A Place For Trash Talk

 


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World Series Championships- 2

1st-1969- The Baltimore Orioles boasted some of the biggest guns in the American League and entered the '69 Series with a renewed confidence after dominating Sandy Koufax and his mighty Dodgers three years earlier. Among the American League champs "lumber company" was Boog Powell (thirty-seven home runs, one-hundred twenty-one runs batted in), Frank Robinson (thirty-two homers, one-hundred RBIs), Brooks Robinson (twenty-three homers, eighty-four RBIs) and Paul Blair (twenty-six homers, seventy-six RBIs). Their opponents, the New York Mets were still a young franchise and were making their first post-season appearance after topping the National League in only their eighth season.

Tom Seaver (a twenty-five game winner) was given the opening start for New York at Baltimore's Memorial Stadium and made it to his second pitch before surrendering the first "home team - home run". By the afternoon's end, Orioles' lefthander Mike Cuellar had given up only six hits and struck out eight. Baltimore was an easy winner (4-1) despite their standout line-up managing only four runs in thirty at-bats. The Mets' Jerry Koosman continued to silence the home team's big guns in Game 2 while holding their line-up to six hitless innings. Donn Clendenon backed up the twenty-six year-old lefty with a fourth inning homer off Dave McNally. Baltimore managed to tie it up in the seventh when Paul Blair led off with his team's first hit, then stole second and finally scored on Brooks Robinson's two out single. Not to be discouraged, the Mets rose to the occasion in the ninth and as Ed Charles, Jerry Grote and Al Weis all came through with two out singles. Koosman then got last-out relief help from Ron Taylor and emerged the 2-1 victor.

Game 3 debuted the first postseason outing at Shea Stadium and featured one of the greatest individual performances in the sixty-six year history of the Series, courtesy of the Mets' Tommie Agee. Agee started the contest off with a first inning home run off of Jim Palmer and continued to produce in the outfield for the remaining innings. With two out in the fourth and Oriole runners on first and third, the centerfielder raced to the 396-foot sign in left-center and made a phenomenal backhanded, catch of Elrod Hendricks' smash. Later in the seventh, the Orioles had loaded the bases with two out, but Agee came up clutch again making a headfirst diving grab of Blair's liner that sailed to right-center. Ed Kranepool added a home run as the Mets came out on top, 5-0. On the mound, Gary Gentry and a young reliever named Nolan Ryan combined on a four hitter.

A determined Seaver returned for redemption in Game 4 and took a 1-0 edge going into the ninth. Clendenon had given the junior pitcher the lead after launching a rocket in the second off of Mike Cuellar, but Frank Robinson and Powell both responded with late-game singles with Brooks Robinson on deck. The Oriole slugger nailed a perfect line drive to center, but right-fielder Ron Swoboda mimicked Agee's performance in Game 3 and made a spectacular diving, one-handed catch. While Frank Robinson tagged up and scored from third, Swoboda had shortened a potential big inning. The deadlocked remained 1-1 through the bottom of the tenth when the Mets sealed the deal on Jerry Grote's double and Oriole reliever Pete Richert's errant throw on pinch-hitter J.C. Martin's bunt. Seizing the opportunity, Rod Gaspar (pinch running for Grote) sped home for the 2-1 win.

Now down three games to one, the stunned Orioles came out swinging in Game 5 as pitcher McNally, (thanks to his own two run home run and another by Frank Robinson) held a 3-0 lead after five tense innings. Earl Weaver's team seemed to finally be on the road to recovery, but the Mets struck again after Cleon Jones led-off with a hit by pitch in the famous "shoe polish play", where manager Gil Hodges came out to argue the original call that Jones had not been struck. Hodges retrieved the ball, showed it to the umpire who saw the polish mark, and awarded Jones first base. Clendenon followed him home with a two run blast edging closer with only a 3-2 disadvantage. An unlikely hero named Al Weis (who had seven home runs in ten years) stepped up to the plate and tied the game with a leadoff home run in the sixth. Eddie Watt came in as relief for Baltimore in the eighth, but eventually lost 5-3 after surrendering a clutch double to Cleon Jones as well as Ron Swoboda who drove in the winning run.

In the end, New York had not only gone on to win their first World Championship (in their first appearance), they had also shut down the biggest line-up in all of baseball by holding the "Bird's Big Four" to a three for fifteen outing in Game 4 and a miserable two for fifteen showing in Game 5.

 2nd- 1986- The Boston Red Sox finally returned to the Fall Classic after an eleven year hiatus determined to shake the "Curse of the Bambino" once and for all. Although the "Beantown Bombers" had appeared in nine previous World Series contests (winning five), their last championship title had come an agonizing sixty-eight years prior (in 1918) when Babe Ruth pitched the Sox to two victories over the Chicago Cubs. This time Roger Clemens was on the hill and the Rocket had just completed a spectacular season in which he had compiled a 24-4 record and set a Major League mark with twenty strikeouts in a single regulation game. The New York Mets were making their third World Series appearance (winning last in 1969) and totaled one-hundred eight regular season wins while finishing a whopping 21½ games ahead of their nearest competition. The Mets also boasted a standout pitcher in Dwight Gooden who had dominated the National League much like Clemens had against the American League. Several sports writers had hyped-up the impending showdown on the mound, and many agreed that a "shootout" was on the horizon.

Game 1 opened with both teams going neck and neck down the stretch with Boston's Bruce Hurst topping New York's Ron Darling and Roger McDowell for the 1-0 victory. Manager Dave Johnson went with the obvious choice of Gooden for Game 2, but the Red Sox managed to oust the ace and four of his peers (Rick Aguilera, Jesse Orosco, Sid Fernandez, and Doug Sisk) for a 9-3 victory that featured homers by Dave Henderson and Dwight Evans. Despite the win, Clemens had fared just as poor and lasted only 4 1/3 innings before being replaced by Steve Crawford. New York lefty Bob Ojeda (acquired from the Sox in '85) returned to Fenway Park for the third outing and pitched five hit ball over seven innings. Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd took the hill for the home team, but surrendered a home run to the first batter he faced in Lenny Dykstra. The opening blast was followed by three more runs (including two off designated hitter Danny Heep's single) for a 4-0 lead in the first. Boyd managed to hold off the scoring for five more innings but stumbled again in the seventh as the Mets connected for three more, completing the thirteen-hit, 7-1 derby.

New York managed to tie up the Series in Game 4 thanks to Gary Carter's two home runs and three runs batted in. Breaking a scoreless tie in the fourth, the All-Star catcher smacked a two run homer in the fourth (off Al Nipper) and a bases-empty shot in the eighth (off reliever Steve Crawford) while Dykstra added to his rapidly growing stats with an RBI blast of his own. Back on the hill, Darling managed to finish with a 6-2 decision despite walking six batters in seven innings. Gooden returned for the fifth meeting determined to save face for his poor debut in Game 2 (in which the entire Mets' rotation was unable to compete) but disappointed again as the opener's winner, Bruce Hurst, overcame a twelve-hit debacle to put the Sox ahead with a middle-of-the-road, 4-2 effort.

Like his struggling counterpart, Clemens was also looking for his first win and left Game 6 with a 3-2 lead. However his teammates were unable to finish the job, leaving fourteen men on base and committing one of the most devastating errors in World Series history. After Henderson led off the top of the tenth with a home run against Rick Aguilera breaking the 3-3 tie, Boston increased its lead to 5-3 as Wade Boggs doubled and Marty Barrett singled him home. Sox reliever Calvin Schiraldi (who yielded the tying run in the eighth) retired the Mets' first two batters in the tenth (Wally Backman and Keith Hernandez), moving Boston to within one out of the World Series title. Carter prolonged the anxious fans tension with a clutch single and Kevin Mitchell followed with another base hit. Schiraldi regained his composure and managed a no-ball, two-strike count on New York's Ray Knight, but the third baseman made contact on his next offering, scoring Carter and moving Mitchell to third. Anticipating a disaster, Bob Stanley was called in and matched Mookie Wilson in a ten-pitch duel that left fans on both sides hanging on the edge of their seats. Wilson fouled off a 2-1 pitch, then sent two more out of bounds. As the pressure continued to build, Stanley's seventh pitch went wild, and Mitchell raced home with the game-tying run with Knight advancing to second. With a full count of 3-2, Wilson finally connected fair on the tenth toss sending a short grounder along the baseline toward first baseman Bill Buckner. A collective sigh of relief fell over the Boston crowd in anticipation of a textbook out and a chance at redemption in the eleventh-inning. However their jubilation quickly turned to shock and disbelief as the ball somehow slipped under Buckner's glove and continued to roll. As Knight bolted home for the 6-5 victory, the home crowd at Shea Stadium erupted in celebration. The Mets were still alive with or without, a little help from "The Babe". For Buckner, the costly error became a defining moment and ultimately overshadowed the rest of his career.

While the Sox had found themselves in this predicament before (one strike away from elimination in the American League Series), many fans had already abandoned the team and Buckner was crucified in the papers for making the critical mistake. Luckily they would have twenty-four hours to regain their senses as Game 7 was postponed a day due to rain. Three time winner Bruce Hurst returned for the final outing and looked to make it right again with a little help from his friends. Dwight Evans and Rich Gedman both belted back-to-back homers and Boggs delivered an RBI single for a 3-0 lead going into the sixth. New York tied the game on Hernandez's bases-loaded single that scored Lee Mazzilli and Wilson while Carter's tee-shot to right brought Wally Backman home.

Schiraldi was sent in as relief in the seventh, but Knight tagged him again (as he had in Game 6) with a tie-breaking homer. Before it was over, Rafael Santana nailed a RBI single and Hernandez added a sac-fly for the 6-3 lead. Sid Fernandez had shut out Boston through the middle innings, but Roger McDowell replaced him and surrendered a two run double off Evans in the eighth. Jesse Orosco entered as the third reliever and managed to coax Gedman to line out, Henderson to strike out and Don Baylor to bounce out. As the Mets took their turn in the bottom of the eighth, Darryl Strawberry sent one into the seats for the 8-5 advantage and it was all over from there. Orosco returned in the ninth to finish the job and struck out the side (1-2-3) crowning the National League reps as World Champions. The heartbreaking loss in Game 6 still remains as the second darkest day in Beantown sports history. The first of course was a "certain trade" that haunted the Boston faithful for over eight decades.

 

Franchise History

 

    

                  1955 Brooklyn Dodgers                                NY Giants: Willie Mays, "Catch heard around the world"
 

In 1957, the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants abandoned New York for California, leaving the largest city in the United States without a National League franchise. Two years later, on July 27, 1959, attorney William Shea announced the formation of a third major baseball league, the Continental League. He tried to get several existing clubs to move, including the Philadelphia Phillies, the Pittsburgh Pirates, and the Cincinnati Reds, but no National League club was interested.

One of the CL's five charter members was a team in New York City. Charles Shipman Payson and his wife Joan Whitney Payson, former minority owners of the Giants, as the principal owners, along with George Herbert Walker, Jr. (uncle of future President George H. W. Bush), who served as vice president and treasurer until 1977. Former Giants director M. Donald Grant became chairman of the board. Grant and Joan Payson had been the only members of the Giants board to oppose the team's move west.

The existing leagues, who had considerably more autonomy at the time, responded with plans to add four new teams, two in each league. One of the new National League teams was to be in New York. The NL offered this new franchise to the CL's New York group, provided that they commit to building a new park. Shea told New York Mayor Robert Wagner, Jr. that he had to personally cable every National League owner and guarantee that the city would build a new facility.

The new team required a new name and many were suggested. Among the finalists were "Bees.”Burros", "Continentals", "Skyscrapers", "Jets", as well as the eventual runner-up, "Skyliners". Although Payson had admitted a preference for "Meadowlarks", the owners ultimately selected "Mets" because it was closely related to the club's already-existing corporate name "New York Metropolitan Baseball Club, Inc.", it hearkened back to "Metropolitans", a historically significant name used by an earlier New York team in the American Association from 1880 to 1887, and because its brevity would naturally fit in newspaper headlines. The name was received with broad approval among fans and press.

From the first, the Mets sought to appeal to the large contingent of former Giants and Dodgers fans as well as presumably those New Yorkers who disliked the New York Yankees. The Mets' team colors reflect this--orange for the Giants, blue for the Dodgers, although not precisely the same shade of those colors as used by the two former residents.

1962-1968: Lovable Losers

In October, 1961, the National League held an expansion draft to stock the rosters of the Mets and the Houston Colt .45s with players from other clubs. 22 players were selected by the Mets, including some with notable previous success such as Roger Craig, Al Jackson, Frank Thomas and Richie Ashburn. But rather than select talented young players with future potential, Mets management preferred to sign faded stars of the Dodgers, Giants and Yankees to appeal to fans' nostalgia. Legendary Yankees manager Casey Stengel was hired out of retirement to lead the team, but his managerial acumen wasn't enough to overcome the severe deficiency of talent among the players.

