Posts Tagged ‘1972 League’

These Writeups are about the 2nd Round of the AL Playoffs. All Series are five games.

Red Sox vs Yankees

RedSox

The Boston RedSox Offensive / Defensive/ Pitching evaluation was done in the Wild card round and Can be found in full here. Fast Summery Strong offense led by Yaz and Fisk, Tied for Top defense in MLB, Pitching, one ace (Nolan) and the rest average with no real closer.

Round 1 vs Angels Game 1 at Anaheim Stadium Gary Nolan Vs Tom Bradley

Game 1 was a true pitchers duel with Redsox Ace Gary Nolan facing Tom Bradley of the 18 losses. The first run came from a leadoff Bill Plummer Solo shot in the 3rd giving the Angels a 1-0. The Red Sox took the lead in the 6th when with two outs light hitting Doug Griffin hit a shot into the Gap that Manny Mota couldn’t catch up to. He end up on 2nd and Yaz immediately drove him with a single to center Griffin beating the throw from Moralas which allowed Yaz to get to 2nd which didn’t matter much since Willie Davis walked putting runners on 1st and Second for Carlton Fisk to singled to center with Yaz motoring home to make it 2-1.

That is all that Bradley would give up the three hits in the 6th were fully half of Boston’s total as Bradly pitched a fine game, alas for the Halo Nolan did even better. Not only did the Angels not get near another run but no Angel got to the plate with a runner in scoring position for Nolan’s 9 innings of work

Red Sox 2 Angels 1 WP Nolan 1-0 LP Bradley 0-1 HR Plumber (1)

Game 2 at Fenway Park Woodie Fryman vs Rick Wise

For the 2nd game in a row California struck first via the longball. In the top of the 1st with two outs Jose Cardinal put a ball over the wall in Right center scoring Bobby Valentine giving the Angels a 2-0 lead. It would have been 3-0 except Wes Parker once again demonstrated his glove at first robbing Manny Mota of a double on a shot down the line.

The lead was cut to one in the bottom of the 2nd when after a pair of walks Doug Griffin singled in Rico Petrocelli but in the top of the 3rd the Angles got it back as Tommy McCraw tripled to center with one out and Bobby Valentine singled him in. Manny Mota followed with a single which could have led to a big inning but wise struck out Cardinal and Morales lined to 3rd to kill the rally. The Sox Answered back again as Fisk put a two out fastball over the monster and the lead was back to 3-2.

In the 5th the Red Sox pitcher Rick Wise helped his own cause by legging out a slow roller that Bobby Valentine couldn’t get to first in time. This would prove critical as with two outs Ollie Brown put one in the gap scoring him all the way from first and the game was tied.

And tied it would stay both teams would threaten in the 8th without success and in the 9th after reaching on an error Dave Conception tried to make it to 3rd when Leroy Stanton hitting for Fryman singled to center but Vada Pinson who had just moved to center threw a strike to Rico Petrocelli for the 2nd out and Wise put out the fire. Angel closer Clay Carroll retired the Sox in order in the 9th and we went to Extras.

Wise would remain in until the top of the 11th when he came out after retiring the first 2. and Joe Horlen came in and promptly grooved a ball to Bill Plumber for his 2nd round tripper of the series.

With victory in their grasp and their playoff hopes on the line they left Carroll in for a 3rd inning which proved costly. He would walk lead off man Vada Pinson who would move to 2nd on a grounder to 3rd and would easily score on a double to left center tying the game. Davis would get to 3rd with two outs when Jack Aker came in and coaxed a pinch hit ground out from Norm Miller and we went to the 12th

After a leadoff single Al Severinsen retired California in order in the top of the inning. Aker would be saved from trouble by a great diving stop by Tommy McGraw keeping Wes Parker from a sure double but his luck would run out when Ollie Brown who only had 2 Homeruns all season for his worst slugging year in his career made Red Sox fans forget this by lifting a ball just over the wall to send the Redsox to a meeting with their longtime rivals from New York.

