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Major League Baseball season

Major League Baseball team season
1986 New York Mets
World Series champions
National League champions
National League East champions
The 1986 World Champion New York Mets reuniting at Citi Field for the team's 30th anniversary in 2016
LeagueNational League
DivisionEast
BallparkShea Stadium
CityNew York
Record108–54 (.667)
Divisional place1st
OwnersNelson Doubleday Jr. and
Fred Wilpon
General managerFrank Cashen
ManagerDavey Johnson
TelevisionWOR-TV 9
(Ralph Kiner, Tim McCarver, Steve Zabriskie, Rusty Staub)
SportsChannel New York
(Ralph Kiner, Tim McCarver, Fran Healy, Rusty Staub)
RadioWHNAM 1050
(Bob Murphy, Gary Thorne, Juan Alicea (SP))
 1985
1987 

During the 1986 Major League Baseball (MLB) season, the New York Mets won the National League East (NL East), the National League Championship Series (NLCS) and the World Series, the team's second and most recent World Series championship. General manager Frank Cashen and manager Davey Johnson built a powerful team that compiled one of the best regular season records in MLB history.

Playing their 25th season in the National League, the Mets improved from a 98–64 record in 1985 to a franchise-best 108–54. They were never seriously challenged in the NL East, defeating the second-place Philadelphia Phillies by 2112 games. They went on to defeat the Houston Astros in six games in the NLCS and the American League champion Boston Red Sox in seven games in the World Series. Both series featured a memorable extra-inning Game 6 won by the Mets after being down to their final at-bat: over the Astros to win the NLCS and over the Red Sox to avoid elimination and force a Game 7.

The 1986 Mets have been described as one of the best teams in MLB history. Nevertheless, the failure to sustain the success has marred the team's legacy. During the season, many team members drank heavily, and the 1986 Mets have become known for their lifestyle off the field.

Background

[edit]

The New York Mets began play in 1962, and for their first seven years were known mostly for losing. Despite this, they attracted considerable fan support,[1] especially once Shea Stadium opened in 1964.[2] By 1968, they had one of the National League's premier pitching staffs, but still finished ninth in the ten-team league.[3] But the following year, the "Miracle Mets" won the National League East with a 100–62 record and swept the Atlanta Braves in the 1969 National League Championship Series.[4][5] The American League champions, the Baltimore Orioles, who had won 109 games during the regular season, had difficulty taking New York seriously, given the team's reputation for losing.[6] They learned to do so, as in the 1969 World Series, the Mets defeated the Orioles, four games to one.[7]

The Mets failed to build on this triumph.[8] In 1973, the Mets, despite a mediocre regular season, took the defending champion Oakland A's to the seventh game of the 1973 World Series.[9] That would be the last postseason appearance for the Mets until 1986.[10] Minimal success followed 1973, leading into losing seasons in the late 1970s and early 1980s, with low attendance. Many fans were alienated by the 1977 trade of pitcher Tom Seaver in a contract dispute.[11] In 1979, the Mets finished last, 35 games behind the Pittsburgh Pirates, and drew fewer than 800,000 fans to Shea Stadium, the lowest full-season attendance thus far in team history.[12]

In January 1980, Nelson Doubleday Jr. and Fred Wilpon purchased the Mets. They hired Frank Cashen as general manager.[13] He began work, warning that it would take four or five years to build a winning team. One advantage the Mets' woeful record had gotten them was the first pick in the 1979 MLB Draft, which they used to select Darryl Strawberry.[14] Cashen made only one minor trade in 1980, spending the season observing,[15] and the team avoided last place for the first time since 1976, finishing fifth. The 1981 season saw improvement, with young prospects such as Hubie Brooks and Mookie Wilson playing well. The team briefly contended in the second half of the strike-marred 1981 season, before fading due to injuries.[16][17]

A baseball player in uniform kneels facing the camera
The acquisition of Keith Hernandez was a key ingredient in building the 1986 Mets.

The 1982 Mets started well, six games over .500 on Memorial Day, and then fell apart, losing 97 games and coming within two of the team record for consecutive losses, set at 17 by the woeful 1962 Mets.[18] Cashen made a number of trades, acquiring Ron Darling and George Foster, and with the fifth selection in the 1982 MLB Draft took Dwight Gooden.[19] The Mets finished last again in 1983, but Strawberry won NL Rookie of the Year and the Mets' young pitching staff showed potential. The Mets acquired former Most Valuable Player Keith Hernandez from the St. Louis Cardinals.[20]

Before the 1984 season, Cashen hired former Oriole Davey Johnson as manager. Despite an abundance of quality pitching, the Mets were picked to finish last again.[21] Gooden won seventeen games and the NL Rookie of the Year award and Strawberry started the All-Star Game as the Mets finished second, 612 games behind the Chicago Cubs.[22] The Mets improved what was already a strong lineup by acquiring slugging catcher Gary Carter from the Montreal Expos in December 1984.[23] The Mets built by such trades: of the eight position players who started most for the 1986 Mets, only four were originally signed by New York, and of the four regular starting pitchers, only Gooden was a Mets draft pick.[24] In 1985, the Mets won 98 games and took the Cardinals to the final weekend of the regular season before finishing second, three games back.[25] Despite having the most wins in baseball for the combined 1984 and 1985 seasons, in an era before the wild card in baseball, the Mets had no playoff appearances to show for it.[26]

Offseason

[edit]

The Mets signed no expensive free agents in the 1985–86 offseason. GM Frank Cashen did not favor free agency, and most baseball owners, at the request of the new baseball commissioner, Peter Ueberroth, had agreed to refrain from signing free agents to keep salary costs down. For this, they were later penalized for collusion.[27] Given Cashen's views on the subject, the Mets might have stayed out of the free agent market anyway, but their rivals also doing so benefitted New York.[28]

Notable offseason transactions involving the Mets included:

Spring training

[edit]
Baseball players running together
Mets spring training in 1986

One issue that shadowed the Mets as they began preparation for the 1986 season was the involvement of Hernandez in cocaine use–he had testified during a criminal trial in Pittsburgh during the previous year's pennant race. On February 28, 1986, Commissioner Ueberroth suspended Hernandez, along with six players on other teams, for a year, but allowed them to play the 1986 season if they agreed to drug testing, performed community service and donated part of their salaries to anti-drug initiatives. All affected players agreed to these terms.[35]

The 1986 Mets held spring training at Al Lang Stadium in St. Petersburg, Florida for the 25th season, at facilities that they shared with the Cardinals.[36] Tired of the arrangement, the Mets signed an agreement in June 1986 to move to a complex in Port St. Lucie, Florida.[37] During the exhibition season, the Mets posted a record of 13 wins, 13 losses and a tie.[38] One major injury during spring training was to Mookie Wilson, whose sunglasses shattered when hit by a thrown ball during a drill. He needed eye surgery and was out for two months.[39]

Regular season

[edit]

The 1986 Mets were my introduction to the experience of being good, and of course it was a complete anomaly—our one and only unstoppable winning machine. We were the favorite in every game we played. The Mets were the favorite. We were supposed to win and we did. It'll never happen again ... It felt less like magic, more like curb-stomping. The '86 Mets were crude and brutish and swaggering, and they kept punching people ... The '86 Mets were a pack of savages, and I loved it.