The Mets began their on-field play in 1962, losing their first nine games en route to a 40-120 record. Their .250 winning percentage was the third worst by any major league team since the beginning of the 20th Century, and the fourth-worst in baseball history. Throughout major league history only the 1899 Cleveland Spiders (20-134) lost more games in a single season than the 1962 Mets. It wasn't until 2003 that the record would be threatened by the Detroit Tigers, who finished the season at 43-119. The ineptitude of the Mets during their first year is chronicled in colorful fashion in the 1963 book Can't Anybody Here Play This Game?, written by New York columnist Jimmy Breslin.

Beloved by New York fans despite their losing ways — or perhaps because of them — the Mets of the early 1960s became famous for their ineptitude. Journeyman players like the ironically nicknamed "Marvelous Marv" Throneberry became icons of athletic incompetence. Ex-Dodger and Giant pitcher Billy Loes, who was selected by the Mets in the 1961 expansion draft, was credited with this ungrammatical quotation: "The Mets is a good thing. They give everybody jobs. Just like the WPA." Even the Mets proved to have standards, however. In 1962, Cleveland Indians catcher Harry Chiti was purchased by the Mets for a player to be named later in the season. That "player to be named later" ended up being Harry Chiti. Chiti was the first player ever to be sent back to his original team in a trade in Major League history.

The 1963 Mets featured a pitcher, Carlton Willey, who was having a great year, pitching four shut-outs, when he incurred an injury and finished with a 9-14 won-loss record.

In 1964, the Mets, who played their first two seasons in the old Polo Grounds, the former home of the Giants, moved to the newly constructed Shea Stadium, a 55,300-seat multipurpose facility built in the Flushing neighborhood of the Borough of Queens, adjacent to the site of the 1939 and 1964 New York World's Fairs. One high point of Shea Stadium's first season came on Father's Day, when Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jim Bunning threw a perfect game against the Mets, the first in the National League since 1880. For perhaps the only time in the stadium's history, the Shea faithful found themselves rooting for the visitors, caught up in the rare achievement, and roaring for Bunning on every pitch in the ninth inning. His strikeout of John Stephenson capped the performance. Another high point was Shea Stadium's hosting of the 1964 All-Star Game. Unexpectedly thrust into the spotlight in the final hectic weekend of the 1964 season, the Mets relished the role of spoiler, beating the Cardinals in St. Louis on Friday and Saturday (keeping alive the hopes of the Phillies, Giants, and Reds) before succumbing to the eventual National League champions on Sunday.

The Mets' image as lovable losers was wearing a little thin as the decade progressed, but things began to change slowly in the late '60s. The Mets acquired top pitching prospect Tom Seaver in a lottery and he became the league's Rookie of the Year in 1967. Even though the Mets remained in last place, Tom Seaver was a sign of good fortune to come. He was originally signed by the Atlanta Braves in February 1966 out of the University of Southern California, but his contract was voided by Commissioner William D. Eckert on the basis that the USC season had already started when Seaver signed. In order to resolve this issue, the Mets, Indians, and Phillies were all placed in a hat since they were the only teams willing to match the Braves offer, and the Mets were fortunate enough to win the drawing. In addition to Seaver, two other young players were catcher Jerry Grote and shortstop Bud Harrelson. This trio of youth formed a new, determined clubhouse nucleus that had no interest in losing, lovably or otherwise. By the 1968 season, Wes Westrum would be replaced as manager by Gil Hodges. Pitcher Jerry Koosman joined the staff and had a spectacular rookie season in 1968, winning 19 games. Left fielder Cleon Jones developed as a batter and exciting center fielder Tommie Agee came over in a trade. But although much improved, the 1968 team still finished the season in 9th place.

1969: The "Miracle' Mets"

Tom Seaver

The Mets played a major role in the National League's move to divisional play for 1969. Faced with the prospect of losing lucrative home dates with the Dodgers and Giants, they threatened to scuttle the whole plan unless they were compensated with more dates against the Cardinals, the reigning power in the league at the time. The Cubs then demanded to be placed in the newly formed National League East as well in order to continue their historic rivalry with the Cardinals. The result was that the Braves and Reds--in defiance of all geographic reality--were placed in the National League West.

The Mets began the 1969 season in a mediocre way; an opening day loss of 11-10 to the expansion Expos was followed by a record of 21-23 through the end of May. By mid-August, the favored Chicago Cubs seemed safely on their way to winning the first ever National League East Division title (and their first postseason appearance of any kind since 1945). The Mets sat in third place, ten games behind. But Chicago went 8-17 in September, while the Mets, with outstanding pitching from their young staff, piled up victory after victory, winning 38 of their last 49 games. They took first place for good on September 9, and finished in first place with a 100-62 record for the season, their first winning year ever, and a full eight games over the Cubs. The Mets finished with a team ERA of 2.99, and a league leading 28 shutouts thrown. Tom Seaver led the way with a 25-7 record, with lefty Jerry Koosman behind him at 17-9 record, while Cleon Jones finished with a .340 batting average. Seaver's best game occurred on July 9, at Shea Stadium, where he came within two outs of a perfect game, but gave up a one-out, ninth-inning single to the Cubs' Jimmy Qualls for the only hit in the Mets' 4-0 victory.

The "Miracle Mets" or "Amazing Mets," as they became known by the press, went on to win a three-game sweep of the strong Atlanta Braves, led by legend Henry "Hank" Aaron, in the very first National League Championship Series. The Mets were still considered underdogs in this series despite the fact that they had a better record than the Braves.

The Mets were given very little chance in the 1969 World Series, facing a powerful Baltimore Orioles team that had gone 109-53 in the regular season and included future Hall of Famers Frank Robinson, Brooks Robinson, and Jim Palmer as well as future Mets manager Davey Johnson, who ironically would make the final out of the Series. Before the series began, pundits predicted Tom Seaver might win the opening game, but that the Mets would have trouble winning again in the World Series. As it turned out, just the opposite occurred; Seaver was roughed up, allowing four runs in the opener, which he lost -- but the Mets' pitching shut down the Orioles after that, holding them to just five runs over the next four games, to win the World Series 4 games to 1. Seaver got his revenge in game four, pitching all 10 innings of a 2-1 victory.

This rags-to-riches story is regarded as one of baseball history's great turnarounds, giving hope to underdogs, also-rans and lost causes everywhere. Soon after the season ended, Tom Seaver lent his name to a commercial saying "If the Mets can win the World Series, America can get out of Vietnam."

1970-1979: "You Gotta Believe!" and the Midnight Massacre

The Miracle Mets magic wore off as the 1970s began. In subsequent years, Mets pitchers generally excelled but received lackluster support from the hitters with mediocre finishes the result. Efforts to improve the offense backfired with blunders such as trading Amos Otis for troubled infielder Joe Foy after the 1969 season as well as young pitcher Nolan Ryan for infielder Jim Fregosi after the 1971 season. Once out of the glaring New York spotlight, Ryan became one of the best pitchers in history, spending 22 more years in the majors and entering the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1999. Fregosi battled injuries and played just 146 games for the Mets over a season and a half. Meanwhile Otis became a star with the Kansas City Royals while Foy lasted only one season in New York.

The team was thrown into confusion and shock prior to the 1972 season, when Manager Gil Hodges, who had led the team to the World Series victory in 1969, suffered a sudden heart attack at the end of spring training and died. Coach Yogi Berra succeeded Hodges.

Berra's Mets found themselves in last place with a 61-71 record at the end of August, 1973 but they recovered behind relief pitcher Tug McGraw and his "Ya gotta believe!" rallying cry (the team has since trademarked the phrase), winning 21 of their last 29 games. Berra also coined his most famous Yogiism that year: "It ain't over till it's over!" In a peculiar circumstance, their final record of only 82-79 was good enough to win the division while five better teams in the Majors missed the postseason. Despite the worst winning percentage ever by a division winner (until the 2005 San Diego Padres), the Mets then shocked the heavily-favored Cincinnati Reds "Big Red Machine" in the NLCS. Their record remains the worst of any pennant-winning team but they managed to push the A.L. champion Oakland Athletics to a seventh game. Their near-miracle season ended with a loss to Ken Holtzman in the final contest.

As the 1975 season ended, owner Joan Payson died. Her husband Charles delegated ownership authority to his daughters, who in turn left the baseball side to M. Donald Grant. Payson had been the driving force behind the Mets, but her survivors did not share her enthusiasm for investing in the future of the team. Contract disputes with star pitcher Tom Seaver and slugger Dave Kingman erupted in 1977. Both players were traded on June 15, the trading deadline, in what New York tabloids dubbed "The Midnight Massacre". The Mets received six players in the two deals, but none had any lasting impact. Attendance fell, to the point where Shea Stadium was nicknamed "Grant's Tomb". Coincidentally, the Yankees began their resurgence at roughly the same time, further eroding the Mets' fan base.

The team finished in last place yet again in 1978. By this time, it was obvious that Grant had mismanaged the team. Charles Payson himself fired Grant at the end of the season. The Mets continued to struggle, and did not become a competitive team again until the mid-1980s, marking the first time that both New York teams were competitive at the same time, both on the field and at the box office.

1980-1985: Cashen rebuilds

In January, 1980 the Payson heirs sold the Mets franchise to the Doubleday publishing company for $21.1 million. Nelson Doubleday, Jr. was named chairman of the board while minority shareholder Fred Wilpon took the role of club president. Wilpon quickly hired longtime Baltimore Orioles executive Frank Cashen as general manager to begin the process of rebuilding the Mets.

Cashen's positive impact on the organization took some time to be felt at the major league level. He began by selecting slugging high school phenomenon Darryl Strawberry as the number one overall pick in the 1980 amateur draft. Two years later, hard-throwing hurler Dwight Gooden was taken as the fifth overall selection in the 1982 draft. The pair rose quickly through the minors, winning successive Rookie of the Year awards (Strawberry in 1983, Gooden in 1984). Cashen's mid-season 1983 trade for former MVP Keith Hernandez helped spark the Mets' return to competitive contention. In 1984, new manager Davey Johnson was promoted from the helm of the AAA Tidewater Tides and led the Mets to a 90-72 record, their first winning season since 1976. In 1985 the Mets acquired future Hall of Fame catcher Gary Carter from the Montreal Expos and won 98 games, but lost the division title to the St. Louis Cardinals in the final days of the season in a memorable series. (The Mets began the series three games behind St. Louis and won the first two, but faltered in the third game, allowing St. Louis to remain in first place).

1986-1990: World Series Champions and what could have been

Unlike the league champion Mets of 1969 or 1973, the 1986 Mets broke away from the rest of the division early and dominated throughout the year. They won 20 of their first 24 games, clinched the East Division title on September 17, and finished the year 108-54, which tied with the 1975 Cincinnati Reds for the third most wins in National League history, behind the 1906 Chicago Cubs (116) and the 1909 Pittsburgh Pirates (110). The relative lack of excitement during the regular season was more than compensated for by the spectacularly suspenseful and dramatic post-season series.

In the National League Championship Series, the Mets faced their fellow 1962 expansion team, the Houston Astros. Unlike the Mets, the Astros had yet to win a pennant, but had former Mets fireballer Nolan Ryan leading their pitching staff. The Mets took a two-games-to-one lead with a come-from-behind walk-off home run by Lenny Dykstra. In Game 6, the Mets turned a 3-0 ninth-inning deficit into a sixteen-inning marathon victory to clinch the National League pennant and earn their third World Series appearance. The Astros would have to wait until 2005 to finally win their first pennant.

In the World Series against the Boston Red Sox, the Mets faced elimination leading into Game 6. The Red Sox scored two runs in the tenth inning and twice came within one strike of winning their first World Series since 1918. But the Mets rallied and would come back in typical Amazing' Mets fashion.

With two outs and down two runs, three consecutive singles brought the Mets within 90 feet of knotting the score. Hitter Mookie Wilson ran the count to 2-1, and then fouled off 3 consecutive pitches. With the count 2-2, pitcher Bob Stanley threw a wild pitch that Wilson had to leap out of the way of. Boston catcher Rich Gedman made a wild stab for the ball but it went to the backstop. Pinch hitter Kevin Mitchell scored from third base, tying the game.

Now facing a full count, Wilson fouled off two more pitches. It was then that Wilson hit a weak ground ball down the first base line. What should have been a routine out to commence extra innings instead rolled under the legs of first baseman Bill Buckner and into the annals of baseball history as third baseman Ray Knight ran home all the way from second base to score the winning  run.

The Mets went on to win their second World Series title by taking Game 7, also in dramatic fashion, overcoming a 3 run deficit while scoring a total of 8 runs during the final 3 innings. They remain the only team to come within one strike of losing a World Series before recovering to become World Champions.

While the team around the 1986 championship was strong, they also became infamous for off-the-field controversy. Both Strawberry and Gooden were youngsters who wound up burning out long before their time because of various substance abuse and personal problems. Both of their problems started before age 25 and have continued. Hernandez's cocaine abuse was the subject of persistent rumors even before he joined the Mets, but he publicly acknowledged his addiction in 1985 and made a successful recovery. Lenny Dykstra's reputation was recently tainted by allegations of steroid use and gambling problems. Instead of putting together a winning dynasty, the problems caused the Mets to soon fall apart. Despite Darryl Strawberry's numerous off-the-field mishaps, he remains the Mets' all-time leader in home runs and runs batted in.

