1982 Major League Baseball season

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1982 MLB season
League
California Angels
NL championsSt. Louis Cardinals
  NL runners-upAtlanta Braves
World Series
ChampionsSt. Louis Cardinals
  Runners-upMilwaukee Brewers
World Series MVPDarrell Porter (STL)
MLB seasons

The 1982 Major League Baseball season concluded with the St. Louis Cardinals winning their ninth World Series championship, defeating the Milwaukee Brewers in the World Series after seven games, after making up for their playoff miss of the year before.

Awards and honors

Baseball Writers' Association of America Awards
BBWAA Award National League American League
Rookie of the Year Steve Sax (LAD) Cal Ripken Jr. (BAL)
Cy Young Award Steve Carlton (PHI) Pete Vuckovich (MIL)
Most Valuable Player Dale Murphy (ATL) Robin Yount (MIL)
Gold Glove Awards
Position National League American League
Pitcher Phil Niekro (ATL) Ron Guidry (NYY)
Catcher Gary Carter (MTL)
CAL
)
First Baseman Keith Hernandez (STL) Eddie Murray (BAL)
Second Baseman Manny Trillo (PHI) Frank White (KC)
Third Baseman Mike Schmidt (PHI) Buddy Bell (TEX)
Shortstop Ozzie Smith (STL) Robin Yount (MIL)
Outfielders Andre Dawson (MTL) Dwight Evans (BOS)
Garry Maddox (PHI) Dwayne Murphy (OAK)
Dale Murphy (ATL) Dave Winfield (NYY)
Silver Slugger Awards
Pitcher/Designated Hitter Don Robinson (PIT) Hal McRae (KC)
Catcher Gary Carter (MTL) Lance Parrish (DET)
First Baseman Al Oliver (MTL) Cecil Cooper (MIL)
Second Baseman Joe Morgan (SF) Dámaso García (TOR)
Third Baseman Mike Schmidt (PHI)
CAL
)
Shortstop Dave Concepción (CIN) Robin Yount (MIL)
Outfielders Leon Durham (CHC)
CAL
)
Pedro Guerrero (LAD) Willie Wilson (KC)
Dale Murphy (ATL) Dave Winfield (NYY)

Other awards

Player of the Month

Month American League National League
April Eddie Murray Dale Murphy
May Hal McRae Tim Wallach
June George Brett Al Oliver
July Robin Yount Mike Schmidt
August Doug DeCinces Bill Buckner
September Dave Winfield Claudell Washington

Pitcher of the Month

Month American League National League
April Geoff Zahn Steve Rogers
May LaMarr Hoyt Dick Ruthven
June Jim Beattie Steve Howe
July Tippy Martinez John Candelaria
August Jim Palmer Nolan Ryan
September Rick Sutcliffe Joaquín Andújar

Statistical leaders

Statistic American League National League
AVG Willie Wilson KC .332 Al Oliver MTL .331
HR Reggie Jackson CAL
Gorman Thomas MIL
39 Dave Kingman NYM 37
RBIs
Hal McRae KC 133 Dale Murphy ATL
Al Oliver MTL
109
Wins
LaMarr Hoyt CWS 19 Steve Carlton PHI 23
ERA Rick Sutcliffe CLE 2.96 Steve Rogers MTL 2.40
SO Floyd Bannister SEA 209 Steve Carlton PHI 286
SV Dan Quisenberry KC 35 Bruce Sutter STL 36
SB Rickey Henderson1 OAK 130 Tim Raines MTL 78

1 Modern (1901–present) single-season stolen bases record

Standings

American League

Team
W
L
Pct. GB Home Road
Milwaukee Brewers 95 67 .586 48‍–‍34 47‍–‍33
Baltimore Orioles 94 68 .580 1 53‍–‍28 41‍–‍40
Boston Red Sox 89 73 .549 6 49‍–‍32 40‍–‍41
Detroit Tigers 83 79 .512 12 47‍–‍34 36‍–‍45
New York Yankees 79 83 .488 16 42‍–‍39 37‍–‍44
Cleveland Indians 78 84 .481 17 41‍–‍40 37‍–‍44
Toronto Blue Jays 78 84 .481 17 44‍–‍37 34‍–‍47
Team
W
L
Pct. GB Home Road
California Angels 93 69 .574 52‍–‍29 41‍–‍40
Kansas City Royals 90 72 .556 3 56‍–‍25 34‍–‍47
Chicago White Sox 87 75 .537 6 49‍–‍31 38‍–‍44
Seattle Mariners 76 86 .469 17 42‍–‍39 34‍–‍47
Oakland Athletics 68 94 .420 25 36‍–‍45 32‍–‍49
Texas Rangers 64 98 .395 29 38‍–‍43 26‍–‍55
Minnesota Twins 60 102 .370 33 37‍–‍44 23‍–‍58

