| 2004 MLB season | |
|---|---|
| League | Major League Baseball |
| Sport | Baseball |
| Duration | March 30 β October 27, 2004 |
| Games | 162 |
| Teams | 30 |
| TV partner(s) | Fox, ESPN |
| Draft | |
| Top draft pick | Matt Bush |
| Picked by | San Diego Padres |
| Regular Season | |
| Season MVP | AL: Vladimir Guerrero (ANA) NL: Barry Bonds (SF) |
| Postseason | |
| AL champions | Boston Red Sox |
| AL runners-up | New York Yankees |
| NL champions | St. Louis Cardinals |
| NL runners-up | Houston Astros |
| World Series | |
| Venue | |
| Champions | Boston Red Sox |
| Runners-up | St. Louis Cardinals |
| World Series MVP | Manny Ramirez (BOS) |
| MLB seasons | |
π Image
West π Image
Central π Image
East
The 2004 Major League Baseball season ended when the Boston Red Sox defeated the St. Louis Cardinals in a four-game World Series sweep. The Red Sox championship ended an 86-year-long drought known as the Curse of the Bambino. The Red Sox were also the first team in MLB history and the third team from a major North American professional sports league ever to come back from a 3β0 postseason series deficit and win. This happened in the ALCS against the New York Yankees.
The Montreal Expos would play their last season in Montreal, before relocating to Washington DC, becoming the Washington Nationals in 2005.
Statistical leaders
[edit]| Statistic | American League | National League | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AVG | Ichiro Suzuki SEA | .372 | Barry Bonds SF | .362 |
| HR | Manny RamΓrez BOS | 43 | AdriΓ‘n BeltrΓ© LAD | 48 |
| RBI | Miguel Tejada BAL | 150 | Vinny Castilla COL | 131 |
| Wins | Curt Schilling BOS | 21 | Roy Oswalt HOU | 20 |
| ERA | Johan Santana MIN | 2.61 | Jake Peavy SD | 2.27 |
| SO | Johan Santana MIN | 265 | Randy Johnson AZ | 290 |
| SV | Mariano Rivera NYY | 53 | Armando BenΓtez FLA Jason Isringhausen STL |
47 |
| SB | Carl Crawford TB | 59 | Scott Podsednik MIL | 70 |
Standings
[edit]American League
[edit]| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) New York Yankees | 101 | 61 | .623 | β | 57βββ24 | 44βββ37 |
| (4) Boston Red Sox | 98 | 64 | .605 | 3 | 55βββ26 | 43βββ38 |
| Baltimore Orioles | 78 | 84 | .481 | 23 | 38βββ43 | 40βββ41 |
| Tampa Bay Devil Rays | 70 | 91 | .435 | 30Β½ | 41βββ39 | 29βββ52 |
| Toronto Blue Jays | 67 | 94 | .416 | 33Β½ | 40βββ41 | 27βββ53 |
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (3) Minnesota Twins | 92 | 70 | .568 | β | 49βββ32 | 43βββ38 |
| Chicago White Sox | 83 | 79 | .512 | 9 | 46βββ35 | 37βββ44 |
| Cleveland Indians | 80 | 82 | .494 | 12 | 44βββ37 | 36βββ45 |
| Detroit Tigers | 72 | 90 | .444 | 20 | 38βββ43 | 34βββ47 |
| Kansas City Royals | 58 | 104 | .358 | 34 | 33βββ47 | 25βββ57 |
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (2) Anaheim Angels | 92 | 70 | .568 | β | 45βββ36 | 47βββ34 |
| Oakland Athletics | 91 | 71 | .562 | 1 | 52βββ29 | 39βββ42 |
| Texas Rangers | 89 | 73 | .549 | 3 | 51βββ30 | 38βββ43 |
| Seattle Mariners | 63 | 99 | .389 | 29 | 38βββ44 | 25βββ55 |
National League
