The San Diego Padres
are a Major League Baseball team based in San Diego, California. They play in the National League Western Division. Founded in 1969, the Padres have won the National League Pennant twice, in 1984 and 1998, losing in the World Series both times.
The Padres are one of four teams to never have a pitcher toss a no-hit game, and are one of just three teams to have never had a player hit for the cycle.
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Franchise history
Pre 1970s: Beginnings
The Padres adopted their name from the
Pacific Coast League team which arrived in San Diego in 1936. That
minor league franchise won the PCL title in 1937, led by then-18-year-old San Diegan
Ted Williams.
In 1969, the San Diego Padres joined the ranks of
Major League Baseball as one of four new expansion teams, along with the
Montreal Expos (now the
Washington Nationals), the
Kansas City Royals and the
Seattle Pilots (now the
Milwaukee Brewers). Their original owner was
C. Arnholt Smith, a prominent San Diego businessman and former owner of the
PCL Padres whose interests included banking, tuna fishing, hotels, real estate and an airline. Despite initial excitement, the guidance of longtime baseball executive
Buzzie Bavasi and a new
playing field, the team struggled; the Padres finished in last place in each of its first six seasons in the
NL West, losing 100 games or more four times. One of the few bright spots on the team during the early years was
first baseman and slugger
Nate Colbert, an expansion draftee from the
Houston Astros and still (as of 2007) the Padres' career leader in home runs.
Washington Padres
Before the 1974 season began, the Padres were on the verge of being sold to
Joseph Danzansky, who was planning to move the franchise to
Washington, D.C. by the beginning of the 1974 season. People were so convinced the transfer would happen that new uniforms were designed. Even the baseball card companies were fooled. About half of the Padres' player cards printed by
Topps that season displayed "Washington National League" as the team name. But C. Arnholt Smith changed his mind, and instead sold the Padres to
McDonald's co-founder
Ray Kroc, who was not interested in moving the team and kept the team in San Diego. The nation's capital would have to wait until after the 2004 season, when the
Montreal Expos, the Padres' sister National League expansion team in 1969, transferred to the District of Columbia and became the
Washington Nationals.
1970s: Winfield, Jones, Fingers and Ozzie
150px
In his first home game as the Padres' new owner in 1974,
Ray Kroc grabbed the public address system microphone and apologized to fans for the poor performance of the team, saying, "I've never seen such stupid ballplaying in my life." At the same time, a
streaker raced across the field, eluding security personnel. Kroc shouted, "Throw him in jail!" The following season, 1975, would be the first season that the Padres would not finish in the National League West cellar (finishing fourth), and brought the promise of an owner who would make the necessary changes to the organization.
Nate Colbert is one of two major-league baseball players (
Stan Musial is the other) to have hit five home runs in a doubleheader, a feat he accomplished as a Padre. He collected 13 RBIs in that doubleheader, still a major league record. Although the Padres continued to struggle after Colbert's departure via trade to the
Detroit Tigers in 1974, they did feature star outfielder
Dave Winfield, who came to the Padres in 1973 from the
University of Minnesota without having played a single game in the
minor leagues. Winfield was also drafted by the
Minnesota Vikings of the
National Football League, the
Atlanta Hawks of the
National Basketball Association and the
Utah Stars of the
American Basketball Association.
Winfield took over where Colbert left off, starring in the Padres outfield from 1973 until 1980, when he joined the
New York Yankees. In seven seasons, Winfield played in 1,117 games for San Diego and collected 1,134 hits, 154 home runs and drove in 626 runs. But most importantly, he helped the team out of the
National League West basement for the first time in 1975, under the guidance of manager
John McNamara, who took over the club at the start of the 1974 season.
Winfield's emergence as a legitimate star coincided with the turnaround of a promising young left-handed pitcher named
Randy Jones, who had suffered through 22 losses in 1974. Jones became the first San Diego pitcher to win 20 games in 1975, going 20-12 in 37 outings as the Padres finished in fourth place with a 71-91 record, 37 games behind the
Cincinnati Reds.
Jones won 22 games in 1976, winning the
Cy Young Award in the process, another franchise first. The club set a new high with 73 wins, but fell to fifth place.
Jones slipped to 6-12 in 1977, and not even the acquisition of
Rollie Fingers could help the Padres escape the bottom half of the division. Only Winfield and fellow outfielder
George Hendrick cracked the 20-homer barrier, and the pitching staff was filled with a group of unknowns and youngsters, few of whom would enjoy much success at the major league level.
The 1978 season brought hope to baseball fans in San Diego, thanks to the arrival a young shortstop named
Ozzie Smith, who arrived on the scene and turned the baseball world on its ears with an acrobatic style that redefined how the position should be played in the field. The Padres hosted the
All-Star Game that summer. The National League won the contest 7-3 thanks to an MVP performance by
Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman
Steve Garvey, who would play a crucial role for San Diego in the not-too-distant future.
Winfield and Fingers represented the team at the game, but conspicuously absent was starting pitcher
Gaylord Perry, who joined the Padres after spending three years with the
Texas Rangers. At 39 years of age and coming off a 15-14 season with Texas, little was expected of him. All Perry did that summer was post a 21-6 record and a 2.73
earned run average, edging Montreal's
Ross Grimsley to earn the Padres' second
Cy Young Award in three seasons. San Diego also picked up another first that summer, compiling an 84-78 mark for manager
Roger Craig, the only time in 10 seasons the team finished a season with a winning percentage above .500.
The good times did not last, as the Padres closed out the decade with another losing season in 1979, a 68-93 record that cost Craig his job. Winfield was the lone bright spot, leading the National League with 118 RBIs. The good times continued to fade out as Winfield signed a 10-year contract with the
New York Yankees after the 1980 season.
1984: The first pennant
The 1984 season began with a shock: Ray Kroc died of heart disease on January 14. Ownership of the team passed to his third wife,
Joan B. Kroc. The team would wear Ray's initials, "RAK" on their jersey's left sleeve during the entire season.
