logo
This Date in Baseball-Week Ahead

This Date in Baseball-Week Ahead

Yahoo2 days ago

June 3
1918 — Dutch Leonard of the Boston Red Sox pitched his second no-hitter, blanking the Detroit Tigers 5-0.
1932 — Lou Gehrig became the first American League player to hit four home runs in a game, helping the New York Yankees beat the Philadelphia A's 20-13. The event was overshadowed by the resignation of John McGraw as manager of the New York Giants.
Advertisement
1954 — Henry Thompson of the New York Giants hit three home runs and drove in eight runs in a 13-8 win against the St. Louis Cardinals. Willie Mays drove in the other five runs with two homers.
1971 — Ken Holtzman of the Chicago Cubs pitched his second no-hitter, beating the Cincinnati Reds 1-0.
1978 — Dave Johnson became the first major leaguer to hit two pinch-hit grand slams in a season. His grand slam in the ninth inning gave the Philadelphia Phillies a 5-1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
1989 — Los Angeles and Houston played 22 innings at the Astrodome in the longest night game in National League history -- 7 hours and 14 minutes. The Astros won the game on Rafael Ramirez's RBI single off Jeff Hamilton, normally the Dodgers' third baseman. When the game ended, Fernando Valenzuela was playing first and Eddie Murray was at third.
Advertisement
1989 — Nolan Ryan pitched his 11th career one-hitter and struck out 11 as Texas beat Seattle 6-1. It was Ryan's 16th low-hit game (no-hitter or one-hitter), breaking Bob Feller's record of 15.
1995 — Pedro Martinez of Montreal pitched nine perfect innings against San Diego before giving up a leadoff double to Bip Roberts in the 10th inning of the Expos 1-0 win.
2003 — Sammy Sosa was ejected in the first inning of Chicago's 3-2 win over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays after umpires found cork in his shattered bat.
2006 — Damion Easley hit three homers and had seven RBIs in Arizona's 13-9 victory over Atlanta.
Advertisement
2008 — Randy Johnson took sole possession of second place on baseball's career strikeout list after getting the Milwaukee Brewers' Mike Cameron to go down swinging in the first inning. It was Johnson's 4,673rd career strikeout, breaking a tie with Roger Clemens and leaving the Arizona Diamondbacks' veteran ace behind only Nolan Ryan, who had 5,714 strikeouts in his career.
2017 — Albert Pujols hits his 600th home run of his career, the historic blast being a 4th-inning grand slam off Ervin Santana of the Twins in a 7 - 2 Angels win. He is the ninth player to join the exclusive fraternity.
2017 — Endinson Volquez of the Mets throws the first no-hiitter of the year, defeating the Diamonbacks 3-0.
2018 — Blake Snell ties an American League record by striking out the first 7 batters he faces for the Rays against the Mariners.
Advertisement
2022 — With a disappointing 22-29 record after splurging on free agents over the past few years, the Phillies fire manager Joe Girardi, who has failed to take them to the postseason in his two-plus seasons at the helm. Bench coach Rob Thomson is named manager on an interim basis to finish the season.
2024 —Padres player Tucupita Marcano faces a lifetime ban from baseball after an investigation by MLB found that he has placed bets on a large number of major league games, in contravention of very clear rule. He is suspected of having bet on Pirates games while injured last season; he has not played this season, also due to injury. The lifetime ban will be confirmed tomorrow and four other players will receive one-year suspensions for placing bets while they were in the minor leagues: Michael Kelly, Jay Groome, José Rodríguez and Andrew Saalfrank.
