January following his release from the Dodgers • January 1 –
Major League Baseball launches the
MLB Network at 6 PM ET. Commissioner
Bud Selig greets viewers at the channel's official inception. • January 13 –
Trevor Hoffman, the current all-time
saves leader, signs a one-year $6 million deal with the
Milwaukee Brewers. • January 15 – The
Los Angeles Dodgers reach an agreement with
Andruw Jones to release him in time to catch on with another team before
spring training in exchange for a deferral of some of the remaining money due on his contract. • January 21 – In his first year of arbitration eligibility, closer
Jonathan Papelbon and the
Boston Red Sox agree to a $6.25 million, one-year contract that avoids salary arbitration. Just one day after
Bobby Jenks does the same ($5.65 million), Papelbon easily surpasses
Éric Gagné's previous major league mark of $5 million for a reliever with three years of service time.
Francisco Rodríguez made $3.775 million in his first year of arbitration. • January 22 -
Jeff Kent announces his retirement after 17 seasons. He hit more home runs than any other
second baseman in major league history. • January 25 – Three time All-Star
Sean Casey announces his retirement after twelve seasons, later joining the MLB Network staff.
February • February 3 •
Joe Torre and
Tom Verducci's book,
The Yankee Years hits book stores. The book chronicles Torre's years as manager of the
New York Yankees from to . In the book, Joe Torre says he feels that general manager
Brian Cashman "betrayed" him in negotiations with the Yankees following the 2007 season, and that teammates refer to
Alex Rodriguez as "A-Fraud". • A urine sample that
Barry Bonds submitted as part of Major League Baseball's anonymous testing program in that did not show the presence of
performance-enhancing drugs under that program is retested by federal authorities after it is seized in a raid, and comes back positive for
anabolic steroids, according to a
New York Times report. •
Óliver Pérez re-signs with the
New York Mets with a three-year $36 million deal. • February 4 • The list of victims of
Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme is revealed, and includes
Sandy Koufax and
Sterling Equities Associates, the New York Mets' ownership group. •
San Diego Padres slugger Adrián González sets a Caribbean Series record with three home runs in a game and Mexico's
Venados de Mazatlán beats the
Dominican Republic's
Tigres del Licey, 12–9. González has a two-run homer in the fourth inning and a solo shot in the sixth and ninth innings. Forty-seven players had hit two home runs in a Series game over its previous fifty editions. • February 7 –
Sports Illustrated reports that Alex Rodriguez tested positive for
steroids in . • February 8 –
Andruw Jones signs a one-year minor league contract offer from the
Texas Rangers. Jones' deal pays him $500,000 if he makes the major league team. He also has the chance to make $1 million in incentives throughout the season. • February 9 – Alex Rodriguez admits in an interview to
ESPN's
Peter Gammons that while with the Texas Rangers during the – seasons he used performance-enhancing drugs. • February 17 – Alex Rodriguez meets the press at
George M. Steinbrenner Field to discuss his admission of having used performance-enhancing drugs to ESPN's Peter Gammons. Rodriguez claims that a cousin repeatedly injected him with drugs obtained over the counter in the Dominican Republic called "Boli", a likely reference to
Primobolan. • February 18 •
Ken Griffey Jr. returns to the
Seattle Mariners, agreeing to a one-year deal that includes a $2 million base salary and up to $2.5 million in incentives based on at-bats and attendance. • The demolition of
Shea Stadium is completed.
March • March 1 •
Jim Bowden resigns after four seasons as the
Washington Nationals general manager, leaving under the cloud of a federal investigation into the skimming of signing bonuses given to Latin American prospects. • Following an afternoon spring training game at
Ed Smith Stadium, New York Yankees
third baseman Alex Rodriguez meets with officials from MLB's Department of Investigations and Labor Relations Department about security issues and his past involvement with performance-enhancing drugs. • March 3 –
Major League Baseball 2K9 is released by
Visual Concepts and
2K Sports for
Microsoft Windows, the
Xbox 360,
Sony's
PlayStation 3,
PlayStation 2 and
PlayStation Portable, and the
Nintendo Wii.
Cy Young Award winner
Tim Lincecum of the
San Francisco Giants appears on the cover as well as serving as MLB player consultant for the popular video game. • March 4 – The Los Angeles Dodgers and
free agent left fielder Manny Ramírez agree in principle on a two-year, $45 million deal. • March 5 – The
2009 World Baseball Classic opens in
Tokyo with defending champions
Japan defeating
China. • March 6 • Los Angeles Dodgers
pinch hitter Mark Sweeney announces his retirement and becomes a member of Joe Torre's coaching staff with the Dodgers. Sweeney's 175 career pinch hits rank second in major league history.
Lenny Harris, the all-time pinch-hits leader (212), is also a member of the Dodgers' coaching staff, as is
Manny Mota, who ranks third on the career list (155). •
Ripken Baseball and
MLB.com announce a multi-year agreement to jointly operate a new youth baseball instructional website, GetGreat.com. • March 10 – For the second time in three days, the
Netherlands upsets the heavily favored
Dominican Republic at the
2009 World Baseball Classic. The Dutch advance to the second round and the Dominicans are eliminated. • March 22 –
Team USA is eliminated from the
World Baseball Classic with a 9–4 loss to
Japan in Los Angeles. • March 23 • After having missed the entire season with right shoulder problems, Boston Red Sox
pitcher Curt Schilling announces his retirement from baseball. •
Japan wins the
2009 World Baseball Classic with a 5–3 victory over
South Korea in ten
innings.
Ichiro Suzuki hits a two-run single in the top of the tenth inning with two outs for the winning runs.
Daisuke Matsuzaka is the tournament's Most Valuable Player for the second time. Dice-K posts a 3–0 record with a 2.45 ERA in the tournament. • March 26 –
Eri Yoshida pitches for the Kobe 9 Cruise at the
Osaka Dome in the season opening game of the newly formed
Kansai Independent Baseball League. • March 31 • The
Detroit Tigers release OF/DH
Gary Sheffield after he bats only .178 (8-for-45) during
spring training. He signs a one-year deal with the New York Mets on April 1. • The
Atlanta Braves extend
Chipper Jones' contract through the 2013 season.
April • April 6 –
Switch-hitters
Tony Clark and
Felipe López of the
Arizona Diamondbacks become the first teammates to each hit homers from both sides of the plate on Opening Day. • April 9 – In the early morning hours after pitching six shutout innings against the
Oakland Athletics, rookie
Angels starter
Nick Adenhart and two others are killed when the car in which they are travelling is struck by a
drunk driver. The series finale with Oakland that evening is subsequently postponed. This marks the second time a player's death in a car accident postpones a series finale. • April 11 • Commissioner
Bud Selig announces that the
2011 MLB All-Star Game will be played at
Arizona's
Chase Field. •
Brandon Inge of the
Detroit Tigers hits his 100th career home run, leading the Tigers to a 4–3 victory over the
Texas Rangers. • April 12 – In a 2–0 loss to the
Cincinnati Reds, the
Pittsburgh Pirates turn the first
triple play of the season, 6–4–3. • April 13 • For the
Pittsburgh Pirates' home opener against the
Houston Astros, the Pirates wear the caps of the Pittsburgh Police Department (PPD) which had lost three officers and had two injured in a shootout on April 4, 2009. The Astros also wore these caps before the game, won 7–0 by the Pirates. • For the first time in Major League history, century milestone home runs are hit in consecutive at-bats—and the two players involved reach the same milestone. Batting against
Zach Miner of the
Detroit Tigers,
Jermaine Dye of the
Chicago White Sox leads off the second inning with his 300th career home run.
Paul Konerko follows with
his 300th career home run one batter later. The White Sox defeat the Tigers at
Comerica Park 10–6. • The San Diego Padres's
Jody Gerut hits the first
home run at
CitiField in the first at-bat in the New York Mets' new home. The first home run by a Met is a three-run shot in the fifth inning by
third baseman David Wright, tying the game at 5–5. The Mets, however, surrender the lead an inning later when
right fielder Ryan Church misplays a fly ball that leads to an unearned run that is the deciding factor in the Padres' 6–5 victory. It is the second consecutive game lost in this manner by the Mets, as the previous day in
Florida,
left fielder Daniel Murphy committed an error that led to both runs in the
Florida Marlins' 2–1 victory over the Mets. •
Harry Kalas, 73, play-by-play announcer for the Philadelphia Phillies, dies of a heart attack after collapsing in the broadcast booth at
Nationals Park before the game with the Washington Nationals. • April 15 – In honor of
Jackie Robinson, the first
African-American to play Major League Baseball, all players on all teams wear his number, 42. It was retired from all teams throughout baseball on its 50th anniversary in and April 15 is the only day players are allowed to wear it, in honor of his debut on April 15, (see also
Jackie Robinson Day). • April 16 – The New York Yankees play their first game at the
new Yankee Stadium, losing to the
Cleveland Indians 10–2. • April 17 •
Gary Sheffield of the New York Mets hits his 500th career home run as a pinch hitter in the bottom of the seventh inning in a game against the Milwaukee Brewers. •
Jason Kubel completes the ninth
cycle in
Minnesota Twins' history with a go-ahead
grand slam to cap off a seven-run eighth inning for Minnesota. Kubel had five RBIs to lift the Twins to an 11–9 victory over the
Los Angeles Angels. He joins just five other
American League batters to fill the 'HR' slot in the cycle with a grand slam, most recently
Miguel Tejada in 2001. •
Adam Dunn and
Ryan Zimmerman of the Washington Nationals both take the field wearing home uniforms with the team name spelled "Natinals". The players changed into jerseys with the correct spelling during the game when the error was caught. • April 18 – The Cleveland Indians rout the New York Yankees 22–4 at the New Yankee Stadium.
Asdrúbal Cabrera clubs a grand slam in the Indians 14-run explosion in the second inning. The Indians are the first team since the
Boston Red Sox on June 27, to tally 14 runs in an inning. The Red Sox did it in the first inning. No team ever scored more than 13 runs in an inning against the Yankees at the Old Yankee Stadium; this occurrence was in just the 3rd game ever played at the New Yankee Stadium. In total, Cleveland bangs out 6 homers and has 25 hits. • April 25 –
Albert Pujols hits his 8th career
grand slam, giving him 1,002 RBIs and becoming the 260th player overall and only the 6th
St. Louis Cardinals' player to reach 1,000 RBIs. • April 26 – Boston Red Sox
centerfielder Jacoby Ellsbury steals home against
Andy Pettitte and the New York Yankees at
Fenway Park in the bottom of the fifth
inning of the Red Sox's 4–1 victory. It was the first steal of home by a Red Sox player since
José Offerman did so on the front end of a double steal on August 30, against the
Kansas City Royals. It was the first pure steal of home by a Red Sox player since
Billy Hatcher did it against
Chuck Finley and the
California Angels on April 22, . This marks the third time Pettitte has allowed a steal of home, the first two being
Mike Sweeney of the
Kansas City Royals on August 14, , and
Aaron Hill of the
Toronto Blue Jays on May 29, .
May • May 3 •
Carl Crawford ties the modern-day Major League record by
stealing six bases in the
Tampa Bay Rays' 5–3 win over the Boston Red Sox in front of 32,332 at
Tropicana Field.
