January 1 –
Baltimore Oriolesrelief pitcherAlfredo Simón is arrested in connection to the shooting death of his cousin, Michael Castillo Almonte, 25, in the city of Luperon in
Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic. Almonte's 17-year-old younger brother Starlling Castillo is also injured in the incident. According to Simon, he was firing celebratory shots in the air as part of the New Year's custom in the
Dominican Republic. He is denied bail on February 1.
Rather than face another shoulder surgery,
Kansas City RoyalspitcherGil Meche announces his retirement despite a guaranteed contract that calls for a $12 million salary in 2011.
January 22 –
Detroit Tigers team president/general manager
Dave Dombrowski announces that the club will retire former manager
Sparky Anderson's number 11. The team will wear a blue patch on the right sleeve of their uniforms, bearing "Sparky" and number 11.
January 24 –
Armando Galarraga, who rose to national stardom on June 2,
2010 when he was denied a
perfect game by an errant call by umpire
Jim Joyce, is traded by the Detroit Tigers to the
Arizona Diamondbacks for minor leaguers Kevin Eichhorn and Ryan Robowski.
Irving Picard's lawsuit seeking up to about $1 billion against
Fred Wilpon,
Jeff Wilpon, Saul Katz and various entities affiliated with the
New York Mets and
Sterling Equities Associates to recover money for the victims of the
Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme is unsealed by a
Manhattan court. The civil suit alleges that the partners in Sterling knew or should have known that Madoff's investment operation was a fraud.
February 7 –
Wake Forest University baseball coach
Tom Walter donates a kidney to freshman outfielder Kevin Jordan. Jordan is diagnosed in April
2010 with
ANCAvasculitis. Walter was tested in December to see if he was a match, and learned January 28 that he was. Jordan was drafted by the
New York Yankees in the nineteenth round of the
2010 Major League Baseball draft, and had yet to play for Wake Forest.
February 17 – Detroit Tigers slugger
Miguel Cabrera is arrested in the early morning hours for a DUI. Cabrera's car is discovered parked on the side of a road in
Fort Pierce, Florida with Cabrera inside, allegedly intoxicated with a .26 blood alcohol level. When police arrive, he begins drinking from a bottle of Scotch he has on the front seat, and later resists arrest. He issues an apology upon arrival at training camp on February 24, and announces that he is undergoing treatment set up by doctors administered by management and the players' union.
February 24 – St. Louis Cardinals general manager
John Mozeliak announces that Cy Young Award candidate
Adam Wainwright requires
Tommy John surgery to replace the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow, and thus will miss the entire 2011 season and part of
2012.
March
March 2 – Following a three-error first inning, including one by
third basemanAramis Ramírez, Chicago Cubs starter
Carlos Silva and Ramirez get into a dugout skirmish. According to Silva, he says "We need to start making plays here" as he leaves the mound and enters the dugout, and Ramírez takes it personally. Silva also gives up two home runs to the
Milwaukee Brewers in the inning.
It is announced that the Hall of Fame will honor "
Talkin' Baseball" composer and singer
Terry Cashman this summer as part of induction weekend, 30 years after his song paying homage to
Willie Mays,
Mickey Mantle and
Duke Snider became a ballpark favorite. The 69-year-old Cashman performs his ballpark anthem once again during ceremonies on July 23, the day before Roberto Alomar, Bert Blyleven and
Pat Gillick are inducted.[2]
March 21
All-time home runs leader and seven-time National League Most Valuable Player
Barry Bonds'
perjury trial begins. Bonds faces four charges of perjury and one charge of obstruction of justice.
The New York Mets release
Óliver Pérez, and absorb the remaining $12 million on the three-year, $36 million deal he signs with the Mets back in
2009.
March 23 – Opening Day in
Nippon Professional Baseball is pushed back a week due to the effects of the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. The Central League agrees to a government request to push back the new season until March 29, a statement from the Central League directors says. The league starts on March 25.[3]
March 29 – Major League Baseball and its players' union announce a new set of protocols for dealing with concussions, including the creation of a new seven-day
disabled list for players with the injury.[4]
March 31 –
San Francisco Giants fan
Bryan Stow is beaten in the
Dodger Stadium parking lot by two men in
Los Angeles Dodgers gear after the Dodgers defeat the Giants 2–1 in the season opener. Stow is left with brain damage, prompting an outpouring of support for the survivor that includes rewards totaling more than $200,000 for information leading to the suspects' arrests.
April 3 – In the Texas Rangers' 5–1 victory over the Boston Red Sox,
Ian Kinsler and
Nelson Cruz combine to become the first set of teammates to hit home runs in each of the first three games in a Major League season. Kinsler also becomes the first
leadoff hitter to hit home runs in each of his team's first two games, bringing his career total of leadoff homers with the Rangers to fifteen, a team's record.[7]
April 6 – The defense in the
Barry Bonds perjury case rests without calling a single witness to the stand. After prosecutors drop one of the five charges against Bonds, and call 25 witnesses to the stand over 2+1⁄2 weeks, the defense takes just one minute to present its side. Prosecutors drop the count accusing Bonds of lying to a grand jury in
2003 when he said prior to that season he never took anything other than vitamins from trainer
Greg Anderson.
April 9 – During the
Pittsburgh Pirates game against the
Colorado Rockies, 41-year-old Scott Ashley is tasered by
Pittsburgh Police after being beaten six times. Ashley is the second fan to be tasered during a Major League game.
April 13 – The jury deciding the federal case against Barry Bonds finds him guilty of
obstruction of justice. The jury is hung on the three counts of making false declarations during his 2003 testimony before the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO) grand jury, resulting in a mistrial.
April 15 –
Lenny Dykstra is arrested by Los Angeles police at his
Encino, California home on suspicion of trying to buy a stolen car. Prosecutors later decline to file charges; however, he is transferred to federal authorities on unrelated charges of illegally removing and selling personal property from his $18 million mansion without permission of a
bankruptcy trustee, according to a federal criminal complaint filed on April 22. He is released on $150,000 bond on April 20, and ordered to seek outpatient substance abuse treatment, as authorities say he has
cocaine and
ecstasy in his possession when he is originally arrested.
April 16 – The
Inland Empire 66ers come back from a 16–7 deficit, scoring 17 combined runs, en route to a 24–19 victory over the
Bakersfield Blaze. Every player in the 66ers starting lineup has multiple hits, and all ten who bat in the ballgame score at least once. The game takes four hours and 55 minutes, the longest in
California League history.
April 20 – Commissioner
Bud Selig announces that Major League Baseball will take over operations of the Los Angeles Dodgers from owner
Frank McCourt.
Pursuant to my authority as Commissioner, I informed Los Angeles Dodgers owner Frank McCourt today that I will appoint a representative to oversee all aspects of the business and the day to day operations of the club. I have taken this action because of my deep concerns regarding the finances and operations of the Dodgers and to protect the best interests of the club, its great fans and all of Major League Baseball. My office will continue its thorough investigation into the operations and finances of the Dodgers and related entities during the period of Mr. McCourt's ownership. I will announce the name of my representative in the next several days. The Dodgers have been one of the most prestigious franchises in all of sports, and we owe it to their legion of loyal fans to ensure that this club is being operated properly now and will be guided appropriately in the future.
April 23 –
Atlanta Bravespitching coachRoger McDowell is accused of making homophobic comments and crude gestures toward fans during batting practice before a game against the Giants in San Francisco. The Braves place McDowell on administrative leave on April 29. Pitching coach duties are taken over by Braves Minor League pitching coordinator
Dave Wallace.
Baseball commissioner Bud Selig appoints former Texas Rangers president
Tom Schieffer to oversee the Los Angeles Dodgers' business and financial operations.
Chicago Cubs shortstop
Starlin Castro commits three
errors in the second inning of the Cubs' 5–3 loss to the Colorado Rockies.
Los Angeles Angels pitcher
Jered Weaver pitches a complete-game shutout of the
Oakland A's to improve his record to 6–0 with a 0.99 ERA and 49 strikeouts. He is the first pitcher to go 6–0 by April 25, and is the fourth player in Major League history to go 6–0 in March and April, the last being
Brandon Webb with the Arizona Diamondbacks in
2008. It is the fifth time a pitcher does this, with
Randy Johnson having done it twice.
