1992 Philadelphia Phillies season

Last updated

1992  Philadelphia Phillies
League National League
Division East
Ballpark Veterans Stadium
City Philadelphia
Record70–92 (.432)
Divisional place6th
Owners Bill Giles
General managers Lee Thomas
Managers Jim Fregosi
Television WTXF-TV
PRISM
Radio WOGL
(Harry Kalas, Richie Ashburn, Andy Musser, Chris Wheeler, Garry Maddox, Kent Tekulve)
  1991 Seasons 1993  

The 1992 Philadelphia Phillies season was a season in Major League Baseball. The Phillies finished sixth in the National League East with a record of 70 wins and 92 losses.

Contents

Offseason

Regular season

On September 20, Mickey Morandini executed an unassisted triple play in the sixth inning. [7] He caught a line drive, touched second base and tagged the runner coming from first base.

Notable transactions

Season standings

NL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Pittsburgh Pirates 9666.59353284338
Montreal Expos 8775.537943384437
St. Louis Cardinals 8379.5121345363843
Chicago Cubs 7884.4811843383546
New York Mets 7290.4442441403150
Philadelphia Phillies 7092.4322641402952

Record vs. opponents


Sources:
TeamATLCHCCINHOULADMONNYMPHIPITSDSFSTL
Atlanta 10–29–913–512–64–87–56–67–513–511–76–6
Chicago 2–105–78–46–67–119–99–98–105–78–411–7
Cincinnati 9–97–510–811–75–77–57–56–611–710–87–5
Houston 5–134–88–1013–58–45–78–46–67–1112–65–7
Los Angeles 6–126–67–115–134–85–75–75–79–97–114–8
Montreal 8–411–77–54–88–412–69–99–98–45–76–12
New York 5–79–95–77–57–56–126–124–144–810–29–9
Philadelphia 6-69–95–74–87–59–912–65–133–93–97–11
Pittsburgh 5–710–86–66–67–59–914–413–55–76–615–3
San Diego 5–137–57–1111–79–94–88–49–37–511–74–8
San Francisco 7–114–88–106–1211–77–52–109–36–67–115–7
St. Louis 6–67–115–77–58–412–69–911–73–158–47–5

