1969 Philadelphia Phillies season

The 1969 Philadelphia Phillies season was a season in American baseball. The team finished fifth in the newly established National League East with a record of 63–99, thirty-seven games behind the division champion New York Mets, which went on to defeat Baltimore, four games to one, in the World Series.

1969 Philadelphia Phillies
Major League affiliations
Location
Other information
OwnersR. R. M. Carpenter, Jr.
General managersJohn J. Quinn
ManagersBob Skinner, George Myatt
Local televisionWFIL
Local radioWCAU
(By Saam, Bill Campbell, Richie Ashburn)
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It was also the Phillies' penultimate season at Connie Mack Stadium.

Offseason

Regular season

1969 was a year of transition for the organization. Dick Allen was suspended by the team for a month after missing a game against the New York Mets. Claiming that Allen was undermining him by going directly to owner R. R. M. Carpenter, Jr., manager Bob Skinner surprised the club by resigning on August 6. Skinner blasted the club for their handling of Allen and blamed Allen for the team's losing saying, "Allen has been a big factor in our losing and there is very definitely disharmony on the club." Skinner was replaced by coach George Myatt.[6] Allen was then traded from the club after the season.

In addition to the turmoil in the clubhouse, the Phillies had expected that 1969 would be their final season at Connie Mack Stadium with an April 1970 opening planned for Veterans Stadium. Construction delays pushed the Vet's opening to April 1971.

At Connie Mack Stadium on April 17, 1969, Montreal Expos pitcher Bill Stoneman threw a no-hitter against the Phillies. It was Stoneman's fifth major league start and only the ninth game of the Expos' existence.[7]

In conjunction with Major League Baseball's celebration in 1969 of the 100th anniversary of professional baseball, the Phillies conducted a fan vote to determine their all-time team. The players were honored on August 5, 1969, at Connie Mack Stadium before the Phillies' game against the San Francisco Giants. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn was on hand to recognize Robin Roberts as the Phillies' greatest player of all time.[8]

The Phillies recorded four straight complete-game shutouts from August 13 to 16, 1969. The Phillies shutout the Atlanta Braves two games in a row in Atlanta then returned to Philadelphia, where they shut out the Houston Astros in the following two games.[9]

Season standings

NL East W L Pct. GB Home Road
New York Mets 10062 0.617 52–30 48–32
Chicago Cubs 9270 0.568 8 49–32 43–38
Pittsburgh Pirates 8874 0.543 12 47–34 41–40
St. Louis Cardinals 8775 0.537 13 42–38 45–37
Philadelphia Phillies 6399 0.389 37 30–51 33–48
Montreal Expos 52110 0.321 48 24–57 28–53

Record vs. opponents


Sources:
Team ATL CHC CIN HOU LAD MON NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL
Atlanta 3–912–615–39–98–44–86–68–413–59–96–6
Chicago 9–36–6–18–46–610–88–1012–67–1111–16–69–9
Cincinnati 6–126–6–19–910–88–46–610–25–711–710–88–4
Houston 3–154–89–96–1211–110–28–43–910–810–87–5
Los Angeles 9–96–68–1012–610–24–88–48–412–65–133–9
Montreal 4–88–104–81–112–105–1311–75–134–81–117–11
New York 8–410–86–62–108–413–512–610–811–18–412–6
Philadelphia 6-66–122–104–84–87–116–1210–88–43–97–11
Pittsburgh 4–811–77–59–34–813–58–108–1010–25–79–9
San Diego 5–131–117–118–106–128–41–114–82–106–124–8
San Francisco 9–96–68–108–1013–511–14–89–37–512–63–9
St. Louis 6–69–94–85–79–311–76–1211–79–98–49–3

