San Diego Padres award winners and league leaders
This is a list of award winners and league leaders for the San Diego Padres professional baseball team.
Award winners
NL Most Valuable Player
NL Cy Young
- 1976 – Randy Jones
- 1978 – Gaylord Perry
- 1989 – Mark Davis
- 2007 – Jake Peavy
NL Rookie of the Year
- 1976 – Butch Metzger
- 1987 – Benito Santiago
Wilson Defensive Player of the Year Award
- See explanatory note at Atlanta Braves award winners and league leaders.
- Team (at all positions)
- (2012)
- (2013)
MLB Delivery Man of the Year Award
- Heath Bell (2010)
NL Rolaids Relief Man of the Year Award
- See footnote[1]
- Rollie Fingers (1977, 1978, 1980)
- Mark Davis (1989)
- Trevor Hoffman (1998, 2006)
- Heath Bell (2009, 2010)
NL Championship Series (NLCS) MVP Award
- 1984 – Steve Garvey
- 1998 – Sterling Hitchcock
DHL Hometown Heroes (2006)
- Tony Gwynn — voted by MLB fans as the most outstanding player in the history of the franchise, based on on-field performance, leadership quality and character value
Best Major League Baseball Player ESPY Award
- Ken Caminiti (1997)
Branch Rickey Award
- 1995 – Tony Gwynn
- 2008 – Trevor Hoffman
Baseball Prospectus Internet Baseball Awards NL Manager of the Year
- Bud Black (2010)[2]
Team award
- 1984 – National League West Division title
- 1984 – Warren C. Giles Trophy (National League champion)
- 1996 – National League West Division title[3]
- 1998 – National League West Division title
- 1998 – Warren Giles Trophy (National League champion)
- 2005 – National League West Division title[3]
- 2006 – National League West Division title[3]
National League Champions | ||
Preceded by: Florida Marlins |
1998 | Succeeded by: Atlanta Braves |
Preceded by: Philadelphia Phillies |
1984 | Succeeded by: St. Louis Cardinals |
National League Western Division Champions | ||
Preceded by: Los Angeles Dodgers |
2005 & 2006 | Succeeded by: Arizona Diamondbacks |
Preceded by: San Francisco Giants |
1998 | Succeeded by: Arizona Diamondbacks |
Preceded by: Los Angeles Dodgers |
1996 | Succeeded by: San Francisco Giants |
Preceded by: Los Angeles Dodgers |
1984 | Succeeded by: Los Angeles Dodgers |
Minor-league system
MiLB Overall Team of the Year
- 2009 – Fort Wayne TinCaps[4]
Other achievements
Hall of Famers
Ford C. Frick Award (broadcasters)
- Jerry Coleman (2005)
Team Hall of Fame
Retired numbers
California Sports Hall of Fame
San Diego Padres in the California Sports Hall of Fame | ||||
No. | Name | Position(s) | Seasons | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
6 | Steve Garvey | 1B | 1969–1982 | |
19 | Tony Gwynn | RF | 1982–2001 | Born in Los Angeles, attended San Diego State |
31 | Dave Winfield | RF | 1973–1980 | |
34 | Fernando Valenzuela | P | 1995–1997 | Elected mainly on his performance with Los Angeles Dodgers |
Best Breakthrough Athlete ESPY Award
- Gary Sheffield (1993)
Breitbard Hall of Fame
- Buzzie Bavasi (2007)[5]
- Goose Gossage (2007)[6]
- Tony Gwynn (2002)[7]
- Randy Jones (1996)[8]
- David Winfield (1998)[9]
National League statistical leaders (batting)
Batting Average
- 1984 – Tony Gwynn (.351)
- 1987 – Tony Gwynn (.370)
- 1988 – Tony Gwynn (.313)
- 1989 – Tony Gwynn (.336)
- 1992 – Gary Sheffield (.330)
- 1994 – Tony Gwynn (.394)
- 1995 – Tony Gwynn (.368)
- 1996 – Tony Gwynn (.353)
- 1997 – Tony Gwynn (.372)
Runs
- 1986 – Tony Gwynn (107) co-leader
RBI
- 1979 – Dave Winfield (118)
Hits
