1992 Major League Baseball season

The 1992 Major League Baseball season saw the Toronto Blue Jays defeat the Atlanta Braves in the World Series, becoming the first team outside the United States to win the World Series.

1992 MLB season
LeagueMajor League Baseball
SportBaseball
DurationApril 6 – October 24, 1992
Games162
Teams26
TV partner(s)CBS, ESPN
Draft
Top draft pickPhil Nevin
Picked byHouston Astros
Regular Season
Season MVPAL: Dennis Eckersley (OAK)
NL: Barry Bonds (PIT)
Postseason
AL championsToronto Blue Jays
  AL runners-upOakland Athletics
NL championsAtlanta Braves
  NL runners-upPittsburgh Pirates
World Series
Venue
  • SkyDome, Toronto, Ontario
  • Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia
ChampionsToronto Blue Jays
  Runners-upAtlanta Braves
World Series MVPPat Borders (TOR)
MLB seasons
← 1991
Angels
White Sox
Royals
Twins
     Athletics
Mariners
Rangers
Orioles
Red
Sox
Indians
Tigers   
Brewers
Yankees
Blue
Jays
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Locations of teams for the 1992–1993 American League seasons
West   East
Braves
Reds
Astros
Dodgers
Padres
  Giants
Cubs
Expos
Mets
     Phillies
Pirates  
Cardinals
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Locations of teams for the 1977–1992 National League seasons
West   East

A resurgence in pitching dominance occurred during this season. On average, one out of every seven games pitched this season was a shutout; in 2,106 MLB regular-season games, 298 shutouts were pitched (up from 272 in 2,104 regular-season games in 1991). Two teams pitched at least 20 shutouts each; the Atlanta Braves led the Majors with 24 and the Pittsburgh Pirates finished second with 20. In the National League, no team hit more than 138 home runs and no team scored 700 runs. The San Francisco Giants were shut out 18 times, the most in the Majors. The effect was similar in the American League. In 1991, two AL teams had scored at least 800 runs and three had collected 1,500 hits. In 1992, no team scored 800 runs and only one reached 1,500 hits. The California Angels were shut out 15 times, the most in the AL.

Awards and honors

  • Baseball Hall of Fame
    • Rollie Fingers
    • Bill McGowan
    • Hal Newhouser
    • Tom Seaver
Baseball Writers' Association of America Awards
BBWAA Award National League American League
Rookie of the Year Eric Karros (LAD) Pat Listach (MIL)
Cy Young Award Greg Maddux (CHC) Dennis Eckersley (OAK)
Manager of the Year Jim Leyland (PIT) Tony La Russa (OAK)
Most Valuable Player Barry Bonds (PIT) Dennis Eckersley (OAK)
Gold Glove Awards
Position National League American League
Pitcher Greg Maddux (CHC) Mark Langston (CAL)
Catcher Tom Pagnozzi (STL) Iván Rodríguez (TEX)
First Baseman Mark Grace (CHC) Don Mattingly (NYY)
Second Baseman José Lind (PIT) Roberto Alomar (TOR)
Third Baseman Terry Pendleton (ATL) Robin Ventura (CWS)
Shortstop Ozzie Smith (STL) Cal Ripken Jr. (BAL)
Outfielders Barry Bonds (PIT) Kirby Puckett (MIN)
Larry Walker (MON) Devon White (TOR)
Andy Van Slyke (PIT) Ken Griffey Jr. (SEA)
Silver Slugger Awards
Pitcher/Designated Hitter Dwight Gooden (NYM) Dave Winfield (TOR)
Catcher Darren Daulton (PHI) Mickey Tettleton (DET)
First Baseman Fred McGriff (SD) Mark McGwire (OAK)
Second Baseman Ryne Sandberg (CHC) Roberto Alomar (TOR)
Third Baseman Gary Sheffield (SD) Edgar Martínez (SEA)
Shortstop Barry Larkin (CIN) Travis Fryman (DET)
Outfielders Barry Bonds (PIT) Joe Carter (TOR)
Andy Van Slyke (PIT) Juan González (TEX)
Larry Walker (MON) Kirby Puckett (MIN)

Other awards

  • Outstanding Designated Hitter Award: Dave Winfield (TOR)
  • Roberto Clemente Award (Humanitarian): Cal Ripken Jr. (BAL).
  • Rolaids Relief Man Award: Dennis Eckersley (OAK, American); Lee Smith (STL, National).