Notable transactions

Game log

Legend
 Phillies win
 Phillies loss
 Postponement
BoldPhillies team member
1969 Game Log[11]
Overall Record: 63–99
April (8–11)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 8@ Cubs6–7 (11)Phil Regan (1–0)Barry Lersch (0–1)None40,7960–1
2April 9@ Cubs3–11Bill Hands (1–0)Rick Wise (0–1)None6,2970–2
3April 10@ Cubs2–6Ken Holtzman (1–0)Woodie Fryman (0–1)None5,4220–3
4April 11@ Pirates1–7Bob Moose (1–0)Jerry Johnson (0–1)None31,6410–4
5April 12@ Pirates8–1Grant Jackson (1–0)Jim Bunning (0–1)None12,4741–4
6April 13@ Pirates5–6Ron Kline (1–0)Bill Wilson (0–1)None14,9811–5
7April 14Mets5–1Woodie Fryman (1–1)Jim McAndrew (0–1)None13,0702–5
8April 15Mets3–6Gary Gentry (2–0)Gary Wagner (0–1)Cal Koonce (2)2,8802–6
April 16ExposPostponed (rain);[12][13] Makeup: July 4 as a traditional double-header
9April 17Expos0–7Bill Stoneman (1–2)Jerry Johnson (0–2)None6,4962–7
April 18PiratesPostponed (rain);[14] Makeup: September 15 as a traditional double-header
10April 19Pirates6–8Steve Blass (1–0)Grant Jackson (1–1)Bruce Dal Canton (1)3,9532–8
11April 20Pirates7–1Rick Wise (1–1)Bob Veale (1–2)Barry Lersch (1)4,9303–8
12April 21@ Mets2–1 (11)Woodie Fryman (2–1)Ron Taylor (0–1)Barry Lersch (2)9,2864–8
April 22@ MetsPostponed (wet grounds and rain);[15][16] Makeup: September 5 as a traditional double-header
April 23@ ExposPostponed (rain);[13] Makeup: September 19 as a traditional double-header
13April 24@ Expos7–1Rick Wise (2–1)Mudcat Grant (1–1)None5,1165–8
14April 25Cardinals5–1Grant Jackson (2–1)Bob Gibson (1–2)None7,7106–8
15April 26Cardinals4–10Ron Willis (1–0)Barry Lersch (0–2)Joe Hoerner (3)8,9426–9
16April 27Cardinals1–0Jerry Johnson (1–2)Ray Washburn (2–2)None7,5657–9
17April 28Cubs1–2 (10)Ted Abernathy (2–0)Rick Wise (2–2)None4,4387–10
18April 29Cubs0–10Ferguson Jenkins (4–1)Grant Jackson (2–2)None3,8117–11
19April 30Cubs3–1Woodie Fryman (3–1)Bill Hands (3–2)None2,9308–11
May (10–13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
20May 2@ Cardinals7–2Jerry Johnson (2–2)Ray Washburn (2–3)Turk Farrell (1)17,9169–11
21May 3@ Cardinals4–1Rick Wise (3–2)Steve Carlton (2–3)None16,79610–11
22May 4@ Cardinals5–0Grant Jackson (3–2)Dave Giusti (2–3)None15,51111–11
23May 6Astros5–4Turk Farrell (1–0)Dooley Womack (1–1)None3,54412–11
24May 7Astros1–6Larry Dierker (4–3)Jerry Johnson (2–3)None3,00112–12
25May 8Astros7–9Jack Billingham (2–2)Gary Wagner (0–2)Fred Gladding (4)2,11312–13
May 9BravesPostponed (rain);[17] Makeup: July 29 as a traditional double-header
26May 10Braves3–6Pat Jarvis (2–2)Grant Jackson (3–3)Cecil Upshaw (7)7,31312–14
27May 11Braves3–4Phil Niekro (6–1)Turk Farrell (1–1)None4,10512–15
28May 13Reds4–6Clay Carroll (2–3)Turk Farrell (1–2)George Culver (1)4,47412–16
29May 14Reds2–4Jim Merritt (3–2)Grant Jackson (3–4)George Culver (2)4,53212–17
30May 15Reds7–0Rick Wise (4–2)Tony Cloninger (1–5)None3,29413–17
31May 16Giants3–1Woodie Fryman (4–1)Mike McCormick (1–1)None12,58714–17
32May 17Giants0–5Gaylord Perry (6–3)Gary Wagner (0–3)None12,51414–18
33May 18Giants9–8Turk Farrell (2–2)Bobby Bolin (2–3)None17,53415–18
34May 20@ Reds0–4Tony Cloninger (2–5)Rick Wise (4–3)None4,19115–19
35May 21@ Reds5–6Clay Carroll (3–3)Jerry Johnson (2–4)None4,81115–20
36May 23@ Braves6–2Grant Jackson (4–4)Milt Pappas (3–3)None14,86816–20
37May 24@ Braves8–3Rick Wise (5–3)Ron Reed (5–2)Bill Wilson (1)20,61017–20
38May 25@ Braves1–4George Stone (5–0)Jerry Johnson (2–5)Cecil Upshaw (10)35,17217–21
39May 27@ Astros2–6Don Wilson (5–4)Bill Wilson (0–2)None13,18817–22
40May 28@ Astros6–7 (10)Jim Ray (2–0)Barry Lersch (0–3)None17,29817–23
41May 30Dodgers13–6Woodie Fryman (5–1)Alan Foster (0–3)Al Raffo (1)10,73718–23
42May 31Dodgers6–7Bill Singer (7–4)Grant Jackson (4–5)Jim Brewer (5)11,34518–24
June (15–15)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
43June 1Dodgers4–12Don Sutton (7–4)Rick Wise (5–4)Al McBean (3)11,71318–25
44June 2Padres4–6Al Santorini (3–2)Jerry Johnson (2–6)Gary Ross (1)3,29218–26
45June 3Padres5–6Clay Kirby (2–6)Woodie Fryman (5–2)Billy McCool (2)3,64618–27
46June 4Padres0–3Dick Kelley (3–4)Bill Champion (0–1)Billy McCool (3)3,42818–28
47June 6@ Giants0–4Gaylord Perry (8–5)Rick Wise (5–5)None6,35518–29
48June 7@ Giants1–3Juan Marichal (6–2)Grant Jackson (4–6)None7,52218–30
49June 8@ Giants8–9 (12)Frank Linzy (3–2)Al Raffo (0–1)None9,05518–31
50June 10@ Dodgers1–2Don Sutton (9–4)Woodie Fryman (5–3)None13,16618–32
51June 11@ Dodgers3–0Bill Champion (1–1)Claude Osteen (8–5)None13,24919–32
52June 12@ Dodgers1–0Grant Jackson (5–6)Bill Singer (7–6)None13,84620–32
53June 13@ Padres6–1Rick Wise (6–5)Johnny Podres (5–5)None5,01821–32
54June 14@ Padres7–5Jerry Johnson (3–6)Al Santorini (3–4)Turk Farrell (2)6,12722–32
55June 15@ Padres5–4 (10)Woodie Fryman (6–3)Clay Kirby (2–7)John Boozer (1)7,31123–32
56June 17 (1)Mets0–1Gary Gentry (6–5)Bill Champion (1–2)Nonesee 2nd game23–33
57June 17 (2)Mets7–3Grant Jackson (6–6)Don Cardwell (2–7)None17,25924–33
58June 18Mets0–2Jerry Koosman (4–4)Rick Wise (6–6)None5,60824–34
59June 19Mets5–6Ron Taylor (3–1)Al Raffo (0–2)Tug McGraw (4)6,87124–35
60June 20Pirates8–7Bill Wilson (1–2)Lou Marone (0–1)John Boozer (2)10,66925–35
61June 21Pirates2–8Bruce Dal Canton (5–0)Lowell Palmer (0–1)None5,46925–36
62June 22 (1)Pirates0–6Dock Ellis (4–7)Bill Champion (1–3)Nonesee 2nd game25–37
63June 22 (2)Pirates3–2Grant Jackson (7–6)Steve Blass (7–4)None33,71226–37
64June 24 (1)@ Mets1–2Tom Seaver (11–3)Woodie Fryman (6–4)Nonesee 2nd game26–38
65June 24 (2)@ Mets0–5Jim McAndrew (1–2)Jerry Johnson (3–7)Ron Taylor (6)39,84326–39
66June 25@ Mets6–5 (10)Bill Wilson (2–2)Ron Taylor (3–2)John Boozer (3)27,81427–39
67June 26@ Mets2–0Grant Jackson (8–6)Don Cardwell (2–8)None15,36028–39
