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2000-Prsent
The new century began with the dawn of a new era as the Phillies
reached an agreement with the city to build a new 43,000-seat ballpark
opening April, 2004 - in South Philadelphia.
The 2000 season began with high expectations after the acquisitions
of Andy Ashby and Mike Jackson, but the club fizzled early and finished
65-97 to end Terry Francona's four-year run as manager.
Former Phillie Larry Bowa took over the managerial reigns for 2001
and led the club to a 21-game improvement (86-76) and a second place
finish. The season was also memorable for the week that baseball
stadiums fell silent. The Phillies' pennant chase - and the rest
of baseball was halted for a week as the nation recovered from
the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11.
Rookie shortstop Jimmy Rollins (pictured left) was a perpetual sparkplug
for the 2001 club, leading the league in stolen bases with 46. Scott
Rolen produced his third and second straight Gold Glove season
and Bobby Abreu became the first Phillies player to record a 30
home run, 30 stolen base year.
In his second year as manager, Larry Bowa's Phillies regressed
from a season that saw them finish two games behind the Braves in
the NL East. The 2002 squad went 80-81 (a rainout was never replayed)
and fell to third place, 21 1/2 games behind Atlanta. They were
never able to recover from a 9-18 start in the season's first month.
Pat Burrell and Bobby Abreu continued to lead the team's offense,
driving in 201 runs between them, and Mike Lieberthal appeared in
130 games, a welcome achievement considering he was coming back
from major knee surgery that cost him all but 34 games of the 2001
season. Jimmy Rollins, who regressed a bit in his second full season,
was voted to start in the All-Star game for the first time in his
career. Randy Wolf also emerged as the staff ace, winning 11 games
and compiling a 3.20 ERA. Especially impressive was August, when
Wolf posted a 1.37 ERA and had a 27-inning scoreless streak.
Philadelphia also cut the cord with prodigal son Scott Rolen in
July, trading him to St. Louis when it became obvious they couldn't
sign him to a long-term contract. They netted Placido Polanco, Bud
Smith and Mike Timlin.
1990-1999
From the standpoint of variety, it would be hard for the Phillies
to top the decade of the 1990s. It was a decade that seemingly had
a little bit of everything.
Another trip to the World Series. An All-Star Game at the Vet. Hall
of Fame inductions, no-hitters, an unassisted triple play, a cycle,
a Rookie of the Year, a strikeout record, and a change at the top
all helped to make the final decade of the 20th century one of the
liveliest in club history.
The highlight of the decade was surely the Phillies' fifth National
League pennant in 1993. Led by a colorful group of hard-charging
players headed by Lenny Dykstra (photo above), Darren Daulton (photo
at left) and John Kruk, the Phils fielded an exciting team that
captured the fancy of fans throughout the country.
After a blazing 45-17 start, the Phillies coasted to the Eastern
Division title, holding first place all but one day. During the
season, the Phils played a memorable doubleheader with the San Diego
Padres that because of three rain delays ended at 4:40 a.m. Dykstra
led the National League in runs (143) and hits (194), and for the
first time the team drew more than three million fans.
The underdog Phillies downed the Atlanta Braves, four games to two
in a pulsating League Championship Series, coming from behind to
win the last three games. Curt Schilling (photo at right) was named
Most Valuable Player in the series as the Phillies became only the
third team in the 20th century to leap from last place the previous
season to first.
In the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays, manager Jim Fregosi's
(photo at left) team fell behind early, and after losing a devastating
15-14 decision, trailed three games to one. Schilling pitched a
gritty 2-0 win in the fifth game, but Joe Carter's three-run homer
off Mitch Williams in the bottom of the ninth inning of game six
gave the Blue Jays an 8-6 win and the Series victory.
The 1993 season would be the only year in the '90s in which the
Phillies had a winning record. But while the team faltered, there
were plenty of individual highlights.
The Phils had no-hitters by Terry Mulholland (photo at right) in
1990 and Tommy Greene in 1991. Mulholland's was the first Phillies
no-hitter at home in the 20th century.
Dykstra and Daulton were involved in a serious auto accident in
1991, but Darren came back in 1992 to lead the National League in
RBI with 109, just the fourth catcher in Major League history to
do that. That same year, second baseman Mickey Morandini gave the
Phils their first unassisted triple play and only the ninth ever
achieved in the big leagues. Kruk hit .323 and Dave Hollins collected
27 homers and 93 RBI, while rookie Jeff Grotwold hit three pinch-hit
home runs in three days.
Later, the Phillies grabbed a chunk of All-Star Game history. Phils
relievers Doug Jones in 1994 and Heathcliff Slocumb in 1995 were
the winning pitchers for the National League. In 1996, the game
was held at the Vet with the Nationals again winning, 6-0.