After winning the World Series in 1986, World Series MVP Ray Knight signed with the Orioles. Also, they traded the flexible Kevin Mitchell to the Padres for long-ball threat Kevin McReynolds. But the biggest shock since the Midnight Massacre of 1977 was when Mets' ace Dwight Gooden was admitted to a drug clinic after testing positive for cocaine. But after struggling in the first few months of the 1987 season, "Dr. K" would come back, and so would the Mets. They would surge to battle St. Louis for the division title. But on September 11 in a game against St. Louis, 3rd baseman and future MVP Terry Pendleton hit a homer to give the Cardinals a lead, and eventually the NL East title. One highlight of the year was Darryl Strawberry and Howard Johnson becoming the first teammates ever to hit 30 homers and steal 30 bases in the same season.

After missing the playoffs in 1987, the 1988 Mets again won the division. Thanks to some stellar pitching from Gooden, Ron Darling, and David Cone as well as offense from McReynolds, Strawberry, and Howard Johnson, the Mets won 100 games for the 2nd time in 3 campaigns. However, the clubhouse was distracted by the presence of a young Gregg Jefferies who was just called up. The veteran players took a disliking to Jefferies, who had a habit of excessive bragging, prompting his teammates to saw his bats in half as a form of hazing. The Mets played the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 1988 National League Championship Series in a season where they beat them 10 out of 11 times but, led by Orel Hershiser, the Dodgers continued their Cinderella story season by beating the Mets in seven games.

The Mets (as well as the Montreal Expos) would battle the Cubs for the division title in 1989, but Chicago would prevail, despite a career year by Howard Johnson and a deadline trade with Minnesota for 1988 AL Cy Young winner Frank Viola. Those high points were tempered by injuries to Gooden, Hernandez and Carter as well as an ill-fated trade that sent Dykstra and Roger McDowell to Philadelphia in exchange for Juan Samuel. After the season, Samuel, who hit .235 that season, would be traded to the Dodgers for Mike Marshall, who would hit .239 in 53 games for the Mets before being traded to Boston. Dykstra, however, would become an All-Star in Philadelphia and help lead his team to a pennant in 1993.

That offseason, the Mets had a mix of triumph and tragedy. They would receive All-Star closer and native New Yorker John Franco in a trade with the Cincinnati Reds, and Strawberry, in legal trouble as well, would check into an alcohol rehabilitation center and miss the start of the season. The next season, the Mets would surge again to battle the Pittsburgh Pirates, but Pittsburgh's "B-B Guns" (which included National League MVP Barry Bonds, future Mets Bobby Bonilla and Jay Bell and former Met Wally Backman) led the Pirates to their first NLCS since 1979. In that campaign, general manager Frank Cashen fired Johnson from his managerial job and replaced him with former shortstop Bud Harrelson. Although he led them to a good finish in 1990 (Strawberry's last with the Mets, as he went on to sign with the Dodgers in the offseason), the Mets fell to 5th place in 1991. Before the 1991 season the Mets signed Vince Coleman to a fat $2 million contract after failing to sign defending batting champion Willie McGee. This was the first of what would lead to many bad free agent signings and trades that would doom the Mets during the mid 1990s.

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1991-1995: "Hardball Is Back" and The Worst Team Money Could Buy

During the 1991 season, the Mets were actually in contention for most of the first half of the season, closing to within 2.5 games of the front-running Pirates at one point. However, during the second half, the bottom completely fell out and Harrelson was fired with a week left to go in the season, replaced by third base coach Mike Cubbage for the final games. The season ended on a high note, however, as David Cone pitched a one-hit shutout against the Phillies at Veterans Stadium, in which he struck out 19 batters, tying the National League regulation game record (first set by former Met Tom Seaver, and more recently broken by the Cubs' Kerry Wood)

With all of the personal problems swirling around the Mets after the 1986 championship, the Mets tried to rebuild using experienced superstars. They picked up the aging, future Hall of Famer Eddie Murray for over $3 million, the younger but troubled Pittsburgh Pirates free agent slugger Bobby Bonilla for over $6 million. They also traded McReynolds and Jeffries for one-time World Series hero Bret Saberhagen and his $3 million contract, along with signing veteran free agent pitcher Frank Tanana for $1.5 million. The rebuilding was supported by the slogan, "Hardball Is Back".

The experiment of building a team via free agency quickly flopped as Saberhagen and Coleman were soon injured and spent more time on the disabled list than on the field, and Bonilla exhibited unprofessional behavior towards members of the press, once threatening a reporter by saying, "I'll show you The Bronx" . At the beginning of the 1991 season, Coleman, Gooden and outfielder Daryl Boston were named in an alleged sexual abuse incident against a woman near the Mets' spring training facility; charges were later dropped. Meanwhile, popular pitcher David Cone was dealt to the Toronto Blue Jays during the 1992 season for Ryan Thompson and Jeff Kent. While the move was widely criticized by fans of both teams, the Jays went on to win the 1992 World Series.

The lowest point of the experiment was the 1993 season when the Mets lost 103 games. In April of that year, Coleman accidentally hit Gooden's shoulder with a golf club while practicing his swing. In July, Saberhagen threw a firecracker under a table near reporters. Their young pitching prospect Anthony Young started the '93 season at 0-13 and his overall streak of 27 straight losses over two years set a new record. After Young's record-setting loss, Coleman threw a firecracker out of the team bus window and injured three people resulting in felony charges that effectively ended his Mets career. Only a few days later, Saberhagen was in trouble again, this time for spraying bleach at three reporters. The meltdown season resulted in the worst record for a Mets team since 1965. Their descent was chronicled by the book The Worst Team Money Could Buy: The Collapse of the New York Mets (ISBN 0-8032-7822-5) by Mets beat writers Bob Klapisch and John Harper. In addition, two of the three remaining links to the '86 team, Howard Johnson and Sid Fernandez, departed after the season via free agency.

The following season was filled with some bright spots, but there was still trouble for the franchise, and for the team's franchise player. Gooden, who had a 3-4 record with a 6.31 ERA in the final year of his contract with the team, shocked not only New York sports fans, but baseball fans around the country by testing positive for cocaine and was suspended by Major League Baseball for 60 days. Shortly after he began serving his suspension for the positive drug test, it was announced that he had again tested positive for cocaine and was now being suspended by Major League Baseball for one year, thus ending his Mets career and nearly his life. The day after receiving the second suspension, Gooden's then-wife, Monica, found him in his bedroom with a loaded gun to his head.

Still, the 1994 season saw some promise for the troubled Mets, as first baseman Rico Brogna and second baseman Jeff Kent became fan favorites with their solid glove work and potential 20-25 home run power, Bonilla started to become the player the Mets expected, and a healthy Saberhagen, along with promising young starter Bobby Jones and Franco, helped the Mets pitching staff along. In the strike-shortened 1994 season the Mets were in 3rd place behind first-place Montreal and Atlanta when the season ended on August 12. When the strike finally ended in 1995, the Mets finally showed some promise again, finishing in 2nd place (but still 6 games under .500) behind eventual World Series champion Atlanta.

1996-2004: Piazza, Bobby V, Who Let the Mets Out, and the Subway Series

The Mets did not play well in 1996, but the season was highlighted by the play of three young stars. Switch hitting catcher Todd Hundley broke the Major League Baseball single season record for home runs hit by catcher with 41. Center fielder Lance Johnson set single-season franchise records in hits (227), triples (21), at-bats (682), runs scored (117), & total bases (327). And, Left fielder Bernard Gilkey set franchise single-season records in doubles (44), and RBI (117). But things started looking up in 1997, as they missed the playoffs by only four games, and improved by 17 games over 1996. One highlight happened June 16, when the Mets beat the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium in the first ever regular-season game played between the cross-town rivals. In 1997 Hundley was also having another great season, but he went down with a devastating elbow injury and needed Tommy John surgery midway through the season. For a time, it looked like the Los Angeles Dodgers were going to be shopping their superstar catcher, Mike Piazza, in a trade rather than pay the exorbitant salary that 1997s MVP runner-up was going to demand at the end of the 1998 season. In a puzzling move, on May 14, 1998, the Dodgers sent Piazza to the Florida Marlins, who were purging themselves of high salaries to alleviate their claimed financial problems. The Marlins' move made more sense when, just a week later, they re-traded Piazza to the Mets for Preston Wilson and two prospects. The Dodgers had no free agency problem, the Marlins had young players with small salaries and the Mets had their new lineup-anchoring catcher. When Hundley returned from his injury later in the 1998 season the Mets experimented with playing him in left field. The experiment was short lived; Hundley was in a Dodgers uniform in the 1999 season.

After the 1998 trade, the Mets played well, but missed the 1998 postseason by only one game. With only five games left in the 1998 season, the Mets could not win a single game against both the Montreal Expos at home and the Atlanta Braves on the road; the Mets could have forced a three-way wild card tie by winning their last game. Although it seemed like a terrible ending to a good season, Met fans felt confident that the team was moving in the right direction. After signing Mike Piazza to a seven-year, $91 million contract, the Mets traded Todd Hundley and minor league P Arnold Gooch to the Los Angeles Dodgers for C Charles Johnson and OF Roger Cedeno. They then sent Johnson to the Baltimore Orioles for P Armando Benitez. The Mets then signed Robin Ventura, Rickey Henderson and Bobby Bonilla to fill out the needs for the start of the 1999 season. John Olerud anchored the heart of the Mets' order.

The Mets started the 1999 season well, going 17-9, but after an eight-game losing streak, including the last two to the New York Yankees, on June 6 the Mets fired their entire coaching staff except for manager Bobby Valentine. On that day, the Mets, in front of a national audience on ESPN Sunday Night Baseball, beat the New York Yankees 7-2 and they never looked back. Both Mike Piazza and Robin Ventura started to have MVP-type seasons and Benny Agbayani began to have an important role on the team. Also this was the breakout year for Mets second baseman Edgardo Alfonzo, as he had 108 RBI, and Roger Cedeño, who broke the single season steals record for the Mets. After the regular season ended, the Mets played a one game playoff against the Cincinnati Reds to see which team would advance to the playoffs. In that game, Mets ace Al Leiter pitched the best game of his Met career as he hurled a two hit complete game shutout, a 5-0 victory to advance to the playoffs. In the NLDS, the Mets defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks 3 games to 1, their series-clinching victory coming on an unlikely home run hit by backup catcher Todd Pratt, playing due to a thumb injury to Piazza. The Mets would advance to the 1999 National League Championship Series, their first NLCS since 1988, only to lose to their archrivals, the Atlanta Braves, in six exciting games which included the famous grand slam single by Robin Ventura to win game 5 for the Mets.

In the offseason, the Mets traded Roger Cedeño and Octavio Dotel to the Houston Astros for Derek Bell and Mike Hampton. Todd Zeile was signed to play first base, replacing departing free agent Olerud. The Mets were heading to the 2000 season as a powerhouse in the National League.

2000 began well for the Mets as Derek Bell became the best hitter on the team for the first month. The Mets enjoyed good play the whole year. The highlight of the season came on June 30, when the Mets beat the rival Atlanta Braves in a memorable game at Shea Stadium on Fireworks Night. With the Mets losing 8-1 to begin the bottom of the eighth, they rallied back with two outs to tie the game, capping the 10-run inning with Mike Piazza's three run home run to put the Mets up 11-8, giving them the lead and eventually the win. The Mets easily made the playoffs winning the National League wild card. In the playoffs, the Mets beat the San Francisco Giants in the first round and the St. Louis Cardinals in the 2000 National League Championship Series to win their fourth NL pennant. Mike Hampton was named the NLCS MVP for his two scoreless starts in the series as the Mets headed to the 2000 World Series to face their cross-town rivals, the New York Yankees. Unfortunately for the Mets, they were defeated in the much-hyped "Subway Series". Even though they lost 4 games to 1, each game was close, as they scored only three fewer total runs than the Yankees. This was the first all-New York World Series since 1956, when the Yankees defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers.

The most memorable moment of the 2000 World Series occurred during the first inning of Game 2 at Yankee Stadium. Piazza fouled off a pitch which shattered his bat, sending a piece of the barrel toward the pitcher's mound. Pitcher Roger Clemens seized the piece and hurled it in the direction of Piazza as the catcher trotted to first base. A brief melee ensued with no punches thrown and Clemens remaining in the game. In July of 2000, Clemens had knocked Piazza unconscious with a fastball to the catcher's head.

