August 16
From BR Bullpen
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| Stats of players who died on this day | |
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Events, births and deaths that occurred on August 16.
[edit] Events
- 1902 - The Athletics move into first place to stay as 18,675 see them beat Chicago 2-1.
- 1903 - Toledo native George Mullin, pitching for the Tigers, helps the attendance today (6,000) as the Tigers take on New York in a Sunday game in Toledo. Mullin is racked for eight runs, but Detroit scores 12, led by the hitting of Sam Crawford, who is 5-for-6.
- 1904 - The Pirates disappoint 23,000 at the Polo Grounds by sweeping two from the Giants, 7 - 2 and 4 - 1. The Bucs jump on Christy Mathewson for five runs in two innings of the opener. It's the first doubleheader loss for New York this year.
- 1907 - The Washington Post reports that Browns SS Bobby Wallace is the highest paid player in either league at a salary of $6,500.
- 1908 - The Cardinals deal a blow to the Giants' pennant hopes by defeating them twice in St. Louis. With Christy Mathewson refusing to pitch on Sundays, Red Ames and Joe McGinnity take the losses. Matty will toss a shutout tomorrow for New York.
- 1909
- New York and Pittsburgh play to a 2-2 tie, stopped after eight innings because of a drenching downpour. Off Christy Mathewson, Ham Hyatt hits his 3rd pinch triple of the year, a record that won't be matched till 1970. Outfielder Red Murray prevents a loss for Matty with one of the greatest catches ever seen at Forbes Field. With two outs and two on, Dots Miller belts a long line drive off Matty into the growing darkness. With everyone straining to follow the ball, a bolt of lightening flashes and Murray is seen making a bare-handed grab on the dead run to end the inning. Bill Klem then calls the game.
- The A's jump on Walter Johnson, scoring six runs in five innings, before relief comes in. Before exiting, Johnson hits his first ML homer, off Harry Krause, who will lead the AL in ERA with a sparkling 1.39.
- 1910 - The Tigers top the Senators, 8 - 3, with Ty Cobb stealing home for the 2nd time in his career. It comes in the 4th inning with Bob Groom on the mound.
- 1911
- At Brooklyn, Honus Wagner suffers a serious ankle injury rounding first in the first inning. He will miss 13 games, play one at first base, then miss another 12. With Wagner out the Pirates will lose eight of 13 and drop out of the race.
- In the 4th inning, Wildfire Schulte busts his record 4th grand slam of the season to help the Cubs maul the Boston Rustlers, 13-6. Pitching, it's Brown over Brown as Mordecai tops Buster.
- Philadelphia OF Sherry Magee is reinstated, following his suspension for attacking umpire Bill Finneran several weeks ago.
- At the Polo Grounds, it take Christy Mathewson just 92 pitches to top the Reds, 6 - 1. Big Six allows just two Cincy hits in beating George Suggs. It is Matty's 22nd straight win over the Ohioans.
- 1912
- Behind Earl Hamilton's seven hitter, the lowly Browns beat the front running Red Sox, 3 - 2. Hamilton gives up six hits to beat O'Brien. Boston is 8 1/2 ahead of the A's.
- In Chicago, the Giants score twice in the opening frame off Jimmy Lavender to knock out the would-be Giant killer and go on to win, 7 - 4. Fred Merkle and Larry Doyle pull off a double steal in the inning, with Doyle on the front end. Jeff Tesreau puzzles the locals and the Cubs drop six games behind the Giants.
- Walter Johnson and Joe Wood are in pursuit of Rube Marquard's 19-game win streak. Johnson picks on the White Sox for his 14th straight, a 2-hitter, tying Jack Chesbro's 1904 mark. The Washingtonians win, 2 - 0, beating "our meatball expert" (Chicago Record-Herald) Joe Benz with eight hits. A week later Joe Wood will win number 13 in a row.