The 1994 season also launched a parade of Phillies into the Hall
of Fame. Steve Carlton was inducted that year, Mike Schmidt and
Richie Ashburn the next, and Jim Bunning in 1996.
In 1995, Gregg Jefferies became the first Phillies player to hit
for the cycle since 1963. One year later, the hugely popular Jim
Eisenreich (photo at left) hit .361, the highest average for a Phils
regular since 1954.
Scott Rolen (photo at right) made his big league debut late in the
1996 season, and went on to win Rookie of the Year honors the following
year. The 1997 season was also noteworthy because the club hired
Terry Francona as manager, Bill Giles stepped down as team president,
passing the reigns to Dave Montgomery, and Schilling set a National
League record for a righthander with 319 strikeouts. On a tragic
note, Ashburn died suddenly in a New York hotel only hours after
broadcasting a Phillies game.
Although they continued to struggle in the late '90s, the Phillies
still made news. In 1998, Ed Wade was named general manager. Fanning
an even 300, Schilling became just the fifth pitcher in major league
history to strike out 300 in back-to-back seasons. Rolen had a big
season, hitting .290 with 31 homers, 110 RBI and 120 runs while
winning a Gold Glove. Rico Brogna drove in 104 runs, the highest
total for a Phillies first baseman in 66 years. And the club signed
number one draft pick Pat Burrell to a record $8 million contract.
1980-1989
No decade in Phillies history began more gloriously than the 1980s.
After 97 years, the Phillies finally reached the promised land in
1980 by winning their first World Championship. In a continuation
of what had become the team's Golden Era, it was the climax of a
memorable season in which the Phils captured their first National
League pennant in 30 years by winning what is generally considered
the most exciting League Championship Series ever held.
The 1980 season was full of outstanding performances. Mike Schmidt
led the league in home runs with 48 and in RBI with 121 and was
named the Most Valuable Player. Steve Carlton won the Cy Young Award
with a 24-9 record. Outfielder Lonnie Smith was The Sporting News
Rookie of the Year after hitting .339. Bake McBride hit .309 with
83 RBI. And the team got stellar performances from Manny Trillo,
Pete Rose, Larry Bowa, Garry Maddox, Bob Boone and a pitching staff
that included 17-game winner Dick Ruthven (photo at left), late-season
callup Marty Bystrom and a strong bullpen led by Tug McGraw and
Ron Reed.
The Phillies floundered through the first half of the season, but
caught fire in mid-August. Then, winning 21 of 27 games, they clinched
the division title on the next to last day of the season as Schmidt's
two-run homer in the 11th inning defeated the Montreal Expos, 6-4.
Manager Dallas Green's club then defeated the Houston Astros in
the LCS, three games to two. Four of the games were decided in extra
innings. Behind two games to one, the Phillies won the last two,
including a pulsating fifth game in which they had trailed, 5-2,
against Nolan Ryan in the eighth inning. The Phils, who came back
with five runs in the eighth, finally won in the 10th, 8-7, on Maddox's
RBI single. Ruthven got the win in relief and Trillo was named the
LCS MVP.
In the World Series, the Phillies defeated the Kansas City Royals
in six games. They won the first two, lost the next two, then won
games five and six. In the final game at Veterans Stadium, Carlton
got his second win of the Series, but not before some late-inning
heroics by Rose (photo at right), who caught Boone's dropped popup,
and reliever McGraw, who fanned Willie Wilson for the final out.
Schmidt, who hit .381 with two home runs, was the Series MVP.
The Phillies returned to post-season play in 1981 in a season interupted
by a 50-day work stoppage. During the season, Rose broke Stan Musial's
National League record for most hits when he laced his 3631st safety.
Schmidt again won home run and RBI crowns and his second straight
MVP. Because of the long gap, the season was divided into two halves
with the Phillies winning the first half and entering a special
playoff with the Expos. Montreal won the best-of-five series, three
games to two with Steve Rogers blanking the Phils in the deciding
game, 3-0.
After the season, Green resigned as manager to join the Chicago
Cubs, and the Carpenter family sold the team to a partnership headed
by vice president Bill Giles.
Carlton won his fourth Cy Young Award with 23 wins in 1982, and
new catcher Bo Diaz had a fine season, hitting .288 with 18 home
runs and 85 RBI. That winter, the Phils sent five players to the
Cleveland Indians for outfielder Von Hayes (photo at left).
By 1983, many players from the 1980 team were gone. With a number
of older players on the roster, the Phils were dubbed the "Wheeze
Kids."
Schmidt again led the NL with 40 home runs, Carlton won his 300th
game with a 6-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals and John Denny
claimed the Cy Young Award with a 19-6 record. Joe Lefebvre hit
.310, and Al Holland (photo at right), Willie Hernandez and Ron
Reed led an outstanding relief corps.
