2007 in baseball

2007 in baseball

Year in baseball
this year = 2007

Champions

Major League Baseball

*Regular Season Champions

*World Series Champion - Boston Red Sox
*Postseason - October 2 to October 28

Click on any series score to link to that series' page.
Higher seed had home field advantage during Division Series and League Championship Series.
The American League champion has home field advantage during the World Series as a result of the AL victory in the All-Star Game.

*Postseason MVPs
**World Series MVP - Mike Lowell (Boston Red Sox)
**ALCS MVP - Josh Beckett (Boston Red Sox)
**NLCS MVP - Matt Holliday (Colorado Rockies)
*All-Star Game, July 10 at AT&T Park - American League, 5-4; Ichiro Suzuki (Seattle Mariners), MVP
**State Farm Insurance Home Run Derby, July 9 - Vladimir Guerrero (Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim)

Other champions

*Minor League Baseball
**Triple-A Championship: Sacramento River Cats (Athletics)
***International League: Richmond Braves (Braves)
***Pacific Coast League: Sacramento River Cats (Athletics)
***Mexican League: Sultanes de Monterrey
**AA
***Eastern League: Trenton Thunder
***Southern League: Montgomery Biscuits
***Texas League: San Antonio Missions
**A
***California League: San Jose Giants
***Carolina League: Frederick Keys
***Florida State League: Clearwater Threshers
***Midwest League: West Michigan Whitecaps
***South Atlantic League: Columbus Catfish
***New York-Penn League: Auburn Doubledays
***Northwest League: Salem-Keizer Volcanoes
**Rookie
***Appalachian League: Elizabethton Twins
***Gulf Coast League: Gulf Coast Yankees
***Pioneer League: Orem Owlz
***Arizona League: AZL Mariners

*Independent baseball leagues
**Alaska Baseball League: Fairbanks AIA Fire
**American Association: Fort Worth Cats
**Atlantic League: Newark Bears
**Canadian-American Association: Nashua Pride
**Frontier League: Windy City ThunderBolts
**Golden Baseball League: Chico Outlaws
**Northern League: Gary SouthShore RailCats
**United League Baseball: Alexandria Aces

*Amateur
**College baseball
***College World Series: Oregon State University def. University of North Carolina 2 games to 0
***NCAA Division II: University of Tampa
***NCAA Division III: Kean University
***NAIA: Lewis-Clark State College
**Little League World Series: Warner Robins, Georgia
*International
**National teams
***Baseball World Cup: United States
***Asian Baseball Championship: Japan
***European Baseball Championship: Netherlands
***Pan-Am Games: Cuba
**International club team competitions
***Caribbean Series: Águilas Cibaeñas (Dominican Republic)
***European Cup: Corendon Kinheim (Netherlands) [1]
***Konami Cup Asia Series: Chunichi Dragons (Japan)
**Domestic leagues
***Australia - Claxton Shield : Victoria Aces
***China Baseball League - Tianjin Lions
***Cuban National Series: Santiago de Cuba
***Dominican Winter League: Águilas Cibaeñas
***Holland Series: Corendon Kinheim
***Italian Serie A1 "Scudetto" - Grosetto
***Japan Series: Chunichi Dragons
***Korean Series - SK Wyverns
***Mexican Pacific League: Naranjeros de Hermosillo
***Puerto Rican Professional Baseball League: Gigantes de Carolina
***Taiwan Series - Uni-President Lions
***Venezuelan Professional Baseball League: Tigres de Aragua

1 - The appearance by the Huskies of Rouen, France in the final marks the first time since 1976 that a team from outside the professional leagues of the Netherlands or Italy has finished in the top two.

Awards and honors

*Baseball Hall of Fame honors
**Cal Ripken, Jr. and Tony Gwynn are elected by the BBWAA in their first year of eligibility.
**Rick Hummel, columnist for the "St. Louis Post-Dispatch" who covered the St. Louis Cardinals for three decades, received the J. G. Taylor Spink Award.
**Denny Matthews, broadcaster for the Kansas City Royals since the team's 1969 formation, received the Ford C. Frick Award.

* MVP Awards
** "National League" Jimmy Rollins, Philadelphia Phillies
** "American League" Alex Rodriguez, New York Yankees

* Cy Young Awards
** "National League" Jake Peavy, San Diego Padres
** "American League" C.C. Sabathia, Cleveland Indians

* Rookie of the Year Awards
** "National League" Ryan Braun, Milwaukee Brewers
** "American League" Dustin Pedroia, Boston Red Sox

* Manager of the Year Awards
** "National League" Bob Melvin, Arizona Diamondbacks
** "American League" Eric Wedge, Cleveland Indians

* Silver Slugger Awards
** "American League"
*** DH: David Ortiz
*** C: Jorge Posada
*** 1B: Carlos Peña
*** 2B: Plácido Polanco
*** 3B: Alex Rodriguez
*** SS: Derek Jeter
*** OF: Vladimir Guerrero
*** OF: Magglio Ordóñez
*** OF: Ichiro Suzuki

** "National League"
*** P: Micah Owings
*** C: Russell Martin
*** 1B: Prince Fielder
*** 2B: Chase Utley
*** 3B: David Wright
*** SS: Jimmy Rollins
*** OF: Carlos Beltrán
*** OF: Matt Holliday
*** OF: Carlos Lee

