2000 Philadelphia Phillies season

Last updated

2000  Philadelphia Phillies
League National League
Division Eastern Division
Ballpark Veterans Stadium
City Philadelphia
Record65–97 (.401)
Divisional place5th
Owners Bill Giles
General managers Ed Wade
Managers Terry Francona
Television WPSG
CSN Philadelphia
Radio WPHT
(Harry Kalas, Larry Andersen, Andy Musser, Chris Wheeler, Scott Graham)
  1999 Seasons 2001  

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

Contents

Offseason

Regular season

Season standings

NL East W L Pct. GB Home Road
Atlanta Braves 95670.58651–3044–37
New York Mets 94680.580155–2639–42
Florida Marlins 79820.49115½43–3836–44
Montreal Expos 67950.4142837–4430–51
Philadelphia Phillies 65970.4013034–4731–50

Record vs. opponents


Source: NL Standings Head-to-Head
TeamARIATLCHCCINCOLFLAHOULADMILMONNYMPHIPITSDSFSTLAL
Arizona 3–65–42–57–64–56–17–64–54–52–78–17–29–46–75–46–9
Atlanta 6–34–52–55–46–65–47–26–36–77–68–55–28–16–33–411–7
Chicago 4–55–44–84–51–65–73–66–74–52–56–33–93–54–53–108–7
Cincinnati 5–25–28–46–33–67–54–55–8–16–35–43–47–64–53–67–67–8
Colorado 6–74–55–43–64–55–44–94–57–23–66–37–27–66–75–36–6
Florida 5–46–66–16–35–43–52–73–47–66–69–45–42–73–63–68–9
Houston 1–64–57–55–74–55–33–67–64–52–55–410–32–71–86–66–9
Los Angeles 6–72–76–35–49–47–26–33–45–34–55–44–58–57–53–66–9
Milwaukee 5–43–67–68–5–15–44–36–74–34–52–72–57–52–73–65–76–9
Montreal 5–47–65–43–62–76–75–43–55–43–95–73–43–63–62–57–11
New York 7–26–75–24–56–36–65–25–47–29–36–77–23–63–56–39–9
Philadelphia 1–85–83–64–33–64–94–54–55–27–57–63–62–52–72–79–9
Pittsburgh 2–72–59–36–72–74–53–105–45–74–32–76–37–22–64–86–9
San Diego 4–91–85–35–46–77–27–25–87–26–36–35–22–75–70–95–10
San Francisco 7–63–65–46–37–66–38–15–76–36–35–37–26–27–55–48–7
St. Louis 4–54–310–36–73–56–36–66–37–55–23–67–28–49–04–57–8

