Sid Bream
Sidney Eugene Bream is an American former professional baseball player who was a first baseman. From 1983 through 1994, he played in Major League Baseball for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates, Atlanta Braves, and Houston Astros. He is best remembered for his game-winning run scored in the 1992 National League Championship Series that sent the Braves to the World Series.
After attending Liberty University, Bream was drafted by the Dodgers in 1981. Though thrice ranking among the home run leaders in the minor league, he batted no higher than.184 in limited playing time before getting traded to the Pirates in 1985. In Pittsburgh, he regularly played over 100 games a year for the Pirates, hitting at least 10 home runs in four full seasons with them. Defensively, he set an NL record for most assists in a season with 166 in 1986. After a knee injury cost him most of the 1989 season, he hit 15 home runs in 1990 as the Pirates reached the playoffs, losing to the Cincinnati Reds in the NLCS.
Bream reached the playoffs each of the next three seasons as well, though he did so with the Braves, who signed him as a free agent after the 1990 season. The Braves defeated Pittsburgh in the NLCS in 1991 and 1992, reaching the World Series two years in a row but losing it both times. Bream received most of the starts at first base in 1991 and 1992, hitting 11 and 10 home runs, respectively. He was getting the majority of the playing time at first base in 1993 until the Braves acquired Fred McGriff in July, relegating Bream to a reserve role for the rest of the year. Bream played one more year in 1994 with the Astros as a backup to Jeff Bagwell before retiring in 1995.
Early life
Sidney Eugene Bream was born on August 3, 1960, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. The third-oldest of six children, he grew up in Mount Holly Springs, a suburb of Carlisle. His family had their own Christian singing group, and Bream travelled all over Pennsylvania with them, eventually getting to sing as part of a family quartet once he got older. Since his father was a St. Louis Cardinals fan, Bream rooted for the same team growing up. He attended Carlisle High School, a Division 4A institution, where he played baseball and basketball. Bream hoped to be drafted by a Major League Baseball team out of high school, but when none selected him, he decided to attend college instead. Both Temple University and Liberty University offered him full tuition scholarships, but Liberty's included room & board as well, and he chose to attend there.College
Bream was "one of Liberty’s first true athletic stars," according to the university's website. As a first baseman for the Liberty Flames, he was named an All-American by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. He earned similar honors from the National Association of Basketball Coaches for his play on the court. Bream set Liberty records for highest career batting average and slugging percentage ; he holds five other baseball records at Liberty as well. In 1980, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Falmouth Commodores of the Cape Cod Baseball League, where he was named a league all-star, and was coached by Al Worthington, who was also Liberty's head baseball coach. Bream was selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second round of the 1981 MLB draft.Los Angeles Dodgers
Bream started his professional career with the Vero Beach Dodgers of the Single-A Florida State League in 1981. In 70 games, he batted.327 with 35 runs scored, 85 hits, one home run, and 47 runs batted in. He split 1982 between Vero Beach and the San Antonio Dodgers of the Double-A Texas League. In 63 games with San Antonio, he batted.310 with 41 runs scored, 70 hits, four home runs, and 43 RBI. His numbers were even better at San Antonio, where he batted.320 with 43 runs scored, 83 hits, eight home runs, and 50 RBI in 70 games. Bream made it all the way to Triple-A before the end of the year, hitting a home run in three games with the Albuquerque Dukes of the Pacific Coast League.In 1983, Bream spent the whole minor league season with Albuquerque, batting.307 with 149 hits. He led the PCL in home runs and RBI, also finishing third in runs scored and walks. He was a September callup by the Dodgers, who hoped he would be a helpful part of their team in the future. Bream made his major league debut on September 1, pinch-hitting for Steve Yeager in an 8–3 loss to the Montreal Expos. His first major league hit, against Tom Hume of the Cincinnati Reds on September 7, 1983, tied the score in the ninth inning as the Dodgers went on to win 7–3 in extra innings. In 15 games, Bream batted.182 with two hits and two RBI for the Dodgers in 1983.
Bream started the 1984 season with Albuquerque but was called up by the Dodgers in July. Used mainly as a pinch hitter, he batted.167 with three RBI in 19 games before getting sent back to Albuquerque. Despite the month spent in the majors, Bream ranked among the PCL leaders in batting average, runs scored, home runs, and RBI. He was called up by the Dodgers again in September, getting more starts at first base this month, though he batted.194 with three RBI on this callup.
In 1985, Bream was named the Dodgers starting first baseman. On April 12, he hit his first major league home run against Mike Krukow in a 4–1 loss to the San Francisco Giants. He hit three home runs in April but was sent to Albuquerque after batting.114. Bream also played games with the Dodgers from May 21 through June 4 and from June 28 through July 6, but none of these were starts, and he had just two hits in 10 at bats. At Albuquerque, he batted.370 with 51 runs scored and 57 RBI, tying with Pat Keedy and Randy Asadoor for fourth in the league with 17 home runs despite only playing in 85 games. On September 9, the Dodgers named him as a player to be named later in a trade to the Pittsburgh Pirates for disgruntled third baseman Bill Madlock, whom the Dodgers promptly signed to a contract extension.