* Gold Glove Awards
** "American League"
*** P: Johan Santana
*** C: Iván Rodríguez
*** 1B: Kevin Youkilis
*** 2B: Plácido Polanco
*** 3B: Adrián Beltré
*** SS: Orlando Cabrera
*** OF: Torii Hunter
*** OF: Grady Sizemore
*** OF: Ichiro Suzuki

** "National League"
*** P: Greg Maddux (his record 17th)
*** C: Russell Martin
*** 1B: Derrek Lee
*** 2B: Orlando Hudson
*** 3B: David Wright
*** SS: Jimmy Rollins
*** OF: Carlos Beltrán
*** OF: Jeff Francoeur
*** OF: Andruw Jones
*** OF: Aaron Rowand ** Francoeur and Rowand finished tied in the voting

Major League Baseball final standings

Events

January-March

*January 9 - As the result of questions regarding his involvement in the ongoing steroids investigations, Mark McGwire falls well short in his first effort to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Cal Ripken Jr. and Tony Gwynn, meanwhile, are elected easily.

*January 11 - The "New York Daily News" reports that Barry Bonds had tested positive for amphetamines at some point during the 2006 season and that Bonds had initially cited a supplement he had received from San Francisco Giants teammate Mark Sweeney as a possible reason for the positive test. Testing rules established in 2006 had required that first positive tests must remain confidential.

*February 4 - The Israel Baseball League announces the official teams of the inaugural season: Bet Shemesh Blue Sox, Modi'in Miracle, Netanya Tigers, Petach Tikva Pioneers, Ra'anana Express, Tel Aviv Lightning. Dropped from the league were the Haifa Stingrays and Jerusalem Lions.

*March 31 - The St. Louis Cardinals defeat the Cleveland Indians 5-1 in the inaugural Civil Rights Game, held at AutoZone Park in Memphis, Tennessee.

April

*April 2:
**Bruce Froemming works behind home plate for the opener between the Athletics and Mariners, tying Bill Klem's major league record of 37 seasons as an umpire.
**The Tribune Company, after agreeing to a buyout of $8.2 billion by real estate magnate Sam Zell, announces that the Chicago Cubs will be subsequently sold following the 2007 season.
*April 1012 - In a case of life imitating art, the Cleveland Indians, displaced by a freak spring snowstorm, play a series against the Los Angeles Angels in Milwaukee. Most of the game action in the 1989 film "Major League", in which the Indians were the featured team, was actually filmed in Milwaukee at the Brewers' home at that time, County Stadium.

*April 15 - To celebrate the sixtieth anniversary of Jackie Robinson's first major league game, dozens of players wear his league-wide retired number, 42. The Los Angeles Dodgers are one of six teams whose entire roster wears number 42 for their games.

*April 18 - Mark Buehrle of the Chicago White Sox pitches a no-hitter against the Texas Rangers, becoming the team's first pitcher since Wilson Alvarez in by|1991, and the 16th in franchise history, to throw a no-hitter [http://proxy.espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=270418104] .

*April 20 - Bruce Froemming umpires at first base in the Cleveland Indians-Tampa Bay Devil Rays game, passing Bill Klem to become – at age 67 years 204 days – the oldest umpire in major league history.

*April 22 - Chase Wright of the New York Yankees gives up four consecutive home runs in the third inning against the Boston Red Sox, joining Paul Foytack to become only the second player to accomplish this dubious feat. Manny Ramírez, J.D. Drew, Mike Lowell, and Jason Varitek hit the home runs.

*April 23 - Alex Rodriguez of the New York Yankees hits two home runs, his 13th and 14th of the season, in a 10-8 loss to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, surpassing the American League record and tying the Major League record for most home runs hit in the month of April.

*April 29:
**Manny Ramírez becomes the fifth player to hit at least 50 career home runs against the New York Yankees, in a 7-4 Red Sox victory.
**Troy Tulowitzki of the Colorado Rockies performs the 13th unassisted triple play in MLB history, catching a Chipper Jones line drive, tagging second base to force Kelly Johnson out off the bag, then tagging out Edgar Rentería in the 7th inning of an 11-inning 9-7 Rockies victory over the Atlanta Braves.
**The Sunday night game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Chicago Cubs is postponed due to the death of Cardinals relief pitcher Josh Hancock early that morning.

May

*May 6 - Roger Clemens announces to the crowd at Yankee Stadium that he has signed a contract to play for the New York Yankees for the remainder of the season.

*May 13:
**Fred Lewis of the San Francisco Giants hits for the cycle at Coors Field in a 15-2 victory over the Colorado Rockies. He led the game off with a double in the 1st, then hit a three-run home run—the first of his career—in the 4th, an RBI triple in the 5th, and capped the cycle off with a single in the 7th.
**Miguel Tejada plays in his 1,118th consecutive game, passing Billy Williams for 5th place all time. However, the Boston Red Sox come back from a 5-0 deficit in the ninth inning en route to a 6-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.

*May 21 - In the Hall of Fame Game at Doubleday Field in Cooperstown, New York, the Baltimore Orioles defeat the Toronto Blue Jays 13-7 with five home runs, including two by minor league catcher Brian Bock.

