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GaryMrMets
07-14-2003, 01:39 AM
1993 Phillies: Schedule

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/phi/news/phi_press_release.jsp?ymd=20030709&content_id=417292&vkey=pr_phi&fext=.jsp

07/09/2003 4:26 PM ET
1993 Phillies Anniversary Weekend Schedule
Sponsored by Toyota

Saturday, July 19 (Phillies-Expos, 7:05 p.m.)

**6 p.m. to 6:15 p.m. - Members of 1993 NL Champion Phillies will greet fans at the gates (Jim Fregosi, Tommy Greene, Mitch Williams, Kim Batiste, Mariano Duncan, Dave Hollins, Ricky Jordan, Mickey Morandini, Kevin Stocker, Wes Chamberlain, Lenny Dykstra, Tyler Green).
**6:20 p.m. - Alumni Batting Challenge (Darren Daulton, Danny Jackson and Pete Incaviglia vs. Jim Eisenreich, John Kruk and Milt Thompson).

(Bob Gordon, co-author of "More than Beards, Bellies and Biceps: The Story of the 1993 Phillies and the Phillie Phanatic Too," will sign books at the 200 level newsstand on both the 19th and 20th).

Sunday, July 20 (Phillies-Expos, 1:45 p.m.)

**All fans 15 and over receive a Commemorative DVD or VHS of the 1993 season, courtesy of Toyota. The video is entitled "High Hopes, The Story of the 1993 Phillies" and is narrated by John Kruk and Larry Andersen.

**1:13 p.m. - 1993 video tribute on PhanaVision.

**1:16 p.m. - Introductions of 1993 NL Champions along with 2003 starting lineup, followed by the National Anthem.
Vet Countdown Clock
Thursday, July 17 - Jim Fregosi
Friday, July 18 - Jim Eisenreich
Saturday, July 19 - Lenny Dykstra
Sunday, July 20 - Darren Daulton and the entire team

1993 Reunion Roll Call
Manager: Jim Fregosi
Coaches: Larry Bowa, Johnny Podres, John Vukovich
Catchers: Darren Daulton, Todd Pratt
First base: John Kruk, Ricky Jordan
Second base: Mickey Morandini, Mariano Duncan
Shortstop: Kevin Stocker
Third base: Dave Hollins
Left field: Pete Incaviglia, Milt Thompson
Center field: Lenny Dykstra, Ruben Amaro Jr.
Right field: Jim Eisenreich, Wes Chamberlain
Pitchers: Larry Andersen, Tommy Greene,
Danny Jackson, Mitch Williams, Tyler Green

GaryMrMets
07-14-2003, 01:40 AM
1993 Phillies: Facts

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/phi/news/phi_press_release.jsp?ymd=20030709&content_id=417289&vkey=pr_phi&fext=.jsp

07/09/2003 3:57 PM ET
1993 Phillies Facts

Manager: Jim Fregosi
Record: 97-65
Finish: 1st
Attendance: 3,137,674

Team Leaders:
Hitting: John Kruk (.316)
Home Runs: Darren Daulton (24), Pete Incaviglia (24)
RBI: Darren Daulton (105)
Stolen Bases: Lenny Dykstra (37)
Wins: Tommy Greene (16-4), Curt Schilling (16-7)
Saves: Mitch Williams (43)
Strikeouts: Curt Schilling (186)
ERA: Terry Mulholland (3.25)

Phillies lineup for Vet opener:
Lenny Dykstra, cf
Mickey Morandini, 2b
John Kruk, 1b
Dave Hollins, 3b
Darren Daulton, c
Milt Thompson, lf
Pete Incaviglia, rf
Juan Bell, ss
Ben Rivera, p