_____
June 4
Advertisement
1940 — The Pirates beat the Boston Bees 14-2 in the first night game at Pittsburgh's Forbes Field.
1940 — The St. Louis Cardinals play their first night game at Sportsman's Park, defeating the Brooklyn Dodgers 10-1.
1951 — Pittsburgh's Gus Bell hit for the cycle to lead the Pirates to a 12-4 victory over the Phillies at Philadelphia.
1964 — Sandy Koufax pitched his third no-hitter, striking out 12, as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Phillies 3-0 in Philadelphia.
1968 — Don Drysdale of the Dodgers blanked the Pirates 5-0 for his sixth straight shutout en route to a record 58 2-3 scoreless innings.
Advertisement
1972 — A major league record eight shutouts were pitched in 16 major league games: five in the American League, three in the National League. The Oakland Athletics swept a pair from the Baltimore Orioles by identical 2-0 scores.
1974 — The game between the Cleveland Indians and the Texas Rangers at Cleveland's Municipal Stadium was forfeited to Texas. Umpire Nestor Chylak had problems with fans all night on 10-cent beer night. The crowd got out of control when Cleveland tied the score 5-5 in the bottom of the ninth.
1989 — Toronto beats Boston 13-11 in 12 innings after trailing 10-0 after six inngs. Red Sox starter Mike Smithson threw six scoreless innings before leaving in the seventh because of a foot blister. The Jays then scored two in the seventh, four in the eighth and five in the ninth and two more in the 11th on Junior Felix's home run. It was the biggest lead the Red Sox have blown and their 12th consecutive loss to the Blue Jays at Fenway Park.
1990 — Ramon Martinez struck out 18 and pitched a three-hitter, sending the Los Angeles Dodgers past the Atlanta Braves 6-0.
Advertisement
1996 — Pamela Davis pitched one inning of scoreless relief and got the win in a minor league exhibition game. She is believed to be the first woman to pitch for a major league farm club under the current minor league system. The 21-year-old right-hander pitched for the Jacksonville Suns, a Double-A affiliate of the Detroit Tigers, against the Australian Olympic team.
2000 — Esteban Yan of the Tampa Bay Devil Rays becomes the 77th major league player to hit a home run in his first at bat, but just the fourth American League pitcher and the first since the Angels' Don Rose in 1972, the year before the designated hitter rule took the bat out of AL pitchers' hands.
2005 — Rafael Palmeiro and Melvin Mora each hit grand slams to help Baltimore rally for a 14-7 win over Detroit.
2007 — Mark Ellis hit for the cycle and Eric Chavez had a two-out homer in the 11th inning to lift Oakland to a 5-4 win over Boston.
Advertisement
2009 — Randy Johnson became the 24th major league pitcher to win 300 games by leading San Francisco to a 5-1 victory over the Washington Nationals in the first game of a doubleheader.
2012 — Mike Scioscia of the Los Angeles Angels manager became the ninth manager in AL history to manage 2,000 games with one club. The Mariners beat the Angels 8-6.
2018 — In a doubleheader with the Detroit Tigers, New York Yankees OF Aaron Judge sets a record by striking out eight times.
2019 — San Francisco Giant Manager Bruce Bochy wins his 1,000th game as the manager of the Giants with a 9-3 victory over the New York Mets.
Advertisement
