The 1987 Houston Astros season was the 26th season for the Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise located in Houston, Texas, their 23rd as the Astros, 26th in the National League (NL), 19th in the NL West division, and 23rd at the Astrodome, The Astros entered the season as defending NL West division champions with a 96âÂÂ66 record; however, the season ended with a 4-games-to-2 defeat to the New York Mets in the 1986 National League Championship Series (NLCS).
The season began for Houston on April 6 hosting Los Angeles Dodgers. Pitcher Mike Scott made the first of his five consecutive Opening Day starts for the Astros, who won, 4âÂÂ3. In the amateur draft, the Astros selected catcher Craig Biggio in the first round, at 22nd overall, and Darryl Kile in the 30th round. On June 27, Kevin Bass became the first player in franchise history to attain four extra-base hits in one game.
Scott represented the Astros at the MLB All-Star Game, his second career selection, where he was the starting pitcher for the National League. On September 9, right-hander Nolan Ryan recorded the 4,500th strikeout of his career.
The Astros concluded the season with a 76âÂÂ86 record and in third place in the NL West, 14 games behind the division champion San Francisco Giants. Ryan led the major leagues in strikeouts (270), in hits per nine innings pitched (6.5), and the National League in earned run average (2.76 ERA), among other categories. Ryan's ERA and strikeout titles were the second consecutive each won by a Houston pitcher, following Scott in 1986 (2.22 ERA and 303 strikeouts).
Left fielder José Cruz made his club-record 11th Opening Day start for the Astros, while right-hander Mike Scott made his first start as the starting pitcher, on April 6. Scott outdueled Dodgers starter Orel Hershiser over seven innings each as Houston won, 4âÂÂ3. Cruz homered off Hershiser, and Alan Ashby stroked a go-ahead two-run single during the bottom of the sixth to take the lead, 3âÂÂ2. Scott was victorious in his debut as the Opening Day starter, while Dave Smith closed out a clutch final two frames for the save.
On April 15, Mike Scott pitched his first career one-hit complete game shutout while striking out 10 against Los Angeles, this time at Dodger Stadium. The lone blemish on Scott's performance was Mariano Duncan's single during the third inning. Mike Marshall, who drew a base on balls, was Los Angeles' other batter who reached base while Scott one over the minimum. Billy Hatcher and Glenn Davis each slugged two-run bombs and added doubles to pace Houston's offense. With a game score of 94, Scott assembled this masterpiece just three outings following his no-hitter on September 25, 1986, It was Scott's twelfth career outing yielding double figures in strikeouts.
On May 1, Nolan Ryan belted a home run off Charlie Puleo of the Atlanta Braves. The second and final blast of his career as a hitter, Ryan hit his first during his Astros debut on April 12, 1980.
Closer Dave Smith surrendered his first run of the season on June 18. Smith had opened the campaign with 22 successive outings without having been scored upon, representing a career-best scoreless innings streak of 27. This run proved crucial for the Dodgers, who temporarily assumed the lead, 4âÂÂ3, in the top of the 10th inning. The Dodger won the contest when Steve Sax singled in two runs in the top of the 11th off losing pitcher Ron Mathis (0âÂÂ1).
On June 27, Kevin Bass became the first player in Astros history to connect for four extra base hits in one game, which were two doubles, one triple, and one home run to overshoot hitting for the cycle (rather, the "cycle plus one"). This effort led a 6âÂÂ5 win over the San Francisco Giants, while Bass collected four runs batted in (RBI). With the Astros leading 6âÂÂ2 in the seventh, Bass took his final at bat requiring only the single to hit for the cycle. He laced a line drive to left field for an easy single of Mark Davis to briefly attain the cycle upon reaching first base. However, Bass instinctively kept running for second to land the double, narrowly ahead of the relay throw. Previously, on three occasions, Astros hitters had amalgamized cycles, including César Cedeño (twiceâÂÂAugust 2, 1972, and August 9, 1976), and Bob Watson (June 24, 1977).
During the first inning, Bass cranked a two-run double off Kelly Downs to score Denny Walling and Glenn Davis. In the third, Bass tripled but was stranded when Downs whiffed José Cruz and retired Alan Ashby on a grounder to first base. In fifth, Bass homered to drive in Walling and chase Downs as Houston mounted a 6âÂÂ1 margin.