In the seasons following the 2000 World Series, the Mets struggled mightily as the result of several poor player acquisitions, including Mo Vaughn, Roberto Alomar, Roger Cedeño (again) and Jeromy Burnitz. These acquisitions were made by then-general manager Steve Phillips, who was fired during the 2003 season. Phillips was credited with building the 2000 World Series team, but also blamed for the demise of the Mets' farm system and the poor play of the acquired players. The Mets did have a few bright spots in 2002. Al Leiter became the first major league pitcher to defeat all thirty major league teams with a victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks. David Weathers had a career year with a 2.91 era coming out of the bullpen, making him one of the better middle relievers of that season in the league. The Mets though posted a 75-86 record, last in the NL East, in 2002. The Mets' record in 2003 (66-95) was the fourth worst in baseball, and Piazza had missed two-thirds of the season with a torn groin muscle. His steady decline around that time mirrored the Mets' fortunes for the first half of the decade.

In 2004, the Mets made more player additions that turned out to be poor. They signed Japanese shortstop Kazuo Matsui, who never lived up to his potential in two-and-a-half years with the Mets, and Mike Cameron to play center field. General manager Jim Duquette acquired pitcher Kris Benson for third baseman Ty Wigginton at the trade deadline just before sending highly-touted pitching prospect Scott Kazmir to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays for the disappointing Victor Zambrano. However, the Mets brought up two young infielders with bright futures, David Wright and José Reyes, and they have become the best products from the farm system since Strawberry and Gooden. The Mets finished 71-91 in 2004.

2005-present: King of Queens, The Team. The Time. The Mets of 2006, "Your Season has gone" and The Last Season at Shea.

After the 2004 season, Mets ownership made significant changes to their management strategy. With their television contract with the MSG Network expiring by the end of 2005, they announced plans to establish their own cable network to broadcast Mets games, rivaling the Yankee-owned YES Network. This investment in what became known as Sports Net New York was coupled with an aggressive plan to upgrade the performance of the team on the field. Jim Duquette was replaced as general manager by former Expos GM Omar Minaya. Minaya, an ex-Mets assistant GM, achieved notable success in Montreal by making bold player moves on a limited budget. With the Mets, Minaya was given substantial financial resources to develop a winning team by the time the new network launched in 2006.

Minaya began by hiring Yankee bench coach Willie Randolph as manager, then signed two of that year's most sought-after free agents — Pedro Martínez and Carlos Beltrán — to large multi-year deals. Though Beltrán underperformed, Martínez and a rejuvenated Tom Glavine led the pitching staff while Cliff Floyd's power, José Reyes's speed and David Wright's hitting sparked the offense. Despite an 0-5 start to the season, the team finished 83-79, finishing above the .500 mark for the first time since 2001.

After 2005, the departure of Mike Piazza gave Minaya enough financial flexibility to take full advantage of a payroll-reduction effort by the Florida Marlins. All-star first baseman Carlos Delgado and all-star catcher Paul Lo Duca were acquired from Florida in exchange for five prospects. Minaya also improved the bullpen by signing star free agent closer Billy Wagner.

Minaya's offseason moves and his organization of the team during the season paid off in 2006, as the team, led by a franchise record six All-Stars (Beltran, Lo Duca, Reyes, Wright, Glavine, and Martínez), won the division title, their first in 18 years. In a runaway similar to 1986, the Mets led the division from April 6 on, and only spent one day out of first the whole season. They built a lead as high as 16 1/2 games before clinching the division on September 18, becoming the first team in the major leagues to clinch a 2006 playoff berth. The Mets finished the season 12 games ahead of the Phillies, and with the best record in the National League. The Mets achieved this success despite a slew of injuries which included losing Martínez for a month, and starting fifteen different pitchers in games. A 9-1 June road trip through Los Angeles, Arizona and Philadelphia was a turning point for the season.

The Mets 2006 division title ended the Atlanta Braves' streak of 14 straight division titles, and they became the first team besides Atlanta to win the National League East title since the 1994 division realignment. 2006 was also the first time ever that the Mets and Yankees each won their respective divisions in the same year. Both New York teams also had the best records in their respective leagues, 97 wins and 65 losses.

Despite losing Pedro Martínez and Orlando Hernández from their starting rotation due to injury just before the start of the post-season, the Mets swept the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 2006 National League Division Series, relying on their bullpen (with the lowest regular season ERA in the National League) and potent offense. However, in the 2006 National League Championship Series, the Mets lost to the St. Louis Cardinals, the eventual 2006 World Series champions, in seven games, with the decisive blow coming on a ninth-inning home run by Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina off Mets reliever Aaron Heilman.

In the 2006 offseason, the Mets signed veteran outfielder Moises Alou to replace Cliff Floyd in left field and provide a right-handed bat in the middle of the lineup.

After their success in 2006, there were high expectations for the Mets in 2007, and they started the season strong, compiling a 34-18 record through May 31. And although they played basically .500 ball through the summer, the Mets still had a seven game lead in September, with 17 games to go. The Mets, however, would lose 11 of their next 16, allowing the Philadelphia Phillies to tie them with three games left. The Mets lost to the Marlins 8-1 in the final game of the season, while the Phillies went on to win their final game 6-1 against the Nationals and clinch the NL East by one game. The Mets became first team in MLB history to blow a lead of seven or more games with only 17 games to play.[9], and, by one analysis, it was the 2nd worst collapse overall in MLB regular season history. Despite the season ending debacle, Minaya announced that Randolph would remain as manager for the 2008 season.

On January 29, 2008, the Mets agreed to trade four minor league prospects, including outfielder Carlos Gomez and pitcher Philip Humber to the Minnesota Twins in exchange for two-time Cy Young Award-winning pitcher Johan Santana. He agreed on a six-year contract extension on February 1 worth $150.75 million, the highest amount ever for a pitcher on a long-term contract. The trade was finalized on February 2 when Santana passed his physical.

 On June 12, 2005 a plan was announced for a new Mets ballpark to be built adjacent to Shea Stadium in Flushing, Queens. Construction of the new stadium is being paid by the Mets, while "infrastructure improvement" costs at the site are to be paid by the city. The stadium was originally dubbed Mets Ballpark, before a corporate sponsor was found. Many fans had hoped the park would be named in honor of Jackie Robinson. The naming rights of the stadium were sold to Citigroup and the name Citi Field was officially announced at the November groundbreaking.[14] Citigroup reportedly agreed to pay $20 million a year for the rights, which would be the most lucrative naming rights deal ever in terms of revenue per year. The final mix of private and public funding has not been settled. As of 2005, Shea Stadium is the sixth oldest stadium among the 30 ballparks in major league baseball, and will be the fifth oldest by the end of the 2008 season as the Washington Nationals are scheduled to move into their new park -- Nationals Park -- before 2009. Shea Stadium is nearly as old as Ebbets Field was when the Dodgers abandoned it. The current site of Shea Stadium is to be a parking lot for Citi Field.

 

Rendering of Citi Field.

Citi Field will be a "retro" park, following current architectural trends in stadium design. It will follow the brick and steel-truss trend begun by the Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards in 1992. The exterior facade will resemble Ebbets Field, former home of the Brooklyn Dodgers. The new stadium will be an open-air design, designed to give the fans a more personal experience. The stadium will only hold 45,000 fans, which is less than the current capacity of Shea Stadium. According to design notes the lesser capacity creates better sightlines and a more contoured seating configuration, allowing seating closer to the field.

The field, however, will not have a dome or retractable roof installed, as had been discussed for Shea Stadium in the late 1970s, and had been originally planned. This will not negate one of the main complaints with Shea Stadium; that the consistent jet noise from LaGuardia Airport makes it hard to hear well.

Construction of the new stadium began in 2006. Most of the current parking lot was closed off to begin preparing for the installation of the main support columns during the 2006 season, but the official groundbreaking did not take place until November 13, just beyond the left field bleachers of Shea Stadium. The stadium is scheduled to open for the 2009 season.

 Team Trivia

The Mets held the New York baseball attendance record for 29 years. They broke the Yankees' 1948 record by drawing nearly 2.7 million in 1970. The Mets broke their own record five times before the Yankees took it back in 1999.

 

The home run apple in Shea Stadium

When a Mets player hits a home run at Shea Stadium, a big red apple emerges from a giant top hat behind center right field sometimes accompanied by a small fireworks display. The apple will reportedly live on at Citi Field, but it is unclear whether the original apple will be moved or a new apple constructed.

The Mets' first scheduled game was postponed due to rain on April 10, 1962 at St. Louis.

No Met pitcher has ever thrown a no-hitter, and the Mets have gone longer than any other major league franchise without pitching a no-hitter — more than seven thousand games. Ironically, a number of pitchers -- Nolan Ryan, Tom Seaver, Mike Scott, Doc Gooden, Hideo Nomo, Al Leiter, and David Cone, just to name a few -- have thrown no-hitters either before joining the Mets or after leaving the team. David Cone pitched a perfect game for cross-town rivals New York Yankees. Three potential no-hitters for Mets pitchers have been broken up by late-game infield hits.

No Met has ever won the Most Valuable Player Award.

The Mets have appeared in more World Series — four —than any other expansion team in Major League Baseball history. They have won two championships, tied with the Toronto Blue Jays and Florida Marlins for the most titles among expansion teams.

The first major sporting event to take place in New York City after the September 11, 2001 attacks was played at Shea Stadium on September 21, 2001, when the Mets hosted the Atlanta Braves. The Mets came from behind to win, 3-2, on an eighth inning home run by Mike Piazza. Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a lifelong fan of the rival Yankees, attended the game and was cheered by the crowd for his leadership in the preceding ten days.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks, the Mets, as well as other teams in the league, wore Red Cross, FDNY, and NYPD hats. Unlike the other teams, the Mets wore these for the rest of the year, despite threats of fines by Major League Baseball.

In 1998, the Independent Budget Office of the city of New York published a study on the economic impact of the city's two Major League Baseball teams. The study included an analysis of where fans of both the Mets and the Yankees resided. The study found that 39% of Mets fans lived in one of the five boroughs of New York, 49% in the tri-state area outside the city and 12% elsewhere. Mets fans were more likely to be found in Queens, Brooklyn, Staten Island and the Long Island counties of Nassau and Suffolk, whereas Manhattan, the Bronx, New Jersey, Connecticut, and the counties of Westchester and Rockland leaned more towards the Yankees.[17]

On April 5, 1993, the Mets played the first game in the history of the Colorado Rockies. Then on April 19, 1995, they played the first game in the history of Coors Field (the Rockies new home).

On October 3, 2004, the Mets played against the Montreal Expos in their last game before they became the Washington Nationals. The last out of that game was recorded by then-Expo Endy Chavez, who subsequently came to the Mets. Coincidentally, the Mets also played against the Expos in the franchise's inaugural game. Both games were contested at Shea Stadium.

The 2006 Mets were the first team in MLB history to win eight consecutive road games after scoring in the first inning of each game.

On July 16, 2006, the Mets set a franchise record by scoring 11 runs in one inning. It took place in the sixth inning against the Chicago Cubs. There were three home runs in the inning; a two-run homer by David Wright, and grand slams from both Cliff Floyd and Carlos Beltrán. The Mets sent 16 batters to the plate in the inning, which took 41 minutes to complete and started with a pop out by Chris Woodward.

In July 2006, the Mets became the third team to hit six grand slams in a month, joining the Cleveland Indians of May 1999 and the Montreal Expos in April 1996. Carlos Beltrán tied the Major League record for slams in a month with three, José Valentín hit two and Cliff Floyd hit one.

Individual Trivia

Gil Hodges hit the first home run in New York Mets history on April 11, 1962 at St. Louis.

On April 10, 1969 Tommie Agee became the only player ever to hit a home run to the small area of fair territory in the upper level of Shea Stadium. A painted sign on the stands nearby commemorates the spot.

In 1966, the Mets chose catcher Steve Chilcott as the first overall selection in the amateur draft. He became the first number one draft pick to retire without reaching the major leagues. The second pick that year was Hall of Famer Reggie Jackson.

The two pitchers who recorded the final outs of the Mets' two World Series titles were traded for one another. Jerry Koosman of the 1969 team was dealt to the Minnesota Twins in 1978 for Jesse Orosco of the 1986 team.

Harry Chiti was acquired from the Cleveland Indians on April 25, 1962 for a player to be named later. The player to be named later... was Chiti. He was traded for himself.

On May 19, 2007, David Wright hit a 460 foot, 2-run home run off New York Yankees reliever Mike Myers. The home run went over Shea's bleachers into Citi Field construction site. One of the radio announcers joked saying that’s the first home run in Citi Field history.