Devin Gordon (2021). So Many Ways to Lose: The Amazing True Story of the New York Mets, the Best Worst Team in Sports, p. 183

April

[edit]

The Mets had a rocky start with a 2–3 record (including two extra-inning losses to the St. Louis Cardinals and Philadelphia Phillies, respectively). But when the Mets beat the Pirates on April 22 for their fifth straight victory, moving their record to 7–3, they took over first place, a position they would never relinquish.[40][41]

The Mets had their first off-the-field controversy of the season, with Gooden involved in an altercation at LaGuardia Airport while returning a rental car. Although this later led to Gooden doing commercials for another rental car company, there were negative headlines in the New York press at the time.[42]

Their toughest test in this stretch happened in St. Louis in a four-game series. On April 24, with the Cardinals leading 4–2 in the top of the ninth, Howard Johnson hit a game-tying home run and the Mets won in ten innings, the first blown ninth inning lead for the Cardinals in 90 games. After Gooden shut out the Cardinals in the second game, New York completed the sweep with two more wins. Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog told sportswriters, "The Mets are the team to beat. Hell, they think they won the last two years anyway."[43] The Mets finished the month 13–3, 412 games in front of the Cardinals and the best start in franchise history.[44]

May

[edit]

After posting the best winning percentage of any month in franchise history in April, the Mets won twice more, over the Braves, before losing, but then started a seven-game winning streak, thus winning 18 of 19 games and posting an overall record of 20–5. By then, four of the Mets' five NL East rivals were at least nine games back, including the Cardinals, leaving only the Expos, whom the Mets had not yet played.[45] On May 15, after a victory over Houston and ex-Met Nolan Ryan, Gary Carter stated that the other teams "must be thinking, 'Gee, when are the Mets going to take a dive?' Well, we don't plan on it."[46]

Many of the Mets drank heavily, including on the charter aircraft taking the team from city to city. Davey Johnson, a hard drinker both as a player and as Mets manager, strongly disliked taking on the role of disciplinarian, and avoided it. Though some Mets, like Gary Carter and Mookie Wilson, were well-behaved, others, such as Danny Heep, Doug Sisk and Jesse Orosco, drank heavily in the rear of the team aircraft (and elsewhere) and were known as the "Scum Bunch".[47]

The Mets continued from Houston on a nine-game West Coast swing, on which they went 5–4.[48] The Mets had rarely had success on West Coast road trips in recent years and counted it a victory to return to Shea with the same four-game lead they had left with.[49] On May 27 at Shea, the Mets and Dodgers had an on-the-field brawl after Dodgers reliever Tom Niedenfuer hit Ray Knight with a pitch after George Foster had hit a grand slam home run.[50] The Mets went 18–9 in May and ended the month with a season record of 31–12.[48]

June

[edit]

The Mets had suffered injuries to third baseman Howard Johnson and to Strawberry, the latter causing great concern since an injury to him the previous year was blamed with costing the Mets the division title. Both returned in June, with the Mets 6–3 in Strawberry's absence.[51]

Playing against the Pirates at Three Rivers Stadium on June 6, the Mets were in another on-field brawl, this one sparked by a dispute between Pirates pitcher Rick Rhoden and Mets first base coach Bill Robinson over whether Rhoden was tampering with the ball.[52] The Mets split a doubleheader with the Pirates that day, with Strawberry went 4–7 with a home run on his first day back, and the Mets took four of five games in that series.[53] On June 10 against the Phillies, reserve infielder Tim Teufel hit a pinch-hit, game-winning grand slam in the 11th inning.[54][55]

New York finally played Montreal in mid-June; the Expos won two of three at Stade Olympique, with Gooden losing the third game, and Montreal also won two of three at Shea, with Gooden pitching poorly in a no decision. Despite an 8–2 record, Gooden was pitching badly enough that there was speculation as to what might be wrong–his increasing cocaine habit was not yet publicly known. Ahead by 912 games at month's end,[56] the Mets went 19–9 during June and finished the month with a season record of 50–21.[48]

July

[edit]

A Gooden victory over the Astros at Shea on July 4 was the team's eighth straight, and put the Mets 1212 games ahead in the NL East,[48] the second-largest July 4 lead in NL history after the 1912 New York Giants.[57]

The Mets had their third brawl of the season on July 11 when Braves pitcher David Palmer hit Strawberry with a pitch after Carter hit a three-run home run and then took a curtain call to the Shea crowd. Carter, on his next at bat against Palmer hit a grand slam, and the Mets won 11–0.[58]

At the 1986 MLB All-Star Game in Houston, with New York 1312 games ahead, there were five Met players including Gooden, who was the starting (and losing) pitcher for the NL. Also present was Davey Johnson, one of Whitey Herzog's coaches.[59] The night after the All-Star break concluded, still in Houston, the Mets defeated Nolan Ryan and the Astros, 13–2. Then, several Mets went out to a local nightclub and there was an altercation with the Houston police, and four Mets were arrested. Charges were dropped, but there was massive publicity and the Mets lost the remaining games in the series.[60]

The remaining brawl the Mets had on the field in 1986 occurred at Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium on July 22. In the top of the ninth, Dave Parker dropped the ball that could have been the final out for the Reds, allowing the Mets to tie the game. In the bottom of the tenth, Eric Davis got to third and brawled with Ray Knight. Both men, along with Kevin Mitchell and Mario Soto, were ejected. Johnson was forced to alternate Orosco and Roger McDowell in the outfield and at pitcher. In the top of the fourteenth, Howard Johnson hit a three-run home run to score the winning runs.[61] The Mets went 16–11 during July and finished the month with a season record of 66–32 and were up by 1512 games in the NL East.[48]

August

[edit]

Former MVP George Foster was released after he was benched for Mitchell, and in interviews stated his belief that the benching was not due to his decline in production, but was for racial reasons. Foster had also refused to leave the bench for the brawl in Cincinnati, which was seen by teammates as a refusal to defend them. Former Mets favorite Lee Mazzilli was re-signed, filling Foster's spot on the roster.[62]

By mid-August, the pennant race was just about over, with the Mets up 18 games.[63] The Mets went 21–11 in August and ended the month with a season record, to that point, of 87–43 and were up by 19 games in the NL East.[48]

September–October

[edit]

By September 12, the Mets had reduced their magic number, the number of wins (or losses by the second-place team) they needed to clinch the division, to 2, and with a three-game series upcoming at the second-place Phillies, the Mets expected to clinch the division.[64] Droves of Mets fans were at hoping to see them clinch the NL East. Instead, the Phillies remained alive in the division by sweeping the Mets.

The Mets won a team-record 108 games.[69] They went 16–11 during September and won all five regular season October games to end the season with a record of 108-54 while winning the NL East by 2112 games.[48]

Postseason

[edit]

NLCS

[edit]

There was for the Mets the terrifying shadow of a pitcher named Mike Scott hanging over the entire proceedings. In his two starting assignments, Mike Scott positively humiliated New York's killers. After that the Mets kept looking over their shoulders, anticipating when they would see him next, until on the day of the sixteen-inning game, Scott's shadow lent a new kind of ferocity to the Mets' game plan. Time may twist the Mets' memories of that situation, but virtually every one of them felt that the team could not beat Scott. Virtually every one of them believed that either they would win it in six or give back to Scott in Game Seven everything they had created in the magnificent summer of 1986.