Boston 5 California 4 WP Severinsen 1-0 LP Aker (0-1) HR Plumber (2), Cardenal (1), Fisk (1), Brown (1)

New York Yankees 111-51 1st Place AL Alpha Division (#1 seed)

Offense: Whoever said “You can’t go home again” apparently never saw this Yankee team whose offense was completely invigorated by their return to the Polo Grounds as Yankees lead the majors in every offensive category except walks (2nd in AL 5th in majors) Stolen bases (3rd in AL 7th in majors) and at bats (1st in AL 2nd in Majors). The top three slugging percentages in the American league belonged to Bobby Murcer (.591+065 over 1971), young John Mayberry (.550 +.291 over 1971) and Reggie Smith (.528 +007 over 1971) Murcer’s HR total went from 23 to 36 Mayberry’s from 5 (in 104 games) to 35 (in 162) and Smith from 20 (in 162 games) to 30 (in 160). Oddly the move didn’t figure in Murcer’s numbers has he hit 10 more homers and slugged a full .197 points higher on the road (.488 vs .685) meanwhile Roberto Clemente hit .290 and drove in 90 while Ron Santo who was floundering in Cincy (.162 0 HR 6 RBI in 29 games) before being dealt to NY soared (.326 13 HR 75 RBI). Put simply they’ve been an offensive monster.

Defense: With so much offense you likely don’t need much defense but the Yanks were above slightly above average. Both Thurman Munson and Ed Kirkpatrick threw out more runners than they allowed to steal. Ron Santo took the 3B job from Bill Melton and ran with it defensively. Horace Clark proved just as good as Doug Griffin who was dealt to Boston early in the season. Clemente only threw out 4 but almost nobody tried to take an extra base against him however Reggie’s Smith’s 9 errors in the outfield were rather high and both Steve Kline and Terry Forster where adventures on the mound if the ball was hit to them.

Pitching: If the Yankees offense wasn’t enough their pitching staff managed the top ERA in the AL (2.96 3rd overall) and the 2nd lowest Avg against in the AL as well (.239) Meanwhile their bullpen saved 45 of 57 however their 116 HR allowed were the 3rd most in the AL & majors but given the dimensions of the Polo Grounds not a huge surprise. Mike Paul & Bob Moose were tied for 2nd in the AL for ERA (2.42) Terry Forester led the AL with 34 saves and Steve Kline and Bob Moose were top 8 in the majors for not giving up walks. Put simply with 3 20 Game winners (Wilbur Wood, Moose and Steve Kline) all of who had over 200 innings they are a force to be reckoned with.

Series one Yankees at Boston April:

Game one was a back and forth affair with six lead changes till it was even at 9 after 9 but in the bottom of the 10th Vada Pinson singled to start the 10th followed by a Triple from Wes Parker to win the game. In Game 2 Roberto Clemente doubled in one run and John Mayberry homered for 2 more in the 6th and Celerino Sanchez tripled in two runs more. Both Fisk and Yaz drove in runs in the 8th but it wasn’t enough and Forester picked up the save for 6-4 Yankees win. A two run shot by Parker and an RBI double by Yaz gave the Redsox a 4-0 lead but Bobby Murcer hit a solo shot in the 8th and the Yanks managed 5 in the 9th including a Reggie Smith homerun giving Yankees a lead that Forester would hold.


Series Two June in NY

The Redsox simply pounded the yanks with a solo shot by Davis a two run shot by Yaz and a three run shot by Rico Petrocelli. Rick Wise threw a complete game giving up 4 which was more than good enough to secure a 9-4 win. In game two after an early exchange of runs the Yanks took the lead with a 3 run 7th with a bases loaded fielders choice plus and a 2 run single giving Wilbur Wood a win and 3rd save for Forster in game 2 and his 4th save in game 3 with a Reggie Smith solo shot and a three run shot by John Mayberry giving Mike Paul the win

Series 3 Aug in Boston:

The Yanks went 8-18 with runners in scoring position allowing them to build a 6-3 lead for which was enough to hold off a 2 run rally in the 9th. In game 2 three Redsox pitchers combined to shut out the Yanks which meant that RBI doubles from Fisk and Griffin and a single from Petrocelli were more than enough to win. In the 3rd game the game remained even at 3 in the ninth but in the end Rick Wise could not hold off a rally with runs scored on a passed ball and a single from Gene Tenace.

Series 4 Sept in NY

The Redsox won a costly victory in game one when he ended up out for 3 series after diving for a ball in left a bases loaded grounder and a Doug Griffin single drove in 2 and a single and flyout in the 9th gave two more runs to secure a 4-1 win for Gary Nolan. In game 2 the Yanks scored 10 including 5 in the first 2 innings and five more on 17 hits while Bob Moose surrendered only 2 runs on 4 hits while striking out 11. In game 3 again things went back and forth and the Yanks took a lead in the 5th on a Clemente single and handed the ball to Terry Forster who had saved 4 vs the Sox but the fifth time was the charm for Boston as he made a key error with two on to load the bases allowing Wes Parker to single in the tying and winning run for a 5-4 Red Sox win.