1992 Game Log

Legend
 Phillies win
 Phillies loss
 Postponement
BoldPhillies team member
1992 Game Log [13]
Overall Record: 70–92
April (10–12)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 7 Cubs 3–4 Greg Maddux (1–0) Terry Mulholland (0–1) Chuck McElroy (1)60,4310–1
2April 8 Cubs 11–3 Tommy Greene (1–0) Danny Jackson (0–1)None16,3281–1
3April 9 Cubs 7–1 Danny Cox (1–0) Mike Morgan (0–1)None14,1492–1
4April 10 Pirates 2–3 Randy Tomlin (1–0) Kyle Abbott (0–1) Stan Belinda (2)21,0192–2
5April 11 Pirates 7–4 Andy Ashby (1–0) Doug Drabek (1–1)None24,9673–2
6April 12 Pirates 1–6 Zane Smith (2–0) Terry Mulholland (0–2)None32,6243–3
7April 13@ Mets 3–2 Curt Schilling (1–0) Sid Fernandez (0–2) Mitch Williams (1)14,8104–3
8April 14@ Mets 5–8 John Franco (1–0) Cliff Brantley (0–1)None15,2744–4
9April 15@ Mets 2–7 Dwight Gooden (1–1) Kyle Abbott (0–2)None17,4484–5
10April 17@ Pirates 4–7 Doug Drabek (2–1) Barry Jones (0–1) Stan Belinda (3)16,4174–6
11April 18@ Pirates 2–9 Zane Smith (3–0) Tommy Greene (1–1)None23,4114–7
12April 19@ Pirates 0–11 Bob Patterson (1–0) Danny Cox (1–1)None11,8124–8
13April 20@ Cubs 3–8 Greg Maddux (3–0) Kyle Abbott (0–3)None23,5154–9
14April 21@ Cubs 7–5 (10) Mitch Williams (1–0) Heathcliff Slocumb (0–1) Curt Schilling (1)8,8865–9
15April 22@ Cubs 5–9 Shawn Boskie (3–0) Terry Mulholland (0–3)None8,1675–10
16April 23@ Cubs 8–2 Tommy Greene (2–1) Frank Castillo (0–1)None9,0866–10
17April 24 Mets 4–3 Mitch Williams (2–0) Wally Whitehurst (0–1)None25,4827–10
18April 25 Mets 2–3 Sid Fernandez (1–2) Kyle Abbott (0–4) John Franco (3)29,3747–11
19April 26 Mets 5–4 Barry Jones (1–1) Wally Whitehurst (0–2) Mitch Williams (2)44,1948–11
20April 27@ Padres 12–9 Curt Schilling (2–0) Bruce Hurst (1–2) Mitch Williams (3)11,9989–11
21April 28@ Padres 6–7 Pat Clements (1–0) Curt Schilling (2–1)None10,1819–12
22April 29@ Dodgers 7–3 Danny Cox (2–1) Orel Hershiser (2–2)None36,63910–12
April 30@ Dodgers Postponed (Rodney King riots); Makeup: July 3 as a traditional double-header
May (12–13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
May 1@ Giants Postponed (Rodney King riots); Makeup: July 7 as a traditional double-header
23May 2@ Giants 1–2 Bill Swift (5–0) Kyle Abbott (0–5) Dave Righetti (1)12,15710–13
24May 3@ Giants 12–3 Cliff Brantley (1–1) Trevor Wilson (1–2) Curt Schilling (2)27,51511–13
25May 5 Dodgers 6–2 Terry Mulholland (1–3) Tom Candiotti (3–1)None15,65412–13
26May 6 Dodgers 1–3 Ramón Martínez (1–1) Danny Cox (2–2) Roger McDowell (3)21,67912–14
27May 8 Padres 5–6 José Meléndez (4–0) Curt Schilling (2–2) Randy Myers (7)8,79812–15
28May 9 Padres 1–5 Craig Lefferts (3–2) Cliff Brantley (1–2) Randy Myers (8)23,07012–16
29May 10 Padres 9–3 Terry Mulholland (2–3) Greg W. Harris (1–3)None13–16
30May 11 Giants 7–8 (10) Dave Burba (2–3) Mitch Williams (2–1)None15,90513–17
31May 12 Giants 5–7 Bryan Hickerson (2–1) Barry Jones (1–2) Mike Jackson (1)16,24713–18
32May 13 Giants 3–5 Trevor Wilson (3–2) Kyle Abbott (0–6) Jeff Brantley (3)21,21113–19
