1989 Baltimore Orioles
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[edit] 1989 Baltimore Orioles / Franchise: Baltimore Orioles / BR Team Page
Record: 87-75, Finished 2nd in AL Eastern Division (1989 AL)
Managed by Frank Robinson
[edit] History, Comments, Contributions
The 1989 Baltimore Orioles rose from the ashes of a 107-loss season (which famously began with a record 21-consecutive losses) and battled for the American League East pennant. The Orioles held first place for 98 days before eventually being eliminated on the next-to-last day of the season. The team’s 33-win improvement ranks as one of the greatest in history.
[edit] Under New Managment
The turn-over within the franchise from Opening Day 1988 to Opening Day 1989 was tremendous. Team owner Edward Bennett Williams had died in August of 1988, and the Orioles started the season with new prospective owners, headed by Eli Jacobs who had announced the plan to keep Larry Lucchino as team president. Of course, it had only taken the first six games of the 21-game losing streak to cost Cal Ripken, Sr. his job as Oriole manager, and so, the 1989 season saw Frank Robinson's first spring training as the Oriole manager. Roland Hemond, who had taken over as GM after the 1987 season, had completed some 17 trades by Opening Day 1989.
[edit] Acquisitions
The biggest trade had come in December of 1988 when the team finally acceded to Eddie Murray’s more-than two-year-old request to be moved. Murray was sent to the Dodgers for minor league shortstop Juan Bell and relievers Ken Howell and Brian Holton.
Minor-leaguer Mike Devereaux was talked about in the Murray-trade discussions, and during spring training, Hemond sent Mike Morgan to Los Angeles to get Devereaux. While the Orioles were in Florida, Hemond also traded for Phil Bradley, giving up Howell; got Bob Melvin for Terry Kennedy and picked up 29 year old Dave Johnson, who’d led the American Association in wins in 1988.
Veterans Fred Lynn (traded for Chris Hoiles), Mike Boddicker (traded for Brady Anderson and Curt Schilling), Scott McGregor, Don Aase and Doug Sisk, all released, and Tom Niedenfuer, granted free agency, all were gone from the 1988 roster.
[edit] New Kids
The ’89 team would break camp with 32-year-old Dave Schmidt (41 career wins) anchoring the starting staff filled out with 24-year-old JJ Bautista (6 wins), 24-year-old Bob Milacki (2 wins), 25-year-old Jeff Ballard (2 wins) and 22-year-old Pete Harnisch (0 wins). The outfield had the 30-year-old Phil Bradley, but also had rookies Brady Anderson, Devereaux and Steve Finley. Around Cal Ripken, Jr. in the infield were Randy Milligan (with 83 career AB, and acquired a month before the Murray trade), Rene Gonzales (353 career AB) and Craig Worthington (81 career AB). For good measure, their closer, Gregg Olson, had been drafted the previous June.
[edit] Opening and Closing a Lead
On Opening Day the Orioles faced Roger Clemens and won. Steve Finley made his major league debut that day and ran into the right-field fence in the 4th inning. Finley would leave the game, go on the DL and struggle with wrist and shoulder injuries for much of the first half. But Finley’s play became part of the team mythology, as throughout the season, when asked about the Orioles’ turn-around his teammates would cite Finley risking his neck on Opening Day.
On day 2, the O’s defeated their former ace, Mike Boddicker, and were off.
On May 26th Jeff Ballard (having what would turn out to be one of the great, fluky DIPS-defying seasons) won to lift his record to 8-1, pushing the Orioles to a game above .500 and into 1st place in the middling AL East. Three days later, Cal Ripken, Mickey Tettleton and Larry Sheets would all homer off Nolan Ryan and the Orioles would begin a 7-game win streak that would open up a 5-game lead by its end (on the same day the Orioles first-ever #1 draft pick rendered them Ben McDonald).
A second 7-game win streak two weeks later had the team 7 games ahead of the 2nd-place Blue Jays.
On July 27th, a 7-0 loss to close a home stand that snapped a 5-game winning streak didn’t seem like a big deal as the lead stood at 7 ½ games (with no other team above .500 in the East). But the 2-12 road trip that followed let virtually the entire division back into contention. By salvaging the last game of the trip in Boston, the Orioles prevented the Sox from moving into a tie, but the division had grown so tight, 6th-place Yankees were just 5 ½ back.
[edit] 4-man (& 3-man) Rotation
Upon return home, manager Frank Robinson, unable to find 5 starters he trusted, began using the four-man rotation of Milacki (5-9), Harnisch (1-5), Ballard (11-5) and Dave Johnson (0-1). Other than when double-headers dictated a 5th option, Robinson went with four starters the rest of the way – except for one 9-game stretch (Sept. 13th-23rd) when a 3-man rotation (eliminating Harnisch) went through 3 complete cycles. On August 14th, forced to find a fifth starter in the wake of a double header, Robinson announced 3 different relievers would go 3 innings each; the result was a 4-1, 10-inning win. From the time Robinson went to the 4-man rotation, Milacki went 9-3, with a 2.92 ERA in 13 starts, Harnisch 4-4, 3.59 in 10 starts, Ballard, 7-3, 3.12 in 13 starts and Johnson, 4-4, 4.03 in 13 starts, but it was the Batimore-native Johnson who became the darling of the city (see article).
[edit] The Stretch
On August 20th, having lost 2 straight to the Blue Jays, the Orioles held a half-game lead over both the Jays and the Brewers. In the final game of their series the Orioles beat the Jays to hold them off, but it would be the last day the Orioles would gain a full-game on the Jays until September 20th. Despite going at a respectable pace of 18-11 during that month, incredibly, each day that the Orioles won, if the Jays played, they won also. Over that month, the Oriole 1 ½-game lead over the Blue Jays became a 2-game deficit.
The teams were to meet in Toronto’s new Skydome for the last 3 games of the season, and they again approached the series in lock-step. The 1-game lead the Jays held on September 24th never changed until the Orioles arrived to play on the 29th. The first pitch of the series was hit out by Phil Bradley, and Ballard and Todd Stottlemyre kept it at 1-0 into the bottom of the 8th. With one out and a runner on 1st, the Oriole rookie closer, Gregg Olson, came in. A stolen base and a groundout later, a Gregg Olson curveball got by late season pick up, Jamie Quirk. A two-out 11th inning single by Lloyd Moseby won it for the Jays and clinched at least a tie.
Harnisch was slated to start the second game of the series, but reportedly stepped on a nail on the way back to the hotel on Friday. Dave Johnson got the start on 3-days rest. The Jays scored in the 1st on George Bell’s single (Bell’s brother Juan was playing for the Orioles). The Orioles responded in the 3rd when Bradley was permitted to score from first on a fan-interference double by Cal Ripken, and Randy Milligan followed by singling Ripken home for a 2-1 lead. The lead then became 3-1 on Bradley’s second infield hit of the game which scored Devereaux. The lead stayed there until Dave Johnson was lifted after walking Nelson Liriano to lead off the home 8th. The Oriole bullpen gave up 3 runs in the 8th after Johnson's departure, and a three-up-three-down ninth ended the Orioles shot at a worst-to-first season.
[edit] Defense & Walks
The team’s successful turn around was based on strong defense to help out young pitching – bringing up three center fielders, in Anderson, Devereaux and Finley; a virtual 2:1 double-play-to-error ratio and Bob Melvin behind the plate. But also, on offense, the Orioles also drew enough walks to be at league average in OBP despite being 12th in hits.
Closer Gregg Olson won the BBWAA’s Rookie of the Year Award and Craig Worthington won the Sporting News rookie award.