Season series Yanks 7-5

The Pick: The Red Sox are a good team with a lot of fine young players who will give the Yankees grief and they played the Yanks tough all season but with excellent pitching and overpowering offence I can’t see the Redsox pulling this one off. Yanks in 4.

The 2nd of our reviews of the upcoming wild card series. (Best of 3) the winner of this series will face the SF Giants in the Divisional Round (best of 5) The AL Writeup is here.

Cincinnati Reds 88-74 10 GB 3rd Wild Card

Offense: Last year the Reds underperformed this year this year they were 4th in the NL in HR (128) 3rd in Slugging (,383) 2nd in OBP (.325) & 1st in triples (53) led by Johnny Bench who was 2nd in both HR (34) and RBI (114) to Triple crown winner Billy Williams. Of course being 2nd in RBI’s is easy when you have Joe Morgan (135 walks) and Dick Allen (115) walks on base constantly. Morgan would lead the league with 122 runs and finish 2nd to Lou Brock with 53 stolen bases. Dick Allen would have 99 runs scored along with 30 HR of his own. Bobby Tolan would also score 102 runs thanks to 186 hits while stealing 30 more and young Bill Buckner would hit .307 with 10 triples (7th in league) only one behind teammate Ted Martinez tied for 3rd with 11. This is a big Red Offensive Machine.

Defense: The Reds were part of a 4 way tie for the best fielding percentage at .987 like Boston & St. Louis only comitting 83 errors all year. As much as Bench contributed offensively his record behind the plate was incredible 15 caught stealing in 15 attempts and only one passed ball and two errors in 912 chances over 1255 innings. In fact no person not even Lou Brock would steal a single base against the Reds this season. With no stolen bases against and only two passed balls you had to earn your bases against the Reds. Bobby Tolan who saved the 1969 WS for the Mets by robbing Pete Rose of a 9th inning double was excellent in Center. Meanwhile Al Kaline and Dick Allen would both put up great range factors at 1B Allen would move to 3B with the Ron Santo Trade to the Yankees putting up comparable numbers .961 Fielding over 920 innings. Joe Morgan’s .993 fielding percentage at 2nd kept the infield tight.

Pitching: This was the weak link of the team. Cincy’s 3.56 ERA was 12th in the Majors just ahead of the Washington Senators 3.64. Their 904 strikes were in the bottom 5 of the majors and teams hit .262 against them, only the Orioles and Cubs and KC were more generous with their total hits. On the bright side their 406 walks allowed were 2nd lowest in the NL and 4th best in the majors. Fritz Peterson was a legit ace going 22-8 with a 2.90 ERA in 282 innings his 1.28 walks per 9 innings 2nd best in the NL. Spaceman Lefty Bill Lee did fine work in the Bullpen saving 18 in 20 chances while going 6-5 and Pedro Borbon 8 saves in 11 chances wasn’t bad but Fred Gladding’s 4-9 and Bucky Brandon’s 1-6 and Steve Mingori’s 0-3 in saves is why the Reds didn’t clinch against StL till the final two weeks of the season.

Pittsburgh Pirates 91-71 2nd place NL Beta 17 GB 2nd Wild Card

Offense: Pittsburgh .256 team avg (2nd in NL 4th in majors) and .328 OBP (tops in NL 2nd in majors) meant a lot of men on base which is why Pit was 3rd in the NL in RBI’s 676 and just behind Cincy in HR (126). Hank Aaron’s 31 HR led a team that has six players with double figures in HR. He added 101 walks to allow others to drive him in. Rod Carew’s .341 avg (2nd in league) and .400 OBP (4th in league) on 201 hits and meant there was usually someone on base. Rennie Stennett’s .319 Avg didn’t hurt there either.

Defense: Defense was not a strong point for Pittsburgh winning 91 games despite the 3rd worst defense in the NL and the 3rd most past balls and errors in the Majors a bit of a surprise with a man as steady as Bill Freehan behind the plate but age caught up to him in the field as it did Aaron (19 errors) and George Scott (27 errors). Young Bill Russell’s 23 errors and .967 fielding at short was below avg but both Johnny Briggs (6 errors in LF) and young Jose Cruz (5 errors in center) made up for this by throwing out 7 and 9 runners from the OF respectively but Joe Lahoud surpassed them all throwing out 11 runners while committing no errors in 750 2/3 innings to augment his power at the plate.

