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The 1985 Major League Baseball season ended with the Kansas City Royals defeating the St. Louis Cardinals in the seventh game of the I-70 World Series. Bret Saberhagen, the regular season Cy Young Award winner, was named MVP of the Series. The National League won the All-Star Game for the second straight year.
During and after World War I, the Athletics had nine consecutive losing seasons including the lowest win percentage in post-1900 major league baseball of .235 in 1916 and only 36 wins in 1919. Between 1934 and 1967 in Philadelphia and later Kansas City the team had sequences of thirteen and fifteen consecutive losing seasons and overall won ...
In Game 3, the Royals cut the Blue Jays series lead to 2–1, powered by star third baseman George Brett’s dominant performance, but the Blue Jays narrowly won Game 4 to take a 3–1 series lead. The Royals' Danny Jackson pitched a complete-game shutout in Game 5 to send the series back to Toronto, where the Royals would take Game 6 to force ...
All-time Washington Nationals regular season record (2005–2024) 19 17 .528 All-time Washington Nationals postseason record (2005–2024) 1529 1643 .482 All-time combined Washington Nationals regular and postseason record (2005–2024) 4265 4569 .483 All-time combined franchise regular season record (1969–2024) 24 22 .522
The 1985 Cincinnati Reds season was the 116th season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 16th and 15th full season at Riverfront Stadium.The Cincinnati Reds improved on their 70–92 record from the previous season to finish at 89–72, but missed the postseason for the 6th consecutive year and they finished in second place, 5½ games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers.
As it stands now, the MLB All-Star Game is headed down an unpredictable path. Mostly out from underneath the baggage of the so-called Steroid Era, the league has struggled to market its brightest ...
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The 10 strikeout complete game caps a spectacular season for Goodenn in which the 20-year old finishes the season with the best ERA in baseball (1.53), wins, innings (276.2), strikeouts (268), and complete games (16) and twice he was named National League player of the week, and the 1985 Baseball Digest Player of the Year.