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1973 New York Mets season


FieldValue
nameNew York Mets
image1973 Mets spring training locker room.jpeg
image_size220px
captionMets equipment staffer John Sellers sits in the locker room of Payson Field in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1973.
season1973
miscNational League champions
National League East champions
leagueNational League
divisionEast
ballparkShea Stadium
cityNew York City, New York
record
divisional_place1st
ownersJoan Whitney Payson
general_managerBob Scheffing
managerYogi Berra
televisionWOR-TV
radioWHN
(Ralph Kiner, Lindsey Nelson, Bob Murphy)
espntnNYM
brtnNYM

National League East champions (Ralph Kiner, Lindsey Nelson, Bob Murphy) The 1973 New York Mets season was the 12th regular season for the Mets, who played home games at Shea Stadium. Manager Yogi Berra led the team to a National League East title with an 82–79 record and the National League pennant, though they were defeated by the Oakland Athletics in the World Series. Their .509 winning percentage is the lowest of any pennant-winner in major league history. Having won only 82 games during the regular season, the 1973 Mets, along with the 2005 San Diego Padres, qualified for the postseason with the fewest regular season wins since MLB expanded to a 162-game season in 1961, and the fewest of any team since 1885 (excluding the strike-shortened 1981 season and the 2020 season shortened by the COVID-19 pandemic). The season was well known for pitcher Tug McGraw's catchphrase "Ya Gotta Believe!!!"

Offseason

  • November 1, 1972: Danny Frisella and Gary Gentry were traded by the Mets to the Atlanta Braves for Félix Millán and George Stone.
  • November 27, 1972: Brent Strom and Bob Rauch were traded by the Mets to the Cleveland Indians for Phil Hennigan.
  • November 27, 1972: Tommie Agee was traded by the Mets to the Houston Astros for Rich Chiles and Buddy Harris.
  • November 30, 1972: Dave Marshall was traded by the Mets to the San Diego Padres for Al Severinsen.
  • March 28, 1973: Bill Sudakis was traded by the Mets to the Texas Rangers for Bill McNulty.

Regular season

Season highlights

Initial turmoil

The 1973 Mets were much improved from their "miracle" 1969 team. They had a group of young proven stars—including Jon Matlack, Rusty Staub, John Milner, and Félix Millán—mixed in with veterans from the 1969 club, such as Jerry Grote, Cleon Jones, Wayne Garrett, and Bud Harrelson. Their pitching staff, led by Tom Seaver, was among the finest in baseball. But injuries hampered the Mets throughout the entire season.

The Mets got off to a 4–0 start to the season, and were still at first place by April 29 with a 12–8 record. But then, injuries to their key players caused turmoil. By July 26, the Mets were in last place, yet still only games behind. On August 16, they were 12 games below .500, with 44 games to play.

On August 30, the Mets were in last place, with only a month left to play. However, the division was so tight-knit that the last place standing consisted of only a game deficit. At the completion of August (one day later), the Mets were in fifth place, nine games under .500, but, in the balanced mediocrity of that year's division, just games out of first. The mathematical inequities of divisional play were beginning to show up. On September 11, the Mets were in fourth place, five games under .500, but just three games out. Ahead of them were the St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Montreal Expos.

"You Gotta Believe!!!"

With Tug McGraw urging his teammates on and celebrating victories with what soon became the catch phrase of 1973, "You Gotta Believe!!!" the Mets clinched the most unlikely of pennants. Yogi Berra, a veteran of pennant races, used a four man rotation down the stretch: Tom Seaver, Jerry Koosman, Jon Matlack, and George Stone, with the suddenly unhittable McGraw coming out of the pen with boisterous, justified confidence. In his last 19 games, the screwball-throwing lefty recorded 5 wins, converted 12 saves and had an ERA of 0.88.