Pitching: Pittsburgh gave up the 4th fewest hits and their teams 1.20 WHIP was tied for 4th best in the majors. This was due to Gaylord Perry being practically unbeatable going 22-10 in 302 1/3 innings (5th in NL) with an ERA below 2 (1.97 1st in NL). Bruce Kison (11-10 2.99) and Bill Singer (10-6 3.05) put up respectable numbers but it was Perry who carried the rotation. Meanwhile Mike Marshall came into his own saving 25 in 29 chances. In all Pittsburgh pen saved 44 games while blowing 15 just below 3/4

Season Series

Series 1 May at Cincy

In Game one Cincy got all they needed in the 1st on a Tolan leadoff single to start the inning and a Morgan double, Bench single and Rudi double off Bill Singer with two outs. A solo shot by George Scott off Milt Wilcox in the 2nd made it 3-1 and a two out 9th inning single by Davey Johnson put the Bucks within one but Don Gullett came in for Bill Lee and Struck out pinch hitter Ron Woods to solidify the victory.

The Pirates struck 1st in game two with a Hank Aaron 2 run shot off Paul Splitoff but Bench answered with a solo shot in the 2nd and the Reds took the lead in the 5th when Buckner stroked a 2 out single scoring Kaline & Martinez and grew the lead in the 7th with an RBI single from Splittorff and an RBI double by Buckner but Ron Woods made up for his failure in game one with a 3 run HR in the top of the 8th to tie it and Carew followed in the 9th with a 2 out two on single to give Pittsburgh the 6-5 lead off George Culver and MIke Marshall held the Reds to a single in the ninth thanks to a nice play by Ron Woods, not known for his range on a flare to Right

In the Rubber match Pit scored to in the 2 and 1 in the fourth off Dick Bosman while the Reds could only manage two unearned runs one off winner Bruce Kison and one off Closer Mike Marshall both made possible by Jose Cruz Miscues but that was all as the Pirates won 4-2

2nd Series June

The Reds took their revenge in Pittsburgh beginning with a pair of shutouts Splitorff in game one of a 5-0 route while 4 Reds pitchers kept the Pirates off the Board for 10 innings and finally scored 3 off of Mike Marshall in Relief of Gaylord Perry who had answered them scoreless inning for scoreless inning. A Tolan Triple and a Kaline Sac to score him made the 3-0 final. The Reds jumped to a 3-0 early lead off Bill Singer thanks to an Allen Homer But Woods, Aaron and Bill Russell all went deep in the 7th to tie things at four until Dick Allen doubled in one run and Rookie George Foster pinch hitting drove in a 2nd off of Mike Marshall for a 6-4 win

3rd Series Aug

Bill Singer finally managed a win off Cincy in game one when he shut out the reds over 8 1/3 on two hits while 2 RBI’s from Woods and another by Rennie Stennett in the first off Reds ace Friz Peterson were more than enough in their 5-0 win. Three Cincy Pitchers returned the favor in game two blanking the bucks who had to use five pitchers after Starter Brian Johnson had to be pulled in the 2nd with arm stiffness. Homers by Dick Allen and Joe Morgan added to the 8-0 rout for their 4th win in their last five meetings but the Pirates had the last laugh in game 3 as they blanked the Reds right Back with Ross Grimsley pitching five, Gary Ross pitching three and Mike Marshall getting his 3rd save vs the reds vs 2 losses. It was a 3rd inning solo shot off Wilcox by Scott and an RBI damage by Aaron off off off Mingori that accounted for the 2-0 win.

Series 4 Sept

The final series of year was the most competitive with Mike Marshall getting saves in game 1 & 3 neither Friz Peterson and Bill Singer batted it out to a 2-2 tie before Hank Aaron just beat Bench’s tag on a throw from Dave Martinez after a Rennie Stennett 8th inning single. In game 3 it was the Pirate bats bailing out Jim Barr who left the Reds with a 5-2 lead in the 2nd. A two out Carew single tied the game 5-5 while Hank Aaron’s three runs on the very next pitch from Mike Caldwell finished the job. In the middle game however the Bucks Ace failed in his 2nd attempt to get a win against the Reds as the Big Red Machine scored 3 in the first and then after Pittsburgh fought back to tie it in the bottom of the 9th they took advantage of a Bill Russell error in the 10th allowing Dick Allen and Joe Morgan to single in the winning runs off a game Gaylord Perry who went the 10 inning distance and a final rally which got the tying runs on with two outs in the 10th fell short.

Season Series even 6-6

This series I suspect will come down to who wins the Perry/Peterson Duel. Neither Ace managed a win vs the other team during the season. Both have good offenses but Cincinnati’s is so overwhelming that it’s hard to pick against them, but Pittsburgh has a legitimate closer so if they can get a lead they might hold it. However while Marshall had four saves vs the Reds he also lost a par. Despite this I have no faith in the Reds holding leads once acquired. I suspect as I said it will all come down to the first meeting between Peterson & Perry? Will one or both rise to the occasion? I really don’t know but I have to pick a winner so I’m going to give the edge to the team managed by the winningest manager in Dynasty history (2665 tournaments wins) and the player #1 ranked #1 all time in the game.

