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1991 Philadelphia Phillies season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1991 Philadelphia Phillies
LeagueNational League
DivisionEast
BallparkVeterans Stadium
CityPhiladelphia
OwnersBill Giles
General managersLee Thomas
ManagersNick Leyva, Jim Fregosi
TelevisionWTXF-TV
(Harry Kalas, Richie Ashburn, Andy Musser)
PRISM
(Chris Wheeler, Jim Barniak, Garry Maddox)
SportsChannel Philadelphia
(Jim Fregosi, Andy Musser)
RadioWOGL
(Harry Kalas, Richie Ashburn, Andy Musser, Chris Wheeler)
← 1990 Seasons 1992 →

The 1991 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 109th season in the history of the franchise. The team finished with a 78–84 record. This was also the last season the team wore the 1970–91 era uniforms. The next season, the Phillies would bring back the old Wiz Kids era uniforms which has remained their current uniform to this day.

Offseason

[edit]
  • December 17, 1990: Danny Cox was signed as a free agent by the Phillies.[1]
  • January 11, 1991: Jim Lindeman was signed as a free agent by the Phillies.[2]

Regular season

[edit]

On April 28, 1991, the Phillies recorded the first triple play in the history of Veterans Stadium.[3] Tony Gwynn lined to second baseman Randy Ready. Ready stepped on second, and although he could have tagged the runner, threw to first baseman Ricky Jordan.[4]

On May 6, 1991, Lenny Dykstra slammed his Mercedes-Benz red sports car into two trees while driving home from a bachelor party.[5] Dykstra, suffered three broken ribs, a broken right collarbone and a broken right cheekbone. A broken rib punctured a lung and his heart was bruised, according to doctors.[5] Phillies' catcher Darren Daulton was also in the car with Dykstra. Daulton suffered a broken left eye socket, a scratched left cornea and a heart bruise, doctors said.[5]

On May 23, 1991, Tommy Greene threw a no-hitter against the Montreal Expos in Montreal. Greene was starting for only the second time in the season and 15th time in his major league career. He became the first visiting pitcher to hurl a no-hitter in Montreal's history as the Phillies defeated the Expos, 2–0 before an Olympic Stadium crowd of 8,833. Greene was pitching in place of Danny Cox who had suffered a pulled groin in his last start. Greene walked seven batters but also struck out 10.[6]

Playing against the Cincinnati Reds on June 14, 1991, Von Hayes was hit by a pitch by Tom Browning[7] which broke his arm. Hayes returned to action on September 6, 1991, against Houston. Hayes was traded to the California Angels in the off-season but Hayes would later cite Browning's pitch as ending his career, "I broke my arm when I was hit by a pitch from Tom Browning... and I was finished. I tried to make a comeback (with California) in 1992, but it was no good."[8]

From July 30 to August 12, the Phillies won 13 straight games, tying the franchise record (in the modern era) set by the 1977 Phillies. The Phillies swept the Montreal Expos twice during the streak and made up nine games in the standings. The streak also helped them move from last place in the NL East to third by season's end.

On October 6, 1991, the most strikeouts were recorded against the Phillies in franchise history as David Cone of their division rival New York Mets struck out 19,[9] tying a then-National League record for most strikeouts in a game, set by Steve Carlton against the Mets in their championship season of 1969 and Tom Seaver the following year.[9] It was also the most strikeouts ever recorded by a pitcher at Veterans Stadium.[9] The Mets won the game 7–0.

Notable transactions

[edit]

Season standings

[edit]
NL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Pittsburgh Pirates 98 64 .605 52‍–‍32 46‍–‍32
St. Louis Cardinals 84 78 .519 14 52‍–‍32 32‍–‍46
Philadelphia Phillies 78 84 .481 20 47‍–‍36 31‍–‍48
Chicago Cubs 77 83 .481 20 46‍–‍37 31‍–‍46
New York Mets 77 84 .478 20½ 40‍–‍42 37‍–‍42
Montreal Expos 71 90 .441 26½ 33‍–‍35 38‍–‍55

Record vs. opponents

[edit]