- 1913 - For the second time in two weeks, a Brooklyn player hits two inside-the-park homers. This time it is Bob Fisher in a nitecap 14 - 5 win at St. Louis. Brooklyn also beats the Cards in the opener, 1 - 0.
- 1915
- In the 2nd game of a doubleheader, Tiger rookie Bernie Boland no hits Cleveland through 26 batters before Ben Paschal singles, his first and only hit of the year. Boland wins, 3 - 1.
- Alex Main of Kansas City pitches a 5 - 0 no-hitter versus Buffalo.
- At Boston, Smoky Joe Wood fires a 1 - 0 shutout over Washington. The Nationals have lost all 11 games at Fenway this year.
- 1919 - The Browns set an AL record with 53 total chances against the A's, but lose 7-4. The Browns have 26 assists and St. Louis 1B George Sisler has 17 putouts. With no putouts, the St. Louis outfielders have the day off.
- 1920 - Cleveland SS Ray Chapman, 29, is beaned by a Carl Mays pitch. A righthanded batter who crowds the plate, Chapman freezes and fails to get out of the way of the submarine delivery. He is carried from the field and dies the next day from a fractured skull. Mays, a surly, unpopular pitcher, is the target of fans' and players' outrage. Chapman, a Cleveland favorite since breaking in in 1912, had been married the previous year. In October his wife will receive a full World Series share, $3,986.34. The incident has no effect on Mays's pitching. One week later he will blank Detroit 10-0, and go on to win 26 and lose 11. Joe Sewell will be called up to take Chapman's place, and for 14 years he will be the hardest man to strike out.
- 1921 - The Braves Walton Cruise connects off the Cubs Pete Alexander for the 2nd home run hit out of mammoth Braves Field. The first home run, also to RF, was hit by Cruise in 1917. There will be 38 home runs in Braves Field this year: 34 inside the park, three bounce homers, and Cruise's missile. Braves pitcher Dana Fillingim is the beneficiary of the offense as he beats Alexander, 8 - 6.
- 1922
- In Pittsburgh, trailing 7 - 6 the Pirates load the bases with two outs before Walter Schmidt drives a ball to deep left center. Giants LF Casey Stengel makes a dramatic catch on the dead run to preserve the New York win.
- The Browns beat Walter Johnson and the Senators again, 11 - 2. Brownie star George Sisler is 1-for-5 with a run scored.
- 1927 - Teeing off on a Tommy Thomas pitch, Babe Ruth becomes the first player to homer over the roof of Chicago's Comiskey Park.
- 1930
- Lefty Grove (20-4) wins his 6th in a row, beating the Browns in Philadelphia, 4 - 2. Grove drives in the first two runs in the 2nd off Dick Coffman, who gives up nine hits in the loss. The Browns net 10 hits off Grove.
- At Wrigley Field, the league-leading Cubs nip the Phillies, 10 - 9, in the first game of a doubleheader, then play to a 3 - 3 tie in 11 innings before darkness intervenes. In the first game, the Phils score eight runs in the 7th to take a 9 - 8 lead, but Gabby Hartnett's drive wins the game for Chicago. Hack Wilson hits his 41st homer in the opener. The Phils manage just two hits in the nitecap, but take a 3 - 0 lead into the 9th. Chicago comes back when Riggs Stephenson scores on a balk, then Woody English cracks a two-run homer to tie. Meanwhile, 2nd place Brooklyn splits with the Pirates, 7-5 and 2-6.
- 1939 - The Giants suspend 2B Burgess Whitehead, who will show up the next day in full uniform at Yankee Stadium and ask to work out. Yankee manager Joe McCarthy refuses. Whitehead rejoins the Giants a few days later, but he will be suspended again in mid-September after leaving the team.
- 1940 - Jimmie Foxx smashes two homers to help the Red Sox beat the Senators. The two round trippers move him ahead of Lou Gehrig on the all time list with a total of 495.