68June 27@ Expos8–7Bill Champion (2–3)Steve Renko (0–1)Bill Wilson (2)16,84729–39
69June 28@ Expos13–8Turk Farrell (3–2)Bill Stoneman (4–10)John Boozer (4)11,15030–39
70June 29 (1)@ Expos2–0Lowell Palmer (1–1)Jerry Robertson (1–6)Nonesee 2nd game31–39
71June 29 (2)@ Expos5–1Jerry Johnson (4–7)Mike Wegener (3–5)None27,16932–39
72June 30@ Pirates4–2Woodie Fryman (7–4)Dock Ellis (4–8)John Boozer (5)17,95433–39
July (9–21)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
73July 1@ Pirates7–4Grant Jackson (9–6)Steve Blass (8–5)Bill Wilson (3)6,65234–39
74July 2@ Pirates14–4Al Raffo (1–2)Jim Bunning (7–6)John Boozer (6)6,32235–39
75July 4 (1)Expos5–8Jerry Robertson (2–6)Lowell Palmer (1–2)Nonesee 2nd game35–40
76July 4 (2)Expos3–7Howie Reed (4–1)Jerry Johnson (4–8)Gary Waslewski (2)21,52135–41
77July 5Expos4–6Dan McGinn (4–7)Woodie Fryman (7–5)Dick Radatz (1)3,49635–42
78July 6 (1)Expos13–2Bill Champion (3–3)Bill Stoneman (4–12)Nonesee 2nd game36–42
79July 6 (2)Expos0–5Gary Waslewski (1–2)Grant Jackson (9–7)None8,66436–43
July 7CardinalsPostponed (rain);[18] Makeup: July 9 as a traditional double-header
80July 8Cardinals3–6Bob Gibson (11–6)Jerry Johnson (4–9)None8,52236–44
81July 9 (1)Cardinals7–1Woodie Fryman (8–5)Nelson Briles (7–8)Nonesee 2nd game37–44
82July 9 (2)Cardinals3–5Nelson Briles (8–8)Lowell Palmer (1–3)Joe Hoerner (10)13,91937–45
83July 10Cardinals3–9Mike Torrez (3–4)Grant Jackson (9–8)Mudcat Grant (1)3,88837–46
84July 11@ Cubs7–5John Boozer (1–0)Ted Abernathy (4–2)Bill Wilson (4)24,50938–46
85July 12@ Cubs4–7Ferguson Jenkins (12–6)Rick Wise (6–7)Phil Regan (8)26,73238–47
86July 13 (1)@ Cubs0–6Ken Holtzman (11–5)Woodie Fryman (8–6)Nonesee 2nd game38–48
87July 13 (2)@ Cubs4–6Jim Colborn (1–0)Lowell Palmer (1–4)Rich Nye (2)34,91338–49
88July 15@ Cardinals2–8Chuck Taylor (2–0)Grant Jackson (9–9)None21,84638–50
89July 16@ Cardinals0–5Steve Carlton (12–5)Bill Champion (3–4)None24,73738–51
90July 17@ Cardinals3–11Mike Torrez (4–4)Rick Wise (6–8)Ray Washburn (1)17,81438–52
91July 18Cubs5–9Phil Regan (10–5)Bill Wilson (2–3)None16,75138–53
92July 19Cubs5–3Rick Wise (7–8)Bill Hands (11–8)None4,80139–53
93July 20 (1)Cubs0–1Ferguson Jenkins (13–7)Grant Jackson (9–10)Nonesee 2nd game39–54
94July 20 (2)Cubs1–6Dick Selma (10–4)Bill Champion (3–5)None12,39339–55
July 22All-Star GamePostponed (rain);[19][20][21] Makeup: July 23
July 231969 Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Washington
95July 24@ Astros3–7Don Wilson (11–7)Rick Wise (7–9)None19,04639–56
96July 25@ Astros7–3Grant Jackson (10–10)Larry Dierker (12–8)None18,28540–56
97July 26@ Astros2–4Tom Griffin (6–4)Lowell Palmer (1–5)Fred Gladding (19)26,96240–57
98July 27@ Astros2–3 (11)Fred Gladding (2–3)Bill Wilson (2–4)None21,18340–58
July 29 (1)BravesPostponed (rain);[22] Makeup: July 30 as a traditional double-header
July 29 (2)BravesPostponed (rain);[22] Makeup: July 31 as a traditional double-header