June

*June 4 - Mark Ellis hits for the cycle at McAfee Coliseum as his Oakland Athletics defeat the Boston Red Sox, 5-4 in 11 innings. He hit a triple in the 2nd inning, a solo home run in the 4th and a double in the 6th. Although a fielder's choice in the 8th with the A's holding the lead seemingly ended his run for the cycle, a rally by the Red Sox in the 9th pushed extra innings, allowing Ellis to get the single he needed in the 10th inning.
*June 6 - In the San Diego Padres' 5-2 win over the Dodgers, closer Trevor Hoffman becomes the first pitcher to record 500 career saves.
*June 7:
** Curt Schilling carries a no-hitter into the bottom of the 9th with two outs before surrendering a single to Shannon Stewart as the Red Sox defeat the A's 1-0. Schilling becomes the first pitcher to give up a no-hitter with two out in the 9th since Mike Mussina blew a perfect game in 2001.
**Joe Torre of the New York Yankees becomes the tenth manager to win 2,000 major league games.
*June 12 - Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers pitches a 4-0 no-hitter against the Milwaukee Brewers. It is the third no-hitter in regular interleague play, the first at Comerica Park, and the first for the Tigers since 1984.
*June 16 - The Cubs and Padres each collect only two hits as Russell Branyan's home run in the ninth inning gives San Diego a 1-0 win. The Cubs' Carlos Zambrano takes a no-hitter into the eighth, while Padres starter Chris Young allows no hits before being ejected in the fourth following a brawl.
*June 18 - In the longest game in College World Series history (5 hours 40 minutes), UC Irvine eliminates Cal State Fullerton with a 5-4 win in 13 innings.
*June 20 - Sammy Sosa becomes the fifth major leaguer to hit 600 home runs when he connects against Jason Marquis in the Texas Rangers' 7-3 win over the Cubs. It is his first home run against his former club, giving him at least one against every major league team.
*June 24:
**Modi'in Miracle win the first ever regular-season game in the Israel Baseball League, beating the Petach Tikva Pioneers, 9-1, at Yarkon Sports Complex in Petach Tikva.
**Dustin McGowan of the Toronto Blue Jays has what would have been the second no-hitter in franchise history broken up in the ninth in a 5-0 victory over the Colorado Rockies at the Rogers Centre. Jeff Baker singles to lead off the inning; the hit is the only one McGowan will allow. Dave Stieb has currently hurled the only no-hitter in Blue Jay history, in by|1990.

*June 27 - Ryan Howard of the Philadelphia Phillies becomes the fastest player in major league history to reach 100 career home runs, taking only 325 games to do so. He surpasses Ralph Kiner, who took 385 games.
*June 28:
**Frank Thomas becomes the 21st player in major league history to record 500 home runs with a first-inning homer off the Minnesota Twins' Carlos Silva at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome.
**Craig Biggio becomes the 27th player in major league history to record 3,000 hits with a seventh-inning single – his third hit of the game – against the Colorado Rockies at Minute Maid Park. He is the 14th player to record 3,000 hits with his initial team, and in September ends his career with 3,060 hits.
*June 29
**Aubrey Huff of the Baltimore Orioles hits for the cycle at Oriole Park at Camden Yards in a 9-7 loss to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Huff becomes the third Orioles player to do so, joining Brooks Robinson and Cal Ripken, Jr., and the first Oriole to hit for the cycle at home in Baltimore. In addition, the triple is his 1000th hit and the double is his 200th double.
**Barry Bonds hits his 750th home run off of Liván Hernández in the 8th inning at AT&T Park as his San Francisco Giants lose 6-4 to the Arizona Diamondbacks. Before his historic at-bat, he is hugged in right field by a drunken fan in the top of the 8th, and he assists the fan off the field without incident.

July

*July 2 - Roger Clemens becomes the eighth major league pitcher to win 350 games, in the Yankees' 5-1 win over the Minnesota Twins.
*July 9 - Vladimir Guerrero of the Los Angeles Angels wins the 2007 Home Run Derby in San Francisco. Despite the highly publicized presence of McCovey Cove beyond the right field fence, not a single home run touches the water.
*July 10 - The American League beats the National League 5-4 in the 2007 MLB All-Star Game in San Francisco; Ichiro Suzuki of the Seattle Mariners is named MVP after hitting the first-ever inside-the-park home run in All-Star Game history.
*July 15 - The St. Louis Cardinals beat the Philadelphia Phillies 10-2, making the Phillies the first team in professional sports history to lose 10,000 games.
*July 20 - Cuba defeats the United States 3-1 to win its 10th consecutive gold medal at the Pan-Am Games.
*July 22 - Mike Coolbaugh of the Texas League Tulsa Drillers is killed when he is struck in the neck by a line drive foul ball while coaching at first base.

August

*August 4:
**Alex Rodriguez becomes the 22nd player to hit 500 career home runs in the Yankees' 16-8 victory over the Royals, and at age 32 becomes the youngest player to reach the milestone.
**Barry Bonds ties Hank Aaron's record of 755 career home runs with a second-inning shot off San Diego's Clay Hensley.
*August 5 - Tom Glavine becomes the 23rd pitcher, and just the fifth left-hander, to earn 300 career wins as the New York Mets defeat the Chicago Cubs 8-3 at Wrigley Field.
*August 7 - Barry Bonds surpasses Hank Aaron's record of 755 career home runs with a fifth-inning shot off Washington's Mike Bacsik.
*August 8- Miguel Tejada records his 1,000th run batted in.
*August 9:
** Roger Clemens is suspended for the fourth time in his career for hitting Toronto's Alex Rios with a pitch after both teams were warned.
** Rick Ankiel, formerly a pitcher with infamous control problems, returns to the major leagues as an outfielder for the St. Louis Cardinals, hitting a 3-run home run in his fourth at-bat.
*August 14- Atlanta Braves manager Bobby Cox is ejected by umpire Ted Barrett at the end of the fifth-inning after arguing a called third strike against Chipper Jones at Turner Field. The ejection is Cox' 132nd of his career, breaking a record he had shared with John McGraw.
*August 17- Brandon Webb tosses his third straight shutout to achieve 42 innings of scoreless baseball.
*August 19 - Johan Santana picks up his 13th win of the year behind a career-best 17 strikeouts in eight innings, helping the Twins wrap up their three-game series at home with the Rangers. Sammy Sosa notches the only two Rangers hits.
*August 20 - Bobby Jenks' tied record of 41 consecutive retired batters comes to an end when Joey Gathright of the Kansas City Royals hits a single to lead off the top of the ninth inning of a game between the Royals and White Sox.