- 1984 – Tony Gwynn (213)
- 1986 – Tony Gwynn (211)
- 1987 – Tony Gwynn (218)
- 1989 – Tony Gwynn (203)
- 1994 – Tony Gwynn (165)
- 1995 – Tony Gwynn (197) co-leader
- 1997 – Tony Gwynn (220)
On-base percentage
- 1994 – Tony Gwynn (.454)
Times on Base
- 1987 – Tony Gwynn (303)
Total Bases
- 1979 – Dave Winfield (333)
- 1992 – Gary Sheffield (323)
Home Runs
- 1998 – Greg Vaughn (50)
- 1992 – Fred McGriff (35)
Triples
- 1981 – Gene Richards (12) co-leader
Singles
- 1980 – Gene Richards (155)
- 1984 – Tony Gwynn (177)
- 1986 – Tony Gwynn (157) co-leader
- 1987 – Tony Gwynn (162)
- 1989 – Tony Gwynn (165)
- 1994 – Tony Gwynn (117)
- 1995 – Tony Gwynn (154)
- 1997 – Tony Gwynn (152)
Hit By Pitch
- 1977 – Gene Tenace (13)
Walks
- 1977 – Gene Tenace (125)
- 1989 – Jack Clark (132)
- 1990 – Jack Clark (104)
- 2005 – Brian Giles (119)
Intentional Walks
- 1979 – Dave Winfield (24)
- 1984 – Garry Templeton (23)
- 1985 – Garry Templeton (24) co-leader
- 1991 – Fred McGriff (26)
Sacrifice Hits
- 1970 – Pat Dobson (19)
- 1975 – Enzo Hernández (24)
- 1977 – Bill Almon (20)
- 1978 – Ozzie Smith (28)
- 1980 – Ozzie Smith (23)
- 1989 – Roberto Alomar (17)
Sacrifice Flies
- 1984 – Steve Garvey (10) co-leader
- 1984 – Carmelo Martínez (10) co-leader
- 1996 – Ken Caminiti (10) co-leader
- 1997 – Tony Gwynn (12) co-leader
- 2004 – Mark Loretta (16)
Grounded into Double Plays
- 1984 – Steve Garvey (25)
- 1991 – Benito Santiago (21)
- 1992 – Darrin Jackson (21)
- 1994 – Tony Gwynn (20)
- 2006 – Adrián González (24) co-leader
Outs
- 1981 – Ozzie Smith (381)
- 1990 – Joe Carter (513)
Games
- 1981 – Ozzie Smith (110) co-leader
- 1985 – Steve Garvey (162) co-leader
- 1990 – Joe Carter (162)
At Bats
- 1981 – Ozzie Smith (450)
- 1986 – Tony Gwynn (642)
- 1990 – Joe Carter (634)
At Bats per Strikeout
- 1984 – Tony Gwynn (26.3)
- 1989 – Tony Gwynn (20.1)
- 1990 – Tony Gwynn (24.9)
- 1991 – Tony Gwynn (27.9)
- 1992 – Tony Gwynn (32.5)
- 1994 – Tony Gwynn (22.1)
- 1995 – Tony Gwynn (35.7)
- 1996 – Tony Gwynn (26.5)
- 1997 – Tony Gwynn (21.1)
- 1998 – Tony Gwynn (25.6)
National League statistical leaders (pitching)
ERA
- 1975 – Randy Jones (2.24)
- 2004 – Jake Peavy (2.27)
- 2007 – Jake Peavy (2.54)
Wins
- 1976 – Randy Jones (22)
- 1978 – Gaylord Perry (21)
- 2007 – Jake Peavy (19)
Won-Loss %
- 1978 – Gaylord Perry (.778)
Complete Games
- 1976 – Randy Jones (25)
- 1989 – Bruce Hurst (10) co-leader
Shutouts
- 1990 – Bruce Hurst (4) co-leader
- 1999 – Andy Ashby (3)
Saves
- 1977 – Rollie Fingers (35)
- 1978 – Rollie Fingers (37)
- 1989 – Mark Davis (44)
- 1998 – Trevor Hoffman (53)
- 2006 – Trevor Hoffman (46)
Strikeouts
- 1994 – Andy Benes (189)
- 2005 – Jake Peavy (216)
- 2007 – Jake Peavy (240)
Strikeouts/9IP
- 1994 – Andy Benes (9.87)
- 2006 – Jake Peavy (9.56)
- 2007 – Jake Peavy (9.67)
Home Runs Allowed
- 1987 – Ed Whitson (36)
- 1990 – Dennis Rasmussen (28)
- 2001 – Kevin Jarvis (37) co-leader
- 2001 – Bobby Jones (37) co-leader
Hits Allowed
- 1976 – Randy Jones (274)
- 1992 – Andy Benes (230)
Hits Allowed/9IP
- 2006 – Chris Young (6.72)
WHIP (Walks plus hits per inning pitched)
- 1976 – Randy Jones (1.027)
Walks Allowed
- 1972 – Steve Arlin (122)
- 1998 – Joey Hamilton (106)
- 2000 – Matt Clement (125)
Walks/9IP
- 1985 – LaMarr Hoyt (.86)
- 2004 – David Wells (.92)
- 2007 – Greg Maddux (1.10)
Hit Batsmen
- 1974 – Bill Greif (14)
Wild Pitches
- 1972 – Steve Arlin (15)