GM Paul Owens again took over as manager of the team at mid-season,
and with Joe Morgan sparking a hot streak in September, the Phils
won 14 of their last 16 games to clinch the division title. The
Phils then defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers in four games with Carlton
getting two of the three wins and Gary Matthews winning the MVP
with his timely hitting. In the World Series, Maddox's home run
gave the Phils and Denny a 2-1 win over the Baltimore Orioles in
the first game. But the Phils then lost four straight with Scott
McGregor pitching a five-hit, 5-0 win in the clincher.
The Phillies had no more pennant runs after '83. Individual highlights,
however, continued. Two exciting young players burst on the scene
in 1984 with Juan Samuel winning The Sporting News Rookie of the
Year award and Jeff Stone hitting .362. That year, Tim Corcoran
hit .341 and Greg Gross (photo at left) .322 in part-time roles.
The Phillies clobbered the New York Mets, 26-7, in a memorable game
in 1985. Von Hayes slugged two home runs, including a grand slam,
in the first inning to become only the second Phillies player ever
to homer twice in one inning. Glenn Wilson ended the year by leading
National League outfielders in assists and drove in 102 runs.
Schmidt won his seventh and last home run crown and his third and
last MVP award in 1986 after slugging 37 homers and driving in 119
runs. Another Phils legend, Steve Carlton, was released in June,
while Hayes had a fine season, batting .305 and driving in 98 runs.
In 1987, Schmidt hit the 500th home run of his career off the Pittsburgh
Pirates' Don Robinson. Steve Bedrosian registered 40 saves to win
the Cy Young Award, and Kent Tekulve (photo at right) set a club
record by appearing in 90 games. Schmidt collected 35 homers and
113 RBI, Samuel had 28 home runs and drove in 100 runs and Milt
Thompson hit .302.
Lee Thomas was named Phillies general manager in 1988. In 1989,
John Kruk hit .331, switch-hitter Steve Jeltz became the first Phillie
to hit a home run from each side of the plate in the same game,
and Schmidt retired with 548 home runs.
1970-1979
For the Phillies, the 1970s marked the start of the team's Golden
Era. It was easily the most successful period the club ever had.
During the decade, the Phillies won three division titles while
establishing the team that would eventually win the franchise's
first World Series. The team moved into a new stadium and great
players were everywhere.
The 1970s Phillies were future Hall of Famers Mike Schmidt (photo
above) and Steve Carlton (photo at left). They were Greg Luzinski,
Garry Maddox, Larry Bowa, Bob Boone and Tug McGraw. They were Bake
McBride, Dave Cash, Jay Johnstone, Dick Ruthven and many others
who became household names in Philadelphia.
Although the decade began slowly with three sixth place finishes
and one fifth, the early years were not entirely dormant. In 1970,
the Phils played their last game at Connie Mack Stadium. They moved
into newly constructed Veterans Stadium the following year. That
season, Rick Wise hit two home runs while pitching a no-hitter against
the Cincinnati Reds and Deron Johnson (photo below) clubbed 34 home
runs, while Willie Montanez socked 30.
Early in 1972, John Quinn in his last move as general manager, traded
Wise to the St. Louis Cardinals for Carlton. Shortly afterward,
Paul Owens became GM and Dallas Green was promoted to farm director.
Carlton, enroute to his first Cy Young Award, had one of the greatest
seasons of any pitcher in big league history in 1972 when he won
27, posted a 1.98 ERA and became the first Phillies pitcher to strike
out 300 batters when he fanned 310. The entire team won just 59
games.
Also in 1972, with vice president Bill Giles' (photo at left) spectacular
promotional events occurring regularly at the Vet, world-famous
Karl Wallenda walked across the middle of the stadium on a high-wire
far above the highest bleacher seat. Later that season, Owens fired
manager Frank Lucchesi and took over the team himself. Schmidt made
his first appearance in a Phillies uniform, and after the season
team president Bob Carpenter handed over the reigns to his son Ruly.
By 1974, with Danny Ozark (photo below) managing the team, the Phillies
had become a contender. The club led the Eastern Division early
in the season before finishing third. After hitting just .196 with
18 home runs as a rookie, Schmidt won the home run crown with 36
while Jim Lonborg won 17 games.
Wheeler-dealer Owens kept bringing in players to fill key gaps on
the roster. First Cash and Johnston in 1974, then Maddox and McGraw
in '75 proved to be important additions. Johnston hit .329 as the
Phils placed second that year. Schmidt again topped the league in
home runs with 38, and Luzinski led the circuit in RBI with 120
while slamming 34 homers and hitting .300. Gene Garber had an outstanding
year in the bullpen with 10 wins and 14 saves in a league-leading
71 appearances.