Notable transactions

Major league debuts

2000 Game Log

Legend
 Phillies win
 Phillies loss
 Postponement
BoldPhillies team member
2000 Game Log [9]
Overall Record: 65–97
April (7–17)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 4@ Diamondbacks 4–6 Randy Johnson (1–0) Andy Ashby (0–1) Darren Holmes (1)44,2980–1
2April 5@ Diamondbacks 3–11 Todd Stottlemyre (1–0) Paul Byrd (0–1) Mike Morgan (1)29,2910–2
3April 6@ Diamondbacks 2–3 (11) Russ Springer (1–0) Steve Schrenk (0–1)None28,7740–3
4April 7@ Astros 4–1 Randy Wolf (1–0) Octavio Dotel (0–1) Wayne Gomes (1)41,5831–3
5April 8@ Astros 5–8 Mike Maddux (1–0) Chris Brock (0–1) Billy Wagner (2)39,0181–4
6April 9@ Astros 3–2 Steve Schrenk (1–1) Jay Powell (0–1) Wayne Gomes (2)38,7842–4
7April 10 Mets 9–7 Amaury Telemaco (1–0) Rich Rodriguez (0–1) Wayne Gomes (3)47,1153–4
8April 12 Mets 8–5 Robert Person (1–0) Mike Hampton (0–3) Wayne Gomes (4)15,2694–4
9April 13 Mets 1–2 Dennis Cook (2–0) Scott Aldred (0–1) Armando Benítez (3)14,5524–5
10April 14 Expos 0–4 Dustin Hermanson (1–1) Chris Brock (0–2)None12,3664–6
April 15 Expos Postponed (rain); Makeup: April 17
11April 16 Expos 5–4 Scott Aldred (1–1) Anthony Telford (2–1)None18,6485–6
April 17 Expos Postponed (rain); Makeup: September 11 as a traditional double-header
12April 18@ Braves 3–4 (12) Luis Rivera (1–0) Carlos Reyes (0–1)None34,9035–7
13April 19@ Braves 1–10 Tom Glavine (3–0) Randy Wolf (1–1)None29,9925–8
14April 20@ Braves 4–6 Kevin Millwood (1–0) Scott Aldred (1–2) John Rocker (1)31,4515–9
15April 21@ Marlins 4–3 Andy Ashby (1–1) Vladimir Núñez (0–2)None15,4786–9
16April 22@ Marlins 2–4 Jesús Sánchez (3–0) Paul Byrd (0–2) Antonio Alfonseca (6)22,7876–10
17April 23@ Marlins 2–5 Brad Penny (3–1) Robert Person (1–1) Antonio Alfonseca (7)11,4426–11
18April 24@ Marlins 1–3 Alex Fernandez (3–2) Randy Wolf (1–2) Antonio Alfonseca (8)9,3446–12
19April 25 Diamondbacks 2–10 Randy Johnson (5–0) Chris Brock (0–3)None11,9266–13
20April 26 Diamondbacks 4–10 Todd Stottlemyre (4–1) Andy Ashby (1–2)None12,2506–14
21April 27 Diamondbacks 5–4 Wayne Gomes (1–0) Byung-hyun Kim (0–1)None13,5607–14
22April 28 Cardinals 4–7 Garrett Stephenson (3–0) Carlos Reyes (0–2) Dave Veres (5)25,8777–15
23April 29 Cardinals 6–7 (10) Mike Mohler (1–1) Wayne Gomes (1–1)None23,0317–16
24April 30 Cardinals 3–4 Darryl Kile (5–1) Curt Schilling (0–1) Mike James (1)34,0337–17
May (11–16)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
25May 2 Reds 0–7 Denny Neagle (3–0) Andy Ashby (1–3) Scott Sullivan (2)23,2347–18
26May 3 Reds 5–2 Paul Byrd (1–2) Steve Parris (1–4)None23,2608–18
27May 4 Reds 14–1 Robert Person (2–1) Pete Harnisch (0–4)None27,5649–18
28May 5@ Braves 5–6 Rudy Seánez (1–0) Wayne Gomes (1–2)None40,1749–19
29May 6@ Braves 6–0 Curt Schilling (1–1) Kevin Millwood (3–1)None48,61010–19
30May 7@ Braves 7–4 Andy Ashby (2–3) Terry Mulholland (3–3) Wayne Gomes (5)40,61311–19