99July 30 (1)Braves3–6Milt Pappas (5–8)Grant Jackson (10–11)Cecil Upshaw (20)see 2nd game40–59
100July 30 (2)Braves4–3Bill Champion (4–5)George Stone (9–6)Bill Wilson (5)9,39141–59
101July 31 (1)Braves2–4Pat Jarvis (9–7)Lowell Palmer (1–6)Claude Raymond (1)see 2nd game41–60
102July 31 (2)Braves9–0Rick Wise (8–9)Jim Britton (5–2)None8,50742–60
August (10–18)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
103August 1Reds6–7Tony Cloninger (8–13)Woodie Fryman (8–7)Wayne Granger (14)7,41242–61
104August 2Reds5–3Grant Jackson (11–11)Jim Merritt (10–5)Bill Wilson (6)8,61543–61
105August 3Reds17–19Wayne Granger (5–4)Turk Farrell (3–3)None13,18143–62
August 4GiantsPostponed (rain);[23] Makeup: August 5 as a traditional double-header
106August 5 (1)Giants2–6Mike McCormick (8–5)John Boozer (1–1)Nonesee 2nd game43–63
107August 5 (2)Giants3–5Bobby Bolin (6–7)Woodie Fryman (8–8)Frank Linzy (9)8,71243–64
108August 6Giants5–4Rick Wise (9–9)Juan Marichal (13–8)Bill Champion (1)8,58644–64
109August 8@ Reds5–12Jack Fisher (3–2)Bill Wilson (2–5)None15,26344–65
110August 9@ Reds2–4 (12)Wayne Granger (6–4)Al Raffo (1–3)None19,23944–66
111August 10@ Reds0–10Gary Nolan (3–3)Woodie Fryman (8–9)None16,58944–67
112August 11@ Reds3–4Jim Merritt (12–5)Rick Wise (9–10)Wayne Granger (16)12,70944–68
August 12@ BravesPostponed (rain);[24] Makeup: August 13 as a traditional double-header
113August 13 (1)@ Braves2–4Milt Pappas (6–9)John Boozer (1–2)Cecil Upshaw (22)see 2nd game44–69
114August 13 (2)@ Braves7–0Jerry Johnson (5–9)Pat Jarvis (10–8)None11,95745–69
115August 14@ Braves6–0Woodie Fryman (9–9)Phil Niekro (16–10)None9,83246–69
116August 15Astros1–0Grant Jackson (12–11)Denny Lemaster (9–12)None6,18347–69
117August 16Astros7–0Rick Wise (10–10)Tom Griffin (8–6)None3,11348–69
118August 17Astros2–3Larry Dierker (15–9)Bill Champion (4–6)Fred Gladding (26)4,79548–70
119August 19Dodgers0–2Jim Bunning (11–9)Woodie Fryman (9–10)Jim Brewer (18)7,85048–71
120August 20Dodgers5–8Pete Mikkelsen (5–3)Grant Jackson (12–12)Al McBean (4)8,23248–72
121August 21Dodgers2–1Jerry Johnson (6–9)Claude Osteen (16–11)None8,35749–72
122August 22Padres10–0Rick Wise (11–10)Clay Kirby (3–17)None3,82450–72
123August 23Padres7–6Lowell Palmer (2–6)Frank Reberger (1–2)Turk Farrell (3)4,66951–72
124August 24Padres6–4Woodie Fryman (10–10)Tommie Sisk (0–8)None4,76152–72
125August 26@ Giants4–13Gaylord Perry (16–10)Jerry Johnson (6–10)None5,20852–73
126August 27@ Giants7–8 (10)Frank Linzy (11–6)Turk Farrell (3–4)None4,97352–74
127August 28@ Giants3–4Frank Linzy (12–6)Bill Champion (4–7)None5,55552–75
128August 29@ Dodgers5–6Pete Mikkelsen (6–3)Woodie Fryman (10–11)Ray Lamb (1)19,51252–76
129August 30@ Dodgers0–2Claude Osteen (18–11)Jerry Johnson (6–11)Pete Mikkelsen (3)35,75352–77
130August 31@ Dodgers1–4Bill Singer (17–8)Rick Wise (11–11)None19,35752–78