*August 22 - In the first game of a doubleheader, the Texas Rangers beat the Baltimore Orioles 30-3, setting a new record for runs scored by a single team in a game in the modern (post-1900) era, and the American League all-time record. The Rangers' 30 runs were the most in a game since the Chicago Colts beat the Louisville Colonels 36-7 on June 29, 1897. With a 9-7 victory in the second game, the Rangers also set the record for most runs scored by a single team in a doubleheader, with 39.
*August 31 - Scott Baker of the Minnesota Twins takes a perfect game into the ninth inning against the Kansas City Royals, but walks the first batter and eventually settles for a 5-0 one-hitter (surrendering a single to Mike Sweeney).

eptember

*September 1 - In his second major league start, Red Sox rookie Clay Buchholz pitches a 10–0 no-hitter over the Orioles at Fenway Park, becoming the third pitcher to throw a no-hitter in his first or second career start since 1900. Bobo Holloman (1st, by|1953) and Wilson Alvarez (2nd, by|1991) are the others.
*September 3
**Ichiro Suzuki of the Mariners records his 200th hit of the season, a home run off the Yankees' Roger Clemens. It is the seventh consecutive season he has reached this mark, tying him with Wade Boggs for the modern major league record.
**Mets pitcher Pedro Martínez records his 3000th career strikeout in his first appearance in nearly a year. Aaron Harang, the opposing pitcher for the Reds, is the victim as the Mets win 10-4 in Cincinnati.
*September 6 - Rick Ankiel's stunning one-month return to baseball as a hitter is mired by controversy when the "New York Daily News" reports that he purchased 12 month's worth of HGH from a Florida pharmacy from January to December by|2004. A few days later, Jay Gibbons of the Orioles is reported to also have received HGH from the same pharmacy. Ankiel did not deny using HGH prior to MLB's official banning of the substance in by|2005, stating he used it during that time under the care of a licensed physician.

*September 7 - Curtis Granderson of the Tigers hits his 20th home run of the season, becoming the sixth player in major league history, and the first since 1979, to join the 20–20–20 club, indicating 20 doubles, 20 triples, and 20 home runs in the same season. He ends the season with 38 doubles, 23 triples, and 23 home runs.
*September 8 - The 50th and 51st home runs of the season by Alex Rodriguez are his 48th and 49th as a third baseman. The first breaks his own AL record for the position, while the second breaks the major league record for the position which had stood since 1980 (Mike Schmidt, tied by Adrián Beltré in 2004). Rodriguez's 50th home run also makes him the first player in major league history to collect 50 home runs, 130 runs scored, 130 RBI and 20 stolen bases in a single season (the previous closest player was Larry Walker in by|1997, who fell one home run short with 49 HR, 143 runs, 130 RBI and 33 steals).
*September 9:
**The Milwaukee Brewers open the game with consecutive home runs from Rickie Weeks, J. J. Hardy and Ryan Braun to defeat the Reds 11–5 at Great American Ball Park. Weeks, Hardy and Braun connect off Phil Dumatrait, as the Brewers become only the third team in major league history to open a game with three straight home runs, joining San Diego's Marvell Wynne, Tony Gwynn and John Kruk (April 13, by|1987 vs. the San Francisco Giants) and (Atlanta's Rafael Furcal, Mark DeRosa and Gary Sheffield (at Cincinnati on May 28, by|2003).
**At Comerica Park, Curtis Granderson collects his 20th stolen base during the first inning of a 14-7 Seattle victory over Detroit. Granderson joins Willie Mays (by|1957) [26-20-35-38, respectively below] and Frank "Wildfire" Schulte (by|1911) [30-21-21-23, respectively below] as the only players in major league history with 20 doubles, 20 triples, 20 home runs and 20 stolen bases during a regular season--ending his season with 38 doubles, 23 triples, 23 home runs, and 26 stolen bases.

*September 16:
**Jim Thome of the White Sox, playing in his 2,000th game, becomes the 23rd player in major league history to reach the 500 home run milestone when he hits a walk-off home run off Dustin Moseley of the Angels to win the game 9-7, making 2007 the first season in history in which three players have hit their 500th homer in the same season. It is also the first time that the 500-homer mark has been reached with a walk-off shot.
**David Wright of the Mets hits his 30th home run of the season to go with 31 stolen bases, becoming only the fifth player in major league history to become a member of the 30-30 club before the age of 25, in a 10-6 loss to the Phillies.
**Todd Jones of the Tigers becomes the 21st pitcher in major league history to record 300 saves.
**Todd Helton hits his 300th career home run.

*September 17 - Frank Thomas of the Blue Jays hits three home runs in a 6-1 win over the Red Sox, tying him for 18th all-time with Ernie Banks and Eddie Mathews with 512. Two of the homers are hit off Tim Wakefield, who gave up all three shots in Thomas' only previous three-homer game in 1996.

