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Baseball commentators [23] during 1972 regularly remarked that Carlton's slider was basically unhittable. "Auggie Busch traded me to the last-place Phillies over a salary dispute," reflected Carlton on his 1972 season. "I was mentally committed to winning 25 games with the Cardinals and now I had to re-think my goals.
The 1972 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 90th season in the ... Rick Wise was traded by the Phillies to the St. Louis Cardinals for Steve Carlton. [2] March 1 ...
September 15 – Steve Carlton beats the Montreal Expos 5–3, raising his record to 24–9. The rest of the Philadelphia Phillies 1972 pitching staff has a combined record of 26–80. September 17 – At County Stadium, the Detroit Tigers down the Milwaukee Brewers 6–2 behind Joe Coleman's 17th win.
He is followed by Billy Hamilton, who holds seven records, including career batting average and the single-season runs record. Several Phillies hold National League and major league records. Pitcher / outfielder John Coleman is the most decorated in this category, holding three major league records, all from the franchise's inaugural season.
Steve Carlton [20] Danny Ozark: 1978: 1978: NL: East ^ 1st 90 72 .556 — Lost NLCS 3–1 Danny Ozark: 1979: 1979: NL: East: 4th 84 78 .519 14 Danny Ozark Until August 31 Dallas Green Starting August 31 1980 † 1980: NL * East ^ 1st 91 71 .562 — Won NLCS 3–2 Won World Series 4–2 † Mike Schmidt (MVP, [16] WSMVP) Steve Carlton [20 ...
Steve Carlton (1972, 1977, 1980, 1982) John Denny (1983) Steve Bedrosian (1987) Roy Halladay (2010) ... Baseball America Short-Season Classification All-Star Team
At the end of each Major League Baseball season, the league leaders of various statistical categories are announced. [1] Leading either the American League or the National League in a particular category is referred to as a title. The following lists describe which players hold the most titles in a career for a particular category.
That same season, Harry Kalas joined the Phillies broadcasting team. In 1972, the Phillies were the worst team in baseball, but newly acquired Steve Carlton won nearly half their games (27 of 59 team wins) and was awarded his first NL Cy Young Award and won it again in 1977.