Fortunately, happier times were ahead for the team. The Padres finished at 92-70 in 1984 and won the National League West championship, despite having no players with 100-RBI and only two batters with 20-HR. They were managed by
Dick Williams and had an offense that featured veterans
Steve Garvey,
Garry Templeton,
Graig Nettles,
Alan Wiggins as well as Hall-of-Famer
Tony Gwynn, who captured his first of what would be eight National League batting championships that year (he would also win in 1987-89 and from 1994-97; Gwynn shares the National League record with
Honus Wagner). Gwynn, who also would win five National League Gold Gloves during his career, joined the Padres in 1982 following starring roles in both baseball and
basketball at
San Diego State University (he still holds the school record for career basketball assists), and after having been selected in the previous year by both the Padres in the baseball draft and by the then
San Diego Clippers in the
National Basketball Association draft. The Padres pitching staff in 1984 featured Eric Show (15-9), Ed Whitson (14-8), Mark Thurmond (14-8), Tim Lollar (11-13), and
Rich "Goose" Gossage as their closer (10-6, 2.90 ERA and 25 saves).
[1]
In the
1984 NLCS, the Padres faced the
NL East champion
Chicago Cubs, who were making their first post-season appearance since 1945 and featured NL
Most Valuable Player Ryne Sandberg and
Cy Young Award winner
Rick Sutcliffe. The Cubs would win the first two games at
Wrigley Field, and were less than two innings away from a series sweep when their luck changed. The Padres swept the final three games at then San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium (the highlight arguably being Steve Garvey's dramatic, game winning home run off of
Lee Smith in Game 4) to win the 1984 National League pennant.
[2]
In the
1984 World Series, the Padres faced the powerful
Detroit Tigers, who steamrolled through the regular season with 104 victories (and had started out with a 35-5 record, the best ever through the first 40 games). The Tigers were managed by
Sparky Anderson and featured shortstop and native San Diegan
Alan Trammell and outfielder
Kirk Gibson, along with Lance Parrish and DH Darrell Evans. The pitching staff was bolstered by ace
Jack Morris (19-11, 3.60 ERA), Dan Petry (18-8), Milt Wilcox (17-8), and closer Willie Hernandez (9-3, 1.92 ERA with 32 saves).
[3] Jack Morris would win games 1 and 4 and the Tigers would go on to win the Series 4-games-to-1.
[4]
1985–95: Tough times following a pennant
After the Padres won the pennant in 1984, they had some tough times.
Tony Gwynn continued to win batting titles (including batting .394 in 1994). The Padres would come close in 1985. They would field eight All-Stars (manager
Dick Williams,
Tony Gwynn,
Graig Nettles,
Rich Gossage,
Terry Kennedy,
Garry Templeton,
Steve Garvey, and
La Marr Hoyt) at the 1985 All-Star Game in
Minnesota. However, they collapsed at the end of the season, finishing tied for second with the
Houston Astros behind the first-place
Los Angeles Dodgers.
In 1987, rookie catcher
Benito Santiago hit in 34 straight games, earning him the
NL Rookie of the Year Award. However, the Padres finished dead last in 1987, thanks to the managing of the tempestuous
Larry Bowa. The next season, rookie second baseman
Roberto Alomar would make his debut, forming a double play combination with veteran shortstop
Garry Templeton. During the 1988 season, Bowa was replaced by
Jack McKeon and the Padres won 83 games, finishing in third place. In 1989, the Padres finished 89-73 thanks to
Cy Young Award-winning closer
Mark Davis. Between 1989 and 1990, friction dominated the Padres' clubhouse as
Tony Gwynn had constant shouting matches with slugger
Jack Clark. But as the franchise player, Gwynn prevailed as Clark finished his career with the Red Sox.
Midway through the 1990 season,
Joan Kroc wanted to sell the team. But she wanted a commitment to San Diego. So Kroc sold it to television producer
Tom Werner. After the ownership change, the old brown that remained in Padres uniforms since their inception were supplanted by navy blue, a nod to the vintage 1940's PCL franchise colors. Shortly after the ownership change, a trade was made with the
Toronto Blue Jays where
Joe Carter and Roberto Alomar were traded for
Fred McGriff and
Tony Fernandez. In 1992, the Padres lineup featured the "Four Tops":
Gary Sheffield,
Fred McGriff,
Tony Fernández, and
Tony Gwynn. However, Fernandez would go to the
New York Mets, McGriff went to the division-winning
Atlanta Braves, and Sheffield would go to the expansion
Florida Marlins. Although extremely unpopular at the time, it was the Sheffield trade that brought in pitcher
Trevor Hoffman, who was virtually unknown to Padres fans. While Sheffield led Florida to a World Championship in 1997, Hoffman would be the next franchise player behind
Dave Winfield and
Tony Gwynn. The Padres would finish dead last in the strike-shortened 1994 season, but Gwynn hit .394 that year (the most since Ted Williams hit over .400 in 1941). After that season, the Padres made a mega-trade with Houston reeling in
Ken Caminiti,
Steve Finley, and others. In November 1995,
Kevin Towers was promoted from scouting director to general manager.
1996–97: Building a winner
In 1996, under new owner
John Moores (a software tycoon who purchased controlling ownership in the team in 1994 from Tom Werner, who subsequently formed a syndicate that purchased the
Boston Red Sox) and team president
Larry Lucchino, and with a team managed by former Padres catcher
Bruce Bochy (a member of the 1984 NL championship squad), the team won the NL West in an exciting race, sweeping the
Los Angeles Dodgers at
Dodger Stadium in the final series of the regular season. The '96 team featured Gwynn, who won his seventh National League batting championship, National League
MVP Ken Caminiti, premier leadoff hitter
Rickey Henderson, pitcher
Fernando Valenzuela, first baseman
Wally Joyner and
outfielder Steve Finley. The Padres had led the NL West early in the season only to falter June, but came back in July and battled the Dodgers the rest of the way. However, they were defeated in the National League Division Series by the
Tony La Russa-led
St. Louis Cardinals, 3 games to 0.