*September 18 - Moisés Alou of the Mets, age 41, hits in his 22nd consecutive game, a modern era record for a player over 40.

*September 19 - Andy Pettitte becomes the 110th pitcher to earn 200 major league victories in the Yankees' 2-1 win over the Orioles.

*September 21
**Barry Bonds announces that his tenure (1993-2007) with the San Francisco Giants has ended, after the team indicates it will not sign him for 2008.
**Moisés Alou extends his hitting streak to 25 games, breaking the Mets single-season record shared by Mike Piazza and Hubie Brooks. In the same game, the Marlins commit a franchise-high six errors in a 9-6 loss. Eight of the nine runs were unearned as a result of the errors, two of them by Miguel Cabrera. Two days later, Alou surpasses David Wright's overall club mark of 26 games, which spanned two seasons. The streak ends at 30 games on the 26th, a new major league record for a player over 40.

*September 22 - The Boston Red Sox become the first major league team to earn a playoff spot with an 8-6 defeat of the Devil Rays.

*September 23
**The Cleveland Indians clinch their first American League Central title since by|2001 with a 6-2 victory over the Athletics. They are also the first team to clinch a division, as the Red Sox have so far only secured a playoff spot.
**The Los Angeles Angels clinch the American League West title with a 7-4 victory over the Mariners.
**In the Yankees' 7-5 win over the Blue Jays, Mike Mussina becomes the first pitcher in major league history to win 250 games without ever winning 20 in a single season.
**After being home to the Washington Senators from 1961 to 1971 and the Washington Nationals since 2005, Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium hosts its final major league game, a 5-3 Nationals victory over the visiting Phillies before a season-high crowd of 40,519.

*September 25
**Jimmy Rollins joins David Wright as the second member of 2007's 30-30 club when he leads off the bottom of the first inning with his 30th home run of the season off Braves pitcher Chuck James.
**Shawn Green gets his 2,000th hit when he singles up the middle off of Nationals pitcher Jason Bergmann.
**Prince Fielder becomes, at age 23, the youngest player ever to hit 50 home runs after connecting twice in the Brewers' 9-1 victory over the Cardinals.

*September 26
**Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols hits his 32nd home run of the season in the first inning against the Brewers, giving him 100 RBI and making him the first player in major league history to have at least a .300 batting average with 30 homers and 100 RBI in his first seven seasons.
**Reds second baseman Brandon Phillips homers in the first inning off Juan Gutiérrez of the Astros, making him only the second player at his position to collect 30 home runs and steal 30 bases in the same season. Alfonso Soriano has accomplished the feat three times at the same position.
**Red Sox third baseman Mike Lowell collects five RBI in a 11–6 Boston victory over the Athletics, raising his total to 116 and setting a new team record for most RBI in a season by a third baseman; Butch Hobson collected 112 RBI in 1977.
**The New York Yankees secure their 13th consecutive postseason berth with a 12-4 rout of the Devil Rays.
**Barry Bonds goes 0-for-3 in his final game with the Giants, an 11-3 loss to the visiting Padres.
*September 27 - Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard strikes out for the 196th and 197th times of the season, surpassing Adam Dunn's single-season record of 195 strikeouts in by|2004. He ends the season with a new record of 199 strikeouts.

*September 28
**Jimmy Rollins of the Phillies collects his 705th-709th at bats of the season, breaking Willie Wilson's by|1980 single-season record of 705; ending the season with 716 at bats.
**The Chicago Cubs clinch the National League Central title with a 6-0 blanking of the Reds.
**The Boston Red Sox clinch their first American League East title since by|1995 and break the Yankees' streak of nine straight division crowns when they defeat the Twins 5-2 and the Bronx Bombers drop a 10-9 decision to the Orioles in 10 innings.
**In just their tenth year of play, the Arizona Diamondbacks secure a playoff spot for the fourth time in franchise history.

*September 29
**The Arizona Diamondbacks clinch their fourth National League West title even before taking the field against the Colorado Rockies, when San Diego loses to Milwaukee 4-3.
**In his second-to-last major league game, Craig Biggio plays at his original position of catcher for the first two innings, playing behind the plate for the first time in 16 years after spending his first four seasons there.

*September 30
**The New York Mets lose to the Florida Marlins 8-1, completing one of the worst collapses in major league history by squandering a 7-game lead with 17 games remaining in the NL East race, and finish the season one game behind the Philadelphia Phillies, who defeat the Nationals 6-1 to clinch the division title for the first time since by|1993.
**Jimmy Rollins collects his 20th triple of the season, making him the seventh member of the 20–20–20 club and the second new member this year along with Curtis Granderson; this also marks the first time in major league history that two batters record 20–20–20 seasons during the same year. He also becomes the fourth member of the 20–20–20–20 club, as well as the first player in major league history to collect at least 20 doubles, 20 triples, 20 home runs and 40 stolen bases in a single season; this also marks the first time that two players record 20–20–20–20 seasons during the same year (Granderson met the mark earlier in September 2007), and the second time that a batter had a 30-30 season and a 20–20–20–20 season during the same year (Willie Mays accomplished the feat in by|1957). Rollins ends the season with 38 doubles, 20 triples, 30 home runs, and 41 stolen bases.
**Bruce Froemming receives a standing ovation from his Milwaukee hometown crowd prior to working his last regular-season game after a record 37 *full* seasons as a major league umpire; his final game overall takes place on October 8 in the Indians-Yankees AL Division Series. In the game, the San Diego Padres fail to clinch the NL wild card spot by losing 11-6 to the Milwaukee Brewers. He also extended his record (April 20) for oldest umpire ever in a regular-season game to 68 years, 2 days.