Honors:
Darren Daulton, NL All-Star starter
John Kruk, NL All-Star starter
Terry Mulholland, NL All-Star starter
Dave Hollins, NL All-Star
Lee Thomas, Major League Executive Of The Year
Curt Schilling, NLCS MVP
Lenny Dykstra, Silver Slugger Award
Jim Fregosi, AP Manager of the Year
Tommy Greene, NL Pitcher of the Month, May

GaryMrMets
07-14-2003, 01:41 AM
1993 Phillies: Roster

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/phi/news/phi_press_release.jsp?ymd=20030709&content_id=417309&vkey=pr_phi&fext=.jsp

07/09/2003 4:32 PM ET
1993 Phillies Roster

1993 Phillies Roster
Manager: Jim Fregosi (11)
Coaches: Larry Bowa (2), Denis Menke (14), Johnny Podres (46), Mel Roberts (26), Mike Ryan (9), John Vukovich (18)

Team Physician: Dr. Philip Marone Athletic Trainer: Jeff Cooper Assistant Athletic Trainer: Mark Andersen

NO. PITCHERS B-T HT WT BORN BIRTHPLACE W-L ERA G GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR HB BB SO WP BK
47 Andersen, Larry R-R 6-3 205 5/6/53 Portland, OR 3- 2 2.92 64 0 0 0 0 61.2 54 22 20 4 1 21 67 2 1
28 Green, Tyler R-R 6-5 185 2/18/70 Springfield, OH 0- 0 7.36 3 2 0 0 0 7.1 16 9 6 1 0 5 7 2 0
49 Greene, Tommy R-R 6-5 219 4/6/67 Lumberton, NC 16- 4 3.42 31 30 7 2 0 200.0 175 84 76 12 3 62 167 15 0
27 Jackson, Danny R-L 6-0 205 1/5/62 San Antonio, TX 12- 11 3.77 32 32 2 1 0 210.1 214 105 88 12 4 80 120 4 0
48 Mason, Roger R-R 6-6 220 9/18/58 Bellaire, MI 5- 5 4.89 34 0 0 0 0 49.2 47 28 27 9 0 16 32 1 1
45 Mulholland, Terry R-L 6-3 215 3/9/63 Uniontown, PA 12- 9 3.25 29 28 7 2 0 191.0 177 80 69 20 3 40 116 5 0
34 Rivera, Ben R-R 6-6 230 1/11/68 San Pedro de Macoris, DR 13- 9 5.02 30 28 1 1 0 163.0 175 99 91 16 6 85 123 12 0
38 Schilling, Curt R-R 6-4 215 11/14/66 Anchorage, AK 16- 7 4.02 34 34 7 2 0 235.1 234 114 105 23 4 57 186 9 3
37 Thigpen, Bobby R-R 6-3 222 7/17/63 Tallahassee, FL 3- 1 6.05 17 0 0 0 0 19.1 23 13 13 2 1 9 10 0 1
40 West, David L-L 6-6 230 9/1/64 Memphis, TN 6- 4 2.92 76 0 0 0 3 86.1 60 37 28 6 5 51 87 3 0
99 Williams, Mitch L-L 6-4 205 11/17/64 Santa Ana, CA 3- 7 3.34 65 0 0 0 43 62.0 56 30 23 3 2 44 60 6 0

NO. CATCHERS B-T HT WT BORN BIRTHPLACE AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SH SF HP BB SO SB CS E
10 Daulton, Darren L-R 6-2 201 1/3/62 Arkansas City, KS .257 147 510 90 131 35 4 24 105 0 8 2 117 111 5 0 9
23 Pratt, Todd R-R 6-3 227 2/9/67 Bellevue, NE .287 33 87 8 25 6 0 5 13 1 1 1 5 19 0 0 2