The Padres suffered an off-year in 1997, plagued by a pitching slump. The one silver lining was Tony Gwynn's eighth and final National League batting title, won in the final days of the season after a down-to-the wire duel with the
Colorado Rockies'
Larry Walker. Walker barely missed becoming the first
Triple Crown winner in baseball since
Carl Yastrzemski in 1967.
1998: The second pennant
150px In 1998, Henderson and Valenzuela were gone, but newly acquired (from the 1997 World Series champion
Florida Marlins) pitcher
Kevin Brown had a sensational year (his only one with the Padres) and outfielder/slugger
Greg Vaughn hit 50 home runs (overlooked in that season of the
Mark McGwire-
Sammy Sosa race). Managed by Bruce Bochy and aided by the talents of players such as Tony Gwynn, Ken Caminiti, Wally Joyner, Steve Finley, pitcher Andy Ashby and premier closer
Trevor Hoffman (4-2, 1.48 ERA and 53 saves), the Padres had their best year in history, finishing 98-64 and winning the NL West division crown.
[5]
The Padres went on to defeat the
Houston Astros in the
1998 NLDS, 3 games to 1, behind solid pitching by Brown and Hoffman, and home runs by
Greg Vaughn,
Wally Joyner and
Jim Leyritz (who homered in 3 of the 4 games).
[6]
In the
1998 NLCS, the Padres faced the
Atlanta Braves, who had won the National League East with an astonishing 106-56 record. The offense was paced by talent such as
Andrés Galarraga,
Chipper Jones,
Andruw Jones and
Javy López. Their pitching staff had the perennial big-3 of
Greg Maddux (18-9, 2.22 ERA),
Tom Glavine (20-6, 2.47 ERA), and
John Smoltz (17-3, 2.90 ERA), as well as
Kevin Millwood (17-8, 4.08 ERA) and
Denny Neagle (16-11, 3.55 ERA). However, it was the Padres that would prevail, 4 games to 2, with ace Kevin Brown pitching a complete game shutout in game 2 (winning 3-0).
[7] Steve Finley caught a pop fly for the final out, as the Padres clinched the series.
In the
1998 World Series the Padres faced the powerhouse
New York Yankees, who had steamrolled through the season with a 114-48 record and drew acclaim as one their greatest teams of all time. There was no offensive player with more than 30 home runs, in contrast to the teams of the 1920s, or 1950's, but they had four players with 24+ and eight with 17+. Yankee pitching had been paced by
David Cone (20–7, 3.55),
Andy Pettitte (16–11, 4.24),
David Wells (18–4, 3.49),
Hideki Irabu (13–9, 4.06) and
Orlando Hernández (12–4, 3.13).
Mariano Rivera, their closer, was excellent once again (3–0, 1.91 ERA with 36 saves).
[8]
The Yankees swept the Padres 4 games to 0. Mariano Rivera closed out 3 of the 4 games. One of the few bright spots of the series for the Padres was a home run by Tony Gwynn, not normally a power hitter, in Game 1 that hit the facing of the right-field upper deck at
Yankee Stadium and put the Padres ahead briefly, 5-2. But the Yankees would score 7 runs in the 7th inning en route to a 9-6 victory.
[9]
thumb
1999–2003: Tough times following a pennant part II
The Padres opened their 1999 season in Monterrey, Mexico versus the Colorado Rockies. On August 6, 1999, Tony Gwynn got his 3,000th hit (a single) against the
Montreal Expos at
Olympic Stadium. After five straight losing seasons in
Qualcomm Stadium (1999-2003), the Padres moved into newly built
PETCO Park.
On October 7, 2001, in a post-game ceremony at
Qualcomm Stadium,
Tony Gwynn made an emotional farewell to the team that had been his only major-league home. In the game played that day,
Rickey Henderson, who in the meantime had rejoined the Padres, collected his 3,000th major-league base hit, a double. Gwynn struck his final major-league hit, also a double, in the previous game. He is presently head coach of the
San Diego State University Aztecs, his alma mater. He was inducted into the
National Baseball Hall of Fame on July 29, 2007.
Also in 2001,
Dave Winfield became the first player to be elected to the
National Baseball Hall of Fame as a Padre.
2004–Present: PETCO Park and a new era
2004: PETCO Park opens
PETCO Park is situated in downtown near San Diego's Gaslamp District, the main entrance located just two blocks from the downtown terminal of the
San Diego Trolley light-rail system. With new amenities and a revitalization of the downtown neighborhood, fan interest renewed. Modeled after recent successes in downtown ballpark building (such as San Francisco's AT&T Park), and incorporating San Diego history in the form of the preservation of the facade of the historic Western Metals Company building (now the left-field corner, the corner of the building substituting for the left field foul pole), the new Petco Park is a sharp contrast to their previous home at Qualcomm (Jack Murphy) Stadium which was a cookie-cutter type football-baseball facility located in an outer, mostly commercial-industrial, area of the city near an interstate interchange.
With the ocean air prevalent and a sharp, clean park to play in, the Padres began to win again. The new stadium also acquired a reputation as a pitchers' park, with notable complaints from some of the Padres batters themselves (deep center field and evenings with dense foggy air). The Padres finished the 2004 season with an 87–75 record, good enough for 3rd in the NL West.
The team somewhat rebranded itself going into the 2004 season, with new colors (navy blue and sand brown), new uniforms and a new advertising slogan, "Play Downtown", referring to the near-downtown location of the new ballpark.
One of the bricks at the center plaza of Petco Park was secretly purchased by the
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, an
animal rights organization that has protested the breeding and purchasing of the animals sold at Petco stores. The brick reads, "Break out your cold ones. Toast the Padres. Enjoy this champion organization." The first letter of each word is really an
acrostic urging people to
boycott the stores.
2005: The worst division winner
In 2005, the Western Division Champion Padres finished with the lowest-ever winning percentage for a division champion (or for that matter, a postseason qualifier) in a non-strike season, 82-80. Three teams in the stronger Eastern Division finished with better records than San Diego but failed to qualify for the playoffs, including second-place Philadelphia, which won 88 games and all six of its contests with the Padres. There had been some speculation that the Padres would be the first team in history to win a division and finish below .500, but their victory over the
Los Angeles Dodgers on September 30 gave them their 81st victory. In the
NLDS, the reigning National League champion St. Louis Cardinals, who finished the season with the majors' best record, swept the Padres in three consecutive games. Thus the Padres finished the season with an overall regular-and-post-season record of 82-83, the first post-season qualifier in a normal-length season to lose more games than it won overall.