Catcher Michel Hernandez and
shortstop Jason Bartlett also steal a base each to give the Rays a club-record eight stolen bases. Crawford is 4-for-4 with an RBI and joins
Eddie Collins (twice, in ),
Otis Nixon (), and
Eric Young () as the only players to steal six bases in a game. •
A-Rod: The Many Lives of Alex Rodriguez by
Selena Roberts hits book stores. The
unauthorized biography links the embattled slugger's
tabloid-like fame and use of
performance-enhancing drugs with an unquenchable desire for attention, and his father, Victor, who abandoned him at ten years old. It also delves into details of the leaked allegations that A-Rod used PEDs with the New York Yankees and tipped pitches to opposing players. • May 4 – The Los Angeles Dodgers beat the
Arizona Diamondbacks 7–2 at
Dodger Stadium, setting a
National League record for the longest home win streak at the start of the season with eleven. Three previous NL teams started the season 10–0 at home—the
New York Giants at the
Polo Grounds, the
1970 Chicago Cubs at
Wrigley Field and the
1983 Atlanta Braves (also managed by
Joe Torre) at
Fulton County Stadium. • May 6 – At
Dodger Stadium, the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Washington Nationals, 10–3, to set the modern Major League record for home wins to start the season, improving to 13–0 to surpass the
1911 Detroit Tigers. In , the
Chicago White Stockings won 21 in a row at home to start the season. • May 7 • Major League Baseball suspends Dodgers
outfielder Manny Ramirez for fifty games for use of performance-enhancing drugs. The Dodgers lose their first game without their star
left fielder 11–9 to the last-place Washington Nationals, ending their thirteen-game home winning streak to start the season. •
Bob Melvin is fired as manager of the Arizona Diamondbacks, becoming the first manager fired in 2009. He will be replaced by
A. J. Hinch. • New York Mets
shortstop José Reyes is called for obstruction of Philadelphia Phillies base-runner
Shane Victorino. Mets manager
Jerry Manuel is ejected from the game for arguing the play, and following his ejection, brushes umpire
Bill Welke's cap with the bill of his own cap. Instant replay shows that Victorino was actually the one who initiated contact with Reyes during the rundown play. The following batter,
Jayson Werth, hits a two-run
home run to bring the Phillies to within two runs of the Mets. The Mets hold on for a 7–5 victory. Manuel is suspended one game for the incident (May 9), and fined an undisclosed amount. • At
Fenway Park, twelve batters come up and all twelve score before the Boston Red Sox make their first out more than half an hour into the bottom of the sixth inning of a 13–3 win over the
Cleveland Indians. The Red Sox break the American League record of 11 runs in an inning before making an out, set by the
1925 Detroit Tigers, who scored 11 runs in the sixth inning in a 19–1 win against the New York Yankees on June 17, . Boston ties the modern major league mark of 12, set by the
1953 Brooklyn Dodgers on May 24, 1953, in the eighth inning of a 16–2 win at the Philadelphia Phillies, according to
Elias Sports Bureau. • May 10 –
Liván Hernández of the New York Mets wins his 150th game. • May 12 –
Roger Clemens appears on
Mike and Mike on
ESPN Radio and
ESPN2 in response to ''
American Icon: The Fall of Roger Clemens and the Rise of Steroids in America's Pastime written by the New York Daily News, which hit bookstores that day. In his first high-profile media appearance since denying steroid use during his January 6, interview on 60 Minutes'', he maintains his innocence and repeats his denial that
Brian McNamee injected him with
performance-enhancing drugs. On February 13, 2008, Clemens testified under oath at a Congressional hearing that he has never used performance-enhancing drugs. • May 13 – The
Pittsburgh Pirates'
Adam LaRoche's first-inning two-run
home run against the
St. Louis Cardinals is ruled a
double following
instant replay review. He is the first player to ever have a home run taken away by instant replay. Later in the same night, the Florida Marlins'
Ross Gload's home run against the Milwaukee Brewers is also overturned upon instant replay review. • May 14 – The
2008 World Series Champion
Philadelphia Phillies are honored at the
White House by
President Barack Obama. • May 15 – The Detroit Tigers hit 2 grand slams in a game, only the third time in team history. • May 17 – After the Cleveland Indians bat in the top of the first
inning at
Tropicana Field, Indians manager
Eric Wedge calls the
umpires together to question the Tampa Bay Rays' lineup. The lineup card shows
Ben Zobrist and
Evan Longoria both at
third base (Longoria was supposed to be the
designated hitter).
Joe Maddon's lineup card mixup results in Rays
starting pitcher Andy Sonnanstine being used in the third spot of the order. With the Rays up 6–3 in the fourth inning, Sonnastine doubles in a run. • May 20 –
Dontrelle Willis pitches innings of one-hit ball to earn his first victory since September 25, , and his first in a Detroit Tigers uniform. • May 21 • Cleveland Indians prospect
Jeanmar Gómez, pitching for the
Akron Aeros, gives them their first
perfect game in franchise history, shutting down the
Trenton Thunder, 3–0, in the
Eastern League. The 21-year-old righty, signed by Cleveland as an undrafted free agent from
Venezuela, strikes out eight in 87 pitches over nine innings, while recording nine ground ball outs and 10 fly ball outs against the host Thunder, a New York Yankees affiliate. Gómez's record improves to 4–0 with an 0.31 ERA since moving up to Double-A Akron earlier in the season. • Eighteen-year-old left-hander Jordan Wiener pitches a
no-hitter for
Robert F. Kennedy High School against
Prospect Heights High School in the first round of the PSAL Class B playoffs one day after burying his father. On May 17, Jordan's father, Mitchell Wiener, became New York City's first fatality from
swine flu. Jordan will throw out the first pitch May 31 at
Citi Field before the New York Mets vs. Florida Marlins game. • May 22 –
Michael Cuddyer hits for the cycle in the Minnesota Twins' 11–3 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers at the
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. Cuddyer joins Jason Kubel as the second Twin to hit for the cycle this season, and is the tenth in team history. The last teammates to hit for the cycle in the same season were
Vladimir Guerrero and
Brad Wilkerson of the
2003 Montreal Expos. Kubel's cycle came against the Los Angeles Angels on April 17 at the Metrodome. • May 27 – With the
Chicago Cubs up 2–1 over the Pittsburgh Pirates and a runner on third,
Carlos Zambrano throws a pitch in the dirt to batter
Nate McLouth.
Nyjer Morgan, the runner on third, breaks for home.
Catcher Geovany Soto flips the ball to Zambrano covering at the plate, but Morgan appears to sneak his left hand in, and is called safe by
home plate umpire Mark Carlson. Zambrano disagrees with this call and argues with Carlson. During the argument, Zambrano and Carlson make contact, and Zambrano is ejected from the game. Zambrano goes off in a tirade that includes him ejecting Carlson, throwing the baseball in the air toward the
outfield, slamming his glove on the ground and beating a
Gatorade machine in the dugout with a baseball bat. The following day, he received a six-game suspension and an undisclosed fine for "inappropriate and violent actions on the field and in the dugout" from
Major League Baseball vice president of on-field operations
Bob Watson. • May 29 –
Clint Hurdle is fired as manager of the
Colorado Rockies, making him the second manager fired this season. He will be replaced by former Dodgers and Pirates manager
Jim Tracy. • May 30 – A
25 inning marathon between the
University of Texas at Austin and
Boston College becomes the longest baseball game in
NCAA Division I history.
Texas Longhorns closer Austin Wood enters the game with one out in the seventh inning, and pitches
innings of
no-hit ball before surrendering a single in the 19th inning to Tony Sanchez. Longhorns
Second baseman Tony Tucker
singles in Connor Rowe in the top of the 25th, and Austin Dicharry retires Boston 1–2–3 in the bottom of the inning to secure the 3–2 victory. • May 31 – Philadelphia Phillies
starter Jamie Moyer goes six innings and gives up one
earned run to earn his 250th career victory over the Washington Nationals, 4–2.
June • June 1 – The New York Yankees set a Major League record by playing their 18th consecutive errorless game. The streak ends the following day when
Jorge Posada commits a throwing error in the fourth inning. The old record was set by the
2006 Boston Red Sox, who went seventeen straight games without an error. • June 2 – The 11-year-old son of Colorado Rockies
catcher Yorvit Torrealba and two uncles, who were taking him to school, are kidnapped in
Guarenas,
Venezuela. The three are rescued the following evening when authorities posing as representatives of Torrealba paid a portion of the two million
bolivares (about $931,000 U.S.) that the kidnappers had demanded in ransom. Upon receiving an undisclosed amount short of what they had sought, the culprits fled and left Torrealba's son and his two uncles on a highway in
Araira. A police spokesman states afterward that six alleged kidnappers have been identified, but have not been captured. • June 3 – In a surprise move, the Atlanta Braves release pitcher
Tom Glavine. Since returning to the Braves, Glavine made only thirteen starts in , and had yet to pitch at the major league level in 2009. The 305-game winner was on the verge of coming back from shoulder and elbow surgery. The previous night, in his third rehab start, Glavine threw six scoreless innings for the Class-A
Rome Braves, and proclaimed himself ready to pitch in the majors again. Instead, the Braves called up top prospect
Tommy Hanson to start that weekend against the Milwaukee Brewers. In another transaction, the Braves acquired
All-Star center fielder Nate McLouth from the Pittsburgh Pirates for three prospects: outfielder
Gorkys Hernández and pitchers
Jeff Locke and
Charlie Morton. • June 4 • The San Francisco Giants'
Randy Johnson pitches six innings to become the 24th pitcher in Major League history to win 300 games, limiting the Washington Nationals to an unearned run and two hits in the Giants' 5–1 victory. • The Pittsburgh Pirates'
Andrew McCutchen makes his Major League debut and racks up two singles, one RBI, three runs scored and a stolen base in four at-bats in an 11–6 win over the New York Mets. • Tom Kahl throws the first pitch for the
Butler BlueSox of the
Prospect League in their inaugural game at the newly renovated
Pullman Park. He pitches a six-inning no-hitter until he is benched in the seventh. The BlueSox go on to beat the
NorthCoast Knights 2–0. •
Alex Rios of the
Toronto Blue Jays strikes out five times in a 6–5 loss to the
Los Angeles Angels, becoming the first major leaguer to accomplish the dubious feat twice in a career after doing so in a game in 2006. • June 6 – For the second day in a row,
Brad Lidge of the Philadelphia Phillies blows a
save against
Andre Ethier and the Los Angeles Dodgers. On June 5, with two out, the bases loaded and the Dodgers down by a run, Ethier hit a line drive to
right field to drive in
Casey Blake and
James Loney for the Dodgers' 4–3 walk off victory. Today, with a save opportunity, Lidge gives up a solo
home run to
Rafael Furcal in the ninth inning that ties the game at two. In the twelfth inning, Ethier hits his second home run of the day (the first being in the fourth inning) off
Chad Durbin to give the Dodgers the 3–2 walk off victory. • June 9 – The Washington Nationals select
San Diego State right-handed pitcher
Stephen Strasburg with the first overall pick in the
2009 Major League Baseball draft. The third pick, taken by the San Diego Padres is outfielder
Donavan Tate, son of former
Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Lars Tate. • June 11 – With the score tied at 3 in the tenth inning at
Progressive Field, the Cleveland Indians'
Shin-Soo Choo singles sharply up the middle straight toward a flock of seagulls that were lounging in center field.
Kansas City Royals centerfielder Coco Crisp misplays the ball when it deflects off a seagull flying away. On the play,
Mark DeRosa scores the winning run for the Indians. • June 12 – With two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning, and the New York Mets leading the Yankees 8–7,
Luis Castillo drops a routine fly ball that allows the tying and winning runs to score for the Yankees. It goes down as Francisco Rodriguez's first "blown save" of the season. • June 13 –
Lance Berkman of the
Houston Astros hits his 300th career home run against Arizona Diamondbacks starter
Jon Garland.