"Ball on the wall" play

One of the most famous plays in Mets folklore occurred when their September 20 match-up against the Pirates at Shea Stadium went into extra innings. The Pirates had Richie Zisk on first base when Dave Augustine hit what appeared to be a two-run home run to left. Instead, the ball hit the top of the wall, and caromed directly into left fielder Cleon Jones' glove. Jones fired a strike to Wayne Garrett as the cut-off man, who in turn, fired a strike to catcher Ron Hodges to nail Zisk at the plate. The Mets went on to win the game in the bottom of the inning as part of a three game sweep.

The unexpected clincher

After completing the three-game sweep of the Pirates on September 21, the Mets' record stood at an even 77–77, but that .500 record was good enough for first place and a half-game lead. Illustrating just how dense the crowd was at the top, the fifth-place Chicago Cubs were just out. The Mets won five of their last seven to finish as National League East champions. The clinching took place at Wrigley Field on October 1 as the Mets beat the Cubs 6–4 as Tom Seaver won his 19th game of 1973 and Tug McGraw recorded the save. The Cardinals finished second, games back, Pittsburgh third at , Montreal fourth at , and Chicago fifth at 5 games back.

This was the only NL East title between 1970 and 1980 not to be won by either the Philadelphia Phillies or the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Opening Day starters

  • Duffy Dyer
  • Jim Fregosi
  • Bud Harrelson
  • Cleon Jones
  • Willie Mays
  • Félix Millán
  • John Milner
  • Tom Seaver
  • Rusty Staub

Notable transactions

  • June 5, 1973: Lee Mazzilli was drafted by the Mets in the 1st round (14th pick) of the 1973 Major League Baseball draft.
  • July 11, 1973: Jim Fregosi was sold by the Mets to the Texas Rangers.

Roster

New York Mets 1962thru1992border=2}}; text-align: center;"1973 New York Mets
New York Mets 1962thru1992border=2}}; text-align: center;"**Roster**
**Pitchers**

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

New York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="5%"PosNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="16%"PlayerNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"GNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"ABNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"HNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"Avg.New York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"HRNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"RBI
C8428573.256132
1B129451108.2392372
2B153638185.290337
SS10635692.258020
3B140504129.2561658
LF9233988.2601148
CF9326260.229221
RF152585163.2791576

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

New York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="5%"PosNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="16%"PlayerNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"GNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"ABNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"HNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"Avg.New York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"HRNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"RBI
1B-LF10028468.239135
SS-OF9226367.255114
CF-1B6620944.211625
C7018935.18519
C4512733.260118
3B-SS4512429.234011
LFGeorge Theodore4511630.259115
3B7611025.227214
OF389222.239010
1B506117.279014
CFDave Schneck13367.19400
CFRich Chiles8253.12001
CJerry May482.25000
SSBrian Ostrosser450.00000
PH-PRGreg Harts321.50000
PH-PRLute Barnes321.50001

Pitching

Starting pitchers

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

New York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="16%"PlayerNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"GNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"IPNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"WNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"LNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"ERANew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"SO
36290.019102.08251
35263.014152.84156
34242.014163.20205

Other pitchers

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

New York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="16%"PlayerNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"GNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"IPNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"WNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"LNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"ERANew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"SO
27148.01232.8077
31116.2543.3987
3896.2843.3563
2380.1385.3838
Craig Swan38.1018.644
Tommy Moore33.10110.801

Relief pitchers

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

New York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="16%"PlayerNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"GNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"WNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"LNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"SVNew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"ERANew York Mets 1962thru1992}}" width="9%"SO
6056253.8781
300436.2322
242743.8635
70008.105
Hank Webb200010.801
Bob Miller10000.001
1000inf0

Postseason

NLCS

Main article: 1973 National League Championship Series

Game 1

October 6: Riverfront Stadium, Cincinnati

Team123456789RHE
New York010000000**1****3****0**
**Cincinnati**000000011**2****6****0**
**W**: Pedro Borbón (1–0) **L**: Tom Seaver (0–1) **S**: None
**HR**: **NYM** – None **CIN** – Pete Rose (1), Johnny Bench (1)
**Pitchers**: **NYM** – Seaver **CIN** – Billingham, Hall (9), Borbón (9)
**Attendance**: 53,431