33May 15@ Reds 8–0 Terry Mulholland (3–3) Tom Browning (3–3)None32,81914–19
34May 16@ Reds 5–6 Tim Belcher (3–4) Wally Ritchie (0–1) Rob Dibble (5)42,38214–20
35May 17@ Reds 5–4 Mike Hartley (1–0) Rob Dibble (0–1) Mitch Williams (4)29,78315–20
36May 18 Astros 2–4 Jimmy Jones (1–0) Kyle Abbott (0–7) Joe Boever (1)17,30915–21
37May 19 Astros 4–3 Curt Schilling (3–2) Butch Henry (0–4) Mitch Williams (5)15,29916–21
38May 20 Astros 2–1 Terry Mulholland (4–3) Darryl Kile (2–5) Mitch Williams (6)16,04817–21
May 21 Reds Postponed (rain); Makeup: August 18 as a traditional double-header
39May 22 Reds 8–2 Cliff Brantley (2–2) Tim Belcher (3–5)None22,02818–21
40May 23 Reds 0–10 Greg Swindell (4–2) Brad Brink (0–1)None26,33218–22
41May 24 Reds 3–8 José Rijo (1–3) Curt Schilling (3–3)None30,95418–23
42May 25 Braves 4–1 Terry Mulholland (5–3) Steve Avery (2–5) Mitch Williams (7)18,34319–23
43May 26 Braves 5–2 Don Robinson (2–0) Mike Bielecki (1–3) Mitch Williams (8)11,29520–23
44May 27 Braves 3–9 Tom Glavine (7–3) Cliff Brantley (2–3)None23,69520–24
45May 29@ Astros 2–1 (12) Barry Jones (2–2) Al Osuna (3–3)None10,81521–24
46May 30@ Astros 4–5 Jimmy Jones (2–0) Terry Mulholland (5–4) Doug Jones (12)16,04621–25
47May 31@ Astros 6–3 (11) Barry Jones (3–2) Rob Murphy (0–1) Wally Ritchie (1)14,84622–25
June (12–15)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
48June 1@ Braves 6–7 Tom Glavine (8–3) Cliff Brantley (2–4) Mark Wohlers (1)25,64722–26
49June 2@ Braves 3–5 Mike Stanton (1–2) Mitch Williams (2–2)None27,85522–27
50June 3@ Braves 4–1 Curt Schilling (4–3) John Smoltz (5–5) Mitch Williams (9)19,35723–27
51June 5 Cardinals 7–5 Barry Jones (4–2) Todd Worrell (2–2) Mitch Williams (10)12,12824–27
52June 6 Cardinals 7–5 Mike Hartley (2–0) Bob McClure (1–1) Mitch Williams (11)28,25725–27
53June 7 Cardinals 4–5 Todd Worrell (3–2) Bob Ayrault (0–1) Lee Smith (15)24,51225–28
54June 8 Pirates 7–0 Curt Schilling (5–3) Vicente Palacios (3–1)None21,04026–28
55June 9 Pirates 3–5 Doug Drabek (5–4) Mike Hartley (2–1) Denny Neagle (1)29,13826–29
56June 10 Pirates 1–2 (12) Bob Patterson (3–0) Barry Jones (4–3) Roger Mason (6)25,11226–30
57June 12@ Cardinals 8–5 Wally Ritchie (1–1) Donovan Osborne (5–3) Mitch Williams (12)35,71927–30
58June 13@ Cardinals 1–4 Omar Olivares (3–3) Curt Schilling (5–4) Lee Smith (16)39,47727–31
59June 14@ Cardinals 2–5 Rhéal Cormier (1–5) Brad Brink (0–2) Lee Smith (17)40,94927–32
60June 15@ Pirates 4–1 Terry Mulholland (6–4) Zane Smith (5–5)None23,58128–32
61June 16@ Pirates 5–6 (12) Bob Patterson (4–0) Cliff Brantley (2–5)None18,54828–33
62June 17@ Pirates 2–8 Randy Tomlin (9–3) Don Robinson (2–1)None24,85428–34
63June 18 Cubs 4–3 Mike Hartley (3–1) Bob Scanlan (2–4) Mitch Williams (13)32,86029–34
64June 19 Cubs 2–5 Danny Jackson (3–7) Brad Brink (0–3) Jim Bullinger (6)20,73229–35
65June 20 Cubs 4–1 Terry Mulholland (7–4) Greg Maddux (7–7) Mitch Williams (14)35,26130–35