Player of the Month

Month American League National League
April Roberto Alomar Barry Bonds
May Kirby Puckett Félix José
June Kirby Puckett Cory Snyder
July Edgar Martínez Brett Butler
August Edgar Martínez Gary Sheffield
September Frank Thomas Barry Bonds

Pitcher of the Month

Month American League National League
April Bill Krueger Bill Swift
May Roger Clemens Mike Morgan
June John Smiley Randy Tomlin
July Kevin Appier Tom Glavine
August Roger Clemens Dennis Martínez
September Cal Eldred José Rijo

Statistical leaders

Statistic American League National League
AVG Edgar Martínez SEA .343 Gary Sheffield SD .330
HR Juan González TEX 43 Fred McGriff SD 35
RBI Cecil Fielder DET 124 Darren Daulton PHI 109
Wins Kevin Brown TEX
Jack Morris TOR
21 Tom Glavine ATL
Greg Maddux CHC
20
ERA Roger Clemens BOS 2.41 Bill Swift SF 2.08
SO Randy Johnson SEA 241 John Smoltz ATL 215
SV Dennis Eckersley OAK 51 Lee Smith STL 43
SB Kenny Lofton CLE 66 Marquis Grissom MON 78

Standings

American League

AL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(1) Toronto Blue Jays 96 66 .593 53‍–‍28 43‍–‍38
Milwaukee Brewers 92 70 .568 4 53‍–‍28 39‍–‍42
Baltimore Orioles 89 73 .549 7 43‍–‍38 46‍–‍35
Cleveland Indians 76 86 .469 20 41‍–‍40 35‍–‍46
New York Yankees 76 86 .469 20 41‍–‍40 35‍–‍46
Detroit Tigers 75 87 .463 21 38‍–‍42 37‍–‍45
Boston Red Sox 73 89 .451 23 44‍–‍37 29‍–‍52
AL West
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(2) Oakland Athletics 96 66 .593 51‍–‍30 45‍–‍36
Minnesota Twins 90 72 .556 6 48‍–‍33 42‍–‍39
Chicago White Sox 86 76 .531 10 50‍–‍32 36‍–‍44
Texas Rangers 77 85 .475 19 36‍–‍45 41‍–‍40
California Angels 72 90 .444 24 41‍–‍40 31‍–‍50
Kansas City Royals 72 90 .444 24 44‍–‍37 28‍–‍53
Seattle Mariners 64 98 .395 32 38‍–‍43 26‍–‍55

National League

NL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(2) Pittsburgh Pirates 96 66 .593 53‍–‍28 43‍–‍38
Montreal Expos 87 75 .537 9 43‍–‍38 44‍–‍37
St. Louis Cardinals 83 79 .512 13 45‍–‍36 38‍–‍43
Chicago Cubs 78 84 .481 18 43‍–‍38 35‍–‍46
New York Mets 72 90 .444 24 41‍–‍40 31‍–‍50
Philadelphia Phillies 70 92 .432 26 41‍–‍40 29‍–‍52
NL West
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
(1) Atlanta Braves 98 64 .605 51‍–‍30 47‍–‍34
Cincinnati Reds 90 72 .556 8 53‍–‍28 37‍–‍44
San Diego Padres 82 80 .506 16 45‍–‍36 37‍–‍44
Houston Astros 81 81 .500 17 47‍–‍34 34‍–‍47
San Francisco Giants 72 90 .444 26 42‍–‍39 30‍–‍51
Los Angeles Dodgers 63 99 .389 35 37‍–‍44 26‍–‍55

Postseason

Bracket

League Championship Series
(ALCS, NLCS)
World Series
      
East Toronto 4
West Oakland 2
AL Toronto 4
NL Atlanta 2
East Pittsburgh 3
West Atlanta 4

Managers

American League

Team Manager Comments
Baltimore Orioles± Johnny Oates
Boston Red Sox Butch Hobson
California Angels Buck Rodgers After a May bus accident John Wathan was acting manager for the remainder of the season
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 Won AL West
Seattle Mariners Bill Plummer
Texas Rangers Bobby Valentine Was replaced during the season by Toby Harrah
Toronto Blue Jays Cito Gaston Won the World Series

National League

Team Manager Comments
Atlanta Braves Bobby Cox Won the National League pennant
Chicago Cubs Jim Lefebvre
Cincinnati Reds Lou Piniella
Houston Astros Art Howe
Los Angeles Dodgers Tommy Lasorda
Montreal Expos Tom Runnells Was replaced during the season by Felipe Alou
New York Mets Jeff Torborg
Philadelphia Phillies Jim Fregosi
Pittsburgh Pirates Jim Leyland Won NL East
St. Louis Cardinals Joe Torre
San Diego Padres± Jim Riggleman
San Francisco Giants Roger Craig