Jerry Izenberg (1987). The Greatest Game Ever Played, p. 17

The Astros had won the NL West with 96 wins, 12 fewer than the Mets.[70] It was the NL East's turn to have home team advantage, but the Houston Oilers had an NFL game scheduled for the same day as Game 4 that could not be moved, and the league scheduled the Astros to have the extra home game.[71] Thus, the Astros hosted the Mets for the first two games of the 1986 National League Championship Series,[72] with Game 1 on October 8 featuring Gooden against Mike Scott. A second-inning home run by Houston's Glenn Davis was the only run as the Astros won the opening game, 1–0.[73] The Mets evened the series the next day as Bob Ojeda outpitched Nolan Ryan, 5–1.[74]

Game 3 at Shea Stadium on October 11 featured a matchup of Bob Knepper versus the Mets' Ron Darling. Houston took a 4–0 lead, including a two-run home run by Bill Doran but the Mets tied it with four runs in the sixth, including a home run by Strawberry with two men on base. Rick Aguilera of the Mets gave up an unearned run in the top of the seventh, but in the bottom of the ninth, Lenny Dykstra of the Mets hit a two-run home run off Houston closer Dave Smith to win the game 6-5, with Orosco taking the decision.[75] Houston pitched Scott again in Game 4; he outdueled Sid Fernandez, 3–1, for his second win of the series.[76]

Postponed a day due to rain,[77] Game 5 was another pitcher's duel with Nolan Ryan for the Astros against Dwight Gooden. Ryan gave up one run in nine innings, while Gooden gave up one run in ten. Wally Backman singled in the twelfth and was brought home by a Carter hit for the winning run in a 2–1 game, with Orosco winning his second game.[48][78]

The series returned to Houston for its conclusion, with the Mets up three games to two.[48] The Mets were desperate to avoid giving Mike Scott a chance at a third victory in a Game 7.[79] The Astros scored three runs in the bottom of the first and Knepper set to work protecting that lead, allowing no runs through eight innings, and the score remained 3–0 Astros going into the top of the ninth.[80] Three hits by the Mets in the top of the ninth scored two runs and drove Knepper from the game, bringing in Smith, who allowed a sacrifice fly by Knight to tie the score. The game went into extra innings. The Mets scored in the top of the fourteenth, but in the bottom of the inning Billy Hatcher homered to tie the game again at 4–4. In the sixteenth, the Mets scored three times, but the Astros cut the lead to a run before Orosco retired the side for his third win of the series, 7–6, giving the Mets the pennant.[81]

On the flight back to New York, the Mets partied on the charter flight and trashed the plane, causing United Airlines to present them with a bill for $7,500 and a notice that the team's business was no longer welcome.[82]

World Series

[edit]
A man in baseball uniform swinging a bat
Mookie Wilson's two-run at bat won Game 6.

The Boston Red Sox had defeated the California Angels in the 1986 American League Championship Series.[83] They quickly took the wind out of the Mets' sails by winning the first two games at Shea, the first 1–0 behind Bruce Hurst, the second 9–3, a Steve Crawford win in relief of Roger Clemens over Gooden.[84]

The Mets won Game 3 at Fenway Park behind two Gary Carter home runs, as Bob Ojeda was the winner, 7–1, over Oil Can Boyd. They evened the series behind Darling, 6–2, as Al Nipper took the loss. But Hurst beat the Mets again in Game 5, defeating Gooden, 4–2. This sent the series back to Shea Stadium with the Mets needing to win two straight games to take the series.[85]

Ojeda and Clemens faced off in Game 6, though neither figured in the decision. The Red Sox took leads of 2–0 and 3–2, but the Mets tied it each time and the game went to extra innings, tied 3–3. In the top of the tenth, Dave Henderson homered and Marty Barrett drove home Wade Boggs to give the Red Sox a 5–3 lead.[86]

In the bottom of the tenth, the first two Mets went quietly against Calvin Schiraldi. With the Mets down to their last out, Carter and Kevin Mitchell singled, and Ray Knight drove home a run with a single to narrow the score to 5–4 and bring Mookie Wilson to the plate. Boston manager John McNamara brought in Bob Stanley to pitch to Wilson.[87] As Wilson batted, he fouled off a series of pitches. Stanley threw a wild pitch to bring home Mitchell and tie the game at 5–5. Wilson hit a ball down the first base line. First baseman Bill Buckner attempted to field it but it went between his legs, Knight scored, and the Mets won 6–5, meaning there would be a series-deciding Game 7.[88]

The final game was postponed a day due to rain, allowing McNamara to start Hurst for the third time.[89] The Red Sox took a 3–0 lead in the second inning, while Hurst allowed little until the sixth inning, when the Mets broke through to tie the score. Schiraldi replaced Hurst, and in the seventh inning, Knight hit a home run and the Mets scored three runs to take a 6–3 lead. Boston narrowed the lead to 6–5 in the top of the eighth, but two runs, including a home run from Strawberry, gave the Mets an 8–5 lead. Jesse Orosco, who had been brought in to relieve Roger McDowell in the eighth, retired the Red Sox in the ninth to give the Mets their second World Series championship.[90]

Aftermath and legacy

[edit]

The Mets owned New York City because they were New York City. In 1986, way before the Giuliani crackdowns, the Big Apple was a cesspool of sin ... There was a ruthlessness floating through the air, a vibe that the movie Wall Street summed up perfectly. Mets manager Davey Johnson guaranteed that his team would dominate, and the town didn't flinch. They expected nothing less.

Jeff Pearlman (2004). The Bad Guys Won, p. 5

New York City threw a parade for the Mets the day after Game 7; two million fans attended. Not among those present was Dwight Gooden, who would have a difficult winter, including an arrest in his hometown of Tampa, culminating with his testing positive for cocaine at the start of the 1987 season and entering a rehabilitation facility.[91] Just like in 1985, the Mets finished second, both times three games behind the Cardinals.[92]

The 1988 Mets easily won the NL East, but fell in seven games to Orel Hershiser and the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 1988 NLCS. The Mets finished second the next two years, but by then few 1986 Mets remained on the team, and Davey Johnson was fired early in the 1990 season.[93] Despite World Series appearances in 2000 and 2015, they have not won the Series again.[94]

In 1987, Bill James said of the 1986 Mets, "In what areas of play were they outstanding? They led the league in both ERA and runs scored ...There may never have been a pennant winner which had such an extraordinary balance of pitching and hitting."[95] In 2000, Rob Neyer and Eddie Epstein ranked the 1986 Mets eighth and tenth, respectively, in lists of all-time great teams.[96] The team is often regarded as one of the best of all time, being cited in 2021 by ESPN as a top contender for best MLB team of the previous half-century.[97] Nevertheless, according to Neyer and Epstein, "Davey Johnson's Mets won only one World Series, which of course hurts their standing in the court of popular opinion."[98]