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 6–6 11–7 13–5 7–11 5–7 9–3 5–7 9–3 11–7 9–9 9–3
Chicago 6–6 4–8 9–3 2–10 10–7 11–6 8–10 7–11 4–8 6–6 10–8
Cincinnati 7–11 8–4 9–9 6–12 6–6 5–7 9–3 2–10 8–10 10–8 4–8
Houston 5–13 3–9 9–9 8–10 2–10 7–5 7–5 4–8 6–12 9–9 5–7
Los Angeles 11–7 10–2 12–6 10–8 5–7 7–5 7–5 7–5 10–8 8–10 6–6
Montreal 7–5 7–10 6–6 10–2 7–5 4–14 4–14 6–12 6–6 7–5 7–11
New York 3–9 6–11 7–5 5–7 5–7 14–4 11–7 6–12 7–5 6–6 7–11
Philadelphia 7-5 10–8 3–9 5–7 5–7 14–4 7–11 6–12 9–3 6–6 6–12
Pittsburgh 3–9 11–7 10–2 8–4 5–7 12–6 12–6 12–6 7–5 7–5 11–7
San Diego 7–11 8–4 10–8 12–6 8–10 6–6 5–7 3–9 5–7 11–7 9–3
San Francisco 9–9 6–6 8–10 9–9 10–8 5–7 6–6 6–6 5–7 7–11 4–8
St. Louis 3–9 8–10 8–4 7–5 6–6 11–7 11–7 12–6 7–11 3–9 8–4


