher
- 1985 - Kyle Hurst, minor league pitcher
- 1987 - Zach Braddock, pitcher
- 1988 - Jon Gilmore, minor league player
- 1988 - Matt Lujan, minor league pitcher
- 1988 - Miles Mikolas, pitcher; All-Star
- 1988 - Michaelangel Trinidad, minor league infielder
- 1989 - Louis Bischof, Swiss national team outfielder
- 1989 - Jacob Rogers, minor league infielder
- 1990 - Jesus Galindo, minor league outfielder
- 1990 - Shane Gnade, Hoofdklasse pitcher
- 1990 - Mike Yastrzemski, outfielder
- 1991 - Charles Haslup, minor league pitcher
- 1992 - Chris Madera, minor league outfielder and manager
- 1992 - Raul Mondesi Jr., minor league outfielder
- 1992 - Hyun Yang, KBO pitcher
- 1993 - Tyler Glasnow, pitcher; All-Star
- 1993 - Braxton Lee, outfielder
- 1993 - Max Povse, pitcher
- 1994 - Billy McKinney, outfielder
- 1995 - Bernardo Flores, pitcher
- 1995 - Miguel Guzman, minor league outfielder
- 1995 - Brian Sossa, Bolivian national team infielder
- 1995 - Lane Thomas, outfielder
- 1995 - Carlos Tocci, outfielder
- 1996 - Ronald Bolanos, pitcher
- 1997 - Juan Alvaro Macasaet, Philippines national team infielder
- 1998 - Jay Groome, minor league pitcher
- 1998 - Bryce Miller, pitcher
- 2000 - Edwin Pertuz, Colombian national team outfielder
- 2000 - Noah Williamson, minor league outfielder
- 2001 - Hai-young Jung, KBO pitcher
Deaths[edit]
- 1905 - Theodore Van Cott, pre-MLB player (b. ????)
- 1916 - Bill George, pitcher (b. 1865)
- 1918 - George Rogers, umpire (b. 1840)
- 1926 - Emil Batch, infielder (b. 1880)
- 1930 - Larry Twitchell, outfielder (b. 1864)
- 1940 - Sylvester Foreman, catcher (b. 1895)
- 1940 - John Patterson, Negro League outfielder (b. 1872)
- 1955 - Eugene Redd, infielder (b. 1899)
- 1958 - Bill Breckinridge, pitcher (b. 1907)
- 1960 - Jack Leiper, pitcher (b. 1867)
- 1968 - Dutch Henry, pitcher (b. 1902)
- 1968 - Larry Smith, minor league umpire (b. 1946)
- 1970 - Doc Gautreau, infielder (b. 1901)
- 1970 - Red Smith, catcher (b. 1892)
- 1973 - Gene Ford, pitcher (b. 1881)
- 1977 - Bubber Jonnard, catcher (b. 1897)
- 1978 - Hal Weafer, umpire (b. 1900)
- 1982 - Henry Merchant, outfielder (b. 1918)
- 1984 - Charlie Robertson, pitcher (b. 1896)
- 1986 - Bill Evans, outfielder (b. 1899)
- 1987 - Tom D'Alesandro, owner (b. 1903)
- 1987 - Ching-Te Yeh, Taiwan national team infielder (b. 1924)
- 1993 - Jim Reninger, pitcher (b. 1915)
- 1994 - Jim Prendergast, pitcher (b. 1917)
- 1996 - Wiley Griggs, infielder (b. 1925)
- 1997 - Guy Curtright, outfielder (b. 1912)
- 1997 - Buddy Hassett, infielder (b. 1911)
- 2002 - Shiro Takegami, NPB infielder and manager (b. 1941)
- 2002 - Hoyt Wilhelm, pitcher; All-Star, Hall of Famer (b. 1922)
- 2003 - Bobby Bonds, outfielder; All-Star (b. 1946)
- 2004 - Hank Borowy, pitcher; All-Star (b. 1916)
- 2007 - Bobby Herrera, pitcher (b. 1926)
- 2011 - Curley Williams, infielder (b. 1925)
- 2012 - Bob Myrick, pitcher (b. 1952)
- 2014 - Sally Buck, owner (b. ~1930)
- 2016 - Bryan Clutterbuck, pitcher (b. 1959)
- 2017 - Joe Klein, General Manager (b. 1942)
- 2019 - Clint Conatser, outfielder (b. 1921)
- 2023 - Andy Rincon, pitcher (b. 1959)
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