- 1947 - Ralph Kiner hits three successive home runs for the host Pittsburgh Pirates, in a 12 - 7 win over the Cardinals in a game in which the two clubs bang out major-league record (since topped) 10 homers. Two other Bucs, Hank Greenberg and Billy Cox, and one Cardinal, Whitey Kurowski, each contribute two home runs to set a major-league record for most players with 2+ homers in a game. Kiner matches the ML mark of seven home runs in four games, six in three games, five in two games, and four in consecutive at bats. By the end of the month, Big Ralph will still trail Johnny Mize 39 to 43 in a head-to-head home run competition that will only be matched by Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle in 1961. Starters Roger Wolff and the Cards Ken Burkhart exit in the first inning.
- 1948 - Babe Ruth dies of throat cancer at age 53 in New York. His body will be put on display at Yankee Stadium and be viewed by more than 100,000 fans.
- 1950
- At the Polo Grounds, Hank Thompson hits two inside-the-park home runs as the Giants drubbed the Dodgers, 16-7.
- Branch Rickey of the Brooklyn Dodgers denies news reports that Jackie Robinson, last year's MVP, will be traded. The latest tempest was started by the second baseman's comments after he was removed from the lineup on August 12th by Burt Shotton after making an error. "I wouldn't be surprised if I was traded," Jackie was quoted as saying.
- The Phils polish off the second place Braves, 5 - 1 on Robin Roberts' three-hitter. The Phils score four in the fourth off Vern Bickford, concluding the scoring with Del Ennis' 26th homer.
- 1951
- The Cards score six runs in the 7th inning to defeat the Pirates, 9 - 6. Murry Dickson, trying for his 17th win, takes the loss. Stan Musial hits a 3-run homer in the 6th to start the scoring for St. Louis. His inside-the-park homer is his first hit in 13 at bats, and his 2nd inside-the-park homer in four days.
- The Browns end the Indians win streak at 13 when Tommy Byrne pitches and bats St. Louis to a 4 - 0 win. Byrne allows two hits in seven innings and drives in all the runs before retiring with back spasms. Mike Garcia loses to drop the Indians lead to 1 1/2 games over the Yankees.
- Sal Maglie outpitches Don Newcombe, 2 - 1, to cut the Dodger lead over the Giants to 9 1/2 games. Maglie allows four hits, including Billy Cox's 300-foot homer, in winning his 17th. The Giants score the winner in the 7th when Bobby Thomson scores on a wild pitch. Pee Wee Reese goes hitless, ending his 22-game streak.
- At Elmira, NY, minor-leaguer Don Zimmer marries Jean Carol Bauerle at home plate. Teammate Ed Roebuck is supposed to make it a double wedding, but opts for a church instead.
- 1954 - In a throwing contest between Jimmy Piersall and Willie Mays before a Red Sox-Giants charity game in Boston, Piersall hurts his arm. He starts the game but leaves midway. He wakes up the following morning with a sore arm that stays with him a year, and he will never throw quite as well again.
- 1958 - Pirate Frank Thomas clouts three consecutive HRs in a 13-4 pasting of the Reds. Pittsburgh is now 7 games behind Milwaukee.
- 1961
- Cincinnati takes the National League lead for good with a shutout sweep 6 - 0 and 8 - 0 at Los Angeles before 72,140, a record crowd for a NL doubleheader. Bob Purkey gives up four hits and Jim O'Toole just two in handing the Dodgers their 1st twinbill whitewash since July 18, 1935.
- Roger Maris ties an American League record with his 7th home run in his 6th straight game, as New York beats Chicago 5 - 4 in the 9th inning. His two blasts off Billy Pierce give him 48, three more than Mickey Mantle.
- 1962
- For the 2nd night in a row, Frank Robinson clouts two homers to power the Reds to a 7 - 1 win over the Braves. Robby now has nine homers in eight games, and 11 in the last 12. Lee Maye's home run off Jim Maloney is the only Braves score.