In 2009, ESPN.com writer David Schoenfeld described Game 6 of the 1986 World Series as the second-greatest sports moment of the 1980s, behind the "Miracle on Ice" of the 1980 Winter Olympics.[99] Jerry Izenberg wrote a book about Game 6 against Houston entitled, The Greatest Game Ever Played[100] Silverman agreed with that assessment: "three decades later, there is not a lot of argument against it. More than a dozen LCS have gone the full seven games since 1986, but the drama of this six-game series remains unparalleled."[72] At the time, it was the longest postseason game ever played; though it has been surpassed in that regard, it remains the longest game in the NLCS. Brett Baker of baseball-reference.com stated, "In retrospect the 1986 Mets were a team of destiny. And this game, when they were up 3-2 in the series, but down 3-0 going into the 9th is a prime example."[101]

ESPN's 30 for 30 in 2021 released a four-part documentary on the 1986 Mets entitled Once Upon a Time in Queens.[102][103]

The 1986 Mets have become as known for their partying as for their success on the baseball diamond, in large part due to Jeff Pearlman's 2004 bestseller, The Bad Guys Won. Pearlman stated that there could be no parallel to the 1986 Mets in the 21st century:

There’s no way with Twitter and cell phones, iPhones, that the '86 Mets could have lived that way—there’s no way. At [the bar] Finn McCool's getting wasted and someone would videotape it. Or some woman would have taken pictures [of] her hooking up with ... No. Impossible.[104]

Standings and game logs

[edit]

Regular season standings

[edit]
NL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
New York Mets 10854 .667 5526 5328
Philadelphia Phillies 8675 .534 21½ 4931 3744
St. Louis Cardinals 7982 .491 28½ 4239 3743
Montreal Expos 7883 .484 29½ 3644 4239
Chicago Cubs 7090 .438 37 4238 2852
Pittsburgh Pirates 6498 .395 44 3150 3348

Source:[70]

