NYY 47-25 --- (best June record 21-9)
BAL 44-31 4.5
CHI 41-31 6
DET 42-32 6
WAS 41-37 9 (best 1-run record 17-5)
CLE 37-38 11.5
LAA 33-45 17 (worst June record 11-19)
MIN 31-44 17.5
BOS 30-44 18
KCA 30-49 20.5
PITCHING (league 3.68)
NYY 2.93 (most shutouts 11, least RA 230)
LAA 3.01 (most CG 22, least saves 8)
CHI 3.04
DET 3.26
BAL 3.32 (least HR against 53, most saves 25)
WAS 3.44 (least K's 370)
CLE 4.00
MIN 4.49 (most K's 541)
KCA 4.61 (most RA 409, most HR against 80)
BOS 4.68
BATTING (league .231)
DET .247 (tie most triples 25)
BOS .243 (most doubles 127, least SB 9, tie least CS 10)
BAL .242 (least triples 9, most SB 47)
NYY .239 (tie most triples 25)
MIN .233 (most runs 353, most HR 96, tie least CS 10)
CHI .228 (least doubles 78, least HR 47)
LAA .227 (least runs 274)
CLE .225 (least GIDP 34)
KCA .220 (most CS 25, most GIDP 78)
WAS .204
FIELDING
least errors-- NYY 34
most errors-- CLE 95
most DP's-- BOS 76
least DP's-- LAA 41
Interesting to note that in actual play, BOS made the fewest DP's and the Angels turned the most! In APBA, however, the Angels can't hope to duplicate their league leading total. With a fielding 3 at third base, and fielding 2 at SS and 2B, not to mention their excellent pitching which keeps runners off the base paths, it isn't going to happen. As for the Bosox, my only explanation is LOTS of traffic on the bases and Frank Malzone's 3B-5.
WINS: Peters-chi 10-3, Chance-la 10-5, Ford-ny 10-6, Wickersham-det 10-6, Monbouquette-bos 9-4
ERA (72 IP): Chance-la 2.01, Ford-ny 2.14, Peters-chi 2.18, Pizarro-chi 2.42, Osteen-was 2.44, Bunker-bal 2.53, Aguirre-det 2.69, Horlen-chi 2.72, Monbouquette-bos 2.86, Belinsky-la 2.90
K's: Chance-la 112, Wilson-bos 103, Pena-kc 99, Arrigo-min 92, Kralick-cle 91
CG: Chance-la 10, Kaat-min 10, Ford-ny 8, Peters-chi 8
IP: Chance-la 143, Kaat-min 133, Kralick-cle 132.2, Ford-ny 130.2, Horlen-chi 129, Peters-chi 128
SHO: Ford-ny 3, 12 tied with 2
LOSSES: Newman-la 3-10, Wilhelm-chi 2-9, Arrigo-min 5-9
SAVES: Hall-bal 18, Kline-was 18, Wilhelm-chi 17, Radatz-bos 16, McMahon-cle 15
BA (194 ab): Fregosi-la .346, Aparicio-bal .322, B.Robinson-bal .316, Fl. Robinson-chi .310, Yastrzemski-bos .307, Howard-ny .292, Stuart-bos .290, Piersall-la .285, Skowron-was .279, Kaline-det .276
HR: Powell-bal 26, Colavito-kc 19, Killebrew-min 19, Lock-was 18, McAuliffe-det 18, Wagner-cle 18
RBI: B.Robinson-bal 59, Powell-bal 57, Colavito-kc 55, Maris-ny 55, Pepitone-ny 53, Killebrew-min 51
RUNS: McAuliffe-det 54, Aparicio-bal 53, Mantle-ny 53, Yastrzemski-bos 53, Bressoud-bos 52, Hall-min 52
Beware the gap-hitting cadaver. |
Triples: Oliva-min 7, Hinton-was 6, Rollins-min 6
Steals: Aparicio-bal 38, Davalillo-cle 15, Hinton-was 9
GIDP: Battey 14, Green-kc 13, B.Robinson-bal 13, Fregosi-la 12
Hey! Howser mudda? Howser fadda? |
TEAM REPORTS (with June record)
Yankee Doodles (21-9) The highlight of June for the Bronx Bombers was unsung Roland Sheldon's no-hitter at Yankee Stadium against the Red Sox. It was oddly workman-like, just a series of routine outs. It was the 4th no-hitter in my APBA Yankee history; Mel Stottlemyre had two in 1967 and Ralph Terry tossed the only no-hitter of the entire replay in 1961. That one was also against Boston. The Yanks staff have 11 shutouts--5 more than any other AL squad. In other news, Roger Maris enjoyed a huge month, knocking in 28 runs. Elston Howard finally found the range and upped his average to .292, while The Mick languishes at .251 but has 17 homers.
Bird Droppings (16-14) While May heroes Sam Bowens and Johnny Orsino returned to earth, June found Brooks Robinson (28 rbi), Boog Powell (13 HR) and Luis Aparicio (30 runs) going off, to lift the birds to a higher branch. However, trouble with 4th and 5th starters Dave McNally and Steve "The Maglie" Barber kept the Orioles from gaining any ground. More than once, they failed to last two innings. Meanwhile, Dick Hall has been gold out of the O's bullpen.
The guy in the suit is the team phrenologist. |
Tiger Tales (19-11) It was truly a team effort as the Bengals put together a great month, but still lost a game in the standings, unfortunately. Mickey Lolich emerged from a season-long funk to get above .500 at 7-6 and shaved a full run off his ERA. Here's a weird fact about the Tigers: they are usually fielding one, yet they sit 8th in the league in fielding at 8.11 (IP divided by errors), trailing such stone-gloved clubs as KC, MIN and CHI. Things that make Your Impartial Goddess go "hmm." The injury bug hit the Tigers' outfield hard at month's end, shelving Billy Bruton, George Thomas, Al Kaline (back to start July) and Don Demeter. This necessitated the call-ups of kid flyhawks Mickey Stanley and Jim Northrup, as well as bench ballast Willie Horton, who was already there. The clubhouse manager has ordered extra diapers.
The W stands for wtf |
Mistah Tiant, he dead. A penny for the old guy. |
Bo Belinsky and Mamie Van Doren audition as department store mannequins. |
Take them to the river. Put them in the water. |
Put me in, Coach! |
Ed Charles moves nicely to his right as Wayne Causey looks on. |
See ya next time for the end of July report!