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1989 Los Angeles Dodgers season


FieldValue
nameLos Angeles Dodgers
season1989
leagueNational League
divisionWest
ballparkDodger Stadium
cityLos Angeles
record77–83 (.481)
divisional_place4th
ownersPeter O'Malley
general_managersFred Claire
managersTommy Lasorda
televisionKTTV (11)
Vin Scully, Ross Porter, Don Drysdale
radioKABC
Vin Scully, Ross Porter, Don Drysdale

Vin Scully, Ross Porter, Don Drysdale

Z Channel Eddie Doucette, Don Sutton Vin Scully, Ross Porter, Don Drysdale

KWKW Jaime Jarrín, René Cárdenas |}}

The 1989 Los Angeles Dodgers season marked the 100th season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, having joined the National League in 1890 after six seasons in the American Association. It also marked their 32nd season in Los Angeles, California.

The team came down to earth after the success of the 1988 season, finishing further down in the standings falling to fourth place in the National League West.

Offseason

  • December 4, 1988: Acquired Eddie Murray from the Baltimore Orioles for Juan Bell, Brian Holton and Ken Howell.
  • March 11, 1989: Acquired Mike Morgan from the Baltimore Orioles for Mike Devereaux.

Regular season

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Notable games

  • June 3–4, 1989: The Dodgers lost 5–4 in 22 innings to the Houston Astros when Jeff Hamilton allowed a RBI single to Rafael Ramírez, scoring Bill Doran. The game lasted 7 hours, 14 minutes and did not finish until 2:49 a.m. Central time (12:49 a.m. Pacific). KTTV, which normally aired a postgame show in this era, canceled it on this night and went straight to a newscast. Whether it was due to the length of the game or due to the confluence of two huge breaking news stories (the death of Ayatollah Khomeini and the Tiananmen Square massacre) was never publicly revealed.
  • August 23–24, 1989: The Dodgers played another 22-inning game, this one against the Montreal Expos. It eventually ended when Rick Dempsey homered for the Dodgers in the top half of the 22nd inning off Expos pitcher Dennis Martínez, who was making a very rare relief performance; the Dodgers won 1–0 in what was the Expos' longest game ever. Rex Hudler would be caught stealing second in the bottom half of the 22nd to end the game. The game almost ended in the 16th when Larry Walker scored from third on a sacrifice fly. The Dodgers' appeal, that Walker left the base too soon, was recognized by the third base umpire and the third out was recorded. The game also marked the first time a mascot was ejected by an umpire. When Youppi! dressed in a nightgown and nightcap pretended to go to sleep on top of the Dodgers' dugout, Dodgers' manager Tommy Lasorda demanded that Youppi! be run from the game. In the end, the game took over 6 hours to finish and ended close to 2 a.m. Eastern time (11 p.m. PT).

Opening Day lineup

Opening Day startersNamePosition
Willie RandolphSecond baseman
Alfredo GriffinShortstop
Kirk GibsonLeft fielder
Eddie MurrayFirst baseman
Mike MarshallRight fielder
John ShelbyCenter fielder
Jeff HamiltonThird baseman
Mike SciosciaCatcher
Tim BelcherStarting pitcher

Roster

1989 Los Angeles Dodgers
**Roster**
**Pitchers**

Notable transactions

  • July 18, 1989: Acquired Kal Daniels and Lenny Harris from the Cincinnati Reds for Mariano Duncan and Tim Leary.
  • July 18, 1989: Acquired Billy Bean from the Detroit Tigers for Domingo Michel and Steve Green.

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

PosPlayerGPABHAvg.HRRBI
CMike Scioscia133408102.2501044
1BEddie Murray160594147.2472088
2BWillie Randolph145549155.282236
3BJeff Hamilton151548134.2451256
SSAlfredo Griffin136506125.247029
LFKirk Gibson7125354.213928
CFJohn Shelby10834563.183112
RFMike Marshall10537798.2601142

Other batters

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

PlayerGPABHAvg.HRRBI
José González9526170.268318
Mickey Hatcher9422466.295225
Mike Davis6717343.249519
Rick Dempsey7915127.179416
Lenny Harris5414737.252115
Dave Anderson8714032.229114
Franklin Stubbs6910330.291415
Mariano Duncan498421.25008
Billy Bean517114.19703
Chris Gwynn326816.23507
Kal Daniels113813.34228
Mike Sharperson27287.25005
Mike Huff12255.20012
José Vizcaíno7102.20000
Darrin Fletcher584.50012
Tracy Woodson460.00000

Pitching

Starting pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Orel Hershiser35256.215152.31178
Tim Belcher39230.015122.82200
Fernando Valenzuela31196.210133.43116
Tim Leary19117.1673.3859
Ramón Martínez1598.2643.1989

Other pitchers

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

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Mike Morgan40152.28112.5372
John Wetteland31102.2583.7796
John Tudor614.1003.149

Relief pitchers

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

PlayerGWLSVERASO
Jay Howell5653281.5855
Alejandro Peña534352.1375
Tim Crews440113.2156
Ray Searage413403.5324
Ricky Horton230005.0612
Mike Hartley50101.504
Mike Munoz300016.883
Jeff Fischer200013.502
Jeff Hamilton10105.402
Mickey Hatcher10009.000

1989 Awards

  • 1989 Major League Baseball All-Star Game
    • Orel Hershiser reserve
    • Jay Howell reserve
    • Willie Randolph reserve
    • Mike Scioscia reserve
  • NL Pitcher of the Month
    • Tim Belcher (September 1989)
  • NL Player of the Week
    • José González (June 26 – July 2)
    • Jay Howell (July 31 – Aug. 6)
    • Tim Belcher (Aug. 21–27)

Farm system

Teams in BOLD won League Championships

Major League Baseball draft

Main article: 1989 Major League Baseball draft

The Dodgers drafted 65 players in this draft. Of those, seven of them would eventually play Major League baseball. The Dodgers had three first round picks this season as they gained the New York Yankees first round pick and a supplemental pick for the loss of free agent Steve Sax. They also gained an extra second round pick from the Cleveland Indians as compensation for the loss of pitcher Jesse Orosco.

With their first pick in the 1st round, the Dodgers selected pitcher Kiki Jones from Hillsborough High School in Tampa, Florida. Despite concerns that he was too small to make it, the Dodgers drafted him and their scouting director said "he's got the best arm around and the best curveball in the country." He was 8–0 with a 1.58 ERA his first season in the rookie leagues with the Great Falls Dodgers but then began to experience arm injuries and legal problems. The Dodgers released him after the 1993 season, though he attempted comebacks in 1998–1999 and 2001. In 8 total minor league seasons he was 23–20 with a 4.13 ERA in 77 games (61 starts).

Their next first round pick was outfielder Tom Goodwin from California State University, Fresno. He would play 14 seasons in the Majors (5 of them with the Dodgers) and hit .268 while stealing 369 bases. The supplemental pick was pitcher Jamie McAndrew of the University of Florida. He was subsequently selected by the Florida Marlins in the 1992 expansion draft and eventually pitched in 15 games in the Majors with the Milwaukee Brewers in 1995 and 1997.

The most successful pick was Eric Young drafted in the 43rd round out of Rutgers University as an outfielder. He was selected by the Colorado Rockies in the 1992 expansion draft and spent most of his 15-season career as a second baseman. He hit .283 in 1,730 career games with 79 homers, 543 RBI and 465 steals while playing with seven different teams.

