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1986 Philadelphia Phillies
Major League affiliations
Location
Other information
Owner(s) Bill Giles
General manager(s) Bill Giles
Manager(s) John Felske
Local television WTAF
PRISM
Local radio WCAU
(Harry Kalas, Richie Ashburn, Andy Musser, Chris Wheeler)
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The 1986 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 104th season for the Phillies. Under second-year manager John Felske, the Phillies stayed just below the .500 mark for roughly two-thirds of the season, until a charge after the All-Star break pushed the club past the St. Louis Cardinals and Montreal Expos into second place in the NL East.[1] The eventual World Series champions rival New York Mets finished with a Major League best 108-54 record, and finished 2112 games ahead of the Phillies. The Mets and the Phillies were the only teams in the National League East to post winning records.[1] Mike Schmidt became the first third baseman in the history of the National League to win the MVP Award three times.[2]

Offseason[edit]

  • December 6, 1985: Jerry Koosman was released by the Phillies.[3]
  • December 22, 1985: Tim Corcoran was released by the Phillies.[4]
  • January 16, 1986: Ronn Reynolds was traded by the New York Mets with Jeff Bittiger to the Philadelphia Phillies for Rodger Cole and Ronnie Gideon.[5]
  • March 17, 1986: Alan Knicely was released by the Phillies.[6]

Regular season[edit]

Veterans Stadium on Phillies Opening Night, April 11, 1986.

On August 20, 1986, pitcher Don Carman took a perfect game into the ninth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Candlestick Park. Giants catcher Bob Brenly hit a long drive into the gap in left-center field. Phillies center fielder Milt Thompson was positioned to make a running catch but the ball hit the base of his glove and was ruled a hit.[7] Carman pitched nine innings, gave up one hit, and was the winner when the Phillies scored in the top of the tenth on a Juan Samuel solo homer to win the game 1 to 0.[8]

The Phillies were the only team in the National League to post a winning record against the World Series champs, going 10-8 with a 7-2 mark at Veterans Stadium. The high point of the season for the Phillies was the three-game sweep of the Mets in mid-September.[1] On September 12, up by 22 games, the Mets needed to win one game to clinch the division and came to Philadelphia for a weekend series. The Phillies won all three games, finishing the weekend by beating the Mets 6-0 behind a six-hit shutout by Kevin Gross who also tripled home two runs. The sweep still left the Phillies down 19 games but was both especially satisfying given the significant number of Mets fans who had traveled to Veterans Stadium for the weekend hoping to see the Mets clinch,[1][9][10] and necessary because they were swept in a three-game series in Chicago preceding this series and did not want to see a visiting team's division-title celebration at Veterans Stadium.[11][12] Had the Mets won one of the three games, it would have been the first time that a division title was won at Veterans Stadium.[11] During the series, Mets fans at Veterans Stadium became unruly and damaged seats in the upper deck.[9] One Mets fan was arrested after striking at two Philadelphia police officers.[9]

The club scored a season-high 19 runs in a 19-1 throttling of the Chicago Cubs at the Vet on June 23.

Hall-of-Fame third baseman Mike Schmidt won the NL MVP for the third and final time in his career with a league-high 37 home runs with 119 RBI and a .290 average.[2] The Phillies distant second-place finish made Schmidt the first major-league MVP to have played on a team that finished at least 20 games first place.[13]

Season standings[edit]

NL East W L Pct. GB Home Road
New York Mets 108 54 0.667 55–26 53–28
Philadelphia Phillies 86 75 0.534 21½ 49–31 37–44
St. Louis Cardinals 79 82 0.491 28½ 42–39 37–43
Montreal Expos 78 83 0.484 29½ 36–44 42–39
Chicago Cubs 70 90 0.438 37 42–38 28–52
Pittsburgh Pirates 64 98 0.395 44 31–50 33–48


Record vs. opponents[edit]

1986 National League Records

Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
Team ATL CHC CIN HOU LAD MON NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL
Atlanta 9–3 6–12 5–13 10–8 4–7 4–8 4–8 5–7 12–6 7–11 6–6
Chicago 3–9 5–7 4–8 6–6 8–10 6–12 9–8 7–11 6–6 6–6 10–7
Cincinnati 12–6 7–5 4–14 10–8 7–5 4–8 7–5 10–2 9–9 9–9 7–5
Houston 13–5 8–4 14–4 10–8 8–4 5–7 6–6 6–6 10–8 9–9 7–5
Los Angeles 8–10 6–6 8–10 8–10 5–7 3–9 5–7 8–4 6–12 8–10 8–4
Montreal 7–4 10–8 5–7 4–8 5–7 8–10 8–10 11–7 4–8 5–7 9–9
New York 8–4 12–6 8–4 7–5 9–3 10–8 8–10 17–1 10–2 7–5 12–6
Philadelphia 8-4 8–9 5–7 6–6 7–5 10–8 10–8 11–7 6–6 9–3 6–12
Pittsburgh 7–5 11–7 2–10 6–6 4–8 7–11 1–17 7–11 8–4 4–8 7–11
San Diego 6–12 6–6 9–9 8–10 12–6 8–4 2–10 6–6 4–8 8–10 5–7
San Francisco 11–7 6–6 9–9 9–9 10–8 7–5 5–7 3–9 8–4 10–8 5–7
St. Louis 6–6 7–10 5–7 5–7 4–8 9–9 6–12 12–6 11–7 7–5 7–5