[edit]| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (2) Atlanta Braves | 96 | 66 | .593 | β | 49βββ32 | 47βββ34 |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 86 | 76 | .531 | 10 | 42βββ39 | 44βββ37 |
| Florida Marlins | 83 | 79 | .512 | 13 | 42βββ38 | 41βββ41 |
| New York Mets | 71 | 91 | .438 | 25 | 38βββ43 | 33βββ48 |
| Montreal Expos | 67 | 95 | .414 | 29 | 35βββ45 | 32βββ50 |
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) St. Louis Cardinals | 105 | 57 | .648 | β | 53βββ28 | 52βββ29 |
| (4) Houston Astros | 92 | 70 | .568 | 13 | 48βββ33 | 44βββ37 |
| Chicago Cubs | 89 | 73 | .549 | 16 | 45βββ37 | 44βββ36 |
| Cincinnati Reds | 76 | 86 | .469 | 29 | 40βββ41 | 36βββ45 |
| Pittsburgh Pirates | 72 | 89 | .447 | 32Β½ | 39βββ41 | 33βββ48 |
| Milwaukee Brewers | 67 | 94 | .416 | 37Β½ | 36βββ45 | 31βββ49 |
| Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (3) Los Angeles Dodgers | 93 | 69 | .574 | β | 49βββ32 | 44βββ37 |
| San Francisco Giants | 91 | 71 | .562 | 2 | 47βββ35 | 44βββ36 |
| San Diego Padres | 87 | 75 | .537 | 6 | 42βββ39 | 45βββ36 |
| Colorado Rockies | 68 | 94 | .420 | 25 | 38βββ43 | 30βββ51 |
| Arizona Diamondbacks | 51 | 111 | .315 | 42 | 29βββ52 | 22βββ59 |
Postseason
[edit]2004 was the last postseason until 2020 where both LCS went to 7 games.
Bracket
[edit]| Division Series (ALDS, NLDS) | League Championship Series (NLCS, ALCS) | World Series | ||||||
| 1 | NY Yankees | 3 | ||||||
| 3 | Minnesota | 1 | ||||||
| 1 | NY Yankees | 3 | ||||||
| American League | ||||||||
| 4 | Boston | 4 | ||||||
| 2 | Anaheim | 0 | ||||||
| 4 | Boston | 3 | ||||||
| AL4 | Boston | 4 | ||||||
| NL1 | St. Louis | 0 | ||||||
| 1 | St. Louis | 3 | ||||||
| 3 | Los Angeles | 1 | ||||||
| 1 | St. Louis | 4 | ||||||
| National League | ||||||||
| 4 | Houston | 3 | ||||||
| 2 | Atlanta | 2 | ||||||
| 4 | Houston | 3 | ||||||
Note: Two teams in the same division could not meet in the division series.
Managers
[edit]| Team | Manager | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Arizona Diamondbacks | Bob Brenly | Replaced during the season by Al Pedrique |
| Atlanta Braves | Bobby Cox | |
| Chicago Cubs | Dusty Baker | |
| Cincinnati Reds | Dave Miley | |
| Colorado Rockies | Clint Hurdle | |
| Florida Marlins | Jack McKeon | |
| Houston AstrosΒ± | Jimy Williams | Replaced during the season by Phil Garner |
| Los Angeles Dodgers | Jim Tracy | |
| Milwaukee Brewers | Ned Yost | |
| Montreal Expos | Frank Robinson | |
| New York Mets | Art Howe | |
| Philadelphia Phillies | Larry Bowa | |
| Pittsburgh Pirates | Lloyd McClendon | |
| St. Louis Cardinals | Tony La Russa | Won the National League pennant |
| San Diego Padres | Bruce Bochy | |
| San Francisco Giants | Felipe Alou |
Β±hosted the MLB All Star Game
Milestones
[edit]The following players reached major milestones in 2004:
Perfect game
[edit]Randy Johnson pitched the 17th perfect game in MLB history on May 18, 2004.
4000 strikeouts
[edit]Randy Johnson struck out Jeff Cirillo on June 29, 2004, for his 4000th strikeout.