RoundNamePositionSchoolSignedCareer spanHighest level
1Kiki JonesRHPHillsborough High SchoolYes1989–2001AA
1Tom GoodwinOFCalifornia State University, FresnoYes1989–2005**MLB**
1sJamie McAndrewRHPUniversity of FloridaYes1989–1997**MLB**
2Bily LottOFPetal High SchoolYes1989–1997AAA
2Stan PayneLHPClarke Central High SchoolNo
Athletics-19921992A-
3Phil NevinSSEl Dorado High SchoolNo
Astros-19921993–2006**MLB**
4Javier De La HoyaRHPGrant High SchoolYes1989–2007AAA
5John Deutsch1BMontclair State UniversityYes1989–1993AA
6Tim BarkerSSVirginia Commonwealth UniversityYes1989–1998AAA
7Bryan BaarCWestern Michigan UniversityYes1989–1992AAA
8Jason BrosnanLHPCalifornia State University, FresnoYes1989–2002AAA
9Barry ParisottoRHPGonzaga UniversityYes1989–1993A+
10Kevin Jordan2BCañada CollegeNo
Yankees-19901990–2005**MLB**
11Dennis BurbankRHPCypress CollegeNo
Yankees-19911991–1993A+
12Garett TeelCWilliam Paterson UniversityYes1989–1994A+
13Lee DeLoachSSRutgers University–CamdenYes1989Rookie
14Michael WismerOFVillanova UniversityYes1989–1990A+
15Keith DanielRHPPender High SchoolYes1989–1990Rookie
16Frank HumberLHPWake Forest UniversityYes1989–1990A+
17Pete GonzalezCMiami Dade CollegeYes1989–1996AAA
18Audelle CummingsRHPOhio Dominican UniversityYes1989Rookie
19Michael PotthoffRHPUniversity of MissouriYes1989–1991A+
20Gary ForresterSSUniversity of Nevada, Las VegasYes1989–1991A+
21Michael Galle3BPurdue UniversityYes1990–1991A+
22William MillerOFSan Diego State UniversityYes1989–1990A+
23Craig WhiteSSSlippery Rock University of PennsylvaniaYes1989–1990A-
24Red Peters1BCalifornia State University, FullertonYes1989–1991AA
25Javier PuchalesOFYes1989–1995AA
26Craig BishopLHPErie Community CollegeYes1989–1994A+
27Raymond BielaninRHPNiagara UniversityYes1989Rookie
28Ray CalhounRHPSpartanburg Methodist CollegeYes1989–1992AA
29Tim PatrickLHPSacramento City CollegeYes1989–1991A+
30Jerome SantivasciRHPClemson UniversityNo
31Darnell WhimsOFGovernor Thomas Johnson High SchoolYes1989Rookie
32Yale FowlerOFCalifornia State University, San BernardinoYes1989–1990A-
33John FarrenCVillanova UniversityNo
34Matt Howard2BPepperdine UniversityYes1989–1999**MLB**
35Al DrumhellerLHPShenandoah High SchoolNo
Yankees – 19931993–2002AAA
36Stephen O'Donnell1BLa Salle UniversityYes1989–1992A+
37Helmut Bohringer3BAdelphi UniversityYes1989–1991A+
38Daniel Stupur2BGeorge Fox UniversityYes1989A-
39Joe SealsCBelmont UniversityYes1989–1996Rookie
40Jimmy BrownSSCarlos Escobar Lopez High SchoolYes1989–1991A-
41Ross FarnsworthLHPPinole Valley High SchoolYes1990–1996A+
42Roger SweeneyOFSan Rafael High SchoolNo
Dodgers-19901991–1992A-
43Eric YoungOFRutgers, the State University of New JerseyYes1989–2006**MLB**
44Garey IngramCMiddle Georgia CollegeYes1990–2002**MLB**
45Melvin WarrenOFFairfield High SchoolNo
Dodgers-19901991–1992Rookie
46Ray BowenLHPSan Diego Mesa CollegeNo
47Martin KilianRHPSan Jose City CollegeNo
48Mark LundeenLHPNapa High SchoolNo
49Daniel PoultonRHPMinidoka High SchoolNo
50Brannon VealOFMiddle Georgia CollegeNo
51Patrick ReedSSCastlemont High SchoolNo
Dodgers-19901991–1993A-
52Don Meyers1BSacramento City CollegeYes1990–1992A+
53Gaither BagsbyRHPRoane State Community CollegeNo
54Robert HoffmanCContra Costa CollegeYes1990Rookie
55Timothy McDermottCIowa Western Community CollegeNo
56Brian Van HornLHPPinconning High SchoolNo
57Richard Josepher1BSt. Rita High SchoolNo
Yankees-19931993A-
58Bradley CohenOFMeridian Community CollegeNo
59Charles WilliamsOFLumberton High SchoolNo
60Pete AltenbergerRHPPurdue UniversityNo
61Brent Prudhomme1BButler County Community CollegeNo
62Richard CraneLHPCalifornia State University, FresnoYes1989–1991A+

|}

References

References

  1. https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/HOU/HOU198906030.shtml Boxscore from Baseball Reference
  2. https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/MON/MON198908230.shtml Boxscore from Baseball Reference
  3. Sullivan, Paul. (June 12, 1989). "Dodgers Size Up Jones As Promising". Chicago Tribune.
  4. (May 17, 1992). "SPORTS PEOPLE: BASEBALL; Dodger Pitching Hopeful Arrested". New York Times.
  5. "1989 Los Angeles Dodgers Picks in the MLB June Amateur Draft".
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