April 26 – Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder
Andre Ethier establishes a major league record for the month of April by extending his hitting streak to 23 games, surpassing former manager
Joe Torre's
1971 record for the longest hitting streak during the month of April. The streak would ultimately last thirty games, ending on May 7 against the New York Mets.
This one is going to cost me a lot of money this is patetic.
and
Today a tough guy show up at Yankee Stadium.
Guillen is fined $50,000 and receives a two-game suspension. According to MLB rules, all social media messages must stop thirty minutes prior to the first pitch, and they can resume after the game at the individual club's discretion. His fine is later reduced to $20,000.
April 28
In a sweep of a doubleheader with the
Minnesota Twins, the Tampa Bay Rays'
Ben Zobrist goes seven-for-ten, collecting ten RBIs. He sets a club record with eight RBIs in the opener, on a home run and two doubles, and hits a two-run home run in the second game. Zobrist is just the fourth player to record at least seven hits and ten RBIs in a single day since RBIs become an official statistic in 1920. The other three are
Jim Bottomley (1929 Cardinals),
Pete Fox (1935 Tigers) and
Nate Colbert (1972 Padres).
Atlanta Braves pitcher
Derek Lowe is charged with drunken driving. A Georgia State Patrolman stops Lowe's vehicle upon seeing it race another car down an Atlanta street. The trooper detects the odor of an alcoholic beverage and administers a field sobriety test, which Lowe fails.
May 7 – At
Rogers Centre, the Detroit Tigers'
Justin Verlander no-hits the
Toronto Blue Jays 9–0, the second no-hitter of the season. Verlander's no-hitter occurs just four days after Francisco Liriano (see above) pitched a no-hitter against the Chicago White Sox. Verlander retires the first 22 batters he faces before a walk to
J. P. Arencibia spoils his bid for a
perfect game. Arencibia is then erased on
Edwin Encarnación's double play ground ball, allowing Verlander to face the minimum 27 batters. The no-hitter is the second in Verlander's career; he also no-hit the
Milwaukee Brewers on June 12, 2007. Verlander becomes the second Tigers pitcher since
Virgil Trucks, and the thirtieth pitcher in the history of baseball, to throw multiple no-hitters. Like the White Sox, victims of Liriano's no-hitter four days earlier, the Blue Jays were also no-hit in 1991, on May 1 by
Nolan Ryan—the seventh and last no-hitter of Ryan's career.
May 13 – Minnesota Twins legend
Harmon Killebrew announces that his
esophageal cancer has progressed to the point where he is no longer able to fight the disease, and that he will settle into
hospice care for the final days of his life. He dies at his home in
Scottsdale, Arizona on May 17, with his wife, Nita, and their family at his side.
It is with profound sadness that I share with you that my continued battle with esophageal cancer is coming to an end. With the continued love and support of my wife, Nita, I have exhausted all options with respect to controlling this awful disease. My illness has progressed beyond my doctors' expectation of cure.
May 14 –
Alex Cabrera of the
Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks hits his 350th career home run in Japanese baseball. At 1,169 games, Cabrera is the quickest player in NPB history to 350 homers. Previously, he was also the quickest to hit 150 homers (380th game); 200 homers (538th game); 250 homers (733rd game; tied with
Ralph Bryant), and 300 homers (934th game). Cabrera also missed being the quickest to 100 homers by one game (Bryant holds the record at 246 games).[8]
May 20 – Four "very small" tumors are discovered on the brain of Hall of Fame catcher
Gary Carter during an MRI. Preliminary results from biopsies performed on a single tumor on May 27 at
Duke University determine that it appears to be malignant. He dies in 2012, at the age of 57.
Randy Poffo known by his ring name
Randy Savage during his time in WWE is killed when he loses control of his Jeep Wrangler and crashes into a tree he is 58. Savage spent four seasons in the Cardinals organization.
The
New York Yankees'
Mariano Rivera becomes the first pitcher in MLB history to make 1,000 appearances with one team, reaching the milestone by retiring the side in the ninth inning of the Yankees' 7–3 win over the
Toronto Blue Jays. Rivera also becomes the 15th pitcher in MLB history with 1,000 career appearances.[9]
The Philadelphia Phillies defeat the Cincinnati Reds 5–4 in nineteen innings. Phillies second baseman
Wilson Valdez (who joins the Reds the following year) pitches the nineteenth inning for Philadelphia to pick up his first career win.
Raúl Ibañez hits a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the inning with one out and the bases loaded to drive in
Jimmy Rollins.
May 26 – The New York Mets agree to sell a minority, non-operating investment in the team to
David Einhorn, president of
Greenlight Capital Inc., for $200 million, pending the completion of exclusive negotiations and approval by Major League Baseball owners. The deal gives him a one-third stake in the team and has an option to own sixty percent in three years.
May 27 –
Brandon Crawford hits a go-ahead grand slam in his first major league game, helping
Tim Lincecum and the San Francisco Giants beat the Milwaukee Brewers, 5–4, at
Miller Park.[10]
June 2 – On the first anniversary of
Armando Galarraga's near-perfect game, Major League Baseball puts a rule into effect that
Jim Joyce, the first-base umpire whose incorrect call cost
Galarraga the perfect game, cannot umpire any games in which Galarraga's team plays. The two had become business partners after releasing a book on the game, and this relationship was seen to affect Joyce's impartiality while umpiring Galarraga's team. This rule is similar to the one that prevents
Jim Wolf from being the home plate umpire in games in which his younger brother
Randy pitches.
June 6 – The hard-throwing
UCLA tandem of
Gerrit Cole (1) and
Trevor Bauer (3), respectively selected by Pittsburgh and Arizona, marks the first time since
1978 that two college teammates are taken in the top three picks of the annual Draft.
Arizona State had earned the honor last time, with
Bob Horner and
Hubie Brooks taken first and third overall.
June 7 – Yuma Scorpions player/manager Jose Canseco enters a game against the
Lake County Fielders at pitcher. He faces four batters, striking out one. It is the first time Canseco pitches in a professional game since he famously pitched an inning for the Texas Rangers on May 29,
1993, injured his arm, and was shut down for the remainder of the season. The Fielders defeat the Scorpions 10–4.
June 19 – With the Florida Marlins on a nine-game losing streak, and having won only one game in the month of June (June 10 against the Arizona Diamondbacks), manager
Edwin Rodríguez resigns. Marlins bench coach
Brandon Hyde replaces Rodriguez for the evening's game (a 2–1 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays that brought the team's losing streak to ten games). The following day, the Marlins name
Jack McKeon interim manager. At 80 years old, he is the oldest manager in National League history, and second-oldest in Major League history after only
Connie Mack, who managed the
Philadelphia Athletics in
1950 at age 87.
June 20 – In his return to managing, Florida Marlins manager Jack McKeon benches star shortstop
Hanley Ramírez for being late to a team meeting.
June 21 – The
Minnesota Twins begin their game against the
San Francisco Giants with four singles and four doubles off
Madison Bumgarner. The eight consecutive hits to open a game ties a major league record. Bumgarner is lifted after giving up
Ben Revere's second hit of the first inning.
June 23 – Following a 1–0 victory over the Seattle Mariners at
Nationals Park, Washington Nationals manager
Jim Riggleman steps down as manager of the team. After the team had won eleven of its last twelve games, Riggleman discusses picking up his option for 2012 with general manager
Mike Rizzo. When Rizzo refuses, the team accepts his resignation. On the topic, Rizzo states the following:
The timing of it, that he resigned at this time when we're playing so well and coming off a homestand that we should be celebrating ... I'm disappointed that this is a distraction. This is not thinking of the team first, it's thinking of personal things first. That's what disappoints me the most.
June 24 – Washington Nationals interim manager
John McLaren is ejected in the eighth inning of his only game at the helm. The Nats go on to defeat the Chicago White Sox 9–5 in fourteen innings.
Davey Johnson is named manager of the Washington Nationals the following day.
June 27 – Unable to make their $40 million payroll obligations for the week, the Los Angeles Dodgers file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a Delaware court. Chapter 11 filings are also made for LA Real Estate LLC, an affiliated entity that owns Dodger Stadium, and three other related holding companies. Meanwhile, on the field, the Dodgers put up fifteen runs and collect 25 hits while shutting out the Minnesota Twins at Target Field. The 25 hits are the most by any team in the Majors this season and match a Dodgers club record, last reached on May 19,
2006 against the Los Angeles Angels. It is the first time in Los Angeles Dodgers history that every player in the lineup has at least one hit, one run and one RBI.