Notable transactions[edit]

1986 Game Log[edit]

Legend
  Phillies win
  Phillies loss
  Postponement
Bold Phillies team member
1986 Game Log[19]
Overall Record: 86–75

Roster[edit]

1986 Philadelphia Phillies
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Player stats[edit]

Batting[edit]

Starters by position[edit]

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

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
3B Schmidt, MikeMike Schmidt 160 552 160 .290 37 119
CF Thompson, MiltMilt Thompson 96 299 75 .251 6 23

Other batters[edit]

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

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Gross, GregGreg Gross 87 101 25 .248 0 8
Foley, TomTom Foley 39 61 18 .295 0 5
Maddox, GarryGarry Maddox 6 7 3 .429 0 1

Pitching[edit]

Starting pitchers[edit]

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Gross, KevinKevin Gross 37 241.2 12 12 4.02 154
Ruffin, BruceBruce Ruffin 21 146.1 9 4 2.46 70
Carlton, SteveSteve Carlton 16 83 4 8 6.18 62
Toliver, FreddieFreddie Toliver 5 25.2 0 2 3.51 20
Freeman, MarvinMarvin Freeman 3 16 2 0 2.25 8
Bittiger, JeffJeff Bittiger 3 14.2 1 1 5.52 8

Other pitchers[edit]

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Carman, DonDon Carman 50 134.1 10 5 3.22 98

Relief pitchers[edit]

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

Player G W L SV ERA SO
Bedrosian, SteveSteve Bedrosian 68 8 6 29 3.39 82
Andersen, LarryLarry Andersen 10 0 0 0 4.26 9
Stewart, DaveDave Stewart 8 0 0 0 6.57 9
Gorman, TomTom Gorman 8 0 1 0 7.71 8
Childress, RockyRocky Childress 2 0 0 0 6.75 1
Gross, GregGreg Gross 1 0 0 0 0.00 2

Awards and honors[edit]

Farm system[edit]

Level Team League Manager
AAA Portland Beavers Pacific Coast League Bill Dancy
AA Reading Phillies Eastern League George Culver
A Clearwater Phillies Florida State League Ron Clark
A Spartanburg Phillies South Atlantic League Roly de Armas
Short-Season A Utica Blue Sox New York-Penn League Tony Taylor
Short-Season A Bend Phillies Northwest League Ed Pebley

[20]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Pascarelli, Peter (October 6, 1986). "Bad Start, Promising Ending". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. D1. 
  2. ^ a b Rogers, Thomas (November 20, 1986). "Schmidt Joins an Elite Club". New York Times. p. D27. 
  3. ^ Jerry Koosman page at Baseball Reference
  4. ^ Tim Corcoran page at Baseball Reference
  5. ^ http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/reynoro02.shtml
  6. ^ Alan Knicely page at Baseball Reference
  7. ^ Robbins, Michael (2004). Ninety Feet from Fame: Close Calls with Baseball Immortality. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers. p. 244. 
  8. ^ http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/SFN/SFN198608200.shtml
  9. ^ a b c Terry, Robert J.; Lieber, David (September 15, 1986). "30 Vet Seats Smashed by Mets Fans". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. B8. 
  10. ^ Brehm, Mike (December 30, 2011). "Flyers, Rangers have contentious history". USA Today. p. E4. In 1986, the New York Mets were running away with the National League East race and needed one win in Philadelphia in mid-September to clinch. Mets fans seemed to take up half of Veterans Stadium, but Philadelphia swept the three games. Though the Mets won the division by 21 games, that was Phillies fans' World Series. 
  11. ^ a b Pascarelli, Peter (September 12, 1986). "Mets Set to Clinch Vs. Phils". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. D1. The Mets' magic number is down to 2...It would be the first division championship ever clinched at the Vet, and the Phillies would love to prevent it from happening. However, after losing three straight in Chicago...the Phils have to sweep the series...to prevent the Mets from clinching in Philadelphia...'To keep them from clinching at the Vet, we needed to do something in Chicago, and we didn't,' said reliever Kent Tekulve, who lost the third game at Wrigley Field. 
  12. ^ Pascarelli, Peter (September 11, 1986). "Cubs Hand Phils 3rd Loss in a Row". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. D1. The Phils now must shut the Mets down in three straight games to avoid watching a division-title celebration on their own turf. 
  13. ^ Pascarelli, Peter (November 20, 1986). "Schmidt is National League MVP". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. A1. 
  14. ^ Tom Gorman page at Baseball Reference
  15. ^ Dave Stewart page at Baseball Reference
  16. ^ Chuck Knoblauch page at Baseball Reference
  17. ^ Steve Carlton page at Baseball Reference
  18. ^ Dan Schatzeder page at Baseball Reference
  19. ^ "1986 Philadelphia Phillies Schedule, Box Scores and Splits". Baseball-Reference.com. 
  20. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2nd and 3rd editions. Durham, N.C.: Baseball America, 1997 and 2007

References[edit]

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