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1976 Atlanta Braves season


FieldValue
nameAtlanta Braves
season1976
leagueNational League
divisionWest
ballparkAtlanta–Fulton County Stadium
cityAtlanta
record70–92 (.432)
divisional_place6th
ownersTed Turner
general_managersEddie Robinson, John Alevizos, Bill Lucas
managersDave Bristol
televisionWTCG
(Ernie Johnson, Pete Van Wieren, Skip Caray)
radioWSB
(Ernie Johnson, Pete Van Wieren)

(Ernie Johnson, Pete Van Wieren, Skip Caray) (Ernie Johnson, Pete Van Wieren) |}}

The 1976 Atlanta Braves season was the 11th season in Atlanta along with the franchise's 106th consecutive year of existence in American professional baseball. The Braves finished in sixth and last place in the National League West Division, compiling a 70–92 (.432) win–loss record; although the 70 victories represented a three-game improvement over the fifth-place 1975 edition, the last-place finish would be the first of four straight years in the NL West divisional basement. The club drew 818,179 fans to Atlanta Stadium, a 53 percent increase over its dismal 1975 attendance of less than 535,000 fans.

Offseason

  • November 17, 1975: Dusty Baker and Ed Goodson were traded by the Braves to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Jerry Royster, Lee Lacy, Tom Paciorek, and Jimmy Wynn.
  • December 12, 1975: Larvell Blanks and Ralph Garr were traded by the Braves to the Chicago White Sox for Ken Henderson, Ozzie Osborn and Dick Ruthven.

Ownership and management: the Ted Turner era begins

On January 7, 1976, the modern era of the Braves franchise effectively began when Atlanta broadcast executive and world-class yachtsman Ted Turner bought 100 percent of the team from the Atlanta LaSalle Corp. for $10 million. The previous ownership group, the LaSalle Corp., had owned the team since October 1962 and spearheaded its move from Milwaukee to Atlanta in time for the season; its chairman, William Bartholomay, retained his association with the Turner-owned Braves as chairman of the board. Early reports speculated that Turner bought the Braves to provide local programming content for his television station, then WTCG-TV, Channel 17. But Turner would become a highly successful baseball executive and turn WTCG into the WTBS Superstation and a cornerstone of the Turner Broadcasting System.

Turner wasted no time in making headlines and major changes in the Braves' front office. On April 11, 1976, he signed one of baseball's first free agents, starting pitcher Andy Messersmith, who had successfully sued baseball and brought about the end of the reserve clause, for a contract valued at more than $1 million. Messersmith, a 19-game-winner for the Dodgers, was initially issued a uniform bearing the numeral 17 but the word "Channel" instead of his nameplate above it, promoting Turner's WTCG outlet. (The Commissioner immediately ordered Turner to remove "channel," due to the rule against putting ads on baseball uniforms.) He made the NL All-Star team that season, his most successful as a Brave, and was one of the few bright spots in a 92-loss, last-place season. The team's field manager, Dave Bristol, hired by the previous owners three months before the sale, survived the 1976 season—but he would be involved in a bizarre firing-and-rehiring by Turner during the campaign.

Turner also employed three general_managers in 1976. In May, he replaced veteran baseball man Eddie Robinson, inherited from the previous regime and in office for almost four full years, with former Boston Red Sox executive John Alevizos. But Alevizos lasted only four months before he was removed in favor of Braves' farm system director Bill Lucas, who became the first African-American general manager in Major League history on September 17. Lucas, the former brother-in-law of Braves' legend Henry Aaron, would begin the rebuilding of the franchise into a competitor, but he died suddenly at age 43 from a cerebral hemorrhage in 1979, the year before the Braves finally cracked the .500 mark.

Led by stars such as Dale Murphy and Bob Horner, the early 1980s Braves featured a succession of successful teams, and won the 1982 National League West Division championship. But they declined precipitously in 1985, and after some very lean years in the late 1980s, Turner, working with a talented team of senior executives such as Bobby Cox, Stan Kasten and John Schuerholz, would turn the Braves into a perennial contender during the 1990s, and a nationally popular franchise on WTBS, where they styled themselves as "America's Team." They won consecutive division titles from 1991–1993 and 1995–1996, NL pennants in 1991, 1992, 1995 and 1996, and the 1995 World Series, before Turner sold the team and all of his Turner Broadcasting holdings to Time Warner in 1996.

Regular season

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Notable transactions

  • June 8, 1976: 1976 Major League Baseball draft
    • Ricky Jones was drafted by the Braves in the 18th round, but did not sign.
    • John Butcher was drafted by the Braves in the 3rd round of the secondary phase, but did not sign.
  • June 13, 1976: Darrell Evans and Marty Perez were traded by the Braves to the San Francisco Giants for Willie Montañez, Craig Robinson, Mike Eden, and Jake Brown.
  • June 15, 1976: Blue Moon Odom was traded by the Braves to the Chicago White Sox for Pete Varney.
  • June 23, 1976: Elías Sosa and Lee Lacy were traded by the Braves to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Mike Marshall.

Roster

1976 Atlanta Braves
**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

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
C6520045.225516
1B103420135.321964
2BRod Gilbreath11638396.251132
SSDarrel Chaney153496125.252150
3B149533132.248545
LF14844993.2071766
CFRowland Office99359101.281434
RF133435114.2621361

Other batters

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

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
11132494.290436
Dave May10521446.215323
Earl Williams6118439.212926
5018049.272320
Biff Pocoroba5417442.241014
Darrell Evans4413924.173110
Cito Gaston6913439.291425
Marty Perez319624.25016
Dale Murphy196517.26209
Rob Belloir306012.20004
11337.21213
Junior Moore20267.26902
Craig Robinson15174.23503
Pete Varney5101.10000
Mike Eden580.00001
Terry Crowley760.00001
Pat Rockett451.20000

Pitching

Starting pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
38270.217113.29173
36240.114174.19142
29207.111113.04135
Carl Morton26140.1494.1742
Frank LaCorte19105.13124.7079
Jamie Easterly422.0114.9111
15.0105.403

Other pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Roger Moret2777.1355.0030
511.1016.356

Relief pitchers

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

PlayerGWLSVERASO
485693.2148
423513.5636
Pablo Torrealba360223.5733
Max León302432.7516
300214.288
Mike Marshall242163.1917
Elías Sosa214435.3532
50108.684
50004.503

Farm system

Notes

References

References

  1. [http://www.baseball-almanac.com/teams/bravatte.shtml Baseball Almanac]
  2. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/r/roystje01.shtml Jerry Royster] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  3. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/blankla01.shtml Larvell Blanks] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  4. ["Ted Turner, the yachtsman, buys baseball's Braves", ''The Boston Globe'', January 7, 1976]
  5. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1755&dat=19760411&id=eHMjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=M2cEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6998,4540888 The Associated Press, April 11, 1976],
  6. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/j/jonesri02.shtml Ricky Jones] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  7. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/b/butchjo01.shtml John Butcher] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  8. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/e/evansda01.shtml Darrell Evans] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  9. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/o/odombl01.shtml Blue Moon Odom] at ''Baseball-Reference''
  10. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/m/marshmi01.shtml Mike Marshall] at ''Baseball-Reference''
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