June 29 – The Detroit Tigers hit five home runs against the New York Mets, yet lose despite the fact that the Mets hit none. It is the first time since August 8
2007 a team wins despite being out-homered by at least five (Tampa Bay Rays over the Baltimore Orioles). With their 16–9 victory, the Mets set a team record with 52 runs scored in a four-game span. They have 69 hits during this stretch.
June 30 – Second baseman
Mark Ellis is dealt from the Oakland A's to the Colorado Rockies for right-handed pitcher
Bruce Billings and a player to be named later.
July
July 7
Texas Rangers left fielder
Josh Hamilton tosses a foul ball to Shannon Stone, a fan in the stands at
Rangers Ballpark, during the second inning of their 6–0 victory over the Oakland A's. After reaching over the railing and catching the ball, Stone falls approximately twenty feet head first from section 5 in the left field lower reserved seats into the opening behind the out-of-town scoreboard. He is immediately attended to by emergency personnel and taken to
John Peter Smith Hospital in
Fort Worth. Witnesses say Stone is conscious after landing and speaks about his six-year-old son, Cooper, being left alone. Stone goes into full arrest on the way, and is pronounced dead at the hospital; an autopsy rules the cause as blunt force trauma from the fall.
The Baltimore Orioles and Boston Red Sox are embroiled in a bench-clearing brawl when Orioles closer
Kevin Gregg throws three inside pitches, then says something and makes a gesture to Red Sox slugger
David Ortiz to run out his sacrifice fly. Both are immediately ejected, along with Red Sox catcher
Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Orioles reliever
Jim Johnson. The following day, Red Sox pitcher
John Lackey hits
Nick Markakis and
Derrek Lee with pitches in his team's 4–0 victory. Red Sox manager
Terry Francona and rookie starter
Kyle Weiland are ejected from the game on the 10th after Weiland throws at two Orioles batters. Orioles reliever
Mike Gonzalez later throws a pitch behind Ortiz, and is immediately ejected along with O's manager
Buck Showalter. Gregg and Ortiz are given four game suspensions, with Gregg fined $2,500 as well. Gonzalez is fined $1,500 and suspended three games, and Showalter is suspended one game, which he served in the Orioles' series opener against the Cleveland Indians on the 14th. Johnson also receives a $500 fine, and Lackey is fined an undisclosed amount.
July 9 – At
Yankee Stadium,
Derek Jeter of the New York Yankees becomes the 28th member of the
3,000 hit club, homering off
David Price in the third inning of the Yankees' 5–4 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays. Jeter becomes the first player to reach the milestone exclusively as a Yankee, and only the second to do so with a home run, joining
Wade Boggs in
1999. He also becomes the first player to go 5-for-5 the day of achieving his 3000th hit and only the second to collect five hits in the game, joining
Craig Biggio in
2007. In the eighth inning, his fifth hit scores
Eduardo Núñez with the winning run.
July 12 –
Prince Fielder's fourth inning three-run home run leads the NL past the AL in the 82nd All-Star Game at
Chase Field. Shortly after Fielder is named the All-Star Game MVP, his team, the Milwaukee Brewers, announces that they have acquired reliever
Francisco Rodríguez from the New York Mets for two players to be named later.
July 14 – The
Roger Clemens perjury trial is declared a
mistrial by Judge Reggie Walton on just the second day of testimony after the government introduces evidence before the jury that Walton rules inadmissible.
July 20 –
Hideki Matsui clubs his 168th Major League home run. Coupled with the 332 he hit while playing with the
Yomiuri Giants of
Nippon Professional Baseball (
1993–
2002), Matsui becomes the first player in the history of baseball to collect 500 home runs spread out over both leagues.
July 26–27 – The Atlanta Braves and Pittsburgh Pirates play a nineteen-inning marathon (the longest game in either franchise's history) that ends in the early morning hours. The winning run scores when, with one out and runners on second and third, Braves pitcher
Scott Proctor grounds to shortstop
Ronny Cedeño. Cedeño throws home to attempt to retire
Julio Lugo and it appears that his throw reaches catcher
Michael McKenry and the tag is made well short of home plate. Lugo, however, gets up from his slide, touches home, and is called safe by home plate umpire
Jerry Meals, ending the game.
The San Francisco Giants acquire outfielder
Carlos Beltrán from the New York Mets for minor league pitching prospect
Zack Wheeler.
The Los Angeles Angels'
Ervin Santana no-hits the Cleveland Indians. Despite not giving up a hit, his team is down 1–0 until a fifth-inning sacrifice fly by
Mike Trout, as
Ezequiel Carrera reaches base on an error by shortstop
Erick Aybar in the first, proceeds to steal second, reaches third on
Asdrúbal Cabrera's ground out, and scores on a
wild pitch. The Angels win by a final score of 3–1.
July 28 – Three-RBI games by
Lucas Duda and
Jason Bay give the New York Mets a 10–9 win over the Cincinnati Reds to complete a four-game sweep at
Great American Ball Park. It is the first sweep of a four-game series against the Reds in their history.
July 29 – The Philadelphia Phillies acquire outfielder
Hunter Pence from the Houston Astros for minor league pitchers Jarred Cosart and
Josh Zeid, first baseman Jonathan Singleton and a player to be named later. Both Cosart and Singleton are with the Class A
Clearwater Threshers and both are ranked on Baseball America's Midseason Top 50 prospects list, with Singleton placing at number 41 and Cosart at number 43.
July 30
In the second game of a doubleheader, the New York Yankees set a franchise record for most runs in the first inning of a game with twelve in their 17–3 win over the Baltimore Orioles.
The Pittsburgh Pirates acquire first baseman
Derrek Lee from the Baltimore Orioles for minor league first baseman
Aaron Baker.
After he believes he is being taunted after home runs by
Magglio Ordóñez and
Carlos Guillén of the Detroit Tigers, Los Angeles Angels pitcher
Jered Weaver intentionally throws at
Alex Avila's head and is ejected – immediately after both sides are warned. Angels manager
Mike Scioscia is also ejected for permitting Weaver to do so. Two days later, Weaver is suspended six games and fined an undisclosed amount, while Scioscia is suspended one game. Weaver appeals the decision.[13]
On the final day before the trade deadline, the Cleveland Indians acquire pitcher
Ubaldo Jiménez from the Colorado Rockies in exchange for a package of four prospects that include the top two pitching prospects in Cleveland's farm system (pitchers
Alex White,
Joe Gardner and
Drew Pomeranz and first baseman
Matt McBride). The Boston Red Sox trade minor league pitchers
Stephen Fife and
Juan Rodríguez and catcher
Tim Federowicz to the Los Angeles Dodgers for outfielder
Trayvon Robinson. The Red Sox then send Robinson and outfielder
Chih-Hsien Chiang to the Seattle Mariners for
Érik Bédard and Minor League reliever
Josh Fields. The Dodgers also send shortstop
Rafael Furcal to the St. Louis Cardinals for minor league outfielder
Alex Castellanos. The Atlanta Braves acquire outfielder
Michael Bourn from the Houston Astros for outfielder
Jordan Schafer and Minor League pitchers
Juan Abreu,
Paul Clemens and
Brett Oberholtzer. The Arizona Diamondbacks acquire reliever
Brad Ziegler from the Oakland A's for first baseman
Brandon Allen and reliever
Jordan Norberto. The Texas Rangers acquire reliever
Mike Adams from the San Diego Padres for pitching prospects
Robbie Erlin and
Joe Wieland, and reliever
Koji Uehara from the Baltimore Orioles for first baseman
Chris Davis and pitcher
Tommy Hunter. San Diego also sends outfielder
Ryan Ludwick to the Pittsburgh Pirates for a player to be named or cash considerations. For the first time since
1998, the Yankees do not make a deadline deal.
August
August 2 –
Mark Teixeira hits home runs from both sides of the plate for a major league-record 12th time, helping the New York Yankees beat the Chicago White Sox 6–0 in a game shortened to 6.5 innings by rain.