October

*October 1 - The Colorado Rockies defeat the San Diego Padres 9-8 in 13 innings in the 2007 NL Wild Card tie-breaker to secure the last of the eight MLB playoff spots, completing a run in which they won 14 of their last 15 games, tying the best 15-game finish in major league history. Despite an error in the game, the Rockies also set a major league record for team fielding percentage (.9893), breaking the by|2006 Boston Red Sox mark of .9891.

* October 2 - Dmitri Young of the Washington Nationals is named the NL Comeback Player of the Year. Carlos Peña of the Tampa Bay Devil Rays is named the AL Comeback Player of the Year.

*October 18 – After the New York Yankees offer him only a one-year contract at a base salary one-third less than what he earned in 2007, Joe Torre leaves after 12 seasons as manager.

*October 22Tony La Russa agrees to a new two-year deal to stay on as manager of the St. Louis Cardinals.

*October 24 – The National Baseball Hall of Fame announces that it will honor Buck O'Neil by establishing a lifetime achievement award in his name. O'Neil, a Negro League first baseman and manager who died in October 2006, will be honored with a statue to be dedicated at the next Hall of Fame induction in Cooperstown, N.Y. After leaving the Negro Leagues, O'Neil became the first African American coach in the majors by joining the Cubs staff in 1962, and was later an influential figure in the promotion of baseball and study of Negro Leagues history. He was nominated to a special Hall ballot for Negro League players, managers, and executives in 2006, but didn't receive the necessary number of votes to gain admission into the Hall.

*October 28
**The Boston Red Sox complete a 4-0 sweep of the Colorado Rockies to win the 2007 World Series. The Bosox' Mike Lowell is named MVP.
**During the early innings of Game 4 of the World Series, Scott Boras, the agent for Alex Rodriguez, announces that A-Rod will exercise his option to void the remaining four years of his contract with the Yankees and will become a free agent.

*October 30 – The Yankees sign Joe Girardi to a three-year deal as their new manager. In the meantime, amid rumors that Torre will be hired as the team's new manager, Grady Little resigns as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

November

*November 1 – The Chunichi Dragons win the 2007 Japan Series over the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters 4-1, losing the first game and sweeping the next four. The Dragons' Norihiro Nakamura is the series MVP. This was a rematch of the 2006 series, won by the Dragons in the same fashion. Game five was a combined perfect game, with starter Daisuke Yamai throwing eight innings, and Hitoki Iwase closing out the ninth. Nippon Professional Baseball does not officially recognize no-hit or perfect games thrown by multiple pitchers.

*November 6
**Greg Maddux wins his 17th Gold Glove Award, breaking a record he had previously shared with Jim Kaat and Brooks Robinson.
**By a vote of 25-5, major league general managers endorse the use of instant replay for the first time, with the condition that its scope be limited to determining where a potential home run ball left the park or the possibility of fan interference on a home run.

*November 8
**General managers decide to mandate first- and third-base coaches to wear head protection during games starting in 2008. This was prompted by the death on July 22 of minor-league first-base coach Mike Coolbaugh of the Tulsa Drillers, a Double-A affiliate of the Colorado Rockies, who was hit in the neck by a foul line drive, killing him on impact.
**The Tampa Bay Devil Rays officially drop the "Devil" from their name, becoming the Tampa Bay Rays. In addition to the name change, they also change their colors from green and black to navy blue, Columbia blue, and gold, and design new uniforms that will be worn starting in 2008.

*November 12 - Ryan Braun of the Brewers edges Troy Tulowitzki of the Rockies in the closest balloting since by|1980 (128-126) for the NL Rookie of the Year Award.

*November 15 - Jake Peavy of the Padres wins the NL Cy Young Award by unanimous vote.

*November 16
**Barry Bonds is indicted on charges of perjury and obstructing justice.
**Alex Rodriguez agrees to an outline of a deal with the New York Yankees (10 years, $275 million, with extra money if he breaks the career home run record with the Yankees. In total the deal could reach $300 million.)

December

*December 13 - Former U.S. Senator George J. Mitchell releases his long-awaited (409-page) report, 20 months in the making at an estimated cost of $40 million, on anabolic steroid use in baseball, naming 89 current and former players. MLB Commissioner Bud Selig and Players Association Executive Director Donald Fehr replied with their own separate statements later in the day.

Media

*"The Bronx Is Burning"
*"The Final Season"