Stats

Batting Leaders


Single-Season LeadersCareer Leaders

Batting Average

RankPlayer  BA  Year
1.John Olerud
.354
1998
2.Mike Piazza
.348
1998
3.Cleon Jones
.340
1969
4.Lance Johnson
.333
1996
5.Dave Magadan
.328
1990
6.David Wright
.325
2007
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
.324
2000
 Mike Piazza
.324
2000
9.Ed Kranepool
.323
1975
10.Wally Backman
.320
1986

Batting Average

RankPlayer  BA  PA
1.John Olerud
.315
2018
2.David Wright
.308
2689
3.Keith Hernandez
.297
3684
4.Mike Piazza
.296
3941
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
.292
4449
 Dave Magadan
.292
2483
7.Steve Henderson
.287
2029
8.Jose Reyes
.285
3105
9.Wally Backman
.283
2704
10.Cleon Jones
.281
4683

On-base %

RankPlayer  OBP  Year
1.John Olerud
.447
1998
2.John Olerud
.427
1999
3.Edgardo Alfonzo
.425
2000
4.Richie Ashburn
.424
1962
5.Rickey Henderson
.423
1999
6.Cleon Jones
.422
1969
7.Dave Magadan
.417
1990
 Mike Piazza
.417
1998
9.David Wright
.416
2007
10.Keith Hernandez
.413
1986

On-base %

RankPlayer  OBP  PA
1.John Olerud
.425
2018
2.Dave Magadan
.391
2483
3.Keith Hernandez
.387
3684
 David Wright
.387
2689
5.Mike Piazza
.373
3941
6.Edgardo Alfonzo
.367
4449
7.Steve Henderson
.360
2029
8.Darryl Strawberry
.359
4549
9.Carlos Beltran
.358
2264
 Rusty Staub
.358
2965

Slugging %

RankPlayer  SLG  Year
1.Mike Piazza
.614
2000
2.Mike Piazza
.607
1998
3.Carlos Beltran
.594
2006
4.Darryl Strawberry
.583
1987
5.Mike Piazza
.575
1999
6.Mike Piazza
.573
2001
7.Bernard Gilkey
.562
1996
8.Howard Johnson
.559
1989
9.Darryl Strawberry
.557
1985
10.John Olerud
.551
1998

Slugging %

RankPlayer  SLG  PA
1.Mike Piazza
.542
3941
2.David Wright
.529
2689
3.Darryl Strawberry
.520
4549
4.Carlos Beltran
.502
2264
5.John Olerud
.501
2018
6.Bobby Bonilla
.495
2040
7.Kevin McReynolds
.460
3218
8.Howard Johnson
.459
4591
9.Dave Kingman
.453
2573
10.Edgardo Alfonzo
.445
4449

OPS

RankPlayer  OPS  Year
1.Mike Piazza
1.024
1998
2.Mike Piazza
1.012
2000
3.John Olerud
.998
1998
4.Carlos Beltran
.982
2006
5.Darryl Strawberry
.981
1987
6.Edgardo Alfonzo
.967
2000
7.David Wright
.962
2007
8.Mike Piazza
.957
2001
9.Bernard Gilkey
.955
1996
10.Darryl Strawberry
.946
1985

OPS

RankPlayer  OPS  PA
1.John Olerud
.926
2018
2.David Wright
.916
2689
3.Mike Piazza
.915
3941
4.Darryl Strawberry
.879
4549
5.Carlos Beltran
.860
2264
6.Bobby Bonilla
.851
2040
7.Keith Hernandez
.816
3684
8.Edgardo Alfonzo
.812
4449
9.Howard Johnson
.800
4591
10.Kevin McReynolds
.791
3218

Games

RankPlayer  G  Year
1.Felix Millan
162
1975
 John Olerud
162
1999
3.Jose Reyes
161
2005
 Robin Ventura
161
1999
5.Lance Johnson
160
1996
 John Olerud
160
1998
 Jose Reyes
160
2007
 David Wright
160
2005
 David Wright
160
2007
10.Lee Mazzilli
159
1977
 Brian McRae
159
1998
 Willie Montanez
159
1978
 Mookie Wilson
159
1982

Games

RankPlayer  G  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
1853
5997
2.Bud Harrelson
1322
5083
3.Jerry Grote
1235
4335
4.Cleon Jones
1201
4683
5.Howard Johnson
1154
4591
6.Mookie Wilson
1116
4307
7.Darryl Strawberry
1109
4549
8.Edgardo Alfonzo
1086
4449
9.Lee Mazzilli
979
3496
10.Mike Piazza
972
3941

At Bats

RankPlayer  AB  Year
1.Jose Reyes
696
2005
2.Lance Johnson
682
1996
3.Jose Reyes
681
2007
4.Felix Millan
676
1975
5.Jose Reyes
647
2006
6.Mookie Wilson
639
1982
7.Felix Millan
638
1973
 Mookie Wilson
638
1983
9.Tommie Agee
636
1970
10.Frank Taveras
635
1979

At Bats

RankPlayer  AB  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
5436
5997
2.Bud Harrelson
4390
5083
3.Cleon Jones
4223
4683
4.Mookie Wilson
4027
4307
5.Howard Johnson
3968
4591
6.Darryl Strawberry
3903
4549
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
3897
4449
8.Jerry Grote
3881
4335
9.Mike Piazza
3478
3941
10.Keith Hernandez
3164
3684

Plate Appearances (approx.)

RankPlayer  PA  Year
1.Jose Reyes
765
2007
2.Felix Millan
743
1975
3.Jose Reyes
733
2005
4.Edgardo Alfonzo
726
1999
5.Lance Johnson
724
1996
6.John Olerud
723
1999
7.David Wright
711
2007
8.Jose Reyes
703
2006
9.Felix Millan
699
1973
10.Tommie Agee
696
1970

Plate Appearances (approx.)

RankPlayer  PA  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
5997
5997
2.Bud Harrelson
5083
5083
3.Cleon Jones
4683
4683
4.Howard Johnson
4591
4591
5.Darryl Strawberry
4549
4549
6.Edgardo Alfonzo
4449
4449
7.Jerry Grote
4335
4335
8.Mookie Wilson
4307
4307
9.Mike Piazza
3941
3941
10.Keith Hernandez
3684
3684

Runs

RankPlayer  R  Year
1.Carlos Beltran
127
2006
2.Edgardo Alfonzo
123
1999
3.Jose Reyes
122
2006
4.Jose Reyes
119
2007
5.Lance Johnson
117
1996
6.David Wright
113
2007
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
109
2000
8.Bernard Gilkey
108
1996
 Howard Johnson
108
1991
 Darryl Strawberry
108
1987

Runs

RankPlayer  R  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
662
4549
2.Howard Johnson
627
4591
3.Edgardo Alfonzo
614
4449
4.Mookie Wilson
592
4307
5.Cleon Jones
563
4683
6.Ed Kranepool
536
5997
7.Mike Piazza
532
3941
8.Bud Harrelson
490
5083
9.Jose Reyes
480
3105
10.Keith Hernandez
455
3684

Hits

RankPlayer  H  Year
1.Lance Johnson
227
1996
2.John Olerud
197
1998
3.David Wright
196
2007
4.Jose Reyes
194
2006
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
191
1999
 Felix Millan
191
1975
 Jose Reyes
191
2007
8.Jose Reyes
190
2005
9.Felix Millan
185
1973
10.Keith Hernandez
183
1985

Hits

RankPlayer  H  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
1418
5997
2.Cleon Jones
1188
4683
3.Edgardo Alfonzo
1136
4449
4.Mookie Wilson
1112
4307
5.Bud Harrelson
1029
5083
6.Mike Piazza
1028
3941
7.Darryl Strawberry
1025
4549
8.Howard Johnson
997
4591
9.Jerry Grote
994
4335
10.Keith Hernandez
939
3684

Total Bases

RankPlayer  TB  Year
1.David Wright
330
2007
2.Lance Johnson
327
1996
3.Bernard Gilkey
321
1996
4.Howard Johnson
319
1989
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
315
1999
 Jose Reyes
315
2006
7.Robin Ventura
311
1999
8.Darryl Strawberry
310
1987
9.David Wright
309
2006
10.John Olerud
307
1998
 Mike Piazza
307
1999

Total Bases

RankPlayer  TB  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
2047
5997
2.Darryl Strawberry
2028
4549
3.Mike Piazza
1885
3941
4.Howard Johnson
1823
4591
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
1736
4449
6.Cleon Jones
1715
4683
7.Mookie Wilson
1586
4307
8.Keith Hernandez
1358
3684
9.Kevin McReynolds
1338
3218
10.Jerry Grote
1278
4335

Doubles

RankPlayer  2B  Year
1.Bernard Gilkey
44
1996
2.David Wright
42
2005
 David Wright
42
2007
4.Edgardo Alfonzo
41
1999
 Howard Johnson
41
1989
6.Edgardo Alfonzo
40
2000
 Gregg Jefferies
40
1990
 David Wright
40
2006
9.Paul Lo Duca
39
2006
 John Olerud
39
1999

Doubles

RankPlayer  2B  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
225
5997
2.Howard Johnson
214
4591
3.Edgardo Alfonzo
212
4449
4.Mike Piazza
193
3941
5.Darryl Strawberry
187
4549
6.Cleon Jones
182
4683
7.Mookie Wilson
170
4307
8.David Wright
161
2689
9.Keith Hernandez
159
3684
10.Kevin McReynolds
153
3218

Triples

RankPlayer  3B  Year
1.Lance Johnson
21
1996
2.Jose Reyes
17
2005
 Jose Reyes
17
2006
4.Jose Reyes
12
2007
5.Mookie Wilson
10
1984
6.Steve Henderson
9
1978
 Charlie Neal
9
1962
 Frank Taveras
9
1979
 Mookie Wilson
9
1982
10.Joe Christopher
8
1964
 Vince Coleman
8
1993
 Doug Flynn
8
1978
 Doug Flynn
8
1980
 Bud Harrelson
8
1970
 Steve Henderson
8
1979
 Steve Henderson
8
1980
 Cleon Jones
8
1970
 Len Randle
8
1978
 Jose Reyes
8
2008
 Mookie Wilson
8
1981
 Mookie Wilson
8
1985
 Joel Youngblood
8
1978

Triples

RankPlayer  3B  PA
1.Mookie Wilson
62
4307
2.Jose Reyes
60
3105
3.Bud Harrelson
45
5083
4.Cleon Jones
33
4683
5.Steve Henderson
31
2029
6.Darryl Strawberry
30
4549
7.Lance Johnson
27
1023
8.Doug Flynn
26
2269
9.Ed Kranepool
25
5997
10.Lee Mazzilli
22
3496

Home Runs

RankPlayer  HR  Year
1.Carlos Beltran
41
2006
 Todd Hundley
41
1996
3.Mike Piazza
40
1999
4.Darryl Strawberry
39
1987
 Darryl Strawberry
39
1988
6.Carlos Delgado
38
2006
 Howard Johnson
38
1991
 Mike Piazza
38
2000
9.Dave Kingman
37
1976
 Dave Kingman
37
1982
 Darryl Strawberry
37
1990

Home Runs

RankPlayer  HR  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
252
4549
2.Mike Piazza
220
3941
3.Howard Johnson
192
4591
4.Dave Kingman
154
2573
5.Todd Hundley
124
2904
6.Kevin McReynolds
122
3218
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
120
4449
8.Ed Kranepool
118
5997
9.David Wright
113
2689
10.Carlos Beltran
102
2264

RBI

RankPlayer  RBI  Year
1.Mike Piazza
124
1999
2.Robin Ventura
120
1999
3.Bernard Gilkey
117
1996
 Howard Johnson
117
1991
5.Carlos Beltran
116
2006
 David Wright
116
2006
7.Carlos Delgado
114
2006
8.Mike Piazza
113
2000
9.Carlos Beltran
112
2007
 Todd Hundley
112
1996

RBI

RankPlayer  RBI  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
733
4549
2.Mike Piazza
655
3941
3.Howard Johnson
629
4591
4.Ed Kranepool
614
5997
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
538
4449
6.Cleon Jones
521
4683
7.Keith Hernandez
468
3684
8.Kevin McReynolds
456
3218
9.David Wright
430
2689
10.Rusty Staub
399
2965

Bases on Balls

RankPlayer  BB  Year
1.John Olerud
125
1999
2.Keith Hernandez
97
1984
 Darryl Strawberry
97
1987
4.John Olerud
96
1998
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
95
2000
 Carlos Beltran
95
2006
 Bud Harrelson
95
1970
8.Keith Hernandez
94
1986
 David Wright
94
2007
10.Lee Mazzilli
93
1979

Bases on Balls

RankPlayer  BB  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
580
4549
2.Bud Harrelson
573
5083
3.Howard Johnson
556
4591
4.Wayne Garrett
482
3361
5.Keith Hernandez
471
3684
6.Edgardo Alfonzo
458
4449
7.Ed Kranepool
454
5997
8.Lee Mazzilli
438
3496
9.Mike Piazza
424
3941
10.Jerry Grote
363
4335

Strikeouts

RankPlayer  SO  Year
1.Tommie Agee
156
1970
 Dave Kingman
156
1982
3.Dave Kingman
153
1975
4.Todd Hundley
146
1996
5.Mo Vaughn
145
2002
6.Mike Cameron
143
2004
7.Darryl Strawberry
141
1986
8.Tommie Agee
137
1969
9.Jeromy Burnitz
135
2002
 Dave Kingman
135
1976