The Phillies finally broke through in 1976, in the process passing
two million in attendance for the first time with 2,480,150. It
being the Bicentennial year, the club played host to the All-Star
Game, won 7-1 by the National League. Then the Phils finished with
a club record 101 wins, leading the division by nine games. Schmidt
won his third straight home run title with 38, including four in
a 10-inning, 18-16 Phillies win at Wrigley Field. Maddox hit .330
and Johnston batted .318, while Carlton won 20 and Lonborg 18.
In the National League playoffs, the Phillies lost three straight
to the Cincinnati Reds, managed by the 1959 Phillies' second baseman
Sparky Anderson. The Phils lost the first two games 6-3 and 6-2
at the Vet and the third, 7-6, in Cincinnati.
The Phils, however, were back in the NLCS the following year after
another 101-win season. Capturing the division title by five games,
the team was led by Carlton's 23 wins and Larry Christenson's 19
wins. McBride, acquired in a trade, hit .339, Luzinski had a monster
.309-39-130 season and Schmidt added 38 home runs again. Seven players
homered in double figures and the Phils led the league with a .279
team batting averaqe.
This time the Phillies lost three out of four in a controversial
playoff series to the Los Angeles Dodgers. After capturing their
first post-season win since 1915 in the first game, 7-5, and losing
the second, 7-1, at Dodger Stadium, the Phils returned home only
to lose the third game, 6-5, as Luzinski couldn't hold Manny Mota's
drive to the left field wall. The fourth game, played in pouring
rain, ended the series with the Phillies losing to Tommy John and
the Dodgers, 4-1.
The Phillies made their third straight trip to the playoffs in 1978
after winning the division flag by just one and one-half games.
The team clinched the title on the next to last day of the season
as Randy Lerch hit two home runs and pitched the Phils to a 10-8
win over the Pittsburgh Pirates. That year, the Phillie Phanatic
(photo at left) made his debut and Luzinski had 35 homers and 101
RBI. But no Phillies player hit .300 and Carlton was the biggest
winner with 16.
In another disappointing playoff, the Phillies again bowed to the
Dodgers. The Phils lost the first two games, 9-5 and 4-0 at home.
Carlton won in LA, 9-4, but the Phillies fell, 4-3, in the finale
with a dropped fly ball by the usually sure-handed Maddox aiding
the Dodger win.
In December 1978, the Phillies signed Pete Rose to a four-year contract.
Pennant expectations soared. But despite Rose's hustle and .331
batting average, Schmidt's 45 homers and 114 RBI and the arrival
in a trade of slick-fielding second baseman Manny Trillo, the Phils
could do no better than fourth place. They beat the Chicago Cubs
in a 23-22 slugfest at Wrigley Field during which the teams combined
for 11 home runs. Late in the season, Ozark was fired as manager
and Green moved down from the front office to take over the team.
1960-1969
After the first game of the 1960 season, Eddie Sawyer, who had returned
to the team two years earlier, abruptly quit his job as Phillies
manager. "I'm 49," Sawyer explained, "and I want to live to be 50."
Sawyer had uncanny insight because what lay ahead for the Phillies
was enough to test even the strongest of mortals. The decade of
the 1960s turned out to be one of the most star-crossed eras in
club history.
From a record losing streak in 1961, to the excruciatingly painful
lost pennant in 1964, to a series of dismal teams in the late '60s,
the decade was not a very pleasant one for the Phillies.
What made the decade somewhat palatable was the presence of some
excellent players, especially Richie Allen (photo above), Johnny
Callison and future Hall of Famer Jim Bunning (photo at right).
Gene Mauch, another name indelibly linked to the '60s Phils, replaced
Sawyer. That same season the Phillies landed Tony Taylor and Tony
Gonzalez (photo at left) in big trades. In 1961, while finishing
last for the fourth straight year, the Phils set a Major League
record by losing 23 straight games. The streak ended when John Buzhardt
beat the Milwaukee Braves.
Also in 1961, Robin Roberts pitched his last game for the Phillies
and Art Mahaffey (photo at right) struck out 17 Chicago Cubs in
one game. Mahaffey won 19 in 1962 as the Phillies had their first
winning season since 1953.
By 1963--with Richie Ashburn in his first year as a Phillies broadcaster--the
team had been rebuilt into a contender by general manager John Quinn
(photo at left). With the help of players such as Don Demeter and
Wes Covington, the team finished fourth. But a pennant fever was
growing.
The 1964 season turned out to be one of the most memorable in Phillies
history. Allen arrived and with his brilliant hitting became National
League Rookie of the Year. Bunning pitched a perfect game against
the New York Mets and Callison's three-run homer in the ninth inning
gave the National League a 7-4 victory in the All-Star Game.
Then there was the downside. After leading the league much of the
season and owning a six and one-half game lead with 12 games to
play, a seemingly certain pennant was snatched away as the Phillies
lost 10 straight in late September. The collapse devastated the
entire city.
In the years that followed, Quinn tried desperately to capture a
pennant by bringing in a slew of veteran players. It didn't work,
and the Phils sank to the lower levels of the standings.
