The 1999 Houston Astros season was the 38th season for the Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise located in Houston, Texas, their 35th as the Astros, 38th in the National League (NL), sixth in the NL Central division, and 35th and final season at The Astrodome. The Astros entered the season as two-time defending NL Central champions with a 102âÂÂ60 record, setting a then-club record for wins, as well their first-ever 100-win season. However, the Astros' season ended in a 3-games-to-1 defeat by the San Diego Padres in the National League Division Series (NLDS), also the NL pennant winners.
On April 6, pitcher Shane Reynolds made his fourth consecutive Opening Day start for the Astros, who hosted the Chicago Cubs and won, 4âÂÂ2. In the amateur draft, the Astros' first round selection was outfielder Mike Rosamond at 42nd overall.
Four Astros represented the club, playing for the National League at the MLB All-Star Game: first baseman Jeff Bagwell, and pitchers Mike Hampton, José Lima, and Billy Wagner. This was the fourth All-Star appearance for Bagwell, and first for each of Hampton, Lima and Wagner. Former pitcher Nolan Ryan was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Ryan spent nine of his 27 MLB seasons with Houston, from 1980 to 1988. Following the season, Ryan was also announced as a selectee to the MLB All-Century Team.
The Astros won their third consecutive NL Central division title on October 3, the final day of playing regular season games in The Astrodome before a sellout crowd. Fans broke the franchise attendance record for a second consecutive season at over 2.7 million. For the first time in franchise history, Houston claimed three consecutive division titles while qualifying for the in three straight seasons; the next time they accomplished this occurred exactly two decades later, in 2017, 2018, and 2019. This was the Astros' sixth division title and sixth playoff appearance in franchise history.
However, the Astros' season ended in a 3-games-to-1 defeat by the Atlanta Braves in that year's NLDS. It was their third consecutive NLDS loss, and the second in three seasons to Atlanta, who ended their season as the NL pennant winners. In fact, through the point, the Astros had never won playoff round.
Following the season, Hampton, the NL leader in wins (22) and third-place finisher in earned run average (ERA, 2.90), was recognized with the Players Choice Award for NL Outstanding Pitcher and as The Sporting News NL Pitcher of the Year, Wagner won the Rolaids Relief Man Award, and Bagwell and Hampton won Silver Slugger Awards.
The Astros relocated the following season to Enron Field, later rebranded as Minute Maid Park, also in downtown Houston.
The Astros concluded the 1998 campaign as National League (NL) Central division champions with a record, the first 100-win season in franchise history. It was their second consecutive division title and fifth overall in franchise history. The Astros' campaign ended in a three-games-to-one defeat by the San Diego Padres in the best-of-five National League Division Series (NLDS). The Astros established a then-club record with 166 home runs. Craig Biggio became the first, and so far only, Major Leaguer to amass 200 hits, 50 doubles, 20 home runs, and 50 stolen bases all within the same season. Randy Johnson became the seventh pitcher since 1900 to amass multiple 300-strikeout seasons.
In 1999, the Astros played their final season in the Astrodome as their new stadium was being prepared for play to begin in the 2000 season. The ballpark was first named as Enron Field on April 9, 1999, with naming rights sold to the Houston energy and financial trading company in a 30-year, $100 million deal. Astros management faced a public relations nightmare when the energy corporation went bankrupt in the midst of one of the biggest corporate scandals in American history in 2001, and they bought back the remainder of Enron's thirty years of naming rights for $2.1 million, renaming the ballpark as Astros Field on February 7, 2002. The field was unofficially known as "The Field Formerly Known As Enron" by fans and critics alike, in the wake of the Enron scandal. On June 5, 2002, Houston-based Minute Maid, the fruit-juice subsidiary of Coca-Cola, acquired the naming rights to the stadium for 28 years at a price exceeding $100 million.
Based on its downtown location next to the old Union Station buildings, one of the suggested names (and nicknames) is the Ballpark at Union Station, or the BUS. During its days as Enron Field, it was also dubbed "Ten-Run" or "Home Run" Field due to its cozy left-field dimensions. In keeping with this theme while paying homage to its current sponsor, the nickname "The Juice Box" is colloquially used today.