Home field attendance and payroll

Team name Wins Home attendance Per game Est. payroll
Toronto Blue Jays 96 5.5% 4,028,318 0.7% 49,732 $44,788,666 125.0%
Baltimore Orioles 89 32.8% 3,567,819 39.8% 44,047 $23,891,667 36.4%
Atlanta Braves 98 4.3% 3,077,400 43.8% 37,993 $34,625,333 88.1%
Chicago White Sox 86 −1.1% 2,681,156 −8.6% 32,697 $30,160,833 78.3%
Oakland Athletics 96 14.3% 2,494,160 −8.1% 30,792 $41,035,000 10.9%
Minnesota Twins 90 −5.3% 2,482,428 8.2% 30,647 $28,027,834 20.0%
Los Angeles Dodgers 63 −32.3% 2,473,266 −26.1% 30,534 $44,788,166 36.6%
Boston Red Sox 73 −13.1% 2,468,574 −3.7% 30,476 $43,610,584 24.0%
St. Louis Cardinals 83 −1.2% 2,418,483 −1.2% 29,858 $27,583,836 26.2%
Cincinnati Reds 90 21.6% 2,315,946 −2.4% 28,592 $33,431,499 27.1%
Texas Rangers 77 −9.4% 2,198,231 −4.3% 27,139 $30,128,167 65.3%
Chicago Cubs 78 1.3% 2,126,720 −8.1% 26,256 $29,829,686 27.6%
California Angels 72 −11.1% 2,065,444 −14.5% 25,499 $34,749,334 5.1%
Philadelphia Phillies 70 −10.3% 1,927,448 −6.0% 23,796 $24,492,834 8.9%
Kansas City Royals 72 −12.2% 1,867,689 −13.6% 23,058 $33,893,834 28.8%
Milwaukee Brewers 92 10.8% 1,857,351 25.6% 22,930 $31,013,667 34.2%
Pittsburgh Pirates 96 −2.0% 1,829,395 −11.4% 22,585 $33,944,167 43.6%
New York Mets 72 −6.5% 1,779,534 −22.1% 21,970 $44,602,002 36.9%
New York Yankees 76 7.0% 1,748,737 −6.2% 21,589 $37,652,334 37.7%
San Diego Padres 82 −2.4% 1,721,406 −4.6% 21,252 $26,854,167 21.2%
Montreal Expos 87 22.5% 1,669,127 78.6% 20,607 $15,822,334 47.4%
Seattle Mariners 64 −22.9% 1,651,367 −23.1% 20,387 $23,304,833 48.5%
San Francisco Giants 72 −4.0% 1,560,998 −10.2% 19,272 $33,163,168 7.1%
Detroit Tigers 75 −10.7% 1,423,963 −13.3% 17,800 $27,322,834 14.6%
Cleveland Indians 76 33.3% 1,224,094 16.4% 15,112 $9,373,044 −46.8%
Houston Astros 81 24.6% 1,211,412 1.3% 14,956 $15,407,500 19.9%

Television coverage

Network Day of week Announcers
CBS Saturday afternoons Sean McDonough, Tim McCarver, Dick Stockton, Jim Kaat
ESPN Sunday nights
Tuesday nights
Wednesday nights
Friday nights
Jon Miller, Joe Morgan

Events

January–June

  • January 2 – The Boston Red Sox sign free agent pitcher Frank Viola.
  • January 7 – Pitchers Tom Seaver and Rollie Fingers are elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Seaver finishes with a record 98.8% of the votes cast. Pete Rose, ineligible because of his ban from baseball (otherwise this year would have been his first year of eligibility), receives 41 write–in votes.
  • January 31 – The Pittsburgh Pirates sign outfielder Barry Bonds to a one-year contract worth $4.7 million, the largest-ever one-year deal.
  • February 20 – The Simpsons episode Homer at the Bat airs on the Fox Network, featuring guest appearances by Roger Clemens, Wade Boggs, Ken Griffey Jr., Steve Sax, Ozzie Smith, José Canseco, Don Mattingly, Darryl Strawberry, and Mike Scioscia.
  • March 2 – Chicago Cubs second baseman Ryne Sandberg becomes the highest-paid player in major league history when he agrees to a four-year contract extension worth $28.4 million.
  • March 17 – Pitcher Hal Newhouser and umpire Bill McGowan are elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee.
  • March 30 – In one of the biggest cross-town trades in Chicago baseball history, the Chicago Cubs trade George Bell to the Chicago White Sox, while the Sox send Sammy Sosa to the Cubs.
  • April 6 – A crowd of 44,568 sees the Baltimore Orioles defeat the Cleveland Indians 2–0 in the first game at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Rick Sutcliffe hurls the shutout for Baltimore.
  • May 17 – The Minnesota Twins trade highly regarded pitching prospect Denny Neagle to the Pittsburgh Pirates for pitcher John Smiley.