Of the few bright spots, Chris Short (photo at right) won 20 games
in 1966 and Bunning had his third straight 19-win season. Gonzalez
finished second in the batting race in 1967 with a .339 average.
In 1969, pitchers Jerry Johnson, Woodie Fryman, Larry Jackson and
Rick Wise hurled four consecutive shutouts.
1950-1959
If there was one thing that characterized the 1950s, it was the
Whiz Kids. Purely and simply, the decade belonged to the Whiz Kids.
The Whiz Kids were Robin Roberts, Richie Ashburn and Del Ennis (photo
at left). They were Granny Hamner, Willie Jones and Curt Simmons.
All were products of the Phillies farm system, young, exciting players
who with a handful of key veterans gave the franchise one of its
most beloved teams.
Managed by Eddie Sawyer, and also featuring such solid vets as Andy
Seminick, Dick Sisler and Eddie Waitkus (photo at right), who had
returned from the previous year's gunshot wound, the Whiz Kids'
star shone only briefly. The club won its first National League
pennant in 35 years in 1950. Disappointingly, it could climb no
higher than third place thereafter.
The 1950 season was one of unbounding excitement. The Phillies led
most of the way, and with 11 games left to play had a seven-game
lead. The team, however, went into a late-season tailspin, losing
eight of 10 games. On the last day of the season, the Phils had
a one-game lead.
Playing the final game against the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field,
the Phillies won, 4-1, in 10 innings on Sisler's dramatic three-run
homer. Roberts went 10 gritty innings to get the win, after Ashburn
threw out Cal Abrams at the plate in the bottom of the ninth.
In the World Series, the Phils were no match for the New York Yankees,
losing all four games, including the first three by one run. The
highlight of the Series for the Phils came in the first game when
Sawyer tapped Jim Konstanty (photo at left) as the starter, and
the veteran reliever gave up just four hits before losing, 1-0.
Konstanty, who won 16 and saved 22, was named the National League's
Most Valuable Player, the first reliever to win the award. Roberts
won 20 in what would be his first of six straight 20-plus win seasons.
Ennis led the league in RBI with 126.
After 1950, however, the Phils faded quickly. They were fifth in
1951, and by the end of the decade had drifted back to the bottom.
Roberts had a sparkling 28-7 record in 1952, Ashburn won batting
titles in 1955 and 1958 and Ennis drove in more than 100 runs in
six of seven seasons. Smoky Burgess (photo at right)hit .368 in
1954, Stan Lopata set a home run record for Phils catchers with
32 in 1956, pitcher Jack Sanford with a 19-8 mark and first baseman
Ed Bouchee won top rookie honors in 1957 and Gene Freese hit three
grand slams homers in 1959.
The Phillies played host to their first All-Star Game in 1952. Two
years later, the Athletics moved away, and Shibe Park became the
property of the Phils. In 1957 John Kennedy and Chico Fernandez
became the Phillies first black players. John Quinn was named the
team's general manager in 1959, replacing Roy Hamey. One of his
first moves was to land Johnny Callison in a trade. The 1959 Phils
had a team that included Sparky Anderson (photo at left) at second
and NBA player Gene Conley on the mound.
1940-1949
From the way it began, it would've been impossible to predict how
the decade of the 1940s would wind up for the Phillies. In an amazing
turnaround, the team went from rock bottom to being a pennant-contender.
The franchise had its worst teams in the early 1940s. By 1942, the
club had lost more than 100 games for the fifth straight season,
including a club-record 111 in 1941.
More weak teams followed during the World War II years between 1942
and 1945. But by 1949, a pennant was just around the corner.
The decade began with a practicing dentist, Doc Prothro, as manager,
and ended with a college professor, Eddie Sawyer (photo at right),
as the skipper. The Phils entered the '40s with a pitching staff
anchored by Hugh Mulcahy, who before he became the first Major Leaguer
drafted in WWII, was known as "Losing Pitcher." They ended the decade
with a future Hall of Famer named Robin Roberts leading the staff.
The Phillies of the early '40s had a kid from Chester who answered
to Danny Murtaugh playing second base. Nick Etten was a solid first
baseman. And in 1942, left fielder Danny Litwhiler (photo at left)
became the first outfielder to play a whole season and field a perfect
1.000.
The 1942 season also launched an upheaval at the top. Team ownership
went rapidly from debt-ridden Gerry Nugent to William Cox, who was
soon banned from baseball for betting on his own team, to Bob Carpenter.
Under Carpenter and the club's first full-time general manager,
Herb Pennock, improvement occurred quickly. A farm system, which
later had working agreements with 15 teams, was developed. Youngsters
Del Ennis, Andy Seminick and Granny Hamner (photo at right) were
signed. And in a contest among fans to pick a new nickname for the
team, Blue Jays was the winner. It never became the official nickname,
and was phased out by 1949.