- Rick Wise tosses a shutout, the Phillies' 4th in a row, to beat Houston 7 - 0. The streak ends tomorrow in the 1st inning when Houston's Sandy Valdespino steals home.
- 1964 - Sandy Koufax pitches a 3 - 0 shutout win against St. Louis, but he will miss the rest of the season because of a elbow injury suffered when he slid back into 2B against Milwaukee on August 8. In the nightcap, Curt Simmons matches Koufax with a 4 - 0 shutout of the Dodgers. Card CF Curt Flood has eight straight hits in the doubleheader split.
- 1965 - At Fenway, Earl Wilson is all the Boston offense as he bangs a pair of two-run home runs. But the righty still takes the loss to the White Sox, 5 - 4.
- 1966 - Willie Mays hits his 534th home run, matching Jimmie Foxx's record for right-handed batters, as Gaylord Perry beats the Cardinals 3 - 1.
- 1967 - Reds P Jim Maloney retires all 19 batters he faces, but has to leave the game with one out in the 7th when he steps in a hole and injures his ankle. Reliever Billy McCool allows two hits and the Reds win, 2 - 0, in Pittsburgh.
- 1968
- Philadelphia's Richie Allen ties a National League record by drawing five bases on balls in one game, but the Dodgers win 7 - 5.
- Detroit's Denny McLain is 16-0 on the road after blanking the Red Sox 4 - 0 in Boston. Tigers C Bill Freehan is hit by a pitch in three consecutive plate appearances, painfully tying a ML record. He will be hit a record tying 24 times this season.
- 1969
- The Phillies rack up their 4th straight shutout victory when Rick Wise pitches a 4-hitter to defeat the Astros, 7 - 0. The Phils set a modern club record with the streak. Dick Allen has a homer and Wise joins in with a homer and a single.
- In an 8 - 1 win in Atlanta, St. Louis P Bob Gibson reaches 200 strikeouts (en route to 269) for the 7th season, a National League record.
- Seattle's Sicks Stadium shakes when 250-pound Boog Powell legs out an inside-the-park homer in the 9th against ex-teammate Steve Barber. It really isn't that vital, as Baltimore romps 15 - 3.
- 1970
- In a 5 - 3 Montreal win over the Astros, Bob Bailey hits one of the longest home runs in Astrodome history.
- Down 3 - 0 in the 8th, the Brewers score four runs, three of the runs on a Danny Walton bases loaded double, to beat the Indians, 4 - 3. Gus Gil's single drives in the last run. The biggest crowd of the season, 44,387, is on hand for bat day, allowing Bernie Brewer to leave his perch in right field after 40 days. Bernie had vowed to stay there until the crowd topped 40,000, and when the attendance was announced, Bernie slid down his slide.
- 1971 - Harmon Killebrew, who has a higher percentage of his hits (28.6%) go for home runs than any other player, collects his annual triple in a 11 - 2 win over the Indians. It marks his 8th season when he will hit exactly one three bagger.
- 1975 - In a 9 - 1 win over Cleveland, the Twins set a ML mark with nine batters getting 2+ hits. Jim Hughes is the recipient of the largesse.
- 1976
- With the help of three picked-off Oakland runners at 1B, the first such occurrence in the American League since 1910, the Brewers beat Oakland 4 - 3. Another oddity happens when Oakland's Billy Williams is called out on strikes after refusing to enter the batter's box. He is then thrown out of the game.
- Lou Brock collects five hits in a losing cause as the Cardinals fall to the Padres, 11 - 7.
- 1977
- At Yankee Stadium, New York blows a 9 - 4 lead in the top of the 9th when Chicago scores six runs, but a two-run homer by Chris Chambliss in the bottom of the inning gives the Yankees an 11 - 10 win.
- At Montreal, the Phillies win their 13th straight, a 20th century club record, beating the Expos, 7 - 5. Warren Brusstar is the winner over Joe Kerrigan.