Strikeouts

RankPlayer  SO  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
960
4549
2.Howard Johnson
827
4591
3.Cleon Jones
697
4683
4.Mookie Wilson
692
4307
5.Dave Kingman
672
2573
6.Todd Hundley
624
2904
7.Bud Harrelson
595
5083
8.Ed Kranepool
581
5997
9.Tommie Agee
572
2687
10.Ron Swoboda
549
2485

Stolen Bases

RankPlayer  SB  Year
1.Jose Reyes
78
2007
2.Roger Cedeno
66
1999
3.Jose Reyes
64
2006
4.Jose Reyes
60
2005
5.Mookie Wilson
58
1982
6.Mookie Wilson
54
1983
7.Lance Johnson
50
1996
8.Mookie Wilson
46
1984
9.Frank Taveras
42
1979
10.Howard Johnson
41
1989
 Lee Mazzilli
41
1980

Stolen Bases

RankPlayer  SB  PA
1.Mookie Wilson
281
4307
2.Jose Reyes
262
3105
3.Howard Johnson
202
4591
4.Darryl Strawberry
191
4549
5.Lee Mazzilli
152
3496
6.Lenny Dykstra
116
1908
7.Bud Harrelson
115
5083
8.Wally Backman
106
2704
9.Roger Cedeno
105
1614
10.Vince Coleman
99
978

Singles

RankPlayer  1B  Year
1.Lance Johnson
166
1996
2.Felix Millan
155
1973
3.Felix Millan
151
1975
4.Jose Reyes
142
2005
5.Mookie Wilson
139
1982
6.Mookie Wilson
138
1983
7.Keith Hernandez
135
1985
 John Olerud
135
1998
9.Jose Reyes
131
2007
 Frank Taveras
131
1979

Singles

RankPlayer  1B  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
1050
5997
2.Cleon Jones
880
4683
3.Bud Harrelson
855
5083
4.Mookie Wilson
820
4307
5.Jerry Grote
798
4335
6.Edgardo Alfonzo
790
4449
7.Keith Hernandez
690
3684
8.Mike Piazza
613
3941
9.Felix Millan
612
2954
10.Rey Ordonez
580
3216

Adjusted OPS+

RankPlayer  OPS+  Year
1.Howard Johnson
169
1989
2.Mike Piazza
167
1998
3.Darryl Strawberry
165
1988
4.Darryl Strawberry
164
1985
5.John Olerud
163
1998
6.Darryl Strawberry
162
1987
7.Mike Piazza
155
2000
8.Bernard Gilkey
155
1996
9.Cleon Jones
151
1969
10.David Wright
150
2007

Adjusted OPS+

RankPlayer  OPS+  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
145
4549
2.John Olerud
142
2018
3.David Wright
138
2689
4.Mike Piazza
136
3941
5.Keith Hernandez
129
3684
6.Bobby Bonilla
127
2040
7.Howard Johnson
124
4591
8.Carlos Beltran
123
2264
9.Dave Magadan
122
2483
10.Kevin McReynolds
120
3218

Runs Created

RankPlayer  RC  Year
1.David Wright
146
2007
2.John Olerud
141
1998
3.Darryl Strawberry
132
1987
4.Edgardo Alfonzo
131
2000
5.Carlos Beltran
127
2006
 Howard Johnson
127
1989
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
126
1999
8.Bernard Gilkey
124
1996
9.John Olerud
122
1999
10.Lance Johnson
121
1996

Runs Created

RankPlayer  RC  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
759
4549
2.Mike Piazza
675
3941
3.Edgardo Alfonzo
671
4449
4.Howard Johnson
663
4591
5.Ed Kranepool
638
5997
6.Cleon Jones
586
4683
7.Keith Hernandez
546
3684
8.Mookie Wilson
519
4307
9.David Wright
490
2689
10.Lee Mazzilli
462
3496

Adjusted Batting Runs

RankPlayer  BtRuns*  Year
1.John Olerud
57
1998
2.Howard Johnson
51
1989
3.Darryl Strawberry
50
1987
4.David Wright
50
2007
5.Bernard Gilkey
47
1996
6.Darryl Strawberry
47
1988
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
44
2000
8.Carlos Beltran
41
2006
9.Mike Piazza
40
2000
10.Mike Piazza
40
1998

Adjusted Batting Runs

RankPlayer  BtRuns*  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
238
4549
2.Mike Piazza
185
3941
3.Keith Hernandez
148
3684
4.David Wright
140
2689
5.Howard Johnson
135
4591
6.John Olerud
123
2018
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
87
4449
8.Dave Magadan
82
2483
9.Rusty Staub
77
2965
10.Kevin McReynolds
76
3218

Batting Wins

RankPlayer  BtWins  Year
1.John Olerud
5.4
1998
2.Howard Johnson
5.3
1989
3.Darryl Strawberry
4.9
1988
4.Darryl Strawberry
4.8
1987
5.David Wright
4.6
2007
6.Bernard Gilkey
4.5
1996
7.Edgardo Alfonzo
4.0
2000
8.Keith Hernandez
3.9
1984
9.Carlos Beltran
3.8
2006
10.Cleon Jones
3.7
1969
 Mike Piazza
3.7
1998

Batting Wins

RankPlayer  BtWins  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
24.1
4549
2.Mike Piazza
17.0
3941
3.Keith Hernandez
15.0
3684
4.Howard Johnson
13.9
4591
5.David Wright
13.1
2689
6.John Olerud
11.5
2018
7.Dave Magadan
8.3
2483
8.Edgardo Alfonzo
7.9
4449
9.Rusty Staub
7.8
2965
10.Kevin McReynolds
7.7
3218

Extra-Base Hits

RankPlayer  XBH  Year
1.Carlos Beltran
80
2006
 Howard Johnson
80
1989
3.Bernard Gilkey
77
1996
4.Howard Johnson
76
1991
 Darryl Strawberry
76
1987
6.Todd Hundley
74
1996
7.David Wright
73
2007
8.David Wright
71
2006
9.Carlos Delgado
70
2006
 Robin Ventura
70
1999
 David Wright
70
2005

Extra-Base Hits

RankPlayer  XBH  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
469
4549
2.Howard Johnson
424
4591
3.Mike Piazza
415
3941
4.Ed Kranepool
368
5997
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
346
4449
6.Cleon Jones
308
4683
7.Mookie Wilson
292
4307
8.Kevin McReynolds
289
3218
9.David Wright
283
2689
10.Jose Reyes
252
3105

Times on Base

RankPlayer  TOB  Year
1.John Olerud
309
1999
2.John Olerud
297
1998
3.David Wright
296
2007
4.Edgardo Alfonzo
279
1999
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
276
2000
6.Lee Mazzilli
274
1979
7.Keith Hernandez
269
1984
 Keith Hernandez
269
1986
 Jose Reyes
269
2007
10.Keith Hernandez
262
1985

Times on Base

RankPlayer  TOB  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
1886
5997
2.Darryl Strawberry
1631
4549
3.Edgardo Alfonzo
1623
4449
 Bud Harrelson
1623
5083
5.Cleon Jones
1582
4683
6.Howard Johnson
1566
4591
7.Mike Piazza
1469
3941
8.Keith Hernandez
1426
3684
9.Jerry Grote
1378
4335
10.Mookie Wilson
1368
4307

Offensive Win%

RankPlayer  Off. WP  Year
1.John Olerud
.784
1998
2.Howard Johnson
.779
1989
 Mike Piazza
.779
1998
4.Cleon Jones
.760
1969
5.Darryl Strawberry
.757
1987
6.Darryl Strawberry
.749
1985
7.David Wright
.742
2007
8.Darryl Strawberry
.738
1988
9.Keith Hernandez
.734
1984
10.Carlos Beltran
.730
2006

Offensive Win%

RankPlayer  Off. WP  PA
1.Dave Magadan
.818
2483
2.Mike Piazza
.779
3941
3.Keith Hernandez
.732
3684
4.Rusty Staub
.680
2965
5.Gary Carter
.671
2448
6.John Olerud
.665
2018
7.Darryl Strawberry
.662
4549
8.Steve Henderson
.630
2029
9.Hubie Brooks
.617
2620
10.Bobby Bonilla
.602
2040

Hit By Pitch

RankPlayer  HBP  Year
1.Ron Hunt
13
1963
 John Olerud
13
1997
3.Cliff Floyd
12
2006
 Felix Millan
12
1975
 Fernando Vina
12
1994
6.Carlos Delgado
11
2007
 Cliff Floyd
11
2004
 Cliff Floyd
11
2005
 Ron Hunt
11
1964
 Ron Hunt
11
1966
 John Olerud
11
1999

Hit By Pitch

RankPlayer  HBP  PA
1.Ron Hunt
41
1887
2.Cleon Jones
39
4683
3.Cliff Floyd
37
1884
4.Felix Millan
36
2954
5.Edgardo Alfonzo
29
4449
6.Jeff Kent
28
1992
 John Olerud
28
2018
8.Darryl Strawberry
26
4549
9.Carlos Delgado
25
1564
 John Stearns
25
3080

Sac. Hits

RankPlayer  SH  Year
1.Felix Millan
24
1974
2.Bobby Jones
18
1995
 Felix Millan
18
1973
4.Felix Millan
17
1975
5.Roy McMillan
16
1965
6.Jerry Koosman
15
1973
 Rey Ordonez
15
1998
8.Wally Backman
14
1985
 Wally Backman
14
1986
 Dwight Gooden
14
1990
 John Maine
14
2007
 Rey Ordonez
14
1997
 Rick Reed
14
2000

Sac. Hits

RankPlayer  SH  PA
1.Dwight Gooden
85
837
 Jerry Koosman
85
926
3.Bud Harrelson
77
5083
 Tom Seaver
77
1139
5.Felix Millan
68
2954
6.Ron Darling
64
600
 Sid Fernandez
64
577
 Rey Ordonez
64
3216
9.Bobby Jones
61
426
10.Wally Backman
60
2704

Sac. Flies

RankPlayer  SF  Year
1.Gary Carter
15
1986
 Howard Johnson
15
1991
3.Bernard Gilkey
12
1997
4.Carlos Beltran
10
2007
 Carlos Delgado
10
2006
 Keith Hernandez
10
1985
 Paul Lo Duca
10
2007
 Dave Magadan
10
1990
9.Edgardo Alfonzo
9
1999
 Keith Hernandez
9
1984
 Howard Johnson
9
1990
 Willie Montanez
9
1978
 Eddie Murray
9
1993
 Timo Perez
9
2003
 Rusty Staub
9
1975
 Darryl Strawberry
9
1986
 Darryl Strawberry
9
1988
 Joel Youngblood
9
1980

Sac. Flies

RankPlayer  SF  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
58
5997
2.Howard Johnson
50
4591
3.Cleon Jones
41
4683
4.Edgardo Alfonzo
40
4449
5.Darryl Strawberry
39
4549
6.Rusty Staub
37
2965
7.Kevin McReynolds
33
3218
8.Gary Carter
31
2448
 Keith Hernandez
31
3684
10.John Stearns
30
3080

Intentional Walks

RankPlayer  IBB  Year
1.Howard Johnson
25
1988
2.Darryl Strawberry
21
1988
3.Willie Montanez
19
1978
 Mike Piazza
19
2001
5.Howard Johnson
18
1987
6.Rey Ordonez
17
2001
7.Gary Carter
16
1985
 Todd Hundley
16
1997
9.Hubie Brooks
15
1984
 Keith Hernandez
15
1985
 Todd Hundley
15
1996
 Ed Kranepool
15
1967
 Darryl Strawberry
15
1984
 Darryl Strawberry
15
1990

Intentional Walks

RankPlayer  IBB  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
108
4549
2.Howard Johnson
101
4591
3.Ed Kranepool
89
5997
4.Mike Piazza
82
3941
5.Jerry Grote
70
4335
6.Rey Ordonez
64
3216
7.Keith Hernandez
59
3684
8.Rusty Staub
56
2965
9.Todd Hundley
51
2904
10.Cleon Jones
42
4683

Grounded into Double Plays

RankPlayer  GIDP  Year
1.Mike Piazza
27
1999
2.Cleon Jones
26
1970
 Mike Piazza
26
2002
4.Steve Henderson
24
1978
 Eddie Murray
24
1993
6.Frank Thomas
23
1963
7.John Olerud
22
1999
 Joe Torre
22
1975
9.Carlos Baerga
21
1998
 Gary Carter
21
1986
 Butch Huskey
21
1997
 Jason Phillips
21
2003
 Rusty Staub
21
1974
 John Stearns
21
1979

Grounded into Double Plays

RankPlayer  GIDP  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
138
5997
2.Mike Piazza
132
3941
3.Jerry Grote
121
4335
4.Cleon Jones
107
4683
5.Rey Ordonez
89
3216
6.Rusty Staub
82
2965
7.John Stearns
80
3080
8.Keith Hernandez
72
3684
 Felix Millan
72
2954
10.Ken Boswell
70
2359