National League

Team
W
L
Pct. GB Home Road
St. Louis Cardinals 92 70 .568 46‍–‍35 46‍–‍35
Philadelphia Phillies 89 73 .549 3 51‍–‍30 38‍–‍43
Montreal Expos 86 76 .531 6 40‍–‍41 46‍–‍35
Pittsburgh Pirates 84 78 .519 8 42‍–‍39 42‍–‍39
Chicago Cubs 73 89 .451 19 38‍–‍43 35‍–‍46
New York Mets 65 97 .401 27 33‍–‍48 32‍–‍49
Team
W
L
Pct. GB Home Road
Atlanta Braves 89 73 .549 42‍–‍39 47‍–‍34
Los Angeles Dodgers 88 74 .543 1 43‍–‍38 45‍–‍36
San Francisco Giants 87 75 .537 2 45‍–‍36 42‍–‍39
San Diego Padres 81 81 .500 8 43‍–‍38 38‍–‍43
Houston Astros 77 85 .475 12 43‍–‍38 34‍–‍47
Cincinnati Reds 61 101 .377 28 33‍–‍48 28‍–‍53

Postseason

Bracket

League Championship Series
(ALCS, NLCS)
World Series
      
East Milwaukee 3
West California 2
AL Milwaukee 3
NL St. Louis 4
East St. Louis 3
West Atlanta 0

Home field attendance

Team name Wins Home attendance Per game
Los Angeles Dodgers[1] 88 39.7% 3,608,881 51.6% 44,554
California Angels[2] 93 82.4% 2,807,360 94.7% 34,659
Philadelphia Phillies[3] 89 50.8% 2,376,394 45.0% 29,338
Montreal Expos[4] 86 43.3% 2,318,292 51.1% 28,621
Kansas City Royals[5] 90 80.0% 2,284,464 78.6% 28,203
St. Louis Cardinals[6] 92 55.9% 2,111,906 109.0% 26,073
New York Yankees[7] 79 33.9% 2,041,219 26.4% 25,200
Milwaukee Brewers[8] 95 53.2% 1,978,896 126.3% 24,133
Boston Red Sox[9] 89 50.8% 1,950,124 83.9% 24,076
Atlanta Braves[10] 89 78.0% 1,801,985 236.6% 22,247
Oakland Athletics[11] 68 6.3% 1,735,489 33.1% 21,426
Detroit Tigers[12] 83 38.3% 1,636,058 42.4% 20,198
Baltimore Orioles[13] 94 59.3% 1,613,031 57.5% 19,671
San Diego Padres[14] 81 97.6% 1,607,516 209.6% 19,846
Chicago White Sox[15] 87 61.1% 1,567,787 65.6% 19,597
Houston Astros[16] 77 26.2% 1,558,555 18.0% 19,241
Cincinnati Reds[17] 61 -7.6% 1,326,528 21.3% 16,377
New York Mets[18] 65 58.5% 1,323,036 87.9% 16,334
Toronto Blue Jays[19] 78 110.8% 1,275,978 69.0% 15,753
Chicago Cubs[20] 73 92.1% 1,249,278 120.9% 15,423
San Francisco Giants[21] 87 55.4% 1,200,948 89.9% 14,827
Texas Rangers[22] 64 12.3% 1,154,432 35.8% 14,252
Seattle Mariners[23] 76 72.7% 1,070,404 68.2% 13,215
Cleveland Indians[24] 78 50.0% 1,044,021 57.9% 12,889
Pittsburgh Pirates[25] 84 82.6% 1,024,106 89.0% 12,643
Minnesota Twins[26] 60 46.3% 921,186 96.4% 11,373

Television coverage

Network Day of week Announcers
ABC Monday nights
Sunday afternoons
Keith Jackson, Howard Cosell, Don Drysdale, Al Michaels, Bob Uecker, Jim Palmer, Tommy Lasorda
NBC Saturday afternoons
USA
Thursday nights Eddie Doucette, Nelson Briles, Monte Moore, Wes Parker

Events

Notes

a Major League Baseball seasons since 1901 without a no-hitter pitched are 1909, 1913, 1921, 19271928, 19321933, 1936, 1939, 19421943, 1949, 1959, 1982, 1985, 1989, 2000 and 2005.

References

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  27. ^ No-Hitters in chronological Order by Retro Sheet