The Astros hosted the Chicago Cubs for Opening Day, April 6. As part of the festivities to commemorate the final Opening Day at the Astrodome, former astronaut Neil Armstrong spun the ceremonial first pitch. This was also Chicago's first Opening Day in Houston since the Colt .45s' franchise Inauguration Day, April 10, 1962, during which the Colts triumphed, 11âÂÂ2. Armstrong was flanked by 70 astronauts on either side of the infield, and delivered the pitch to Craig Biggio. Shane Reynolds made his fourth consecutive Opening Day start opposite the Cubs' Steve Trachsel. In the second inning, Mark Grace homered off Reynolds for his first of three hits and early 1âÂÂ0 Cubs' lead. In the bottom of the inning, Tony Eusebio doubled and scored on a single by Reynolds. In the bottom of the fourth inning, Carl Everett and Richard Hidalgo went deep to give the Astros a 3âÂÂ2 lead. In the fifth, Everett lined a single to plate Jeff Bagwell for a 4âÂÂ2 Astros lead and the final tally of the contest. Reynolds breezed through six innings on 75 pitches, whiffing seven. Scott Elarton relieved and spun two shutout frames. Billy Wagner fanned Benito Santiago and José Hernández to polish off the triumph for the save and the win for Reynolds. This defeat dropped the Cubs' all-time record at the Astrodome to .
On the 35th and final anniversary of the opening of the Astrodome, April 9, 1965, Tim Bogar singled home Richard Hidalgo for the winning run to defeat the Milwaukee Brewers, 3âÂÂ2. Starting pitcher Sean Bergman homered but it was Scott Elarton who notched the victory relief.
On April 11, Craig Biggio scored his 1,000th run along with two hits to lead a 5âÂÂ2 win over the Brewers. Shane Reynolds was the winning pitcher.
On April 21, Jeff Bagwell hit three home runs in a 10âÂÂ3 win against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field, his second career three-home run game. The second home run surpassed Jimmy Wynn as the Astros' all-time home run leader at 224, while his six runs batted in (RBI) tied a career-high. Bagwell joined Glenn Davis as Astros with multiple three-home run games (September 10, 1987, and June 1, 1990).
Houston staged an offensive onslaught on May 11, routing the Pittsburgh Pirates 19âÂÂ8 at the Astrodome. This matched a 1995 explosion against the Chicago Cubs for the club record for runs, which stood until the 2015 season. The Astros' batting order cranked 10 extra-base hitsâÂÂall doubles. Leading the way, Bagwell reached base 5 times, including 2 hits for doubles and 3 bases on balls, scored 4 runs and had 4 RBI. Carl Everett added 5 RBI, and Ken Caminiti also had 4 RBI. Sean Bergman was the winning pitcher after having allowing 11 hits and 6 runs over 5 innings. The doubles tally broke a club record, which stood until another banner offensive performance, when they collected 11 doubles en route to defeating the Seattle Mariners, 21âÂÂ1, on September 8, 2019.
During a 10âÂÂ5 win over the San Francisco Giants on May 15, second baseman Craig Biggio powered a 4-for-4 performance, including a three-run home run. Bagwell also slugged a three-run home run in the effort.
Bagwell connected for another three-home run game on June 9 against the Chicago White Sox. He was also a grand slam short of hitting for the "home run cycle," with a solo home run, a three-run home run, and a two-run home run, respectively. The two three-home run games made him the only player to accomplish this feat at two different stadiums in Chicago in the same season. Hence, Bagwell became the first Astro with three such games, breaking a tie with Glenn Davis.
On June 13, manager Larry Dierker collapsed in the dugout mid-game versus the San Diego Padres due to a grand mal seizure. He was hospitalized and required brain surgery, but recovered well to miss just 27 games. The game was suspended with Houston leading, 4âÂÂ0. In spite of losing Dierker, two other coaches to lengthy absences, and 14 players to the disabled list (DL), the Astros kept the competitive momentum going throughout the season.
Astros general manager Gerry Hunsicker promoted bench coach Matt Galante to serve as interim manager of the Astros in Dierker's stead. Galante, who had been in the organization since 1980 and was bench coach for one year, led the team to a performance result of . It was during this time that the team absorbed the absences of other coaching staff members on medical leave. First base coach José Cruz was on leave after an irregular heart beat. Hitting coach Tommy McCraw underwent treatment for prostate cancer.