The 2005 Padres featured bright spots, however, including ace pitcher
Jake Peavy, the NL strikeout leader, and closer
Trevor Hoffman, who claimed his 400th save.
2006: Another division title
The Padres started April 2006 with a 9–15 record and were stuck in the cellar of the NL West.
However, after going 19–10 in May, the club moved into first place in the division. Closer
Trevor Hoffman was elected to the
2006 MLB All-Star Game in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, threw one inning in that game and got the loss. On September 24 (the last home game of the regular season), Hoffman became the all-time saves leader when he recorded his 479th career save, breaking
Lee Smith's record of 478 (Hoffman's career total as of the end of the season was 482). Hoffman's 2006 campaign (2.14 ERA, 46 saves in 51 opportunities through 65 games pitched) was one of his best. The 2006 Padres would attribute their success largely to the team's pitching staff. Their ERA was 3.87, first in the NL and trailing only the
Detroit Tigers in all of MLB.
On September 30, 2006, the Padres clinched a playoff berth with a 3–1 win over the
Arizona Diamondbacks. In the final game of the season, the Padres defeated the Diamondbacks 7-6 to win back to back division titles for the first time in team history (they were tied with the Dodgers for the division title, but because of winning the season series against them, the division title went to them and the wild card went to the Dodgers). The final out of the final game of the 2006 regular season — confirming the Padres as Division champions — was a highly unusual play. With Trevor Hoffman pitching the 9th, 2 out, Diamondback Chris Young was on first. Alberto Callaspo hit a grounder past first. Second baseman Josh Barfield fielded and threw wildly to first, forcing Gonzalez to come off the bag. However, Gonzalez then threw to Khalil Greene at second, beating but not tagging Young. Second base umpire Larry Poncino initially called safe because of the no-tag, but Padres manager Bruce Bochy successfully argued that the force play at second did not need a tag to be declared out. The game, and the season, ended with a changed call. TV replay, however, clearly showed that Greene was off the bag as well, so the original call may have been correct. This call, understandably, was greeted by a long and loud chorus of boos by the Diamondbacks fans who packed Chase Field to bid farewell to Luis Gonzalez.
Only 53 teams in the modern era have posted sub-.500 records in April and survived to make the postseason. The San Diego Padres, achieved the feat in both 2005 and 2006.
The Padres opened the
2006 National League Division Series at home against the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday, October 3, 2006. After losing the first two games at home (5-1 and 2-0 respectively), they won game 3 at
Busch Stadium 3–1, but were eliminated with a 6–2 loss in Game 4, when the Cardinals, who trailed 2–0 before their first at-bat, scored six unanswered runs (two in the first, and four in the sixth) for the win.
Overall the Padres have a post-season record of 12–22; they have lost 10 of their last 11 games since winning the National League pennant in 1998.
One key offseason trade between the San Diego Padres' General Manager, Kevin Towers, and the Texas Rangers' General Manager, Jon Daniels, would prove to have a dramatic impact on their 2006 season. The Padres dealt starting pitcher Adam Eaton, middle reliever Akinori Otsuka, and minor-league catcher Billy Killian in exchange for starting pitcher Chris Young (a star at
Princeton University), left fielder Terrmel Sledge, and first baseman Adrian Gonzalez. Gonzalez would take over the everyday duties at first base, batting .304 with a club-leading 24 home runs and 82 RBI in his first year as a full-time starter. Sledge would hit .229 in limited major league action. Chris Young proved to be the real story, however, as he would go 11-5 with a 3.46 ERA (6th best in the National League) and allowed just 6.72 hits per 9 innings pitched - best in the majors.
2006 also ended up being the last year of
Bruce Bochy's tenure as the manager of the Padres, taking the managerial position for their divisional rivals, the
San Francisco Giants. He was replaced by Bud Black, a San Diego State University alumni and former pitching coach of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
2007: Falling short
On Sunday, April 1, 2007, Major League Baseball's 2007 Opening Night, the Padres announced that they had agreed to terms on a four-year contract with 1B
Adrian Gonzalez, keeping him in San Diego until 2010 with a club option for 2011. Prior to this contract agreement the Padres had offered to renew Gonzalez's contract during the offseason at $380,500, only $500 over the league minimum for the 2007 season.
The Padres' 2007 season began April 3 in an away game against the
San Francisco Giants, winning it 7-0 in front of a capacity crowd of 42,773 at
AT&T Park, defeating $126 million staff-ace Barry Zito in his Giants debut. The Padres bullpen has continued to be the team's strength as in recent years, opening the season with 28 1/3 scoreless innings, a Major League record to start a season. At the start of the season the Padres starting rotation order was as follows:
Jake Peavy,
Chris Young,
Clay Hensley (injured, replaced by
Justin Germano),
Greg Maddux,
David Wells.
On June 4, 2007,
Jake Peavy was named NL Pitcher of the Month after going 4-0 with a 0.79 ERA in May. The next day,
Trevor Hoffman was named the “DHL Presents the Major League Baseball Delivery Man of the Month Award” for May 2007. The award recognizes the most outstanding relief pitcher during each month of the regular season.
On June 6, 2007,
Trevor Hoffman became the first pitcher in major league history to record 500 saves, 498 of them coming as a Padre (the first 2 were as a Florida Marlin).
The Padres ended the regular season in an 89-73 tie for the NL wild card with the Colorado Rockies. In a cruel piece of irony, on September 29, 2007, the Padres were within one out and one strike of clinching the
National League Wild Card berth, but
Tony Gwynn, Jr., son of the longtime Padres legend, tripled against Hoffman to tie the game. The Padres went on to lose that game, and the one that followed, even though the
Milwaukee Brewers had been eliminated from the pennant race and had nothing left to play for. The Padres then met the Rockies on October 1, 2007 in Denver for a
one-game playoff to decide the wild card winner. Despite having Jake Peavy start the game and bringing in Trevor Hoffman in the bottom of the 13th inning to try to hold an 8-6 lead, the Padres' season ended when the Rockies rallied to win 9-8. It ended on a controversial call on a sacrifice fly where many questioned whether
Matt Holliday ever touched home plate, leaving Padre fans saying "Holliday never touched home!"