Game 2

October 7: Riverfront Stadium, Cincinnati

Team123456789RHE
**New York**000100004**5****7****0**
Cincinnati000000000**0****2****0**
**W**: Jon Matlack (1–0) **L**: Don Gullett (0–1) **S**: None
**HR**: **NYM** – Rusty Staub (1) **CIN** – None
**Pitchers**: **NYM** – Matlack **CIN** – Gullett, Carroll (6), Hall (9), Borbón (9)
**Attendance**: 54,041

Game 3

October 8: Shea Stadium, New York City

Team123456789RHE
Cincinnati002000000**2****8****1**
**New York**15120000x**9****11****1**
**W**: Jerry Koosman (1–0) **L**: Ross Grimsley (0–1) **S**: None
**HR**: **CIN** – Denis Menke (1) **NYM** – Rusty Staub (2), (3)
**Pitchers**: **CIN** – Grimsley, Hall (2), Tomlin (3), Nelson (4), Borbón (7) **NYM** – Koosman
**Attendance**: 53,967

Game 4

October 9: Shea Stadium, New York City

Team123456789101112RHE
**Cincinnati**000000100001**2****8****0**
New York001000000000**1****3****1**
**W**: Clay Carroll (1–0) **L**: Harry Parker (0–1) **S**: Pedro Borbón (1)
**HR**: **CIN** – Tony Pérez (1), Pete Rose (2) **NYM** – None
**Pitchers**: **CIN** – Norman, Gullett (6), Carroll (10), Borbón (12) **NYM** – Stone, McGraw (7), Parker (12)
**Attendance**: 50,786

Game 5

October 10: Shea Stadium, New York City

Team123456789RHE
Cincinnati001010000**2****7****1**
**New York**20004100x**7****13****1**
**W**: Tom Seaver (1–1) **L**: Jack Billingham (0–1) **S**: Tug McGraw (1)
**HR**: **CIN** – None **NYM** – None
**Pitchers**: **CIN** – Billingham, Gullett (5), Carroll (5), Grimsley (7) **NYM** – Seaver, McGraw (9)
**Attendance**: 50,323

World Series

Main article: 1973 World Series

GameScoreDateLocationAttendanceTime of Game
1Mets – 1, **A's – 2**October 13Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum46,0212:26
2**Mets – 10**, A's – 7 (12 inns)October 14Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum55,9894:13
3**A's – 3**, Mets – 2 (11 inns)October 16Shea Stadium54,8173:15
4A's – 1, **Mets – 6**October 17Shea Stadium54,8172:41
5A's – 0, **Mets – 2**October 18Shea Stadium54,8172:39
6Mets – 1, **A's – 3**October 20Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum49,3332:07
7Mets – 2, **A's – 5**October 21Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum49,3332:37

Awards and honors

  • Cy Young Award – Tom Seaver
  • Jerry Koosman – Player of the Month, April 1973

All-Stars

All-Star Game

  • Tom Seaver
  • Willie Mays

Farm system

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Memphis

References

Book sources

References

  1. "Ultimate Mets Database - Register of Transactions".
  2. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/a/ageeto01.shtml Tommie Agee page at Baseball Reference]
  3. "Events of Friday, August 31, 1973". Retrosheet.
  4. (July 18, 2010). "September 20, 1973: The "Ball on the Wall" Play". Mets Wiki.
  5. Von Benko, George. (July 7, 2005). "Notes: Phils–Pirates rivalry fading". Phillies.MLB.com.
  6. (September 28, 1992). "Pirates perform rare three-peat feat 4–2". USA Today.
  7. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/mazzile01.shtml Lee Mazzilli page at Baseball Reference]
  8. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/f/fregoji01.shtml Jim Fregosi page at Baseball Reference]
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