Deaths

January-March

*January 1 - Ernie Koy, 97, left fielder for four NL teams from 1938-1942 who homered in his first at bat, with the Dodgers
*January 4 - Bob Milliken, 80, pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1953 and 1954
*January 16 - Betty Trezza, 81, shortstop for the Racine Belles of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
*January 19 - Bill Lefebvre, 91, pitcher for the Boston Red Sox and Washington Senators between 1938 and 1944
*January 20 - Vern Ruhle, 55, pitcher for the Tigers and Astros who had notable starts for Houston in the 1980, 1981 playoffs; later a pitching coach for four NL teams
*January 23 - Dick Joyce, 63, pitcher for the Kansas City Athletics in 1965
*January 25 - Jack Lang, 85, sportswriter for New York area newspapers from 1946 to 1989, and longtime BBWAA official who was responsible for notifying Hall of Famers of their election from 1966 to 1988
*January 27 - Bing Devine, 90, general manager who built the Cardinals' pennant winners of 1964, '67 and '68; later president of the Mets
*January 29 - Art Fowler, 84, pitcher from 1954 to 1964, mainly with the Redlegs and Angels, who became pitching coach for five teams under manager Billy Martin
*January 30 - Max Lanier, 91, All-Star pitcher who won 101 games for the Cardinals, led NL in ERA in 1943 and won final game of the 1944 World Series; father of infielder-manager Hal
*February 1 - Ray Berres, 99, catcher for four NL teams from 1934 to 1945, later a White Sox pitching coach for nearly two decades
*February 4 - Steve Barber, 68, All-Star pitcher for the Orioles who in 1963 became the first 20-game winner in modern Baltimore history
*February 4 - Jim Pisoni, 77, outfielder, the last player to debut in a St Louis Browns uniform, who also played for the Kansas City Athletics, Milwaukee Braves and New York Yankees
*February 6 - Lew Burdette, 80, All-Star pitcher for the Braves who was MVP of the 1957 World Series, led NL with 21 wins in 1959
*February 9 - Hank Bauer, 84, All-Star right fielder for the Yankees on seven World Series champions; managed Orioles to 1966 World Series title
*February 15 - Buddy Hancken, 92, catcher for the 1940 Philadelphia Athletics; later a minor league manager, scout, coach and executive
*February 18 - Danny Reynolds, 87, infielder for the 1945 Chicago White Sox
*February 20 - Bob Malloy, 88, pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Browns between 1943 and 1949
*February 20 - Casey Wise, 74, infielder for the Chicago Cubs (1957), Milwaukee Braves (1958-1959) and Detroit Tigers (1960)
*February 21 - Sherman Jones, 72, pitcher for three NL teams from 1960-1962; later a Kansas legislator for twelve years
*March 2 - Clem Labine, 80, All-Star relief pitcher for the Dodgers who helped the team win its first World Series in 1955, held NL record for career saves from 1958 to 1962
*March 3 - Gene Oliver, 71, catcher and first baseman for five teams in the 1960s who hit 21 home runs for the 1965 Milwaukee Braves
*March 7 - Emil Mailho, 97, outfielder for the 1936 Philadelphia Athletics
*March 8 - John Vukovich, 59, third baseman for three teams, mainly the Phillies, from 1970 to 1981; later a Phillies coach for 17 seasons
*March 10 - Art Lopatka, 87, pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals and Philadelphia Phillies in the 1940s
*March 10 - Bobby Sturgeon, 87, infielder for the Chicago Cubs and Boston Braves between 1940 and 1948
*March 12 - Norm Larker, 76, All-Star first baseman, and a member of the original Los Angeles Dodgers and Houston Colt .45s teams
*March 15 - Bowie Kuhn, 80, commissioner of Major League Baseball from 1969 to 1984 who oversaw strong increases in attendance, the arrival of free agency and the sport's first labor strikes
*March 15 - Marty Martínez, 65, utility infielder for six teams from 1962 to 1972; became a coach and scout for the Mariners
*March 22 - Don Dennis, 65, relief pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals in 1965-1966 who was named St. Louis rookie of the year in 1965
*March 22 - Willard Schmidt, 78, pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals (1952-1957) and Cincinnati Reds (1958-1959)
*March 23 - Ed Bailey, 75, 5-time All-Star catcher for the Reds and Giants who batted .300 with 28 home runs for the 1956 Reds

April-June

*April 1 - Herb Carneal, 83, broadcaster for the Minnesota Twins since their second season in 1962; previously called games for the Philadelphia Athletics and Phillies and the Baltimore Orioles
*April 1 - Lou Limmer, 82, first baseman who hit the last home run for the Philadelphia Athletics and had the last hit in their final game in Philadelphia
*April 6 - Ed Bahr, 87, Canadian pitcher for the 1946 and 1947 Pirates
*April 10 - Dick Kryhoski, 82, first baseman for four AL teams from 1949 to 1955 including the final season of the St. Louis Browns
*April 15 - Charlie Marshall, 87, catcher for the 1941 St. Louis Cardinals
*April 23 - David Halberstam, 73, Pulitzer-winning author and historian who wrote three non-fiction books on baseball: "Summer of '49", "October, 1964" and "The Teammates"
*April 27 - Ralph McLeod, 90, outfielder for the 1938 Boston Bees
*April 28 - Archie Wilson, 83, 1951 International League MVP, who later played for the New York Yankees, Washington Senators and Boston Red Sox
*April 29 - Milt Bocek, 94, outfielder for the 1933 and 1934 White Sox who hit .364 in his first month in the majors
*April 29 - Josh Hancock, 29, relief pitcher for the Red Sox, Phillies, Reds and Cardinals since 2002
*May 13 - Gomer Hodge, 63, infielder for the 1971 Indians who later coached in the minors and managed in the Mexican Pacific League
*May 17 - Bill Wight, 85, pitcher for eight teams between 1946 and 1958 who won 15 games for the 1949 White Sox
*June 4 - Clete Boyer, 70, third baseman for five consecutive Yankees pennant winners from 1960-1964 who won 1969 Gold Glove with the Braves
*June 15 - Larry Whiteside, 69, pioneering African American journalist known for his coverage of baseball for a number of American newspapers
*June 24 - Rod Beck, 38, All-Star relief pitcher who was the NL runnerup in saves four times, including 48 for the 1993 Giants and 51 for the 1998 Cubs