August 4 – The New York Yankees complete a four-game sweep of the Chicago White Sox at
U.S. Cellular Field. It is their first four-game sweep against the White Sox in
Chicago since
1976. Yankees pitching also does not allow a
base on balls in any of the four games. The last time such a feat was accomplished was by the Boston Red Sox in
1968, also against the White Sox.
August 12
After having given up six earned runs to the Atlanta Braves in the first four innings, Cubs pitcher
Carlos Zambrano gives up back-to-back home runs to
Freddie Freeman and
Dan Uggla (who extends his hitting streak to 32 games) with one out in the fifth. Zambrano is then ejected after throwing two consecutive inside pitches to Atlanta third baseman
Chipper Jones (who also hits one of the Braves' five home runs off Zambrano earlier in the game). Following his ejection, Zambrano cleans out his locker at
Wrigley Field, and announces his retirement. He later recants, but the Cubs suspend him for 30 games, effectively ending his season. During the off-season, the Cubs trade Zambrano to the
Miami Marlins.
August 15 – At
Comerica Park,
Jim Thome hits two home runs in the Minnesota Twins' 9–6 victory over the Detroit Tigers, the second of which makes Thome the eighth player with 600 career home runs. After homering off
Rick Porcello in the sixth inning, Thome hits his milestone home run off
Daniel Schlereth one inning later. Thome becomes the second-fastest player to hit 600 home runs, doing so in his 8,167th at bat; only
Babe Ruth needed fewer at-bats with 6,921. He also becomes, at age 40, the oldest player to reach this milestone.
Sammy Sosa is previously the oldest, at 38 years, 220 days.[14]
August 18 – The Colorado Rockies release minor league first baseman
Mike Jacobs after he receives a fifty-game suspension for testing positive for human growth hormone. Jacobs becomes the first athlete in any North American professional sport to be suspended for testing positive for HGH.
August 19 – The Chicago Cubs announce that they have dismissed
general managerJim Hendry and have named assistant GM
Randy Bush interim GM. Hendry was promoted to the GM job in the summer of 2002 and was under contract through 2012.
August 21 – With both Alex Rodriguez and Jim Thome in the line-ups for their respective ball clubs in the final game of a four-game set between the New York Yankees and Minnesota Twins, it is the first match-up of 600 home run club members since
Willie Mays and
Hank Aaron face off as members of the New York Mets and Atlanta Braves, respectively, on July 17,
1973. Rodriguez and Thome share a handshake at homeplate prior to the game to a huge ovation.
August 22 –
Clinton County, Pennsylvania's Landon Breon and Brandon Miller combine for a no-hitter over
Lafayette, Louisiana in the
2011 Little League World Series. The game ends after the top of the fourth due to Little League's ten-run "mercy" rule. Breon pitched the first 3.1 with Miller getting the final two outs. Miller also scored Clinton County's first run with a solo home run in the bottom of the first inning.
August 25
In a 22–9 routing of the Oakland A's, the New York Yankees become the first team in major league history to record three
grand slams in one game. The grand slams are hit by
Robinson Canó,
Russell Martin, and
Curtis Granderson.
The Minnesota Twins send Jim Thome to the Cleveland Indians for a player to be named later.
August 26 –
Barry Bonds' obstruction of justice conviction is upheld by U.S. District Judge Susan Illston in San Francisco, who denies the former baseball star's motion for a new trial or acquittal on the charge. Meanwhile,
Roger Clemens files a motion in the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., for sanctions against the prosecutors of his perjury trial for their "egregious error" resulting in a mistrial; the motion seeks dismissal of the case.
August 27 –
Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers wins his 20th game of the season, the only pitcher to do so before the end of August since
Curt Schilling did so in 2002. He is the first Tigers 20-game winner since
Bill Gullickson in 1991, and it marks the 44th time in Tigers history that a pitcher has reached 20 wins in a season. Verlander wins his 20th game in the Tigers' 132nd game of the season, making him the fastest Detroit pitcher to 20 wins since
Mickey Lolich got his 20th win in Game No. 131 of the 1972 season.[15]
August 28 –
Derek Jeter plays his 2,402nd game as a Yankee, passing
Mickey Mantle as the team's all-time leader in games played.
September
September 2 – U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton rules that
Roger Clemens will face another trial on charges of lying under oath to a House committee about using performance-enhancing drugs. The new date is set for April 17, 2012.
September 11 –
José Valverde records his 43rd
save of the season, passing
Todd Jones as the Detroit Tigers' single season saves leader.
September 12 –
Manny Ramírez is arrested after slapping his wife, Juliana, in their
Weston, Florida, home. He is released on $2,500 bail the next day after spending the night in the
Broward County Jail.
September 13
At
Fenway Park,
Tim Wakefield of the
Boston Red Sox wins his 200th game on his eighth try. He survives a shaky outing, giving up five runs in six innings, and exits with his team leading 6–5. His teammates assure him of the victory by scoring 12 runs in their last three half-innings, in an 18–6 victory against the
Toronto Blue Jays. Wakefield's last victory was on July 24 against the
Seattle Mariners.
September 14 – A first-inning run against the
Houston Astros is all the
Philadelphia Phillies need as they cruise to a 1–0 victory behind
Roy Halladay to become the first team to clinch a playoff spot in the season.
The
Detroit Tigers clinch the
American League Central Division title, their first since they join the division in
1998, and the team's first title of any kind since
1987. The Tigers become the first team in either league to clinch their division.[16]
The
Frederick Keys score a club-record eleven runs in the third inning to defeat the
Kinston Indians, 11–3, to capture the
Carolina League championship. It is the Keys' first Mills Cup since
2007.
September 19 –
Mariano Rivera records his 602nd career save in the
New York Yankees' 6–4 win over the
Minnesota Twins, placing him alone atop Major League Baseball's career saves list.
September 22 – Upon finding out that he is not able to play winter ball in the
Dominican Republic because he is on MLB's inactive list,
Manny Ramírez tells
ESPN Deportes that he formally requests reinstatement to the major leagues.
September 25 – At Yankee Stadium,
Jacoby Ellsbury crashes two solo home runs off
A. J. Burnett in the first half of a day-night doubleheader, to become the first player in
Boston Red Sox history to reach the
30 home runs and 30 stolen bases plateaus in the same season. New York takes the opening match, 7–2. In the nightcap, Ellsbury hits a three-run homer off
Scott Proctor in the top of the 14th inning, lifting Boston to a 7–4 win over the Yankees.
September 28
Cardinals pitcher
Chris Carpenter holds the Houston Astros to just two hits to lead his team to an 8–0 victory, and into the postseason. The Cards had trailed the Atlanta Braves by 10.5 games in the Wild Card race on August 25, but they went on a 23–9 tear since. Meanwhile, the Braves went 11–20, capped off by a thirteen-inning 4–3 loss to the
National League Eastern division-winning Philadelphia Phillies in Atlanta to end their season.
In the final game of the season, the Tampa Bay Rays rally from a 7–0 deficit against the New York Yankees to tie the game at seven, and head into extra innings.
Evan Longoria hits a home run in a six-run eighth, while
Dan Johnson hits a solo shot in the ninth to tie it. Longoria's second home run in the 12th wins it for the Rays.
Robert Andino's single off
Jonathan Papelbon caps off a two-run, two-out rally in the ninth to give the Baltimore Orioles a 4–3 victory over the Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox went 7–20 in the month of September, to go from leading the Wild Card standings by nine games when the month starts to missing the playoffs entirely. They are the first team in history to miss the postseason after having that big a lead in September.
The
Florida Marlins play their final regular season game at
Sun Life Stadium, which was their home since their inaugural 1993 season, and move to Marlins Park the following season.
September 30:
The Tampa Bay Rays storm to a 9–0 victory over the Texas Rangers in game one of the
2011 American League Division Series. Rays starter
Matt Moore holds the Rangers to just two hits over seven innings.
A match-up of aces
CC Sabathia and
Justin Verlander for game one of the ALDS at
Yankee Stadium is suspended in the middle of the second inning by rain. The game is resumed the following day with would-be game two starters
Iván Nova and
Doug Fister replacing their respective clubs' aces. The Yankees cruise to a 9–3 victory, highlighted by a
Robinson Canó grand slam.