September (11–19)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
131September 1@ Padres2–5Clay Kirby (4–18)Grant Jackson (12–13)Gary Ross (3)2,70352–79
132September 2@ Padres2–0Bill Champion (5–7)Tommie Sisk (0–10)None3,72953–79
133September 3@ Padres9–1Woodie Fryman (11–11)Al Santorini (6–13)None6,30054–79
134September 5 (1)@ Mets1–5Tom Seaver (20–7)Grant Jackson (12–14)Nonesee 2nd game54–80
135September 5 (2)@ Mets4–2Rick Wise (12–11)Jim McAndrew (6–6)None40,45055–80
136September 6@ Mets0–3Don Cardwell (6–9)Jerry Johnson (6–12)Tug McGraw (11)20,47755–81
137September 7@ Mets3–9Nolan Ryan (5–1)Bill Champion (5–8)None28,93755–82
138September 8Cardinals3–4Chuck Taylor (7–2)Woodie Fryman (11–12)Mudcat Grant (4)2,02555–83
139September 9Cardinals2–6Nelson Briles (15–12)Grant Jackson (12–15)Mudcat Grant (5)2,54755–84
140September 10Cubs6–2Rick Wise (13–11)Ken Holtzman (16–10)None4,16456–84
141September 11Cubs4–3Jeff James (1–0)Dick Selma (12–7)Grant Jackson (1)4,25557–84
142September 12Expos0–4Bill Stoneman (10–17)Bill Champion (5–9)None2,73957–85
143September 13Expos5–7Dan McGinn (6–10)Woodie Fryman (11–13)Jerry Robertson (1)3,15457–86
144September 14Expos2–7Steve Renko (5–6)Grant Jackson (12–16)Claude Raymond (2)3,32757–87
145September 15 (1)Pirates2–1Rick Wise (14–11)Bob Veale (12–12)Nonesee 2nd game58–87
146September 15 (2)Pirates4–3Jeff James (2–0)Bo Belinsky (0–3)None2,93359–87
147September 16Pirates5–9Bob Moose (11–3)Woodie Fryman (11–14)Joe Gibbon (10)1,16959–88
148September 17@ Cubs7–9Ferguson Jenkins (20–14)Bill Champion (5–10)Rich Nye (3)6,06259–89
149September 18@ Cubs5–3Grant Jackson (13–16)Phil Regan (12–6)None5,79660–89
150September 19 (1)@ Expos6–10Gary Waslewski (3–9)Rick Wise (14–12)Howie Reed (1)see 2nd game60–90
151September 19 (2)@ Expos1–3Steve Renko (6–6)Jeff James (2–1)None17,08360–91
152September 20@ Expos6–4Woodie Fryman (12–14)Mike Wegener (5–13)None12,62461–91
153September 21@ Expos6–7Dan McGinn (7–10)Lowell Palmer (2–7)None15,82261–92
154September 23@ Pirates4–3Grant Jackson (14–16)Bob Veale (13–13)Jerry Johnson (1)2,36462–92
September 24@ PiratesPostponed (rain);[25] Makeup: September 25 as a traditional double-header
155September 25 (1)@ Pirates3–5Luke Walker (4–6)Rick Wise (14–13)Nonesee 2nd game62–93
156September 25 (2)@ Pirates7–9Bob Moose (13–3)Jeff James (2–2)Joe Gibbon (11)2,37962–94
157September 26Mets0–5Jerry Koosman (17–9)Woodie Fryman (12–15)None6,28862–95
158September 27Mets0–1Tom Seaver (25–7)Grant Jackson (14–17)None4,29762–96
159September 28Mets0–2Gary Gentry (13–12)Jerry Johnson (6–13)Ron Taylor (13)6,87562–97
160September 30@ Cardinals4–3Rick Wise (15–13)Santiago Guzmán (0–1)None9,89163–97
October (0–2)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
161October 1@ Cardinals5–6Joe Hoerner (2–3)Lowell Palmer (2–8)None7,81063–98
162October 2@ Cardinals2–3 (12)Bob Gibson (20–13)Grant Jackson (14–18)None11,68063–99