Ken Raffensberger became the first Phillies pitcher to win an All-Star
game in 1944. Andy Karl set a league record in 1945 by appearing
in 67 games. In 1946, first baseman Frank McCormick set a league
fielding record with a .999 mark, the team drew 1,045,247, nearly
double its previous attendance record, and Ennis was named Rookie
of the Year.
The Phils began 1947 with their first Spring Training at Clearwater.
Harry Walker won the league's batting championship with a .363 average,
and a record 41,660 watched a doubleheader with Jackie Robinson
and the Brooklyn Dodgers at Shibe Park.
Within the next year, Roberts and Richie Ashburn (photo at left)
had arrived. So had Curt Simmons and veterans Dick Sisler and Jim
Konstanty.
In 1949, with the soon-to-be named Whiz Kids virtually in place,
the Phils wound up third, their highest finish since 1917. First
baseman Eddie Waitkus was shot by a deranged woman in June, but
that proved only a temporary setback as the Phillies continued their
push upward.
1930-1939
No period in Phillies history was more bizarre than the decade of
the 1930s. On the one hand, the club had some of its worst teams.
On the other hand, it had some of its best players.
A perfect example was the 1930 season. The Phillies hit .315 for
the third highest team batting average in National League history.
Five regulars hit above .300. Yet, the club still lost 102 games,
thanks largely to a pitching staff that had an ERA of 6.71 and gave
up an all-time record 1199 runs.
In 1930 Chuck Klein (photo at left) hit .386 with 40 home runs and
170 RBI in one of the best years any Phillie ever had. Lefty O'Doul
added a .383 average during a year that also saw Grover Cleveland
Alexander return to the team as a washed-up part-timer.
Klein was in the midst of one of baseball's finest first five-years.
In 1931, he won his first of three home run titles with 31 homers
while also leading the league in RBI, hitting .337 and being named
the league's Most Valuable Player. After going .348-38-137 and winning
another MVP award in 1932, Klein topped off his heroics in 1933
by winning the Phillies' only Triple Crown with a .368 average,
28 home runs and 129 RBI. He and fiery shortstop Dick Bartell (photo
at right) were both starters in the first All-Star Game that year.
The Phils of the 1930s had loads of outstanding hitters. First baseman
Don Hurst led the league with 143 RBI while hitting .339 in 1932.
Spud Davis, Pinky Whitney (photo at left), Johnny Moore, Ethan Allen
and Dolph Camilli were all heavy hitters as the decade progressed.
Good pitching, though, was a rarity. Jumbo Elliott in 1931 and Curt
Davis in 1934 were 19-game winners. In 1935, manager and catcher
Jimmie Wilson converted third baseman Bucky Walters (photo below)
to pitcher, and he along with Claude Passeau became fine moundsmen.
But it wasn't enough to keep the Phillies from four eighth place
and three seventh place finishes during the decade.
The Phils' best season was in 1932 when they wound up fourth under
manager Burt Shotton, the team's only first division finish between
1917 and 1949.
The Phillies of the '30s were noted for trading their top players
to make ends meet. William Baker died in 1930 and he was eventually
replaced by Gerry Nugent, who swapped everything that wasn't nailed
down. Nugent's wife, Mae, became the first woman vice president
in the National League.
In 1935, the Phils met the Cincinnati Reds at Crosley Field in the
first Major League night game. That year, second baseman Chile Gomez
became the team's first Latin American player. In 1938, the Phils
finally moved out of Baker Bowl and into Shibe Park where one year
later thay played in their first home night game.
1920-1929
By the time the 1920s arrived, the Phillies were slipping into what
would become the bleakest period in club history. It lasted for
31 years during which time the Phils had just one first division
finish.
The decade of the '20s was especially dreary. The Phillies finished
eighth five times and seventh three times. They lost more than 100
games four times, had six different managers and unwisely traded
future Hall of Famers Dave Bancroft and Eppa Rixey before their
primes.
On a more positive note, outfielder Cy Williams (photo at right)
emerged as the Phillies' new slugger, winning three home run crowns.
When he won his first Phillies title in 1920, Williams extended
the club's record to seven home run crowns in an eight-year period.
Hitting home runs was easy at Baker Bowl where the right field wall
stood just 272 feet down the line. In 1921, the Phils set a Major
League team record with 88 homers. The Phils led the National League
in homers in five straight years bwetween 1919-23. Williams slammed
41 round-trippers in 1923, the same year the Phils lost a 20-14
decision to the St. Louis Cardinals in a game which featured a record
10 home runs.
In the early 1920s, Casey Stengel played with the Phillies. So did
future Philadelphia Eagles Hall of Fame coach Earle (Greasy) Neale.
Phils pitcher Lee Meadows was one of the first Major Leaguers to
wear glasses.