To many Padres fans, however, the last call at the plate seemed irrelevant. Between Hoffman's two blown saves in the last three games, the Rockies' incredible surge at the end of the season and the season-long slump by the Padres' offense, a Padres postseason appearance just wasn't meant to be.
On November 15, Jake Peavy won the National League Cy Young Award by unanimous ballot. He was the fourth Padre to capture the pitching award.
The Padres entered the 2007-08 offseason with a number of questions, including the ability of Trevor Hoffman to close games past his 40th birthday, the ongoing inability to hold runners on base (the Padres' caught-stealing ratio in 2007 was one of the worst in baseball history), two holes in the back of the starting rotation, and the possible departure of
Mike Cameron to free agency. The two holes in the rotation were filled by former Dodger
Randy Wolf and
Mark Prior and the club dealt for
Jim Edmonds to replace Cameron. Additionally,
Milton Bradley was signed by the
Texas Rangers.
The Padres signed Mark Prior to a one-year deal in the off-season. Prior, a University of San Diego HS graduate (now Cathedral HS), joins a team that consists of players that were also local prep stars, Brian Giles (Granite Hills HS), Adrian Gonzalez (Eastlake HS), and Oscar Robles (Montgomery HS). Recent Padres teams had also included Dave Roberts (Rancho Buena Vista HS), David Wells (Point Loma HS), and Marcus Giles (Granite Hills HS).
2008-present: struggles
The Padres started the 2008 campaign March 31, in San Diego against the Houston Astros and won the series 3–1.
2007 All-Star Chris Young pitched in the second game of the season, a 2–1 win, and Trevor Hoffman, the game's all-time saves leader, wrapped up the ninth for the save. The Los Angeles Dodgers came into town and took two of three. 2007 Cy Young winner Jake Peavy picked up the only win during the Dodgers' series. At the end of the opening homestand, the Padres were 3–3.
The Padres traveled to San Francisco, hoping to fatten up on former manager Bruce Bochy's Giants, but the now-Bondsless bay dwellers took two of three.In Los Angeles, the Padres won two of three, pushing their record back to .500.
On April 17, 2008 during the series against the
Colorado Rockies at
PETCO Park, the Padres played the longest game in team history, in terms of innings (22), losing 2–1. The game was the second longest in team history, in terms of time, played in 6 hours, 16 minutes. Following that game, which sapped the team's bullpen strength, the Padres stumbled, dropping games at home, where they struggled to score runs, and on the road, where they committed uncharacteristic errors and failed to hold leads. Returning home after a humbling three-game sweep in Atlanta in early May, the Padres cut Jim Edmonds, the Cardinals castoff who had been brought in after the Padres failed to sign Mike Cameron to an new deal in the offseason. With former Indian
Jody Gerut now in center, the Padres won the three-game weekend home series with the Rockies and motored to Chicago with the hopes of winning three of four to get the season back on track. Instead, the Cubs, with Jim Edmonds in center, won three of four and booted the Padres from the Windy City into an interleague series with the Mariners, their Peoria, Ariz. spring training neighbors. The Mariners used speed ---- and a late inning burst of power from
Adrián Beltré in one game ---- to win the series and shove the Padres deeper into their early-season hole. After sweeping the
New York Mets in a four game series that ended on June 8, the Padres climbed to 7 games back of first place Arizona. The sweep put the Mets 7 and a half games behind the first place
Philadelphia Phillies, sending the Padres and the Mets, expansion teams in the 1960s, in different directions. The Padres won two of three games in a series against the Dodgers at Petco Park. There was talk in San Diego that the Padres had a serious chance to get back in the race in a week NL West. A road trip sent the Padres to play the Indians in Cleveland, where they lost two of the three games. During their final trip to Yankee Stadium, the site of Tony Gwynn's upperdeck World Series blast, the Padres were swept by the Yankees.
They returned to Petco and dropped two of three to the Tigers. They were then swept by the Twins and Mariners. Returning to National League competition didn't help much, as Padres lost two of three in Colorado to the Rockies. Powered by former Diamondbacks outfielder Scott Hairston, the Padres won two of three in Arizona. The team couldn't sustain the momentum however and they lost two of three to the Marlins at Petco Park. In the last series before the All-Star break, the Padres lost two of three to the Braves. Adrian Gonzalez represented the Padres at the All-Star Game at Yankee Stadium, going 1-3 with an RBI. Gonzalez made a nice scoop on a throw from catcher Russell Martin during a tense moment late in the game but he struck out with a chance to drive in the go-ahead run late in the game. According to media reports, Gonzalez was asked during an All-Star game media session what it would take for the Padres to make the playoffs. He said 30 wins. When the interviewer asked if he thought that was possible, Gonzalez glared at the interviewer and didn't answer the question.
On July 17, the Padres traded former San Diego State great Tony Clark to the Diamondbacks for minor league pitcher Evan Scribner. Following the All-Star break, the Padres would continue to struggle, getting swept in a four game series in St. Louis and losing two of three in Cincinnati. A trip to Pittsburgh proved to be the tonic the team needed. The Padres won three of four in the Steel City and during the series the Pirates traded former Padre underachiever Xavier Nady to the Yankees for prospects. Back home, the Padres won the first game of the series against the division leading Diamondbacks. The win gave Greg Maddux 351 career wins and he tipped his hat to the crowd when he left with a lead. Late in August, the team parted ways with
Greg Maddux by trading him to the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
As this disastrous season started to come to a close, questions about the coaching staff started swirling like crazy. In mid-September, Hitting Coach
Wally Joyner resigned due to the teams lackluster offense and a difference in philosophy with upper management (most notably, CEO
Sandy Alderson). It seems that Joyner beat the Padres to the punch, as he was likely to be replaced at the end of the season. The team finished off a 63–99 season on September 28 with a 10–6 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates finishing 5th in the NL West, 21 games behind the division leader
Los Angeles Dodgers.