NO. INFIELDERS B-T HT WT BORN BIRTHPLACE AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SH SF HP BB SO SB CS E
5 Batiste, Kim R-R 6-0 193 3/15/68 New Orleans, LA .282 79 156 14 44 7 1 5 29 0 1 1 3 29 0 1 10
7 Duncan, Mariano R-R 6-0 191 3/13/63 San Pedro de Macoris, DR .282 124 496 68 140 26 4 11 73 4 2 4 12 88 6 5 21
15 Hollins, Dave S-R 6-1 207 5/25/66 Buffalo, NY .273 143 543 104 148 30 4 18 93 0 7 5 85 109 2 3 27
17 Jordan, Ricky R-R 6-3 205 5/26/65 Richmond, CA .289 90 159 21 46 4 1 5 18 0 2 1 8 32 0 0 2
29 Kruk, John L-L 5-10 214 2/9/61 Charleston, WV .316 150 535 100 169 33 5 14 85 0 5 0 111 87 6 2 8
12 Morandini, Mickey L-R 5-11 171 4/22/66 Kittanning, PA .247 120 425 57 105 19 9 3 33 4 2 5 34 73 13 2 5
19 Stocker, Kevin S-R 6-1 178 2/13/70 Spokane, WA .324 70 259 46 84 12 3 2 31 4 1 8 30 43 5 0 14

NO. OUTFIELDERS B-T HT WT BORN BIRTHPLACE AVG G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SH SF HP BB SO SB CS E
33 Amaro, Ruben S-R 5-10 175 2/12/65 Philadelphia, PA .333 25 48 7 16 2 2 1 6 3 1 0 6 5 0 0 1
44 Chamberlain, Wes R-R 6-2 219 4/13/66 Chicago, IL .282 96 284 34 80 20 2 12 45 0 4 1 17 51 2 1 1
4 Dykstra, Lenny L-L 5-10 193 2/10/63 Santa Ana, CA .305 161 637 143 194 44 6 19 66 0 5 2 129 64 37 12 10
8 Eisenreich, Jim L-L 5-11 200 4/18/59 St. Cloud, MN .318 153 362 51 115 17 4 7 54 3 2 1 26 36 5 0 1
22 Incaviglia, Pete R-R 6-1 225 4/2/64 Pebble Beach, CA .274 116 368 60 101 16 3 24 89 0 7 6 21 82 1 1 5
16 Longmire, Tony L-R 6-1 197 8/12/68 Vallejo, CA .231 11 13 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
25 Thompson, Milt L-R 5-11 200 1/5/59 Washington, DC .262 129 340 42 89 14 2 4 44 3 2 2 40 57 9 4 1

GaryMrMets
07-14-2003, 01:42 AM
1993 Phillies: Numbers

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/phi/news/phi_press_release.jsp?ymd=20030709&content_id=417297&vkey=pr_phi&fext=.jsp

07/09/2003 4:03 PM ET
1993 Phillies by the numbers

1 - Number of days the Phillies were NOT in first place.

2 - Number of runs scored by the Phillies in Curt Schilling's five-hit complete game shutout in Game 5 of the World Series; first-ever World Series shutout by a Phillies pitcher.

3 - Third time since 1900 that a team went from last place one season to first place the following season (Atlanta and Minnesota in 1991).

4 - Consecutive games with a home run for Pete Incaviglia; 14th player in Phillies history to do so.

5 - Total number of NL Pennants won by the Phillies, after defeating the Braves on October 13.

5 - Approximate number of lockers on "Macho Row".

6 - Phillies home runs hit in a game on May 30 at Colorado, tied for second highest in club history.

6 - Total number of Division Titles won by Phillies, after clinching the 1993 title on September 28.

7 - Players on team with post-season experience going into the playoffs - Larry Andersen, Mariano Duncan, Lenny Dykstra, Danny Jackson, Roger Mason, David West, Mitch Williams.

7 - Players with double-digit home runs, tied Phillies record - Wes Chamberlain (12), Darren Daulton (24), Mariano Duncan (11), Lenny Dykstra (19), Dave Hollins (18), Pete Incaviglia (24), John Kruk (14).