- 1978 - Boston's Luis Tiant wins his 200th ML game, beating Nolan Ryan and the Angels, 4 - 2. Jim Rice's 2-run home run is the difference.
- 1982 - Richie Hebner returns to the Pirates, who buy the vet from the Tigers.
- 1986 - Dale Holman, of the IL Richmond Braves becomes the first professional player ever to play for two teams in one game. The game was suspended because of rain on June 16 when he was in the lineup for Syracuse. By the time the game is completed today, Holman had been traded to Richmond and is in the lineup (as noted by Doug Lyons).
- 1987
- The wind is blowing out at Wrigley as the Mets pound the Cubs 23 - 10 at Wrigley Field, setting a club record for runs scored in a game.
- Tim Raines goes 5-for-5 and hits for the cycle to lead the Expos to a 10 - 7 win over Pittsburgh.
- 1988 - The Dodgers trade Pedro Guerrero to the Cardinals for pitcher John Tudor, whose 2.29 ERA is leading the National League.
- 1989
- Yankees OF Luis Polonia is arrested in his hotel room for having sex with a 15-year-old girl. He will be sentenced to 60 days in jail after the season.
- Lefty Tom Drees, 26, pitches his 3rd no-hitter of the season for AAA Vancouver, beating Las Vegas 5 - 0 in the 7-inning opener of doubleheader. He fired consecutive 1 - 0 no-hitters, beating Calgary in nine innings (May 23rd) and Edmonton in seven (May 28th). Drees, now 12 - 11, will pitch 7+ innings for the White Sox in 1991.
- 1990 - In a 7 - 5 loss to the Indians, the Twins Kirby Puckett starts off in RF and then moves to SS, 3B, and 2B in the 8th inning. Al Newman switches from 3B to SS back to 3B in the frame. Cleveland fails to score.
- 1991 - The Red Sox obtain P Dan Petry from the Braves in exchange for a player to be named.
- 1992 - Greg Maddux allows four hits as the Cubs beat Houston, 1-0. Maddux goes the route, winning his 15th, beating Brian Williams.
- 1996
- Trailing 2-0, the Orioles score 14 runs over the final three innings to defeat the Athletics, 14-3, in the 1st game of a doubleheader. Rafael Palmeiro drives home six runs for Baltimore, and each member of the starting lineup, with the exception of leadoff man Roberto Alomar, gets at least two hits. The Orioles stroke 19 hits for the 2nd day in a row off Oakland pitching. Baltimore also takes the nightcap, 5 - 4 in 10 innings.
- San Diego OF Steve Finley homers in the Padres game against the Mets in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico. By doing so, he becomes the 1st major league player to have homered in three different countries, having previously hit four-baggers in the US and Canada. The Padres win the 1st regular season game to be played outside of the US or Canada, 15 - 10, belting four homers. Leadoff batter Tony Gwynn is 3-for-5 and will repeat it tomorrow in the 7 - 3 loss to the Mets.
- Playing for his 7th team in six years, Mark Whiten hits a pinch hit homer in his first at bat for Seattle to help beat the Yanks. In his last at-bat for the Braves before being traded for farmhand Roger Blanco, Whiten belted a 3-run pinch homer to beat the Phils, 5 - 2. Whiten is the 45th player used by Seattle this season.
- 1998
- The Padres defeat the Brewers, 4 - 0, in the 1st game of a doubleheader behind Kevin Brown's 1 - hitter. Brown fans 11 and allows only a single to OF Jeromy Burnitz. The Brewers bounce back to take the nightcap, 4 - 2.
- Baltimore OF Eric Davis has his 30 - game hitting streak snapped in a 5 - 3 loss to the Indians.
- 1999
- The Indians obtain 2B Carlos Baerga from the Padres in exchange for a player to be named.
