1990 Boston Red Sox season


The 1990 Boston Red Sox season was the 90th season in the franchise's Major League Baseball history. The Red Sox finished first in the American League East with a record of 88–74. It was the third AL East division championship in five years for the Red Sox. However, the team was defeated in a four-game sweep by the Oakland Athletics season|Oakland Athletics] in the ALCS, as had been the case in 1988.

Offseason

February

Regular season

Highlights

The Red Sox set a major league record, which still stands, for the most times grounding into a double play during a season, 174.
On June 6, the Red Sox got a measure of retribution for Bucky Dent's home run in the 1978 [American League East tie-breaker game]. While in Boston for a four-game series, the New York Yankees season|New York Yankees] fired Dent as their manager. The Red Sox had just defeated the Yankees in the first two games of the series, giving the Yankees an 18–31 record, games behind the first-place Red Sox. The firing made Fenway Park arguably the scene of Dent's best moment as a player and worst moment as manager. Although the Red Sox got retribution for Dent's home run, they, along with the Yankees, were shaken to the core by the firing and called it an outrage and blasted Yankees owner George Steinbrenner for firing Dent—his 18th managerial change in as many years—in Boston. Dan Shaughnessy of The Boston Globe criticized Steinbrenner and rhetorically asked if he couldn't have waited to fire Dent elsewhere. Shaughnessy noted, "if Dent had been fired in Seattle or Milwaukee, this would have been just another event in an endless line of George's jettisons. But it happened in Boston and the nightly news had its hook." Author Bill Pennington called the firing of Dent "merciless." However, Yankees television analyst Tony Kubek blasted at Steinbrenner for the firing in a harsh, angry way. At the beginning of the broadcast of the game on MSG Network, he said to Yankees television play-by-play announcer Dewayne Staats, "George Steinbrenner...mishandled this. You don't take a Bucky Dent the site of one of the greatest home runs in Yankee history and fire him and make it a media circus for the Boston Red Sox." He then stared defiantly on camera and said to Steinbrenner, "You don't do it by telephone, either, George. You do it face to face, eyeball to eyeball...If you really are a winner, you should not have handled this like a loser." He then said, angrily, "George, you're a bully and a coward." He then said that "What all this does, it just wrecks George Steinbrenner's credibility with his players, with the front office and in baseball more than it already is-if that's possible. It was just mishandled."

Notable transactions

Opening Day lineup

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Alumni game

The team held an old-timers game on May 19, before a scheduled home game against the Minnesota Twins. Red Sox alumni pitchers Bill Lee, Bill Monbouquette, and Dick Radatz allowed just one hit in the four-inning game, as Boston won by a 2–0 score over a team of MLB alumni from other clubs.

Player stats

Batting

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases; BB = Walks; AVG = Batting average; SLG = Slugging average
PlayerGABRH2B3BHRRBISBBBAVGSLG
Wade Boggs15561989187445663087.302.418
Mike Greenwell159610711813061473865.297.434
Jody Reed15559870173450551475.289.390
Ellis Burks152588891743382189948.296.486
Carlos Quintana14951256147280767152.287.383
Tony Peña14349162129191756843.263.348
Tom Brunansky129461611232451571554.267.438
Dwight Evans123445661111831363367.249.391
Luis Rivera1183463878200745425.225.344
Marty Barrett62159153640013415.226.252
Kevin Romine70136213770214412.272.368
Mike Marshall3011210326141204.286.464
Tim Naehring248510236021208.271.412
John Marzano3283820400605.241.289
Randy Kutcher637418174115313.230.351
Danny Heep4169312110807.174.217
Billy Jo Robidoux274438401406.182.341
Bill Buckner224348001303.186.256
Phil Plantier141512100304.133.200
Rich Gedman101533000005.200.200
Rick Lancellotti4800000100.000.000
Jeff Stone10211000100.500.500
Scott Cooper2100000000.000.000
Jim Pankovits2000000000.---.---
Team Totals162551669915022983110666053598.272.395

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Pitching

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts
PlayerWLERAGGSSVIPHRERBBSO
Roger Clemens2161.9331310228.1193594954209
Mike Boddicker1783.3634340228.0225928569143
Greg A. Harris1394.0034300184.1186908277117
Dana Kiecker893.9732250152.014574675493
Tom Bolton1053.3821160119.211146454765
Dennis Lamp354.684710105.211461553049
Wes Gardner374.89349077.17743423558
Rob Murphy066.32680757.08546403254
Jeff Reardon533.164702151.13919181933
Jeff Gray244.44410950.25327251550
Jerry Reed214.80290245.05527241617
Eric Hetzel145.9198035.03928232120
Joe Hesketh043.51122025.23712101126
Larry Andersen001.23150122.01833325
John Dopson002.0444017.2137499
Daryl Irvine114.67110017.115109109
Lee Smith211.88110414.11343917
John Leister004.762105.275343
Mike Rochford0118.002104.01010840
Danny Heep009.001001.041100
Team Totals88743.72162162441442.01439664596519997

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Statistical leaders

CategoryPlayerStatistic
Youngest playerPhil Plantier21
Oldest playerBill Buckner40
Wins Above ReplacementRoger Clemens10.4

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Batting

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Pitching

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ALCS

Game 1

October 6, 1990, at Fenway Park

Game 2

October 7, 1990, at Fenway Park

Game 3

October 9, 1990, at Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum

Game 4

October 10, 1990, at Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum

Awards and honors

;Awards
;Accomplishments
1990 [Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star Game]

Farm system

The Lynchburg Red Sox and Winter Haven Red Sox changed classification from Class A to Class A-Advanced.
The Red Sox shared a DSL team with the Detroit Tigers and San Diego Padres.
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