Miguel Tejada also records his 2000th career hit off Garland right before Berkman's home run. • June 14 – The
1909 World Series' 100th anniversary is celebrated, when the Tigers and Pirates play each other in Pittsburgh. Both teams wear throwback uniforms similar to those worn in . The stadium's public address and sound systems are also turned off, simulating the game conditions in 1909. The Pirates win the game, 6–3. • June 16 – According to a report published on
The New York Times Web site,
Sammy Sosa is allegedly among the 104 Major League players who tested positive for PEDs in . Sosa testified under oath before Congress at a public hearing in that he had never taken illegal
performance-enhancing drugs. • June 17 • In the place where his career began as a 19-year-old rookie,
Iván Rodríguez sets the record for the most games caught, with 2,227. The Houston Astros lose 5–4 to the Texas Rangers in ten innings in
Arlington, Texas. • At
Fenway Park, the Boston Red Sox celebrate their 500th consecutive sellout, the longest sellout streak in major league history, with a 6–1 victory over the Florida Marlins. Starter
Brad Penny labors through five innings to earn his 100th career victory. The previous record of 455 straight sellouts was set by the Cleveland Indians in 2001. The only other sports teams to sell out more games in a row were the
NBA's
Portland Trail Blazers (744),
Boston Celtics (567) and
Chicago Bulls (515). • June 19 •
Albert Pujols scores his 1,000th career
run on
Ryan Ludwick's first career
grand slam, against Pujols' hometown, Kansas City. •
Instant replay is used twice in the Detroit Tigers' 10–4 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers at
Comerica Park, the first time that's happened in league history.
Miguel Cabrera's third-inning single off the top of the wall is called a home run after instant replay review shows that it had actually cleared the wall. Contrarily,
Dusty Ryan's fourth-inning home run is overturned to a ground rule double. The game is called with one out in the seventh inning due to rain. • June 20 • The Northern Division wins the 48th annual
Florida State League All-Star game at
Hammond Stadium in
Fort Myers, 6–4.
Daytona Cubs shortstop
Starlin Castro goes four for four with an
inside-the-park home run to be named the game's MVP.
Fort Myers Miracle first baseman Chris Parmelee wins the
home run derby held before the game. • In the third annual
Civil Rights Game, the
Chicago White Sox defeat the
Cincinnati Reds, 10–8, at
Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. • June 21 –
Tony La Russa records his 2500th victory as a manager as the St. Louis Cardinals defeat the Kansas City Royals 12–5 at
Kauffman Stadium. He becomes the third manager in Major League Baseball to reach this milestone, joining
Connie Mack (3,831) and
John McGraw (2,763). • June 23 • The Northern Division survives a back-and-forth baseball battle for an 8–7 come-from-behind victory over the South in the 50th annual
South Atlantic League All-Star Game.
Lake County Captains second baseman Karexon Sanchez goes 2-for-2 with two RBIs, two runs, two walks and a stolen base to earn Most Valuable Player honors.
West Virginia Power first baseman Calvin Anderson wins the
home run derby held before the game with 13. •
West Michigan Whitecaps Ronnie Bourquin's three-run
home run in the fourth inning carries the East Division to a 6–3 victory over the West in the 45th
Midwest League All-Star Game. The
Peoria Chiefs'
Sawyer Carroll went 4-for-4 with two stolen bases and a run scored to be named the "Star of Stars". • After going 0–3 with three
strike outs,
Lancaster JetHawks outfielder Jonathan Gaston leads off the bottom of the 10th inning of the
California League/
Carolina League All-Star Game with a
home run to give California a 2–1 victory over Carolina. Gaston also recorded an outfield assist, catching the
Potomac Nationals'
Michael Burgess trying to extend a
single into a
double in the seventh inning, and was named the All-Star MVP. • June 26 –
Kevin Millwood of the Texas Rangers wins his 150th game. • June 28 • The Tampa Bay Rays become the fastest team in major league history to reach 100
home runs and 100
stolen bases when
B. J. Upton homers on the first pitch in the bottom of the third off
Andrew Miller of the
Florida Marlins. It is the Rays' 100th this season. Tampa Bay, which started the game with 116 steals, accomplishes the feat in 77 games. The previous fastest were the
1977 Cincinnati Reds and
1994 Cleveland Indians, who both did it in 84 games, according to
Stats LLC. The only other two teams to reach the 100–100 mark by the All-Star break since were the Florida Marlins () and the
Toronto Blue Jays (). • New York Yankees
closer Mariano Rivera records the final four outs of a 4–2 Yankees victory over their cross-town rival
New York Mets at
Citi Field for his 500th career
save. Also, in the visitors' half of the ninth inning, Rivera works a seven-pitch walk with the bases loaded against Mets closer Francisco Rodriguez to earn his first career
RBI. • June 30 – Trailing 10–1 entering the bottom of the seventh inning, the
Baltimore Orioles score five runs in the seventh inning and five runs in the eighth inning to defeat the Boston Red Sox, 11–10. The Orioles' comeback represents the largest comeback in team history, and the largest comeback of a last-place team over a first-place team in Major League Baseball history.
July • July 1 • Construction begins for the long-awaited Florida Marlins ballpark, as crews arrive at the former
Miami Orange Bowl site to begin preparations for the project. The Marlins plan to move into the new 37,000-seat retractable-roof stadium in time for the 2012 season. • The North Division holds on for a 2–1 victory over the South in the
Texas League All-Star Game before a crowd of 10,314 at
Dr Pepper Ballpark.
Northwest Arkansas Naturals third baseman Corey Smith goes 2-for-3 and scores the game's first run to be named MVP. • July 4 –
Adam Dunn of the Washington Nationals hits his 300th home run off Atlanta Braves starter
Tommy Hanson. • July 7 – Immediately after entering in the eighth inning of a 4–4 tie with the Washington Nationals with two outs and
Austin Kearns on first base,
Alan Embree picks off Kearns to end the inning. In the bottom half of the inning,
Clint Barmes hits a
sacrifice fly that gives the Colorado Rockies their third unearned run of the night, and the deciding run of the game.
Huston Street pitches the ninth for the save. Embree becomes the first pitcher to earn a win without throwing a pitch since
B. J. Ryan did it for the Baltimore Orioles over the Detroit Tigers on May 1, . • July 9 • The
Oakland A's announce that they will be retiring
Rickey Henderson's number 24 on August 1. •
David Ortiz of the
Boston Red Sox hits his 300th home run off Kansas City Royals pitcher
Luke Hochevar. • July 10 • At
AT&T Park,
Jonathan Sánchez of the San Francisco Giants
no-hits the San Diego Padres 8–0. Sánchez, starting in place of an injured
Randy Johnson, retires the first 22 batters before a
Juan Uribe error on
Chase Headley's ground ball spoils his bid for a
perfect game; this is the only baserunner Sánchez allows. The no-hitter is the first by a Giant since
John Montefusco in . The home plate umpire is
Brian Runge, whose grandfather
Ed was the home plate umpire for
Dave Morehead's no-hitter in . In addition, Bengie Molina, who was set to call the game, had to leave just minutes before the game because his wife was going into labor, and was replaced by Eli Whiteside. • Division rivals New York Mets and Atlanta Braves swap
right fielders who have fallen out of favor with their respective franchises as the Mets acquire
Jeff Francoeur from the Braves in exchange for
Ryan Church. • July 11 – Alex Rodriguez of the New York Yankees hits his 570th career home run off Los Angeles Angels pitcher
Jason Bulger, passing
Rafael Palmeiro for 10th on the all-time list. • July 13 • After months of speculation, the Washington Nationals fire manager
Manny Acta, and name
Jim Riggleman as interim skipper. •
Milwaukee Brewers All-Star first baseman Prince Fielder out-homers Texas Rangers outfielder
Nelson Cruz in the final round by a score of 6–5 to win the
State Farm Home run derby at
Busch Stadium. • July 14 – The
American League wins their seventh consecutive
All-Star game over the
National League, 4–3, at
Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
Carl Crawford, whose leaping catch in the seventh inning robs
Brad Hawpe of a home run, is named the game's MVP.
Mariano Rivera sets an All-Star record by saving his fourth All-Star game. • July 15 –
Pedro Martínez signs a one-year deal with the Philadelphia Phillies. • July 16 –
Ryan Howard hits his 200th career
home run against
Chris Volstad of the Florida Marlins. It comes in his 658th career game, 48 fewer than the previous record held by
Ralph Kiner (706). • July 17 – Cody Adams, the Milwaukee Brewers' second-round pick in the
2008 Major League Baseball draft, currently assigned to the Brewers'
Midwest League affiliate
Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, receives a fifty-game ban after testing positive for an amphetamine. Five other Minor Leaguers from the
Dominican Summer League, all pitchers, are also suspended fifty games for
performance-enhancing drugs. Billis Andújar and José Encarnación of the Detroit Tigers' Dominican Summer League club and Toronto Blue Jays farmhand Jorge Serra all tested positive for
stanozolol. Chicago White Sox farmhand Carlos Rosario and Kansas City Royals pitcher Aristedes Santos were suspended after testing positive for
boldenone. A day earlier, five other players in the Dominican Summer League, received fifty game suspensions after each tested positive for a performance-enhancing substance in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. They included:
Oakland A's pitchers Alexis Juma and Alex Nolasco and Los Angeles Angels pitcher Renedin Mesa for boldenone, and Philadelphia Phillies farmhands Joan Pascual, a pitcher, and Jose Trinidad, an outfielder, for stanozolol. The total number of suspended Minor Leaguers for the 2009 season is 36. • July 18 – With two outs in the sixth inning at
Dodger Stadium,
Mark Loretta singles in Casey Blake to give the Los Angeles Dodgers a 4–0 lead over the Houston Astros. Following the play, Astros pitcher
Mike Hampton commits an odd error while trying to slam the ball into his glove. The ball gets away, allowing the Dodgers to score a fifth run. The Dodgers go on to win the game 5–2. • July 23 – At
U. S. Cellular Field, the
Chicago White Sox's
Mark Buehrle pitches a 5–0
perfect game against the
Tampa Bay Rays.
DeWayne Wise, brought into the game in the ninth inning for defensive purposes, makes a spectacular catch to rob
Gabe Kapler of what would have been a home run leading off the ninth. The perfect game is Buehrle's second career
no-hitter and the second perfect game in White Sox history.