1991 Game Log

[edit]
Legend
  Phillies win
  Phillies loss
  Postponement
Bold Phillies team member
1991 Game Log[13]
Overall Record: 78–84
April (9–12)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
1 April 8 @ Mets 1–2 Dwight Gooden (1–0) Terry Mulholland (0–1) John Franco (1) 49,276 0–1
2 April 9 @ Mets 1–2 (10) Doug Simons (1–0) Joe Boever (0–1) None 16,013 0–2
3 April 10 @ Mets 8–7 (10) Roger McDowell (1–0) Jeff Innis (0–1) Mitch Williams (1) 22,841 1–2
4 April 12 Cardinals 11–4 Pat Combs (1–0) Jamie Moyer (0–1) None 38,227 2–2
5 April 13 Cardinals 4–2 Terry Mulholland (1–1) Bob Tewksbury (0–1) Mitch Williams (2) 15,485 3–2
6 April 14 Cardinals 7–11 Bryn Smith (2–0) Dave LaPoint (0–1) Lee Smith (3) 20,337 3–3
7 April 15 @ Cubs 4–5 Greg Maddux (2–0) Jason Grimsley (0–1) Dave Smith (3) 27,794 3–4
8 April 16 @ Cubs 3–4 (13) Mike Bielecki (2–0) Mitch Williams (0–1) None 11,571 3–5
9 April 17 @ Cubs 1–4 Shawn Boskie (1–1) Pat Combs (1–1) Dave Smith (4) 13,680 3–6
April 18 Cardinals Postponed (rain); Makeup: April 20 as a traditional double-header
10 April 19 Cardinals 1–3 Bob Tewksbury (1–1) Terry Mulholland (1–2) Lee Smith (5) 21,468 3–7
11 April 20 (1) Cardinals 1–12 José DeLeón (1–1) Jason Grimsley (0–2) Omar Olivares (1) see 2nd game 3–8
12 April 20 (2) Cardinals 6–5 (10) Roger McDowell (2–0) Cris Carpenter (1–1) Mitch Williams (3) 27,482 4–8
13 April 21 Cardinals 6–7 (10) Lee Smith (1–0) Mitch Williams (0–2) None 26,701 4–9
14 April 23 Mets 1–2 Ron Darling (1–1) Jason Grimsley (0–3) John Franco (4) 20,187 4–10
15 April 24 Mets 3–7 Pete Schourek (1–0) Darrel Akerfelds (0–1) None 15,214 4–11
16 April 25 Mets 5–3 Roger McDowell (3–0) Doug Simons (1–1) Mitch Williams (4) 22,099 5–11
17 April 26 Padres 0–4 Bruce Hurst (2–0) José DeJesús (0–1) None 19,363 5–12
18 April 27 Padres 4–3 (12) Darrel Akerfelds (1–1) Mike Maddux (2–1) None 20,334 6–12
19 April 28 Padres 9–2 Jason Grimsley (1–3) Eric Nolte (3–1) None 39,332 7–12
20 April 29 Padres 7–2 Terry Mulholland (2–2) Ed Whitson (1–3) None 12,359 8–12
21 April 30 Giants 11–9 Joe Boever (1–1) Jeff Brantley (0–1) Mitch Williams (5) 15,500 9–12
May (13–13)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
22 May 1 Giants 4–1 Tommy Greene (1–0) Mike LaCoss (1–2) Roger McDowell (1) 17,281 10–12
23 May 3 Dodgers 1–7 Ramón Martínez (4–1) Danny Cox (0–1) None 29,364 10–13
24 May 4 Dodgers 4–3 Terry Mulholland (3–2) Jay Howell (0–1) Mitch Williams (6) 30,106 11–13
25 May 5 Dodgers 2–3 Mike Morgan (3–2) Joe Boever (1–2) Jay Howell (2) 44,160 11–14
26 May 7 @ Padres 2–4 Bruce Hurst (4–0) José DeJesús (0–2) Craig Lefferts (7) 23,172 11–15
27 May 8 @ Padres 5–2 Danny Cox (1–1) Andy Benes (0–4) Roger McDowell (2) 12,063 12–15
28 May 9 @ Padres 9–6 Terry Mulholland (4–2) Derek Lilliquist (0–2) Mitch Williams (7) 43,153 13–15
29 May 10 @ Dodgers 1–3 Bob Ojeda (2–3) Joe Boever (1–3) John Candelaria (2) 44,255 13–16
30 May 11 @ Dodgers 2–3 Mike Morgan (4–2) Pat Combs (1–2) Jay Howell (4) 40,335 13–17