31May 9@ Expos 2–3 Steve Kline (1–0) Wayne Gomes (1–3)None8,84511–20
32May 10@ Expos 8–0 Robert Person (3–1) Javier Vázquez (3–1)None9,41112–20
33May 11@ Expos 6–4 Randy Wolf (2–2) Carl Pavano (3–1) Wayne Gomes (6)8,31113–20
34May 12 Braves 7–8 Kerry Ligtenberg (1–1) Wayne Gomes (1–4) John Rocker (8)21,92213–21
35May 13 Braves 2–3 (10) Rudy Seánez (2–1) Scott Aldred (1–3) John Rocker (9)20,51613–22
36May 14 Braves 2–11 John Burkett (2–2) Paul Byrd (1–3)None22,25813–23
37May 16 Cardinals 2–8 Andy Benes (3–2) Robert Person (3–2)None18,39913–24
38May 17 Cardinals 5–4 Randy Wolf (3–2) Heathcliff Slocumb (1–3) Jeff Brantley (1)18,94114–24
39May 18 Cardinals 2–7 Garrett Stephenson (6–0) Curt Schilling (1–2)None17,13714–25
40May 19 Rockies 2–10 Pedro Astacio (5–2) Andy Ashby (2–4)None14,20214–26
41May 20 Rockies 3–4 Julián Tavárez (3–2) Chris Brock (0–4) José Jiménez (6)19,19214–27
42May 21 Rockies 4–3 Robert Person (4–2) Masato Yoshii (1–5) Jeff Brantley (2)20,61215–27
43May 23@ Astros 2–10 Chris Holt (2–6) Randy Wolf (3–3)None33,38115–28
44May 24@ Astros 9–7 Wayne Gomes (2–4) Billy Wagner (1–3) Jeff Brantley (3)32,66516–28
45May 25@ Astros 6–10 Scott Elarton (3–1) Andy Ashby (2–5) Joe Slusarski (1)34,73616–29
46May 26@ Dodgers 4–11 Kevin Brown (4–1) Paul Byrd (1–4)None37,04816–30
47May 27@ Dodgers 7–6 Robert Person (5–2) Darren Dreifort (3–2) Jeff Brantley (4)33,96717–30
48May 28@ Dodgers 4–2 Randy Wolf (4–3) Antonio Osuna (0–1)None28,60318–30
49May 29@ Giants 2–7 Shawn Estes (4–2) Curt Schilling (1–3) Alan Embree (1)40,93018–31
50May 30@ Giants 3–7 Liván Hernández (4–5) Andy Ashby (2–6) Robb Nen (8)40,93018–32
51May 31@ Giants 4–10 Mark Gardner (4–2) Paul Byrd (1–5)None40,93018–33
June (15–11)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
52June 2 Red Sox 2–1 (11) Jeff Brantley (1–0) John Wasdin (0–2)None22,19419–33
53June 3 Red Sox 9–3 Randy Wolf (5–3) Tim Wakefield (1–4)None31,13120–33
54June 4 Red Sox 6–5 (12) Steve Schrenk (2–1) Rhéal Cormier (2–1)None27,38221–33
55June 5 Devil Rays 3–5 (12) Mark Guthrie (3–3) Jason Boyd (0–1) Rick White (1)13,23721–34
56June 6 Devil Rays 3–5 (10) Roberto Hernández (2–2) Jeff Brantley (1–1) Rick White (2)13,41521–35
57June 7 Devil Rays 5–4 Chris Brock (1–4) Mark Guthrie (3–4) Jeff Brantley (5)20,51422–35
58June 9@ Orioles 9–5 Randy Wolf (6–3) Pat Rapp (4–4)None47,21823–35
59June 10@ Orioles 4–11 Sidney Ponson (4–3) Curt Schilling (1–4)None48,44323–36
60June 11@ Orioles 2–7 Mike Mussina (4–6) Andy Ashby (2–7)None47,54023–37
61June 12 Marlins 2–5 Vic Darensbourg (3–0) Cliff Politte (0–1) Antonio Alfonseca (19)11,92623–38
62June 13 Marlins 4–3 Wayne Gomes (3–4) Joe Strong (0–1) Jeff Brantley (6)13,31624–38
63June 14 Marlins 1–8 Ryan Dempster (7–4) Randy Wolf (6–4)None14,47224–39
64June 16@ Braves 2–1 Curt Schilling (2–4) Tom Glavine (7–3) Jeff Brantley (7)20,49525–39
65June 17@ Braves 9–3 Cliff Politte (1–1) Terry Mulholland (6–6)None37,29226–39