1986 Game Log
Overall: 108–54 (Home: 55–26; Away: 53–28)
April (13–3) (Home: 5–1; Road: 8–2)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumRecordReportRankGB
1April 8@ Pirates4–2Gooden (1–0)Reuschel (0–1)48,962Three Rivers Stadium1–0Boxscore1Tied6:05 PM ESTWOR-TV
April 10@ PiratesPostponed (inclement weather); rescheduled for June 6Three Rivers Stadium
2April 11@ Phillies9–7Ojeda (1–0)Gross (0–1)Orosco (1)36,190Veterans Stadium2–0Boxscore27:35 PM ESTSportsChannel New York Plus
3April 12@ Phillies8–9 (14)Hudson (1–0)Niemann (0–1)22,737Veterans Stadium2–1Boxscore2-1+121:20 PM ESTNBC
4April 13@ Phillies2–4Rawley (1–0)Aguilera (0–1)27,691Veterans Stadium2–2Boxscore3-1+123:05 PM ESTWOR-TVABC
5April 14Cardinals2–6 (13)Perry (1–0)Niemann (0–2)47,752Shea Stadium2–3Boxscore4-2+121:35 PM ESTWOR-TV
April 16CardinalsPostponed (rain); rescheduled for August 14Shea Stadium-2+12
April 17CardinalsPostponed (rain); rescheduled for August 17Shea Stadium-2+12
6April 18Phillies5–2Darling (1–0)Carlton (0–2)Orosco (2)26,906Shea Stadium3–3Boxscore3-2+127:35 PM ESTWOR-TV
7April 19Phillies3–2Gooden (2–0)Rawley (1–1)38,333Shea Stadium4–3Boxscore3-2+121:35 PM ESTSportsChannel New York
8April 20Phillies8–0Fernandez (1–0)Gross (0–2)41,848Shea Stadium5–3Boxscore3-1+121:35 PM ESTWOR-TV
9April 21Pirates6–5McDowell (1–0)Clements (0–1)10,282Shea Stadium6–3Boxscore2-17:35 PM ESTWOR-TV
10April 22Pirates7–1Ojeda (2–0)Kipper (0–1)15,668Shea Stadium7–3Boxscore1Tied7:35 PM ESTSportsChannel New York Plus
11April 24@ Cardinals5–4 (10)McDowell (2–0)Worrell (0–1)33,597Busch Memorial Stadium8–3Boxscore1+1+128:35 PM ESTSportsChannel New York Plus
12April 25@ Cardinals9–0Gooden (3–0)Horton (0–2)43,721Busch Memorial Stadium9–3Boxscore1+2+128:35 PM ESTWOR-TV
13April 26@ Cardinals4–3Fernandez (2–0)Cox (0–1)Orosco (3)44,769Busch Memorial Stadium10–3Boxscore1+3+121:20 PM ESTNBC
14April 27@ Cardinals5–3Ojeda (3–0)Tudor (3–1)39,193Busch Memorial Stadium11–3Boxscore1+43:05 PM EDTWOR-TVABC
15April 29@ Braves10–5Berenyi (1–0)McMurtry (0–1)McDowell (1)12,258Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium12–3Boxscore1+4+125:40 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
16April 30@ Braves8–1Gooden (4–0)Johnson (3–1)23,361Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium13–3Boxscore1+57:40 PM EDTSportsChannel New York Plus
May (18–9) (Home: 9–3; Road: 9–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumRecordReportRankGB
17May 1@ Braves2–7Smith (2–2)Aguilera (0–2)8,343Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium13–4Boxscore1+4+125:40 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
18May 2@ Reds8–7Fernandez (3–0)Gullickson (0–3)Orosco (4)20,677Riverfront Stadium14–4Boxscore1+5+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
19May 3@ Reds4–1Ojeda (4–0)Denny (1–3)Orosco (5)20,268Riverfront Stadium15–4Boxscore1+5+122:15 PM EDTSportsChannel New York Plus
20May 4@ Reds7–2Darling (2–0)Soto (2–3)McDowell (2)25,407Riverfront Stadium16–4Boxscore1+5+122:15 PM EDTWOR-TV
21May 6Astros4–0Gooden (5–0)Knepper (5–1)41,722Shea Stadium17–4Boxscore1+57:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
22May 7Astros3–2Fernandez (4–0)Ryan (3–4)Orosco (6)26,956Shea Stadium18–4Boxscore1+57:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
23May 9Reds2–1Ojeda (5–0)Soto (2–4)'McDowell (3)40,744Shea Stadium19–4Boxscore1+57:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
24May 10Reds5–1Darling (3–0)Browning (0–4)45,303Shea Stadium20–4Boxscore1+51:20 PM EDTNBC
25May 11Reds2–3Gullickson (2–3)Gooden (5–1)Franco (4)44,236Shea Stadium20–5Boxscore1+41:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
26May 12Braves1–0McDowell (3–0)Assenmacher (1–1)Shea Stadium45,303Shea Stadium21–5Boxscore1+57:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
27May 13Braves3–6Johnson (4–3)Aguilera (0–3)Sutter (2)29,052Shea Stadium21–6Boxscore1+47:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
28May 14@ Astros2–6Knepper (7–1)Ojeda (5–1)11,626Astrodome21–7Boxscore1+38:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
29May 15@ Astros6–2Darling (4–0)Ryan (3–5)13,856Astrodome22–7Boxscore1+48:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
30May 16@ Dodgers3–4 (11)Howell (1–2)Orosco (0–1)11,626Dodger Stadium22–8Boxscore1+310:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
31May 17@ Dodgers2–6Niedenfuer (2–2)Fernandez (4–1)39,429Dodger Stadium22–9Boxscore1+34:05 PM EDTNBC
32May 18@ Dodgers8–4Niemann (1–2)Reuss (2–2)44,426Dodger Stadium23–9Boxscore1+33:05 PM EDTWOR-TVABC
33May 20@ Giants2–1Ojeda (6–1)LaCoss (4–1)McDowell (4)28,837Candlestick Park24–9Boxscore1+410:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
34May 21@ Giants7–4Darling (5–0)Mason (2–4)18,618Candlestick Park25–9Boxscore1+53:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
35May 22@ Giants2–10Krukow (6–3)Gooden (5–2)27,442Candlestick Park25–10Boxscore1+44:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
36May 23@ Padres4–7Gossage (3–3)Orosco (0–2)22,982Jack Murphy Stadium25–11Boxscore1+310:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
37May 24@ Padres5–4Berenyi (2–0)Thurmond (2–4)Orosco (7)36,679Jack Murphy Stadium26–11Boxscore1+310:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
38May 25@ Padres4–2 (11)Orosco (1–2)Lefferts (3–2)30,296Jack Murphy Stadium27–11Boxscore1+44:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
39May 27Dodgers8–1Darling (6–0)Welch (3–4)35,643Shea Stadium28–11Boxscore1+4+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
40May 28Dodgers4–2Gooden (6–2)Reuss (2–4)41,032Shea Stadium29–11Boxscore1+5+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
41May 29Dodgers5–2Fernandez (5–1)Valenzuela (7–3)Orosco (8)41,080Shea Stadium30–11Boxscore1+67:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
42May 30Giants8–7 (10)Orosco (2–2)Davis (1–3)38,243Shea Stadium31–11Boxscore1+67:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
43May 31Giants3–7Garrelts (5–5)Ojeda (6–2)50,498Shea Stadium31–12Boxscore1+67:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
June (19–9) (Home: 11–6; Road: 8–3)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumRecordReportRankGB
44June 1Giants3–7Krukow (7–3)Darling (6–1)49,041Shea Stadium31–13Boxscore1+63:05 PM EDTWOR-TVABC
45June 2Padres11–2Gooden (7–2)Hoyt (2–2)28,426Shea Stadium32–13Boxscore1+6+127:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
46June 3Padres4–5Hawkins (4–4)Fernandez (5–2)Gossage (9)25,196Shea Stadium32–14Boxscore1+6+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
47June 4Padres4–2McDowell (4–0)Walter (1–1)26,735Shea Stadium33–14Boxscore1+7+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
48June 5@ Pirates7–0Ojeda (7–2)Kipper (1–5)8,855Three Rivers Stadium34–14Boxscore1+8+127:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
49June 6@ Pirates1–7Rhoden (5–3)Darling (6–2)Walk (2)N/AThree Rivers Stadium34–15Boxscore1+85:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
50June 6@ Pirates10–4McDowell (5–0)León (1–3)15,113Three Rivers Stadium35–15Boxscore1+88:57 PM EDTWOR-TV
51June 7@ Pirates6–4Gooden (8–2)Reuschel (4–5)Orosco (9)29,770Three Rivers Stadium36–15Boxscore1+97:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
52June 8@ Pirates4–3Fernandez (6–2)McWilliams (1–4)Orosco (10)14,391Three Rivers Stadium37–15Boxscore1+91:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
53June 9Phillies2–3 (10)Carman (3–0)Sisk (0–1)Bedrosian (8)26,050Shea Stadium37–16Boxscore1+87:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
54June 10Phillies8–4 (11)McDowell (6–0)Lerch (0–1)27,472Shea Stadium38–16Boxscore1+87:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
55June 11Phillies5–3Darling (7–2)Carlton (4–7)Orosco (11)27,830Shea Stadium39–16Boxscore1+87:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
56June 13Pirates6–5Orosco (3–2)Clements (0–2)37,582Shea Stadium40–16Boxscore1+97:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
