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1998 San Diego Padres season

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1998 San Diego Padres
National League Champions
National League West Champions
LeagueNational League
DivisionWest
BallparkQualcomm Stadium
CitySan Diego, California
Record98–64 (.605)
Divisional place1st
OwnersJohn Moores
General managersKevin Towers
ManagersBruce Bochy
TelevisionKUSI-TV
4SD
(Mark Grant, Mel Proctor, Rick Sutcliffe)
RadioKFMB (AM)
(Jerry Coleman, Ted Leitner, Bob Chandler)
← 1997 Seasons 1999 →

The 1998 San Diego Padres season was the 30th season in franchise history. The Padres won the National League championship and advanced to the World Series for the second time in franchise history.

San Diego featured five All-Stars: pitchers Andy Ashby, Kevin Brown, and Trevor Hoffman, and outfielders Tony Gwynn and Greg Vaughn. Brown and Hoffman were two of the premier pitchers in baseball for 1998. Brown led the staff in wins, earned run average, and strikeouts, and he also finished in the league's top five in each category. Hoffman saved 53 games and was voted the NL Rolaids Relief Man Award for best closer in the league. Ashby was the team's number two starter with 17 wins.

The Padres offense was led by Vaughn, who had the greatest season of his career in 1998. He ended up winning both the Comeback Player of the Year Award and the Silver Slugger Award. And in a season headlined by sluggers Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa, Vaughn was matching them in home runs before finishing with 50 (compared to 70 for McGwire and 66 for Sosa). Former MVP Ken Caminiti was second on the team in home runs and runs batted in. Gwynn had a .321 batting average.

In the regular season, San Diego won the NL Western Division. Their 98–64 record was third-best in the National League, behind the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves. Facing those teams in the NLDS and NLCS respectively, The Padres defeated both teams 3-1 and 4-2 to win their second NL pennant. The Padres were swept in the World Series by the New York Yankees.

Offseason

Regular season

Opening Day starters

Player Pos
Quilvio Veras 2B
Steve Finley CF
Tony Gwynn RF
Ken Caminiti 3B
Greg Vaughn LF
Wally Joyner 1B
Carlos Hernández C
Chris Gomez SS
Kevin Brown P

Season standings

NL West
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
San Diego Padres 98 64 .605 54‍–‍27 44‍–‍37
San Francisco Giants 89 74 .546 49‍–‍32 40‍–‍42
Los Angeles Dodgers 83 79 .512 15 48‍–‍33 35‍–‍46
Colorado Rockies 77 85 .475 21 42‍–‍39 35‍–‍46
Arizona Diamondbacks 65 97 .401 33 34‍–‍47 31‍–‍50

Game Log

1998 game log: 98–64 (Home: 54–27; Away: 44–37)
March/April: 19–7 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Streak
May: 16–14 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Streak
June: 18–9 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Streak
July: 18–8 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Streak
August: 18–11 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Streak
September: 9–15 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Streak

Postseason

Record vs. opponents


Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16]
Team AZ ATL CHC CIN COL FLA HOU LA MIL MTL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL AL
Arizona 1–8 5–7 4–5 6–6 6–2 4–5 4–8 6–3 2–7 4–5 2–7 6–3 3–9 5–7 2–7 5–8
Atlanta 8–1 3–6 7–2 5–3 7–5 4–5 8–1 7–2 6–6 9–3 8–4 7–2 5–4 7–2 6–3 9–7
Chicago 7–5 6–3 6–5 7–2 7–2 4–7 4–5 6–6 7–2 4–5 3–6 8–3 5–4 7–3 4–7 5–8
Cincinnati 5–4 2–7 5–6 4–5 9–0 3–8 5–4 6–5 8–1 3–6 4–5 5–7 1–11 2–7 8–3 7-6
Colorado 6–6 3–5 2–7 5–4 6–3 6–5 6–6 4–7 7–2 3–6 5–4 5–4 5–7 7–5 3–6 4–8
Florida 2–6 5–7 2–7 0–9 3–6 3–6 4–5 0–9 5–7 5–7 6–6 3–6 4–5 0–9 4–5 8–8
Houston 5–4 5–4 7–4 8–3 5–6 6-3 3–6 9–2 7–2 5–4 7–2 9–2 5–4 6–3 5–7 10–4
Los Angeles 8–4 1–8 5–4 4–5 6–6 5–4 6–3 5–4 5–4 3–5 5–4 7–5 5–7 6–6 4–5 8–5
Milwaukee 3–6 2–7 6–6 5–6 7–4 9–0 2–9 4–5 6–3 1–8 4–5 6–5 3–6 5–4 3–8 8–6
Montreal 7–2 6–6 2–7 1–8 2–7 7–5 2–7 4–5 3–6 8–4 5–7 2–7 4–4 3–6 3–6 6–10
New York 5–4 3–9 5–4 6–3 6–3 7–5 4–5 5–3 8–1 4–8 8–4 4–5 4–5 4–5 6–3 9–7
Philadelphia 7-2 4–8 6–3 5–4 4–5 6–6 2–7 4–5 5–4 7–5 4–8 8–1 1–8 2–6 3–6 7–9
Pittsburgh 3–6 2–7 3–8 7–5 4–5 6–3 2–9 5–7 5–6 7–2 5–4 1–8 5–4 2–7 6–5 6–7
San Diego 9–3 4–5 4–5 11–1 7–5 5–4 4–5 7–5 6–3 4–4 5–4 8–1 4–5 8–4 6–3 6–7
San Francisco 7–5 2–7 3–7 7–2 5–7 9–0 3–6 6–6 4–5 6–3 5–4 6–2 7–2 4–8 7–5 8–5
St. Louis 7–2 3–6 7–4 3–8 6–3 5-4 7–5 5–4 8–3 6–3 3–6 6–3 5–6 3–6 5–7 4–9