500 Home Run Club
[edit]Ken Griffey Jr. β June 20
300 Wins Club
[edit]Greg Maddux β August 7, 2004
Single-Season hits record broken
[edit]Ichiro Suzuki β 262 hits (broke George Sisler's 84-year-old record of 257)
Walk-off home runs
[edit]There were a total of 80 walk-off home runs, which was then the MLB single-season record until 2018.[1]
Awards
[edit]Other awards
[edit]- Edgar MartΓnez Award (Best designated hitter): David Ortiz (BOS)
- Hank Aaron Award: Manny Ramirez (BOS, American); Barry Bonds (SF, National).
- Roberto Clemente Award (Humanitarian): Edgar MartΓnez (SEA).
- Rolaids Relief Man Award: Mariano Rivera (NYY, American); Γric GagnΓ© (LAD, National).
- Warren Spahn Award (Best left-handed pitcher): Johan Santana (MIN)
Player of the Month
[edit]| Month | American League | National League |
|---|---|---|
| April | Carlos BeltrΓ‘n | Barry Bonds |
| May | Melvin Mora | Lance Berkman |
| June | IvΓ‘n RodrΓguez | Jim Thome |
| July | Mark Teixeira | Jim Edmonds |
| August | Ichiro Suzuki | Barry Bonds |
| September | Vladimir Guerrero | AdriΓ‘n BeltrΓ© |
Pitcher of the Month
[edit]| Month | American League | National League |
|---|---|---|
| April | Kevin Brown | Roger Clemens |
| May | Mark Buehrle | Jason Schmidt |
| June | Mark Mulder | Carl Pavano |
| July | Johan Santana | Russ Ortiz |
| August | Johan Santana | Jake Peavy |
| September | Johan Santana | Carlos Zambrano |
Rookie of the Month
[edit]| Month | American League | National League |
|---|---|---|
| April | Gerald Laird | Khalil Greene |
| May | Kevin Youkilis | Terrmel Sledge |
| June | Bobby Crosby | Jason Bay |
| July | Robb Quinlan | Jason Bay |
| August | Frank Francisco | Khalil Greene |
| September | Ross Gload | Jason Bay |
Home field attendance and payroll
[edit]| Team name | Wins | %Β± | Home attendance | %Β± | Per game | Est. payroll | %Β± |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York Yankees[2] | 101 | 0.0% | 3,775,292 | 8.9% | 46,609 | $184,193,950 | 20.6% |
| Los Angeles Dodgers[3] | 93 | 9.4% | 3,488,283 | 11.1% | 43,065 | $92,902,001 | β12.3% |
| Anaheim Angels[4] | 92 | 19.5% | 3,375,677 | 10.3% | 41,675 | $100,534,667 | 27.2% |
| San Francisco Giants[5] | 91 | β9.0% | 3,256,854 | β0.2% | 39,718 | $82,019,166 | β1.0% |
| Philadelphia Phillies[6] | 86 | 0.0% | 3,250,092 | 43.8% | 40,125 | $93,219,167 | 31.7% |
| Chicago Cubs[7] | 89 | 1.1% | 3,170,154 | 7.0% | 38,660 | $90,560,000 | 13.4% |
| Houston Astros[8] | 92 | 5.7% | 3,087,872 | 25.8% | 38,122 | $75,397,000 | 6.1% |
| St. Louis Cardinals[9] | 105 | 23.5% | 3,048,427 | 4.7% | 37,635 | $84,340,333 | 0.7% |
| San Diego Padres[10] | 87 | 35.9% | 3,016,752 | 48.6% | 37,244 | $55,384,833 | 22.5% |
| Seattle Mariners[11] | 63 | β32.3% | 2,940,731 | β10.0% | 35,863 | $81,515,834 | β6.3% |
| Boston Red Sox[12] | 98 | 3.2% | 2,837,294 | 4.2% | 35,028 | $127,298,500 | 27.4% |
| Baltimore Orioles[13] | 78 | 9.9% | 2,744,018 | 11.8% | 33,877 | $51,623,333 | β30.1% |
| Arizona Diamondbacks[14] | 51 | β39.3% | 2,519,560 | β10.2% | 31,106 | $69,780,750 | β13.5% |
| Texas Rangers[15] | 89 | 25.4% | 2,513,685 | 20.0% | 31,033 | $55,050,417 | β46.8% |
| Colorado Rockies[16] | 68 | β8.1% | 2,338,069 | 0.2% | 28,865 | $65,445,167 | β2.6% |
| Atlanta Braves[17] | 96 | β5.0% | 2,327,565 | β3.1% | 28,735 | $90,182,500 | β15.1% |
| New York Mets[18] | 71 | 7.6% | 2,318,951 | 8.3% | 28,629 | $102,035,970 | β12.9% |
| Cincinnati Reds[19] | 76 | 10.1% | 2,287,250 | β2.9% | 28,238 | $46,915,250 | β21.0% |
| Oakland Athletics[20] | 91 | β5.2% | 2,201,516 | β0.7% | 27,179 | $59,425,667 | 18.2% |