Pit 2-1

It’s been an interesting season in our 1972 Draft league here is where we stand so far

Team AL Alpha DivisionWinsLossesPCTGBWild Card GB
New York Yankees3614.720—-n/a
California Angels2519.5688+1 1/2
Cleveland Indians2723.5409+ 1/2
Kansas City Royals (Kansas shitty)1832.360188 1/2
Baltimore Orioles1334.27721 1/212

The Yankees hold the best record in baseball thanks to the 2nd best ERA in the AL (2.65) the 3rd best fielding percentage .986 and a team that leads the majors in slugging percentage by almost 40 points thanks for Bobby Mercer and John Mayberry California and Cleveland continue the fight for the wild card while last years top dogs KC & the O’s are both falling behind. Interesting stat KC while having a horrible record are 3rd in the AL and 4th in the league in walks

Team AL Beta DivisionWinsLossesPCTGBWild Card GB
Milwaukee Brewers3215.681—-n/a
Boston Red Sox2522.5327—–
Minnesota Twins2324.48992
Oakland A’s2227.44011 1/24 1/2
Washington Senators2027.426125

Milwaukee leads the pack based on Pitching, Pitching and Pitching. Last years NL Cy Young winner Don Wilson (1.24) & Ken Holtzman (1.44) are 2nd & 4th in the Majors for ERA While leading the majors in doubles and sitting 3rd in OBP (.320) & 4th in OPS (.688). Boston hold the last wild card but is poised to advance leading the majors in OBP (.339) and just behind NY in OPS (.712) thanks in part to a rookie named Carlton Fisk. The twins remain in the hunt despite a -17 run differential. Oakland started strong but is fading thanks to an injury to ace Vida Blue. The Senators seem poised to take advantage to climb out of the cellar and back in the wild card race.

Team NL Alpha DivisionWinsLossesPCTGBWild Card GB
St. Louis Cardinals2918.617—-n/a
Cincinnati Reds (cin city)2522.5324+1
Atlanta Braves (Bananas)2423.5115
Philadelphia Phillies2225.46872
New York Mets (Daytraders)2126.44783

The Cardinals hold a 4 game lead despite Bob Gibson’s complete inability to get run support in his starts (5-3 1.79 ERA ) fortunately the team 2.54 ERA has made the difference. Cincinnati has thrived under new management this year, of course Johnny Bench’s Major league leading 14 HR might have something to do with it. The Atlanta Braves (Bananas) Billy Williams is helping them keep a grip on the wild card. The Phillies with an off season from Torrie but a powerful rookie Named Luzinski are right there and with Tom Seaver and Steve Carlton going 1,2 the Mets (Daytraders) aren’t far behind. Both the wild card and indeed the division are wide open.

Team NL Beta DivisionWinsLossesPCTGBWild Card GB
Pittsburgh Pirates2918.617—-+5
San Francisco Giants2918.617—-+5
Montreal Expos2126.44783
Chicago Cubs1829.38311 6
Los Angeles Dodgers1430.31813 1/28 1/2

Pittsburgh and the Giants are locked in a battle for 1st. The Pirates trying to make up for a disappointing 1971 and the Giants trying to return to the world series winning glory of 1970. Gaylord Perry (Pit) & Jim Palmer (Giants) leading the fight. The Montreal Expos despite having issues holding managers have been a surprise only 3 out of the wild card thanks to Lou Brock’s hitting and speed. The Chicago Cubs are top 5 in the majors in OBP (.315) & top 10 in slugging (.351) but are dead last in ERA (4.85). The Champion Dodgers have two great arms in Nolan Ryan (ERA 1.63) 2nd in NL and Wayne Twitchell (ERA 1.72) 3rd in NL but nothing else.

We weren’t expecting this but the draft has begun a couple of days early.

One draft day trade first. The Boston Red Sox Trade Starter Phil Niekro and a 3rd round pick to the New York Mets to get Yaz back in Fenway Park.

The official timed draft starts at 1:30 EST on Saturday but why wait if everyone is ready

Round 1 & 2

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1MontrealLou Brock OF1MontrealWillie MaysOF
2PittsburghHank Aaron1B2PittsburghBill RussellSS
3CincinnatiRon Santo3B3CincinnatiBill LeeP
4San FranciscoDarryl Evans3B4.SF Dave Cash2B
5St. LouisDon KessingerSS5StLDarold KnowlesP
6New York (Y)Reggie Smith RF6New York (Al)Danny ThompsonSS
7ClevelandJohn MatlackP7ClevelandBill StonehamP
8MinnesotaAl OliverOF8MinnesotaBob WatsonOF
9MilwaukeeDoug Rader3B9MilwaukeeEarl WilliamsC
10BostonGary NolanP10BostonHorace Clarke2B
11PhiladelphiaRudy MayP11PhiladelphiaTed AbernaphyP
12WashingtonMike Epstein1B12Washington SenatorsReggie ClevelandP
13CaliforniaDon Money3B13CaliforniaDave ConcepecionSS
14AtlantaRollie FingersP14AtlantaAurelio Rodriguez3B
15OaklandRoy WhiteLF15OaklandTed Sizemore2B
16Mil (Via NYM)Don Wilson P16New York (NL)Jerry ReussP
17Chicago (N)Jeff BurroughsOF17CubsLou PinellaOF
18Mil (Via Balt)Blue Moon OdomP18 NYY (via balt)Dave Nelson3B
19Kansas CityClyde WrightP19Kansas CityNelson BrilesP
20Los AngelesWayne TwitchellP20Los AngelesSteve RenkoP

Round 3 & 4

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1MontrealCarlos MayOF1MontrealEd Kirpatrickc
2PittsburghJim Barr P2PittsburghJose Cruzcf
3Cincinnati Al Kaline OF3CincinnatiMike CaldwellP
4San FranciscoEllie Rodriguezc4San FranciscoRick MondayOF
5Boston (Via StL)Bud HarrelsonSSSt LouisBob VealeP
6New York (A)Lindsy McDanielPNew York (A)Sklp LockwoodP
7ClevelandBill HandP7ClevelandWayne Garrett3B
8MinnesotaTito Fuentes2B8MinnesotaRay FossieC
9MilwaukeeEd BrinkmanSS9MilwaukeeCaesar Geronimoof
10New York (N) (via Bos)Ken HendersonOF10StL (via BostonMatty AlouOF
11PhiladelphiaSteve Arlin P11PhiladelphiaPaul LimbladP
12WashingtonTim Foliss12WashingtonEd HermanC
13CaliforniaManny MotaOF13CaliforniaBobby Valentine2B
14AtlantaToby HarrahSS14AtlantaSandy Alomar2B
15OaklandBoog Powel1B15OaklandLynn McGlothenP
16New York (N)Leron LeeOF16San Fran (via NY)Eddie WattP
17Chicago (N)Steve Braun3B17Chicago (N)Jose OrtaSS
18Mil (via Balt)Frank RobinsonOF18SF (via Balt)Tommie Ageecf
19KCduffy Dyerc19KCNorm Cash1B
20Los AngelesDave Roberts P20Los AngelesMike LumOF

Round 5 & 6 NOTE ALL TRADING ENDS WHEN ROUND 6 Begins

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1Montreal Frank DuffySS1MontrealRon Theobald2B
2PittsburghGray Ross P2PittsburghBob JohnsonP
3Cincinnati Paul Splittorff P3CincinnatiLuis Aparicioss
4San FranciscoCy AcostaP4San FranciscoTommy Harper OF
5St LouisBob Oliver1B5StLDick McAuliffe2B
6NYYJim McGlothlinP6NYYGene TenaceC
7ClevelandJim HickmanOF7ClevelandDave RaderC
8MinnesotaJohn BoccabellaC8MinnesotaDave LaRocheP
9MilwaukeeMike Jorgenson1B9MilwaukeeRay LambP
10BostonVada PinsonOF10BostonTom timmermanP
11PhiladelphiaChuck SeelbachP11PhiladelphiaElliott madduxof
12WashingtonCarl MortonP12WashingtonAndy EtchebarrenC
13CaliforniaJerry MoralesCF13CaliforniaTommy McCraw1B
14AtlantaDick BillingsC14AtlantaSonny SiebertP
15OaklandDennis Menkie3B15OaklandSteve DunningP
16Kansas City (via mets)Bob LockerP16 NY metsLeo CardenesSS
17chicago (N)John HillerP17CubsRich GossageP
18Mil (via balt)Darryl Porterc18BaltimoreGlenn Becket2B
19Mil (via KCGene Michaelss19Mil (via KC)Tom KelleyP
20Los AngelesBill Sudsakis1b20Los AngelesMerv Rettenmundof

