"A man once told me to walk with the Lord. I'd rather walk with the bases loaded."
--Ken Singleton, Orioles outfielder after walking with the bases loaded during the '83 World Series
Franchises
Milwaukee Brewers History
By Wikipedia
The Milwaukee Brewers are a Major
League Baseball team based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. They are in the Central
Division of the National
League. The Brewers were part of the American
League from their inception as the Seattle Pilots through the 1997
season, after which they switched to the National League. Not only are
they the only team to have played in both the American and National
Leagues, but they were the only AL team to play in all three divisions.
The team was purchased at the close of spring training on April Fool's
Day, 1970 by an ownership group headed by Milwaukee car dealer Bud
Selig, who had been trying to attract a team to the city from the
nanosecond the Braves headed to Atlanta (even arranging for the White Sox
to play some "home games" in County Stadium in the late
sixties). At the time, with the ownership situation in a state of limbo,
trucks carrying the team's equipment had been sent from Arizona to Provo,
Utah, where they were to receive instructions about whether to continue to
Seattle or Milwaukee. With completion of the sale, the Milwaukee Brewers
were born.
The team was renamed the Brewers to honor Milwaukee's
beer-brewing traditions. An earlier team known as the Milwaukee Brewers
played in the American League in 1901 but moved after the season to become
the St. Louis Browns. Milwaukee also had a
minor league team with the same name in the first half of the 20th
century. With the season's opening day only six days away, there was not
enough time to order completely new uniforms, so the club had to remove
the Pilots logos from team uniforms and replace them with Brewers logos.
The city of Milwaukee already had a remarkable baseball history with
the Milwaukee
Braves producing such great players as Hank Aaron, Eddie Mathews,
Warren Spahn, Joe Adcock, Del Crandall, Bobby Thomson, and Lew Burdette.
The Braves, who played in Milwaukee from 1953 to 1965, were the pride of
the city and won the World Series in 1957. The Braves also won the
National League pennant in 1958, and lost a best-of-three playoff in 1959
against the Los
Angeles Dodgers for a chance at a third consecutive league
championship.
The Braves left Milwaukee after the 1965 season. Aside from a few Chicago
White Sox home games relocated to Milwaukee in '68 and '69, the
baseball void was not filled in old Milwaukee
County Stadium until the Brewers arrived in 1970 from Seattle.
The Brewers franchise reached its pinnacle in the early Awesome80s. In 1981,
the Brewers won the second half of the season (divided to due a players'
strike) and played the New
York Yankees in a playoff mini-series that they ultimately lost. It
was the first playoff appearance for the franchise. In 1982,
the Brewers won the American
League pennant by defeating the California
Angels 3 games to 2 in the American
League Championship Series, becoming the first team to win a playoff
series after trailing 2 games to 0. The Brewers then played the St.
Louis Cardinals in the World Series. The Brewers started out strong,
taking the first game of the series 10-0. Unfortunately, Hall-of-Famer
Rollie Fingers had been injured prior to the postseason and relief
pitching became a problem for the Brewers. St. Louis eventually triumphed
in the series, winning 4 games to 3. These are the only two seasons out
the first 35 for the franchise which have led to the Brewers'
participation in the postseason.
During the Awesome80s the Brewers produced three league MVPs (Rollie
Fingers in 1981 and Robin Yount in 1982 and 1989) and two Cy Young Award
winners (Rollie Fingers in 1981 and Pete Vuckovich in 1982). Yount is one
of only three players in the history of the game to win the MVP award at
two different positions (shortstop and centerfield, respectively).
Brewers
A program from the
inaugural season in Milwaukee in 1970.
Following their two playoff years, the club quickly retreated to the
bottom of the standings, never finishing higher than fifth (out of seven)
in their division from 1983
to 1986.
Hope was restored in 1987
when, guided by rookie manager Tom Trebelhorn, the team began the year
with a thirteen game winning streak. "Team Streak" eventually
posted a strong third place finish, highlights of the year including Paul
Molitor's 39-game hitting streak and the only no-hitter in team history,
pitched by Juan Nieves on April 15.
On that day, Nieves became the first (and so far, only) Brewer and
first Puerto Rican-born Major Leaguer to pitch a no-hitter, defeating the Baltimore
Orioles 7-0 at Memorial
Stadium. The final out came on a climactic diving catch in
right-center field by Robin Yount of a line drive hit by Eddie Murray. The
game was also the first time the Orioles were no-hit at Memorial Stadium.