66June 18@ Braves 3–5 John Burkett (5–3) Steve Schrenk (2–2) John Rocker (11)25,35926–40
67June 19@ Braves 5–2 Chris Brock (2–4) Mike Remlinger (2–2) Jeff Brantley (8)22,26427–40
68June 20@ Mets 3–2 (10) Chris Brock (3–4) Armando Benítez (1–3) Jeff Brantley (9)40,38628–40
69June 21@ Mets 10–5 Wayne Gomes (4–4) John Franco (2–3)None22,52429–40
70June 22@ Mets 4–5 Glendon Rusch (5–5) Cliff Politte (1–2) Dennis Cook (1)21,00529–41
71June 23@ Expos 13–6 David Coggin (1–0) Javier Vázquez (6–4)None8,19730–41
72June 24@ Expos 8–1 Randy Wolf (7–4) Carl Pavano (8–4)None8,37431–41
73June 25@ Expos 1–3 Mike Johnson (3–2) Paul Byrd (1–6) Steve Kline (8)13,16431–42
74June 27 Brewers 7–0 Curt Schilling (3–4) Jimmy Haynes (7–7)None15,25632–42
75June 28 Brewers 9–7 Chris Brock (4–4) Juan Acevedo (0–3) Jeff Brantley (10)13,52033–42
76June 29 Brewers 6–8 Jason Bere (5–6) Steve Schrenk (2–3) Curtis Leskanic (1)21,59733–43
77June 30 Pirates 3–8 Kris Benson (7–6) Randy Wolf (7–5)None38,22133–44
July (13–14)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
78July 1 Pirates 4–3 Paul Byrd (2–6) Bronson Arroyo (0–2) Jeff Brantley (11)48,40634–44
79July 2 Pirates 9–1 Curt Schilling (4–4) Todd Ritchie (5–5)None20,29035–44
80July 3@ Brewers 5–3 Andy Ashby (3–7) John Snyder (3–3) Jeff Brantley (12)13,90336–44
81July 4@ Brewers 7–4 Chris Brock (5–4) Bob Wickman (2–2) Jeff Brantley (13)14,60237–44
82July 5@ Brewers 5–2 Randy Wolf (8–5) Jamey Wright (4–2) Wayne Gomes (7)10,67738–44
83July 6@ Brewers 2–4 Jeff D'Amico (4–4) Paul Byrd (2–7) Bob Wickman (12)12,57838–45
84July 7 Orioles 1–2 Mike Mussina (6–7) Curt Schilling (4–5) Mike Timlin (8)21,88238–46
85July 8 Orioles 13–4 Andy Ashby (4–7) José Mercedes (3–4)None28,38539–46
86July 9 Orioles 4–5 Alan Mills (3–1) Jeff Brantley (1–2) Mike Timlin (9)28,10039–47
July 11 2000 Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Turner Field in Atlanta
87July 13@ Blue Jays 8–5 Curt Schilling (5–5) Chris Carpenter (7–8) Jeff Brantley (14)22,16340–47
88July 14@ Blue Jays 2–3 Billy Koch (5–1) Jeff Brantley (1–3)None21,38540–48
89July 15@ Blue Jays 7–3 Bruce Chen (5–0) David Wells (15–3)None24,82841–48
90July 16@ Yankees 8–9 (10) Mariano Rivera (3–3) Jeff Brantley (1–4)None53,13141–49
91July 17@ Yankees 10–8 David Coggin (2–0) David Cone (1–8) Chris Brock (1)38,98742–49
92July 18@ Yankees 1–3 Denny Neagle (9–2) Curt Schilling (5–6) Mariano Rivera (22)40,01342–50
93July 19@ Cubs 4–5 Félix Heredia (4–3) Mark Holzemer (0–1)None39,39042–51
94July 20@ Cubs 3–2 Mark Brownson (1–0) Kevin Tapani (6–8) Jeff Brantley (15)38,84843–51
95July 21@ Pirates 2–9 Jimmy Anderson (3–5) Paul Byrd (2–8)None22,43843–52
96July 22@ Pirates 1–2 Bronson Arroyo (1–3) Robert Person (5–3) Mike Williams (14)28,48543–53
97July 23@ Pirates 4–1 Curt Schilling (6–6) Todd Ritchie (5–6)None23,84044–53
98July 25 Cubs 7–8 Tim Worrell (3–3) Chris Brock (5–5) Rick Aguilera (22)22,06544–54