Round 7 & 8

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1Montreal Jim FregosiSS1MontrealChris Chamblis1B
2PittsburghSteve Barber P2Pittsburghelrod Hendricksc
3Cincinnati Jim Ray Hart 3B3CincinnatiJerry GroteC
4San FranciscoJohn StrohmeyerP4San FranciscoTony TaylorInf
5St LouisDon McMahonP5St LouisPete BrobergP
6New York (AL)Jerry JohnsonP6New York (AL)Mark BelangerSS
7ClevelandRon ReedP7ClevelandTom GriffinP
8MinnesotaCito GastonOF8MinnesotaMike KekichP
9MilwaukeeJohnny Edwardsc9MilwaukeeBob HeiseInf
10BostonJoe HorlenP10 BostonStaeve KealyP
11PhiladelphiaLarvell BlanksUtl11PhiladelphiaPete RichertP
12Mil (via Wash)Ken SandersP12WashingtonRick Reichartof
13CaliforniaBill Faheyc13CaliforniaJim RookerP
14AtlantaTed FordP14AtlantaEd Krainpool1b
15OaklandChris ZacheryP15OaklandMike corkinsP
16KC (via mets)Bob Bailey 3B16New York (N)Dave LemondsP
17Chicago (N)John MilnerOF17Chicago (N)Mickey Stanleycf
18BaltimoreJuan MarichallP18BaltimoreBill ParsonsP
19Mil (via KC)Denny RiddlebergerP19Kansas CityJoe DeckerP
20Los AngelesGrant JacksonP20Los AngelesDiego SeguiP

Round 9 & 10

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1Montreal Bobby BrolinP1MontrealRon Hansen3B
2PittsburghRon Woods OF2PittsburghGary PetersP
3Cincinnati Ted Martinez 2B3CincinnatiBuckey BrandonP
4San FranciscoTerry Harmon2B4San FranciscoMaury WillsSS
5St LouisBill GogolewskiP
6New York (AL)ShellenbachP5New York (AL)Deron Johnson1B
7ClevelandBill SlaybackP6ClevelandGene AlleySS
8MinnesotaAngel Mangualof7MinnesotaDerryl Thomas2B
9MilwaukeeJack HiattC8 MilwaukeeJim SlantonP
10BostonDick DietzC9BostonKen BrettP
11 PhiladelphiaAndy KoscoOF10PhiladelphiaDeron JOhnson1B
12WashingtonVicente RomoP11WashingtonEddie FisherP
13CaliforniaJack AkerP12CaliforniaBob Robinson1B
13AtlantaCarmen Fanzone3B13AtlantaMonty MontgomeryP
14OaklandHoracio PinaP14OaklandDarrell Chaney SS
15New York (NL)lerrin LagrowP15New York (NL)Al SantoriniP
16Chicago (NL)Garry Jestdadt2B16Chicago (NL)Danny FrisellaP
17BaltimoreEric Soderholm3B17BaltimoreRich AuerbachSS
18Kansas CityEnzo Hernandezss18Kansas CityLuiz MelendezCF
19Los AngelesMickey Riverscf19Los AngelesFred KendallC

Round 11 & 12

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1Montreal Terry HumpfreyC1MontrealMilt Mayc
2PittsburghDave Leonard P2PittsburghSonny JacksonSS
3Cincinnati John Ellis C3CincinnatiAl FitzmorrisP
4New York (AL)Bill Melton3B4New York (AL)Wayne SimpsonP
5ClevelandHal King1B5ClevelandTom MurphyP
6MinnesotaRon Bloomberg1B6MinnesotaJim NorthrupOF
7MilwaukeeGeorge StoneP7MilwaukeeGary WaslewskiP
8BostonDon BufordOF8BostonGil Garrido2B
9 PhiladelphiaPat Corralesc9PhiladelphiaTony OlivaOF
10WashingtonEd FarmerP10WashingtonJohn LowenstienOF
11CaliforniaBill Plumberc11CaliforniaMike HedlundP
12AtlantaFrank RebergerP12AtlantaJerry MosesC
13OaklandDuke SimsC13OaklandJim StrictlandP
14New York (NL)Ray SadeckiP14New York (NL)Bill WilsonP
15Chicago (NL)Felipe Alou1B15Chicago (NL)Sam McDowellP
16BaltimoreBob MillerP16BaltimoreBen OgliveOF
17Kansas CityMike Andrews2B17Kansas CityDave Campbell3B
18Los AngelesGary GentryP18Los AngelesAl Gallagher3b