The Astros withstood two home runs each by Chili Davis and Matt Williams, while the bullpen staved off Padres comeback attempts during the bottom of sixth and eighth innings. Starter Jim Deshaies (8âÂÂ2) tossed seven sturdy innings with three earned runs, while Larry Andersen got his first save by converting the final two outs.
The next Astros player to swat as many as four extra-base hits during one contest was Jeff BagwellâÂÂwho tied the major league record with four doublesâÂÂon June 14, 1996.
Ryan collected his 1,494th strikeout as a member of the Houston Astros on July 3 to surpass J. R. Richard for the franchise record. In spite of striking out 10 on the day to go with two runs surrendered over seven innings, Ryan (4âÂÂ9) dropped a 2âÂÂ1 defeat to the Philadelphia Phillies.
Astros' Opening Day starter Mike Scott was also named the NL starter for the All-Star Game hosted at the OaklandâÂÂAlameda County Coliseum. He tossed two scoreless innings. Scott became the second Astros pitcher to start the All-Star Game, following J. R. Richard in the 1980 contest.
Following Scott's effort, the contest remained scoreless, as the first All-Star Game to go scoreless past five innings. It remained so until the top of the 13th when Tim Raines tripled home Ozzie Virgil Jr. and Hubie Brooks.
Astros rookies provided the key roles in a July 16 walk-off win over the Philadelphia Phillies, including third baseman Ken Caminiti, who made his major league debut. His defensive prowess immediately electrified the Astrodome crowd. In the first inning, he pegged an off-balance throw to retire Charlie Hayes, and in the second, an acrobatic catch to snag a line drive off the bat of Lance Parrish. At the plate, Caminiti went 2-for-4, including his first major league triple and, in the seventh inning, his first home run, off starter Kevin Gross, deep to center that tied the contest, 1âÂÂ1. In the top of the ninth, fellow rookie Gerald Young made two dramatic catches in center field to save runs and keep the scored tied. Caminiti drew a base on balls in the bottom of the ninth, and with one out, Young singled to score him as the game-winner and 2âÂÂ1 win. Astros hitters drew 10 walks while Houston's Danny Darwin (6âÂÂ6) tossed a four-hit complete game gem, staying through all the way through to become the winning pitcher.
Caminiti earned the NL Player of the Week Award for July 19.
The Astros aggregated a season-high seven-game winning streak as of August 20, following a four-game sweep of Atlanta and three-game sweep of St. Louis. This brought their overall record on the season to , while trailing first place by game.
Bill Doran earned NL Player of the Week Award for August 23.
The Astros encountered their longest losing streak of season, also seven games, starting August 25.
On August 31, 1987, Billy Hatcher of the Astros was batting against the Chicago Cubs when his bat broke and pieces flew down the third base line. Cubs third baseman Keith Moreland saw cork, and Hatcher was subsequently suspended for 10 games. He later claimed that he was using reliever Dave Smith's bat, who had allowed him to select one from his bat rack, and not his own.
On September 4, Nolan Ryan combined with Juan Agosto to blank the Pittsburgh Pirates, 2âÂÂ0. Ryan recorded his 210th whiff of the campaign, achieving a record for hurlers aged 40 and older. Bill Doran smashed a two-run single that resulted in the only tallies of the contest.
José Cruz connected for his final home run as a member of the Astros on September 7, off Joe Price of the Giants. The 5âÂÂ6âÂÂ7 batters in the order delivered, as Kevin Bass singled in Alan Ashby in the bottom of the sixth to tie the contest, 2âÂÂ2. Glenn Davis followed with a long ball in the bottom of the seventh, and Cruz led of the eighth with his blast to extend the score to 4âÂÂ2. That accounted for all the scoring required by Mike Scott (15âÂÂ10), who earned a complete game, three-hit victory.
On September 9, Ryan struck out Mike Aldrete for the 4,500th strikeout in his career. The final out of the seventh inning in a fantastic outing for "The Express," Ryan fanned 16 total that day to lead a 4âÂÂ2 victory over San Francisco. At the plate, he contributed two hits of his own, including one that drove in the first run of the contest. Building on another dominant season, Ryan ended the day leading the NL in earned run average (2.76 ERA) and strikeouts (226), though his winâÂÂloss record stood at 8âÂÂ15. Speaking on the performance, Ryan predicted that this "old dog" would not reach strikeout number 5,000.