Notable transactions

Roster

1998 San Diego Padres
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

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

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
C Carlos Hernández 129 390 102 .262 9 52
1B Wally Joyner 131 439 131 .298 12 80
2B Quilvio Veras 138 517 138 .267 6 45
SS Chris Gomez 145 449 120 .267 4 39
3B Ken Caminiti 131 452 114 .252 29 82
LF Greg Vaughn 158 573 156 .272 50 119
CF Steve Finley 159 619 154 .249 14 67
RF Tony Gwynn 127 461 148 .321 16 69

Other batters

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
Andy Sheets 88 194 47 .242 7 29
Mark Sweeney 122 192 45 .234 2 15
Rubén Rivera 95 172 36 .209 6 29
Greg Myers 69 171 42 .246 4 20
Jim Leyritz 62 143 38 .266 4 18
Ed Giovanola 92 139 32 .230 1 9
Archi Cianfrocco 40 72 9 .125 1 5
James Mouton 55 63 12 .190 0 7
George Arias 20 36 7 .194 1 4
Eddie Williams 17 28 4 .143 0 3
John Vander Wal 20 25 6 .240 0 0
Mandy Romero 6 9 0 .000 0 0
Ben Davis 1 1 0 .000 0 0

Pitching

Starting pitchers

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Kevin Brown 36 257.0 18 7 2.38 257
Andy Ashby 33 226.2 17 9 3.34 151
Joey Hamilton 34 217.1 13 13 4.27 147
Sterling Hitchcock 39 176.1 9 7 3.93 158
Mark Langston 22 81.1 4 6 5.86 56
Stan Spencer 6 30.2 1 0 4.70 31

Other pitchers

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Pete Smith 10 43.1 3 2 4.78 36
Matt Clement 4 13.2 2 0 4.61 13

Relief pitchers

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

Player G W L SV ERA SO
Trevor Hoffman 66 4 2 53 1.48 86
Dan Miceli 67 10 5 2 3.22 70
Brian Boehringer 56 5 2 0 4.36 67
Donne Wall 46 5 4 1 2.43 56
Scott Sanders 23 3 1 0 4.11 26
Roberto Ramírez 21 1 0 0 6.14 17
Carlos Reyes 22 2 2 1 3.58 24
Randy Myers 21 1 3 0 6.28 9
Don Wengert 10 0 0 1 5.93 5
Ben Van Ryn 6 0 1 0 10.13 1
Jim Bruske 4 0 0 0 3.86 4
Will Cunnane 3 0 0 0 6.00 1
Marc Kroon 2 0 0 0 0.00 2

League honors

All-Stars

Awards

Statistical leaders

Kevin Brown

  • #2 ERA (2.38)
  • #2 Strikeouts (257)
  • #2 WHIP (1.07)
  • #2 Innings Pitched (257)
  • #4 Wins (18)
  • #4 Complete Games (7)

Tony Gwynn

  • #1 At-Bats Per Strikeout (25.6)

Trevor Hoffman

  • #1 Saves (53)

Greg Vaughn

  • #3 Home runs (50)
  • #5 Slugging percentage (.597)
  • #5 Total Bases (342)

National League Division Series

Houston Astros vs. San Diego Padres

San Diego wins the series, 3-1

Game Home Score Visitor Score Date Series
1 Houston 1 San Diego 2 September 29 1-0 (SD)
2 Houston 5 San Diego 4 October 1 1-1
3 San Diego 2 Houston 1 October 3 2-1 (SD)
4 San Diego 6 Houston 1 October 4 3-1 (SD)

National League Championship Series

Game Date Visitor Score Home Score Record

(SD-Atl)

Attendance
1 October 7 San Diego 3 Atlanta 2 1-0 42,117
2 October 8 San Diego 3 Atlanta 0 2-0 43,083
3 October 10 Atlanta 1 San Diego 4 3-0 62,779
4 October 11 Atlanta 8 San Diego 3 3-1 65,042
5 October 12 Atlanta 7 San Diego 6 3-2 58,988
6 October 14 San Diego 5 Atlanta 0 4-2 50,988
San Diego wins series 4–2 and advances to the World Series