- 1994 – Scott Sanders (10) co-leader
- 1999 – Sterling Hitchcock (15) co-leader
- 2000 – Matt Clement (23)
Innings
- 1976 – Randy Jones (315 ⅓)
Games
- 1977 – Rollie Fingers (78)
- 1981 – Gary Lucas (57)
- 1986 – Craig Lefferts (83)
Games Started
- 1976 – Randy Jones (40)
- 1995 – Andy Ashby (31) co-leader
- 1998 – Kevin Brown (35) co-leader
Games Finished
- 1976 – Butch Metzger (62)
- 1977 – Rollie Fingers (69)
- 1989 – Mark Davis (65)
Losses
- 1969 – Clay Kirby (20)
- 1971 – Steve Arlin (19)
- 1972 – Steve Arlin (21)
- 1974 – Randy Jones (22) co-leader
- 1981 – Steve Mura (14) co-leader
- 1994 – Andy Benes (14)
- 2001 – Bobby Jones (19)
Batters Faced
- 1976 – Randy Jones (1,251)
National League statistical leaders (age)
Oldest Player
- 2003 – Jesse Orosco (46)
Youngest Player
- 1971 – Jay Franklin (18)
- 1977 – Brian Greer (18)
Footnotes
- MLB appears to have dropped the Rolaids Relief Man of the Year Award as an official MLB award, after the 2006 season. Relief Man Award winners (1976-2006). Awards (The Official Site of MLB's Honors and Accolades). MLB Advanced Media, L.P. (MLB.com). Retrieved 2010-06-09. Established in 1976, it does not appear on the MLB.com awards page for the most recent completed season. 2010 Awards. MLB Advanced Media, L.P. Retrieved 2011-08-21. The MLB Delivery Man of the Year Award (initially sponsored by DHL) was first given in 2005 and does appear on the MLB.com awards page for the most recent completed season. Prior to both awards, in 1960, The Sporting News established its Fireman of the Year Award, to recognize the best closer from each league. In 2001, the award was broadened to include all relievers and was re-named The Sporting News Reliever of the Year Award. In 2002, MLB began its This Year in Baseball Awards (TYIB Awards) (for all of MLB, not for each league), including Pitcher of the Year and Setup Man of the Year. In 2004, a Closer of the Year category was added and "Pitcher of the Year" was re-named "Starting Pitcher of the Year". In or about 2000, the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum began its Hilton Smith Legacy Award for "Relievers of the Year".
- Spira, Greg (November 9, 2010). "Internet Baseball Awards: National League". Retrieved 2011-04-09.
- Lost National League Division Series.
- Mayo, Jonathan (December 28, 2009). "TinCaps honored as Minors' top team: Padres' Class A affiliate posted .678 winning percentage". MLB Advanced Media, L.P. Retrieved 2011-06-17.
- Buzzie Bavasi Archived 2012-03-16 at the Wayback Machine webpage. Breitbard Hall of Fame. San Diego Hall of Champions website. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
- Goose Gossage Archived 2012-03-16 at the Wayback Machine webpage. Breitbard Hall of Fame. San Diego Hall of Champions website. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
- Tony Gwynn Archived 2012-06-25 at the Wayback Machine webpage. Breitbard Hall of Fame. San Diego Hall of Champions website. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
- Randy Jones Archived 2012-03-16 at the Wayback Machine webpage. Breitbard Hall of Fame. San Diego Hall of Champions website. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
- David Winfield Archived 2012-03-16 at the Wayback Machine webpage. Breitbard Hall of Fame. San Diego Hall of Champions website. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
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