66June 21 Cubs 2–5 Mike Morgan (6–2) Kyle Abbott (0–8) Paul Assenmacher (3)53,87230–36
67June 22@ Expos 5–3 Pat Combs (1–0) Brian Barnes (0–1) Mitch Williams (15)15,15731–36
68June 23@ Expos 5–0 Curt Schilling (6–4) Chris Nabholz (5–6)None30,31332–36
69June 24@ Expos 1–8 Ken Hill (7–4) Mickey Weston (0–1)None17,42232–37
70June 26@ Cubs 0–3 Mike Morgan (7–2) Kyle Abbott (0–9) Jim Bullinger (7)32,89632–38
71June 27@ Cubs 5–4 Mike Hartley (4–1) Chuck McElroy (3–4) Mitch Williams (16)35,30933–38
72June 28@ Cubs 3–5 Frank Castillo (6–6) Curt Schilling (6–5) Paul Assenmacher (4)32,41833–39
73June 29 Expos 5–4 Terry Mulholland (8–4) Jeff Fassero (3–4) Mitch Williams (17)27,42634–39
74June 30 Expos 2–7 Ken Hill (8–4) Mike Williams (0–1)None22,28234–40
July (11–18)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
75July 1 Expos 3–6 Dennis Martínez (9–6) Kyle Abbott (0–10) John Wetteland (13)41,22234–41
76July 2@ Dodgers 4–9 Kevin Gross (4–8) Pat Combs (1–1)None46,02634–42
77July 3 (1)@ Dodgers 1–5 Bob Ojeda (5–4) Curt Schilling (6–6)Nonesee 2nd game34–43
78July 3 (2)@ Dodgers 0–2 Pedro Astacio (1–0) Don Robinson (2–2)None34,71334–44
79July 4@ Dodgers 3–2 Terry Mulholland (9–4) Tom Candiotti (6–7)None44,41835–44
80July 5@ Dodgers 9–3 Mike Williams (1–1) Ramón Martínez (4–6)None31,02436–44
81July 6@ Giants 2–4 Bud Black (6–2) Kyle Abbott (0–11) Rod Beck (6)8,54836–45
82July 7 (1)@ Giants 7–8 Bryan Hickerson (3–1) Mike Hartley (4–2) Rod Beck (7)see 2nd game36–46
83July 7 (2)@ Giants 6–10 Jim Pena (1–0) Don Robinson (2–3)None13,57136–47
84July 8@ Giants 3–4 Mike Jackson (4–2) Mike Hartley (4–3) Rod Beck (8)14,92236–48
85July 9@ Padres 1–3 Jim Deshaies (1–0) Terry Mulholland (9–5) Randy Myers (14)17,52836–49
86July 10@ Padres 7–8 Rich Rodriguez (4–2) Barry Jones (4–4) Randy Myers (15)35,37636–50
87July 11@ Padres 2–3 (11) Tim Scott (2–1) Mike Hartley (4–4)None11,77736–51
88July 12@ Padres 2–8 Andy Benes (7–7) Don Robinson (2–4)None21,80336–52
July 14 1992 Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego
89July 16 Dodgers 5–7 Tom Candiotti (8–8) Terry Mulholland (9–6) Jim Gott (4)34,56636–53
90July 17 Dodgers 11–3 Curt Schilling (7–6) Orel Hershiser (7–8)None50,60637–53
91July 18 Dodgers 14–3 Kyle Abbott (1–11) Ramón Martínez (5–7)None33,89238–53
92July 19 Dodgers 6–5 Wally Ritchie (2–1) Jay Howell (0–1) Mitch Williams (18)33,21539–53
93July 20 Padres 1–2 Rich Rodriguez (5–2) Barry Jones (4–5) Randy Myers (16)20,79539–54
94July 21 Padres 3–4 Bruce Hurst (9–6) Terry Mulholland (9–7) Randy Myers (17)19,82939–55
95July 22 Padres 4–0 Curt Schilling (8–6) Andy Benes (7–9)None26,06240–55
96July 24 Giants 8–4 Barry Jones (5–5) Mike Jackson (4–3) Mitch Williams (19)20,58041–55
97July 25 Giants 2–6 (10) Bryan Hickerson (4–1) Mitch Williams (2–3)None27,68041–56
98July 26 Giants 7–2 Terry Mulholland (10–7) Pat Rapp (0–2)None27,37042–56
99July 27 Mets 5–0 Curt Schilling (9–6) Bret Saberhagen (3–3)None29,13843–56
