Year In Review : 2002 American League

Off the field...

Big business took the witness stand in 2002 as Enron, WorldCom and Xerox were all exposed in major accounting scandals. The total cost of corporate fraud in the United States was estimated at more than five trillion dollars, coming in plunging stocks, loss of investments and tax revenue.

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed with U.S. President George W. Bush in Moscow a nuclear disarmament treaty and a strategic partnership agreement. Under the treaty, the two countries pledged to slash their nuclear arsenals by two-thirds.

On September 11, tributes around the nation showcased American emotion and patriotic pride on the one-year anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the United States. Major League Baseball held special opening ceremonies in every ballpark operating that day.

In the American League...

The Anaheim Angels dethroned the perennial American League Champion New York Yankees and the Minnesota Twins to face the San Francisco Giants in their first Fall Classic since entering the league forty-two years earlier. The victory was sweetened by overcoming a 5-0 seventh-inning deficit in Game 6, fittingly the greatest elimination-game comeback in Classic history. The Angels went on to win the contest four games to three.

From August 13th to September 4th, Most Valuable Player Miguel Tejada and the Oakland Athletics set an American League record of twenty straight wins.

Seattle's Mike Cameron hit four homers in Comiskey Park on May 2nd, becoming the first Major Leaguer in nine years (Mark Whiten, 1993) to manage the feat. He was outdone twenty-one days later in Milwaukee as the Los Angeles Dodgers' Shawn Green totaled a six-for-six, nineteen total base spectacle and finished the week with nine home runs of his own.

In the National League...

Barry Bonds continued to chase Babe Ruth as the most dominant player in MLB history. The San Francisco Giants outfielder tallied his 600th home run off the Pittsburgh Pirates' Kip Wells on August 9th and won his first batting title (.370) before falling to the Anaheim Angels in Game 7 of the World Series.

The Arizona Diamondbacks continued to dominate on the mound as Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling went 47-12 and ranked 1-2 in the Majors with a combined total of six-hundred fifty strikeouts. The lethal 1-2 combination also boasted thirteen complete games, more than any other big-league team.

No one demonstrated more resolve than the Cardinals, who experienced the untimely deaths of longtime announcer Jack Buck and pitcher Darryl Kile. The team, though mourning, went on to dominate the National League Central dedicating the season in the memory of their departed comrades.

Around the league...

Major League owners and players, inevitably heading toward a ninth play stoppage over labor issues, reached accord virtually minutes before the first feared cancellation. It was the first time a new Collective Bargaining Agreement was struck without the loss of a single inning.

For only the second time in the History of the Midsummer Classic, the 2002 All-Star Game was called at a 7-7 tie after eleven innings due to both teams running out of available pitchers.

The West was the best as six of the nine West Division teams won ninety-two-plus games (more teams than the other four divisions combined) and West players dominated the individual awards including the Cy Young, Most Valuable Player and eight of the nine American League Gold Gloves.

Baseball bid farewell to some of the greatest ever to lace up a pair of cleats including Ted Williams, Jim Spencer, Al Cowens, Minnie Rojas, Joe Black, Wes Westrum, Darrell Porter, Enos Slaughter, John Roseboro, Hoyt Wilhelm and Darryl Kile.

"The goal is to win it again. That's all we're here to do. People get remembered for championships, and that's what we want to do. We got one, so let's try to get two." - World Series MVP Troy Glaus
2002 American League Player Review

Hitting Statistics League Leaderboard

Base on Balls

Jim Thome

Cleveland

122

Top 25

Batting Average

Manny Ramirez

Boston

.349

Top 25

Doubles

Garret Anderson

Anaheim

56

Top 25

Nomar Garciaparra

Boston

Hits

Alfonso Soriano

New York

209

Top 25

Home Runs

Alex Rodriguez

Texas

57

Top 25

On Base Percentage

Manny Ramirez

Boston

.450

Top 25

RBI

Alex Rodriguez

Texas

142

Top 25

Runs

Alfonso Soriano

New York

128

Top 25

Slugging Average

Jim Thome

Cleveland

.677

Top 25

Stolen Bases

Alfonso Soriano

New York

41

Top 25

Total Bases

Alex Rodriguez

Texas

389

Top 25

Triples

Johnny Damon

Boston

11

Top 25

 

2002 American League Pitcher Review

Pitching Statistics League Leaderboard

Complete Games

Paul Byrd

Kansas City

7

Top 25

ERA

Pedro Martinez

Boston

2.26

Top 25

Games

Billy Koch

Oakland

84

Top 25

Saves

Eddie Guardado

Minnesota

45

Top 25

Shutouts

Jeff Weaver

New York

3

Top 25

Strikeouts

Pedro Martinez

Boston

239

Top 25

Winning Percentage

Pedro Martinez

Boston

.833

Top 25

Wins

Barry Zito

Oakland

23

Top 25

 

