1994 New York Yankees season
Major League Baseball team season / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 1994 New York Yankees season was the 92nd season for the Yankees. New York was managed by Buck Showalter and played at Yankee Stadium. The season was cut short by the 1994 player's strike, which wiped out any postseason aspirations for their first postseason appearance since losing the 1981 World Series and that their star player and captain, Don Mattingly, had. On the day the strike began, the team had a record of 70–43, 6+1⁄2 games ahead of the Baltimore Orioles, the best record in the American League and the second-best record in Major League Baseball.[3] The Yankees were on pace to win at least 100 games for the first time since 1980.[4] The Yankees' ace, 33-year-old veteran Jimmy Key, was leading the majors with 17 wins and was on pace to win 24 games.[3] Right fielder Paul O'Neill was also having a career year, as he was leading the league with a .359 batting average.[3]
1994 New York Yankees | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
League | American League | |||
Division | East | |||
Ballpark | Yankee Stadium | |||
City | New York City | |||
Owners | George Steinbrenner | |||
General managers | Gene Michael | |||
Managers | Buck Showalter | |||
Television | WPIX (Phil Rizzuto, Bobby Murcer, Paul Olden, Suzyn Waldman[1][2]) MSG Network (Dewayne Staats, Tony Kubek, Al Trautwig) | |||
Radio | WABC (AM) (Michael Kay, John Sterling) | |||
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The strike is remembered bitterly by Yankees fans as it shook sports fans in New York City and the Yankees to the core,[5][6] and has been named among the 10 worst moments in New York City sports history, primarily because Mattingly had not played in a postseason.[7] It was also seen as the frustrating peak of the Yankees' downfall of the 1980s and early 1990s.[5]
Many fans said that the strike and the lost Yankees season was another blow to baseball backers in New York City, following the move of the Dodgers and the Giants to California for the 1958 season, the demise of the Yankees during the 1960s and early 1970s, and the bad baseball at Shea Stadium during the late 1970s and early 1990s.[5] The strike ruined the chance for the Yankees to follow in the footsteps of the NHL Stanley Cup Champion Rangers and NBA Eastern Conference Champion Knicks by making the championship round of their respective sport.[8][1]
Because the Yankees' last postseason appearance had been in a season cut short by a strike,[9] the media often remarked on the parallels between the two Yankee teams (1981 and 1994), which included both teams having division leads taken away by strike.[10][11] Throughout October, they continued to bombard the Yankees, making speculations about what might have been if there had not been a strike.[12]