2022 — The rule preventing position players from pitching in a close game is invoked for the first time when Crew chief C.B. Bucknor objects to Dodgers manager Dave Roberts calling on OF Zach McKinstry to pitch the 9th inning gainst the Mets with his team trailing, 9 - 4. The rule, adopted before the 2020 season but not implemented until this year due to the upheavals caused by the coronavirus pandemic, states that a team cannot use a position player on the mound unless there is a difference of six or more runs between the two teams. Roberts is thus forced to use a real pitcher, Evan Phillips, to pitch the final inning. In spite of the rule, the practice of using such 'mystery pitchers' is continuing undiminished, with teams even resorting to them when they have built a huge lead late in the game, in order to rest their bullpens, something that was completely unseen before the decade started.
_____
June 5
1915 — Philadelphia's Grover Cleveland Alexander lost his no-hitter when Artie Butler punched a single with two outs in the ninth. Alexander struck out Bob Bescher for the final out to beat St. Louis 3-0. Alexander went on to pitch three more one-hitters during the season.
Advertisement
1929 — The Cincinnati Reds scored nine runs in the sixth inning en route to a 21-4 romp over the Chicago Cubs.
1935 — Chicago White Sox rookie John Whitehead loses to St. Louis 2-0. It was his first loss after winning his first eight starts, an AL record for the start of a career.
1949 — Commissioner Happy Chandler lifted the ban on all players who jumped to Mexico, starting in 1946.
1955 — Mickey Mantle of the New York Yankees hit a home run off Chicago's Billy Pierce that traveled about 550 feet. The ball cleared the left-field upper deck at Comiskey Park.
1959 — Pittsburgh's Dick Stuart hit the longest home run at Forbes Field. Stuart smashed a shot over the center-field wall off Chicago pitcher Glenn Hobbie.
Advertisement
1966 — Leo Cardenas of the Reds hit four home runs in a doubleheader against the Chicago Cubs. Cardenas hit two home runs in each game as Cincinnati won the opener 8-3 but dropped the second game 9-5.
1986 — San Diego's Steve Garvey was ejected for the first time in his career when he argued a play at home plate. Garvey, the on-deck hitter, protested the last out of a triple play by the Atlanta Braves. Television replays showed that Bip Roberts was indeed safe. The Padres lost 4-2.
1989 — The Blue Jays lost their debut in the SkyDome as Glenn Braggs hit a two-run homer to lead the Milwaukee Brewers past Toronto 5-3. The $375 million complex featured a $100 million, four-section, retractable roof.
1997 — Alex Rodriguez of the Mariners became the first Seattle player to hit for the cycle in a nine-inning game. He completed the cycle with a double in the ninth of a 14-6 win at Detroit.
Advertisement
2001 — Colorado pitcher Mike Hampton had two homers, three RBIs and recorded his eighth win as Colorado defeated Houston 9-4.
2008 — Atlanta's Chipper Jones became the third switch-hitter in major league history to hit 400 career home runs. Jones' homer off Ricky Nolasco was one of his four hits in the 7-5 comeback win over Florida. Mickey Mantle and Eddie Murray were the first two reach the milestone.
2013 — The Chicago White Sox and Seattle Mariners played the first game in major league history when each team scored five or more runs in the game when it was scoreless through the ninth. Alejandro De Aza and Alex Rios each had an RBI single in the 16th inning, and Chicago won 7-5.
2015 — Oakland's Pat Venditte became the first pitcher in 20 years to throw with both arms in the same game, but the Boston Red Sox beat the Athletics 4-2 on a night a fan sustained life-threatening injuries when she was struck by a broken bat.
2021 — Team USA secured a spot in the Tokyo Olympics by winning the Americas Olympic Qualifier.
_____