57June 14Pirates5–1Fernandez (7–2)Bielecki (4–4)47,664Shea Stadium41–16Boxscore1+101:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
58June 15Pirates4–1Ojeda (8–2)Walk (2–3)N/AShea Stadium42–16Boxscore1+10+121:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
59June 15Pirates8–5Aguilera (1–3)Kipper (2–6)McDowell (5)41,847Shea Stadium43–16Boxscore1+10+124:08 PM EDTWOR-TV
60June 16@ Expos4–1 (10)Sisk (1–1)Reardon (6–4)16,347Olympic Stadium44–16Boxscore1+11+127:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
61June 17@ Expos2–4Hesketh (4–4)Berenyi (2–1)Burke (4)20,193Olympic Stadium44–17Boxscore1+10+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
62June 18@ Expos4–7Youmans (6–5)Gooden (8–3)Reardon (16)22,026Olympic Stadium44–18Boxscore1+9+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
June 19CubsPostponed (rain); rescheduled for July 29Shea Stadium+10
63June 20Cubs10–3Fernandez (8–2)Sanderson (3–5)44,817Shea Stadium45–18Boxscore1+107:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
64June 21Cubs6–8Fontenot (3–2)Orosco (3–3)42,566Shea Stadium45–19Boxscore1+101:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
65June 22Cubs4–2Darling (8–2)Sutcliffe (4–9)46,279Shea Stadium46–19Boxscore1+101:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
66June 23Expos4–5 (10)Burke (5–2)Orosco (3–4)44,199Shea Stadium46–20Boxscore1+97:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
67June 24Expos2–6Smith (5–5)Berenyi (2–2)McClure (2)40,092Shea Stadium46–21Boxscore1+87:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
68June 25Expos5–2Fernandez (9–2)McGaffigan (5–3)McDowell (6)33,030Shea Stadium47–21Boxscore1+91:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
June 27@ CubsPostponed (rain); rescheduled for August 6Wrigley Field+9+12
69June 28@ Cubs5–2McDowell (7–0)Fontenot (3–3)35,152Wrigley Field48–21Boxscore1+9+123:20 PM EDTNBC
70June 29@ Cubs7–4Gooden (9–3)Sutcliffe (4–10)34,222Wrigley Field49–21Boxscore1+9+122:20 PM EDTWOR-TV
71June 30@ Cardinals7–0Ojeda (9–2)Tudor (6–4)38,819Busch Memorial Stadium50–21Boxscore1+9+128:05 PM EDTABC
July (16–11) (Home: 9–6; Road: 7–5)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumRecordReportRankGB
72July 1@ Cardinals2–1Fernandez (10–2)Cox (2–6)McDowell (7)25,869Busch Memorial Stadium51–21Boxscore1+10+128:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
73July 2@ Cardinals4–3Sisk (2–1)Forsch (6–5)Orosco (12)29,794Busch Memorial Stadium52–21Boxscore1+11+128:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
74July 3Astros6–5 (10)Orosco (4–4)DiPino (1–4)48,839Shea Stadium53–21Boxscore1+12+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
75July 4Astros2–1Gooden (10–3)Smith (1–5)28,557Shea Stadium54–21Boxscore1+12+121:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
76July 5Astros1–2Kerfeld (6–1)McDowell (7–1)50,939Shea Stadium54–22Boxscore1+11+127:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
77July 6Astros5–3Fernandez (11–2)Knudson (0–3)McDowell (8)31,017Shea Stadium55–22Boxscore1+11+121:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
78July 7Reds6–7Robinson (7–0)Niemann (1–3)Franco (13)29,265Shea Stadium55–23Boxscore1+11+127:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
79July 8Reds4–5 (10)Franco (3–4)McDowell (7–2)35,803Shea Stadium55–24Boxscore1+11+127:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
80July 9Reds1–11Browning (7–7)Gooden (10–4)38,079Shea Stadium55–25Boxscore1+10+121:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
81July 10Braves5–1Ojeda (10–2)Smith (7–10)34,836Shea Stadium56–25Boxscore1+10+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
82July 11Braves11–0Fernandez (12–2)Palmer (5–8)39,924Shea Stadium57–25Boxscore1+11+128:35 PM EDTNBC
83July 12Braves10–1Aguilera (2–3)Mahler (10–8)30,899Shea Stadium58–25Boxscore1+12+121:50 PM EDTNBC
84July 13Braves2–0Darling (9–2)Alexander (6–5)41,128Shea Stadium59–25Boxscore1+13+121:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
July 15: All-Star Game (AL wins—)3–2Clemens (BOS)Gooden (NYM)Aase (BAL)45,774AstrodomeHouston, Texas
85July 17@ Astros13–2Ojeda (11–2)Ryan (6–7)21,536Astrodome60–25Boxscore1+13+128:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
86July 18@ Astros0–3Knepper (11–7)Darling (9–3)22,906Astrodome60–26Boxscore1+12+128:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
87July 19@ Astros4–5Smith (2–6)McDowell (7–3)44,502Astrodome60–27Boxscore1+12+128:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
88July 20@ Astros8–9 (15)Knepper (12–7)McDowell (7–4)23,900Astrodome60–28Boxscore1+123:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
89July 21@ Reds4–2Aguilera (3–3)Soto (3–8)Orosco (13)23,827Riverfront Stadium61–28Boxscore1+138:05 PM EDTABC
90July 22@ Reds6–3 (14)McDowell (8–4)Willis (1–1)23,707Riverfront Stadium62–28Boxscore1+147:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
91July 23@ Reds3–2Darling (10–3)Robinson (7–1)McDowell (9)25,496Riverfront Stadium63–28Boxscore1+157:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
July 25@ BravesPostponed (rain); rescheduled for July 26Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium+15
92July 26@ Braves3–4Assenmacher (4–2)McDowell (8–5)N/AAtlanta–Fulton County Stadium63–29Boxscore1+14+125:40 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
93July 26@ Braves5–8Acker (3–4)Fernandez (12–3)Garber (12)44,400Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium63–30Boxscore1+14+128:46 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
94July 27@ Braves5–1Aguilera (4–3)Mahler (10–10)33,338Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium64–30Boxscore1+15+122:10 PM EDTWOR-TV
95July 28Cubs9–2Ojeda (12–2)Sanderson (5–7)McDowell (10)38,890Shea Stadium65–30Boxscore1+16+127:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
96July 29Cubs3–0Darling (11–3)Trout (4–4)N/AShea Stadium66–30Boxscore1+16+125:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
97July 29Cubs1–2Moyer (11–3)Sisk (2–2)Smith (18)45,731Shea Stadium66–31Boxscore1+16+128:21 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
98July 30Cubs3–4Eckersley (5–6)Fernandez (12–4)Smith (19)35,734Shea Stadium66–32Boxscore1+15+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
August (21–11) (Home: 7–5; Road: 14–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumRecordReportRankGB
99August 1Expos3–1Gooden (11–4)Youmans (10–7)McDowell (11)47,883Shea Stadium67–32Boxscore1+16+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
100August 2Expos4–1Aguilera (5–3)Sebra (1–2)Orosco (14)43,069Shea Stadium68–32Boxscore1+17+127:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
101August 3Expos4–3 (10)McDowell (9–5)McClure (2–3)47,167Shea Stadium69–32Boxscore1+17+121:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
102August 4@ Cubs2–4Eckersley (6–6)Darling (11–4)Smith (20)29,016Wrigley Field69–33Boxscore1+17+124:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
103August 5@ Cubs5–8Smith (7–7)McDowell (9–6)28,211Wrigley Field69–34Boxscore1+16+124:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
104August 6@ Cubs7–6 (12)McDowell (10–6)Frazier (2–4)N/AWrigley Field70–34Boxscore1+171:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
105August 6@ Cubs7–6Anderson (1–0)Trout (4–5)Orosco (15)33,343Wrigley Field71–34Boxscore1+175:37 PM EDTSportsChannel New York Plus
106August 7@ Cubs12–3Aguilera (6–3)Sanderson (5–9)28,725Wrigley Field72–34Boxscore1+172:20 PM EDTWOR-TV
107August 8@ Expos3–5Smith (8–6)Ojeda (12–3)Reardon (26)21,027Olympic Stadium72–35Boxscore1+167:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
108August 9@ Expos10–8McDowell (11–6)Reardon (6–7)Orosco (16)33,093Olympic Stadium73–35Boxscore1+177:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
109August 10@ Expos7–2Fernandez (13–4)Martínez (1–4)Anderson (1)35,743Olympic Stadium74–35Boxscore1+181:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
110August 11@ Phillies8–4Gooden (12–4)Carman (5–4)43,133Veterans Stadium75–35Boxscore1+198:05 PM EDTABC