- The Reds Juan Guzman has to leave his start in Pittsburgh after seven innings because his shoes are too small. After he was traded to the Reds, he arrived with only his size 10 1/2 orange and black Orioles shoes. Puma sent him a size nine 1/2 in red which he wore today until blisters developed. The Reds still win, 9 - 2.
- Alex Rodriguez homers for the 5th straight game to pace the Mariners to a 7 - 5 win over Toronto. He'll go homerless tomorrow.
- 2000
- The Rangers shut out the Yankees, 5-0, as P Brian Sikorski hurls scoreless ball into the 8th inning in his major league debut. Texas OF Gabe Kapler goes hitless in the game, ending his 28-game hitting streak. During the streak, Kapler batted .375 (42-for-112) and his average jumped from .241 to .289. The outfielder's streak is the 10th of at least 28 games in the A.L. since 1950.
- The Astros defeat the Pirates, 11-10, hitting six home runs in a game for the 2nd time in four days. Houston has now hit an NL-record 18 homers in its last four contests.
- 2001
- After piloting the team 13 games above .500 in spite of numerous injuries to key players, manager Jimy Williams is fired by the Red Sox. The ousted skipper is replaced by the club's well respected pitching coach, Joe Kerrigan.
- Barry Bonds' second home run of the game and 53rd of the season breaks the franchise record established by his godfather, Willie Mays. With his first homer, the left fielder eclipses the National League record for home runs by a left handed batter established in 1947 by another Giant, Johnny Mize.
- The Padres defeat the Mets, 6 - 5. SD rookie P Jeremy Fikac gets the win in his major league debut as he strikes out the side in his only inning.
- 2002
- The Twins down the Red Sox, 5 - 0, in the process ending Pedro Martinez's scoreless inning streak at 35. It is the longest such streak in the majors since 2000.
- After four days of delaying the decision, the executive board of the Major League Baseball Players Association votes 57-0 to set an August 30 strike date. All eight previous negotiations since 1972 have resulted in work stoppages in the national pastime.
- During opening ceremonies of the Little League World Series at Volunteer Stadium, the 1955 Little League Team from Charleston, SC, is honored. The fourteen boys from the Cannon Street YMCA team, who were banned from their own state's post-season tournament 47 years ago due their skin color, were invited to Williamsport at the time as guests after the other 61 S.C. all-white leagues were told by Little League officials the winner of their state finals would not be permitted to participate in the tournament because they refused they to play a duly franchised league.
- 2006 - Bruce Froemming umpires in his 5,000th game, becoming the second MLB umpire to ever reach that figure. Bill Klem had been the first.
- 2007:
- The World Youth Championship is canceled by the International Baseball Federation after Venezuela refuses to issue visas to Taiwan's entry. Australia and the Netherlands had backed out due to security concerns. The Championship is held anyways without IBAF sponsorship.
- The Puerto Rican Winter League 2007-2008 season is canceled due to financial concerns. It is the first time since the league's founding in 1939 that it will not hold a season.
- Trevor Hoffman saves his 30th game of the season. It gives him a record 12 consecutive 30-save campaigns.