99July 26 Cubs 9–14 Félix Heredia (6–3) Paul Byrd (2–9)None17,82544–55
100July 27 Cubs 1–4 Steve Rain (2–0) Vicente Padilla (2–2) Rick Aguilera (23)30,72244–56
101July 28 Dodgers 0–2 Darren Dreifort (7–7) Omar Daal (2–11) Jeff Shaw (16)20,11044–57
102July 29 Dodgers 3–0 Cliff Politte (2–2) Kevin Brown (10–4) Jeff Brantley (16)35,18945–57
103July 30 Dodgers 3–2 Randy Wolf (9–5) Chan Ho Park (11–8) Jeff Brantley (17)23,30146–57
104July 31@ Padres 1–4 Woody Williams (6–3) Bruce Chen (5–1)None43,20746–58
August (10–18)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
105August 1@ Padres 9–10 (10) Carlos Almanzar (2–3) Jeff Brantley (1–5)None18,27446–59
106August 2@ Padres 2–5 Matt Clement (10–10) Omar Daal (2–12) Trevor Hoffman (26)14,44746–60
107August 4@ Rockies 1–8 Julián Tavárez (7–2) Kent Bottenfield (7–9)None42,82746–61
108August 5@ Rockies 6–7 José Jiménez (5–0) Jeff Brantley (1–6)None40,97946–62
109August 6@ Rockies 10–9 Bruce Chen (6–1) Pedro Astacio (9–8)None38,27847–62
110August 7 Padres 4–6 Matt Clement (11–10) Robert Person (5–4) Trevor Hoffman (30)13,35347–63
111August 8 Padres 10–4 Omar Daal (3–12) Brian Tollberg (2–2)None14,18148–63
112August 9 Padres 3–2 Chris Brock (6–5) Heathcliff Slocumb (2–4)None16,54149–63
113August 10 Padres 3–15 Woody Williams (7–4) Randy Wolf (9–6)None15,68149–64
114August 11 Astros 2–7 Marc Valdes (3–4) Vicente Padilla (2–3)None15,55149–65
115August 12 Astros 3–2 Robert Person (6–4) Wade Miller (1–4) Jeff Brantley (18)21,18850–65
116August 13 Astros 7–14 José Cabrera (1–2) Omar Daal (3–13)None20,12950–66
117August 14 Diamondbacks 3–4 (11) Dan Plesac (2–0) Jeff Brantley (1–7) Matt Mantei (10)14,08350–67
118August 15 Diamondbacks 6–11 Byung-hyun Kim (3–5) Wayne Gomes (4–5)None16,94950–68
119August 16 Diamondbacks 1–5 Armando Reynoso (10–7) Bruce Chen (6–2)None23,49850–69
120August 18@ Cardinals 6–7 Jason Christiansen (3–8) Chris Brock (6–6)None46,25350–70
121August 19@ Cardinals 3–6 Pat Hentgen (12–9) Omar Daal (3–14)None47,16350–71
122August 20@ Cardinals 6–0 Kent Bottenfield (8–9) Britt Reames (0–1)None43,00051–71
123August 21@ Reds 4–7 Pete Harnisch (5–6) Randy Wolf (9–7) Danny Graves (21)21,55851–72
124August 22@ Reds 5–4 Vicente Padilla (3–3) Larry Luebbers (0–2) Jeff Brantley (19)22,47052–72
125August 23@ Reds 4–3 Chris Brock (7–6) Danny Graves (10–4) Vicente Padilla (1)20,25553–72
126August 24@ Reds 3–8 Steve Parris (8–14) Omar Daal (3–15)None25,74553–73
127August 25@ Giants 3–16 Russ Ortiz (10–10) Kent Bottenfield (8–10)None18,38453–74
128August 26@ Giants 5–2 Randy Wolf (10–7) Kirk Rueter (8–9) Jeff Brantley (20)19,63654–74
129August 27@ Giants 2–1 (10) Ed Vosberg (1–0) Aaron Fultz (3–2)None18,71755–74
130August 28 Rockies 3–2 Robert Person (7–4) Masato Yoshii (5–14) Jeff Brantley (21)14,11856–74
131August 29 Rockies 1–2 Brian Rose (5–7) Omar Daal (3–16) José Jiménez (17)14,86256–75
132August 30 Rockies 4–5 (11) Gabe White (9–1) Wayne Gomes (4–6) José Jiménez (18)14,15056–76