Charlie Robertson pitched the first in . Buehrle becomes the sixth pitcher to hurl both a perfect game and another no-hitter (which occurred in ), joining
Cy Young,
Addie Joss,
Jim Bunning,
Sandy Koufax and
Randy Johnson. In the second inning,
Josh Fields hits the first
grand slam ever hit in a perfect game. Buehrle's 2007 no-hitter also featured a grand slam (
Jermaine Dye). In addition, home plate umpire Eric Cooper also called balls and strikes for Buehrle's 2007 no-hitter; both Cooper and Buehrle wear number 56; and both no-hitters were completed in 2 hours, 3 minutes. Following the game, Buehrle receives a congratulatory call from President Obama. • July 24 – The
St. Louis Cardinals acquire
Matt Holliday from the
Oakland A's for minor leaguers
Brett Wallace,
Clayton Mortensen and
Shane Peterson. • July 27 • The Washington Nationals'
Josh Willingham hits two
grand slams in a game, the 13th player all-time to do so. His first slam is hit off
Jeff Suppan and his second one comes off
Mark DiFelice en route to a 14–6 Nationals victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. • The New York Mets fire Vice President for player development
Tony Bernazard. On July 21, the
New York Daily News reported that at a recent game at
Citi Field, Bernazard unleashed a profanity-laced tirade against a subordinate when the seat he wanted behind home plate was occupied by an Arizona Diamondbacks scout, and the subordinate suggested he wait until the half inning ended to take the seat. A day later, reports surfaced that Bernazard recently pulled off his shirt and challenged middle infield prospect
Jose Coronado and the rest of the Mets' Double-A
Binghamton Mets to a fight roughly ten days before the All-Star break. A recent 1–6 homestand and rumors of underage drinking by the team were the supposed catalysts of the tirade. • July 28 • Two days after his enshrinement into the Baseball Hall of Fame, the Boston Red Sox retire
Jim Rice's number 14. • Mark Buehrle retires the first seventeen Minnesota Twins he faces. Factoring in the perfect game he pitched in his previous start and the final out he recorded in his July 18 start against the
Baltimore Orioles, Buehrle retired 45 straight batters—a major league record. A walk to
Alexi Casilla in the sixth inning ends his streak. The following batter,
Denard Span, singles for the first hit, and Buehrle records just two more outs and gives up five earned runs as the Twins win 5–3. The previous record of 41 consecutive batters retired had been done twice.
Jim Barr did it for the San Francisco Giants in , and
Bobby Jenks did it for the Chicago White Sox in . The record-breaking 42nd out is of former teammate
Joe Crede. • July 29 – The Philadelphia Phillies acquire pitcher
Cliff Lee and outfielder
Ben Francisco from the Cleveland Indians for right-handers
Jason Knapp and
Carlos Carrasco, shortstop
Jason Donald and catcher
Lou Marson. • July 30 –
The New York Times reports that
Manny Ramirez and
David Ortiz were among the 104 Major League Baseball players to test positive for
performance-enhancing drugs in , according to lawyers with knowledge of the results. • July 31 • A little more than a week after acquiring him, the
Boston Red Sox send
Adam LaRoche and cash considerations to the Atlanta Braves for
Casey Kotchman, then send pitchers
Justin Masterson,
Nick Hagadone and
Bryan Price to the
Cleveland Indians for All-Star catcher
Victor Martinez. Boston acquired LaRoche from the
Pittsburgh Pirates for Minor Leaguers
Argenis Diaz and
Hunter Strickland on July 22. • Following an off-season filled with speculation that
Jake Peavy would be traded to the
Chicago Cubs, the
San Diego Padres strike a 4-for-1 deal with the Cubs' cross-town rivals, the Chicago White Sox, for Peavy. The White Sox send left-handers
Aaron Poreda and
Clayton Richard and right-handers
Dexter Carter and
Adam Russell to San Diego for Peavy. The two clubs had struck a deal for Peavy on May 21 that reportedly also included Poreda and Richard, however, Peavy invoked his no-trade clause to block a potential trade. • At the trade deadline, the Minnesota Twins acquire shortstop
Orlando Cabrera from the Oakland A's for Minor League shortstop
Tyler Ladendorf, the Detroit Tigers acquire pitcher
Jarrod Washburn from the Seattle Mariners for left-handers
Luke French and
Mauricio Robles, the
Cincinnati Reds received third baseman
Scott Rolen and an undisclosed amount of cash from the Toronto Blue Jays for third baseman
Edwin Encarnación, reliever
Josh Roenicke and Minor League right-handed pitcher
Zach Stewart, and the Florida Marlins acquire first baseman
Nick Johnson from the Washington Nationals for lefty pitching prospect
Aaron Thompson.
August • August 1 –
Andrew McCutchen hit three home runs and drives in six runs to lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to an 11–6 win over the Washington Nationals at
PNC Park. With his feat, McCutchen becomes the first rookie in Pirates history to go deep three times in a game. • August 2 • Trailing 2–1 in the ninth inning, the Florida Marlins get a walk-off win on back-to-back shots by
Dan Uggla and
Cody Ross to defeat the Chicago Cubs 3–2. •
Melky Cabrera of the New York Yankees hits a
triple in the ninth inning to complete the
cycle. Cabrera has four RBIs in the game, leading New York to an 8–5 victory over the Chicago White Sox at
U.S. Cellular Field. It is the first Yankee cycle since
Tony Fernández in . • August 4 •
Bobby Abreu of the Los Angeles Angels is named the
American League Player of the Month for July. The Angels' outfielder batted .380 during the month (27-for-89), driving in 28 runs and scoring a league-best 26 runs. His .467 on-base percentage also paced the AL. Abreu reached base in 25 of his 26 games in July, 13 of which were multi-hit and seven of which were multi-RBI. The monthly award is the second of Abreu's career, but his first in the AL, which he joined on July 30, , when the Yankees acquired him from the Phillies. • In the ninth inning of a 17–4 rout of the Milwaukee Brewers, the Los Angeles Dodgers'
Guillermo Mota hits
Prince Fielder in the leg with a pitch. Mota is immediately ejected by home plate umpire
Lance Barksdale. After the game, Fielder charges down the dugout steps, and heads toward the Dodgers clubhouse yelling obscenities through a crowd of fans and reporters. Teammates
Casey McGehee and
Bill Hall and stadium security officials catch up with Fielder in time to usher him back to the visitor's side. Earlier in the game, the Dodgers'
Juan Pierre and
Manny Ramírez and the Brewers'
Frank Catalanotto had also been hit by pitches. • August 6 •
Bobby Abreu leads off the fifth inning with a solo home run to left field, giving him 250 homers in his career and moving the Angels right fielder onto an impressive list of baseball achievers. Abreu becomes one of only six players in major league history to collect 250 home runs, 2,000 hits, 1,000 runs, 1,000 runs batted in, 1,000 walks and 300 stolen bases. The others are
Barry Bonds,
Craig Biggio, and Hall of Famers
Joe Morgan,
Rickey Henderson and
Willie Mays. • On consecutive pitches, New York Yankees rookie
Mark Melancon fires one heater over
Dustin Pedroia's head and to the backstop, and a second into Pedroia's left shoulder during New York's 13–6 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Pedroia was 3–for-4 with a home run, yet Yankees manager
Joe Girardi maintains that the eighth-inning plunking was unintentional. • August 7 • Rookie
Everth Cabrera hits a
walk-off grand slam in the ninth inning off closer Francisco Rodríguez to give the San Diego Padres a 6–2 victory over the New York Mets. • In different transactions, the Boston Red Sox designate
John Smoltz for assignment, the Oakland Athletics give
Jason Giambi his unconditional release, and the Minnesota Twins acquire right-hander
Carl Pavano from the Cleveland Indians for a player to be named later. •
Alex Rodriguez hits a walk-off 2-run homer to give the
New York Yankees a 2–0 win over the Red Sox in an intense 15-inning game. • August 10 •
Vladimir Guerrero hits two home runs to lead the Los Angeles Angels to an 8–7 win over the Tampa Bay Rays at
Angel Stadium. His solo home run in the seventh inning was his 400th career home run. •
Troy Tulowitzki hits for the cycle and collects a career-high seven RBIs and five hits in the Colorado Rockies 11–5 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Tulowitski, who also had a
grand slam denied in the first video review at
Coors Field, joins
John Valentin as the only players in MLB history to hit for the cycle and turn an
unassisted triple play during their careers. • August 11 –
Junichi Tazawa gives up three runs (one earned) while striking out six in five innings as the Boston Red Sox beat the Detroit Tigers, 7–5, at
Fenway Park. Tazawa, at 23 years of age, becomes the youngest Japanese-born pitcher to win his first major league start. Early in the game,
Kevin Youkilis is
hit by a pitch by Tigers hurler
Rick Porcello. Players from benches and bullpens went onto the field and Youkilis tackled Porcello, but no punches are thrown. Youkilis and Porcello are ejected and later suspended five games each. • August 12 –
Pedro Martínez wins his first start with the Philadelphia Phillies, giving up three earned runs over five innings in a 12–5 victory over the Chicago Cubs at
Wrigley Field. • August 14 –
Félix Pie of the Baltimore Orioles singles and triples in Baltimore's seven-run seventh inning of their 16–6 win over the Los Angeles Angels, to become the seventh player to
hit for the cycle in the season. • August 16 •
Derek Jeter collects his 2,674th hit in the New York Yankees' 10–3 loss to the
Seattle Mariners, to move past Hall of Famer
Luis Aparicio as the all-time leader in hits at shortstop. • The Los Angeles Angels score nine runs in the 13th inning of their 17–8 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. The Major League record for runs in any extra inning is 12, set by the Texas Rangers against the A's in Oakland on July 3, . • August 17 • The Detroit Tigers acquire 1B/DH
Aubrey Huff from the Baltimore Orioles in exchange for minor league pitcher
Brett Jacobson. •
Garrett Jones, who homered in Pittsburgh's 9–5 victory over Milwaukee, has, as of this date, hit 13 home runs in only 40 games this season. Jones is the first rookie in eight years to hit 13 (or more) home runs in his first 40 games of a season, joining
Albert Pujols and
Adam Dunn, who did that in . • August 18 – The Angels defeated the Indians, 5–4, at Cleveland. Each of the nine players in the Angels' batting order comes out of this game with a season's batting average of .300 or higher. It's the first time since that any major league team has finished a game-at least 100 games into a season-with each player in its starting batting order hitting .300 or better. The lineups: 2009 Angels
Chone Figgins, 3b .308,
Bobby Abreu, rf .310,
Juan Rivera, lf .310,
Vladimir Guerrero, dh .313,
Kendrys Morales, 1b .303,
Torii Hunter, cf .307,
Maicer Izturis, 2b .300,
Mike Napoli, c .300,
Erick Aybar, ss .313. 1934 Tigers (September 9, 1934, 5–4 win vs. Red Sox)
Jo-Jo White, cf .307,
Mickey Cochrane, c .328,
Charlie Gehringer, 2b .364,
Goose Goslin, lf .306,
Billy Rogell, ss .303,
Hank Greenberg, 1b .337,
Marv Owen, 3b .322,
Gee Walker, rf .301,
Schoolboy Rowe, p .302. • August 19 – Following a
rain delay,
Jamie Moyer pitches six scoreless innings in
relief of
Pedro Martínez, who had taken his spot in the starting rotation, and the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5–1.