Round 13 & 14

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1Montreal Earl StephensonP1MontrealWillie HortonOF
2PittsburghCurt Blefary C2PittsburghJoe LahaudOF
3Cincinnati Steve Mingori P3CincinnatiMike KilkennyP
4New York (AL)Dal MaxvillSS4New York (AL)Oscar GambleRF
5ClevelandBilly ConigliaroOF
6MinnesotaEd Spiezio3B5MinnesotaBuzz CapraP
7BostonRick MillerOF6BostonBrock DavisOF
8PhiladelphiaBill ButlerP7PhilladelphiaDan McGinnP
9WashingtonFrank Howard1B8Washington
10CaliforniaRusty TorresRF9CaliforniaTed Kubick2B
11AtlantaTim Cullen2B10AtlantaKen ReynoldsP
12OaklandCecil UpshawP11OaklandEd Goodwin1B
15New York (NL)Pat JarvisP12New York (NL)Eddie LeonSS
16Chicago (NL)Ray CulpP13Chicago (NL)John StephensonC
17BaltimoreFred SchermanP14BaltimoreJim RayP
18Kansas CityBill GreifP15Kansas CityKen SwarezC
19Los AngelesMarty PerezSS16Los Angeles

Round 15 & 16

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1MontrealOrlando Cepeda1B1MontrealNorm AngliniP
2PittsburghJoe NiekroP2PittsburghJuan PizzaroP
3CincinnatiRickey ClarkP
4New York (AL)Phil Roofc3New York (AL)George Hendrickcf
5MinnesotaDwayne AndersonInf4MinnesotaLarry Bitnerof
6BostonJoe Pepitone1B5BostonJerry McNertleyc
7WashingtonChuck TaylorP6WashingtonBobby Knoop2B
8CaliforniaMike StrahlerP7CaliforniaChris ShortP
9AtlantaCleon JonesOF8AtlantaVince ColbertP
10OaklandIke BrownInf9OaklandKen TatumP
11New York (NL)Joe Hague1B10New York (NL)Steve Bryeof
12Chicago (NL)Moe DrabowskyP11Chicago (NL)Mike Ryanc
13BaltimoreJeff Torborgc12BaltimoreBernie Allen3B
14Kansas CityAlan FosterP13Kansas CityMike Hegan1B
15Los AngelesKen WrightP14Los AngelesWalt WilliamsOF

Round 17 & 18

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1MontrealHal Lanier3B1MontrealGates BrownOF
2PittsburghLloyd AllenP2PittsburghCoco Laboy3B
3BostonAl SeverinsenP3BostonTommy MooreP
4CaliforniaBob Bartonc4CaliforniaTom PhobousP
5AtlantaDon CarrithersP5AtlantaOscar BrownOF
6OaklandDick Green2B6OaklandDanny Cater1B
7New York (N)Joe Lis1B7New York (N)Don Minchner1B
8Chicago (N)Tom DukesP8Chicago (N)Lowell PalmerP
9BaltimoreRoger FreedOF9BaltimoreClyde MashoreOF
10Kansas CityJim Spencer1B10Kansas CityJohnny JeterOF
11Los AngelesAlex JohnsonOF11Los AngelesJackie HernandezSS

Round 19 & 20

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1MontrealBuddy BradfordOF
2PittsburghJerry Jeneskip
5CaliforniaMike McQueenP1CaliforniaRon SwabotaOF
6AtlantaMike CosgroveP2AtlantaRich MoralasSS
7New York (N)Ron PerranoskiP3New York (N)Ed AscostaP
8Chicago (N)Jerry KenneySS4Chicago (N)Steve HamiltonP
9BaltimoreJim HardinP5BaltimoreJohn KennedySS
10Kansas CityPaul Popovich2B6Kansas CityJohnny Grubbcf
11Los AngelesBilly ChampionP7Los AngelesBart JohnsonP

Round 21 & 22

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1AtlantaJohn BatemanC1AtlantaRich Reese1B
2New York (N)Steve HovleyOF2New York (N)Dwayne Josephson1b
3Chicago (N)Terry CrowleyOF
4BaltimoreJimmy Stewart1b3BaltimoreDon Clendenon1B
5Kansas CityChris Canazarioc4Kansas CityBrent StormP
6Los AngelesJim YorkP5Los AngelesEd SpragueP

Round 23 & 24

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1New York (N)Bobby FloydP1New York (N)Hoyt WilhelmP
2BaltimoreCasey CoxP
3Kansas CityJesus Alou1B2Kansas CityJoe HornerP

Round 25 & 26

Pick # TeamPlayerPositionPick #TeamPlayerPosition
1New York (N)Jim HoltOF1New York (N)Hal Breeden1B
3Kansas City Tom BurgermeierP

Round 27

Pick # TeamPlayerPosition
1New York (N)Bob MontgomeryC