July–December

  • July 7 – Andy Van Slyke of the Pittsburgh Pirates becomes the first outfielder in nearly 18 years to record an unassisted double play, in the Pirates' 5–3 win over the Houston Astros. Van Slyke races in from center field to catch a fly ball, then continues in to double up Ken Caminiti, who was running from second base on the play.
  • July 14 – The American League pounds out a record 19 hits in defeating the National League by a score of 13–6 in the All-Star Game. It is the AL's fifth straight win. Seattle Mariners outfielder Ken Griffey Jr., who hit a single, a double and a home run, is named the MVP, 12 years after his father Ken Sr. won the same honor.
  • August 28 – The Milwaukee Brewers lash 31 hits in a 22–2 drubbing of the Toronto Blue Jays, setting a record for the most hits by a team in a single nine-inning game. Darryl Hamilton leads the way for the Brewers, going 4-for-7 with 5 RBI.
  • September 7 – After receiving an 18–9 no-confidence vote from the owners, Commissioner Fay Vincent is forced to resign. Vincent is soon replaced by Milwaukee Brewers president Bud Selig on what is meant to be an interim basis.
  • September 9 – Robin Yount becomes the 17th player to reach 3,000 hits in the Milwaukee Brewers' 5–4 loss to the Cleveland Indians. Yount singles to right center off Cleveland's José Mesa in the seventh inning.
  • September 20 – Philadelphia Phillies second baseman Mickey Morandini completes the first unassisted triple play in the National League in 65 years against their in-state rivals, the Pittsburgh Pirates. In the bottom of the sixth inning, Morandini snares Jeff King's line drive, steps on second to double off Andy Van Slyke, and finally tags Barry Bonds out before he can return to first. It is the ninth unassisted triple play since 1901, but only the second to be pulled off by a second baseman.
  • September 23 – Bip Roberts of the Cincinnati Reds hits safely in his tenth consecutive at-bat. He ends his streak later in the game against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
  • September 26 – Bill Pecota becomes the first position player for the New York Mets to pitch in a game, giving up a home run in the 8th inning as the Pittsburgh Pirates defeat the Mets 19–2.
  • September 27 – The Pittsburgh Pirates seal their third consecutive National League East championship with a 4–2 victory over the New York Mets.
  • September 28 – The idle Oakland Athletics clinch their fourth American League West crown in five years when the second-place Minnesota Twins fall to the Chicago White Sox 9–4.
  • September 29 – The Atlanta Braves wrap up the National League West with a 6–0 shutout of the San Francisco Giants.
  • September 30 – George Brett of the Kansas City Royals collects his 3,000th hit, an infield single off Tim Fortugno in the seventh inning of a 4–0 Royals victory over the California Angels.
  • October 3 – The Toronto Blue Jays clinch their second straight American League East title with a 3–1 win over the Detroit Tigers.
  • October 23 – The expansion Florida Marlins hire Rene Lachemann as the team's first manager.
  • October 24 – The Toronto Blue Jays clinch their first World Series championship with a 4–3 win over the Atlanta Braves in Game 6. Dave Winfield's 2–out, 2–run double in the top of the 11th gives Toronto a 4–2 lead. The Braves score one run in the bottom half of the inning and have the tying run on 3rd when the final out is made. Jimmy Key wins the game in relief, and Candy Maldonado homers for Toronto. Blue Jays catcher Pat Borders, with a .450 batting average, is named the Series MVP. The Toronto Blue Jays finish the season without being swept in any series. They are the first team from outside the United States to win the World Series.
  • October 27 – The expansion Colorado Rockies hire Don Baylor as the team's first manager.
  • November 10 – In a 9–4 vote, the National League fails to get enough yes votes to approve a sale of the San Francisco Giants to Vince Naimoli, which would have resulted in a move of the team to St. Petersburg, Florida.
  • November 10 - The Seattle Mariners hire Lou Piniella as their new manager.
  • November 16 – The Rockies sign free agent first baseman Andrés Galarraga, who rejoins Don Baylor, his hitting coach with the St. Louis Cardinals. Galarraga is coming off his second injury-plagued year, having missed 44 days of the season after being hit on the wrist by a Wally Whitehurst pitch in the 3rd game of the season.
  • November 17 – Major League Baseball holds an expansion draft to stock the rosters of the National League's two new teams, the Florida Marlins and Colorado Rockies. A total of 72 players are chosen. The best picks for Florida are Trevor Hoffman, eventually packaged for Gary Sheffield; Jeff Conine, and Cris Carpenter, later dealt to the Texas Rangers for Robb Nen. For Colorado, their best picks are Eric Young, Joe Girardi, Vinny Castilla, Armando Reynoso, Andy Ashby, Brad Ausmus, Charlie Hayes and Doug Bochtler. The next season, Ashby, Ausmus and Bochtler will go to the San Diego Padres in an ill-fated deal for pricey veteran pitchers Bruce Hurst and Greg Harris.

Movies

  • A League of Their Own

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