100July 28 Mets 6–8 David Cone (12–4) Barry Jones (5–6) Anthony Young (7)32,87243–57
101July 29 Mets 6–3 Mitch Williams (3–3) Jeff Innis (5–7)None39,69144–57
102July 30@ Expos 2–7 Mark Gardner (10–8) Greg Mathews (0–1)None28,10644–58
103July 31@ Expos 2–0 Terry Mulholland (11–7) Brian Barnes (2–3)None30,47045–58
August (8–18)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
104August 1@ Expos 4–2 Curt Schilling (10–6) Ken Hill (12–5) Mitch Williams (20)30,51146–58
105August 2@ Expos 0–1 Chris Nabholz (7–7) Ben Rivera (0–2) John Wetteland (23)28,64546–59
106August 3@ Cardinals 1–2 Bob Tewksbury (11–4) Kyle Abbott (1–12) Lee Smith (25)25,09246–60
107August 4@ Cardinals 5–9 Bob McClure (2–2) Mitch Williams (3–4)None24,35746–61
108August 5@ Cardinals 4–5 Donovan Osborne (8–6) Bob Ayrault (0–2) Lee Smith (26)27,39646–62
109August 6 Expos 4–7 Ken Hill (13–5) Curt Schilling (10–7) John Wetteland (26)18,84846–63
110August 7 Expos 3–1 Ben Rivera (1–2) Chris Nabholz (7–8) Mitch Williams (21)22,67347–63
111August 8 Expos 1–6 Dennis Martínez (12–10) Kyle Abbott (1–13)None26,33847–64
112August 9 Expos 2–6 Mark Gardner (11–8) Greg Mathews (0–2) Mel Rojas (8)25,68347–65
August 10 Cardinals Postponed (rain); Makeup: September 26 as a traditional double-header
113August 11 Cardinals 6–7 Todd Worrell (4–3) Mitch Williams (3–5) Lee Smith (27)20,82547–66
114August 12 Cardinals 2–3 (10) Todd Worrell (5–3) Mitch Williams (3–6) Lee Smith (28)19,80747–67
115August 14@ Mets 6–2 Ben Rivera (2–2) Dwight Gooden (6–10)None20,83148–67
116August 15@ Mets 4–3 Mike Hartley (5–4) Jeff Innis (5–8) Mitch Williams (22)15,90149–67
August 16@ Mets Postponed (rain); Makeup: September 28 as a traditional double-header
117August 18 (1) Reds 0–6 Greg Swindell (12–5) Terry Mulholland (11–8)Nonesee 2nd game49–68
118August 18 (2) Reds 6–1 Curt Schilling (11–7) José Rijo (9–9)None27,20250–68
119August 19 Reds 9–3 Ben Rivera (3–2) Chris Hammond (6–8)None30,18451–68
120August 21 Astros 1–6 Brian Williams (5–4) Andy Ashby (1–1)None20,78751–69
121August 22 Astros 9–14 Willie Blair (3–6) Mike Hartley (5–5)None22,34551–70
122August 23 Astros 1–3 Jimmy Jones (7–5) Curt Schilling (11–8) Doug Jones (28)27,13051–71
123August 24@ Reds 5–8 Chris Hammond (7–8) Ben Rivera (3–3) Norm Charlton (25)22,94651–72
124August 25@ Reds 1–7 Tim Belcher (11–12) Greg Mathews (0–3)None21,07851–73
125August 26@ Reds 3–4 Tom Bolton (3–4) Andy Ashby (1–2) Rob Dibble (17)23,51651–74
126August 28 Braves 7–3 Terry Mulholland (12–8) John Smoltz (14–9)None22,26752–74
127August 29 Braves 6–7 Charlie Leibrandt (11–5) Curt Schilling (11–9) Kent Mercker (6)27,76052–75
128August 30 Braves 10–2 Ben Rivera (4–3) Tom Glavine (19–5)None32,08453–75
129August 31@ Astros 2–9 Butch Henry (5–9) Andy Ashby (1–3)None5,94553–76
September (16–14)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
130September 1@ Astros 3–5 Brian Williams (7–4) Cliff Brantley (2–6) Doug Jones (29)6,33453–77
131September 2@ Astros 2–3 Pete Harnisch (6–9) Terry Mulholland (12–9) Doug Jones (30)7,82853–78
