armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

1967 in baseball

This year in baseball

2000s

2009 • 2008 • 2007 • 2006 • 2005
2004 • 2003 • 2002 • 2001 • 2000

1990s

1999 • 1998 • 1997 • 1996 • 1995
1994 • 1993 • 1992 • 1991 • 1990

1980s

1989 • 1988 • 1987 • 1986 • 1985
1984 • 1983 • 1982 • 1981 • 1980

1970s

1979 • 1978 • 1977 • 1976 • 1975
1974 • 1973 • 1972 • 1971 • 1970

1960s

1969 • 1968 • 1967 • 1966 • 1965
1964 • 1963 • 1962 • 1961 • 1960

1950s

1959 • 1958 • 1957 • 1956 • 1955
1954 • 1953 • 1952 • 1951 • 1950

1940s

1949 • 1948 • 1947 • 1946 • 1945
1944 • 1943 • 1942 • 1941 • 1940

1930s

1939 • 1938 • 1937 • 1936 • 1935
1934 • 1933 • 1932 • 1931 • 1930

1920s

1929 • 1928 • 1927 • 1926 • 1925
1924 • 1923 • 1922 • 1921 • 1920

1910s

1919 • 1918 • 1917 • 1916 • 1915
1914 • 1913 • 1912 • 1911 • 1910

1900s

1909 • 1908 • 1907 • 1906 • 1905
1904 • 1903 • 1902 • 1901 • 1900

1890s

1899 • 1898 • 1897 • 1896 • 1895
1894 • 1893 • 1892 • 1891 • 1890

1880s

1889 • 1888 • 1887 • 1886 • 1885
1884 • 1883 • 1882 • 1881 • 1880

1870s

1879 • 1878 • 1877 • 1876 • 1875
1874 • 1873 • 1872 • 1871 • 1870

Early Years

1869 • 1845-1868

See also
  • Major League Baseball
  • Minor league baseball
  • Negro league baseball
  • Japanese baseball
Sources
  • Baseball Hall of Fame
  • Baseball Almanac
  • Baseball Library
  • Baseball Reference
  • National Pastime
  • Wikipedia
  • The Deadball Era

The following are the baseball events of the year 1967 throughout the world.  


Contents

  • 1 Champions
    • 1.1 Major League Baseball
    • 1.2 Other champions
  • 2 Awards and honors
  • 3 MLB Statistical Leaders
  • 4 Major League Baseball final standings
    • 4.1 American League final standings
    • 4.2 National League final standings
  • 5 Events
  • 6 Births
  • 7 Deaths

[edit] Champions

[edit] Major League Baseball

  • World Series: St. Louis Cardinals over Boston Red Sox (4-3); Bob Gibson, MVP
  • All-Star Game, July 11 at Anaheim Stadium: National League, 2-1 (15 innings); Tony Pérez, MVP

[edit] Other champions

  • College World Series: Arizona State
  • Japan Series: Yomiuri Giants over Hankyu Braves (4-2)
  • Little League World Series: West Tokyo, Japan

[edit] Awards and honors

  • Most Valuable Player
    • Carl Yastrzemski (AL)
    • Orlando Cepeda (NL)
  • Cy Young Award
    • Jim Lonborg (AL)
    • Mike McCormick (NL)
  • Rookie of the Year
    • Stan Bahnsen (AL)
    • Tom Seaver (NL)

[edit] MLB Statistical Leaders

  American League National League
Type Name Stat Name Stat
AVG Carl Yastrzemski * .326 Roberto Clemente .357
HR Carl Yastrzemski*
& Harmon Killebrew
44 Hank Aaron 39
RBI Carl Yastrzemski * 121 Orlando Cepeda 111
Wins Jim Lonborg & Earl Wilson 22 Mike McCormick 22
ERA Joel Horlen 2.06 Phil Niekro 1.87
SB Bert Campaneris 44 Lou Brock 52

* Triple Crown winner.