The Phillies always had plenty of .300 hitters. In 1922, the same
year the club lost a 26-23 shootout in Chicago to the Cubs in a
game that still stands as a Major League record for most runs by
two teams, outfielders Williams, Cliff Lee and Curt Walker all hit
over .300. George Harper hit .349 in 1925.
The Phils were the victims of the major league's first unassisted
triple play when the Boston Braves' Ernie Padgett turned the trick
in 1923. In 1927, a section of the Baker Bowl grandstand collapsed,
forcing the Phillies to play 12 games at Shibe Park.
The best news of the decade came in 1928. The team hired the highly
respected Burt Shotton as manager, signed minor leaguers Pinky Whitney
and Don Hurst, and--best of all--bought a kid named Chuck Klein
for $5000. Klein went on to become one of the greatest players in
Phillies history.
Klein paid immediate dividends by hitting .356, driving in 145 runs
and leading the league with 43 homers in 1929. He was joined that
year by Lefty O'Doul (photo at left), who led the league with a
.398 batting average while collecting a record 254 hits to go along
with 32 home runs and 122 RBI. Altogether six Phillies hit over
.300 in 1929, four slugging more than 200 hits as the team placed
fifth, its highest finish since 1917.
1910-1919
Thirty-three years after their first National League season, the
Phillies finally reached the World Series. They did it in 1915 with
a powerful team led by first-year manager Pat Moran.
The Phils swept to the pennant with a 90-62 record, leading most
of the way and finishing seven games ahead of the defending world
champion Boston Braves. Grover Cleveland Alexander won 31 games
and pitched four one-hitters, Erskine Mayer won 21, and Gavvy Cravath
(photo at right) set a Major League record with 24 home runs while
also leading the league in RBI and runs scored. The home run record
would last until Babe Ruth broke it in 1919.
After Alexander and the Phils won the first game of the World Series,
the club lost four straight to the Boston Red Sox, the end coming
when Harry Hooper bounced his second ground-rule home run of the
game into the center field bleachers for a 5-4 Red Sox victory,
Boston's fourth straight one-run triumph.
It was otherwise, mostly a splendid decade for the Phillies until
the later years. Sherry Magee led the league in batting, RBI and
runs scored in 1910. The following year, the Phils signed Alexander,
and the future Hall of Famer won 28 games as a rookie. Two more
future Hall of Famers, pitcher Eppa Rixey in 1912 and shortstop
Dave Bancroft (photo at left) in 1915 joined the club. In 1913,
Doc Miller set a club record with 20 pinch-hits and Tom Seaton won
27 games as the Phils leaped into second place. And the slugging
Cravath won six home run crowns between 1913 and 1919.
The Phils lost key players to the Federal League and to World War
I during the decade. They also lost another owner. Horace Fogel,
an ex-sports writer, was banned from baseball for life for injudicious
comments about the league.
In 1913, former New York City police commissioner William Baker
became the team's seventh president since Reach left in 1903. Baker
had Philadelphia Park renamed Baker Bowl, but more significantly
would destroy a fine team after its second straight second place
finish in 1917. His worst move was trading Alexander, after he had
won 30 or more games in three straight years, to the Chicago Cubs
for two nobodies. Alexander had been drafted into the Army, and
Baker was afraid that he might not make it back as a player.
The Phils set an attendance record in 1916 of 515,365 that stood
until after World War II. In 1918, slugger Cy Williams arrived in
one of the Phillies' best trades, the club had its longest game
in history, a 21-inning, 2-1 loss to the Cubs, and Moran (photo
at right) was fired. By 1919, the Phils had slipped to eighth place
as a long, dreary era began. That year, Joe Oeschger pitched all
20 innings of a 9-9 tie with the Brooklyn Dodgers.
1900-1909
As the 20th century dawned, the Phillies had become one of the stronger
teams in the National League, with good reason. The team had three
future Hall of Famers in the lineup with Ed Delahanty at first base,
Nap Lajoie (photo at right) at second and Elmer Flick in right field.
In 1900, Flick led the league in RBI and was second in batting average
with a .367 mark.
Hopes of the team's first pennant, however, were soon dashed when
the American League was formed in 1901. Within two years, the new
league had signed not only the Phillies' three star players but
a handful of others, most of them going to the rival Philadelphia
Athletics. In a cruel touch of irony, the first five American League
batting champions would all be former Phillies with Lajoie winning
three titles and Delahanty and Flick each one.
After placing second in 1901, their highest finish since 1887, the
Phils slipped in the standings. To make matters worse, in 1903,
a balcony at Philadelphia Park collapsed, sending 12 people to their
deaths and injuring 232 others. Soon afterward, popular owner Al
Reach and his partner John Rogers sold the team.