111August 12@ Phillies1–3Gross (8–9)Aguilera (6–4)36,442Veterans Stadium75–36Boxscore1+187:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
112August 13@ Phillies4–8Ruffin (4–3)Ojeda (12–4)39,041Veterans Stadium75–37Boxscore1+187:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
113August 14Cardinals4–3McDowell (12–6)Worrell (7–9)N/AShea Stadium76–37Boxscore1+17+125:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
114August 14Cardinals1–5Horton (2–3)Anderson (1–1)48,949Shea Stadium76–38Boxscore1+17+128:56 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
115August 15Cardinals2–4 (10)Perry (2–2)Orosco (4–5)Worrell (26)46,780Shea Stadium76–39Boxscore1+167:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
116August 16Cardinals1–3 (11)Mathews (9–3)McDowell (12–7)Worrell (27)44,873Shea Stadium76–40Boxscore1+162:20 PM EDTNBC
117August 17Cardinals1–2Tudor (12–6)Aguilera (6–5)Perry (2)N/AShea Stadium76–41Boxscore1+16+121:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
118August 17Cardinals9–2Niemann (2–3)Cox (7–10)McDowell (12)44,843Shea Stadium77–41Boxscore1+16+124:32 PM EDTWOR-TV
119August 18@ Dodgers5–4Ojeda (13–4)Hershiser (12–9)McDowell (13)46,099Dodger Stadium78–41Boxscore1+178:05 PM EDTABC
120August 19@ Dodgers6–4Darling (12–4)Valenzuela (15–9)McDowell (14)46,977Dodger Stadium79–41Boxscore1+1810:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
121August 20@ Dodgers7–5Fernandez (14–4)Powell (2–5)Orosco (17)36,738Dodger Stadium80–41Boxscore1+18+128:20 PM EDTNBC
122August 22@ Giants5–3Gooden (13–4)Blue (9–8)McDowell (15)30,679Candlestick Park81–41Boxscore1+1911:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
123August 23@ Giants3–2Ojeda (14–4)Downs (0–4)McDowell (16)31,033Candlestick Park82–41Boxscore1+204:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
124August 24@ Giants1–10Krukow (13–7)Aguilera (6–6)31,606Candlestick Park82–42Boxscore1+194:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
125August 25@ Padres5–2Orosco (5–5)Lefferts (7–5)McDowell (17)18,605Jack Murphy Stadium83–42Boxscore1+208:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
126August 26@ Padres11–6Fernandez (15–4)Dravecky (9–11)15,992Jack Murphy Stadium84–42Boxscore1+2010:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
127August 27@ Padres6–5 (11)Sisk (3–2)Gossage (5–7)19,747Jack Murphy Stadium85–42Boxscore1+2010:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
128August 29Dodgers2–1Ojeda (15–4)Honeycutt (9–9)45,667Shea Stadium86–42Boxscore1+207:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
129August 30Dodgers6–3Aguilera (7–6)Hershiser (12–10)McDowell (18)44,040Shea Stadium87–42Boxscore1+202:20 PM EDTNBC
130August 31Dodgers4–7Valenzuela (17–9)Darling (12–5)45,678Shea Stadium87–43Boxscore1+191:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
September (16–11) (Home: 11–4; Road: 5–7)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumRecordReportRankGB
131September 1Giants5–2McDowell (13–7)Davis (4–5)44,272Shea Stadium88–43Boxscore1+191:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
132September 2Giants3–4Krukow (14–8)Gooden (13–5)Garrelts (7)26,166Shea Stadium88–44Boxscore1+197:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
133September 3Giants4–2Ojeda (16–4)Mulholland (0–6)25,851Shea Stadium89–44Boxscore1+207:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
September 5PadresPostponed (rain); rescheduled for September 7Shea Stadium+20+12
134September 6Padres4–3Orosco (6–5)McCullers (7–7)46,879Shea Stadium90–44Boxscore1+20+122:20 PM EDTNBC
135September 7Padres7–1Gooden (14–5)LaPoint (4–8)N/AShea Stadium91–44Boxscore1+211:05 PM EDTWOR-TV
136September 7Padres6–5Sisk (4–2)Lefferts (7–7)McDowell (19)38,630Shea Stadium92–44Boxscore1+213:54 PM EDTWOR-TV
137September 8Expos1–9Sebra (4–3)Ojeda (16–5)38,630Shea Stadium92–45Boxscore1+217:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
138September 9Expos7–9Burke (9–7)Orosco (6–6)Reardon (31)26,867Shea Stadium92–46Boxscore1+217:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
139September 10Expos6–1Darling (13–5)Valdez (0–1)31,934Shea Stadium93–46Boxscore1+227:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
140September 12@ Phillies3–6Ruffin (8–3)Gooden (14–6)Bedrosian (24)43,070Veterans Stadium93–47Boxscore1+217:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
141September 13@ Phillies5–6Schatzeder (4–4)McDowell (13–8)Bedrosian (25)47,108Veterans Stadium93–48Boxscore1+207:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
142September 14@ Phillies0–6Gross (10–11)Fernandez (15–5)38,652Veterans Stadium93–49Boxscore1+191:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
143September 15@ Cardinals0–1 (13)Worrell (9–10)McDowell (13–9)29,566Busch Memorial Stadium93–50Boxscore1+188:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
144September 16@ Cardinals4–2Aguilera (8–6)Conroy (4–9)Orosco (18)30,935Busch Memorial Stadium94–50Boxscore1+188:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
145September 17Cubs4–2Gooden (15–6)Eckersley (6–10)47,823Shea Stadium95–50Boxscore1+197:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
146September 18Cubs5–0Anderson (2–1)Maddux (1–3)13,726Shea Stadium96–50Boxscore1+191:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
147September 19Phillies3–4Gross (11–11)Fernandez (15–6)Bedrosian (27)35,023Shea Stadium96–51Boxscore1+187:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
148September 20Phillies9–5Darling (14–5)Hume (4–1)39,104Shea Stadium97–51Boxscore1+197:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
149September 21Phillies1–7Freeman (1–0)Mitchell (0–1)42,631Shea Stadium97–52Boxscore1+181:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
150September 22Cardinals5–2Gooden (16–6)Forsch (14–9)25,714Shea Stadium98–52Boxscore1+197:35 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
151September 23Cardinals9–1Ojeda (17–5)Mathews (10–8)Orosco (19)11,203Shea Stadium99–52Boxscore1+197:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
152September 24@ Cubs2–8Hall (1–1)Aguilera (8–7)6,468Wrigley Field99–53Boxscore1+192:20 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
153September 25@ Cubs6–5McDowell (14–9)Lynch (5–5)Orosco (20)8,840Wrigley Field100–53Boxscore1+202:20 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
154September 26@ Pirates3–1Fernandez (16–6)Fansler (0–2)McDowell (20)14,080Three Rivers Stadium101–53Boxscore1+207:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
155September 27@ Pirates4–2 (11)Orosco (7–6)McWilliams (2–11)Sisk (1)13,210Three Rivers Stadium102–53Boxscore1+207:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
156September 28@ Pirates4–1 (11)Aguilera (9–7)Walk (7–8)30,606Three Rivers Stadium103–53Boxscore1+201:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
157September 30@ Expos0–1Sebra (5–5)Darling (14–6)6,068Olympic Stadium103–54Boxscore1+19+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
October (5–0) (Home: 3–0; Road: 2–0)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumRecordReportRankGB
158October 1@ Expos6–4 (11)Orosco (8–6)McClure (4–6)McDowell (21)10,740Olympic Stadium104–54Boxscore1+207:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
159October 2@ Expos8–2Gooden (17–6)Youmans (13–12)10,726Olympic Stadium105–54Boxscore1+20+127:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
October 3PiratesPostponed (rain); rescheduled for October 4Shea Stadium+21
160October 4Pirates8–2Ojeda (18–5)Fansler (0–3)Orosco (21)N/AShea Stadium106–54Boxscore1+21+121:05 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
161October 4Pirates5–2Aguilera (10–7)Patterson (2–3)McDowell (22)30,810Shea Stadium107–54Boxscore1+21+123:52 PM EDTSportsChannel New York
162October 5Pirates9–0Darling (15–6)Pena (0–3)Fernandez (1)32,170Shea Stadium108–54Boxscore1+21+121:35 PM EDTWOR-TV
Legend
Mets win Mets loss All-Star Game Game postponed Clinched playoff spot
"GB" legend
1st (NL East) Not in playoff berth Tied for 1st (NL East)