[edit] Major League Baseball final standings

[edit] American League final standings

American League
Club Wins Losses Win %   GB
Boston Red Sox 92 70 .568 --
Detroit Tigers 91 71 .562 1
Minnesota Twins 91 71 .562 1
Chicago White Sox 89 73 .549 3
California Angels 84 77 .522 7.5
Baltimore Orioles 76 85 .472 15.5
Washington Senators 76 85 .472 15.5
Cleveland Indians 75 87 .463 17
New York Yankees 72 90 .444 20
Kansas City Athletics 62 99 .385 29.5

[edit] National League final standings

National League
Club Wins Losses Win %   GB
St. Louis Cardinals 101 60 .627 --
San Francisco Giants 91 71 .562 10.5
Chicago Cubs 87 74 .540 14
Cincinnati Reds 87 75 .537 14.5
Philadelphia Phillies 82 80 .506 19.5
Pittsburgh Pirates 81 81 .500 20.5
Atlanta Braves 77 85 .475 24.5
Los Angeles Dodgers 73 89 .451 28.5
Houston Astros 69 93 .426 32.5
New York Mets 61 101 .377 40.5

[edit] Events

  • January 23 - Stan Musial is named General Manager of the St. Louis Cardinals.
  • January 29 - Branch Rickey and Lloyd Waner are elected to the Hall of Fame by an unanimous vote of the Special Veterans Committee.
  • February 16 - Red Ruffing is selected for the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers Association of America through a special runoff election, since no one received the required 75 percent vote in January.
  • May 14 - The New York Yankees' Mickey Mantle becomes the 6th member of the 500-home run club in New York's 6-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium. Mantle connects while batting left-handed off Baltimore's Stu Miller.
  • July 11 - At Anaheim Stadium, Tony Pérez ends the longest All-Star Game (15 innings, three hours and 41 minutes) with a home run off Catfish Hunter in a National League 2–1 victory over the American League. Solo homers by Richie Allen and the AL's Brooks Robinson account for the other runs, as Pérez is named MVP.
  • August 2 - With homers from both sides of the plate, Pete Rose leads the Cincinnati Reds to a 7-3 win over the Atlanta Braves. It's the second time Rose accomplished the feat.
  • August 18 - A tragedy occurs when the Boston Red Sox' Tony Conigliaro is beaned by the California Angels' Jack Hamilton. Hit on the left cheekbone, just below the eye socket, Conigliaro will miss the rest of 1967 and all of 1968. He was hitting .267 with 20 home runs and 67 RBIs in 95 games in 1967. Despite the loss of Tony C., The Red Sox will sweep the 4-game sesies with the Angels. The sweep will still leave the Minnesota Twins in 1st place, with Boston, the Detroit Tigers and the Chicago White Sox all within 2 games.
  • October 12 - In Game Seven of the World Series, the St. Louis Cardinals earn their second World Championship of the decade with a 7–2 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Bob Gibson notches his third win in the Series with a three-hitter, 10 strikeouts and a fifth-inning home run. Lou Brock has two hits and three stolen bases for a record seven steals in a seven-game World Series. For the second time in four years, Gibson is honored as the Series MVP.

[edit] Births

  • April 17 - Marquis Grissom
  • April 24 - Omar Vizquel
  • May 15 - John Smoltz
  • May 31 - Kenny Lofton
  • July 4 - Vinny Castilla
  • July 14 - Robin Ventura
  • September 3 - Luis Gonzalez
  • September 19 - Jim Abbott
  • October 13 - Trevor Hoffman
  • November 4 - Eric Karros
  • December 1 - Reggie Sanders
  • December 7 - Tino Martinez
  • December 15 - Mo Vaughn

[edit] Deaths

  • January 6 - Johnny Keane, 55, manager who won the 1964 World Series with the St. Louis Cardinals and joined the opposing Yankees immediately afterward
  • March 4 - Bullet Rogan, 77, pitcher in the Negro Leagues for the Kansas City Monarchs
  • July 21 - Jimmie Foxx, 59, Hall of Fame first baseman who retired with more career home runs (534) than any player except Babe Ruth; a 3-time MVP and the AL's 1933 triple crown winner, he hit .325 lifetime and played in the first nine All-Star games
  • August 17 - Ray Caldwell, 79, spitball pitcher for the Yankees who was later struck by lightning during a 1919 game while with the Indians; he no-hit the Yankees two weeks later
  • September 12 - Rollie Zeider, 83, infielder for three Chicago franchises from 1910 to 1918

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/1967_in_baseball"

This page was last modified 15:14, 16 April 2006. Content is available under the GFDL.

Contribute

ArmchairGM's pages can be edited.
Is this page incomplete? Is there anything wrong?
Change it!

Edit this page Discuss this page Page history

Recent contributors to this page

The following people recently contributed to this article.

Embed this on your site

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise