1993 in baseball

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The following are the baseball events of the year 1993 throughout the world.

Champions

Major League Baseball

  League Championship Series
CBS
World Series
CBS
                 
East  Toronto Blue Jays 4  
West  Chicago White Sox 2  
    AL  Toronto Blue Jays 4
  NL  Philadelphia Phillies 2
East  Philadelphia Phillies 4
West  Atlanta Braves 2  

Other champions

Awards and honors

MLB statistical leaders

  American League National League
Type Name Stat Name Stat
AVG John Olerud TOR .363 Andrés Galarraga COL .370
HR Juan González TEX 46 Barry Bonds SFG 46
RBI Albert Belle CLE 129 Barry Bonds SFG 123
Wins Jack McDowell CHW 22 John Burkett SFG & Tom Glavine ATL 22
ERA Kevin Appier KCR 2.56 Greg Maddux ATL 2.36

Major league baseball final standings

Managers

American League

Team Manager Comments
Baltimore Orioles Johnny Oates
Boston Red Sox Butch Hobson
California Angels Buck Rodgers
Chicago White Sox Gene Lamont
Cleveland Indians Mike Hargrove
Detroit Tigers Sparky Anderson
Kansas City Royals Hal McRae
Milwaukee Brewers Phil Garner
Minnesota Twins Tom Kelly
New York Yankees Buck Showalter
Oakland Athletics Tony La Russa
Seattle Mariners Lou Piniella
Texas Rangers Kevin Kennedy
Toronto Blue Jays Cito Gaston Won World Series

National League

Team Manager Comments
Atlanta Braves Bobby Cox
Chicago Cubs Jim Lefebvre
Cincinnati Reds Tony Pérez Replaced during the season by Davey Johnson
Colorado Rockies Don Baylor Expansion team
Florida Marlins Rene Lachemann Expansion team
Houston Astros Art Howe
Los Angeles Dodgers Tommy Lasorda
Montreal Expos Felipe Alou
New York Mets Jeff Torborg Replaced during the season by Dallas Green
Philadelphia Phillies Jim Fregosi Won the National League pennant
Pittsburgh Pirates Jim Leyland
St. Louis Cardinals Joe Torre
San Diego Padres Jim Riggleman
San Francisco Giants Dusty Baker

Events

January–March

April–June

July–August

September

October–December

Movies

Births

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Deaths

January–March

  • January 21 – Charlie Gehringer, 89, Hall of Fame second baseman who played his entire career for the Detroit Tigers, batting .320 lifetime, scoring 100 runs twelve times, and collecting 200 hits seven times; 1937 MVP had seven 100-RBI seasons, led AL in hits and doubles twice each and in steals and triples once each, retired with 7th most doubles in history and record for career double plays
  • January 28 – Vern Kennedy, 85, twice All-Star pitcher for seven teams between 1934 and 1945, who threw a no-hitter against the Cleveland Indians in 1935
  • February 10 – Rip Repulski, 65, All-Star outfielder, mainly with the Cardinals and Phillies
  • March 6 – George Stumpf, 82, outfielder who played in the early 1930s for the Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox
  • March 22 – Steve Olin, 27, relief pitcher for the Cleveland Indians since 1989 whose 48 saves ranked third in club history
  • March 23 – Tim Crews, 31, relief pitcher newly acquired by the Indians who had 15 saves in 281 appearances for the Dodgers