September (9–20)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
133September 1@ Dodgers 1–2 Mike Fetters (6–2) Chris Brock (7–7) Jeff Shaw (23)28,38356–77
134September 2@ Dodgers 0–1 (10) Matt Herges (9–3) Vicente Padilla (3–4)None37,24456–78
135September 3@ Dodgers 1–6 Chan Ho Park (15–8) Robert Person (7–5) Jeff Shaw (24)38,15056–79
136September 4@ Giants 0–3 Russ Ortiz (12–10) Omar Daal (3–17) Robb Nen (34)40,93056–80
137September 5@ Giants 5–8 John Johnstone (3–4) Ed Vosberg (1–1) Robb Nen (35)40,93056–81
138September 6@ Giants 4–5 Aaron Fultz (4–2) Vicente Padilla (3–5) Alan Embree (2)40,93056–82
139September 8@ Mets 2–0 Vicente Padilla (4–5) Mike Hampton (13–9) Jeff Brantley (22)38,80857–82
140September 9@ Mets 6–3 Robert Person (8–5) Turk Wendell (7–5)None42,32458–82
141September 10@ Mets 0–3 Al Leiter (15–7) Omar Daal (3–18)None53,77558–83
142September 11 (1) Expos 5–2 Cliff Politte (3–2) Dustin Hermanson (11–13) Jeff Brantley (23)see 2nd game59–83
143September 11 (2) Expos 6–7 Guillermo Mota (1–1) Vicente Padilla (4–6) Scott Strickland (5)11,31059–84
144September 12 Expos 0–1 Tony Armas Jr. (5–8) Amaury Telemaco (1–1) Scott Strickland (6)12,13559–85
145September 13 Expos 15–5 Bruce Chen (7–2) Felipe Lira (4–6)None12,31660–85
146September 15 Marlins 7–4 Robert Person (9–5) A. J. Burnett (2–6)None13,06461–85
147September 16 Marlins 2–3 Brad Penny (6–7) Omar Daal (3–19) Antonio Alfonseca (41)15,25561–86
148September 17 Marlins 6–5 Randy Wolf (11–7) Chuck Smith (4–6) Thomas Jacquez (1)15,48662–86
149September 18 Pirates 5–6 Rich Loiselle (1–3) Vicente Padilla (4–7) Mike Williams (20)11,47062–87
150September 19 Pirates 8–12 Matt Skrmetta (2–2) Amaury Telemaco (1–2) Mike Williams (21)11,36262–88
151September 20 Pirates 6–7 (10) Rich Loiselle (2–3) Chris Brock (7–8) Mike Williams (22)12,76262–89
152September 21 Mets 6–5 Jeff Brantley (2–7) Rick White (5–9)None17,76963–89
153September 22 Mets 6–9 Bobby J. Jones (10–6) Randy Wolf (11–8) Armando Benítez (39)21,12863–90
154September 23 Mets 3–7 Mike Hampton (14–10) Cliff Politte (3–3)None22,57063–91
155September 24 Mets 2–3 Glendon Rusch (11–11) Bruce Chen (7–3) Armando Benítez (40)31,39163–92
156September 25@ Cubs 3–4 Rubén Quevedo (3–9) Robert Person (9–6) Tim Worrell (2)26,10463–93
157September 26@ Cubs 10–4 Omar Daal (4–19) Jon Lieber (12–11)None26,05564–93
158September 27@ Cubs 0–1 Kerry Wood (8–7) Randy Wolf (11–9) Tim Worrell (3)28,18064–94
159September 28@ Cubs 4–2 Cliff Politte (4–3) Joey Nation (0–2) Vicente Padilla (2)22,91665–94
160September 29@ Marlins 1–7 Chuck Smith (6–6) Bruce Chen (7–4)None15,81665–95
161September 30@ Marlins 5–11 Reid Cornelius (4–10) Robert Person (9–7)None23,88265–96
October (0–1)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
162October 1@ Marlins 5–7 Ryan Dempster (14–10) Amaury Telemaco (1–3) Antonio Alfonseca (45)21,05565–97

