1959 Philadelphia Phillies season - Biblioteka.sk

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1959 Philadelphia Phillies season
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1959 Philadelphia Phillies
LeagueNational League
BallparkConnie Mack Stadium
CityPhiladelphia
OwnersR. R. M. Carpenter, Jr.
General managersJohn J. Quinn
ManagersEddie Sawyer
TelevisionWFIL
RadioWIP
(By Saam, Claude Haring, Gene Kelly)
← 1958 Seasons 1960 →

The 1959 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 77th season in the history of the franchise. During spring training, manager Eddie Sawyer told the press, "We're definitely not a last place club... I think the biggest thing we've accomplished is getting rid of the losing complex. That alone makes us not a last place club."[1] The Phillies finished in last place in 1959, seven games behind seventh-place St. Louis and 23 games behind the pennant and World Series winning Dodgers. They attracted 802,515 fans to Connie Mack Stadium, seventh in the eight-team league.

Offseason

In early 1959, Phillies owner Bob Carpenter proposed building a new ballpark for the Phillies on 72 acres (290,000 m2) adjacent to the Garden State Park Racetrack in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. Connie Mack Stadium was 50 years old, did not have sufficient parking, and the sale of alcohol was banned at sports venues in Pennsylvania. Beer sales were legal in New Jersey. The proposed ballpark would have seated 45,000 fans, been expandable to 60,000, and would have had 15,000 parking spaces.[2] The Phillies would eventually move to the South Philadelphia Sports Complex in 1971. On January 13, Carpenter also changed general_managers, replacing Roy Hamey with John J. Quinn, recruited from the defending two-time National League champion Milwaukee Braves.[3] Quinn would run the Phils' front office for almost 14 full seasons.

Notable transactions

Regular season

On April 11, coach Benny Bengough was removed from the coaching staff and reassigned to the front office where he worked in team public relations.[10]

Season standings

National League W L Pct. GB Home Road
Los Angeles Dodgers 88 68 0.564 46–32 42–36
Milwaukee Braves 86 70 0.551 2 49–29 37–41
San Francisco Giants 83 71 0.539 4 42–35 41–36
Pittsburgh Pirates 78 76 0.506 9 47–30 31–46
Chicago Cubs 74 80 0.481 13 38–39 36–41
Cincinnati Reds 74 80 0.481 13 43–34 31–46
St. Louis Cardinals 71 83 0.461 16 42–35 29–48
Philadelphia Phillies 64 90 0.416 23 37–40 27–50

Record vs. opponents


Sources:
Team CHC CIN LA MIL PHI PIT SF STL
Chicago 9–13 11–11 10–12 10–12–1 12–10 12–10 10–12
Cincinnati 13–9 13–9 11–11 9–13 9–13 8–14 11–11
Los Angeles 11–11 9–13 14–10 17–5 11–11 14–8 12–10
Milwaukee 12–10 11–11 10–14 13–9 15–7–1 12–10 13–9
Philadelphia 12–10–1 13–9 5–17 9–13 9–13 9–13 7–15
Pittsburgh 10–12 13–9 11–11 7–15–1 13–9 10–12 14–8
San Francisco 10–12 14–8 8–14 10–12 13–9 12–10 16–6
St. Louis 12–10 11–11 10–12 9–13 15–7 8–14 6–16


Notable transactions

Game log

1959 Game Log (Overall Record: 64–90–1)
April (6–8)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
1 April 10 Reds 2–1 Robin Roberts (1–0) Don Newcombe (0–1) None 22,189 1–0
April 11 Reds Postponed (rain);[14] Makeup: July 2 as a traditional double-header
April 12 (1) Reds Postponed (rain);[15] Makeup: August 14 as a traditional double-header
April 12 (2) Reds Postponed (rain);[15] Makeup: September 22 as a traditional double-header
2 April 14 @ Braves 3–4 (10) Don McMahon (1–0) Turk Farrell (0–1) None 42,081 1–1
3 April 16 @ Braves 3–7 Lew Burdette (2–0) Jack Meyer (0–1) None 11,186 1–2
4 April 17 @ Reds 5–1 Ray Semproch (1–0) Brooks Lawrence (0–1) None 8,376 2–2
5 April 18 @ Reds 14–9 Al Schroll (1–0) Don Newcombe (0–2) None 2,890 3–2
6 April 19 @ Reds 5–12 Bob Mabe (1–0) Jim Owens (0–1) None 8,091 3–3
April 20 @ Pirates Postponed (rain, wet grounds);[16][17] Makeup: May 7
7 April 22 Braves 0–2 Lew Burdette (3–0) Robin Roberts (1–1) None 14,228 3–4
8 April 23 Braves 4–3 Ray Semproch (2–0) Juan Pizarro (0–1) None 8,689 4–4
9 April 24 Pirates 5–8 Roy Face (2–0) Al Schroll (1–1) None 15,675 4–5
10 April 25 Pirates 2–4 Harvey Haddix (1–0) Seth Morehead (0–1) None 6,678 4–6
11 April 26 (1) Pirates 2–9 Vern Law (2–1) Don Cardwell (0–1) None see 2nd game 4–7
12 April 26 (2) Pirates 10–5 Jack Meyer (1–1) Bob Friend (0–3) None 19,266 5–7
April 27 Giants Postponed (rain);[18] Makeup: June 14 as a traditional double-header
April 28 Giants Postponed (rain, cold weather);[19][20] Makeup: July 14 as a traditional double-header
13 April 29 Dodgers 5–4 Jack Meyer (2–1) Johnny Podres (2–2) None 13,775 6–7
14 April 30 Dodgers 4–6 Johnny Klippstein (3–0) Ray Semproch (2–1) Art Fowler (1) 11,547 6–8
May (11–21)
Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=1959_Philadelphia_Phillies_season
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# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
15 May 1 Cubs 4–2 Jim Owens (1–1) Glen Hobbie (2–2) None 9,054 7–8
16 May 2 Cubs 3–4 Joe Schaffernoth (1–0) Seth Morehead (0–2) Don Elston (5) 4,171 7–9
17 May 3 (1) Cubs 3–4 John Buzhardt (1–2) Turk Farrell (0–2) Don Elston (6) see 2nd game 7–10
18 May 3 (2) Cubs 5–4 Jack Meyer (3–1) Bill Henry (2–1) None 13,660 8–10
19 May 5 Cardinals 8–7 Turk Farrell (1–2) Larry Jackson (0–4) None 12,023 9–10
20 May 6 Cardinals 7–8 Howie Nunn (1–1) Jack Meyer (3–2) Jim Brosnan (2) 12,005 9–11
21 May 7 @ Pirates 4–5 (10) Roy Face (4–0) Jim Owens (1–2) None 10,358 9–12
22 May 8 @ Pirates 8–1 Gene Conley (1–0) Red Witt (0–4) Turk Farrell (1) 17,691 10–12
23 May 9 @ Pirates 1–9 Ron Kline (3–1) Rubén Gómez (0–1) None 9,633 10–13
24 May 10 (1) @ Pirates 6–3 Robin Roberts (2–1) Bob Friend (0–6) Turk Farrell (2) see 2nd game 11–13
25 May 10 (2) @ Pirates 6–7 Harvey Haddix (3–1) Jim Hearn (0–1) Roy Face (2) 23,549 11–14
26 May 11 @ Dodgers 10–11 Art Fowler (3–2) Jim Hearn (0–2) None 13,524 11–15
27 May 12 @ Dodgers 1–3 Danny McDevitt (2–1) Gene Conley (1–1) None 12,562 11–16
28 May 13 @ Giants 0–6