Chase Utley's 25th home run of the season is the first in a four-homer barrage unleashed by the Phillies, as he becomes the fourth player to reach the 25-homer plateau for Philadelphia this season, joining
Ryan Howard,
Raúl Ibañez and
Jayson Werth. In National League history, only one other team had as many as four players each hit 25 or more home runs as early in a season as this year's Phillies (through their first 117 games). That was the
1995 Colorado Rockies, with
Dante Bichette,
Vinny Castilla,
Andrés Galarraga and
Larry Walker all reaching that mark through the team's first 105 games. • August 20 • Limited to four hits in a 4–1 loss to the Houston Astros, the Florida Marlins' impressive string of consecutive games with at least 10 hits comes to an end. The streak, which began on August 4 at Washington, reached 15 games, marking the first time since the
1937 St. Louis Browns reach that mark. Florida's streak was the longest by a National League team since the
1929 New York Giants did it. Only three teams since 1900 had streaks longer than 15: the
1925 Cleveland Indians and
1922 St. Louis Browns each reached 18, while the
1900 Philadelphia Phillies finished at 16. • Red Sox catcher/first baseman
Víctor Martínez hits his 20th home run of the season in an 8–1 victory against the Blue Jays, becoming the fourth American League player to hit 20 homers in a season while playing at least 50 games at both catcher and first base. Martínez joins
Gene Tenace (1974–'76),
Mickey Tettleton (1993) and
Gus Triandos (1956). • August 21 • The Yankees beat the Red Sox, 20–11, in the highest-scoring game in the history of their rivalry. The Yankees' 20 runs were the third-most they have ever scored against Boston, behind a 24–4 win in and a 22–1 victory in . •
Garrett Jones hits his 14th home run of the season in Pittsburgh's win against Cincinnati. Jones, who played his first game this season on July 1, ties the Pirates rookie record for most home runs hit over consecutive calendar months. That record had been untouched for 51 years, since
Dick Stuart hit 14 home runs spanning July and August . • August 23 • In the ninth inning of a 9–7 victory over the
New York Mets at
Citi Field, second baseman
Eric Bruntlett of the Philadelphia Phillies turns the 15th, and final,
unassisted triple play in Major League history. He catches
Jeff Francoeur's line drive for the first out, doubles
Luis Castillo off second and tags out
Daniel Murphy for the final out. Bruntlett's feat was only the second unassisted triple play to end a game,
Johnny Neun having turned the other, on May 31, . It is also only the second unassisted triple play turned by a second baseman in National League play,
Mickey Morandini having turned the other, on September 20, . •
Miguel Cabrera of the Detroit Tigers hits his 200th career home run in a 9–4 defeat to the Oakland Athletics, becoming the fifth
Venezuelan player to reach that plateau. Cabrera joins fellow countrymen
Tony Armas (251),
Bobby Abreu (252),
Magglio Ordóñez (275) and
Andrés Galarraga (399) on that list. The homer was his team-leading 25th of the season, marking the sixth consecutive season he has reached that total. • The
Minnesota Twins'
Michael Cuddyer hits two home runs in the seventh inning against
Kansas City. With his
hitting for the cycle on May 22, he is the first player ever to accomplish that feat and a two-homer inning in the same baseball season. • August 24 •
Cliff Lee allows only two unearned runs in seven innings at Citi Field, improving to 5–0 with a 0.68 ERA since joining the Phillies. Lee and
Fernando Valenzuela are the only major-league pitchers in the past 60 years to win each of their first five career starts for a team, with an ERA below 1.00 over those five games. Through five starts in , Valenzuela's ERA was 0.20. •
Ryan Howard's first-inning home run at Citi Field produces his 600th career RBI. Howard reaches that milestone in his 693rd game, the fastest for any major-league player since , when
Ted Williams collected his 600th RBI in his 675th game. •
Ryan Spilborghs' grand slam in the bottom of the 14th inning gives the Colorado Rockies a 6–4 win over the San Francisco Giants. Since , only one player hit a walk-off grand slam in a later inning:
Clyde Vollmer of the Boston Red Sox hit a grand slam in the bottom of the 16th inning to beat the Indians at
Fenway Park (July 28, ). • August 25 • Four days after being claimed on waivers by the Boston Red Sox,
Billy Wagner is dealt by the New York Mets to Boston for two players to be named later. Wagner had just returned to the Mets from
Tommy John surgery that cut short his season, and had only made two appearances in 2009. •
Zack Greinke sets a team record with 15 strikeouts over eight innings in the Kansas City Royals' 6–2 win over the Cleveland Indians. • August 28 – The Los Angeles Angels acquire left-hander
Scott Kazmir from the Tampa Bay Rays for prospects
Alexander Torres,
Matthew Sweeney and a player to be named later. Second baseman
Sean Rodriguez is sent to the Rays on September 1 to complete the deal.
September • September 3 –
Kendrys Morales of the Anaheim Angels is named the American League Player of the Month for August, after he hit .385 (42-for-109) with 10 home runs, eight doubles, 22 runs, and 33 RBI in 28 games. Morales also set a new club record for RBI in the month, previously held by
Bobby Bonds (31, ) and was one RBI shy of the franchise record for any month. Last month, Angels' outfielder
Bobby Abreu was selected as the A.L. Player of the Month for July. This is the first time any major league club has had consecutive monthly award winners since Texas Rangers' outfielder
Josh Hamilton won in both April and May of . • September 6 –
Ichiro Suzuki becomes the second-fastest player in Major League history to reach 2,000 hits with a first-inning double in his 1,402nd game (2001–present).
Al Simmons did it in 1,390 games (1924–1934). • September 7 • At
PNC Park, the Chicago Cubs assure the Pittsburgh Pirates of a record-breaking 17th consecutive losing season, getting two home runs from
Derrek Lee and a solid start from pitcher
Ted Lilly while winning 4–2. The Pirates will finish below a .500 average, just as they have every season since . The losing string is a major league record and the longest for any team in the four major North American professional team sports. •
Chris Carpenter of the St. Louis Cardinals tosses a one-hit shutout with 10 strikeouts against the Milwaukee Brewers, 3–0. Carpenter also threw a one-hitter shutout with 10 strikeouts for St. Louis in (Blue Jays). Since 1900, only two other Cardinals pitchers had a shutout in which they struck out at least 10 batters and did not allow more than one hit:
Bob Gibson in (Padres) and (Pirates, no-hitter) and
Ernie Broglio in (Cubs). •
Mark Buehrle and the Chicago White Sox beat the Boston Red Sox 5–1. It is Buehrle's first victory since his perfect game on July 23. Since then, he had been 0–4 with a 5.44 ERA before this win. • September 8 •
Raúl Ibañez belts two home runs while
Jayson Werth,
Carlos Ruíz and
Chase Utley each add one apiece, to help the Philadelphia Phillies and
Pedro Martínez to a 5–3 victory over the Washington Nationals. Ibáñez and Utley both reached their 30th HR of the season, joining Werth (32) and
Ryan Howard (38), making the Phillies the 12th team in MLB history with four 30-HR players and only the second with three left-handed batters to reach 30 homers (Howard, Ibáñez and Utley). The first was the 1929 Phillies trio of
Lefty O'Doul,
Don Hurst and
Chuck Klein. The other 11 teams with four 30-HR players in a season are the
1977 Dodgers,
1995 Rockies,
1996 Rockies,
1997 Dodgers,
1997 Rockies,
1998 Braves,
1999 Rockies,
2000 Blue Jays,
2000 Angels,
2004 Chicago Cubs and
2006 White Sox. • The Chicago Cubs tie a major league record with eight consecutive hits to start a game in a 9–4 win against the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Cubs also accomplished this feat in (both against Pittsburgh). Only four other teams had eight straight hits to start a game:
1975 Phillies,
1975 Pirates,
1981 Athletics and
1990 Yankees. • September 9 •
Brian Roberts of the Baltimore Orioles becomes just the fourth player in major league history to have three seasons with at least 50
doubles (2004, 2008–'09). The other players to reach 50 or more doubles at least three times were Hall of Famers
Tris Speaker (1912, 1920–'21, 1923),
Paul Waner (1928, 1932, 1936) and
Stan Musial (1944, 1946, 1953). Roberts also set the all-time record for second basemen with his three 50-double seasons. HoF
Billy Herman (1935–'36) and Houston Astros'
Craig Biggio (1998–'99) both collected 50-plus doubles in back-to-back seasons but never came close to matching it again. •
Scott Feldman earns his club-record 12th road win of the season as the Texas Rangers defeated the Cleveland Indians, 10–0, at
Progressive Field. Feldman's eight successive road wins is the longest such streak in club history. •
Derek Jeter collects three hits against the Tampa Bay Rays to give him 2,721 for his Yankee career, tying him with
Lou Gehrig atop the Yankees' all-time hits list. • September 10 –
Ian Desmond hits a home run and drives in four runs in his major league debut to lead the Washington Nationals to an 8–7 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. Desmond is only the second player since (the first season
run batted in was recorded as an official statistic) to drive in at least four runs as a shortstop in his major league debut. The other player to do it was
Ted Kazanski for the Phillies against the Cubs on June 25, .
Matt Stairs of the Phillies belts the second pinch-hit grand slam of his career in a lost cause. • September 11 – With a single off
Chris Tillman to lead off the third inning, Derek Jeter collects his 2,722nd career hit to pass Lou Gehrig as the all-time Yankees hit leader. • September 13 – In the second inning of the second game of a
doubleheader against the Texas Rangers,
Ichiro Suzuki hits a slow grounder to Rangers shortstop
Elvis Andrus that he legs out for a single. It is his 200th hit of the season, giving him an MLB record nine consecutive 200 hit seasons. • September 15 • In the eighth inning of the Toronto Blue Jays' 10–4 victory over the New York Yankees at
Yankee Stadium, a bench-clearing brawl breaks out. Earlier in the game Blue Jays
third baseman Edwin Encarnación is hit by a
Sergio Mitre pitch, and in the eighth inning
second baseman Aaron Hill is hit by
Mark Melancon. In what appeared to be retaliation for the shot to Hill, Jays pitcher
Jesse Carlson throws a pitch behind Yankees catcher
Jorge Posada in the bottom half of the inning. Both benches and bullpens clear; however, no punches are thrown. Posada ends up reaching on a walk, and scores on a
Brett Gardner double. As he crosses the plate, he bumps Carlson, who had been backing up home plate on the play. Posada is immediately ejected from the game, and the benches and bullpens empty for a second time as a fight breaks out between the two. •
Daisuke Matsuzaka of the Boston Red Sox is activated following his near three-month stint on the disabled list, to become the fourth Japanese player on Boston's active roster, setting a Major League record. Matsuzaka joins fellow pitchers
Takashi Saito,
Hideki Okajima and
Junichi Tazawa. On August 7, in a 15-inning loss at Yankee Stadium, the Red Sox had set another record, becoming the first team to deploy three Japanese pitchers in the same game. • September 16 –
Jayson Werth's seventh-inning grand slam is the key hit in Philadelphia's 6–1 win against Washington, the Phillies' major-league leading tenth slam this season, making them only the sixth team in National League history to hit at least 10 slams in one season. Meanwhile,
Ian Desmond goes 2-for-4 against the Phillies and is now 10-for-17 (.588) since making his major-league debut, to become the first major league player in more than half a century to collect 10 hits over his first four career games. The last player to do that was
Jim Davenport for the 1958 Giants, in the team's first season in San Francisco. • September 18 – With two outs in the ninth inning, and
Mariano Rivera on the mound for the Yankees,
Mike Sweeney hits a double, followed by a first-pitch home run by
Ichiro Suzuki to give the Mariners a 3–2 victory. It is the first walk-off home run of Ichiro's career. • September 20 – Chicago Cubs general manager
Jim Hendry suspends outfielder
Milton Bradley for the final two weeks of the season following comments he made in which he said the Cubs were "not a positive environment." Hendry explained the decision with the following: :Three days later, Bradley would issue an apology. • September 21 –
Cecil Cooper is fired as manager of the
Houston Astros. Third-base coach
Dave Clark is named interim manager for the thirteen games remaining in their season. • September 22 •
Dan Uggla of the Florida Marlins hits his 30th home run of the season in the second game of a doubleheader against the Philadelphia Phillies, giving Uggla three consecutive seasons of 30-or-more homers. He is the first player in major league history to do so while playing at least 100 games at second base.