31 May 12 @ Dodgers 7–3 José DeJesús (1–2) Tim Belcher (3–4) None 33,208 14–17
32 May 13 @ Giants 3–2 (11) Joe Boever (2–3) Rod Beck (0–1) None 7,901 15–17
33 May 14 @ Giants 9–0 Terry Mulholland (5–2) Kelly Downs (1–2) None 8,656 16–17
34 May 15 @ Giants 2–4 Bud Black (4–3) Jason Grimsley (1–4) Jeff Brantley (3) 12,661 16–18
35 May 17 Cubs 1–0 (16) Tommy Greene (2–0) Les Lancaster (0–1) None 28,044 17–18
36 May 18 Cubs 5–2 Joe Boever (3–3) Paul Assenmacher (2–1) Mitch Williams (8) 34,877 18–18
37 May 19 Cubs 1–2 (10) Mike Bielecki (5–2) Roger McDowell (3–1) Dave Smith (10) 27,830 18–19
38 May 21 @ Expos 0–3 Dennis Martínez (6–3) Jason Grimsley (1–5) None 12,002 18–20
39 May 22 @ Expos 8–1 Pat Combs (2–2) Brian Barnes (0–2) None 15,331 19–20
40 May 23 @ Expos 2–0 Tommy Greene (3–0) Oil Can Boyd (2–5) None 8,833 20–20
41 May 24 @ Pirates 1–9 Zane Smith (6–2) Terry Mulholland (5–3) None 29,770 20–21
42 May 25 @ Pirates 2–4 (11) Vicente Palacios (3–2) Joe Boever (3–4) None 24,358 20–22
43 May 26 @ Pirates 2–5 John Smiley (7–1) Jason Grimsley (1–6) Bill Landrum (7) 26,117 20–23
44 May 27 Expos 1–8 Chris Nabholz (2–3) Pat Combs (2–3) None 18,028 20–24
45 May 28 Expos 12–0 Tommy Greene (4–0) Oil Can Boyd (2–6) None 16,850 21–24
46 May 29 Expos 2–1 Terry Mulholland (6–3) Barry Jones (2–2) Mitch Williams (9) 30,828 22–24
47 May 31 Pirates 1–5 Bob Walk (1–0) Jason Grimsley (1–7) None 25,652 22–25
June (10–18)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
48 June 1 Pirates 3–5 John Smiley (8–1) Pat Combs (2–4) Bill Landrum (9) 31,601 22–26
49 June 2 Pirates 3–5 Bob Walk (2–0) Mitch Williams (0–3) Bob Patterson (1) 36,185 22–27
50 June 4 @ Braves 5–9 Tom Glavine (9–2) Terry Mulholland (6–4) None 30,165 22–28
51 June 5 @ Braves 12–11 (12) Darrel Akerfelds (2–1) Jeff Parrett (0–2) José DeJesús (1) 16,937 23–28
52 June 6 @ Braves 4–9 Charlie Leibrandt (5–4) Pat Combs (2–5) None 15,682 23–29
53 June 7 @ Reds 5–4 Tommy Greene (5–0) Jack Armstrong (4–5) Mitch Williams (10) 35,827 24–29
54 June 8 @ Reds 4–1 José DeJesús (2–2) Chris Hammond (3–5) Roger McDowell (3) 37,457 25–29
55 June 9 @ Reds 3–6 Tom Browning (8–4) Terry Mulholland (6–5) Rob Dibble (15) 29,748 25–30
56 June 10 @ Reds 3–9 José Rijo (5–2) Andy Ashby (0–1) None 27,567 25–31
57 June 11 @ Astros 0–1 (11) Al Osuna (2–2) Roger McDowell (3–2) None 7,953 25–32
58 June 12 @ Astros 2–3 Al Osuna (3–2) Joe Boever (3–5) None 8,374 25–33
59 June 13 @ Astros 5–4 José DeJesús (3–2) Darryl Kile (0–2) Mitch Williams (11) 14,362 26–33
60 June 14 Reds 2–4 Tom Browning (9–4) Terry Mulholland (6–6) Rob Dibble (17) 26,067 26–34
61 June 15 Reds 1–3 José Rijo (6–2) Andy Ashby (0–2) Rob Dibble (18) 32,075 26–35
62 June 16 Reds 6–8 Randy Myers (3–4) Roger McDowell (3–3) Don Carman (1) 41,905 26–36
63 June 17 Braves 4–3 Mitch Williams (1–3) Juan Berenguer (0–2) None 18,517 27–36
64 June 18 Braves 8–4 José DeJesús (4–2) Pete Smith (1–1) None 12,405 28–36
65 June 19 Braves 2–9 Tom Glavine (11–3) Terry Mulholland (6–7) None 23,989 28–37