On September 29, the team renewed the contracts of Manager
Bud Black, Pitching Coach
Darren Balsley, Bullpen Coach
Darrell Akerfelds, 3rd Base Coach
Glenn Hoffman (brother of closer
Trevor Hoffman) and 1st Base Coach
Rick Renteria. Only Bench Coach
Craig Colbert was not renewed and because of
Wally Joyner's earlier resignation the team had no Hitting Coach to bring back. On Oct. 10, the Padres offered
Trevor Hoffman a $4 million salary for 2009 plus a $4 million club option in 2010 then on Nov. 11th the Padres withdrew the $4 million offer to the all-time saves leader and making him a free agent.
[10]
The Padres opened 2009 April 6 versus the rival
Los Angeles Dodgers at home, losing 4-1 and splitting the four game series. They then swept the Giants, also at home in three games. Then they took 2 of 3 from the Mets to ruin the 1st series at Citi Field. After the 1st 3 series the Pads were tied with the Dodgers for 1st place at 7-3. After the hot start however, the Padres stumbled and were 25-25 as of May 31. Early in the season, the Padres acquired
Tony Gwynn, Jr., son of franchise great
Tony Gwynn from the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Spring training games
The team plays spring training games at the
Peoria Sports Complex in
Peoria, Arizona. They share the stadium with the
Seattle Mariners.
During the 1980s (and continuing through 1994), the Padres held Spring Training in
Yuma, Arizona. Due to the short driving distance and direct highway route (170 miles, all on
Interstate 8), Yuma was very popular with Padres fans, and many fans would travel by car from San Diego for Spring Training games. The move from Yuma to Peoria (announced during the 1994 baseball strike) was very controversial, but was defended by the team as a reflection on the low quality of facilities in Yuma and the long travel necessary to play against other Arizona-based Spring Training teams (whose sites are all in the Phoenix and Tucson areas, both rather far from Yuma).
Logos and colors
The San Diego Padres have used six different logos and four different color combinations throughout their history. Their first logo depicts a friar swinging a bat with Padres written at the top while standing in a sun-like figure with San Diego Padres on the exterior of it. The "Swinging Friar" has popped up on the uniform on and off ever since (he is currently on the left sleeve of the jersey), and is currently the
mascot of the team. The original team colors were the brown and gold of the original logo (pictured below).
In 1985, the Padres switched to using a script-like logo in which
Padres
was written sloped up. That would later become a script logo for the Padres. The team's colors were changed to brown and orange and remained this way through the 1990 season.
In 1989, the Padres took the scripted Padres logo that was used from 1985-1988 and put it in a tan ring that read "San Diego Baseball Club" with a striped center. In 1991, the logo was changed to a silver ring with the Padres script changed from brown to blue. The logo only lasted one year, as the Padres changed their logo for the third time in three years, again by switching colors of the ring. The logo became a white ring with fewer stripes in the center and a darker blue Padres script with orange shadows. In 1991, the team's colors were also changed, to a combination of orange and navy blue.
The logo was completely changed when the team changed stadiums between the 2003 and 2004 seasons, as the logo now looks like home plate at a baseball field with
San Diego
written in gold font at the top right corner and the Padres new script written completely across the center. Waves finish the bottom of the plate. Navy remains but a sandy beige replaces orange as a secondary color. The team's colors were also changed, to navy blue and sand brown.
In 2008 and 2009, during every Sunday home game, the Padres wear camouflage jerseys, green hats and road pants in honor of the military. They also wear these uniforms on Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day. Recruits from the nearby Marine Corps Recruit Depot often visit the games en masse, in uniform, often filling entire sections in the upper deck. When they are present, the team commemorates this with a special Fourth Inning Stretch featuring the Marine Hymn. This is part of an extensive military outreach program, which also includes a Military Appreciation Night game, and game tapes mailed to deployed
United States Navy ships of the Pacific Fleet for onboard viewing (a large portion of the
Pacific Fleet is homeported in San Diego).
Vintage logo gallery
Season records
Quick facts
thumb, home of the San Diego Padres (2004-Present)
Founded:
1969 (National League expansion)
Current uniform colors:
Dark blue, Sand, and White
Logo design:
White interlocking 'S' and 'D'
Hometown Hero:
Tony Gwynn
TV Play by Play:
Mark Neeley, Mark Grant, Tony Gwynn (Occasionally)
Team motto:
2008:"Are You In?"
Nicknames:
The Friars, the "Pads" (pronounced as "Pods"), Say May Kids (named from 2 consecutive amazing runs in May during the 2005 & 2006 seasons; nickname by Matt Vasgersian).
Most Winning Season:
(1998) 98-64. Western Division Title and National League Pennant Winners.
Most Losing Season:
(1969) 52-110
Local Television:
Channel 4 San Diego (4SD) (Cable TV only; not available over the air.)
Local Radio:
1090 AM / 105.7 FM XX 1090 (pronounced "Double X"), La Poderosa 860 AM (en español).
Spring Training Facility:
Peoria Sports Complex, Peoria, AZ
Rivals:
Los Angeles Dodgers (Division), San Francisco Giants (Division), Arizona Diamondbacks (Division), Colorado Rockies (Division), St. Louis Cardinals (Post-Season), Seattle Mariners (Interleague)
Achievements
Award winners and league leaders
Team records (single-season and career)
Baseball Hall of Famers
The following inducted members of the
Baseball Hall of Fame played and/or managed for the Padres. Those denoted in
bold
are depicted on their Hall plaque wearing a Padres cap insignia.