8 - Wins in Tommy Greene's 8-0 start, best since Steve Carlton went 8-0 in 1982.

8 - Grand slams for the season, set a club record.

9 - Approximate number of times Harry Kalas belted out "High Hopes" to the team.

10 - Saves by Mitch Williams in April, club record.

14 - Strikeouts by Terry Mulholland on June 4 vs Colorado, career high.

15 - Consecutive games with a run scored by Lenny Dykstra, two shy of modern NL record.

16 - Pinch-hits for Ricky Jordan, tied for fifth most in club history.

18 - Consecutive games with a hit for Mariano Duncan, team's longest streak.

20 - Innings to defeat the Dodgers on July 7.

20 - Consecutive home dates, July 10-August 29, in which crowds exceeded 40,000, another club record.

36 - Home runs in August, tied for 10th highest for any month in club history.

40 - Age of Larry Andersen, oldest player on the team.

43 - Saves by Mitch Williams, at the time setting a new club record.

54 - Total bases in Game 4 of the World Series vs Toronto. The two teams combined for 29 runs on 32 hits, 13 extra-base hits; runs, hits and total bases were most ever in a World Series game.

69 - Combined wins for starting five pitchers; only second time in club history (1932) that all five starters finished with double-digit wins - Tommy Greene (16), Danny Jackson (12), Terry Mulholland (12), Ben Rivera (13), Curt Schilling (16).

99 - Number worn by Mitch Williams, highest in club history.

103 - Total wins, including post-season, most ever for a Phillies team.

129 - Walks by Lenny Dykstra, led the NL and set a new club record.

143 - NL-leading runs scored by Lenny Dykstra, most by a Phillie since 1930.

174 - Consecutive games without being shutout, September 20, 1992-September 30, 1993, established new NL record.

181 - Days in first place, setting a new NL record.

440 - Or 4:40. Time July 2 doubleheader ended, latest ending game in history.

665 - Walks for the season, established new club record.

981 - Total putouts by Darren Daulton, Phillies record for a catcher.

1,281 - Runners left on base, a new team record.

3,480 - Approximate number of cigarettes smoked by Manager Jim Fregosi, despite his attempts to quit.

3,137,674 - Fans who came to see the Phillies during their "enchanted" season; record-setting regular season total.

GaryMrMets
07-14-2003, 01:43 AM
1993 Phillies: Highlights

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/phi/news/phi_press_release.jsp?ymd=20030709&content_id=417284&vkey=pr_phi&fext=.jsp

07/09/2003 4:08 PM ET
1993 Vet Highlight

--April 9: Bombs away on Opening Day! Phillies and Chicago combined for eight home runs, tying the old Vet record. Cubs prevailed, 11-7, before 60,985, a record for the second straight year. First ball was delivered by the Phillie Phanatic who parachuted into the Vet with the US Navy Leapfrogs.

--April 14: Phillies defeated Cincinnati, 9-2, to complete the first three-game sweep of the Reds in Philadelphia since 1968.

--May 9: SS Mariano Duncan hit a grand slam off St. Louis RHP Lee Smith in the eighth inning for a dramatic 6-5 win.

--May 10: C Darren Daulton's seventh-inning grand slam is game-winner, 5-1 vs. Pittsburgh. 23-7 record is Phillies' best start ever after 30 games.

--May 20: LF Pete Incaviglia hit Phillies' third grand slam of the month in a 9-3 romp over Montreal. Slams were one short of the club record for a month, July 1950.

--June 5: RHP Tommy Greene improved record to 8-0 with a 6-2 win against Colorado and his fifth straight complete game. He was the first Phillies pitcher to start 8-0 since Steve Carlton in 1981.

--June 20: John Kruk's three-run home run helped the Phillies defeat Florida, 4-3 and extend their Sunday win streak to 11 games. Phillies drew 185,679, a Vet record for a four-game series.