66 June 20 Astros 7–3 Danny Cox (2–1) Jimmy Jones (4–5) None 23,415 29–37
67 June 21 Astros 3–0 Bruce Ruffin (1–0) Mark Portugal (6–3) Mitch Williams (12) 21,120 30–37
68 June 22 Astros 3–4 (10) Al Osuna (4–2) Roger McDowell (3–4) Mike Capel (2) 25,506 30–38
69 June 23 Astros 4–6 Darryl Kile (1–2) José DeJesús (4–3) Jim Clancy (3) 23,455 30–39
70 June 25 @ Cardinals 9–10 Scott Terry (2–1) Roger McDowell (3–5) Lee Smith (19) 30,798 30–40
71 June 26 @ Cardinals 1–14 Bryn Smith (6–4) Pat Combs (2–6) None 25,706 30–41
72 June 27 @ Cardinals 2–4 Ken Hill (7–5) Tommy Greene (5–1) Lee Smith (20) 26,419 30–42
73 June 28 @ Mets 6–2 José DeJesús (5–3) Ron Darling (4–5) None 33,511 31–42
74 June 29 @ Mets 0–5 Wally Whitehurst (4–4) Terry Mulholland (6–8) None 46,244 31–43
75 June 30 @ Mets 10–9 Danny Cox (3–1) Dwight Gooden (7–6) Mitch Williams (13) 44,310 32–43
July (10–15)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
76 July 1 Cardinals 0–1 Bryn Smith (7–4) Bruce Ruffin (1–1) Lee Smith (21) 17,281 32–44
77 July 2 Cardinals 1–6 Ken Hill (8–5) Tommy Greene (5–2) Lee Smith (22) 16,847 32–45
78 July 3 Cardinals 3–4 Omar Olivares (2–1) José DeJesús (5–4) Lee Smith (23) 50,156 32–46
79 July 4 Cardinals 7–1 Terry Mulholland (7–8) Bob Tewksbury (6–5) None 14,921 33–46
80 July 5 Mets 1–3 Dwight Gooden (8–6) Danny Cox (3–2) John Franco (18) 51,314 33–47
81 July 6 Mets 1–2 Frank Viola (10–5) Bruce Ruffin (1–2) John Franco (19) 35,067 33–48
82 July 7 Mets 2–8 David Cone (8–5) Tommy Greene (5–3) None 35,444 33–49
July 9 1991 Major League Baseball All-Star Game at SkyDome in Toronto
83 July 11 Giants 3–2 Terry Mulholland (8–8) Trevor Wilson (4–8) Mitch Williams (14) 22,355 34–49
84 July 12 Giants 1–0 Tommy Greene (6–3) Bud Black (6–8) Mitch Williams (15) 21,221 35–49
85 July 13 Giants 5–7 Francisco Oliveras (4–2) Wally Ritchie (0–1) Dave Righetti (12) 23,017 35–50
86 July 14 Giants 5–17 Kelly Downs (5–4) Danny Cox (3–3) None 28,338 35–51
87 July 15 Dodgers 9–8 Steve Searcy (2–2) Tim Crews (2–2) Mitch Williams (16) 31,262 36–51
88 July 16 Dodgers 3–1 Terry Mulholland (9–8) Bob Ojeda (7–7) None 28,622 37–51
89 July 17 Dodgers 4–2 Tommy Greene (7–3) John Candelaria (0–1) Mitch Williams (17) 33,651 38–51
90 July 19 @ Padres 4–1 José DeJesús (6–4) Dennis Rasmussen (3–6) Mitch Williams (18) 21,621 39–51
91 July 20 @ Padres 4–0 Bruce Ruffin (2–2) Greg W. Harris (2–2) None 15,882 40–51
92 July 21 @ Padres 2–5 Bruce Hurst (11–5) Terry Mulholland (9–9) None 18,053 40–52
93 July 23 @ Dodgers 5–6 (10) Jay Howell (3–2) Roger McDowell (3–6) None 48,925 40–53
94 July 24 @ Dodgers 1–2 John Candelaria (1–1) Steve Searcy (2–3) None 36,127 40–54
95 July 25 @ Dodgers 0–5 Ramón Martínez (13–5) Bruce Ruffin (2–3) None 39,626 40–55
96 July 26 @ Giants 2–3 Kelly Downs (6–4) Terry Mulholland (9–10) Dave Righetti (14) 15,083 40–56
97 July 27 @ Giants 0–3 Paul McClellan (1–0) Danny Cox (3–4) Dave Righetti (15) 26,132 40–57
98 July 28 @ Giants 1–2 Bud Black (8–8) Tommy Greene (7–4) Jeff Brantley (9) 36,268 40–58