Pittsburgh Pirates
With the Pirates in 1985, Bream was used as the starting first baseman. His home run total was identical to what it had been with the Dodgers earlier in the year, but Bream batted.284 with 15 RBI in the 26 games he played with Pittsburgh.Bream remained the Pirates' first baseman in 1986, his first full season in the majors. In late June and July, he was part of a platoon system at first base with Mike Diaz, a right-handed hitter who got starts against left-handed pitchers. However, by August, Bream was getting most of the starts again regardless of which hand the pitcher threw with. He had four hits and two RBI on July 27 in a 7–0 win over San Francisco. In the first game of a doubleheader on August 16, he had four hits and four RBI, including a home run against Kevin Gross, in a 6–1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. On August 22, he had a season-high five hits and five RBI, including a two-run home run against Cliff Speck, in a 16–5 victory over the Atlanta Braves. He set an NL single-season record with 166 assists at first base, passing Bill Buckner's season-best of 161. Bream batted.268 with 140 hits and set what would be career highs in many categories, such as games played, at bats, runs scored, doubles, triples, home runs, RBI, stolen bases, and walks. He and Shawon Dunston tied for third in the National League in doubles, behind Von Hayes's 46 and Steve Sax's 43.
On April 20, 1987, Bream had four hits and three RBI, including home runs against Rick Aguilera and Randy Myers, in a 9–6 victory over the New York Mets. Against the Giants on May 1, he had two hits and three RBI, including a two-run home run against Mark Davis in a 4–2 victory. He had to leave a game against the Expos on June 24 after grounding out to end the sixth inning; Bream missed three games and did not get a start at first base until nine games later. On July 25, he had three hits and five RBI in a 9–3 victory over the San Diego Padres. That was his only game in 1987 in which he had four or more RBI, but he had six other three-RBI games. In 149 games, Bream hit 13 home runs, scored 64 runs, and drove in 65 runs. His 142 hits would be a career high, and his.275 average would be a career high for seasons in which he had more than 100 at bats. Bream batted fourth in the lineup in 1987 but was the worst cleanup hitter in the league, according to Baseball America.
Bream was again platooned at first base in 1988, this time with Randy Milligan, who got the Opening Day start because left-hander Shane Rawley was pitching for the Phillies. Ultimately, Bream would get the bulk of the starts, and Milligan was sent to the minor leagues for the rest of the season after July 29. Against the Cardinals on April 10, Bream hit a fourth-inning home run against Joe Magrane, then doubled against Todd Worrell in the top of the 10th inning, scoring the eventual winning run one batter later when Mike LaValliere drove him in with another double. In the 12th inning of a 1–1 tie against the Padres on May 6, he hit a walkoff home run against Davis, giving the Pirates a 4–1 victory. Against the Expos on June 23, he had three hits and four RBI, including a two-run home run against John Dopson in a 6–4 victory. On August 9, he had two hits and four RBI in a 10–8 victory over the Expos. He was batting.294 through August 15, but he batted.174 in his final 36 games. In 148 games, he batted.264 with 50 runs scored, 122 hits, 10 home runs, and 65 RBI. Bream tied his career high with 37 doubles, fourth in the NL behind Andrés Galarraga's 42, Rafael Palmeiro's 41, and Chris Sabo's 40.
Entering the 1989 season, John Perrotto of the Beaver County Times reported that Bream might platoon with Gary Redus. Bream played the first nine games of the season at first for Pittsburgh before tearing cartilage in his right knee on April 14 while trying to run back to first base. After a month on the disabled list, he returned on May 14 but played only 10 games before having to undergo season-ending knee surgery. In only 19 games, he batted.222 with no home runs and four RBI.
Bream made a healthy return in 1990, but the platoon with Redus became a reality. He had four hits on June 12 but did not score a run or drive one in; however, the Pirates beat the Cardinals 6–3.
Against the Expos on July 24, he had three hits and three RBI, including a two-run home run against Gross as the Pirates won 5–3. On July 31, Bream had three RBI, including a two-run home run against Shawn Boskie, in a 9–1 victory over the Cubs that moved Pittsburgh into a tie with Chicago for the NL East lead. Four days later, he had four hits and three RBI, including a two-run home run against Don Carman as the Pirates beat the Phillies 11–0. Five times he had a season-high three RBI. In 147 games, Bream batted.270 with 39 runs scored, 105 hits, 15 home runs, and 67 RBI. Sportswriter J. Brady McCollough said that Bream "was a solid everyday player" in 1990. It had taken three knee operations to get Bream back in playing shape after his injuries in 1989; for his perseverance, he was named the winner of MLB's Hutch Award after the season.
The Pirates won the NL East and faced the Reds in the NL Championship Series. Bream only played in four of the six games of the series, but he batted.500. In Game 1, he hit a two-run, fourth-inning home run against José Rijo that tied the game; Pittsburgh scored the only other run to win by a score of 4–3. The Pirates lost the series in six games.
Following the season, Bream became a free agent. He wanted to stay with the Pirates, as he and his family had moved into a newly-built home in the area, but he wanted more money than the Pirates were willing to give him. As a result, he signed with the Atlanta Braves. "It was a very, very difficult time for my wife, Michele, and I," Bream recalled in 2017. "We went to bed that night and literally cried all night thinking that we were leaving Pittsburgh." Bob Collier of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote in 2006 that Sean Casey was "the first real first baseman to walk into in about 16 years, or since the fate-torturing departure of Sid Bream."