All times are Eastern time Sources for game logs:[48] Some statistics reproduced from boxscore for each game.

Record vs. opponents and by month

[edit]
Record
Opponent Home Road Total
NL East
Chicago Cubs6–36–312–6
Montreal Expos5–45–410–8
Philadelphia Phillies6–32–78–10
Pittsburgh Pirates9–08–117–1
St. Louis Cardinals4–58–112–6
NL West
Atlanta Braves5–13–38–4
Cincinnati Reds2–46–08–4
Houston Astros5–12–47–5
Los Angeles Dodgers5–14–29–3
San Diego Padres5–15–110–2
San Francisco Giants3–34–27–5
Grand Totals 55–26 53–28 108–54
Month Games Won Lost Pct.
April16133.813
May27189.667
June28199.679
July271611.593
August322111.656
September271611.593
October5501.000
Totals16210854.667

Source for tables:[48]

Notable transactions

[edit]

Postseason game log

[edit]
1986 Postseason Game Log
National League Championship Series vs. Houston New York (NL) wins series 42
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumReportGame TimeNational TVNational Radio
1October 8@ Astros0–1Scott (1–0)Gooden (0–1)44,131AstrodomeBoxscore8:25 PM EDTABCCBS
2October 9@ Astros5–1Ojeda (1–0)Ryan (0–1)44,391AstrodomeBoxscore8:20 PM EDTABCCBS
3October 11Astros6–5Orosco (1–0)Smith (0–1)55,052Shea StadiumBoxscore12:10 PM EDTABCCBS
4October 12Astros1–3Scott (2–0)Fernandez (0–1)55,038Shea StadiumBoxscore8:20 PM EDTABCCBS
5October 14Astros2–1 (12)Orosco (2–0)Kerfeld (0–1)54,986Shea StadiumBoxscore1:10 PM EDTABCCBS
6October 15@ Astros7–6 (16)Orosco (3–0)López (0–1)45,718AstrodomeBoxscore3:05 PM EDTABCCBS
World Series vs. Boston New York (NL) wins series 43
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceStadiumReportGame TimeNational TVNational Radio
1October 18Red Sox0–1Hurst (1–0)Darling (0–1)Schiraldi (1)57,908Shea StadiumBoxscore8:30 PM EDTNBCCBS
2October 19Red Sox3–9Crawford (1–0)Gooden (0–1)Stanley (1)57,911Shea StadiumBoxscore8:25 PM EDTNBCCBS
3October 21@ Red Sox7–1Ojeda (1–0)Boyd (0–1)33,595Fenway ParkBoxscore8:30 PM EDTNBCCBS
4October 22@ Red Sox6–2Darling (1–1)Nipper (0–1)Orosco (1)33,920Fenway ParkBoxscore8:25 PM EDTNBCCBS
5October 23@ Red Sox2–4Hurst (2–0)Gooden (0–2)34,010Fenway ParkBoxscore8:35 PM EDTNBCCBS
6October 25Red Sox6–5 (10)Aguilera (1–0)Schiraldi (0–1)57,908Shea StadiumBoxscore8:25 PM EDTNBCCBS
7October 27Red Sox8–5McDowell (1–0)Schiraldi (0–2)Orosco (2)55,032Shea StadiumBoxscore8:10 PM ESTNBCCBS
Legend
Mets Win Mets Loss

Source for game logs:[48] Some statistics reproduced from boxscore for each game.

Attendance

[edit]
Attendance Rank in Major Leagues
2,767,601 2 (to L.A. Dodgers)

1985 attendance: 2,762,417, 2nd in attendance behind Dodgers.[113]

Opening day lineup

[edit]
Opening Day Starters
#NamePosition
4Lenny DykstraCF
6Wally Backman2B
17Keith Hernandez1B
8Gary CarterC
18Darryl StrawberryRF
15George FosterLF
20Howard Johnson3B
3Rafael SantanaSS
16Dwight GoodenP

Sourced to:[114]

Roster

[edit]

Sourced to:[115]

1986 New York Mets
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Player stats

[edit]
= Indicates team leader

Batting

[edit]

Starters by position

[edit]

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

Sourced to:[116]
Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI SB
CGary Carter132490125.255241051
1BKeith Hernandez149551171.31013832
2BWally Backman124387124.32012713
3BRay Knight137486145.29811762
SSRafael Santana13939486.2181280
LFGeorge Foster7223353.22713381
CFLenny Dykstra147431127.29584531
RFDarryl Strawberry136475123.259279328

[117]

Other batters

[edit]

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

Sourced to:[116]
Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI SB
Mookie Wilson123381110.28994525
Kevin Mitchell10832891.27712433
Tim Teufel9327969.2474311
Howard Johnson8822054.24510398
Danny Heep8619555.2825331
Ed Hearn4913636.2654100
Lee Mazzilli395816.276271
Kevin Elster19305.167000
Stan Jefferson14245.208130
John Gibbons8199.474110
Dave Magadan10188.444030
Barry Lyons690.000020
Tim Corcoran670.000000

Pitching

[edit]

Starting pitchers

[edit]

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

Sourced to:[118]
Player G IP W L ERA SO
Dwight Gooden33250.11762.84200
Ron Darling34237.01562.81184
Sid Fernandez33204.11663.52200
Bob Ojeda32217.11852.57148
Rick Aguilera28141.21073.88105

Other pitchers

[edit]

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

Sourced to:[118]
Player G IP W L ERA SO
Rick Anderson1549.2212.7221
Bruce Berenyi1439.2226.3530
John Mitchell410.0013.602

Relief pitchers

[edit]

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

Sourced to:[118]
Player G IP W L ERA SO SV
Roger McDowell76128.01493.026523
Jesse Orosco5981.0862.336221
Doug Sisk4170.2423.06311
Randy Niemann3135.2233.79180
Randy Myers1010.2004.22130
Terry Leach66.2002.7040
Ed Lynch11.2000.0010

Awards and honors

[edit]
President Ronald Reagan welcomes the World Champion Mets to the White House, November 1986

57th Major League Baseball All-Star Game

[edit]

The 57th Major League Baseball All-Star game was held at the Astrodome on July 15, 1986, with the American League winning, 3–2. Roger Clemens of the Red Sox was the winning pitcher and Dwight Gooden of the Mets took the loss. Participants from the Mets were as follows:[123]

Infielder

Pos # Player League AB H RBI
1B17Keith HernandezNational League Starter400

Outfielder

Pos # Player League AB H RBI
RF18Darryl StrawberryNational League Starter210

Catcher

# Player League AB H RBI
8Gary CarterNational League Starter300

Pitchers

# Player League IP SO
50Sid FernandezNational League13
16Dwight GoodenNational League Starter32

Coach

# Coach League Position
5Davey JohnsonNational LeagueThird Base Coach

Farm system

[edit]

Steve Schryver was farm director for the Mets in 1986.[117]

Level Team League Manager
AAA Tidewater Tides International League Sam Perlozzo[124]
AA Jackson Mets Texas League Mike Cubbage[125]
A Lynchburg Mets Carolina League Bobby Floyd[126]
A Columbia Mets South Atlantic League Tucker Ashford[127]
A-Short Season Little Falls Mets New York–Penn League Rich Miller[128]
Rookie Kingsport Mets Appalachian League Chuck Hiller[129]

Columbia won the league championship.[127]

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
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[edit]