[edit] Births
- 1854 - Doc Landis, pitcher
- 1855 - Hick Carpenter, infielder (d. 1937)
- 1865 - Ed Mayer, infielder (d. 1946)
- 1872 - Willie Clark, infielder (d. 1932)
- 1872 - Gene Steere, infielder (d. 1942)
- 1884 - Joe Hovlik, pitcher (d. 1951)
- 1885 - Hub Northen, outfielder (d. 1947)
- 1889 - Hank Robinson, pitcher (d. 1965)
- 1890 - Baby Doll Jacobson, outfielder (d. 1977)
- 1892 - Bill Keen, infielder (d. 1947)
- 1893 - Cy Wright, infielder (d. 1947)
- 1895 - Fred Bailey, outfielder (d. 1972)
- 1897 - Bob Fothergill, outfielder (d. 1938)
- 1900 - Billy Rhiel, infielder (d. 1946)
- 1901 - Mahlon Higbee, outfielder (d. 1968)
- 1908 - Andy Bednar, pitcher (d. 1937)
- 1911 - Herman Besse, pitcher (d. 1972)
- 1913 - Tiny Bonham, pitcher; All-Star (d. 1949)
- 1913 - Lew Carpenter, pitcher (d. 1979)
- 1922 - Gene Woodling, outfielder; All-Star (d. 2001)
- 1925 - Willie Jones, infielder; All-Star (d. 1983)
- 1929 - Curt Roberts, infielder (d. 1969)
- 1931 - Don Rudolph, pitcher (d. 1968)
- 1938 - Buck Rodgers, catcher, manager
- 1941 - Gene Brabender, pitcher (d. 1996)
- 1941 - Bill Edgerton, pitcher
- 1941 - Larry Loughlin, pitcher (d. 1999)
- 1945 - Jan Dukes, pitcher
- 1948 - Mike Jorgensen, infielder, manager
- 1952 - Al Holland, pitcher; All-Star
- 1953 - Nick Leyva, , manager
- 1958 - Jim Maler, infielder
- 1960 - Bill Mooneyham, pitcher
- 1961 - Greg Jelks, infielder
- 1961 - Donnie Scott, catcher
- 1964 - Rick Reed, pitcher; All-Star
- 1965 - Xavier Hernandez, pitcher
- 1966 - Steve Foster, pitcher
- 1966 - Terry Shumpert, infielder
- 1967 - Bret Barberie, infielder
- 1971 - Rafael Pina, minor league pitcher
- 1973 - Damian Jackson, infielder
- 1974 - Roger Cedeno, outfielder
- 1974 - John Snyder, pitcher
- 1975 - Jin Ho Cho, pitcher
- 1975 - Michael Coleman, outfielder
- 1978 - Ruben Castillo, minor league infielder
- 1980 - Ryan Hanigan, catcher
- 1980 - Ben Kozlowski, pitcher
- 1985 - Daric Barton, infielder
- 1985 - Karl Bolt, minor league infielder
- 1985 - Matt Harrison, pitcher
[edit] Deaths
- 1906 - Tom Carey, infielder, manager (b. 1846)
- 1919 - Ed McKean, infielder (b. 1864)
- 1923 - Bill Day, pitcher (b. 1867)
- 1923 - Jim Scoggins, pitcher (b. 1891)
- 1927 - Jerry Denny, infielder (b. 1859)
- 1937 - Bunk Congalton, outfielder (b. 1875)
- 1943 - Beals Becker, outfielder (b. 1886)
- 1944 - Tom Sullivan, catcher (b. 1906)
- 1946 - Billy Rhiel, infielder (b. 1900)
- 1948 - Babe Ruth, outfielder; All-Star, Hall of Famer (b. 1895)
- 1953 - Ty Tyson, outfielder (b. 1892)
- 1963 - Dick Braggins, pitcher (b. 1879)
- 1970 - Kurt Krieger, pitcher (b. 1926)
- 1971 - Walter Mueller, outfielder (b. 1894)
- 1972 - Fred Bailey, outfielder (b. 1895)
- 1976 - George Aiton, outfielder (b. 1890)
- 1977 - Charlie Barnabe, pitcher (b. 1900)
- 1977 - Al Javery, pitcher; All-Star (b. 1918)
- 1977 - Joe Kelly, outfielder (b. 1886)
- 1983 - Earl Averill, outfielder; All-Star, Hall of Famer (b. 1902)
- 1984 - Tommie Aaron, infielder (b. 1939)
- 1984 - Fred Hahn, pitcher (b. 1929)
- 1985 - Dick Drott, pitcher (b. 1936)
- 1993 - Bama Rowell, infielder (b. 1916)
- 2002 - Johnny Roseboro, catcher; All-Star (b. 1933)
- 2007 - Chico Garcia, infielder; Salón de la Fama (b. 1924)