#
| Name
| Position
| Years with Padres
| Team on HOF cap
| HOF Induction Year
| Ref
|
44
| Willie McCovey
| First Base
| 1974-1976
| San Francisco
| 1986
| [11]
|
36
| Gaylord Perry
| Pitcher
| 1978-1979
| San Francisco
| 1991
| [12]
|
34
| Rollie Fingers
| Pitcher
| 1977-1980
| Oakland
| 1992
| [13]
|
31
| Dave Winfield
| Outfielder
| 1973-1980
| San Diego
| 2001
| [14]
|
1
| Ozzie Smith
| Shortstop
| 1978-1981
| St. Louis
| 2002
| [15]
|
19
| Tony Gwynn
| Right Field
| 1982-2001
| San Diego
| 2007
| [16]
|
54
| Rich "Goose" Gossage
| Pitcher
| 1984-1987
| New York Yankees
| 2008
| [17]
|
23
| Dick Williams
| Manager
| 1982-1985
| Oakland
| 2008
| [18]
|
24
| Rickey Henderson
| Outfielder
| 1996-1997, 2001
| Oakland
| 2009
| [19]
|
Though not recognized as an inducted member of the Hall, longtime Padres
play-by-play announcer
Jerry Coleman is permanently honored in the Hall's "Scribes & Mikemen" exhibit as a result of winning the
Ford C. Frick Award for broadcasting excellence in 2005.
Gwynn, Winfield, Fingers, Gossage, Randy Jones, and
Graig Nettles (3B, 1984-1987) are also members of the
San Diego Hall of Champions, which is open to athletes native to the San Diego area (such as Gwynn and Nettles) as well as to those who played for San Diego teams.
Ford C. Frick Award recipients (broadcasters)
Names in
bold
received the award based primarily on their work as Padres broadcasters.
* Played as Padres
Retired numbers
The Padres have retired five numbers. Four were in honor of Padre players and one was Jackie Robinson's number 42, which was retired by all of Major League Baseball.
Steve Garvey 1B Retired 1989
| Tony Gwynn RF Retired 2004
| Dave Winfield 1B Retired 2001
| Randy Jones P Retired 1997
| Jerry Coleman Broadcaster Honored 2004
| Ray Kroc Owner Honored 2004
| Jackie Robinson - Retired 1997
|
The retired numbers are displayed in center field atop the batter's eye wall. They are free standing and mounted on poles. During the 2004 season, the first season in PETCO Park, there were only four retired numbers displayed. Gwynn's number 19 was not yet officially retired until late in the season and was added the following winter.
The Padres also have a "star on the wall" in honor of broadcaster
Jerry Coleman, in reference to his trademark phrase "You can hang a star on that one!" Nearby the initials of former owner
Ray Kroc are also displayed. Both the star and the initials are painted in gold on the front of the pressbox down the right field line accompanied by the name of the person in white.
Team Hall of Fame
People inducted into the San Diego Padres Team Hall of Fame which was founded in 1999.
- Buzzie Bavasi, Team President, 1969-1977. Inducted 2001.
- Nate Colbert, 1B, 1969-1974. Inducted 1999.
- Jerry Coleman, Manager, 1980, Announcer, 1972-1979, 1981-present. Inducted 2001.
- Tony Gwynn, OF, 1982-2002. Inducted 2007.
- Randy Jones, P, 1973-1980. Inducted 1999.
- Ray Kroc, Owner, 1974-1984. Inducted 1999.
- Dick Williams, Manager, 1982-1985. Inducted 2009.
- Dave Winfield, OF, 1973-1980. Inducted 2000.
Current roster
|
Active roster
| Coaches/Other
|
Pitchers
- 37 Mike Adams (pitcher)
- 53 Cha Seung Baek
- 21 Heath Bell
- -- Matt Bush
- -- Cesar Carrillo
- 56 Mike Ekstrom
- 56 Ernesto Frieri
- 52 Josh Geer
- 45 Justin Hampson
- 58 Wade LeBlanc
- 53 Wilton Lopez
- 43 Cla Meredith
- -- Ivan Nova
- 40 Scott Patterson (baseball)
- 44 Jake Peavy
- -- Jackson Quezada
- -- Cesar Ramos (baseball)
- 59 Chad Reineke
- 50 Joe Thatcher
- -- Mark Worrell
- 32 Chris Young (pitcher)
|
| Catchers
- 4 Nick Hundley
- -- Jose Lobaton
Infielders
- 9 Matt Antonelli
- -- Everth Cabrera
- -- Travis Denker
- 23 Adrian Gonzalez
- 2 Edgar Gonzalez (infielder)
- 5 Kevin Kouzmanoff
- 15 Luis Rodríguez (baseball)
Outfielders
- -- Luis Durango
- 33 Jody Gerut
- 24 Brian Giles
- 12 Scott Hairston
- 16 Chase Headley
- 11 Drew Macias
- 25 Will Venable
|
| Manager
Coaches
- 48 Darrel Akerfelds (bullpen)
- 36 Darren Balsley (pitching)
- 47 Glenn Hoffman (third base)
- -- Jim Lefebvre (hitting)
- 17 Rick Renteria (first base)
- -- Ted Simmons (bench)
† 15-day disabled list
* Suspended list
# Bereavement list
updated 2008-12-12
•
|
Championships
| colspan = 3 align = center |
National League Champions
|-
| width = 30% align = center | Preceded by:
Florida Marlins
| width = 40% align = center |
1998
| width = 30% align = center | Succeeded by:
Atlanta Braves
|-
| width = 30% align = center | Preceded by:
Philadelphia Phillies
| width = 40% align = center |
1984
| width = 30% align = center | Succeeded by:
St. Louis Cardinals
|-
| colspan = 3 align = center |
National League Western Division Champions
|-
| width = 30% align = center | Preceded by:
Los Angeles Dodgers
| width = 40% align = center |
2005 &
2006
| width = 30% align = center | Succeeded by:
Arizona Diamondbacks
|-
| width = 30% align = center | Preceded by:
San Francisco Giants
| width = 40% align = center |
1998
| width = 30% align = center | Succeeded by:
Arizona Diamondbacks
|-
| width = 30% align = center | Preceded by:
Los Angeles Dodgers
| width = 40% align = center |
1996
| width = 30% align = center | Succeeded by:
San Francisco Giants
|-
| width = 30% align = center | Preceded by:
Los Angeles Dodgers
| width = 40% align = center |
1984
| width = 30% align = center | Succeeded by:
Los Angeles Dodgers
|-
Minor league affiliations
- AAA:
Portland Beavers, Pacific Coast League
- AA:
San Antonio Missions, Texas League
- Advanced A:
Lake Elsinore Storm, California League
- A:
Fort Wayne TinCaps, Midwest League
- Short A:
Eugene Emeralds, Northwest League
- Rookie:
AZL Padres, Arizona League
- Rookie:
DSL Padres, Dominican Summer League
Radio and television
As of 2008, the Padres'
flagship radio stations were
XEPRS 1090AM and
XHPRS 105.7FM, collectively known as "XX 1090" (pronounced "Double X.") When XX was only on AM, the station was known as the "Mighty 1090."