99 July 30 Padres 2–1 José DeJesús (7–4) Dennis Rasmussen (3–8) Mitch Williams (19) 22,946 41–58
100 July 31 Padres 9–3 Bruce Ruffin (3–3) Greg W. Harris (2–3) None 24,779 42–58
August (20–9)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
101 August 1 @ Expos 4–1 Terry Mulholland (10–10) Mark Gardner (5–8) None 24,953 43–58
102 August 2 @ Expos 6–5 (11) Mitch Williams (2–3) Mel Rojas (0–3) Mike Hartley (2) 18,638 44–58
103 August 3 @ Expos 7–1 Tommy Greene (8–4) Brian Barnes (2–4) None 21,939 45–58
104 August 4 @ Expos 3–2 (10) Mitch Williams (3–3) Jeff Fassero (1–2) None 17,976 46–58
105 August 6 Cubs 6–2 (11) Mitch Williams (4–3) Les Lancaster (7–5) None 26,562 47–58
106 August 7 Cubs 5–4 (11) Mitch Williams (5–3) Les Lancaster (7–6) None 26,294 48–58
107 August 8 Cubs 11–1 Danny Cox (4–4) Danny Jackson (1–3) None 32,232 49–58
108 August 9 Expos 5–4 Mitch Williams (6–3) Dave Wainhouse (0–1) None 13,297 50–58
109 August 10 Expos 4–2 José DeJesús (8–4) Scott Ruskin (3–3) Mitch Williams (20) 31,006 51–58
110 August 11 Expos 5–4 Mike Hartley (3–0) Jeff Fassero (1–3) Mitch Williams (21) 35,274 52–58
111 August 12 Expos 2–1 Terry Mulholland (11–10) Dennis Martínez (11–7) None 31,001 53–58
112 August 13 @ Pirates 3–4 Doug Drabek (11–11) Danny Cox (4–5) Stan Belinda (10) 22,584 53–59
113 August 14 @ Pirates 3–5 John Smiley (14–8) Tommy Greene (8–5) Stan Belinda (11) 42,501 53–60
114 August 15 @ Pirates 6–4 José DeJesús (9–4) Neal Heaton (3–2) Mitch Williams (22) 28,193 54–60
115 August 16 @ Cubs 1–9 Rick Sutcliffe (3–4) Bruce Ruffin (3–4) None 34,547 54–61
116 August 17 @ Cubs 5–2 Terry Mulholland (12–10) Mike Bielecki (11–8) Mitch Williams (23) 33,223 55–61
117 August 18 @ Cubs 6–7 (10) Paul Assenmacher (6–4) Mitch Williams (6–4) None 32,801 55–62
118 August 20 Pirates 6–5 Steve Searcy (3–3) Stan Belinda (3–4) None 23,336 56–62
119 August 21 Pirates 6–5 Mitch Williams (7–4) Bob Kipper (2–2) None 35,591 57–62
120 August 22 Pirates 4–3 (11) Mitch Williams (8–4) Bill Landrum (1–3) None 41,544 58–62
121 August 23 @ Braves 2–4 Tom Glavine (16–8) Terry Mulholland (12–11) Mark Wohlers (2) 43,161 58–63
122 August 24 @ Braves 6–5 Mitch Williams (9–4) Tony Castillo (1–1) None 43,966 59–63
123 August 25 @ Braves 6–5 Tommy Greene (9–5) Steve Avery (13–8) Mitch Williams (24) 26,027 60–63
124 August 26 @ Reds 4–5 Kip Gross (6–4) Mike Hartley (3–1) Rob Dibble (25) 18,683 60–64
125 August 27 @ Reds 2–4 Scott Scudder (5–4) Bruce Ruffin (3–5) Rob Dibble (26) 17,787 60–65
126 August 28 Astros 11–10 (10) Mike Hartley (4–1) Al Osuna (7–4) None 24,981 61–65
127 August 29 Astros 1–5 Mark Portugal (10–6) Danny Cox (4–6) None 20,321 61–66
128 August 30 Braves 1–6 Steve Avery (14–8) Tommy Greene (9–6) None 22,708 61–67
129 August 31 Braves 5–0 José DeJesús (10–4) Armando Reynoso (2–1) None 30,259 62–67
September (13–15)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
130 September 1 Braves 5–4 (10) Mitch Williams (10–4) Mark Wohlers (1–1) None 25,141 63–67