--June 23: RHP Ben Rivera won, 8-3, vs. Atlanta before 57,903, largest Businessperson's Special crowd in Vet history.

--July 2: One of the Vet classics. Twi-night doubleheader with San Diego featured three rain delays totaling 5:54. LHP Mitch Williams' 10th-inning single in the second game gave the Phillies a 6-5 win and split. Williams' hit came at 4:40 a.m., 12 hours and five minutes after the first game was scheduled to start.

--July 7: Another classic. Kevin Stocker made his Major League debut in one of the Vet's longest games. Los Angeles scored twice in the ninth to send the game into extra innings. It all ended with CF Lenny Dykstra's two-run double in the bottom of the 20th inning, a 7-6 win. It matched the longest game in Vet history, May 4, 1973 vs Atlanta.

--July 9: San Francisco set a Vet record for hits by a visiting team with 23 as the Giants romped, 15-8.

--July 10: Another grand slam, this one by 2B Mickey Morandini. It came in the eighth inning and put San Francisco away, 8-3, the first CBS telecast from the Vet.

--July 28: Daulton hit a grand slam and drove in six runs - at the time tying a Vet record for RBI by a Phillie in 14-6 decision over St. Louis.

--July 29: Phillies swept three-game series from second-place St. Louis. Three games drew 147,613.

--July 31: Pete Incaviglia hit two home runs, including his only career Vet upper deck homer, en route to a 10-2 win over Pittsburgh. Phillies reached two million in attendance.

--August 1: C Todd Pratt had his first career multi-home run game to give the Phillies a 5-4 win over Pittsburgh. Phillies went 5-1 on the homestand and drew 289,883 fans, a Vet record for a six-game homestand.

--August 13: 3B Kim Batiste hit a game-winning grand slam in the ninth to sink New York, 9-5, on Friday the 13th. It was the club's seventh grand slam of a record eight hit over the season.

--August 15: Four-run eighth gave Phillies a 5-4 win over New York before 58,103, the 11th consecutive home crowd over 50,000.

--August 24: LHP Danny Jackson earned his tenth win in a 4-2 victory over Colorado. It was the first time since 1932 that the Phillies had five starters with double-digit wins.

--August 29: Jackson and RHP Roger Mason combined to blank Cincinnati, 12-0, matching the Vet record for most runs in a Phillies shutout. Fifth sellout (58,363) was a Vet-record 20th straight crowd over 40,000.

--September 24: Mitch Williams earned his 41st save of the season as he combined with Greene on a three-hit, 3-0 shutout. A crowd of 57,792 put the Phillies over three million for the first time.

--September 26: Three-game series with Atlanta ended with 7-2 Braves win. Series drew 172,556, a Vet record for a three-game series. Home schedule ended (52-29) with a new attendance record, 3,137,674.

--October 6: Batiste's 10th-inning single drove in the winning run as the Phillies edged Atlanta, 4-3, in Game 1 of the NLCS.

--October 7: Atlanta set a new NLCS record for runs scored in bombing the Phillies, 14-3.

--October 13: Phillies won the NL pennant with third straight win over Atlanta, a 6-3 decision. LHP Mitch Williams struck out PH Bill Pecota to end the game and start the celebration. RHP Curt Schilling was named MVP.

--October 19: 1B Paul Molitor had three hits and three RBI to lead Toronto to a 10-3 win in Game 3 of the World Series. Blue Jays took a 2-1 Series lead.

--October 20: One of the wildest games in World Series history saw Toronto score six times in the eighth for a 15-14 win, overcoming two homers by Dykstra and five RBI by LF Milt Thompson. It was the longest game in World Series history, 4:14.

--October 21: RHP Curt Schilling saved the Phillies from elimination by shutting out Toronto on five singles, 2-0.

GaryMrMets
07-14-2003, 01:44 AM
1993 Phillies: Where are they?