July-September

*July 11 - Shag Crawford, 90, umpire for 3082 National League games between 1956 and 1975 who also worked in three World Series, two NL Championship Series, and three All-Star Games; father of NL umpire Jerry
*July 16 - Carl McNabb, 90, played briefly for the Detroit Tigers in 1945
*July 18 - Orlando McFarlane, 69, catcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Detroit Tigers and California Angels between 1962 and 1968
*July 19 - Jim Mangan, 77, catcher for the 1952 Pittsburgh Pirates
*July 22 - Rollie Stiles, 100, pitcher for the 1930-31, 1933 St. Louis Browns; pitched to Babe Ruth, and was the oldest living former MLB player at the time of his death
*July 22 - Mike Coolbaugh, 35, third baseman with the Milwaukee Brewers and St. Louis Cardinals in 2001-2002, later a minor league coach
*July 23 - Otis Davis, 87, utilility for the 1946 Brooklyn Dodgers
*July 29 - Bill Robinson, 64, outfielder for four teams from 1966 to 1983 who batted .304 with 104 RBI for the 1977 Pirates; was left fielder on 1979 World Series champions, later a hitting coach with several teams
*August 1 - Pete Naktenis, 93, pitcher for the Philadelphia Athletics and Cincinnati Reds between 1936 and 1939
*August 4 - Frank Mancuso, 89, catcher for the St. Louis Browns and Washington Senators in the 1940s, who later served for 30 years (1963-93) on the Houston City Council
*August 7 - Hank Morgenweck, 78, American League umpire from 1972 to 1975 who also worked second base in Game 1 of the 1970 NLCS as a strike replacement
*August 14 - Phil Rizzuto, 89, Hall of Fame shortstop for the Yankees from 1941 to 1956 who played on ten pennant winners and seven World Series champions; named MVP in 1950, and later announced Yankees games for four decades
*August 17 - Chico Garcia, 82, Mexican Baseball Hall of Fame [http://www.salondelafama.com.mx/salondelafama/trono/alfasf.asp?x=45] second baseman who played for the 1954 Orioles; won minor league batting titles in the 1949 Arizona-Texas League and 1963 Mexican League, managed in Mexican League from 1965-1976
*August 20 - Wild Bill Hagy, 68, fan noted for leading cheers at Baltimore Orioles games in the 1970s and 1980s
*August 26 - Chuck Comiskey, 81, vice president of the White Sox in the 1950s, and the last member of the Comiskey family to be involved in the club's operation
*August 30 - Hal Jeffcoat, 82, outfielder/pitcher for the Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Redlegs and St. Louis Cardinals between 1948 and 1959
*September 12 - Lou Kretlow, 86, pitcher from 1946 through 1956 with the Detroit Tigers, St. Louis Browns, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox and Kansas City Athletics

October-December

*October 4 - Don Nottebart, 71, pitcher for five teams in the 1960s who was 11-8 for Houston in 1963, including the franchise's first no-hitter
*October 14 - Fred Bruckbauer, 69, pitcher for the 1969 Minnesota Twins
*October 14 - Owen Friend, 80, infielder for the Browns, Tigers, Indians, Red Sox and Cubs in the 1950s
*October 17 - Billy Berroa, 79, Spanish-language broadcaster for the New York Mets who began announcing major league games in 1963
*October 17 - Mickey Rutner, 86, third baseman for the 1947 Philadelphia Athletics
*November 13 - Kazuhisa Inao, 70, Japanese Hall of Fame pitcher for the Nishitetsu Lions who was MVP of the Pacific League in 1957 and 1958 and posted a 42-14 record in 1961
*November 15 - Joe Nuxhall, 79, All-Star pitcher who earned all but 5 of his 135 wins from 1952 to 1966 for the Reds; became youngest player in modern major league history, pitching 2/3 of an inning in 1944 during World War II at age 15; later a broadcaster for the Reds from 1967-2004
*November 22 - Ken Wood, 83, outfielder for the St. Louis Browns, Boston Red Sox and Washington Senators from 1948-53
*November 23 - Joe Kennedy, 28, pitcher for five teams since 2001, most recently with the Blue Jays; posted a 9-7 mark with a 3.66 ERA for the 2004 Rockies
*December 14 - Cuddles Marshall, 82, pitcher for the New York Yankees and St. Louis Browns between 1946 and 1950, and the Yankees pitcher to start the first night game at Yankee Stadium on May 28, 1946
*December 17 - Don Chevrier, 68, Canadian television broadcaster for the Toronto Blue Jays for 20 years, who also spanned the world of sports for the CBC for more than 30 years
*December 20 - Tommy Byrne, 87, All-Star pitcher for four AL teams who earned 72 of his 85 major league victories with the Yankees, including three 15-win seasons for pennant winners
*December 21 - Jack Lamabe, 71, pitcher from 1962 to 1968 for seven major league teams, mainly with the Boston Red Sox
*December 25 -Jim Beauchamp, 68, outfielder/first baseman for seven major league teams from 1963-1974; later a minor league manager (1975-90) and a major league coach (1991-98)
*December 26 - Jim Castiglia, 89, catcher for the 1942 Philadelphia Athletics; later a running back for several NFL teams, including the Eagles, Redskins and Colts

ee also

*2007 Nippon Professional Baseball season
*2007 Chinese Professional Baseball League season


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