Roster

2000 Philadelphia Phillies
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

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 Mike Lieberthal 108389108.2781571
1B Pat Burrell 111408106.2601879
2B Mickey Morandini 9130276.252022
SS Desi Relaford 8325356.221330
3B Scott Rolen 128483144.2982689
LF Ron Gant 8934387.2542038
CF Doug Glanville 154637175.275852
RF Bobby Abreu 154576182.3162579

Other batters

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

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
Kevin Jordan 10933774.220536
Travis Lee 5618043.239114
Marlon Anderson 4116237.228115
Alex Arias 7015529.187215
Kevin Sefcik 9915336.235010
Rob Ducey 11215230.197625
Tomás Pérez 4514031.221113
Brian Hunter 8513829.210722
Rico Brogna 3812932.248113
Tom Prince 4612229.238216
Gary Bennett 317418.24325
Jimmy Rollins 145317.32105
David Newhan 10173.17600
Chris Pritchett 5111.09100
Reggie Taylor 9111.09100
Clemente Álvarez 251.20000

Pitching

Starting pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Randy Wolf 32206.11194.36160
Robert Person 28173.1973.63164
Curt Schilling 16112.2663.9196
Andy Ashby 16101.1475.6851
Bruce Chen 1594.1343.6380
Paul Byrd 1783.0296.5153
Omar Daal 1271.0294.6951
Kent Bottenfield 844.0124.5031
Dave Coggin 527.0205.3317

Other pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Cliff Politte 1259.0433.6650
Amaury Telemaco 1324.1136.6622

Relief pitchers

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

PlayerGWLSVERASO
Jeff Brantley 5527235.8657
Wayne Gomes 654674.4049
Chris Brock 637814.3469
Ed Vosberg 311104.1323
Jason Boyd 300106.5532
Vicente Padilla 282625.3421
Mark Holzemer 250107.7119
Scott Aldred 231305.7521
Steve Schrenk 202307.3319
Bryan Ward 200002.3311
Trever Miller 140008.3610
Carlos Reyes 100205.234
Tom Jacquez 900111.056
Doug Nickle 400013.500
Kirk Bullinger 30005.404
Mark Brownson 21007.203

Farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
Red Barons
International League Marc Bombard
AA Reading Phillies Eastern League Gary Varsho
A Clearwater Phillies Florida State League Ken Oberkfell
A Piedmont Boll Weevils South Atlantic League Greg Legg
A-Short Season Batavia Muckdogs New York–Penn League Frank Klebe
Rookie GCL Phillies Gulf Coast League Ramón Avilés

[10] [11]

Related Research Articles

The 2002 New York Yankees season was the 100th season for the Yankees. The team finished with a record of 103-58 finishing 10.5 games ahead of the Boston Red Sox. New York was managed by Joe Torre. The Yankees played at Yankee Stadium. 2002 was a transition year for the Yankees, as they soldiered on without Paul O'Neill, Tino Martinez, Scott Brosius and Chuck Knoblauch, main pieces in the 1990s dynasty. In the playoffs, they lost in the ALDS in 4 games to the Anaheim Angels, marking the 2002 Yankees season a failure as they did not advance to a World Series for the first time since 1997; failing to win their fifth straight pennant; they did not win a World Championship, giving the team a 2-year title drought.

The Seattle Mariners 1997 season was their 21st season, and the team won their second American League West title, with a record of 90–72 (.556), six games ahead of the runner-up Anaheim Angels. For the second straight year, they led the AL in runs scored (925) and shattered the all-time record for most home runs hit by a team in one season with 264. Five Mariners scored at least 100 runs and six hit at least 20 home runs. In addition, the Seattle pitching staff led the league with 1,207 strikeouts. In the postseason, the Mariners lost the ALDS to the Baltimore Orioles in 4 games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2000 Boston Red Sox season</span>

The 2000 Boston Red Sox season was the 100th season in the franchise's Major League Baseball history. The Red Sox finished second in the American League East with a record of 85 wins and 77 losses, 2+12 games behind the New York Yankees, who went on to win the 2000 World Series. The Red Sox did not qualify for the postseason, as the AL wild card went to the Seattle Mariners, who had finished second in the American League West with a record of 91–71.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2000 Anaheim Angels season</span>

The 2000 Anaheim Angels season involved the Angels finishing 3rd in the American League West with a record of 82 wins and 80 losses.

The 1992 California Angels season involved the Angels finishing 5th in the American League West with a record of 72 wins and 90 losses.

The 2001 Kansas City Royals season involved the Royals finishing 5th in the American League Central with a record of 65 wins and 97 losses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2001 Atlanta Braves season</span>

The 2001 Atlanta Braves season marked the franchise's 36th season in Atlanta and 131st overall. The Braves won their seventh consecutive division title. The season saw the team finish first in the NL East Division with an 88-74 record – the worst among playoff teams in 2001, and also the worst record for the Braves since the 1994 strike-reduced season. Atlanta finished the season with just a 2 game division lead over the Philadelphia Phillies.