In 1988
the team had another strong season, finishing only two games out of first
(albeit with a lesser record than the previous year) in a close playoff
race with four other clubs. Following this year, the team slipped, posting
mediocre records from 1989
through 1991,
after which manager Tom Trebelhorn was fired. In 1992,
reminiscent of the resurgence which greeted Trebelhorn's arrival in 1987,
the Brewers rallied behind the leadership of rookie manager Phil Garner
and posted their best record since their World Series year in 1982,
finishing the season with a 92-70 record and a second-place finish, four
games behind the Toronto
Blue Jays.
Hope of additional pennant races was quickly dashed, however, as the
club plummeted to the bottom of the standings in the following year,
finishing an abysmal 26 games out of first. Since 1992, highlights have
been few and far between as the franchise has failed to produce a single
winning season, having not fielded a competitive team due to a combination
of bad management and financial constraints which limit the team relative
to the resources available to other, larger-market clubs. It is hoped that
with new management, structural changes in the economics of baseball, and
the advent of revenue sharing the Brewers will become competitive once
again.
In 1994,
the franchise was placed into a new division with the restructuring which
took place that year to accommodate the adoption of the new expanded
playoff system. This restructuring entailed changing the composition of
each league from two divisions to three, the result being that the Brewers
were transferred from the old AL East division to the newly-created
Central. This made Milwaukee the first team to play in all three division
in a Major League (A.L. West, East, and now Central).
Brewers
A 1987 Milwaukee
Brewers program featuring baseball
cards on the cover.
Out of divisions to transfer to in the American League, Selig had the
team transferred from the to the National League in 1998
during baseball's expansion and realignment. With the addition of two new
franchises (Arizona and Tampa Bay), one in both the NL and AL, each league
would have had 15 teams. Major League Baseball, however, wished to
schedule interleague play, introduced the prior year, in designated blocks
throughout the season. This required each league to have an even number of
teams so as to not have single interleague games scattered throughout the
year. It was therefore decided to have a 16-team National League and a
14-team American League, with the Brewers volunteering to be the franchise
to switch leagues, moving to the NL Central division. Selig wanted his
team to be rivals with the Cubs hoping this would generate additional
revenue.
Miller
Park was opened in 2001, built to replace Milwaukee
County Stadium. The stadium was built with $310 million of public
funds, drawing some controversy, and is one of the few professional
sporting stadiums with a retractable roof. The park was to have opened a
year earlier, however an accident during construction forced a year's
delay. The taxpayers were told the team could not compete for players
without the new stadium, but soon after the stadium was built, Selig's
surrogates cut back and left the city with an expensive bill for a new
stadium occupied by a mediocre team. Hardly a novel tactic but certainly
an effective one in the in a sport were the goal is to generate as much TV
revenue as possible and to stick local taxpayers with a much of your
liabilities as possible - and then see if you can get a better deal in
another city.
On January 16, 2004, Selig announced that his ownership group was
putting the team up for sale, to the great relief of many fans who were
unhappy with the team's lackluster performance and perceived poor
management over the prior decade. In September of 2004, it was announced
that the Brewers had reached an oral agreement with Los Angeles investment
banker Mark Attanasio to purchase the team for $180 million. The sale to
Attanasio was completed on January 13, 2005 at Major League Baseball's
quarterly owners meeting.
Potential
The team secured its first non-losing record since 1992 on September
30, 2005, against the Pittsburgh
Pirates. The Brewers were down 5-0 fairly late in the game but came
back to win 6-5 and post a guaranteed .500 record with 81 wins. Currently,
the Pittsburgh
Pirates hold the longest losing streak in all of sports with 13
consecutive losing seasons.
Formerly known as: Seattle Pilots (Sick's
Stadium) (1969).
The franchise relocated to Milwaukee and changed its name prior to the
1970
season.
Uniform colors: Midnight Blue, White, and Gold
Logo design: The word "Brewers" in script
superimposed over a baseball which itself is inside a circle with the
word "MILWAUKEE" above and a pair of crossed barley stalks
below
Official Team Mascot: Bernie Brewer
All-Time Record (at the end of the 2005 season): 2,761 wins,
3,100 losses (.471 winning percentage)
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