After allowing three runs in the first inning,
Roy Halladay pitches seven scoreless innings to lead the Philadelphia Phillies to an 11–6 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of the
2011 National League Division Series.
The Texas Rangers score five runs in the fifth to defeat the Tampa Bay Rays 8–6 in Game 2 of the ALDS. Rays starter
James Shields had allowed just one run in twenty innings against the Rangers all season up to that point.
Yovani Gallardo ties a Milwaukee Brewers postseason club record with nine strikeouts to lead his team to a 4–1 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks.
October 2
Max Scherzer holds the New York Yankees hitless until the sixth inning, as the Detroit Tigers cruise to a 5–3 victory in Game 2 of the ALDS.
Despite having been spotted a four-run lead,
Cliff Lee is unable to contain the St. Louis Cardinals as they charge back to win Game 2 of the NLDS, 5–4.
On the strength of a five-run sixth inning, the Milwaukee Brewers defeat the Arizona Diamondbacks 9–4 in Game 2 of the NLDS.
October 3
Delmon Young breaks a 4–4 tie in the seventh inning with a home run off
Rafael Soriano to lead the Detroit Tigers to a 5–4 victory over the New York Yankees in Game 3 of the ALDS.
Josh Hamilton's two-run single highlights a four-run seventh inning as the Texas Rangers defeat the Tampa Bay Rays 4–3 to take a two-games-to-one lead in the ALDS.
October 4
Adrián Beltré clubs three home runs to lead the Texas Rangers to a 4–3 victory in the fourth and decisive game of the ALDS.
Paul Goldschmidt clubs a grand slam in the fifth inning to lead the Arizona Diamondbacks to their first victory of the 2011 postseason.
Ben Francisco breaks a scoreless tie in the seventh inning with a three-run homer off
Jaime García to lead the Philadelphia Phillies to a 3–2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 3 of the NLDS.
Curtis Granderson's diving catch in the first inning helps Yankees starter
A. J. Burnett escape a bases-loaded jam. From there, Burnett is nearly flawless in the next 4.2 innings as the New York Yankees cruise to a 10–1 victory over the Detroit Tigers in Game 4 of the ALDS.
October 5
David Freese hits a two-run double and a two-run home run to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 5–3 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies, and tie the NLDS at two games apiece.
The Arizona Diamondbacks also even their series with the Milwaukee Brewers as
Chris Young hits two home runs and
Ryan Roberts hits a grand slam.
October 6
Would-be Game 2 starters
Doug Fister and
Iván Nova face off again, this time with Fister emerging on top as the Tigers win the fifth and decisive game of the ALDS, 3–2. The Yankees use seven pitchers in the game, including
CC Sabathia, who gives up the Tigers' third run of the game.
Alex Rodriguez becomes the only player in major league history to strike out in his team's final postseason at-bat two seasons in a row.
The Chicago White Sox name
Robin Ventura their new manager. Ventura had been working with the club as a special advisor to director of player development
Buddy Bell for the past year.
October 7
Andy MacPhail announces he will not return as the Baltimore Orioles' president of baseball operations for the 2012 season.
Nyjer Morgan's RBI single in the tenth inning scores
Carlos Gómez to give the Milwaukee Brewers a 3–2 victory in the fifth and decisive game of the NLDS.
Roy Halladay allows hits to the first two St. Louis Cardinals batters he faces, as
Skip Schumaker's double drives in
Rafael Furcal to give the Cards the early 1–0 lead. It turns out to be the only scoring of the game as game five of the NLDS lives up to its billing as a pitchers' duel. Halladay holds St. Louis scoreless the rest of the way, while
Chris Carpenter holds the Philadelphia Phillies to just three hits in a complete-game victory to send the Cardinals to the
National League Championship Series.
October 8 –
Justin Verlander gives up three runs in four innings of work as the Texas Rangers defeat the Detroit Tigers 3–2 in Game 1 of the
2011 American League Championship Series.
C. J. Wilson gives up two runs in the rain-interrupted fifth inning before giving way to
Alexi Ogando, who pitches two innings out of the bullpen to earn the win.
October 9 – Losing 5–2, the Milwaukee Brewers score six in the fifth inning to defeat the St. Louis Cardinals 9–6 in Game 1 of the
2011 National League Championship Series.
October 10
Nelson Cruz hits the first walk-off grand slam home run in postseason history and the Texas Rangers win 7–3 in Game 2 of the ALCS.
Albert Pujols goes four-for-five with a home run and five RBIs to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 12–3 victory in Game 2 of the NLCS.
October 11
San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow, the survivor of the March 31 beating in the Dodger Stadium parking lot by two Los Angeles Dodgers fans, is transferred to a rehabilitation facility after nearly seven months in hospitals.
The St. Louis Cardinals score four runs in the first inning, and hold on for a 4–3 victory in Game 3 of the NLCS. It is the fifth time in a row that the Cardinals score in the first inning this postseason.
A run-scoring single by
Mike Napoli is followed by a three-run home run by
Nelson Cruz, as the Texas Rangers win Game 4 of the ALCS 7–3 in eleven innings.
Despite being named National League Comeback Player of the Year,
Lance Berkman is not in the lineup for Game 4 of the NLCS, as his St. Louis Cardinals lose, 4–2.
Jacoby Ellsbury brings home American League honors.
October 14 – Four errors by the Milwaukee Brewers lead to three unearned runs as the St. Louis Cardinals win Game 5 of the NLCS, 7–1. The four errors are the most in a playoff game since the Atlanta Braves committed four in Game 4 of the
2001 National League Championship Series.
October 15
Behind the strength of a nine-run third, the Texas Rangers win the
American League Championship Series with a 15–5 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
October 19 –
Chris Carpenter earns his eighth career postseason win in Game 1 of the
2011World Series, passing
Bob Gibson as the Cardinals' winningest pitcher in the postseason.
October 22 –
Albert Pujols joins
Babe Ruth and
Reggie Jackson as the only players to hit three home runs in a World Series game as the St. Louis Cardinals win Game 3 of the series, 16–7. Pujols collects a record 14 total bases, while tying World Series records for most hits in a game (5) and RBIs (6). He also becomes the first player in World Series history to get hits in four consecutive innings. The Cards put two runs or more on the board in a record four straight innings (4th through 7th), while also scoring in six consecutive innings (4th through 9th).
October 25 – The Chicago Cubs introduce former Boston Red Sox general manager
Theo Epstein as their new president, while the Red Sox name
Ben Cherington the team's executive vice president/general manager.
October 27 – The St. Louis Cardinals win a memorable Game 6 of the 2011 World Series in 11 innings. They trailed twice by two runs, in both the 9th and 10th innings, yet came back to tie the game, and then win it in the 11th inning on a
David Freese solo home run leading off the inning, to dead centerfield. The home run is called by
Joe Buck who says "We will see you tomorrow night" the same call made by his father
Jack Buck 20 years ago calling Kirby Puckett's walk-off home run in Game 6 of the
1991 World Series
October 28 – The
St. Louis Cardinals win their 11th World Series title, defeating the Texas Rangers 6–2 at
Busch Stadium. Third baseman David Freese is named Series MVP and is awarded a new 2012
Chevrolet Corvette. The game would be the last of Cardinals manager Tony La Russa's 33-year career as he announces his retirement 3 days later.
October 29 – The Los Angeles Angels hire
Jerry Dipoto as their new general manager. Dipoto becomes the 11th GM in club history.
October 31 –
Tony La Russa retires as manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, three days after winning a dramatic, seven-game
World Series against the Texas Rangers. La Russa retires third on the all-time wins list (2,728), trailing only
Connie Mack (3,731) and
John McGraw (2,763). In addition to this season, La Russa won World Championships in Oakland in
1989 and St. Louis in
2006.
Los Angeles Dodgers owner
Frank McCourt agrees to sell the team. The sale not only includes the club and Dodger Stadium, but also the media rights.
November 2 – The Chicago Cubs fire manager
Mike Quade after just one full season at the helm in which he leads the team to a 71–91 record in 2011. His overall record is 95–104.
November 6 – The Baltimore Orioles sign
Dan Duquette to a three-year deal to become the general manager. Duquette, 53, is out of baseball since being dismissed by the Boston Red Sox in
2002.
November 7 – The Kansas City Royals trade outfielder
Melky Cabrera to the San Francisco Giants for pitcher
Jonathan Sánchez, upgrading their starting rotation and clearing the way for prospect
Lorenzo Cain to get a chance in center field.