There were plenty of bright spots, though. Chick Fraser (photo at
left) in 1903 and John Lush in 1906 pitched no-hitters. There would
not be another Phillies no-hitter for 58 years. Sherry Magee (photo
below) led the league in RBI in 1907 while hitting a lofty .328.
Togie Pittinger won 23 games in 1905, Tully Sparks won 22 in 1907
and George McQuillan won 23 with a 1.52 ERA in 1908. That same year,
rookie lefthander Harry Coveleskie earned the nickname "Giant Killer"
by beating the New York Giants late in the season three times in
six days to knock John McGraw's team out of the pennant.
The first City Series games between the Phillies and the A's were
played in 1903. The series would be a popular attraction for Philadelphia
baseball fans for more than 50 years.
As usual, the Phillies had their share of interesting personalities.
Ponderous manager Billy Shettsline was a colorful figure who was
in the midst of working his way from ticket-taker to club president.
His arm gone bad, Kid Gleason had left the mound to become the team's
second baseman. Norristown's Roy Thomas was a stellar outfielder
and leadoff hitter, whistling catcher Red Dooin was a superb backstop
and Kitty Bransfield was a solid player at first base. Toward the
end of the decade, the Phillies' third baseman was a man named Eddie
Grant. Some years later, having been traded to the New York Giants,
Grant would become the first major league player killed in World
War I.
By the end of the decade, the Phillies were starting to climb back
up in the National League standings. Slowly, the team that would
soon win the club's first pennant was being put together.
1883-1899
No one could have realized it at the time, but when the Phillies
were formed in 1883, history was in the making. Now, as the 21st
century begins, the Phillies are the oldest, continuous, one-name,
one-city franchise in all of professional sports.
The original Phillies began when the Worcester Brown Stockings were
disbanded and the franchise was moved by the National League to
Philadelphia. Al Reach, who in 1866 had become the first professional
baseball player and was later a successful sporting goods dealer,
became the Phillies first owner along with attorney John Rogers.
The first Phillies game was played May 1, 1883 at Recreation Park
on the corner of 24th Street and Ridge Avenue with the club losing
4-3 to the Providence Grays. The club would go on to win just 17
of 98 games that season, pitcher John Coleman losing 48 of them.
The Phillies fortunes changed in 1884 with the naming of the widely-known
Harry Wright (photo at left) as manager. Wright, a future Hall of
Famer, would lead the Phillies to respectability during the next
decade, with the team finishing out of the first division only once
during his reign.
Great players also began dotting the landscape. Charlie Ferguson,
the first Phillies star, pitched the club's first no-hitter in 1885
and won 99 games in four seasons before dying of typhoid fever at
the age of 25. Ed Delahanty (photo below) joined the team in 1888.
The first of the Phillies' great hitters, he hit over .400 three
times, winning a batting title with a .410 average in 1899, and
finishing his career with a .346 mark, fourth highest in big league
history.
Delahanty was also the first Phillies player to hit four home runs
in one game when he slammed four round-trippers in 1896. Jack Boyle
in 1893 and Delahanty in 1894 also had the Phillies' first six-hit
games.
In 1894, the Phillies had three future Hall of Famers in the outfield,
and each of them--Delahanty, Billy Hamilton and Sam Thompson--hit
over .400. Hamilton won batting titles in 1891 and 1893, the same
year Delahanty led the league in home runs with 19 and in RBI with
146. Thompson was the Phils' first home run king, twice leading
the league, including in 1889 when he hit the unheard of total of
20. Hamilton also led the league four times in stolen bases, pilfering
111 in 1891. In 1894 he set a still-standing Major League record
by scoring 192 runs and a club record by hitting in 36 straight
games.
The Phils also had their share of good pitching, Camden's Kid Gleason
set a club record with 38 wins in 1890. Gus Weyhing won 32 in 1892,
Charlie Buffinton and Brewery Jack Taylor each had three straight
20-plus win seasons, and Red Donahue hurled a no-hitter in 1898.
For more than a decade, the Phils had a lefthanded catcher named
Jack Clements (photo at left). They also had a lefthanded shortstop,
Bill Hulen. Billy Sunday played briefly for the Phillies before
becoming a world-famous evangelist. Until his death in 1943, pitcher
Dan Casey claimed that he was the subject of the legendary poem,
"Casey at the Bat." And long-time first baseman Sid Farrar had a
daughter Geraldine who became a famous opera star.
The Phillies played at Recreation Park until moving in 1887 into
a new stadium called Philadelphia Park at Broad Street and Lehigh
Avenue. Built at a cost of $101,000, the park originally held 12,500
and was regarded as the finest baseball arena in the nation. A fire
destroyed much of the park in 1894, but while the Phillies moved
to a field at the University of Pennsylvania, it was rebuilt, using
mostly steel and brick. The park, with a new seating capacity of
18,800, featured a cantilever pavilion, a radical new technique
in stadium construction.
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