Ryne Sandberg (–),
Alfonso Soriano (–) and
Chase Utley (-2009) are the only other second basemen with 30-HRs in 100 games during two straight seasons. •
Mark Reynolds of the Arizona Diamondbacks strikes out three times for a total of 206 on the season, breaking the single-season record of 204 that he set in . • September 23 – The Atlanta Braves announce that manager
Bobby Cox will retire from his managerial position at the conclusion of the season and immediately enter into a five-year contract that will enable him to continue serving as a consultant with the organization. • September 24 -
Sporting News publishes a series of All-Decade awards, including the All-Decade Team. Cardinals first baseman
Albert Pujols is named the MLB Athlete of the Decade, ex-Yankees manager
Joe Torre, now managing the Dodgers, is named Manager of the Decade, and the Red Sox are named the Team of the Decade. • September 25 –
Ian Kinsler's three-run home run in the Texas Rangers' 8–3 victory over the visiting Tampa Bay Rays is his 30th home run of the season. Combined with his 30th
stolen base a day before, he becomes only the second player in Rangers' history to put up a
30-HR 30-SB season, joining
Alfonso Soriano, who did it in . Kinsler also joins Soriano, who also had 30–30 seasons for the Yankees (–), and
Brandon Phillips of the Reds () as the only 30/30
second basemen in Major League history. • September 26 •
Ichiro Suzuki is ejected for the first time in his professional career, ending a streak that Suzuki started in 1992 as a rookie with the Japan's
Orix BlueWave. It happens in the top of the fifth inning of the Mariners' eventual extra-inning 5–4 loss to the Blue Jays at
Rogers Centre, and is also the first ejection of a Mariners player, coach or manager this season. •
Marlon Byrd of the Texas Rangers hits his sixth career
grand slam in the 15–3 victory against the visiting Tampa Bay Rays. Byrd, who homered twice in the game, now has 59 lifetime home runs, becoming the
only player in major-league history with fewer than 60 home runs and six-or-more grand slams. • The St. Louis Cardinals clinch the National League Central Division title with a 6–3 victory over the Colorado Rockies. It is the eighth division title for the Cardinals manager
Tony La Russa in his 14-year tenure in St. Louis. •
Víctor Martínez of the Boston Red Sox singles with two outs in the ninth off
Mariano Rivera, extending his hitting streak to 25 games, in a 3–0 defeat against New York at
Yankee Stadium. Martinez's streak is the longest by a
Venezuelan-born player, surpassing the 59-year, 24-game streak set by
Chico Carrasquel in . Martínez's streak ends the following day, but he bats 34-for-95 (.358) during the streak. •
Team Canada earns its first bronze medal in the
2009 Baseball World Cup by upending
Puerto Rico, 6–2, in
Grosseto, Italy. The third-place finish is the senior national team's highest placing since earning a bronze medal at the
1999 Pan American Games in
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The medal also adds to Baseball Canada's total which is now 11 with two bronze and a silver for the women's national team and five bronze and one gold (1991 world junior) for the national junior team. • September 27 • The New York Yankees secure their 16th AL division crown since (11th since ) with a 4–2 win over their
arch-rivals, the Boston Red Sox. The Yankees put a bow on this title with their major-league leading 100th win, as second baseman
Robinson Canó collected his 200th hit of the season. Canó's infield partner, shortstop
Derek Jeter, already has 200 hits in the season, becoming the first second baseman/shortstop combo to accomplish the feat in major league history. •
Team USA takes advantage of a critical error by
Cuba, scoring six runs with two outs in the seventh inning on its way to a 10–5 win in the gold medal game of the
2009 Baseball World Cup in
Nettuno, Italy. Paired with its win over Cuba in the
2007 tournament, the Americans have won back-to-back World Cup titles for the first time since and .
Justin Smoak,
Terry Tiffee and
Jon Weber are named to the
IBAF World Cup All-Tournament Team. Smoak is also named the
Baseball World Cup's Most Valuable Player. • In the eighth inning of the Cardinals' 4–3 loss to the Rockies in
Coors Field,
Albert Pujols records his 181st
assist of the season, setting a National League record for most assists in a season by a first baseman. The previous record had been set by the Cubs'
Mark Grace in .
Bill Buckner holds the Major League record of 184, set in with the Red Sox. • September 28 • The Los Angeles Angels defeat the Texas Rangers convincingly, 11–0, to take the American League West title. Los Angeles is headed back to the playoffs for the sixth time in eight years. •
Carlos Lee of the Houston Astros
drives in his 100th run of the season, giving him a five-year streak of reaching triple-digits in RBIs. Only four other players have driven in at least 100 runs in each of the last five seasons:
Bobby Abreu,
Miguel Cabrera,
Albert Pujols and
Mark Teixeira. •
Robinson Canó hits his 25th home run of the season, and he now has 201 hits as a second baseman this year. Since
Rogers Hornsby retired in , only two other players have had 200 hits and 25 homers as a second baseman in one season:
Bret Boone in and
Alfonso Soriano in . Over the last 70 years only three other Yankees players have had a 200-hit, 25-HR season:
Don Mattingly (–),
Bernie Williams () and Soriano (2002). • September 29 • The Baltimore Orioles'
Brian Roberts hits his 56th double this season against Tampa Bay's
Wade Davis, breaking the record for a switch-hitter set by
Lance Berkman in . Earlier in the season, Roberts became just the fourth player all-time to record three 50-double seasons, the other three being
Stan Musial,
Tris Speaker and
Paul Waner. • After being down 8–2 to the Toronto Blue Jays, the Boston Red Sox score five in the eighth to bring it within one run. Although their comeback attempt falls short, a 5–2 loss by the Texas Rangers to the Los Angeles Angels secures the Wild Card for the BoSox.
Adam Lind has a memorable game, hitting three home runs for the Blue Jays. • September 30 • Cleveland Indians General Manager
Mark Shapiro announces that
Eric Wedge and his coaches have all been relieved of their duties. However, Wedge and his staff will stay aboard for the season's final six games. • The Philadelphia Phillies clinch their third straight NL East title, 10–3 at home against the Houston Astros. •
Ricky Nolasco of the Florida Marlins sets a club record with 16
strikeouts and came within one of a Major League mark by fanning nine straight in a 5–4 victory over the Atlanta Braves. The big league record for consecutive strikeouts in a game is 10 by
Tom Seaver for the New York Mets on April 22, . Two other pitchers had nine consecutive strikeouts in one game:
Mickey Welch for the New York Giants in and
Jake Peavy for the San Diego Padres in . • Pirates catcher
Ryan Doumit goes 4-for-4 with a home run and four RBIs in the second game of a double-header against the Cubs. Doumit is only the second Pittsburgh catcher in the last 40 years to have at least four hits and four RBIs in the same game.
Jason Kendall collected four hits and five RBIs in a 13–1 Pirates victory over the Cardinals on May 19, . •
Justin Maxwell of the Washington Nationals becomes the second player (and the second rookie) to hit a
walk-off grand slam against New York Mets closer Francisco Rodríguez this season.
Everth Cabrera of the San Diego Padres did that on August 7. The only other pitchers in major-league history to surrender two game-ending grand slams in one season were
Satchel Paige (),
Lindy McDaniel () and
Lee Smith (). •
Justin Masterson goes the distance for the Cleveland Indians and
struck out 12 but the Chicago White Sox scratch out a run in the top of the sixth inning to win 1–0. Masterson is the first major-leaguer to lose a complete game by a 1–0 score while pitching at least nine innings and striking out a dozen or more batters since May 6, , when
Pedro Martínez of the Red Sox struck out 17 but was beaten by Tampa Bay at
Fenway Park.
October • October 1: •
Ichiro Suzuki of the Seattle Mariners collects his 220 hit of season to set a new Major League mark. It is the fifth time in nine seasons in the majors that Suzuki has reached 220 hits, supplanting the old record of four 220-hit seasons shared by Hall of Famers
Jesse Burkett and
Rogers Hornsby. Earlier this season, Suzuki surpassed another Hall of Famer when he collected his ninth consecutive 200-hit season (September 13), breaking the long-standing major-league record of eight straight 200-hit seasons set by
Wee Willie Keeler from to . •
Orlando Cabrera hits his first career
grand slam to lead the Twins to an 8–3 win over Detroit. Cabrera, who had never hit a
home run in 135 previous
at-bats with the bases loaded, was the only active major leaguer who has had at least 100 bases-loaded at-bats without a grand slam to his credit. •
Tony La Russa passes
John McGraw for second-most games managed in baseball with his 4,770th game managed (2,552–2,214–4). La Russa gets three more games (October 4) to extend his managed games to 4,773 (2,552–2,217–4) by the end of the
2009 season. • October 2: •
B. J. Upton not only
hits for the cycle in the Rays' 13–4 victory over the Yankees, but he does it by the end of the fifth inning. It is the quickest cycle since
Mike Lansing of the Rockies accumulated all four hits within the first four innings against the Diamondbacks on June 18, . The Rays score nine runs in the first three innings to deny
CC Sabathia his first 20-win season. Sabathia is the first pitcher in nearly 30 years to allow as many as nine runs in a game while needing one more victory for the first 20-win season of his career. The last pitcher to do so was
Rick Langford of the Athletics in . •
Adam Wainwright of the Cardinals also fails to earn his 20th victory when the Brewers rally for six runs in the seventh inning of their eventual 12–6 win. 2009 will be only the second season in major-league history without a 20-game winner (see ), excluding seasons that were shortened by work stoppages. • October 3: • In the early morning hours, following an 0–4 performance in an 8–0 loss to the Chicago White Sox the previous night,
Miguel Cabrera is picked up by
Birmingham, Michigan police after a
911 call from his wife, Rosangel. The couple began fighting when Miguel came home intoxicated talking on the phone, and woke up their child. When police arrive at his suburban
Detroit home at 5:00 AM, Cabrera blows a 0.26 on the
breathalyzer administered on the scene, which is three times Michigan's legal limit for driving. Tigers GM
Dave Dombrowski picks him up at the station at roughly 7:30 AM. That evening, Cabrera goes 0–4 and strands six runners in the Tigers' 5–1 loss to the ChiSox. • The San Diego Padres announce that executive vice president/general manager
Kevin Towers will not return for the season. In a similar movement, the Toronto Blue Jays dismissed general manager
J. P. Ricciardi after eight seasons. •
Ryan Howard is in select company after hitting his 45th
home run of the season in Philadelphia's loss to Florida. The 29-year-old Howard is only the second player to do that before his 30th birthday, the other being
Harmon Killebrew (1961 to 1964, at 28). Beside this, as Howard nears the end of his fifth full season he has a career total of 640
runs batted in, moving past for the third-highest RBI total after five seasons in Major League history over
Lou Gehrig (639, 1926–'30) and
Ted Williams (638, 1939–'42, 1946). The leader and runner-up are
Joe DiMaggio (691, 1936–'40) and
Hal Trosky (663, 1934–'38). • October 4: •
Alex Rodriguez belts a three-run homer and a grand slam in New York's 10-run 6th inning, leading the Yankees to a 10–2 victory over the Rays in the regular-season finale. Rodriguez' 30th home run of the season makes him the first AL player to have 7 RBIs in a single inning. The only other Major Leaguers to have 7 or more RBIs in an inning are
Fernando Tatís, who hit two grand slams as a member of the Cardinals to collect 8 RBIs against the Dodgers in the third inning on
April 23, 1999, and
Ed Cartwright, who hit a 3-run homer and a grand slam in the 3rd inning on September 23, 1890, for 7 RBIs. Rodriguez also reached the 30 HR/100 RBI plateau for the 12th consecutive season. •
Albert Pujols breaks
Bill Buckner's 1985 major-league record for
assists by a first baseman, with his 185th. • The Detroit Tigers and Minnesota Twins each win their final (162nd) games, leading to a one-game tiebreaker at the Metrodome to decide the American League Central champion. It is the third consecutive season – the longest such streak in MLB history – that the regular season goes beyond 162 games, requiring a division tiebreaker to finalize the postseason field. The Twins become the first club ever to play such a tiebreaker in consecutive years, having lost the AL Central tiebreaker against the Chicago White Sox in . The Colorado Rockies beat the San Diego Padres for the National League Wild Card to start this three-year extension. •
Mark Reynolds of the
Arizona Diamondbacks strikes out three times, setting a new season record of 223 strikeouts in a season. • October 5 – The Milwaukee Brewers and
Trevor Hoffman agree to a one-year deal with a mutual option for 2011. • October 6: • Kansas City Royals first baseman
Billy Butler is named winner of the
AL Player of the Month Award for September. Butler batted .363 in the month with 10 doubles, six home runs and 26 RBI. He also recorded his fourth 3-double game of the season on September 9 against the Detroit Tigers to set a Major League record and had a pair of 2-homer games against the Los Angeles Angels (September 7) and Minnesota Twins (September 25). His 26 RBIs in the month led the AL and were tied for second in baseball. Butler and
Zack Greinke (April) are the first Royals duo to win the award in the same season since , when
Jermaine Dye and
Johnny Damon took home the honor. • Chicago Cubs first baseman
Derrek Lee is named winner of the
NL Player of the Month Award for September, after he led the Majors with a .386 average (32-for-83) with nine home runs, 23 RBIs, a .795 slugging percentage and .500 on-base percentage. • The final regular season game in the Metrodome may have been the best. The one-game division playoff between the Minnesota Twins and Detroit Tigers goes extra innings, 4–4. Both teams score a run in the tenth before an
Alexi Casilla single in the twelfth inning scores
Carlos Gómez from second to give the Twins the 6–5 victory. They become the first team in Major League history to win the division after trailing by three games with four to play. They are also the first team in MLB history to make the playoffs in the final year of their stadium. • October 7: • The Philadelphia Phillies open defense of their
World Series title with a convincing victory over the Colorado Rockies, 5–1, in Game 1 of the NLDS behind a dominant
Cliff Lee in his postseason debut. Lee hurls a complete game and gets support from
Raúl Ibañez,
Jayson Werth and
Ryan Howard RBI extra-base hits. Rockies starter
Ubaldo Jiménez matches Lee with four scoreless innings before surrendering two runs in the fifth inning and three in the sixth. • The New York Yankees win their first playoff game at new Yankee Stadium, as
CC Sabathia holds down the Minnesota Twins, 7–2, in Game 1 of the ALDS.