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/phi/news/phi_press_release.jsp?ymd=20030709&content_id=417269&vkey=pr_phi&fext=.jsp

07/09/2003 3:57 PM ET
Where are they now?

Ruben Amaro, Jr. . . . Resides: Yardley, PA . . . Phillies Assistant General Manager . . . Favorite Vet memory: "My first start in 1992 - I had two doubles and a homer and I got a curtain call from the fans."

Larry Andersen . . . Resides: Lafayette Hill, PA . . . Phillies broadcaster . . . "Doubleheader ending at 4:40 a.m."

Larry Bowa . . . Resides: Radnor, PA . . . Manager, Phillies . . . "Tug McGraw striking out Willie Wilson to win the World Series."

Wes Chamberlain . . . Resides: Chicago, IL . . . Infielder, Gary South Shore RailCats.

Darren Daulton . . . Resides: Belleair Bluffs, FL . . . Mediocre amateur golfer . . . "Entire 1993 season. It was a blast."

Mariano Duncan . . . Resides: Vero Beach, FL . . . Minor league coach, Los Angeles Dodgers . . . "My grand slam against St. Louis on Mother's Day."

Lenny Dykstra . . . Resides: Thousand Oaks, CA . . . Entrepreneur . . . "Mitch striking out Bill Pecota to put us in the World Series."

Jim Eisenreich . . . Resides: Blue Springs, MO . . . "Mariano Duncan's grand slam off Lee Smith to win the game."

Jim Fregosi . . . Resides: Tarpon Springs, FL . . . Special Assistant to the GM/Major League Scout, Atlanta Braves . . . "There are two... the monster game that we won at 4 o'clock in the morning in 1993 and riding around the Vet with the National League Championship trophy after we eliminated the Braves."

Tyler Green . . . Resides: Lansdale, PA . . . Insurance broker, Fleet Bank . . .

Tommy Greene . . . Resides: Glen Allen, VA . . . Real estate investor . . . "When we clinched the pennant in '93 and the fans (over 60,000 of them) were doing the tomahawk chop to the Braves. The stadium was rockin'."

Dave Hollins . . . Resides: Orchard Park, NY . . . "Game 6 victory over the Braves."

Pete Incaviglia . . .Resides: Argyle, TX . . . Restaurant owner.

Danny Jackson . . . Resides: Olathe, KS . . . Owner, family entertainment center . . . "Winning playoffs at the Vet and everyone wanting the 'pump-me-up' pose."

Ricky Jordan . . . Resides: Folsom, CA . . . Co-owner/partner of three companies . . . "Hitting a home run in my first official at-bat."

John Kruk . . . Resides: Mt. Laurel, NJ . . . Phillies Marketing & Client Relations Specialist . . . "Game 6 NLCS, Mitch strikes out Bill Pecota for pennant."

Mickey Morandini . . .Resides: Chesterton, IN . . . Store owner . . . "60,000 screaming fans in 1993 during our World Series run."

Johnny Podres . . . Resides: Queensbury, NY . . . Phillies part-time pitching instructor; "Keeping track of the horses." . . . "Geez, the '93 season was something special. Schilling's shutout in the World Series. Duncan's grand slam off Lee Smith."

Todd Pratt . . . Resides: West Palm Beach, FL . . . Phillies back-up catcher . . . "Watching Lenny Dykstra in the 1993 playoffs."

Kevin Stocker . . . Resides: Liberty Lake, WA . . . Business owner . . . "July 7, 1993 - 20 innings in my first MLB game and winning NLCS."

Milt Thompson . . . Resides: Williamstown, NJ . . . Phillies minor league outfield/baserunning coordinator.

John Vukovich . . . Resides: Voorhees, NJ . . . Third base coach . . . "Tug's last pitch in 1980!"

Mitch Williams . . . Resides: Medford, NJ . . . Manager, Atlantic City Surf . . . "4:40 a.m. laser to left field to win the game against San Diego!"