Caught Stealing

RankPlayer  CS  Year
1.Len Randle
21
1977
 Jose Reyes
21
2007
3.Frank Taveras
19
1979
4.Frank Taveras
18
1980
5.Roger Cedeno
17
1999
 Jose Reyes
17
2006
7.Howard Johnson
16
1991
 Mookie Wilson
16
1982
 Mookie Wilson
16
1983
10.Tommie Agee
15
1970
 Lee Mazzilli
15
1977
 Lee Mazzilli
15
1980
 Jose Reyes
15
2005
 John Stearns
15
1979

Caught Stealing

RankPlayer  CS  PA
1.Mookie Wilson
90
4307
2.Darryl Strawberry
75
4549
3.Lee Mazzilli
71
3496
4.Jose Reyes
67
3105
5.Howard Johnson
63
4591
6.Bud Harrelson
51
5083
 John Stearns
51
3080
8.Cleon Jones
48
4683
9.Tommie Agee
47
2687
10.Wally Backman
46
2704

Power/Speed Number

RankPlayer  PowSpd  Year
1.Howard Johnson
38.3
1989
2.Darryl Strawberry
37.4
1987
3.Howard Johnson
33.9
1987
4.Howard Johnson
33.5
1991
5.Darryl Strawberry
33.3
1988
6.David Wright
31.9
2007
7.Jose Reyes
29.3
2006
8.Darryl Strawberry
27.5
1986
9.Howard Johnson
27.4
1990
10.Darryl Strawberry
27.4
1985

Power/Speed Number

RankPlayer  PowSpd  PA
1.Darryl Strawberry
217.3
4549
2.Howard Johnson
196.9
4591
3.Mookie Wilson
98.9
4307
4.David Wright
97.0
2689
5.Lee Mazzilli
94.0
3496
6.Cleon Jones
92.0
4683
7.Jose Reyes
89.5
3105
8.Tommie Agee
86.7
2687
9.Kevin McReynolds
86.5
3218
10.Carlos Beltran
82.3
2264

At Bats per Strikeout

RankPlayer  AB/SO  Year
1.Felix Millan
37.0
1974
2.Felix Millan
29.0
1973
3.Felix Millan
27.9
1976
4.Felix Millan
24.1
1975
5.Roy McMillan
23.7
1964
6.Doug Flynn
22.2
1980
7.Bob Bailor
22.1
1982
8.Rusty Staub
21.9
1982
9.Doug Flynn
17.1
1981
 Lance Johnson
17.1
1996

At Bats per Strikeout

RankPlayer  AB/SO  PA
1.Felix Millan
29.1
2954
2.Doug Flynn
13.5
2269
3.Rusty Staub
12.6
2965
4.Ken Boswell
10.2
2359
5.Ed Kranepool
9.4
5997
 Rey Ordonez
9.4
3216
7.John Stearns
9.1
3080
8.Gary Carter
8.7
2448
9.Kevin McReynolds
8.5
3218
10.Dave Magadan
8.4
2483

At Bats per Home Run

RankPlayer  AB/HR  Year
1.Carlos Beltran
12.4
2006
2.Mike Piazza
12.7
2000
3.Dave Kingman
12.8
1976
4.Todd Hundley
13.2
1996
5.Mike Piazza
13.4
1999
6.Darryl Strawberry
13.6
1985
 Darryl Strawberry
13.6
1987
8.Carlos Delgado
13.8
2006
9.Todd Hundley
13.9
1997
 Dave Kingman
13.9
1975
 Darryl Strawberry
13.9
1988

At Bats per Home Run

RankPlayer  AB/HR  PA
1.Dave Kingman
15.1
2573
2.Darryl Strawberry
15.5
4549
3.Mike Piazza
15.8
3941
4.Bobby Bonilla
18.7
2040
5.Carlos Beltran
19.2
2264
6.Todd Hundley
20.6
2904
7.Howard Johnson
20.7
4591
 David Wright
20.7
2689
9.Kevin McReynolds
23.9
3218
10.George Foster
24.1
2610

Outs

RankPlayer  Outs  Year
1.Jose Reyes
536
2005
2.Felix Millan
527
1975
3.Jose Reyes
523
2007
4.Frank Taveras
508
1979
5.Felix Millan
495
1973
6.Mookie Wilson
487
1983
7.Mookie Wilson
486
1982
8.Tommie Agee
483
1970
 Lance Johnson
483
1996
10.George Foster
480
1983

Outs

RankPlayer  Outs  PA
1.Ed Kranepool
4276
5997
2.Bud Harrelson
3560
5083
3.Cleon Jones
3256
4683
4.Howard Johnson
3135
4591
5.Jerry Grote
3098
4335
6.Mookie Wilson
3076
4307
7.Darryl Strawberry
3038
4549
8.Edgardo Alfonzo
2908
4449
9.Mike Piazza
2613
3941
10.Rey Ordonez
2413
3216

Pitching Leaders


Single-Season LeadersCareer Leaders

ERA

RankPlayer  ERA  Year
1.Dwight Gooden
1.53
1985
2.Tom Seaver
1.76
1971
3.Jerry Koosman
2.08
1968
 Tom Seaver
2.08
1973
5.Tom Seaver
2.20
1968
6.Tom Seaver
2.21
1969
7.David Cone
2.22
1988
8.Jerry Koosman
2.28
1969
9.Jon Matlack
2.32
1972
10.Tom Seaver
2.38
1975

ERA

RankPlayer  ERA  IP
1.Tom Seaver
2.57
3045.3
2.Jesse Orosco
2.73
595.7
3.Jon Matlack
3.03
1448.0
4.Jerry Koosman
3.09
2544.7
5.John Franco
3.10
702.7
 Dwight Gooden
3.10
2169.7
7.Bob Ojeda
3.12
764.0
8.David Cone
3.13
1209.3
9.Sid Fernandez
3.14
1584.7
10.Bret Saberhagen
3.16
524.3

Wins

RankPlayer  W  Year
1.Tom Seaver
25
1969
2.Dwight Gooden
24
1985
3.Tom Seaver
22
1975
4.Jerry Koosman
21
1976
 Tom Seaver
21
1972
6.David Cone
20
1988
 Tom Seaver
20
1971
 Frank Viola
20
1990
9.Dwight Gooden
19
1990
 Jerry Koosman
19
1968
 Tom Seaver
19
1973

Wins

RankPlayer  W  IP
1.Tom Seaver
198
3045.3
2.Dwight Gooden
157
2169.7
3.Jerry Koosman
140
2544.7
4.Ron Darling
99
1620.0
5.Sid Fernandez
98
1584.7
6.Al Leiter
95
1360.0
7.Jon Matlack
82
1448.0
8.David Cone
81
1209.3
9.Bobby Jones
74
1215.7
10.Steve Trachsel
66
956.3

Won-Loss %

RankPlayer  wlp  Year
1.David Cone
.870
1988
2.Dwight Gooden
.857
1985
3.Bob Ojeda
.783
1986
4.Tom Seaver
.781
1969
5.Bret Saberhagen
.778
1994
6.Dwight Gooden
.739
1986
 Al Leiter
.739
1998
8.Sid Fernandez
.737
1989
9.Dwight Gooden
.731
1990
10.Ron Darling
.727
1985
 Sid Fernandez
.727
1986

Won-Loss %

RankPlayer  wlp  IP
1.Dwight Gooden
.649
2169.7
2.Rick Reed
.621
888.7
3.Tom Seaver
.615
3045.3
4.David Cone
.614
1209.3
5.Ron Darling
.586
1620.0
 Al Leiter
.586
1360.0
7.Bobby Jones
.569
1215.7
8.Bob Ojeda
.560
764.0
9.Sid Fernandez
.557
1584.7
10.Steve Trachsel
.528
956.3

BB + H per IP (WHIP)

RankPlayer  WHperIP  Year
1.Tom Seaver
0.946
1971
2.Pedro Martinez
0.949
2005
3.Dwight Gooden
0.965
1985
4.Tom Seaver
0.976
1973
5.Tom Seaver
0.980
1968
6.Bob Ojeda
1.004
1988
7.Bret Saberhagen
1.026
1994
8.Tom Seaver
1.039
1969
9.Rick Reed
1.042
1997
10.Sid Fernandez
1.053
1988

BB + H per IP (WHIP)

RankPlayer  WHperIP  IP
1.Tom Seaver
1.076
3045.3
2.Bret Saberhagen
1.079
524.3
3.Sid Fernandez
1.113
1584.7
4.Rick Reed
1.155
888.7
5.Dwight Gooden
1.175
2169.7
6.Bob Ojeda
1.182
764.0
7.Jim McAndrew
1.184
729.7
8.David Cone
1.192
1209.3
9.Jon Matlack
1.195
1448.0
10.Jesse Orosco
1.209
595.7

Hits Allowed/9IP

RankPlayer  Hper9IP  Year
1.Sid Fernandez
5.71
1985
2.Sid Fernandez
6.11
1988
3.Dwight Gooden
6.44
1985
4.Sid Fernandez
6.44
1989
5.Sid Fernandez
6.52
1990
6.Pedro Martinez
6.59
2005
7.Tom Seaver
6.60
1971
8.Dwight Gooden
6.65
1984
9.Tom Seaver
6.65
1969
10.Sid Fernandez
6.79
1992

Hits Allowed/9IP

RankPlayer  Hper9IP  IP
1.Nolan Ryan
6.51
510.0
2.Sid Fernandez
6.63
1584.7
3.Tom Seaver
7.18
3045.3
4.Jesse Orosco
7.25
595.7
5.David Cone
7.52
1209.3
6.Gary Gentry
7.61
789.3
7.Tug McGraw
7.78
792.7
8.Dwight Gooden
7.87
2169.7
9.Jerry Koosman
8.07
2544.7
10.Al Leiter
8.09
1360.0

Bases on Balls/9IP

RankPlayer  BBper9IP  Year
1.Bret Saberhagen
0.66
1994
2.Rick Reed
1.23
1998
3.Ed Lynch
1.27
1985
4.Rick Reed
1.34
1997
5.Tom Seaver
1.56
1968
6.Bob Ojeda
1.56
1988
7.Rick Reed
1.66
2000
8.Jim McAndrew
1.86
1970
9.Dennis Ribant
1.91
1966
10.Tom Seaver
1.92
1971

Bases on Balls/9IP

RankPlayer  BBper9IP  IP
1.Bret Saberhagen
1.32
524.3
2.Rick Reed
1.60
888.7
3.Ed Lynch
1.95
730.3
4.Frank Viola
2.24
566.3
5.Jack Fisher
2.34
931.7
6.Jim McAndrew
2.47
729.7
7.Tom Seaver
2.50
3045.3
8.Bob Ojeda
2.51
764.0
9.Jon Matlack
2.60
1448.0
10.Bobby Jones
2.61
1215.7

Strikeouts/9IP

RankPlayer  SOper9IP  Year
1.Dwight Gooden
11.39
1984
2.David Cone
9.91
1990
3.David Cone
9.79
1992
4.Sid Fernandez
9.51
1985
5.David Cone
9.32
1991
6.Sid Fernandez
9.10
1988
7.Tom Seaver
9.08
1971
8.Sid Fernandez
9.08
1990
9.Oliver Perez
8.85
2007
10.Sid Fernandez
8.81
1986

Strikeouts/9IP

RankPlayer  SOper9IP  IP
1.David Cone
8.72
1209.3
2.Nolan Ryan
8.70
510.0
3.Sid Fernandez
8.23
1584.7
4.Dwight Gooden
7.78
2169.7
5.Jesse Orosco
7.65
595.7
6.John Franco
7.58
702.7
7.Tom Seaver
7.51
3045.3
8.Al Leiter
7.32
1360.0
9.Dave Mlicki
7.22
501.3
10.Tug McGraw
7.02
792.7

Games

RankPlayer  G_p  Year
1.Mike Stanton
83
2004
2.Aaron Heilman
81
2007
3.Turk Wendell
80
1999
4.Pedro Feliciano
78
2007
5.Armando Benitez
77
1999
 Dave Weathers
77
2003
 Turk Wendell
77
2000
8.Armando Benitez
76
2000
 Jeff Innis
76
1992
10.Roger McDowell
75
1986

Games

RankPlayer  G_p  IP
1.John Franco
695
702.7
2.Tom Seaver
401
3045.3
3.Jerry Koosman
376
2544.7
4.Jesse Orosco
372
595.7
5.Tug McGraw
361
792.7
6.Armando Benitez
333
347.0
7.Dwight Gooden
305
2169.7
8.Jeff Innis
288
360.0
9.Turk Wendell
285
312.7
10.Roger McDowell
280
468.3

Saves

RankPlayer  SV  Year
1.Armando Benitez
43
2001
2.Armando Benitez
41
2000
3.Billy Wagner
40
2006
4.John Franco
38
1998
5.John Franco
36
1997
6.Billy Wagner
34
2007
7.Armando Benitez
33
2002
 John Franco
33
1990
9.Jesse Orosco
31
1984
10.John Franco
30
1991
 John Franco
30
1994