Derek Jeter and
Hideki Matsui homer, and
Alex Rodriguez contribute with two RBIs. Minnesota scores first, but rookie left-hander
Brian Duensing gives it all back and the Twins cannot recover. • The Los Angeles Dodgers defeat
Chris Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals, 5–3, in Game 1 of the NLDS. After St. Louis scores a run off
Randy Wolf in the first inning,
Matt Kemp blasts a two-run homer in the bottom half of the frame, and Los Angeles does not trail again. Carpenter allows four runs in an uneven five-inning performance.
Rafael Furcal goes 3-for-4, as the Dodgers' bullpen gives up a run in 5 superb innings. The Dodgers (16) and Cardinals (14) combine to strand 30 runners on base, setting a record for a nine-inning postseason game. • October 8: • The Colorado Rockies even the NLDS against the Philadelphia Phillies, winning the second game, 5–4, at Citizens Bank Park.
Aaron Cook combines with five relievers for the victory, while the attack is led by
Yorvit Torrealba (2-for-3, two-run homer) and
Carlos González (3-for-5, run).
Cole Hamels is the losing pitcher. • The Los Angeles Dodgers take advantage of a crucial
error by
Matt Holliday with two outs, bases empty in the bottom of the ninth inning, to defeat the St. Louis Cardinals 3–2.
Ronnie Belliard and
Mark Loretta come through with RBI singles off closer
Ryan Franklin, giving the Dodgers a 2–0 lead in the NLDS. St. Louis starter
Adam Wainwright, who lasts eight innings, allows one run on three hits and strikes out seven in a lost cause. • The Los Angeles Angels defeat the Boston Red Sox in the ALDS opener, 5–0, behind a strong start by
John Lackey, who allows four hits in 7 innings of work.
Torii Hunter gets the game-breaking hit, a three-run homer off
Jon Lester in the bottom of the fifth inning that breaks a scoreless tie, and reliever
Darren Oliver pitches 1 innings of no-hit ball. • October 9: • The New York Yankees storm past the Minnesota Twins in Game 2 of their division series, tying it in the ninth inning on a two-run homer by
Alex Rodriguez and winning in the 11th, 4–3, on a blast down the left-field line by
Mark Teixeira. • The Los Angeles Angels manufacture a three-run seventh inning to move one win away from the ALCS and leave the Boston Red Sox on the precipice.
Jered Weaver pitches brilliantly in his second career postseason start, outduelling
Josh Beckett in the 4–1 triumph. • October 10 – The Los Angeles Dodgers dispose of the host St. Louis Cardinals in Game 3 of the NLDS, 5–1, advancing to the league championship. For
Joe Torre, it is his sixth postseason series sweep as a Major League manager. Torre had four sweeps with the Yankees ( ALDS vs. Texas and World Series vs. San Diego, and ALDS vs. Texas and World Series vs. Atlanta) and one previous sweep with the Dodgers ( NLDS vs. Cubs). The only other manager in Major League history to lead his teams to at least six postseason series sweeps is the manager Torre defeated in this year's NLDS,
Tony La Russa, who has seven sweeps on his resume. • October 11: • The Los Angeles Angels comes up with a three-run comeback in the ninth inning off
Jonathan Papelbon, to clinch the ALDS with a 7–6 victory against the Boston Red Sox at
Fenway Park.
Vladimir Guerrero brings home the tying and winning runs with a single and the Angels sweep aside the Red Sox in stunning fashion. • The New York Yankees defeat the Minnesota Twins, 4–1, to complete a three-game sweep of their ALDS and record their first victory in a postseason series since , thanks to
Andy Pettitte, who pitches a gem, and home runs from
Alex Rodriguez and
Jorge Posada. It is the final baseball game inside the
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, which will be replaced next season by Minneapolis'
Target Field. • October 12 – The Philadelphia Phillies are headed back to the NLCS after eliminating the Colorado Rockies from the playoffs with a three-run, ninth-inning rally, in Game 4 of the NLDS. The defending
World Series Champions blow a one-run lead in the bottom of the eighth inning before pulling out a 5–4 victory at
Coors Field. The Phillies-Rockies series is the only one in the first round not to end in a three-game sweep. The 13 combined games during the opening round equal the fewest (in ) since the
three-round postseason format was introduced in . • October 14 – For the third time of his career, New York Yankees closer
Mariano Rivera earns the
Delivery Man of the Year Award, sponsored by
DHL. Rivera went 3–3 with a 1.76 ERA in innings of work and converted 44 of his 46
save opportunities (95.7%), permitting 48 hits and 12 walks with 72 strikeouts while holding opposing hitters to a .197 batting average. • October 15 –
Carlos Ruiz and
Raúl Ibañez hit three-run homers,
Cole Hamels wins his fourth Game 1 of the postseason, and closer
Brad Lidge finishes off the Philadelphia Phillies' 8–6 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NLCS opener at
Dodger Stadium. • October 16: • The Los Angeles Dodgers defeat the Philadelphia Phillies, 2–1, in Game 2 of the NLCS.
Ryan Howard hits a solo homer in the fourth inning to put the Phillies ahead, but an eighth-inning bullpen collapse combined with a crucial error by
Chase Utley and a bases-loaded, walk-RBI to
Andre Ethier makes the difference. Phillies'
Pedro Martínez and Dodgers'
Vicente Padilla find themselves in a pitching duel during seven-plus innings, but they are not a factor in the decision.
Hong-Chih Kuo is the winning pitcher and
Chan Ho Park the loser, while
Jonathan Broxton earns the save. The series is tied 1–1. •
CC Sabathia holds the Los Angeles Angels to four hits and a run in eight strong innings, in a 4–1 victory that gives the New York Yankees a 1–0 lead in the ALCS.
Hideki Matsui (2),
Alex Rodriguez and
Derek Jeter each
drive in runs, and
Mariano Rivera gets the
save. Three Angels
errors tie a franchise postseason record and lead to two Yankees runs, which serve as a support for Sabathia, who does not need all that much help to prevail in his duel against
John Lackey. • October 17 –
Alex Rodriguez hit a tying home run in the bottom of the 11th inning to negate a
Chone Figgins go-ahead RBI-single, and the New York Yankees score the winning run on a 13th inning
error by
Maicer Izturis to edge the Los Angeles Angels, 4–3, for a 2–0 lead in the best-of-seven ALCS. • October 18 –
Ryan Howard plays a key role in a four-run first inning and
Cliff Lee dominates the Los Angeles Dodgers over eight innings, giving the Philadelphia Phillies an 11–0 win and a 2–1 NLCS lead. With his first-inning two-run triple off
Hiroki Kuroda, Howard becomes the first player in Major League history to record an
RBI in seven consecutive
playoff games in the same year. Lee allows just three hits and struck out 10 in eight scoreless innings to improve to 2–0 with a 0.74
ERA in three starts this postseason. Howard is one game shy of matching the legendary
Lou Gehrig, who holds the all-time record with an RBI in eight consecutive postseason games that spanned from through . • October 19: • For the second straight game, the Los Angeles Angels and New York Yankees play into tense extra innings, until
Jeff Mathis drives home
Howie Kendrick in the 11th inning, and the Angels survive a second straight ALCS thriller, beating New York 5–4 to trim the Yankees' series lead to 2–1.
Ervin Santana earns the win, while Kendrick homers and triples before singling with two outs in the 11th off
Alfredo Aceves, who takes the loss. •
Jimmy Rollins lines a two-run double with two outs in the ninth inning off
Jonathan Broxton and the Philadelphia Phillies rally past the Los Angeles Dodgers, 5–4, for a 3–1 lead in the NLCS.