132September 4@ Braves 2–1 Curt Schilling (12–9) Tom Glavine (19–6) Mitch Williams (23)40,76854–78
133September 5@ Braves 5–6 Jeff Reardon (3–2) Mitch Williams (3–7)None33,75554–79
134September 6@ Braves 3–4 Jeff Reardon (4–2) Mike Hartley (5–6)None42,09754–80
135September 7 Mets 3–6 Pete Schourek (5–6) Terry Mulholland (12–10) Anthony Young (13)14,60054–81
136September 8 Mets 2–1 Keith Shepherd (1–0) Dwight Gooden (8–12) Mitch Williams (24)15,85655–81
137September 9 Mets 2–1 Curt Schilling (13–9) Sid Fernandez (12–10)None15,52556–81
138September 11 Pirates 5–2 Ben Rivera (5–3) Bob Walk (9–5) Mitch Williams (25)20,16857–81
139September 12 Pirates 7–9 Stan Belinda (6–4) Mitch Williams (3–8)None22,85757–82
140September 13 Pirates 6–3 Terry Mulholland (13–10) Bob Patterson (6–3)None35,84258–82
141September 14 Expos 6–2 Tommy Greene (3–1) Brian Barnes (6–6) Keith Shepherd (1)12,13059–82
142September 15 Expos 0–3 Ken Hill (16–8) Curt Schilling (13–10) John Wetteland (34)13,79959–83
143September 16@ Cubs 9–14 Greg Maddux (18–11) Ben Rivera (5–4)None11,98559–84
144September 17@ Cubs 0–3 Mike Morgan (15–7) José DeLeón (2–8)None7,74359–85
145September 18@ Pirates 2–5 (6) Tim Wakefield (6–1) Terry Mulholland (13–11)None20,38759–86
146September 19@ Pirates 0–3 Doug Drabek (14–10) Tommy Greene (3–2)None25,49759–87
147September 20@ Pirates 2–3 (13) Roger Mason (5–6) Keith Shepherd (1–1)None21,65259–88
148September 21@ Expos 9–2 Ben Rivera (6–4) Chris Nabholz (10–11)None11,59660–88
149September 22@ Expos 5–2 Mike Hartley (6–6) Kent Bottenfield (0–2) Mitch Williams (26)11,19661–88
150September 23 Cubs 9–3 Bob Ayrault (1–2) Jim Bullinger (2–6)None12,60962–88
151September 24 Cubs 3–2 (10) Mitch Williams (4–8) Bob Scanlan (3–6)None12,96363–88
September 25 Cardinals Postponed (rain); Makeup: September 27 as a traditional double-header
152September 26 (1) Cardinals 3–1 Curt Schilling (14–10) Joe Magrane (1–2)Nonesee 2nd game64–88
153September 26 (2) Cardinals 10–0 Ben Rivera (7–4) Donovan Osborne (10–9)None16,18965–88
154September 27 (1) Cardinals 1–8 Rhéal Cormier (9–10) Brad Brink (0–4)Nonesee 2nd game65–89
155September 27 (2) Cardinals 6–5 Mike Hartley (7–6) Bryn Smith (3–2) Mitch Williams (27)20,27466–89
156September 28 (1)@ Mets 7–6 (10) Mitch Williams (5–8) Jeff Innis (6–9)Nonesee 2nd game67–89
157September 28 (2)@ Mets 7–6 Greg Mathews (1–3) Joe Vitko (0–1) Keith Shepherd (2)8,91568–89
158September 29@ Mets 5–3 Bob Ayrault (2–2) Anthony Young (2–14) Mitch Williams (28)7,28369–89
159September 30@ Mets 2–6 Sid Fernandez (14–11) Kyle Abbott (1–14)None6,35069–90
October (1–2)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
160October 2@ Cardinals 1–2 Donovan Osborne (11–9) Curt Schilling (14–11) Lee Smith (42)17,72469–91
161October 3@ Cardinals 3–2 Greg Mathews (2–3) Lee Smith (4–9) Mitch Williams (29)20,31170–91
162October 4@ Cardinals 3–6 Rhéal Cormier (10–10) Tommy Greene (3–3) Lee Smith (43)32,47570–92