Four Astros selected to fortify the National League roster at the MLB All-Star Game, hosted at Fenway Park in Boston. It was the fourth selection for Bagwell, who became the first Astro to make the starting lineup as the designated hitter, and first for each of the pitchers Mike Hampton, José Lima, and Billy Wagner. Bagwell collected a single off David Cone in three at bats, while Lima (1 inning pitched), Hampton (), and Wagner () each tossed a scoreless outing. However, the American League (AL) triumphed, 4âÂÂ1.
Lance Berkman made his major league debut on July 16, entering during the bottom of the seventh as a pinch hitter for starting pitcher Scott Elarton. Southpaw Justin Thompson induced Berkman to ground out into a double play with the score tied, 1âÂÂ1. However, Craig Biggio delivered the walk-off single that plated Glen Barker for a 2âÂÂ1 triumph over the Detroit Tigers.
On July 23, the Astros and Padres resumed the contest interrupted by Dierker's seizure. Reliever Billy Wagner surrendered a pair of home runs to Phil Nevin and Rubén Rivera. However, the Astros held on for a 4âÂÂ3 win.
Bagwell crushed his second career grand slam on July 28, capping a 16âÂÂ8 thrashing of the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Bagwell's victim was Mike Porzio in the top of seventh. However, during an all-round hit parade, Houston piled on 21 hits to Colorado's 18. Derek Bell had a four-hit game for Houston, Tony Eusebio logged three with a double, Biggio doubled, and both Russ Johnson and Daryle Ward went deep. Moreover, starter Mike Hampton (14âÂÂ3), in spite of ceding 5 runs on 13 hits to the Rockies, stroked his third triple among three hits and two RBI at the plate, helping to pave his own way to victory. Mercifully, games are concluded when the scored is not tied after nine innings. Ignited by five runs in the fourth, the Astros tallied in each of the final six innings, while the Rockies scored in each of the final five frames.
On July 31, Berkman launched his first two major league home runs during an 8âÂÂ5 triumph over San Diego at Qualcomm Stadium. The premier shot, on an Andy Ashby offering, broke a scoreless tie in the top of the fourth. Berkman's second was off Dan Miceli in the seventh. Berkman collected three hits and a stolen base. Bagwell also homered twice.
To cap an extra inning marathon on August 20, Ken Caminiti crushed his second homer of the game, tipping the final score to Houston, 6âÂÂ4, in the 16th over the Florida Marlins. The contest featured an NL-record 16 bases on balls coaxed by the Astros hitters, while they also whiffed 21 times. Meanwhile, Bagwell drew a major-league-record six free passes, including twice intentionally.
During the August 31 contest, Caminiti launched the final grand slam hit at the Astrodome, with Houston hosting the New York Mets. The big knock proved crucial, as all the scoring transpired after the sixth inning. Caminiti's two out error in the top of the eighth injected new life into the Mets, and John Olerud leveraged the opportunity by homering to tie the game, 2âÂÂ2. In the bottom of the eighth, Turk Wendell (3âÂÂ2) issued the intentional walk to Bagwell to face Caminiti instead, who launched the grand slam to put the Astros ahead, 6âÂÂ2. Meanwhile, Lima (18âÂÂ7) tossed eight smooth innings, with just two unearned runs allowed, while Wagner closed out the contest with a clean ninth.
On September 19, Billy Wagner converted his 37th save, breaking the single-season franchise mark held by Doug Jones (1992). Wagner closed out 4âÂÂ3 triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals. Starter Chris Holt (5âÂÂ13) earned the win with a quality start (6 innings, 3 earned runs), despite Mark McGwire taking him deep for home runs 58 and 59. Craig Biggio collected three hits, including his 55th double and 15th home run. Jeff Bagwell also crushed his 42nd home run while obtained his 120th RBI.
During a Friday night contest on September 24 at Milwaukee County Stadium, Bill Spiers, stationed in right field, endured an ambush by a fan who had crawled down the adjacent wall. On a dare from his peers, the assailant, a 23-year-old Berley Visgar tackled Spiers from behind, toppling him, and delivered a bloody nose, a welt under the left eye and induced whiplash. Astros starting pitcher Mike Hampton immediately saw what was unfolding and sprinted to his right fielder's aidâÂÂarriving before anyone elseâÂÂand pummeled Visgar with several kicks before being separated by teammates and Milwaukee Brewers players.