Brad Lidge gets two outs in the ninth to earn the win, while
Ryan Howard hits a two-run home run to extend his Major League record to eight consecutive playoff games with an RBI within the same year. • Three Phillies members make history during their 5–4 victory against the Dodgers in Game 4 of the NLCS. There have been 1,251 postseason games in MLB history, according to the
Elias Sports Bureau. Only three players ever ended a game with a walk-off extra-base hit by a team that was
one out away from losing: (1)
Jimmy Rollins with his two-run double in the ninth inning off
Jonathan Broxton in this game, (2) the Dodgers'
Kirk Gibson with his memorable home run off Oakland Athletics' closer
Dennis Eckersley in Game 1 of the
1988 World Series, and (3) the Brooklyn Dodgers'
Cookie Lavagetto with his two-run double off
Bill Bevens in Game 4 (and final game) of the
1947 World Series, when Yankees pitcher Bevens got within one out of the first
no-hitter game in World Series history, and then lost it all. Also,
Ryan Howard joins
Lou Gehrig as the only players who have recorded an RBI in eight consecutive playoff games, a mark that Gehrig set 77 years ago, and also matches
Mike Schmidt's career-club, playoff-record with his sixth career postseason home run. In addition to Rollins and Howard,
Chase Utley surpasses the legendary Gehrig when he reaches base safely in his 24th consecutive postseason game. Former Orioles first baseman
Boog Powell holds the Major League record by reaching safely in 25 consecutive postseason games that spanned from 1966 to 1971. • October 20: •
Alex Rodriguez homers in his third straight game and
CC Sabathia pitches five-hit ball on three days' rest, as the New York Yankees take a 10–1 victory over the Los Angeles Angels in Game 4 of the ALCS, moving just one win away from going to their 40th World Series. Rodriguez drives in a run for the eighth consecutive postseason game, tying a record that had been set by
Lou Gehrig 77 years ago and tied by
Ryan Howard less than 24 hours earlier. •
Kenji Johjima opts out of the final two seasons with the Seattle Mariners, allowing him to sign with a Japanese team. Johjima's contract gave him the right to end it by November 15 for the purpose of finishing his career in Japan. He gives up salaries of $7.7 million in 2010 and $8.1 million in 2011. Johjima hit .268 in his four seasons with Seattle, with 48 homers and 198 RBIs in 462 games. He holds the AL record for hits by a rookie catcher with 147 in 2006. His 18 homers in this season tied the Mariners' record for most by a catcher. • October 21 –
Jayson Werth homers twice,
Shane Victorino and
Pedro Feliz also connect, and the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Los Angeles Dodgers, 10–4, in Game 5 of the NLCS to win their second straight NL pennant.
Ryan Howard is named Series MVP.
Chase Utley ties a record set by
Boog Powell when he reaches base safely in his 25th consecutive postseason game. The Dodgers lose in the NLCS to the Phillies for the second straight season. • October 22 –
Kendrys Morales drives in the go-ahead run with a two-out single in the seventh inning, and the Los Angeles Angels respond to the New York Yankees' six-run comeback moments earlier for a 7–6 win that trims the Yankees' ALCS lead to 3–2. • October 25 – The New York Yankees win their 40th American League pennant (and the first in six years) beating the Los Angeles Angels, 5–2, in Game 6 of the ALCS.
Andy Pettitte earns his 16th postseason victory, breaking a tie with
John Smoltz for most wins in the postseason.
CC Sabathia is selected MVP of the series. • October 26 – The
St. Louis Cardinals announce the re-hiring of
Tony La Russa as manager for 2010, and the surprise hiring of
Mark McGwire as hitting coach, replacing
Hal McRae. • October 28 – The Philadelphia Phillies defeat the New York Yankees, 6–1, in Game 1 of the
World Series at Yankee Stadium. Phillies pitcher
Cliff Lee gives up an
unearned run on six hits, while
striking out 10 without
walking a batter in a
complete game effort.
Chase Utley leads the Philadelphia attack with two solo home runs off left-handed
CC Sabathia, the losing pitcher. It is the first time a left-handed batter has hit two homers off a lefty pitcher since
Babe Ruth, when he did it against
Bill Sherdel of the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 4 of the
1928 World Series. With a walk in the first inning, Utley also sets a Major League Baseball record by
reaching base safely in his 26th consecutive postseason game, breaking the 25-game mark of
Boog Powell from 1966 to 1971. • October 29 – The New York Yankees even the World Series at a game apiece with a 3–1 victory against the Philadelphia Phillies. In the biggest start of his career,
A. J. Burnett throws seven solid innings to get his first postseason win, holding the Phillies to only one run and four hits, while
Mark Teixeira and
Hideki Matsui provide the offensive support with solo home runs off
Pedro Martínez, the losing pitcher.
Mariano Rivera throws two scoreless innings in relief and earns the save. • October 31 – The New York Yankees beat the Philadelphia Phillies 8–5, at
Citizens Bank Park, to take a 2–1 advantage in the World Series.
Alex Rodriguez belts the first video-reviewed home run in World Series history to support another winning
Andy Pettitte effort, while
Nick Swisher and
Hideki Matsui add solo shots.
Cole Hamels is the losing pitcher. Pettitte, who overcomes two homers from
Jayson Werth, earns his Major League-leading 17th postseason win. Phillies catcher
Carlos Ruíz hits a late homer in a lost cause.
November • November 1 – The New York Yankees put themselves one win away from their 27th World Series title, after a three-run rally in the ninth inning, to beat the Philadelphia Phillies 7–4.
Johnny Damon sparks the rally with a two-out single and two
stolen bases off reliever and loser
Brad Lidge, before a
hit-by-pitch to
Mark Teixeira and a go-ahead RBI double by
Alex Rodriguez. A two-run, RBI-single by
Jorge Posada seals the victory. Both starters, Yankees'
CC Sabathia and Phillies'
Joe Blanton, give a good pitching effort.
Joba Chamberlain is credited with the victory after one inning of relief, while
Mariano Rivera earns the
save. Damon also singles, doubles, scores and drives in a run early in the game. The Phillies' offense is led by
Chase Utley, who hits an RBI double and his third home run of the Series, while
Pedro Feliz adds a solo homer. • November 2 – The Philadelphia Phillies get an 8–6 victory over the New York Yankees, which forces the World Series to Game 6 at Yankee Stadium.
Chase Utley hits two
home runs with four
RBI and joins
Reggie Jackson as the only players who have batted five home runs in the Series, a record that Jackson set in
1977, which gave him the
nickname "Mr. October".
Cliff Lee improves to 4–0 with a 1.56
ERA in his first postseason and
Ryan Madson earns the
save, while
Raúl Ibañez adds a homer and two RBI. For the Yankees,
Johnny Damon goes 3-for-4 with two runs and one RBI, while
A. J. Burnett has a poor start, giving up six runs in just two-plus innings and is credited with the loss. • November 4 – The New York Yankees beat the Philadelphia Phillies 7–3 in Game 6 of the
World Series, to clinch their 27th World Championship title, the most in all of sports. Yankees
DH Hideki Matsui, who gains
Most Valuable Player honors,
drives in six runs, tying the record set by
Bobby Richardson (
1960 WS) and
Will Clark (
1989 NLCS) for most runs batted in a postseason game, while
Andy Pettitte, pitching on three days' rest, becomes the first pitcher to
start and win the clincher in all three postseason rounds. Pettitte beat
Minnesota and the
Anaheim Angels in the earlier AL playoffs. Philadelphia falls two wins short of becoming the first NL team to repeat as World Series champions since the
1975–
'76 Cincinnati Reds. Phillies second baseman
Chase Utley ties
Reggie Jackson's record with five
home runs in a Series, but first baseman
Ryan Howard strikes out 13 times to set a record in the Classic. The clincher marks the sixth time New York has defeated the defending champ in the Series. • November 10 – MLB general managers fail to take a vote on expanding instant replay following a postseason filled with blown calls by umpires, according to
Jimmie Lee Solomon, executive vice president of baseball operations in the commissioner's office. • November 23 –
Joe Mauer of the Minnesota Twins becomes only the second catcher in 33 years to win the American League Most Valuable Player Award, finishing first in a near-unanimous vote. Mauer, who set a major league record for highest batting average by a catcher and won his third batting title, receives 27 of 28 first-place votes and 387 points in balloting by the
BBWAA. New York Yankees teammates
Mark Teixeira (225 points) and
Derek Jeter (193) follow. The only other player to get a first-place vote is
Miguel Cabrera, of the Detroit Tigers, who finishes in fourth place with 171 points, one point ahead of the Los Angeles Angels'
Kendrys Morales. • November 24 –
Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals receives his third National League MVP Award, tying eight others who also had three. Only
Barry Bonds has more with seven. Pujols, who also won in 2005 and 2008, receives all 32 first-place votes and 448 points in balloting announced by the
BBWAA. Florida's
Hanley Ramírez, the NL batting champion, is second with 233 points, followed by Philadelphia's
Ryan Howard (217) and Milwaukee's
Prince Fielder (203). • November 30: •
Derek Jeter is named the
Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year, becoming the first member of the New York Yankees to win the prestigious award. •
Nelson Díaz, a top umpire in Cuban baseball, defects to the United States. Díaz worked in the Olympics and the 2006 World Baseball Classic; called the
exhibition game between the Cubans and Orioles at Baltimore in 1999, and also participated in World Cups and the Pan American Games, among many other international tournaments.
December • December 1 – The Los Angeles Dodgers confirm that broadcaster
Vin Scully will return to the booth for his 61st season in . His 60 years of service is the longest tenure of any broadcaster in sports history, according to the Dodgers. Scully, who turned 82 on November 29, entered the
Hall of Fame in . • December 2 – Michael Weiner is confirmed as the new executive director of the
MLB Players Association, succeeding Donald Fehr, who had held the position since . • December 7 –
Umpire Doug Harvey and former
manager Whitey Herzog are elected to the
Hall of Fame by the
Veterans Committee. • December 16 – In separate deals, the Philadelphia Phillies send left-handed pitcher
Cliff Lee to the Seattle Mariners in exchange for minor league right-handers
Phillippe Aumont and
JC Ramirez and outfielder
Tyson Gillies, and acquire right-hander
Roy Halladay and cash considerations from the
Toronto Blue Jays in exchange for minor league right-hander
Kyle Drabek, outfielder
Michael Taylor and catcher
Travis d'Arnaud. Additionally, Halladay agrees to a three-year, $60 million contract extension with the Phillies that includes a $20 million vesting option for a fourth season. • December 18 – After one tumultuous season in Chicago, Cubs deal outfielder
Milton Bradley to the
Seattle Mariners for right-handed pitcher
Carlos Silva and cash. Silva was limited to only eight games and 30.1 innings in 2009 by shoulder injuries. • December 22 –
Sports Illustrated names St. Louis Cardinals first baseman
Albert Pujols as number 9 on its list of the
Top 20 Male Athletes of the Decade. • December 23 – Major League Baseball ensures its first decade of labor peace since the 1960s by agreeing to a five-year contract with umpires that runs through 2014. • December 28 •
Sports Illustrated publishes the names of the players and manager on its
MLB All-Decade Team, and chooses the
New York Yankees as the
MLB Top Team of the Decade. • The
Fort Wayne TinCaps are named the 2009 MiLBY winner for Overall and Class A Team of the Year. The
Danville Braves win the 2009 MiLBY award for the best Short-Season Team, and the
San Jose Giants are named the best Class A Advanced Team. The
Akron Aeros earn MLB.com's Double-A team of the Year honors, and the
Durham Bulls are named MLB.com's Triple-A Minor League Team of the Year. • The New York Mets sign reliever
Kelvim Escobar to a one-year deal. • December 29 – The San Francisco Giants sign
Mark DeRosa to a two-year, $12 million contract. • December 30 • Detroit Tigers catcher
Gerald Laird and his younger brother,
Brandon Laird, a prospect in the Yankees' Minor League system, are arrested on suspicion of assault and
disorderly conduct in
Phoenix, Arizona, following a brawl after a
Phoenix Suns game at
U.S. Airways Arena. The two ballplayers, plus another man were arrested after an incident at an arena lounge. • The Arizona Diamondbacks sign second baseman
Kelly Johnson to a one-year, $2.35 million contract. • December 31 – The Chicago Cubs sign free agent
Marlon Byrd to a three-year, $15 million contract. Byrd will play center field for the Cubs in , while
Kosuke Fukudome shifts back to right. ==Movies==