Saves

RankPlayer  SV  IP
1.John Franco
276
702.7
2.Armando Benitez
160
347.0
3.Jesse Orosco
107
595.7
4.Billy Wagner
93
174.7
5.Tug McGraw
86
792.7
6.Roger McDowell
84
468.3
7.Neil Allen
69
381.7
8.Skip Lockwood
65
379.7
9.Braden Looper
57
142.7
10.Randy Myers
56
240.0

Innings

RankPlayer  IP  Year
1.Tom Seaver
290.7
1970
2.Tom Seaver
290.0
1973
3.Tom Seaver
286.3
1971
4.Tom Seaver
280.3
1975
5.Tom Seaver
277.7
1968
6.Dwight Gooden
276.7
1985
7.Tom Seaver
273.3
1969
8.Tom Seaver
271.0
1976
9.Jon Matlack
265.3
1974
10.Jerry Koosman
265.0
1974

Innings

RankPlayer  IP  IP
1.Tom Seaver
3045.3
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
2544.7
2544.7
3.Dwight Gooden
2169.7
2169.7
4.Ron Darling
1620.0
1620.0
5.Sid Fernandez
1584.7
1584.7
6.Jon Matlack
1448.0
1448.0
7.Al Leiter
1360.0
1360.0
8.Craig Swan
1230.7
1230.7
9.Bobby Jones
1215.7
1215.7
10.David Cone
1209.3
1209.3

Strikeouts

RankPlayer  SO_p  Year
1.Tom Seaver
289
1971
2.Tom Seaver
283
1970
3.Dwight Gooden
276
1984
4.Dwight Gooden
268
1985
5.Tom Seaver
251
1973
6.Tom Seaver
249
1972
7.Tom Seaver
243
1975
8.David Cone
241
1991
9.Tom Seaver
235
1976
10.David Cone
233
1990

Strikeouts

RankPlayer  SO_p  IP
1.Tom Seaver
2541
3045.3
2.Dwight Gooden
1875
2169.7
3.Jerry Koosman
1799
2544.7
4.Sid Fernandez
1449
1584.7
5.David Cone
1172
1209.3
6.Ron Darling
1148
1620.0
7.Al Leiter
1106
1360.0
8.Jon Matlack
1023
1448.0
9.Bobby Jones
714
1215.7
10.Craig Swan
671
1230.7

Games Started

RankPlayer  GS  Year
1.Jack Fisher
36
1965
 Tom Seaver
36
1970
 Tom Seaver
36
1973
 Tom Seaver
36
1975
5.Ron Darling
35
1985
 Gary Gentry
35
1969
 Dwight Gooden
35
1985
 Jerry Koosman
35
1973
 Jerry Koosman
35
1974
 Jon Matlack
35
1976
 Tom Seaver
35
1968
 Tom Seaver
35
1969
 Tom Seaver
35
1971
 Tom Seaver
35
1972
 Craig Swan
35
1979
 Frank Viola
35
1990
 Frank Viola
35
1991

Games Started

RankPlayer  GS  IP
1.Tom Seaver
395
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
346
2544.7
3.Dwight Gooden
303
2169.7
4.Sid Fernandez
250
1584.7
5.Ron Darling
241
1620.0
6.Al Leiter
213
1360.0
7.Jon Matlack
199
1448.0
8.Bobby Jones
190
1215.7
9.Craig Swan
184
1230.7
10.David Cone
169
1209.3

Comp. Games

RankPlayer  CG  Year
1.Tom Seaver
21
1971
2.Tom Seaver
19
1970
3.Tom Seaver
18
1967
 Tom Seaver
18
1969
 Tom Seaver
18
1973
6.Jerry Koosman
17
1968
 Jerry Koosman
17
1976
8.Dwight Gooden
16
1985
 Jerry Koosman
16
1969
 Jon Matlack
16
1976

Comp. Games

RankPlayer  CG  IP
1.Tom Seaver
171
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
108
2544.7
3.Dwight Gooden
67
2169.7
4.Jon Matlack
65
1448.0
5.Al Jackson
41
980.7
6.Jack Fisher
35
931.7
7.David Cone
34
1209.3
8.Roger Craig
27
469.3
9.Ron Darling
25
1620.0
 Craig Swan
25
1230.7

Shutouts

RankPlayer  SHO  Year
1.Dwight Gooden
8
1985
2.Jerry Koosman
7
1968
 Jon Matlack
7
1974
4.Jerry Koosman
6
1969
 Jon Matlack
6
1976
6.David Cone
5
1992
 Bob Ojeda
5
1988
 Tom Seaver
5
1968
 Tom Seaver
5
1969
 Tom Seaver
5
1974
 Tom Seaver
5
1975
 Tom Seaver
5
1976

Shutouts

RankPlayer  SHO  IP
1.Tom Seaver
44
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
26
2544.7
 Jon Matlack
26
1448.0
4.Dwight Gooden
23
2169.7
5.David Cone
15
1209.3
6.Ron Darling
10
1620.0
 Al Jackson
10
980.7
8.Sid Fernandez
9
1584.7
 Bob Ojeda
9
764.0
10.Gary Gentry
8
789.3

Home Runs Allow.

RankPlayer  HRA  Year
1.Roger Craig
35
1962
2.Pedro Astacio
32
2002
3.Jay Hook
31
1962
4.Pete Harnisch
30
1996
 Rick Reed
30
1998
6.Roger Craig
28
1963
 Rick Reed
28
2000
 Steve Trachsel
28
2001
9.Jack Fisher
26
1966
 Bobby Jones
26
1996
 Frank Tanana
26
1993
 Steve Trachsel
26
2003

Home Runs Allow.

RankPlayer  HRA  IP
1.Tom Seaver
212
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
187
2544.7
3.Ron Darling
155
1620.0
4.Sid Fernandez
138
1584.7
5.Bobby Jones
137
1215.7
6.Steve Trachsel
124
956.3
7.Dwight Gooden
123
2169.7
8.Al Leiter
118
1360.0
9.Rick Reed
116
888.7
10.Craig Swan
112
1230.7

Bases On Balls Allow.

RankPlayer  BB_p  Year
1.Nolan Ryan
116
1971
2.Ron Darling
114
1985
3.Mike Torrez
113
1983
4.Ron Darling
104
1984
5.Mike Hampton
99
2000
 Jon Matlack
99
1973
7.Jerry Koosman
98
1975
8.Al Leiter
97
2004
 Nolan Ryan
97
1970
10.Ron Darling
96
1987

Bases On Balls Allow.

RankPlayer  BB_p  IP
1.Tom Seaver
847
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
820
2544.7
3.Dwight Gooden
651
2169.7
4.Ron Darling
614
1620.0
5.Sid Fernandez
596
1584.7
6.Al Leiter
546
1360.0
7.David Cone
431
1209.3
8.Jon Matlack
419
1448.0
9.Craig Swan
368
1230.7
10.Steve Trachsel
354
956.3

Hits Allowed

RankPlayer  H_p  Year
1.Roger Craig
261
1962
2.Frank Viola
259
1991
3.Jerry Koosman
258
1974
4.Jack Fisher
256
1964
5.Jack Fisher
252
1965
6.Jack Fisher
251
1967
7.Roger Craig
249
1963
8.Al Jackson
244
1962
9.Dwight Gooden
242
1988
10.Craig Swan
241
1979

Hits Allowed

RankPlayer  H_p  IP
1.Tom Seaver
2431
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
2281
2544.7
3.Dwight Gooden
1898
2169.7
4.Ron Darling
1473
1620.0
5.Jon Matlack
1312
1448.0
6.Bobby Jones
1255
1215.7
7.Al Leiter
1222
1360.0
8.Craig Swan
1191
1230.7
9.Sid Fernandez
1167
1584.7
10.Tom Glavine
1057
1005.3

SO to Walk

RankPlayer  SOperBB  Year
1.Bret Saberhagen
11.00
1994
2.Rick Reed
5.28
1998
3.Tom Seaver
4.74
1971
4.Pedro Martinez
4.43
2005
5.Tom Seaver
4.27
1968
6.Bob Ojeda
4.03
1988
7.Tom Seaver
3.92
1973
8.Dwight Gooden
3.88
1985
9.Dwight Gooden
3.78
1984
10.Rick Reed
3.65
1997

SO to Walk

RankPlayer  SOperBB  IP
1.Bret Saberhagen
5.04
524.3
2.Rick Reed
3.73
888.7
3.Tom Seaver
3.00
3045.3
4.Dwight Gooden
2.88
2169.7
5.Frank Viola
2.74
566.3
6.David Cone
2.72
1209.3
7.Jon Matlack
2.44
1448.0
8.Sid Fernandez
2.43
1584.7
9.Jerry Koosman
2.19
2544.7
10.Bob Ojeda
2.15
764.0

Losses

RankPlayer  L  Year
1.Roger Craig
24
1962
 Jack Fisher
24
1965
3.Roger Craig
22
1963
4.Al Jackson
20
1962
 Al Jackson
20
1965
 Jerry Koosman
20
1977
 Tracy Stallard
20
1964
8.Galen Cisco
19
1964
 Jay Hook
19
1962
10.Jack Fisher
18
1967

Losses

RankPlayer  L  IP
1.Jerry Koosman
137
2544.7
2.Tom Seaver
124
3045.3
3.Dwight Gooden
85
2169.7
4.Jon Matlack
81
1448.0
5.Al Jackson
80
980.7
6.Sid Fernandez
78
1584.7
7.Jack Fisher
73
931.7
8.Craig Swan
71
1230.7
9.Ron Darling
70
1620.0
10.Al Leiter
67
1360.0

Earned Runs Allow.

RankPlayer  ER  Year
1.Roger Craig
117
1962
2.Jack Fisher
115
1967
 Jay Hook
115
1962
4.Al Jackson
113
1962
5.Jack Fisher
111
1965
6.Mike Torrez
108
1983
7.Nino Espinosa
107
1978
 Jack Fisher
107
1964
9.Pedro Astacio
102
2002
 Frank Viola
102
1991

Earned Runs Allow.

RankPlayer  ER  IP
1.Jerry Koosman
875
2544.7
2.Tom Seaver
870
3045.3
3.Dwight Gooden
747
2169.7
4.Ron Darling
630
1620.0
5.Bobby Jones
558
1215.7
6.Sid Fernandez
553
1584.7
7.Al Leiter
517
1360.0
8.Craig Swan
508
1230.7
9.Jon Matlack
488
1448.0
10.Al Jackson
464
980.7

Wild Pitches

RankPlayer  WP  Year
1.Jack Hamilton
18
1966
2.David Cone
17
1991
3.David Cone
14
1989
 Jason Isringhausen
14
1996
5.Jon Matlack
13
1976
6.Kevin Appier
12
2001
 Ron Darling
12
1989
 Jack Fisher
12
1966
 Bob Miller
12
1962
 Tom Seaver
12
1976
 Tracy Stallard
12
1964

Wild Pitches

RankPlayer  WP  IP
1.Tom Seaver
81
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
66
2544.7
3.Ron Darling
63
1620.0
4.David Cone
62
1209.3
5.Dwight Gooden
47
2169.7
6.Tug McGraw
44
792.7
7.Jon Matlack
42
1448.0
8.John Franco
39
702.7
9.Jim McAndrew
34
729.7
10.Pete Falcone
31
607.7

Hit Batsmen

RankPlayer  HBP  Year
1.Pedro Astacio
16
2002
2.Kevin Appier
15
2001
 Nolan Ryan
15
1971
 Victor Zambrano
15
2005
5.Al Jackson
12
1963
6.Orel Hershiser
11
1999
 Al Leiter
11
1998
 Al Leiter
11
2000
 Al Leiter
11
2004
10.Don Cardwell
10
1968
 Jack Fisher
10
1964
 Pedro Martinez
10
2006
 Oliver Perez
10
2008
 Paul Wilson
10
1996

Hit Batsmen

RankPlayer  HBP  IP
1.Al Leiter
63
1360.0
2.Tom Seaver
52
3045.3
3.Jerry Koosman
49
2544.7
4.Dwight Gooden
41
2169.7
5.Ron Darling
36
1620.0
 Sid Fernandez
36
1584.7
7.Bobby Jones
33
1215.7
8.Al Jackson
32
980.7
9.David Cone
28
1209.3
10.Jack Fisher
26
931.7
 Gary Gentry
26
789.3

Batters Faced

RankPlayer  BFP  Year
1.Tom Seaver
1173
1970
2.Tom Seaver
1147
1973
3.Jerry Koosman
1118
1974
4.Tom Seaver
1115
1975
5.Tom Seaver
1103
1971
6.Tom Seaver
1089
1969
7.Tom Seaver
1088
1968
8.Tom Seaver
1079
1976
9.Jon Matlack
1076
1974
10.Jerry Koosman
1071
1973

Batters Faced

RankPlayer  BFP  IP
1.Tom Seaver
12191
3045.3
2.Jerry Koosman
10517
2544.7
3.Dwight Gooden
8898
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