131 September 2 Reds 8–5 Terry Mulholland (13–11) Tom Browning (13–9) Mitch Williams (25) 15,175 64–67
132 September 3 Reds 5–8 José Rijo (12–4) Cliff Brantley (0–1) Rob Dibble (28) 15,565 64–68
133 September 4 Reds 1–5 Randy Myers (6–12) Tommy Greene (9–7) None 15,962 64–69
134 September 6 @ Astros 1–3 Pete Harnisch (9–8) José DeJesús (10–5) Al Osuna (11) 7,868 64–70
135 September 7 @ Astros 0–6 Darryl Kile (7–9) Bruce Ruffin (3–6) None 12,952 64–71
136 September 8 @ Astros 5–0 Terry Mulholland (14–11) Ryan Bowen (4–3) None 7,847 65–71
137 September 9 @ Cardinals 2–4 Omar Olivares (8–5) Andy Ashby (0–3) Lee Smith (38) 16,597 65–72
138 September 10 @ Cardinals 5–2 Tommy Greene (10–7) Rhéal Cormier (2–3) Mitch Williams (26) 16,210 66–72
139 September 11 Expos 5–6 Bill Sampen (8–4) Wally Ritchie (0–2) Barry Jones (12) 13,501 66–73
140 September 12 Expos 2–6 Chris Nabholz (5–7) Bruce Ruffin (3–7) None 13,243 66–74
141 September 13 Pirates 6–8 Stan Belinda (6–5) Mitch Williams (10–5) Rosario Rodríguez (4) 29,107 66–75
142 September 14 Pirates 3–5 John Smiley (18–8) Andy Ashby (0–4) Vicente Palacios (3) 27,412 66–76
143 September 15 Pirates 8–3 Tommy Greene (11–7) Randy Tomlin (8–6) Mitch Williams (27) 35,560 67–76
144 September 16 Cardinals 0–3 Bob Tewksbury (10–11) José DeJesús (10–6) Lee Smith (41) 13,892 67–77
145 September 17 Cardinals 4–2 Cliff Brantley (1–1) Ken Hill (9–10) Mitch Williams (28) 14,059 68–77
146 September 18 Expos 1–0 Terry Mulholland (15–11) Dennis Martínez (14–10) None 5,963 69–77
147 September 19 Expos 5–4 (10) Mitch Williams (11–5) Scott Ruskin (3–4) None 5,297 70–77
148 September 20 @ Pirates 8–3 Tommy Greene (12–7) Randy Tomlin (8–7) None 22,691 71–77
149 September 21 @ Pirates 0–7 Zane Smith (16–10) José DeJesús (10–7) None 27,162 71–78
150 September 22 @ Pirates 1–2 Doug Drabek (15–13) Cliff Brantley (1–2) None 33,662 71–79
151 September 23 @ Cubs 3–10 Greg Maddux (13–10) Terry Mulholland (15–12) None 16,141 71–80
152 September 24 @ Cubs 4–2 Andy Ashby (1–4) Mike Bielecki (13–11) Mitch Williams (29) 19,694 72–80
153 September 25 @ Cubs 5–4 Tommy Greene (13–7) Shawn Boskie (4–9) Mitch Williams (30) 9,892 73–80
154 September 27 @ Mets 4–6 Pete Schourek (5–4) José DeJesús (10–8) John Franco (29) 13,680 73–81
155 September 28 @ Mets 6–2 Cliff Brantley (2–2) Anthony Young (2–4) None 16,967 74–81
156 September 29 @ Mets 3–4 Frank Viola (13–15) Terry Mulholland (15–13) John Franco (30) 16,573 74–82
157 September 30 Cubs 6–5 Wally Ritchie (1–2) Paul Assenmacher (7–7) None 12,109 75–82
October (3–2)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
158 October 1 Cubs 6–5 (13) Bruce Ruffin (4–7) Paul Assenmacher (7–8) None 12,291 76–82
159 October 2 Cubs 0–1 Greg Maddux (14–11) José DeJesús (10–9) None 13,680 76–83
160 October 4 Mets 5–4 (10) Mitch Williams (12–5) John Franco (5–9) None 20,720 77–83
161 October 5 Mets 1–0 Terry Mulholland (16–13) Anthony Young (2–5) None 22,281 78–83
162 October 6 Mets 0–7 David Cone (14–14) Andy Ashby (1–5) None 29,676 78–84