Roster

1992 Philadelphia Phillies
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

[14]

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
C Darren Daulton 145485131.27027109
1B John Kruk 144507164.3231070
2B Mickey Morandini 127422112.265330
3B Dave Hollins 156586158.2702793
SS Juan Bell 4614730.20418
LF Mariano Duncan 142574153.267850
CF Lenny Dykstra 85345104.301639
RF Rubén Amaro 12637482.219734

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
Stan Javier 7427672.261024
Ricky Jordan 9427684.304434
Wes Chamberlain 7627571.258941
Kim Batiste 4413628.206110
Dale Sveum 5413524.178216
Tom Marsh 4212525.200216
Joe Millette 337816.20502
Braulio Castillo 287615.19727
Jeff Grotewold 726513.20035
Dale Murphy 186210.16127
Steve Lake 205313.24512
Wally Backman 124813.27106
Todd Pratt 164613.283210
Jim Lindeman 293910.25616
Steve Scarsone 7132.15400
Julio Peguero 1492.22200

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Terry Mulholland 32229.013113.81125
Ben Rivera 20102.0732.8266
Tommy Greene 1364.1335.3239
Don Robinson 843.2146.1817
Brad Brink 841.1044.1416
Danny Cox 938.1225.4030
Andy Ashby 1037.0137.5424
Mike Williams 528.2115.345
Pat Combs 418.2117.7111
José DeLeón 315.0013.007
Mickey Weston 13.20112.270

Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Curt Schilling 42226.114112.35147
Kyle Abbott 31133.11145.1388
Cliff Brantley 2876.1264.6032
Greg Mathews 1452.1235.1627

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGWLSVERASO
Mitch Williams 6658293.7874
Mike Hartley 467603.4453
Barry Jones 445604.6419
Wally Ritchie 402113.0019
Bob Ayrault 302203.1227
Keith Shepherd 121123.2710
Steve Searcy 100006.105
Jay Baller 80008.189
Darrin Chapin 10009.001

Farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
Red Barons
International League Lee Elia
AA Reading Phillies Eastern League Don McCormack
A Clearwater Phillies Florida State League Bill Dancy
A Spartanburg Phillies South Atlantic League Roy Majtyka
A-Short Season Batavia Clippers New York–Penn League Ramón Avilés
Rookie Martinsville Phillies Appalachian League Roly de Armas

[15]

Notes

  1. Rubén Amaro at Baseball Reference
  2. 1 2 Danny Cox at Baseball Reference
  3. Mariano Duncan at Baseball Reference
  4. Dale Sveum at Baseball Reference
  5. Charlie Hayes at Baseball Reference
  6. Rick Schu at Baseball Reference
  7. "Unassisted Triple Plays | Baseball Almanac".
  8. Curt Schilling at Baseball Reference
  9. Steve Lake at Baseball Reference
  10. Bobby Estalella at Baseball Reference
  11. Dale Sveum at Baseball Reference
  12. Juan Bell at Baseball Reference
  13. "1992 Philadelphia Phillies Schedule, Box Scores and Splits". Baseball-Reference.com.
  14. "1992 Philadelphia Phillies Roster by Baseball Almanac".
  15. Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2nd and 3rd editions. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 1997 and 2007

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The 1992 New York Yankees season was the 90th season for the Yankees, their 69th at Yankee Stadium and their first under manager Buck Showalter. The team looked to improve their standings from 1991 when they finished fifth in the American League East with a 71–91 record.

The 1998 season was the 96th season played by the New York Yankees. Widely regarded as one of the greatest teams in baseball history, the Yankees finished with a franchise record regular-season standing of 114–48. These Yankees set an American League record for wins in a season, a record that would stand until 2001, when the Seattle Mariners won 116 games in the regular season against 46 losses. It also saw Yankee David Wells pitch the 15th perfect game in baseball history. The Yankees played at Yankee Stadium, in which they celebrated the stadium's 75th anniversary. Joe Torre managed the team.