2002 American League

Team Standings

New York Yankees

103 58 .640

--

$125,928,583

Boston Red Sox

93 69 .574

10½

$108,366,060

Toronto Blue Jays

78 84 .481

25½

$76,864,333

Baltimore Orioles

67 95 .414

36½

$60,493,487

Tampa Bay Devil Rays

55 106 .342

48

$34,380,000

Minnesota Twins

94 67 .584 -- $40,225,000

Chicago White Sox

81 81 .500

13½

$57,052,833

Cleveland Indians

74 88 .457

20½

$78,909,448

Kansas City Royals

62 100 .383

32½

$47,257,000

Detroit Tigers

55 106 .342

39

$55,048,000

Oakland Athletics

103 59 .636 -- $39,679,746

Anaheim Angels

99 63 .611 4 $61,721,667

Seattle Mariners

93 69 .574 10 $80,282,668

Texas Rangers

72 90 .444 31 $105,302,124

 

2002 American League Team Review

Hitting Statistics League Leaderboard

Anaheim

162 5,678 851 1,603 333 32 152 811 2,456 462

805

117

51 .341 .433 .282

Baltimore

162 5,491 667 1,353 311 27 165 636 2,213 452

993

110

48 .309 .403 .246

Boston

162 5,640 859 1,560 348 33 177 810 2,505 545

944

80

28 .345 .444 .277

Chicago

162 5,502 856 1,475 289 29 217 819 2,473 555

952

75

31 .338 .449 .268

Cleveland

162 5,423 739 1,349 255 26 192 706 2,232 542

1,000

52

37 .321 .412 .249

Detroit

161 5,406 575 1,340 265 37 124 546 2,051 363

1,035

65

44 .300 .379 .248

Kansas City

162 5,535 737 1,415 285 42 140 695 2,204 524

921

140

65 .323 .398 .256

Minnesota

161 5,582 768 1,518 348 36 167 731 2,439 472

1,089

79

62 .332 .437 .272

New York

161 5,601 897 1,540 314 12 223 857 2,547 640

1,171

100

38 .354 .455 .275

Oakland

162 5,558 800 1,450 279 28 205 772 2,400 609

1,008

46

20 .339 .432 .261

Seattle

162 5,569 814 1,531 285 31 152 771 2,334 629

1,003

137

58 .350 .419 .275

Tampa Bay

161 5,604 673 1,418 297 35 133 640 2,184 456

1,115

102

45 .314 .390 .253

Texas

162 5,618 843 1,510 304 27 230 806

2,558

554

1,055

62

34 .338 .455 .269

Toronto

162 5,581 813 1,457 305 38 187 771 2,399 522

1,142

71

18 .327 .430 .261

2002 American League Hitting Statistics League Leaderboard

 

2002 American League Team Review

Pitching Statistics League Leaderboard

Anaheim

99

63

3.69

7

14

54 70 1452.1 1,345 644 595 169 49 509

999

Baltimore

67

95

4.46

8

3

31 46 1450.2 1,491 773 719 208 54 549

967

Boston

93

69

3.75

5

17

51 68 1446.0 1,339 665 603 146 84 430

1,157

Chicago

81

81

4.53

7

7

35 46 1423.0 1,422 798 716 190 60 528

945

Cleveland

74

88

4.91

9

4

34 53 1424.2 1,508 837 777 142 57 603

1,058

Detroit

55

106

4.92

11

7

33 53 1414.0 1,593 864 773 163 62 463

794

Kansas City

62

100

5.21

12

6

30 54 1441.0 1,587 891 834 212 52 572

909

Minnesota

94

67

4.12

8

9

47 65 1444.2 1,454 712 662 184 45 439

1,026

New York

103

58

3.87

9

11

53 69 1452.0 1,441 697 625 144 48 403

1,135

Oakland

103

59

3.68

9

19

48 68 1452.0 1,391 654 593 135 62 474

1,021

Seattle

93

69

4.07

8

12

43 64 1445.1 1,422 699 654 178 49 441

1,063

Tampa Bay

55

106

5.29

12

3

25 46 1440.1 1,567 918 846 215 94 620

925

Texas

72

90

5.15

4

4

33 65 1439.2 1,528 882 824 194 76 669

1,030

Toronto

78

84

4.80

6

6

41 70 1438.1 1,504 828 767 177 71 590

991

2002 American League Pitching Statistics League Leaderboard



The 2002 Anaheim Angels set a new Major League record for most players (they had nine) on one team with one-hundred or more hits during a single season.

Did you know that Carlos Beltran of the Kansas City Royals set the American League record for most extra base hits (eighty) by a switch-hitter in 2002?

One of the longest "streaks" in Major League baseball belongs to the New York Yankees who through 2002 have played forty-four seasons without being held hitless during a game - the pitcher who last accomplished this feat was Hoyt Wilhelm on September 20, 1958.