| Milwaukee Brewers[21] | 67 | β1.5% | 2,062,382 | 21.3% | 25,462 | $27,528,500 | β32.2% |
| Chicago White Sox[22] | 83 | β3.5% | 1,930,537 | β0.5% | 23,834 | $65,212,500 | 27.8% |
| Detroit Tigers[23] | 72 | 67.4% | 1,917,004 | 40.1% | 23,667 | $46,832,000 | β4.8% |
| Minnesota Twins[24] | 92 | 2.2% | 1,911,490 | β1.8% | 23,599 | $53,890,000 | β2.9% |
| Toronto Blue Jays[25] | 67 | β22.1% | 1,900,041 | 5.6% | 23,457 | $50,017,000 | β2.4% |
| Cleveland Indians[26] | 80 | 17.6% | 1,814,401 | 4.9% | 22,400 | $34,319,300 | β29.4% |
| Florida Marlins[27] | 83 | β8.8% | 1,723,105 | 32.2% | 21,539 | $42,143,042 | β14.8% |
| Kansas City Royals[28] | 58 | β30.1% | 1,661,478 | β6.7% | 20,768 | $47,609,000 | 17.5% |
| Pittsburgh Pirates[29] | 72 | β4.0% | 1,580,031 | β3.5% | 19,750 | $32,227,929 | β41.2% |
| Tampa Bay Devil Rays[30] | 70 | 11.1% | 1,274,911 | 20.4% | 15,936 | $29,856,667 | 52.1% |
| Montreal Expos[31] | 67 | β19.3% | 749,550 | β26.9% | 9,369 | $41,197,500 | β20.7% |
Television coverage
[edit]This was the fourth season that national television coverage was split between ESPN and Fox Sports. ESPN and ESPN2 aired selected weeknight and Sunday night games, and selected Division Series playoff games. Fox televised Saturday baseball, the All-Star Game, selected Division Series games, both League Championship Series, and the World Series.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "There's a new MLB walk-off home run record". MLB.com.
- ^ "New York Yankees Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Los Angeles Dodgers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Los Angeles Angels Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "San Francisco Giants Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Philadelphia Phillies Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Chicago Cubs Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Houston Astros Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "St. Louis Cardinals Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "San Diego Padres Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Seattle Mariners Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Boston Red Sox Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Baltimore Orioles Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Arizona Diamondbacks Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Texas Rangers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Colorado Rockies Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Atlanta Braves Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "New York Mets Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Cincinnati Reds Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Oakland Athletics Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Milwaukee Brewers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Chicago White Sox Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Detroit Tigers Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Minnesota Twins Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Toronto Blue Jays Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Cleveland Indians Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Florida Marlins Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Kansas City Royals Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Pittsburgh Pirates Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Tampa Bay Rays Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
- ^ "Washington Nationals Attendance, Stadiums and Park Factors". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 8, 2020.