The 1999 Arizona Diamondbacks season was the franchise's second season in Major League Baseball and their second season at Bank One Ballpark and in Phoenix, Arizona. They began the season on April 5 at home against the Los Angeles Dodgers, and looked to improve on their 1998 expansion season. They looked to contend in what was a strong National League West. They finished the season with a highly surprising record of 100-62, good enough for the NL West title, becoming the fastest expansion team in MLB history to reach the playoffs. They also set all-time franchise highs in hits (1,566), runs (908), batting average (.277), on-base percentage (.347), and slugging percentage (.459). In the NLDS, however, they fell in four games to the New York Mets on Todd Pratt's infamous home run. Randy Johnson would win the NL Cy Young Award and become the third pitcher to win the Cy Young Award in both leagues.

The 1993 Seattle Mariners season was their 17th since the franchise creation. The team ended the season finishing fourth in the American League West, finishing with a record of 82–80 (.506). It was the franchise's first full season under the ownership of Nintendo president Hiroshi Yamauchi, with team chairman John Ellis representing him. During the 1993 season, Randy Johnson set a club record with 308 strikeouts. It was also the first season he walked less than 100 batters.

The 1988 Baltimore Orioles had the worst start to a season in modern American baseball history. The Orioles finished seventh in the American League East, reduced to a record of 54 wins and 107 losses just five seasons after winning the World Series. The season is most notable for the 0–21 start that lasted from April 4 to April 28. Manager Cal Ripken, Sr. was fired after an 0–6 start and replaced by Hall of Famer Frank Robinson. The Orioles won their first game of the year against the Chicago White Sox at Comiskey Park on April 29. The most runs allowed during the season was 15 in a game on June 19 while the most runs scored was 12 in a game on May 31. Orioles owner Edward Bennett Williams died in August of that year.

The 1992 California Angels season involved the Angels finishing fifth in the American League West with a record of 72 wins and 90 losses.

The Oakland Athletics' 1993 season was the team's 26th in Oakland, California. It was also the 93rd season in franchise history. The team finished seventh and last in the American League West with a record of 68–94.

The 1990 Atlanta Braves season was the team's 25th season in Atlanta, the 115th in franchise history as a member of the National League and the 120th season overall. The Braves went 65–97, en route to their sixth-place finish in the National League West, 26 games behind the World Champion Cincinnati Reds, and ending up with the worst record that year. On June 22, Bobby Cox replaced Russ Nixon as the team's manager, a job Cox would hold for the next two decades.

In the 1992 Milwaukee Brewers season, the team finished in second place in the American League East with a record of 92 wins and 70 losses.

The 1992 Chicago White Sox season was the White Sox's 94th season. They finished with a record of 86–76, good enough for third place in the American League West, 10 games behind the first place Oakland Athletics.

The 1966 Chicago Cubs season was the 95th season of the Chicago Cubs franchise, the 91st in the National League and the 51st at Wrigley Field. The Cubs finished tenth and last in the National League with a record of 59–103, 36 games behind the NL Champion Los Angeles Dodgers. The Cubs would not lose 100 or more games in a season for another 46 seasons. One of the defining trades in Cubs history occurred on April 21, when the Cubs acquired future Cy Young Award winner Ferguson Jenkins in a trade with the Philadelphia Phillies.

The Philadelphia Phillies' 1981 season was a season in American baseball.

The 1988 Philadelphia Phillies season was a season in Major League Baseball. The Phillies finished sixth in the National League East with a record of 65 wins and 96 losses.

The 1991 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 109th season in the history of the franchise. The team finished with a 78–84 record. This was also the last season the team wore the 1970–91 era uniforms. The next season, the Phillies would bring back the old Wiz Kids era uniforms which has remained their current uniform to this day.

The 1994 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 112th season in the history of the franchise.

The 1995 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 113th season in the history of the franchise.

The 1996 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 114th season in the history of the franchise. The Phillies finished fifth in the National League East with a record of 67 wins and 95 losses. They also hosted the 1996 Major League Baseball All-Star Game.

The 2000 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 118th season in the history of the franchise.

The 2008 Milwaukee Brewers season opened with optimism as the team attempted to build on the success of the 2007 season – their first winning season since 1992.

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