November 9 – Washington Nationals catcher
Wilson Ramos is kidnapped by four gunmen from the front yard of his mother's home in
Valencia in his native
Venezuela.[18] He is rescued by Venezuelan authorities on November 11 during an air operation in the mountains in the state of
Carabobo, roughly forty miles northwest of where he is abducted.[19]
November 11 – At 9:00 pm, the Florida Marlins are officially renamed the
Miami Marlins. They move to
Marlins Park the next year.
The Los Angeles Dodgers sign
Matt Kemp to an eight-year extension worth $160 million.
November 17 – Major League Baseball owners approve the sale of the
Houston Astros to a group led by private equity fund company CEO
Jim Crane, with the sale conditional on the team moving to the
American League beginning in 2013.
December 5 – The
Hall of Fame announces the results of voting by the Golden Era Committee, a component of the
Veterans Committee. After considering 10 nominees whose greatest contributions to the sport came from 1947 to 1972, the panel elects
Ron Santo to the Hall. He will be formally inducted on July 22, 2012.[20]
December 7 – The Hall of Fame announces
Tim McCarver, the lead analyst for Major League Baseball on Fox since
1996, as the 2012 recipient of its
Ford C. Frick Award for broadcasting excellence. He will formally receive the honor at the Hall of Fame Awards Presentation.[22]
December 8 – The
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim win the
Albert Pujols sweepstakes in agreeing to a contract with the
free agent in the second-highest contract amount in baseball history: $254 million over 10 years.
Major league baseball owners ratify a new five-year collective bargaining agreement with the players' union. The
MLBPA previously gave its own assent. The agreement provides for testing of
human growth hormone, limits signing bonuses for
draft picks, and institutes a second wild-card team for each league beginning in 2013.
January 1 –
John L. Rice, 92, American League umpire from 1955 through 1973, who worked in four World Series and three All-Star Games.
January 6 –
Francisco de la Rosa, 44, Dominican relief pitcher for the 1991 Baltimore Orioles.
January 6 –
Ryne Duren, 81, All-Star relief pitcher who played with seven MLB teams from 1954 to 1965, and a key contributor for New York Yankees teams that won the American League Championship in the
1958 and
1960 seasons.
January 7 –
Red Borom, 95, the oldest living former Detroit Tigers player, who was on the Tigers'
1945 World Series champion team.
January 7 –
José Vidal, 70, Dominican outfielder for the Cleveland Indians, Seattle Pilots and Nishitetsu Lions from 1966 to 1971, and a California League MVP winner in 1963.
January 9 –
Dave Sisler, 79, pitcher who posted a 38–44 record with a 4.33 ERA in 247 games while playing for the Boston Red Sox, Detroit Tigers, Washington Senators and Cincinnati Reds; son of Hall-of-Famer
George Sisler, and brother of MLB player, coach and manager
Dick Sisler.
January 15 –
Roy Hartsfield, 85, infielder who got into 265 games for 1950–1952 Boston Braves; manager of the Toronto Blue Jays during their first three Major League seasons (1977–1979).
January 18 –
Sargent Shriver, 95, brother-in-law of
John F. Kennedy; U.S. political and diplomat who was a minority owner of the Baltimore Orioles from 1989 to 1993.
January 18 –
George Crowe, 89, first baseman and veteran of Negro leagues who spent nine seasons in the National League with the Boston/Milwaukee Braves (1952–1953, 1955), Cincinnati Redlegs (1956–1958) and St. Louis Cardinals (1959–1961); selected to the 1958 NL All-Star team.
January 18 –
Jerre DeNoble, 87, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League outfielder.
January 20 –
José Ortiz, 63, Puerto Rican outfielder who hit .301 in 67 games for the White Sox and Cubs from 1969 to 1971.
January 20 –
Gus Zernial, 87, All-Star outfielder who played for the Chicago White, Philadelphia and Kansas City Athletics, and Detroit Tigers during his 11-year MLB career (1949–1959); led the American League with 33 home runs and 129 RBI in 1951.
February
February 3 –
Ron Piché, 75, Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher, who posted a 10–16 record and a 4.19 ERA in 134 games for the Milwaukee Braves, Los Angeles Angels and St. Louis Cardinals from 1960 to 1966.
February 4 –
Woodie Fryman, 70, All-Star pitcher who posted a 141–155 record and a 3.77 ERA for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Philadelphia Phillies, Detroit Tigers, Cincinnati Reds and Montreal Expos from 1966 to 1983.
February 8 –
Cliff Dapper, 91, catcher for the
1942 Brooklyn Dodgers, who made history after being traded in 1948 by the Dodgers to the
Atlanta Crackers of the Southern Association for broadcaster
Ernie Harwell, to become the only player in major league baseball history traded for a broadcaster.[23]
February 11 –
Chuck Tanner, 81, managed the Pittsburgh Pirates for nine seasons (1977–1985), winning the World Series championship in
1979; also managed Chicago White Sox (1970–1975), Oakland Athletics (1976) and Atlanta Braves (1986–1988); in his playing days, an outfielder for Milwaukee Braves, Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians and Los Angeles Angels from 1955 to 1962.
February 12 –
Gino Cimoli, 81, first player to bat for the Dodgers after their move to Los Angeles in 1958; later an outfielder on the Pittsburgh Pirates' 1960 World Series championship team; got into 969 games for seven MLB clubs between 1956 and 1965.
February 14 –
Cecil Kaiser, 94, oldest living Negro leagues star.
February 15 –
Joe Frazier, 88, outfielder who spent parts of four seasons in the majors with four clubs between 1947 and 1956; later managed the New York Mets from 1976 to May 30, 1977.
February 18 –
Forrest "Spook" Jacobs, 85; second baseman who played from 1954 through 1956 for the Philadelphia/Kansas City Athletics and the Pittsburgh Pirates.
February 18 –
Buddy Lewis, 94, All-Star third baseman/outfielder who hit .297 in 1,349 games over 11 seasons for the Washington Senators (1935–1941, 1945–1947 and 1949).
February 20 –
Andrew Baur, 66, co-owner and treasurer of the St. Louis Cardinals from 1996 until his death.
February 26 –
Greg Goossen, 65, catcher who played in 193 games for the New York Mets, Seattle Pilots/Milwaukee Brewers and Washington Senators from 1966 to 1970.
February 26 –
Bill Grigsby, 89, Kansas City sportscaster; spent three seasons (1959–1961) calling Athletics baseball games before moving on to become the longtime voice of the AFL/NFL Kansas City Chiefs.
February 27 –
Duke Snider, 84,
Hall of Fame centerfielder of the "Boys of Summer;" key player on the
Brooklyn Dodgersteam that brought the only World Series crown to Brooklyn in
1955; also won world championship as a member of 1959 Los Angeles Dodgers; played in six different World Series as a Dodger, and hit 11 home runs in 36 Fall Classic games.
March 7 –
Frank Dezelan, 81, National League umpire from 1966 to 1970; behind home plate when
Willie Mays hit his 600th career home run in 1969; worked at the 1970 All-Star Game that ended with
Pete Rose colliding with catcher
Ray Fosse at home plate.
March 12 –
Mitchell Page, 59, outfielder for the Athletics and Pirates from 1977 to 1984, who later served as the Cardinals' hitting coach between 2001 and 2004.
March 13 –
Jean Smith, 82, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League All-Star.
March 15 –
Marty Marion, 94, eight-time All-Star shortstop and 1944 National League MVP, who also managed the St. Louis Cardinals, St. Louis Browns and the Chicago White Sox.
March 15 –
Fred Sanford, 91, pitcher for the Browns, Yankees and Senators between 1943 and 1951.
March 16 –
Tom Dunbar, 51, outfielder who played from 1983 through 1985 for the Texas Rangers.
March 18 –
Charlie Metro, 91, player, manager, coach and scout; member of the Chicago Cubs' "
College of Coaches" in 1962, and "head coach" from June 5 through the end of the 1962 season; second manager in Kansas City Royals history, from April 7 (Opening Day) to June 7, 1970.
April 1 –
Lou Gorman, 82, Major League Baseball executive for 47 years; general manager of the Seattle Mariners (1976–1980) and Boston Red Sox (1984–1993).