On October 2, Lima and Wagner combined to hurl the final shutout pitched at the Astrodome.
The Astros won their final regular-season contest at the Astrodome on October 3, 9âÂÂ4 over the Los Angeles Dodgers, while also clinching a third consecutive National League Central division title in record-setting fashion and with style. Hampton became the first 22-game winner in club history, while Biggio extended his club-record 56th double. Daryle Ward also doubled, driving in runs with the bases loaded in the first inning to begin the scoring. Tony Eusebio secured the final regular-season putout at the Astrodome.
Following the game, members of the 1965 club appeared and were honored along with an All-Time Astros Team before a jubilant crowd. The first time in franchise history the Astros had won three consecutive division titles, they made history before yet another sellout crowd. In a season where standing-room only access became more commonplace than ever, Astros fans turned in yet another record-setting year of attendance, with 2.7 million, shattering the previous record set just the year prior, at 2.45 million.
Incorporating the 102-win campaign of the year prior, these Astros editions matched the 1979 (89 wins) and 1980 (93) outfits as the second period in franchise annals in which Houston won 89 or more contests successively.
Having won a third division titleâÂÂall consecutivelyâÂÂDierker became the first manager to guide his rosters to these feats for the Astros, surpassing Bill Virdon (1980 and 1981 second-half division winner). The franchise record of three successive division titles was matched when the 2017, 2018, and 2019 squads each claimed an American League (AL) West title, and remained as the franchise record until Houston captured four successive AL West titles from 2021 to 2024.
This Astros team established club records for home runs with 168 (surpassed 166 the previous season), 728 bases on balls (699 in 1969), and scored 823 runs which ranked second to the 1998 team (856).
The accomplishments of the club two decades later and beyond notwithstanding, Dierker maintained a share of the club record as manager to lead his club to division titlesâÂÂhe was equaled by A. J. Hinch, who guided the 2017âÂÂ2019 clubs, and Dusty Baker, leader of the 2021âÂÂ2023 editions. In 2024, Joe Espada took over for Baker.
Having hit 42 home runs and stolen 30 bases, Bagwell repeated to be in the 30 home runsâÂÂ30 stolen bases club, (first in 1997), and he was the first Astro to accomplish such an achievement. Bagwell also drew 149 bases on balls to eclipse the franchise record of 148 sustained by Jimmy Wynn in 1969. The 149 free passes led the major leagues, as well as Bagwell's 331 times on base, 143 runs scored and powerâÂÂspeed number of 35.0.
Biggio became the twelfth Major Leaguer and first since George Kell (Detroit Tigers) in 1950 to assemble at least 56 doubles, and first National Leaguer since Joe Medwick (1936 and 1937). In addition to entrenching the club record with 56 doubles, Biggio became the third Astro to headline the National League, and his club-record third time doing so, previously in 1994 and 1998. The seventh occasion by an Astros hitter, those preceding Biggio included Rusty Staub (1967), César Cedeño (twice, 1971 and 1972), and Bagwell (1996).
Also for the first time in franchise history, with Hampton (22 wins) and Lima (21), the Astros sported a 20 game-winner duo, the sixth and seventh pitchers in franchise history to win 20 in a season. The third in a succession of Astros hurlers who led the league the in wins over decennial intervals, Hampton joined Niekro in 1979 and Scott in 1989 (20). Dierker, who became the Astros' first-ever 20-game winning pitcher in 1969, ranked fifth in the league that season.
Hampton was recognized with The Sporting News NL Pitcher of the Year Award, the third Astro to receive this honor, following Joe Niekro in 1979 and Mike Scott in 1986.
Bagwell was awarded his third career Silver Slugger Award, extending his club record for first baseman. Meanwhile Hampton, who also claimed a Silver Slugger, became the first in club history to win among pitchers. It was the third successive campaign that Houston had boasted at least two Silver Sluggers, and fourth overall (1983).
Closer Billy Wagner, whose 39 saves established a then-club record (surpassing 36 saves converted by Doug Jones in 1992), was recognized with the NL Rolaids Relief Man Award. Wagner became Houston's first hurler be named with an annual reliever award since Jones, when, also in 1992, he received The Sporting News NL Fireman of the Year honors.
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
Atlanta wins series, 3-1
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