April–June

  • April 21 – Hal Schumacher, 82, All-Star pitcher who won 158 games for the New York Giants; pitched 10-inning victory in 1936 World Series
  • April 22 – Mark Koenig, 88, shortstop who was the last survivor from the 1927 New York Yankees "Murderers' Row" team; batted .319 the next year
  • June 2 – Johnny Mize, 80, Hall of Fame first baseman, primarily for the Cardinals and New York Giants, who won four NL home run titles and retired with the sixth most HRs in history; MVP runnerup in 1939 and 1940 batted .312 in his career and led NL in RBI and total bases three times each and in runs, doubles and triples once each; hit three home runs in a game six times
  • June 4 – Bobby Reeves, 93, utilitity-man who played all positions except catcher for the Washington Senators and Boston Red Sox from 1926 to 1931
  • June 8 – Roy Henshaw, 81, left-handed pitcher for the Cubs, Dodgers, Cardinals and Tigers from 1933–44
  • June 26 – Roy Campanella, 71, Hall of Fame catcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers who won three MVP awards (1951-53-55) after several standout years in the Negro Leagues; posted a career .500 slugging percentage, highest of any catcher; in 1953, led NL in RBI and became first catcher to hit 40 home runs; career was ended by an automobile accident that left him paralyzed

July–September

  • July 3 – Don Drysdale, 56, Hall of Fame pitcher for the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers who won 1962 Cy Young Award and set record with ​58 23 consecutive scoreless innings in 1968; led NL in strikeouts three times and hit batsmen five times
  • July 4 – Walter Stephenson, 82, backup catcher for the Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies from 1935 to 1938
  • July 5 – Charlie Bishop, 64, pitcher for the Philadelphia & Kansas City Athletics from 1952 to 1955
  • July 7 – Ben Chapman, 84, All-Star outfielder who batted .300 six times and led AL in steals four times; as manager of the Phillies, vociferously opposed Jackie Robinson's entry into major leagues
  • July 7 – Larry Napp, 77, American League umpire from 1951 to 1974 who worked in four World Series and four All-Star Games
  • July 17 – Harold Greiner, 86, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League manager
  • July 18 – Ted Sadowski, 57, a relief pitcher for the Washington Senators and Minnesota Twins and one of three major league brothers
  • August 1 – Ewing Kauffman, 76, Owner of the Kansas City Royals
  • August 12 – Quincy Trouppe, 80, Negro League catcher who was a 39-year-old rookie with the Cleveland Indians in 1952; with pitcher "Toothpick Sam" Jones, formed the first black battery in American League history on May 3, 1952
  • August 21 – Felix Evans, 82, Negro league baseball pitcher from 1934 to 1949
  • September 12 – Granny Hamner, 66, All-Star shortstop for the Phillies who batted .429 in the World Series with the 1950 "Whiz Kids" team
  • September 15 – Ethan Allen, 89, center fielder for six teams who batted .300 lifetime and led NL in doubles in 1934; later coached Yale teams with players including future President George H. W. Bush
  • September 19 – Frank Wurm, 79, pitcher for the 1944 Brooklyn Dodgers

October–December

  • October 21 – Bob Hunter, 80, sportswriter for several Los Angeles newspapers
  • October 23 – Steve Wylie, 82, Negro league baseball pitcher from 1944 to 1947
  • November 4 – Doris Satterfield, 67, three-time All-Star outfielder and member of two AAGPBL champion teams
  • November 6 – Ed Sadowski, 62, a catcher for the original Angels who also played with the Braves and Red Sox
  • November 8 – Hank Leiber, 82, Cubs and Giants All-Star outfielder who hit .288 with 101 home runs and 518 RBI from 1933–42, including a three-home run game in 1939
  • November 12 – Bill Dickey, 86, Hall of Fame catcher for the Yankees who batted .313 lifetime, had four 100-RBI seasons, and was the first AL catcher to hit 200 home runs; 11-time All-Star batted .362 in 1936, caught 38 World Series games, and was later a coach
  • November 25 – Burgess Whitehead, 83, last surviving member of the St. Louis Cardinals Gashouse Gang team that won the 1934 World Series
  • December 28 – Augie Galan, 81, three-time All-Star outfielder who played 16 seasons in the majors and led the National League in stolen bases twice for the Chicago Cubs
  • December 29 – Shirley Jameson, 75, AAGPBL All-Star center fielder
  • December 30 – Tom Alston, 67, first black player in St. Louis Cardinals history

References

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