April 2 –
Tom Silverio, 65, Dominican outfielder who played from 1970 through 1972 for the California Angels.
April 3 –
Amy Irene Applegren, 83, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League pitcher, who hurled a no-hitter and was a member of three championship teams.
April 3 –
Larry Shepard, 92, manager for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1968 and 1969, later the pitching coach for the Cincinnati Reds team that won the
1975 and
1976 World Series; also coached for Philadelphia Phillies and San Francisco Giants and was a successful minor-league pitcher and manager.
April 12 –
Eddie Joost, 94, All-Star shortstop for the Philadelphia Athletics in the 1940s and 1950s; player-manager of 1954 Athletics, the last season the team spent in Philadelphia; last living member of the Cincinnati Reds team that won the
1940 World Series.
April 15 –
Reno Bertoia, 76, Italian-born Canadian infielder who played 10 years in the Major Leagues, eight of them with the 1950s Detroit Tigers, and a member of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.
April 15 –
Bobo Osborne, 75, first baseman who played for the Detroit Tigers and Washington Senators between the 1957 and 1963 seasons; later a longtime scout; son of
Tiny Osborne.
April 16 –
Bill Kinnamon, 91, American League umpire (1960–1969) who worked in the 1962 and 1968 All-Star Games, the 1968 World Series, and umpired at home plate when
Roger Maris hit his 61st home run in 1961 to break
Babe Ruth's single-season record.
April 25 –
Elizabeth Wicken, 83, Canadian outfielder who played from 1945 through 1946 in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.
April 26 –
Don Miles, 75, outfielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers during the 1958 season.
April 27 –
Gene Kirby, 95, play-by-play broadcaster and club executive; served as
Dizzy Dean's partner on three radio networks for two decades; later, served in front office of three MLB clubs.
April 30 –
Mike Krsnich, 79, outfielder for the Milwaukee Braves during the 1960 and 1962 seasons.
April 30 –
Emilio Navarro, 105, first Puerto Rican to play in the Negro leagues, believed to be the oldest living professional baseball player.
May
May 6 –
Duane Pillette, 88, pitcher who posted a 38–66 record and a 4.40 ERA in 188 games for the New York Yankees, St. Louis Browns, Baltimore Orioles and Philadelphia Phillies from 1949 through 1956; led American League in games lost (14) and earned runs allowed (106) in 1951.
May 6 –
Dick Walsh, 85, who spent 23 years in baseball as a front office executive for the
Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers (1948–1966) and
California Angels (1968–1971); served as second general manager in Angels' franchise history.
May 10 –
Bill Bergesch, 89, Major League Baseball executive who worked for the St. Louis Cardinals, Kansas City Athletics, New York Mets, New York Yankees and Cincinnati Reds organizations; general manager of the Yankees (1982–1983) and Reds (1984–1987).
May 10 –
Bill Gallo, 88, cartoonist for the
New York Daily News for seven decades, whose playful characters included hundreds of baseball gems.
May 13 –
Mel Queen, 69, outfielder-turned-pitcher, then a coach and executive; a principal architect of the Toronto Blue Jays' farm system in the 1980s and 1990s; acting manager of 1997 Blue Jays (replacing
Cito Gaston) from September 24 to end of season; won 20 of 37 decisions on the mound while hurling for the Cincinnati Reds and California Angels (1966–1972) after breaking into MLB as an outfielder for the 1964 Reds; son of the
MLB pitcher.
May 17 –
Harmon Killebrew, 74, Hall of Fame first baseman and outfielder who hit 573 home runs during his 22-year career, most of them with the Washington Senators and Minnesota Twins, for the 11th most in major league history.
May 20 – Randy Poffo, 58, professional wrestler better known as
Randy Savage, who spent four years in the St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds minor league systems before embarking upon his legendary wrestling career.
May 21 –
Jim Pyburn, 78, backup outfielder and third baseman who played from 1955 through 1957 for the Baltimore Orioles.
May 25 –
Paul Splittorff, 64, the winningest pitcher in Kansas City Royals history—going 166–143 between 1970 and 1984—who became a popular broadcaster for the team.
May 25 –
Gene Smith, 94, pitcher who hurled three no-hitters during his eight-year career in the Negro leagues.
May 28 –
Bill Harris, 79, Canadian-born pitcher who played in two MLB games—one each for the Brooklyn (1957) and Los Angeles (1959) Dodgers.
May 28 –
Martha Rommelaere, 88, Canadian-born outfielder in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.
June
June 6 –
Eleanor Dapkus, 87, outfielder and pitcher, one of the original players of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in its inaugural season of 1943.
June 7 –
José Pagán, 76, Puerto Rican infielder for the San Francisco Giants (1959–1965), Pittsburgh Pirates (1965–1972) and Philadelphia Phillies (1973); drove in the winning run for Pittsburgh in Game 7 of the
1971 World Series; coached for the Pirates from 1974 to 1978.
June 8 –
Jim Northrup, 71, hero of the
1968 World Champion Detroit Tigers, after hitting a grand slam in Game 6 and a tie-breaking two-run triple in Game 7; spent a dozen years in majors, 101⁄2 of them with the Tigers.
June 10 –
John Braun, 71, relief pitcher for the 1964 Milwaukee Braves.
June 12 –
Chase Riddle, 85, head baseball coach of
Troy State University (1979–1990) whose teams won five
Gulf Coast Conference championships; earlier, a player, manager and scout in professional baseball for 36 years; as a Cardinals' scout, signed
Steve Carlton to his first pro contract.
June 15 –
Ted Gray, 86, All-Star pitcher who played all but one season of his nine-year major league career with the Detroit Tigers.
June 16 –
José Bracho, 82, Venezuelan pitcher and member of two Hall of Fames, who set several records in the Venezuelan League during a 26-year career, while also pitching in Minor league baseball and the Dominican league.
June 24 –
Richie Myers, 81, utility infielder for the 1956 Chicago Cubs.
June 28 –
Billy Baldwin, 60, backup outfielder for the Detroit Tigers and New York Mets between the 1975 and 1976 seasons.
June 28 –
Howard Fox, 90, president of the Minnesota Twins (1985–1986) and a 60-plus-year employee of the franchise dating to its time in Washington, D.C.
June 30 –
Don Buddin, 77, shortstop who played between 1956 and 1962 for the Boston Red Sox, Houston Colt .45s and Detroit Tigers.
July 4 –
Wes Covington, 79, outfielder and minor league call-up who sparked the
1957 Milwaukee Braves down the stretch and helped them win the World Series; also a key member of Philadelphia Phillies between 1961 and 1965; overall, played in 1,075 for six big league teams between 1956 and 1966.
July 7 –
Dick Williams, 82, Hall of Fame manager who posted a 1,571–1,451 record in 21 seasons (1967–1969 and 1971–1988), while leading the Oakland Athletics to a pair of World Series titles in
1972 and
1973; helmed
"Impossible Dream" Boston Red Sox to 1967 American League pennant (and named AL Manager of the Year); managed San Diego Padres to a National League title in 1984; also managed California Angels, Montreal Expos and Seattle Mariners; had a 13-season playing career as an outfielder and third baseman for five MLB clubs between 1951 and 1964.
July 27 –
Hideki Irabu, 42, Japanese pitcher who posted a 34–35 record and a 5.15 ERA for the New York Yankees, Montreal Expos and Texas Rangers from 1997 to 2002.
August
August 1 –
Joe Caffie, 80, backup catcher for the Cleveland Indians between 1956 and 1957.
August 1 –
Alex Pitko, 96, outfielder for the 1938 Philadelphia Phillies and the 1939 Washington Senators.
August 2 –
Al Federoff, 87, who spent 25 years in the Detroit Tigers organization as a player, manager and scout, including a major league stint with the Tigers as their second baseman from 1951 to 1952.
August 11 –
Joe Trimble, 80, pitcher who played with the Boston Red Sox and Pittsburgh Pirates in the mid-1950s.
August 11 –
Bob Will, 80, outfielder who played from 1957 through 1963 for the Chicago Cubs.
August 12 –
Ernie Johnson, 87, Vermont-born pitcher who played with the Boston and Milwaukee Braves teams before becoming the voice of the Braves on radio and television.
August 15 –
Tōru Shōriki, 92, Japanese businessman and long time owner of the
Yomiuri Giants baseball team.