The 2001 San Francisco Giants season was the Giants' 119th year in Major League Baseball, their 44th year in San Francisco since their move from New York following the 1957 season, and their second at Pacific Bell Park. The team finished in second place in the National League West with a 90–72 record, two games behind the Arizona Diamondbacks, and they finished three games behind the St. Louis Cardinals for the Wild Card spot. The Giants set franchise records for home runs (235) and pinch hit home runs (14).

The 2000 San Francisco Giants season was the Giants' 118th season in Major League Baseball and their 43rd season in San Francisco since their move from New York following the 1957 season. The Giants finished in first place in the National League West with a record of 97 wins and 65 losses, which was the best record in the major leagues in 2000. They lost the National League Division Series in four games to the New York Mets. The team played their first season in newly opened Pacific Bell Park. The Giants had 889 runs batted in (RBI), the most in franchise history, while their 925 runs scored is the most in the club's San Francisco era.

The 1983 San Diego Padres season was the 15th season in franchise history. The team finished with an 81–81 record, their second year in a row finishing 81-81. They scored 653 runs and allowed 653 runs for a run differential of zero, becoming only the second team with a .500 winning percentage and a zero run differential.

The 2004 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 122nd season in the history of the franchise. The Phillies finished in second-place in the National League East with a record of 86–76, ten games behind the Atlanta Braves, and six games behind the NL wild-card champion Houston Astros. The Phillies were managed by their former shortstop Larry Bowa (85–75) and Gary Varsho (1–1), who replaced Bowa on the penultimate day of the season. The Phillies played their first season of home games at Citizens Bank Park, which opened April 12, with the visiting Cincinnati Reds defeating the Phillies, 4–1.

The 2006 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 124th season in the history of the franchise. The Phillies finished in second place in the National League East, 12 games behind the New York Mets, and three games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL Wild-Card race. The Phillies, managed by Charlie Manuel, played their home games at Citizens Bank Park. Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard was the National League's Most Valuable Player for the 2006 season, and was the winner of the Century 21 Home Run Derby, held during the All-Star Break at Pittsburgh.

The 1986 Montreal Expos season was the 18th season in franchise history, finishing in 4th with a 78–83 record and 29 1/2 games behind the eventual World Series champion New York Mets.

The 1998 San Francisco Giants season was the Giants' 116th season in Major League Baseball, their 41st season in San Francisco since their move from New York following the 1957 season, and their 39th at 3Com Park at Candlestick Point. The team finished in second place in the National League West with an 89–74 record, 9½ games behind the San Diego Padres.

The 1999 San Francisco Giants season was the Giants' 117th season in Major League Baseball, their 42nd season in San Francisco since their move from New York following the 1957 season, and their 40th and final season at 3Com Park at Candlestick Point. The team finished in second place in the National League West with an 86–76 record, 14 games behind the Arizona Diamondbacks.

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.

The 1997 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 115th season in the history of the franchise.

The 1999 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 117th season in the history of the franchise.

The 2001 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 119th season in the history of the franchise.

The 1995 Detroit Tigers finished in fourth place in the American League Eastern Division with a record of 60–84 (.417). The strike-shortened 1995 season was the last for Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson and longtime second baseman Lou Whitaker, who each retired at the end of the season, as well as Kirk Gibson who retired in August 1995.

References

  1. 1 2 "Jalal Leach Stats". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  2. "Mark Brownson Stats". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  3. Bobby Estalella Statistics Baseball-Reference.com
  4. Chase Utley Statistics Baseball-Reference.com
  5. "Rob Ducey: Career Statistics". Baseball Reference. Retrieved March 14, 2018.
  6. "Kent Bottenfield Stats". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  7. "Rico Brogna Stats". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  8. "2000 Philadelphia Phillies - National League". www.thebaseballcube.com. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  9. "2000 Philadelphia Phillies Schedule, Box Scores and Splits". Baseball-Reference.com.
  10. Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007
  11. Baseball America 2001 Directory