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Texas A&M's biggest needs from the transfer portal ahead of the 2026 season
Texas A&M's biggest needs from the transfer portal ahead of the 2026 season

USA Today

time16 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Texas A&M's biggest needs from the transfer portal ahead of the 2026 season

Texas A&M's biggest needs from the transfer portal ahead of the 2026 season With the news that Texas A&M will retain head baseball coach Michael Earely, Athletic Director Trev Alberts is taking a risk, but feels that the young skipper is the right choice for the future, knowing that at 37 years of age, Earley has alot to prove, starting with utilizing the transfer portal, which officially opens on Monday. Texas A&M's talented 2025 roster never lived up to expectations this season, starting with star outfielder Jace LaViolette, who failed to find consistency at the plate despite breaking the program's home run record. However, LaViolette, like 12 other players, still have eligibility remaining heading into the 2026 season, providing Earley a cushion while looking for more depth and starting talent in the portal. Here are the 2025 roster members who are eligible to return in 2026: Pitchers: Ryan Prager Justin Lamkin Myles Patton Weston Moss Shane Sdao Kaiden Wilson Luke Jackson Josh Stewart Infield/Oufield: SS Kaeden Kent 1B Blake Binderup OF Jace LaViolette 2B Ben Royo Utility Jamal George 2025 MLB Draft potential: Jace LaViolette, Ryan Prager, Justin Lamkin, and Shane Sdao are considered MLB prospects ahead of this summer's draft. According to but right now LaViolette (15th), Lamkin (110th), and Sdao (113th) are the only Aggies to make the rankings, as Prager, who was selected 81st overall by the Los Angeles Angels in the 2024 MLB Draft, did not make the cut. Texas A&M's most significant needs in the transfer portal: On paper, the news that relievers Clayton Freshcorn and Caden McCoy is great news for a bullpen that began to look the part late in the season, and combined with the starters, especially Justin Lamkin's solid end to the season, Texas A&M finished 22nd in ERA (4.30) third in strikeout-run ratio (3.31) and 12th in WHIP (1.27), all impressive given the early struggles. However, suppose Prager, Lamkin, and possibly Shane Sdao declare for the MLB Draft. In that case, the Aggies will be in trouble if Earley doesn't immediately fill the pitching void, which would force Weston Moss and several young arms into the starting lineup. Offensively, losing first baseman Gavin Kash isn't detrimental, given Blake Binderup's likely return. Additionally, Kaeden Kent and Ben Royo are also slated to return, although they have not yet announced their final decisions. If both players do leave, freshman Sawyer Farr, who struggled during the season, will likely make his way into the infield after hitting .176 with four RBI and 37 strikeouts as a part-time outfielder during the latter half of the year. Defensively, the Aggies finished 73rd nationally in infield defense, which included 49 errors, leading to multiple losses in conference play. This issue must be addressed through coaching and portal additions. Lastly, as GigEm247's Carter Karels noted in his recent piece, Texas A&M's offense was largely ineffective for most of the year, aside from its explosive efforts in series wins against Tennessee, Arkansas, and South Carolina. Ending the year ranked 259th in batting average (.260), which was also dead last in the SEC at 16th. With Wyatt Henseler gone and Jace LaVolette likely leaving for the draft, this puts the pressure on incoming junior outfielder Caden Sorrell, who, despite missing the first half of the 2025 season, finished hitting .337 with 32 hits and 12 home runs on the year. Paired with impressive freshman Terrence Kiel II and returning sophomore third baseman Gavin Grahovac, the Aggies are in decent shape, but if contending for an NCAA Tournament bid is the goal, more power at the plate is needed from the portal. Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.

This Week in Mets: What might New York need at the trade deadline?
This Week in Mets: What might New York need at the trade deadline?

New York Times

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Times

This Week in Mets: What might New York need at the trade deadline?