August 24 –
Mike Flanagan, 59,
Cy Young Award-winning pitcher and part of the
1983 World Champion Baltimore Orioles; later served as Orioles' general manager (2006–2008) and spent four separate terms as an analyst on the O's television network.
August 26 –
Josephine Figlo, 88, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League ballplayer.
September 6 –
Malcolm Prine, 83, president of the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1985 to 1987.
September 7 –
Jang Hyo-Jo, 56, Korean outfielder for the
Samsung Lions and the
Lotte Giants from 1983 to 1992, who set
KPB all-time career records with a .331 average and four batting titles that are still intact today.
September 8 –
Jesse Jefferson, 62, pitcher for the Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox, Toronto Blue Jays, Pittsburgh Pirates and California Angels between 1973 and 1981.
September 12 –
Bill Cash, 92, Negro league baseball catcher who also played in the Dominican, Mexican and Venezuelan baseball leagues.
September 14 –
Choi Dong-Won, 63, South Korean pitcher who played for the Lotte Giants and the Samsung Lions between 1983 and 1990, and the first pitcher to earn four wins in Korean Series history.
September 15 –
Dorothy Harrell, 87, one of the premier shortstops of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in its twelve-year history.
September 15 –
Bill Taylor, 81, part-time outfielder for the Giants and Tigers in the 1950s and a prolific hitter in eleven minor league seasons, who set two records while playing in the Venezuelan Winter League in the 1953–1954 season, when he became the first player in the league's history to hit three home runs in a single game, and for setting a new season mark with 16 home runs.[24]
September 23 –
Danny Litwhiler, 95, All-Star left fielder who hit .281 in 1,057 games for the Philadelphia Phillies, St. Louis Cardinals, Boston Braves and Cincinnati Reds between 1940 and 1951, who, during the 1941 season, batted at least one home run in every National League ballpark, and became the first outfielder in major league history to play an entire season without committing an error; later, a longtime college baseball coach at Florida State (1955–1963) and Michigan State (1964–1982).
October 1 –
Johnny Schmitz, 90, two-time All-Star pitcher who posted a 93–114 record and a 3.55 ERA for seven MLB clubs between 1941 and 1956; led the National League in strikeouts in 1946 as a member of the Chicago Cubs.
October 2 –
John Romonosky, 82, pitcher who played in the 1950s for the St. Louis Cardinals and Washington Senators.
October 4 –
Martha Haines, 87, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player.
October 4 –
Ralph Hodgin, 96, outfielder/third baseman who hit .285 in 530 games for the Boston Bees (1939) and Chicago White Sox (1943–44 and 1946–1948).
October 11 –
Cy Buker, 92, relief pitcher for the 1945 Brooklyn Dodgers.
October 11 –
Paul Martin, 79, relief pitcher for the 1955 Pittsburgh Pirates, one of few big leaguers who played their entire careers at the majors level without spending any time in the minor leagues.
October 13 –
George Scherger, 90, minor-league infielder, instructor and manager who spent 14 seasons spanning 1970 to 1986 as an MLB coach for the Cincinnati Reds; member of 1975 and 1976 World Series champions.
October 16 –
Don Williams, 80, relief pitcher for the 1958–59 Pittsburgh Pirates and the 1962 Kansas City Athletics.
October 17 –
Carl Lindner Jr., 92, financier who from 1999 to 2005 was chief executive officer and principal owner of the Cincinnati Reds.
October 18 –
Merritt Ranew, 73, catcher who played between 1962 and 1969 for the Houston Colt .45s, Chicago Cubs, Milwaukee Braves, Los Angeles/California Angels, and Seattle Pilots.
October 22 –
Roy Smalley, 85, shortstop who played 11 MLB seasons with the Chicago Cubs (1948–1953), Milwaukee Braves (1954) and Philadelphia Phillies (1955–1958); his
son, also a shortstop, had a 13-year MLB career (1975–1987).
October 25 –
Bert Cueto, 74, pitcher and native of Cuba who worked in seven games for the 1961 Minnesota Twins.
October 26 –
Dave Cole, 81, pitcher who played from 1950 to 1955 with the Boston/Milwaukee Braves, Cubs and Phillies.
October 28 –
Ricky Adams, 52, infielder who played for the California Angels and San Francisco Giants between the 1982 and 1985 seasons.
October 30 –
Mickey Scott, 64, German-born reliever for the Baltimore Orioles, Montreal Expos and California Angels between 1972 and 1977, who also was elected to the
Rochester Red Wings Hall of Fame in 1998.
November
November 1 –
Eilaine Roth, 82, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player.
November 3 –
Matty Alou, 72, outfielder for the San Francisco Giants, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Cardinals, Oakland A's, New York Yankees and San Diego Padres who played 1,667 games between 1960 and 1974; National League batting champion (.342) in
1966 who hit over .330 for four consecutive seasons during pitcher-dominated late 1960s; two-time NL All-Star and member of
1972 World Series champion Oakland; made history in
1963, when he joined his brothers
Felipe and
Jesús to form the only all-brother outfield in major league history: each brother batted in the same half-inning in a game against the New York Mets, on
September 10, and five days later, all three Alou brothers made the start in each of the three spots in the Giants' outfield; the three Alous would collect 5,094 combined hits over their careers, beating out the 4,853 hits of
Joe,
Dom and
Vince DiMaggio for the best three-brother total of all time.
November 3 –
Bob Forsch, 61, only pitcher in St. Louis Cardinals history to throw two
no-hitters (1978 vs. Phillies and 1983 vs. Expos); won 163 games over his 15-season (1974–1988) Redbird career, including 20 wins in 1977, and 168 games overall; member of 1982 World Series champions and hurled in two other Fall Classics; brother of
Ken Forsch; died less a week after he threw out the
ceremonial first pitch at Game 7 of the 2011 World Series, won by the Cardinals.[25]
November 9 –
Benny McCoy, 96, second baseman for the Detroit Tigers and Philadelphia Athletics from 1938 through 1941, who was among 91 Detroit minor league players declared free agents in
1939 by baseball commissioner
Kenesaw Mountain Landis.
November 11 –
Charlie Lea, 54, French-born American pitcher for the Montreal Expos and Minnesota Twins from 1980 to 1988, who was a two-time All-Star and hurled a
no-hitter in
1981.
November 11 –
Nick Strincevich, 96, pitcher for the Boston Bees/Braves, Pirates and Phillies in the 1940s, who was selected for the 1945 All-Star Game, but, due to wartime restrictions, the game was never played.
November 19 –
Sonny Dixon, 87, pitcher for the Senators, Athletics and Yankees from 1953 to 1956.
December 5 –
Joe Lonnett, 84, backup catcher for the Philadelphia Phillies from 1956 through 1959; later a third-base coach under
Chuck Tanner with Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics and Pittsburgh Pirates (1971–1984); member of the 1979 World Series champion Pirates.
December 11 –
Mabel Holle, 91, one of the original players to join the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League for its inaugural season in 1943.
December 12 –
Randy Stein, 58, pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers, Seattle Mariners and Chicago Cubs between the 1978 and 1982 seasons.
December 15 –
Andy Carey, 80, third baseman for the New York Yankees and three other MLB clubs over 11 seasons (1952–1962) who helped preserve
Don Larsen's
1956 World Series perfect game against the Brooklyn Dodgers; played for two world champions in four Fall Classic appearances.
December 18 –
Andrés Fleitas, 95, Cuban minor league baseball catcher and member of two Hall of Fames, who batted several .300 seasons, won two MVP awards, and is the only catcher ever to have caught a no-hitter in the Caribbean Series.
December 19 –
Kathleen Malach, 85, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player.
December 21 –
Bud Bloomfield, 75, backup infielder who played from 1963 to 1964 for the St. Louis Cardinals and Minnesota Twins.
December 28 –
Don Mueller, 84, two-time All-Star right fielder, and a member of the 1954 World Champion New York Giants.
December 29 –
Rosman García, 32, Venezuelan reliever for the Texas Rangers from 2003 to 2004.
December 30 –
Ted Beard, 90, outfielder who played for the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago White Sox for parts of seven seasons spanning 1948–1958.
^Baseball Writers' Association of America (December 6, 2011).
"Bob Elliott Wins Spink Award" (Press release). National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Retrieved December 8, 2012.