Roster

[edit]
1991 Philadelphia Phillies
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

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
C Darren Daulton 89 285 56 .196 12 42
1B John Kruk 152 538 158 .294 21 92
2B Mickey Morandini 98 325 81 .249 1 20
3B Charlie Hayes 142 460 106 .230 12 53
SS Dickie Thon 146 539 136 .252 9 44
LF Wes Chamberlain 101 383 92 .240 13 50
CF Lenny Dykstra 63 246 73 .297 3 12
RF Dale Murphy 153 544 137 .252 18 81

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
Ricky Jordan 101 301 82 .272 9 49
Von Hayes 77 284 64 .225 0 21
Randy Ready 76 205 51 .249 1 20
Wally Backman 94 185 45 .243 0 15
Steve Lake 58 158 36 .228 1 11
Dave Hollins 56 151 45 .298 6 21
Darrin Fletcher 46 136 31 .228 1 12
John Morris 85 127 28 .220 1 6
Jim Lindeman 65 95 32 .337 0 12
Rod Booker 28 53 12 .226 0 7
Braulio Castillo 28 52 9 .173 0 2
Sil Campusano 15 35 4 .114 1 2
Kim Batiste 10 27 6 .222 0 1
Ron Jones 28 26 4 .154 0 3
Rick Schu 17 22 2 .091 0 2
Doug Lindsey 1 3 0 .000 0 0

Pitching

[edit]

Starting pitchers

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Terry Mulholland 34 232.0 16 13 3.61 142
Tommy Greene 36 207.2 13 7 3.38 154
José DeJesús 31 181.2 10 9 3.42 118
Danny Cox 23 102.1 4 6 4.57 46
Pat Combs 14 64.1 2 6 4.90 41
Jason Grimsley 12 61.0 1 7 4.87 42
Alan Ashby 8 42.0 1 5 6.00 26
Cliff Brantley 6 31.2 2 2 3.41 25
Dave LaPoint 2 5.0 0 1 16.20 3

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
Bruce Ruffin 31 119.0 4 7 3.78 85

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
Mitch Williams 69 12 5 30 2.34 84
Joe Boever 68 3 5 0 3.84 89
Wally Ritchie 39 1 2 0 7.59 6
Roger McDowell 38 3 6 3 3.20 28
Darrel Akerfelds 30 2 1 0 5.26 31
Steve Searcy 18 2 1 0 4.15 21
Mike Hartley 18 2 1 1 3.76 19
Tim Mauser 3 0 0 0 7.59 6
Amalio Carreño 3 0 0 0 16.20 2

Farm system

[edit]
Level Team League Manager
AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
Red Barons
International League Bill Dancy
AA Reading Phillies Eastern League Don McCormack
A Clearwater Phillies Florida State League Lee Elia
A Spartanburg Phillies South Atlantic League Mel Roberts
A-Short Season Batavia Clippers New York–Penn League Ramón Avilés
Rookie Martinsville Phillies Appalachian League Roly de Armas

[14]

References

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  1. ^ Danny Cox at Baseball Reference
  2. ^ Jim Lindeman at Baseball Reference
  3. ^ Westcott, Rich (2005). Veterans Stadium: field of memories. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. p. 81. ISBN 1-58261-303-6.
  4. ^ "April 28, 1991 San Diego Padres at Philadelphia Phillies Box Score and Play by Play".
  5. ^ a b c "BASEBALL; Dykstra and Daulton Injured in Car Accident". The New York Times. Associated Press. May 7, 1991. Retrieved April 20, 2010.
  6. ^ Chass, Murray (May 24, 1991). "BASEBALL; From Sub to Sublime: No-Hitter for Phillies' Greene". New York Times.
  7. ^ "June 14, 1991 Cincinnati Reds at Philadelphia Phillies Box Score and Play by Play".
  8. ^ Schneider, Russell (2002). Tales From the Tribe Dugout. Sports Publishing LLC. p. 82. ISBN 1-58261-303-6.
  9. ^ a b c Polman, Dick (October 7, 1991). "Mets' Cone Fans 19 As Phils Wave Goodbye". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. C1.
  10. ^ Mitch Williams at Baseball Reference
  11. ^ Rick Schu at Baseball Reference
  12. ^ Ricky Bottalico at Baseball Reference
  13. ^ "1991 Philadelphia Phillies Schedule, Box Scores and Splits". Baseball-Reference.com.
  14. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2nd and 3rd editions. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 1997 and 2007
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