Advanced | Help | Encyclopedia
Directory


San Diego Padres

For the minor league franchise in the Pacific Coast League, see: San Diego Padres (PCL).

The San Diego Padres are a Major League Baseball team based in San Diego, California. They are in the Western Division of the National League.

Founded: 1969 (National League expansion)
Home ballpark: PETCO Park (2004)
Former home ballpark: Qualcomm Stadium (formerly Jack Murphy Stadium) (1969-2003)
Uniform colors: Navy blue, "sand" (khaki), and white
Logo design: Gold "SAN DIEGO" in small capitals and large, stylized white "Padres" superimposed over an outline of home plate; blue background with wave design in bottom half of home plate.
Wild Card titles won (0): none
Division titles won (3): 1984, 1996, 1998
National League pennants won (2): 1984, 1998
World Series championships won (0): none
2005 Season Record: 18–16 as of May 10

Table of contents

Franchise history

The Padres adopted their name from the Pacific Coast League team which arrived in San Diego in 1936. That minor league franchise won the PCL title in 1937, led by then-18-year-old San Diegan Ted Williams.

In 1969, San Diego joined the ranks of Major League Baseball as one of four new expansion teams. Despite initial excitement and a new playing field at San Diego (now Qualcomm) Stadium, the team struggled, finishing in last place in each of its first six seasons.

In 1974, with the team on the brink of relocating to Washington, D.C., Ray A. Kroc (founder of McDonald's restaurants) purchased the Padres and kept them in San Diego. He died just before he could see his team win their first National League pennant (after dramatically rallying from a 2–0 deficit against the Chicago Cubs in the NLCS) in 1984. His wife, Joan, assumed control of the team until selling it in 1990.

The San Diego Chicken began performing for the team in 1974. Currently, their team mascot is the Swinging Friar.

Despite featuring such notable players as Randy Jones, Dave Winfield, Ozzie Smith, Tony Gwynn, and Trevor Hoffman, the Padres have had limited success, going to the playoffs only three times during their Major League tenure. The team marked its 36th year on a new playing field, PETCO Park, in 2004.

Country western singer Garth Brooks once tried out for the Padres, but was cut in spring training.

Players of note

Baseball Hall of Famers

Current 25-man roster (updated on May 12, 2005)

Pitchers

  • 53 Adam Eaton
  • 29 Chris Hammond
  • 51 Trevor Hoffman
  • 50 Brian Lawrence
  • 38 Scott Linebrink
  • 34 Darrell May
  • 16 Akinori Otsuka
  • 44 Jake Peavy
  • 39 Tim Redding
  • 49 Dennys Reyes
  • 37 Rudy Seanez
  • 47 Tim Stauffer
  • 17 Woody Williams

Catchers

 

Infielders

Outfielders

Disabled List

  • 46 Miguel Asencio (P, 60-day)
  •   3 Khalil Greene (IF, 15-day)
  •   7 Eric Young (OF, 60-day)
  • Manager
    • 15 Bruce Bochy
  • Coaches
    • 48 Darrel Akerfelds (bullpen)
    • 36 Darren Balsley (pitching)
    • 25 Davey Lopes (first base)
    • 12 Dave Magadan (hitting)
    • 40 Tony Muser (bench)
    •    5 Rob Picciolo (third base)

Not to be forgotten

Retired numbers

Single Season Records

External link

Major League Baseball
American League National League
Baltimore Orioles | Boston Red Sox | Chicago White Sox | Cleveland Indians | Detroit Tigers | Kansas City Royals | Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim | Minnesota Twins | New York Yankees | Oakland Athletics | Seattle Mariners | Tampa Bay Devil Rays | Texas Rangers | Toronto Blue Jays Arizona Diamondbacks | Atlanta Braves | Chicago Cubs | Cincinnati Reds | Colorado Rockies | Florida Marlins | Houston Astros | Los Angeles Dodgers | Milwaukee Brewers | New York Mets | Philadelphia Phillies | Pittsburgh Pirates | San Diego Padres | San Francisco Giants | St. Louis Cardinals | Washington Nationals
World Series | All Star Game | MLBPA | Minor Leagues








Links: Addme | Keyword Research | Paid Inclusion | Femail | Software | Completive Intelligence

Add URL | About Slider | FREE Slider Toolbar - Simply Amazing
Copyright © 2000-2008 Slider.com. All rights reserved.
Content is distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License.