Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
New York Mets all-time win–loss records Statistic Wins Losses Win% New York Mets regular season record (1962–2024) 4,816 5,148 .483 New York Mets postseason record (1962–2024) 59 46 .562 All-time regular and postseason record: 4,875: 5,194.484
The 1962 New York Mets season was the first regular season for the Mets, as the National League returned to New York City for the first time since 1957. They went 40–120 (.250) and finished tenth and last in the National League, 60 + 1 ⁄ 2 games behind the NL Champion San Francisco Giants , who had once called New York home.
This is a list of team records for the New York Mets ... Games played: Ed Kranepool: 1,853: 1962–1979 ... Single season batting records Record Name Player Record Year
The Chicago White Sox remained tied with the 1962 New York Mets for the modern major league record of 120 losses in a season, rallying to score three runs in the eighth inning and beat the Los ...
The 1962 Mets and the 2024 White Sox are the only teams that lost 120 games. ... tying the 1962 New York Mets for the most losses in a single season since the modern era of baseball began in 1900 ...
The Chicago White Sox tied the post-1900 MLB record of 120 losses by the 1962 expansion New York Mets on Sunday when the San Diego Padres won 4-2 by rallying for three runs in the eighth inning ...
Can't Anybody Here Play This Game? is a 1963 book by journalist Jimmy Breslin, about the 1962 New York Mets. [1] [2] The book chronicles the first season of the Mets, an expansion team that lost 120 games, which was a modern MLB record until 2024, when it was broken by the Chicago White Sox with 121 (though the White Sox would avoid having a worst winning percentage by comparison to that same ...
Through the 2024 season, he still holds the mark of most games played with the Mets at 1,853 and became an enduring legend among Mets fans for having played 18 seasons. He was the last of the 1962 Mets to remain with the team, and the last of that team to retire from Major League Baseball.