Roster

1969 Philadelphia Phillies
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Player stats

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
CMike Ryan13344691.2041244
1BDick Allen118438126.2883289
2BCookie Rojas11039189.228430
SSDon Money127450103.229642
3BTony Taylor138557146.262330
LFDeron Johnson138475121.2551780
CFLarry Hisle145482128.2662056
RFJohnny Callison134495131.2651664

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
Johnny Briggs12436186.2381246
Rick Joseph9926472.273637
Ron Stone10322253.239124
Terry Harmon8720148.239016
Dave Watkins6914826.176412
Rich Barry20326.18800
Gene Stone18286.21400
Scott Reid13194.21100
Vic Roznovsky13133.23101
Don Lock440.00000
Leroy Reams110.00000

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
Grant Jackson38253.014183.34180
Woodie Fryman36228.112154.41150
Rick Wise33220.015133.23144
Bill Champion23116.25105.0170
Jeff James631.2225.4021
Chris Short210.0007.205

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
Jerry Johnson33147.16134.2882
Lowell Palmer2690.0285.2068
Gary Wagner919.1037.918

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
John Boozer461264.2847
Turk Farrell463434.0040
Al Raffo451314.1138
Bill Wilson372563.3248
Barry Lersch100327.1313
Luis Peraza80006.007

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Eugene Emeralds Pacific Coast League Frank Lucchesi
AA Reading Phillies Eastern League Bob Wellman
A Raleigh-Durham Phillies Carolina League Nolan Campbell
A Spartanburg Phillies Western Carolinas League Bobby Malkmus
A-Short Season Walla Walla Bears Northwest League Howie Bedell
Rookie Pulaski Phillies Appalachian League Dallas Green

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Raleigh-Durham, Pulaski[26]

Notes

  1. Larry Jackson at Baseball Reference
  2. Bobby Wine at Baseball Reference
  3. Tony González at Baseball Reference
  4. Billy Cowan at Baseball-Reference
  5. Clay Dalrymple at Baseball Reference
  6. Linder, Lee (August 7, 1969). "Bob Skinner resigns post with Phillies". Eugene Register-Guard. Retrieved September 17, 2009.
  7. Associated Press (April 18, 1969). "Stoneman of Expos Hurls No-Hitter to Beat Phils, 7–0". The New York Times. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
  8. Paul Lukas (August 6, 1969). "A Night to Remember". Reading Eagle. p. 48.
  9. "1969 Philadelphia Phillies Schedule by Baseball Almanac". Retrieved September 17, 2009.
  10. Bob Boone at Baseball Reference
  11. "1969 Philadelphia Phillies Schedule, Box Scores and Splits". Baseball-Reference.com.
  12. Blackman, Ted (April 17, 1969). "Expos' first rainout good for Grant". The Gazette. Montreal, Quebec. p. 26. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
  13. Blackman, Ted (April 24, 1969). "Expos-Phils rained out, Mauch sets up pitching". The Gazette. Montreal, Quebec. p. 14. Retrieved July 2, 2015.
  14. "Bucs, Phils Rained Out". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. April 19, 1969. p. 10. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
  15. "Baseball Standings". Milwaukee Journal. April 22, 1969. p. 14, part 2. Retrieved July 2, 2015.
  16. "Baseball Standings". Milwaukee Journal. April 23, 1969. p. 19, part 2. Retrieved July 2, 2015.
  17. "Baseball". Milwaukee Journal. May 10, 1969. p. 14. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  18. "Majors at a Glance". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. July 8, 1969. p. 16. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
  19. Feeney, Charley (July 23, 1969). "Booming Storm Hits Night Tilt; 1st Postponement: Managers Say No Changes Expected in Starting Lineups; AL Eager to See Alou Hit". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 18. Retrieved July 4, 2015.
  20. "Nixon Starts World Trip As Ball Game Postponed". Milwaukee Sentinel. July 23, 1969. p. 3, part 1. Retrieved July 4, 2015.
  21. "Now Pitching: Spiro Agnew For Dick Nixon". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Associated Press (AP). July 23, 1969. p. 18. Retrieved July 4, 2015.
  22. "Majors at a Glance". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. July 30, 1969. p. 22. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  23. "Baseball". Milwaukee Journal. August 5, 1969. p. 12, part 2. Retrieved July 7, 2015.
  24. "Baseball in a Nutshell". Milwaukee Sentinel. August 13, 1969. p. 1, part 2. Retrieved July 3, 2015.
  25. Feeney, Charley (September 25, 1969). "'Major Leaguer': Putting Money On Cash–Hoak". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 26. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  26. Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2nd and 3rd editions. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 1997 and 2007

References

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