Ryan's performance was the most in the Major Leagues since Roger Clemens's 20 strikeout game on April 29, 1986. It was the third 16+ strikeout performance in franchise annals, and by the second Astro overall. Preceding Ryan was Don Wilson, who whiffed a club-record 18 on July, 14, 1968, and another 16 on September 10, 1968. Randy Johnson tossed the next 16-strikeout blitz for Astros pitchers, on August 28, 1998.
This was Ryan's fourteenth career performance with 16 or more strikeouts, and represented his career-high while in Houston. It was his most since June 9, 1979, as a member of the California Angels.
However, this was the final date of the season in which the Astros' record was still above .500, going . Their performance tumbled at for the remainder of the season.
Glenn Davis launched three home runs on September 10 at Jack Murphy Stadium; however, in spite of this performance, the San Diego Padres overcame Houston, 8âÂÂ7. Davis' first two home runs were off Mark Grant, and the final was launched off Mark Davis on his way to five RBI. In the bottom of the ninth, Rob Nelson singled home Garry Templeton off Manny Hernández for the walk-off. This was the first of two occasions that Davis had hit three home runs in a game during his career, and was the third time by an Astros hitte.
On September 15, the Astros turned the fifth triple play in club history, doing so against the Dodgers.
Houston finished the season with the third-highest attendance total in baseball (1,909,902).
Nolan Ryan concluded the season having maintained his major league lead in numerous pitching categories, including 270 strikeouts, 6.548 hits per nine innings (H/9), 11.480 strikeouts per nine innings (K/9), 2.47 fielding independent pitching (FIP), and 3.103 strikeout-to-walk ratio (K/BB), He also finished as the National League ERA leader at 2.76, earning the distinction as the first Houston Astro to win two ERA titles. It was the fourth occasion that an Astros pitcher led the NL in ERA, following J. R. Richard (2.71 in 1979), himself (1.69 in 1981), and Mike Scott the year before (2.22). Ryan also joined Richard (303 in 1978 and 313 in 1979) and Scott (306 in 1986) as the third Astros pitcher to lead the NL strikeouts. As league leader in strikeouts and ERA, Ryan contributed the third season in which an Astros pitcher claimed two-thirds of the pitching Triple Crown (Richard in 1979 and Scott in 1986).
This was the second season in franchise history that the Astros featured two or more hurlers who registered 200 or more whiffs, and first since 1969. Scott concluded the 1987 season as NL runner-up in strikeouts (233), tied for third in wins (16), and seventh with a 3.23 ERA.
Such was the magnitude of Ryan's accomplishment that he became the rare pitcher to lead his league in both ERA and strikeouts while not winning the Cy Young Award during the same season, instead placing fifth in the voting. Ryan joined Richard in 1979 as the second Astro with this distinction. Ryan became the oldest pitcher to the lead the league in strikeouts.
Ryan also led the major leagues in hits per nine innings surrendered (6.548 H/9) for the fourth time in his Astros career, setting a franchise record in this statistic. This was the ninth occasion in club history a Houston pitcher had led the league. Ryan was preceded by Don Wilson, J. R. Richard and Mike Scott..
With 53 stolen bases, Billy Hatcher became the first Astro since César Cedeño (61) in 1977 to pierce the 50-stolen base threshold. Hatcher's was the seventh such season in franchise history (Cedeño produced each of the first six).
Second baseman Bill Doran was voted for Houston Astros' team Most Valuable Player Award (MVP) for the second time, following his selection in 1985. He became the third repeat winner, following Rusty Staub (1966 and 1967), and teammate José Cruz (four times, 1977, 1980, 1983, and 1984).
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|-style=background:#bbbfff | style=";" |<span style="color:#072854;">âÂÂ</span> || || style=";" |<span style="color:#072854;">7:30</span><span style="color:#072854;">p.m.</span> <span style="color:#072854;">CDT</span> || colspan="9" style=";" |<span style="color:#072854;">58th All-Star Game in Oakland, CA</span> |-
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Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts
Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts
Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts