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1978 Atlanta Braves season


FieldValue
nameAtlanta Braves
season1978
leagueNational League
divisionWest
ballparkAtlanta–Fulton County Stadium
cityAtlanta
record69–93 (.426)
divisional_place6th
ownersTed Turner
general_managersBill Lucas
managersBobby Cox
televisionWTCG
radioWSB
(Ernie Johnson, Pete Van Wieren, Skip Caray)

(Ernie Johnson, Pete Van Wieren, Skip Caray) |}} The 1978 Atlanta Braves season was the 108th season for the franchise and their 13th in Atlanta.

Offseason

  • December 8, 1977: Willie Montañez was traded by the Braves to the New York Mets as part of a four-team trade. Adrian Devine, Tommy Boggs, and Eddie Miller were traded by the Texas Rangers to the Braves. The Rangers sent Bert Blyleven to the Pittsburgh Pirates, and the Mets sent John Milner to the Pirates. The Rangers sent Tom Grieve and a player to be named later to the Mets. The Pirates sent Al Oliver and Nelson Norman to the Rangers, and the Mets sent Jon Matlack to the Rangers. The Rangers completed the trade by sending Ken Henderson to the Mets on March 15, 1978.
  • March 30, 1978: Buzz Capra was released by the Atlanta Braves.

Managerial turnover: Bobby Cox begins his first term

In May 1977, owner Ted Turner had stunned baseball when—in the midst of a 16-game losing streak—he furloughed manager Dave Bristol, sent him on a ten-day scouting trip, and took the reins of the team himself; on May 11, he donned uniform #27 and skippered the Braves to their 17th straight loss. National League president Chub Feeney and Commissioner of Baseball Bowie Kuhn then stepped in and forbade the owner from managing his own ballclub, citing MLB rules that apparently took effect after Connie Mack retired as owner-manager of the Philadelphia Athletics in 1950. Veteran coach Vern Benson ran the Braves the following night (and broke the losing skein), and then Bristol was rehired for the balance of the season.

However, that chaotic season was followed by one of the most important events in Braves' history: the hiring of Bobby Cox, briefly a Braves' farm system player, as manager for 1978. Cox was then a 36-year-old, relatively unknown former third baseman who had spent the previous ten seasons in the New York Yankees' organization, including six years (1971–1976) as a highly successful minor league manager and one season as the first-base coach on the Yankees' 1977 world championship team. Cox would spend four seasons, 1978–1981, during this first term in the Braves' dugout. While his first two years produced frustrating, last-place seasons in the National League West, by Cox' third year, , the Braves posted a winning (81–80) mark and rose to fourth place in their division. Attendance began to climb, with the team exceeding the one-million mark at Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium for the first time since 1971. But the strike-shortened season was a major disappointment; the Braves fell to 50–56, and Cox was fired. He went 266–323 (.452) during his inaugural tenure.

His successor, former New York Mets skipper Joe Torre, would lead the Braves to the National League West Division championship. Cox would land with the Toronto Blue Jays as their 1982 manager. The Jays were then a five-year-old expansion team that had never escaped the basement of the American League East Division, nor won more than 67 games in a season. By Cox' second season, the Blue Jays broke the .500 mark, and by his fourth, in , they would win 99 games and the AL East title. Meanwhile, the Braves' front office was in flux and owner Turner was seeking a strong hand to take over the team's baseball operations as general manager. He lured Cox back to Atlanta with a multi-year contract. And, although the team struggled desperately on the field in the late 1980s, general manager Cox was assembling a base of talent that, when he returned to the dugout to manage the Braves for his second term, on June 23, 1990, would ignite a series of first-place divisional teams (for 15 out of 16 straight seasons) and five National League pennant winners (as well as the 1995 World Series title) that would earn Cox a place in the Baseball Hall of Fame by his 2010 retirement.

Regular season

  • May 1, 1978: In a game versus the New York Mets, Braves manager Bobby Cox was ejected from a game for the first time in his career. Cox would go on to set the record for most ejections by a manager.
  • June 16, 1978: Bob Horner, freshly signed by the Braves off the Arizona State University campus, hits a home run off the Pittsburgh Pirates' Bert Blyleven in his first professional game. Horner would go on to hit 23 home runs, leading all National League third basemen, and win the National League Rookie of the Year award.

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Notable transactions

  • May 16, 1978: Jim Bouton was signed as a free agent by the Braves.
  • September 22, 1978: Cito Gaston was purchased from the Braves by the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Roster

1978 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
C9228970.242634
1B151530120.2262379
2B140529137.259235
SS8924555.224320
3B8932386.2662363
LF153488147.3012377
CF146404101.250940
RF129474135.2851862

Other batters

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

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
Rod Gilbreath11632680.245331
Barry Bonnell11730473.240116
Joe Nolan9521349.230422
Bob Beall10818545.243116
4416342.258213
Pat Rockett5514220.14104
6011827.22919
3910328.272213
Bruce Benedict225213.25001
184613.28302
6213.14302
Larry Whisenton6163.18802
Jerry Maddox7143.21401
Tom Paciorek593.33300
140.00000
Rob Belloir2111.00000

Pitching

= Indicates league leader

Starting pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
44334.119182.88248
29140.17135.1390
1599.1932.8142
Dick Ruthven1381.0264.1145
529.0134.9710

Other pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Mickey Mahler34134.24114.6892
Eddie Solomon37106.0464.0864
3165.1545.9226
1659.0286.7121
Frank LaCorte214.2013.687

Relief pitchers

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

PlayerGWLSVERASO
4344222.5361
534414.8045
Craig Skok433224.3528
422403.7523
373615.6542
50006.351
Duane Theiss30001.423
30000.000

Farm system

Awards and honors

League leaders

  • Phil Niekro, National League leader, Losses

Notes

References

References

  1. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/b/blylebe01.shtml Bert Blyleven page at Baseball Reference]
  2. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/c/caprabu01.shtml Buzz Capra page at Baseball Reference]
  3. [https://www.espn.com/blog/playbook/fandom/post/_/id/22066/the-night-ted-turner-managed-the-braves Williams, Doug, "Remembering the Night Ted Turner Managed the Braves." ESPN.com, 2013.05.23]
  4. [http://www.baseball-almanac.com/teams/bravatte.shtml Baseball Almanac]
  5. [http://cooperstownersincanada.com/2014/01/01/cooperstowners-in-canada-bobby-cox/ Cooperstowners in Canada.com]
  6. Lake, Thomas. (July 26, 2010). "Thumbing his Way back home". Time Inc..
  7. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/b/boutoji01.shtml Jim Bouton page at Baseball Reference]
  8. [https://www.baseball-reference.com/g/gastoci01.shtml Cito Gaston page at Baseball Reference]
  9. ''Great Baseball Feats, Facts and Figures'', 2008 Edition, p.348, David Nemec and Scott Flatow, A Signet Book, Penguin Group, New York, {{ISBN. 978-0-451-22363-0
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