'We create without turning, without looking back, without ever really knowing we create.' — 'The Apple Tree,' Galway Kinnell A baseball season, most front-office folks will tell you, is traditionally broken down into three parts. In the first third of the season, you're feeling out what kind of team you have, up through about Memorial Day. In the second third, you're figuring out how to improve that team by the trade deadline. In the final third, you learn whether you were right. Advertisement After a weekend sweep of the Rockies, the Mets are formally into that second third — 59 games down, 50 to go before the deadline on July 31. With a big series on the way this week in Los Angeles, let's examine what the Mets will be trying to figure out between now and the trade deadline. The Mets have arrived at the first week of June in first place despite an offense that hasn't performed up to expectations. They currently average 4.41 runs per game, a shade above the major-league average of 4.33, and only good for ninth in the National League. There's reason to believe that will change. Juan Soto, of course, has not yet hit like Juan Soto. Francisco Lindor and Pete Alonso took steps in May. (Pretty much nobody outside of Brett Baty and Jeff McNeil had strong Mays for New York.) Mark Vientos and Francisco Alvarez should be better, though their youth and shorter track records render them larger question marks than they'd otherwise be. If those players pick up the pace, as you'd expect, then the Mets will enter the second half of July pretty comfortable with their offense. If they're still sitting ninth in the NL in scoring by then, it will be time for an upgrade. Where that upgrade needs to happen is unpredictable; it could be at second base, third base, catcher, designated hitter, etc. (No, no, no, it will not be in right field.) The Mets are where they are with that offense because of the way their pitching staff has performed. New York's rotation has finally fallen behind the Rangers for the best ERA in baseball, but its 2.91 ERA is still the best in the NL by more than half a run. The Mets have proven in these first two months that they possess enviable starting depth: Griffin Canning and Tylor Megill were supposed to fight it out for the sixth spot in the rotation, and instead they've both pitched exceedingly well every fifth day. The question is how good the top half of the Mets' rotation can be. Advertisement In other words, who do the Mets want to trust come October? As good as New York's rotation pitched down the stretch and into the early rounds last year, it wasn't up to the task against the Dodgers' star-studded lineup in the NLCS. Frankie Montas and Sean Manaea should return before the All-Star break, and by then, the Mets will have a better read on the sustainability of what Kodai Senga, Clay Holmes, David Peterson, Canning and Megill have done. No, right here, right now, it doesn't look like the Mets will be in the market for an ace at the deadline. (It's also up in the air how many purported aces will be on the market.) But the Mets should be in position to start contemplating the best playoff roster they can build, and the top part of the rotation could be in that conversation. The bullpen has been even better than the rotation, though its ERA is only good for second-best in the NL behind San Francisco's relief corps. Edwin Díaz has looked sharper than he did at any point last season, Reed Garrett has been lights out for two months, and Huascar Brazobán has been a revelation as a high-leverage innings-eater. At some point, they're going to hit a snag — the way they did when A.J. Minter and Danny Young went down for the season days apart. New York has other options built in: Ryne Stanek has rebounded well from his rough period in late April, Dedniel Núñez should come back to the majors eventually, and Brooks Raley can help out from the left side in the season's second half. But the likelihood is the Mets seek out assistance for the pen, whether it's just another left-handed arm or a fresher arm for the back half of the pen. Remember, Stanek was Díaz's primary set-up man in the postseason last year, and he was a mop-up man in August and September. Things change quickly down there. Advertisement The Mets swept the Rockies at home to finish a 7-2 homestand. New York, 37-22, retook first place in the National League East from the Phillies. The Dodgers couldn't finish a sweep of the Yankees on Sunday night. Los Angeles is still in first in the NL West at 36-23. The Rockies had a winless week after being swept by the Cubs and Mets. Their record is 9-50 as Colorado finishes its trip with three in Miami before a day off Thursday. at Los Angeles RHP Paul Blackburn (season debut) vs. RHP Dustin May (3-4, 4.20 ERA) RHP Tylor Megill (4-4, 3.52) vs. RHP Ben Casparius (4-0, 2.72) RHP Griffin Canning (5-2, 3.23) vs. LHP Clayton Kershaw (0-0, 4.91) LHP David Peterson (4-2, 2.69) vs. RHP Tony Gonsolin (3-1, 5.23) at Colorado RHP Kodai Senga (6-3, 1.60) vs. RHP Antonio Senzatela (1-10, 7.14) RHP Clay Holmes (6-3, 3.07) vs. LHP Carson Palmquist (0-4, 8.50) RHP Tylor Megill vs. RHP Germán Márquez (1-7, 7.13) A chart I made for fun: Red = 60-day IL Orange = 15-day IL Blue = 10-day IL • Blackburn is back after a lengthy rehab stint to make his season debut against the Dodgers on Monday night. • Montas is two starts into what is likely to be a monthlong rehab assignment. The next time the Mets need a sixth starter is around June 23. Montas should be an option by then. • Manaea hasn't started his rehab assignment, which is also likely to last about a month. So the first two weeks of July, just ahead of the All-Star break, look like the right time to expect Manaea. • Jose Siri still hasn't gotten to 100 percent in his running progression. Manager Carlos Mendoza said Siri wasn't all that close to a return late last week. Triple-A: Syracuse vs. Buffalo (Toronto) Double-A: Binghamton vs. Somerset (New York, AL) High-A: Brooklyn at Wilmington (Washington) Low-A: St. Lucie vs. Dunedin (Toronto) Advertisement • Inside the Mets' new outfield ritual, sparked by Juan Soto • Brandon Nimmo on staying sane while hitting at Citi Field • How Francisco Lindor leads • The Mets' superpower as a pitching staff is limiting extra-base hits That's right, I'm on a poetry kick. Reading Galway Kinnell for the first time, and have enjoyed both 'The Book of Nightmares' and 'Mortal Acts, Mortal Words.' Garrett has a 0.70 ERA through 25 2/3 innings. Only two pitchers in Mets history have posted an ERA below 1.00 in more than 30 innings at the All-Star break. One is Kevin Kobel in 1978, whom I'll admit I had never heard of. The other did it in 1984. He was a member of the '86 champion Mets, though he seldom pitched in games that team won. Who is it? (I'll reply to the correct answer in the comments.) (Photo of Clay Holmes pitching Sunday against the Rockies: Jim McIsaac / Getty Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store