Ted Leitner is the primary play-by-play announcer, with
Andy Masur working the middle innings of each game.
Jerry Coleman,
Ford C. Frick Award winner, former
Yankee second baseman and Padres manager, no longer does play-by-play, however he does work as a color analyst alongside Leitner and Masur, mostly during the middle part of the game. The games are also broadcast in Spanish on
XEMO, "La Poderosa 860 AM."
Padres' games are shown mostly on
4SD, a cable-only network controlled by Cox Communications.
Matt Vasgersian was the
play-by-play announcer (2002-2008), and
Mark Grant is the
color commentator. In 2006, the booth played host to a controversial guest appearance by
Rick Sutcliffe, who had been Davis' predecessor before joining
ESPN. Sutcliffe appeared to be drunk and discussed topics other than baseball, even when Vasgersian tried to redirect the subject. After the appearance, ESPN suspended Sutcliffe for a week. For the 2009 season, Vasgersian will be replaced by veteran minor league announcer Mark Neely, who for the previous 13 years had been the voice of the
Tulsa Drillers of the
Texas League.
[20] [21]
Spanish language telecasts of Sunday games are seen
XHAS-TV channel 33. Until September 2007, Friday and Saturday Spanish games were seen on
KBOP-CA channel 43, until that station changed to an all-infomercial format. This makes XHAS the only over-the-air-television station carrying Padres baseball. English-language Padres over-the-air broadcasts aired over the years on
XETV,
KCST,
KUSI,
KFMB-TV and
KSWB-TV.
Jerry Coleman, former second baseman for the
New York Yankees in the 1950s, had been the Padres' play-by-play announcer from 1972 to 2008, except in one year, 1980, in which Coleman managed the team. He also worked for the Yankees (alongside legendary sportscaster
Mel Allen) and the California Angels. Coleman is famous for his phrases "Oh Doctor!" and "You can hang a star on that one!" At the old stadium, he would often commemorate exceptionally good plays by displaying a foam star suspended from a fishing pole extended from the broadcast booth window (thus literally hanging the star he often referenced) . In 2005, Coleman reduced his broadcast role, allowing longtime partner
Ted Leitner to be the Padres' primary announcer. Coleman is also the 2005 recipient of the
Ford C. Frick Award, giving him entry into the broadcasters wing of the
Baseball Hall of Fame.
Between games of a
doubleheader with the
Cincinnati Reds on July 25, 1990,
Roseanne
series star
Roseanne Arnold delivered a screeching rendition of
The Star-Spangled Banner, immediately after which she grabbed her crotch and spat on the ground. She was intending to parody those actions of ballplayers which are often caught on camera, but she picked the wrong time to do it, as it appeared to many that she was commenting on the flag and/or the anthem. Had it not been for those gestures, her performance likely would have been written off as simply a poor choice of singer on the ballclub's part, and probably soon forgotten. As it was, her act drew boos and catcalls from fans and then criticism from players (most notably Tony Gwynn) and even outside quarters, including then-
President George H. W. Bush, a former
Yale University first baseman and the father of then-
Texas Rangers owner, former
President George W. Bush.
Notable fans of the Padres have included comedian and film actor
Jerry Lewis, singers
Patti Page and
Frankie Laine, former astronaut
Wally Schirra, author and syndicated columnist
George Will, and former San Diego mayor and California governor
Pete Wilson, all of whom have maintained residences in the San Diego area. The fictional character of
Finn DeTrolio from the show
The Sopranos is also a Padres fan.
Padres fans typically delight in the misfortunes of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, loudly chanting "BEAT L.A." when the two teams meet head-to-head.
See also
- Managers and ownership of the San Diego Padres
- Active MLB droughts
- San Diego Sports Curse
- 2009 San Diego Padres season
- Author Nelson Papucci wrote "The San Diego Padres, 1969-2002: A Complete History". This was the first definitive history of the Padres as a major league franchise.
Education/MBA program
- The San Diego Padres are the sponsors of and heavily involved in most aspects of the degree program offered in conjunction with San Diego State University's College of Business Administration.
References
- Baseball-reference.com San Diego Padres 1984
- Baseball-Reference.com 1984 NLCS
- Baseball-reference.com Detroit Tigers 1984 season
- Baseball-reference.com 1984 World Series stats
- Baseball-reference.com San Diego Padres 1998 season stats
- Baseball-reference.com 1998 NLDS stats
- Baseball-reference.com 1998 NLDS
- Baseball-reference.com New York Yankees 1998 season stats
- Baseball-reference.com 1998 World Series
- http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/2008/nov/10/padres-pull-hoffman-contract-offer-table/?padres
- Hall of Famer detail: Willie McCovey National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Hall of Famer detail: Gaylord Perry National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Hall of Famer detail: Rollie Fingers National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Hall of Famer detail: Dave Winfield National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Hall of Famer detail: Ozzie Smith National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Hall of Famer detail: Tony Gwynn National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Hall of Famer detail: Goose Gossage National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Hall of Famer detail: Dick Williams National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Rickey to wear A's cap into Cooperstown National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
- Bill Haisten, "Neely leaving Drillers for Padres, ''Tulsa World'', January 23, 2009.
- Bill Center, "Veteran Neely ready for call-up", ''San Diego Union-Tribune'', January 23, 2009.