World Series

Game 1

October 17, 1998, at Yankee Stadium in New York City

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
San Diego 0 0 2 0 3 0 0 1 0 6 8 1
New York 0 2 0 0 0 0 7 0 X 9 9 1
WP: David Wells (1-0)   LP: Donne Wall (0-1)   Sv: Mariano Rivera (1)
Home runs:
SD: Greg Vaughn 2 (2), Tony Gwynn (1)
NYY: Chuck Knoblauch (1), Tino Martinez (1)

In Game 1, Kevin Brown took the hill for the Padres and he was opposed by Yankee ace and ALCS MVP David Wells. The Yankees began the scoring in the 2nd inning, when rookie Ricky Ledée laced a 2-run double into the right field corner with the bases loaded. Wells was battered hard for the only time in the postseason beginning with the 3rd when Greg Vaughn homered to right-center with a man aboard tying the game up at 2 runs apiece. In the 5th, Tony Gwynn smashed a 2-run shot off the facing of the upper deck and that was followed up immediately by Vaughn's second dinger of the night. Trailing 5–2, the Yanks made their comeback in the 7th. Jorge Posada singled and Ledee walked ending the night for Brown. It turned out to be a bad move by Padres manager Bruce Bochy. New York took advantage of the Padres bullpen with a 3-run homer by Chuck Knoblauch that tied the game at 5. Later in the inning, a 2-2 count call by home plate umpire Rich Garcia was decisive. Mark Langston's pitch was shown on television replays to be a strike, which Rich Garcia called a ball. Tino Martinez took advantage of Garcia's call and on the next pitch sent a grand slam into the upper deck making it a 9–5 lead. The Padres score only one more run as the Yankees won game one, 9–6.

Game 2

October 18, 1998, at Yankee Stadium in New York City

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
San Diego 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 3 10 1
New York 3 3 1 0 2 0 0 0 X 9 16 0
WP: Orlando Hernández (1-0)   LP: Andy Ashby (0-1)
Home runs:
SD: None
NYY: Bernie Williams (1), Jorge Posada (1)

In Game 2, the Bombers took a big early lead, thanks to a dreadful outing by San Diego starter Andy Ashby. Bernie Williams and Jorge Posada hit home runs to assist the Yankees on offense. New York started Cuban import, Orlando Hernández, who was outstanding.

Game 3

October 20, 1998, at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
New York 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 5 9 1
San Diego 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 4 7 1
WP: Ramiro Mendoza (1-0)   LP: Trevor Hoffman (0-1)   Sv: Mariano Rivera (2)
Home runs:
NYY: Scott Brosius 2 (2)
SD: None

With the Yankees up 2–0, they sent David Cone to the mound to face former Yankee pitcher, Sterling Hitchcock, the MVP of the NLCS. Both teams were kept off the scoreboard until the bottom of the 6th when Hitchcock himself led off the inning with a single off Cone. He and Qulivio Veras both scored two batters later when Tony Gwynn shot a double down the line past Tino Martinez at first base. Gwynn also scored in the inning to give San Diego a 3–0 lead. However, a half inning later the Yanks jumped on Hitchcock for two runs beginning with a home run to left-center by Scott Brosius. The second run came in after Shane Spencer doubled and scored on an error by Ken Caminiti. In the 8th, the call was made to Trevor Hoffman after Randy Myers walked Paul O'Neill to open the inning. Hoffman then walked Tino Martinez before Scott Brosius tagged a three-run blast over the fence in dead center. With a 5–3 lead, the Yankees wrapped up the victory when Mariano Rivera picked up the save in the 9th to end it.

October 21, 1998, at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
New York 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 3 9 0
San Diego 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 0
WP: Andy Pettitte (1-0)   LP: Kevin Brown (0-1)   Sv: Mariano Rivera (3)

New York's Andy Pettitte outpitched San Diego's Kevin Brown with 713 strong innings for the 3-0 Yankees victory, giving the Bombers their 24th title. Though New York's reliever Jeff Nelson allowed the Padres to load the bases, Mariano Rivera came in to end the threat by getting Jim Leyritz, known for his clutch postseason homers with San Diego, to fly out. Rivera added another scoreless inning for the save.

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Las Vegas Stars Pacific Coast League Jerry Royster
AA Mobile BayBears Southern League Mike Ramsey
A Rancho Cucamonga Quakes California League Carlos Lezcano
A Clinton LumberKings Midwest League Tom LeVasseur
Rookie AZL Padres Arizona League Randy Whisler
Rookie Idaho Falls Braves Pioneer League Don Werner

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Mobile, Idaho Falls[7]

References

  1. ^ "Jorge Velandia Statistics and History". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
  2. ^ "Derrek Lee Statistics and History". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
  3. ^ "Buddy Carlyle Statistics and History". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
  4. ^ Jim Leyritz Statistics Baseball-Reference.com
  5. ^ Randy Myers Statistics Baseball-Reference.com
  6. ^ John Vander Wal Statistics Baseball-Reference.com
  7. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007