1984 Cincinnati Reds season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1984 Cincinnati Reds
Major League affiliations
Location
  • Riverfront Stadium (since 1970)
  • Cincinnati (since 1882)
Results
Record70–92 (.432)
Divisional place5th
Other information
Owner(s)Marge Schott
General manager(s)Bob Howsam, Bill Bergesch
Manager(s)Vern Rapp, Pete Rose
Local televisionWLWT, Sports Time
(Ray Lane, Ken Wilson)
Local radioWLW
(Marty Brennaman, Joe Nuxhall)
< Previous season     Next season >

The Cincinnati Reds' 1984 season consisted of the Cincinnati Reds attempting to win the National League West. It marked the return of Bob Howsam as General Manager, after Dick Wagner was fired during the 1983 season. The Reds finished in fifth place that year, as they escaped last place in the NL West, which the team had finished in 1982 and 1983.

Offseason[]

  • November 4, 1983: Brad Gulden was signed as a Free Agent with the Cincinnati Reds.[1]
  • November 12, 1983: Bob Owchinko was purchased by the Cincinnati Reds from the Pittsburgh Pirates.[2]
  • November 21, 1983: Steve Christmas was traded by the Reds to the Chicago White Sox for Fran Mullins.[3]
  • November 21, 1983: Wayne Krenchicki was purchased by the Reds from the Detroit Tigers.[4]
  • December 5, 1983: Fran Mullins was drafted from the Reds by the San Francisco Giants in the rule 5 draft.[5]
  • December 6, 1983: Tony Pérez was purchased by the Reds from the Philadelphia Phillies.[6]
  • December 7, 1983: Dave Parker was signed as a free agent by the Reds.[7]

Regular season[]

Reds pitcher Mario Soto endured two suspensions during the 1984 season for various incidents. In the first incident, on May 27 against the Chicago Cubs in Wrigley Field, third baseman Ron Cey hit what was originally ruled a home run down the left field line. Believing the ball had gone foul, Soto and Reds manager Vern Rapp disputed the call, and during the argument, Soto shoved third base umpire Steve Rippley, who had made the call.

After conferring, the umpires changed their decision and ruled it a foul ball, drawing a protest from the Cubs. However, for shoving Rippley, Soto was ejected, prompting him to charge the field and attack Cubs coach Don Zimmer, which triggered a ten-minute brawl. Four days later, National League president Chub Feeney suspended Mario Soto for five games. This game is also notable because Soto's opponent that day was future Hall of Fame Dennis Eckersley, who would go on to become a record-setting closer years later. "Eck", who was making his Cubs debut after being acquired in a trade with the Boston Red Sox, took the loss that day.[8]

In the second incident, on June 16, the Reds were playing the Atlanta Braves in Atlanta. Soto threw several brushback pitches at Braves slugger Claudell Washington. Washington tossed his bat in the direction of Soto, appeared to go out to retrieve it, but instead walked toward the mound. Umpire Lanny Harris attempted to restrain Washington. Harris was thrown to the ground. Soto used the distraction to punch Washington. Several of Washington's teammates attempted to hold Washington to the ground. While they were doing that, Soto fired the baseball into the crowd of players, striking Braves coach Joe Pignatano. He was suspended three games for this incident; Washington received a five-game suspension for shoving Lanny Harris.

The Reds drew the two smallest attendances in the history of Riverfront Stadium in 1984. Only 3,921 were on hand to see the Reds play the New York Mets on April 4, which was the record for the smallest crowd until May 31, when they lost to the Braves 7–1 in a makeup game from April, which drew just 2,472. That started a five-game series sweep of the Reds by Atlanta.

Prior to May 31, the Reds were 26-22 and trailed the San Diego Padres by a half-game in the NL West standings. From then until August 16, the Reds went 25-48 and had long left any hopes of winning the division. August 16 was the day the Reds brought Rose back as player-manager, as part of a trade with Montreal, as Rapp was fired.[9]

Season standings[]

NL West W L Pct. GB Home Road
San Diego Padres 92 70 0.568 48–33 44–37
Atlanta Braves 80 82 0.494 12 38–43 42–39
Houston Astros 80 82 0.494 12 43–38 37–44
Los Angeles Dodgers 79 83 0.488 13 40–41 39–42
Cincinnati Reds 70 92 0.432 22 39–42 31–50
San Francisco Giants 66 96 0.407 26 35–46 31–50

Record vs. opponents[]


Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
Team ATL CHC CIN HOU LAD MON NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL
Atlanta 3–9 13–5 12–6 6–12 5–7 4–8 7–5 8–4 7–11 10–8 5–7
Chicago 9–3 7–5 6–6 7–5 10–7 12–6 9–9 8–10 6–6 9–3 13–5
Cincinnati 5–13 5–7 8–10 7–11 7–5 3–9 5–7 7–5 7–11 12–6 4–8
Houston 6–12 6–6 10–8 9–9 7–5 4–8 6–6 6–6 6–12 12–6 8–4
Los Angeles 12–6 5–7 7–11 9–9 6–6 3–9 3–9 4–8 10–8 10–8 6–6
Montreal 7–5 7–10 5–7 5–7 6–6 7–11 11–7 7–11 7–5 7–5 9–9
New York 8–4 6–12 9–3 8–4 9–3 11–7 10–8 12–6 6–6 4–8 7–11
Philadelphia 5-7 9–9 7–5 6–6 9–3 7–11 8–10 7–11 7–5 8–4 8–10
Pittsburgh 4–8 10–8 5–7 6–6 8–4 11–7 6–12 11–7 4–8 6–6 4–14
San Diego 11–7 6–6 11–7 12–6 8–10 5–7 6–6 5–7 8–4 13–5 7–5
San Francisco 8–10 3–9 6–12 6–12 8–10 5–7 8–4 4–8 6–6 5–13 7–5
St. Louis 7–5 5–13 8–4 4–8 6–6 9–9 11–7 10–8 14–4 5–7 5–7


Notable transactions[]

  • March 30, 1984: Dallas Williams was traded by the Reds to the Detroit Tigers for Charlie Nail (minors).[10]
  • August 16, 1984: Tom Lawless was traded by the Reds to the Montreal Expos for Pete Rose. Rose was named player-manager, as Vern Rapp was fired.[11]

Roster[]

1984 Cincinnati Reds roster
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

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

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
C Brad Gulden 107 292 66 .226 4 33
1B Dan Driessen 81 218 61 .280 7 28
2B Ron Oester 150 553 134 .242 3 38
SS Dave Concepción 154 531 130 .245 4 58
3B Nick Esasky 113 322 62 .193 10 45
LF Gary Redus 123 394 100 .254 7 22
CF Eddie Milner 117 336 78 .232 7 29
RF Dave Parker 156 607 173 .285 16 94

Other batters[]

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

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
César Cedeño 110 380 105 .276 10 47
Tom Foley 106 277 70 .253 5 27
Duane Walker 83 195 57 .292 10 28
Dann Bilardello 68 182 38 .209 2 10
Wayne Krenchicki 97 181 54 .298 6 22
Eric Davis 57 174 39 .224 10 30
Tony Pérez 71 137 33 .241 2 15
Dave Van Gorder 38 101 23 .228 0 6
Pete Rose 26 96 35 .365 0 11
Tom Lawless 43 80 20 .250 1 2
Skeeter Barnes 32 42 5 .119 1 3
Alan Knicely 10 29 4 .138 0 5
Paul Householder 14 12 1 .083 0 0
Wade Rowdon 4 7 2 .286 0 0
Alex Treviño 6 6 1 .167 0 0

Pitching[]

Starting pitchers[]

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Mario Soto 33 237.1 18 7 3.53 185
Jeff Russell 33 181.2 6 18 4.26 101
Joe Price 30 171.2 7 13 4.19 129
Jay Tibbs 14 100.2 6 2 2.86 40
Bruce Berenyi 13 51 3 7 6.00 53
Tom Browning 3 23.1 1 0 1.54 14

Other pitchers[]

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

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Tom Hume 54 113.1 4 13 5.64 59
Frank Pastore 24 98.1 3 8 6.50 53
Ron Robinson 12 39.2 1 2 2.72 24
Andy McGaffigan 9 23 0 2 5.48 18
Charlie Puleo 5 22 1 2 5.73 6
Freddie Toliver 3 10 0 0 0.90 4

Relief pitchers[]

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

Player G W L SV ERA SO
Ted Power 78 9 7 11 2.82 81
John Franco 54 6 2 4 2.61 55
Bob Owchinko 49 3 5 2 4.12 60
Bill Scherrer 36 1 1 1 4.99 35
Brad Lesley 16 0 1 2 5.12 7
Keefe Cato 8 0 1 1 8.04 12
Mike Smith 8 1 0 0 5.23 7
Carl Willis 7 0 1 1 3.72 3

Farm system[]

Level Team League Manager
AAA Wichita Aeros American Association Gene Dusan
AA Vermont Reds Eastern League Jack Lind
A Tampa Tarpons Florida State League Marc Bombard
A Cedar Rapids Reds Midwest League Jim Lett
Rookie GCL Reds Gulf Coast League Sam Mejías
Rookie Billings Mustangs Pioneer League

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Vermont

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Brad Gulden Stats".
  2. ^ "Bob Owchinko Stats".
  3. ^ Steve Christmas page at Baseball Reference
  4. ^ Wayne Krenchicki page at Baseball Reference
  5. ^ Fran Mullins page at Baseball Reference
  6. ^ Tony Perez page at Baseball Reference
  7. ^ Dave Parker page at Baseball Reference
  8. ^ "SPORTS PEOPLE; Soto Faces Suspension". The New York Times. June 19, 1984.
  9. ^ https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/CIN/1984-schedule-scores.shtml%7Caccessdate=20140621[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ Dallas Williams page at Baseball Reference
  11. ^ Pete Rose page at Baseball Reference

References[]

Retrieved from ""