The 1993 New York Mets season was the 32nd season in the history of the franchise. They played all of the home games at Shea Stadium. After a tumultuous season the year before, the Mets were looking to improve on their 72-90 record and perhaps get back into contention for the National League Eastern Division. Instead, the team performed significantly worse and sank further back in the standings, while the turmoil surrounding them continued into 1993.

For the first time since 1967, the Mets lost 100 games in a season. Their 59 wins were the least in a full 162 game season since 1964, when they won 53. Their 103 losses were the fifth most in franchise history, only trailing the first four teams the Mets fielded. They finished in seventh and last place in their division, their first last place finish since 1983, and recorded the worst record in baseball in 1993.

Background

The 1993 Mets entered the season after a disappointing 1992 campaign where their major player acquisitions, designed to help the team return to contending for a division title, largely fizzled out. Their biggest acquisition, outfielder Bobby Bonilla, did not perform up to fans' expectations and was frequently booed by the local fans. Pitcher Bret Saberhagen and second baseman Willie Randolph, two more major pickups in the previous offseason, were injured much of the season and largely ineffective. One of the few bright spots was Eddie Murray, who led the team with 91 RBI to go along with 16 home runs, but besides he and Bonilla (74 RBI, 19 home runs) no Met reached 50 RBI or 15 home runs. Murray's .261 average led the regulars, who all struggled to record hits; shortstop Dick Schofield, for instance, recorded over 400 plate appearances but could not manage to reach 100 hits. Howard Johnson, the 1991 National League home run and RBI champion, also battled injuries and saw his totals fall off significantly. The pitching staff was not much better off, as Dwight Gooden recorded his worst season as a major leaguer and the team left a hole in its rotation by trading away ace David Cone in August; Gooden's 12 wins led the team.

Manager Jeff Torborg, who had come off two consecutive winning seasons with the Chicago White Sox, found himself unable to maintain control of the team. He had a particularly testy relationship with outfielder Vince Coleman, which eventually resulted in the former stolen base king's suspension in September.

Offseason

The Mets were not as aggressive in pursuing other players as they had been in 1992 but made a splash in a trade, acquiring All-Star shortstop Tony Fernández in a trade with the San Diego Padres. Another significant acquisition was veteran starter Frank Tanana, who had spent the last eight years with the Detroit Tigers and would give the rotation an additional veteran to go with Gooden, Sid Fernandez, and Saberhagen. Neither man would be on the team by the end of the year, however, as Fernández was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays during the summer and Tanana was traded to the New York Yankees in September.

Moves

Regular season

The Mets first game of the season was reminiscent of the first game of their 1969 championship season, as they hosted an expansion team in their very first game in franchise history; this time, the Colorado Rockies.

Once again, trouble courted the Mets in 1993. After Bob Klapisch and John Harper's chronicle of the 1992 season, The Worst Team Money Could Buy, came out early in the season, Bobby Bonilla confronted Klapisch after a game and tried to provoke him into a physical confrontation. In June, Bret Saberhagen filled a Super Soaker water gun with bleach and shot it at reporters in the clubhouse. Vince Coleman once again found himself in trouble when he struck Dwight Gooden with a golf club while swinging it wildly in the clubhouse and injured him. Later in the season, while in the car of Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Eric Davis, Coleman tossed a lit firecracker toward a crowd of autograph seekers at Dodger Stadium, injuring three people when it exploded. This proved to be the last straw for the Mets and Coleman; he was placed on administrative leave following the incident and the team later announced that Coleman would not be with the team going forward.

After thirty-eight games, the Mets had decided enough was enough and relieved Torborg of his duties as manager. He became the third straight Mets skipper to be fired before the end of the season, following Davey Johnson and Bud Harrelson. Dallas Green, who had not managed a team since he was fired by the New York Yankees as their manager during the 1989 season but had been serving as a scout for the Mets, was promoted to replace him. With the team standing at 13–25, Green recorded only forty-six victories in his abbreviated first campaign and brought the Mets home with the worst record in baseball.

Al Harazin, who took over the general manager duties after Frank Cashen retired and was the man who made all of the moves that changed the franchise's direction in the 1992 offseason, resigned his position in June of 1993 after ownership decided to separate the business operation of the team from the baseball operation; Harazin was offered the position of vice president of business operation but declined, stating that it would feel "awkward" and that it would be "in the best interest for all concerned" for him to resign after thirteen years working for the Mets.[6] In July, the Mets hired Joe McIlvane to take over as general manager and executive vice president of baseball operations; he had previously worked with the team as a scout and assistant to Cashen before leaving to become general manager of the San Diego Padres, but had resigned earlier in the season after the team began selling off many of its star players (like the Mets, the Padres would also finish with more than 100 losses and end the season in last place in their division).

Despite the poor record, some positives came from the Mets' lineup. Bonilla returned to the All-Star Game and hit a career high 34 home runs. Second baseman Jeff Kent, in his first full year as a starter, added 21 home runs with 80 RBI. Eddie Murray tallied 27 home runs, led the team with a .285 average, and recorded 100 RBI, the first time he had done that since he was with the Baltimore Orioles in 1985. 1993 also saw the debut of Bobby Jones, a rookie who would become a frontline starter for the Mets in the coming years.

Pitchingwise, Gooden's 12 wins led the team, but his 15 losses were tied with Tanana for second on the team. Fernandez was the only Met starter to record a sub-3.00 ERA, coming in at 2.97 with a 5-6 record. Saberhagen managed a 7-7 record, but was lost during the summer due to a severe knee injury. John Franco was again limited by injuries as the Mets' closer, recording just 10 saves in 35 appearances. The only Met to record a winning record as a pitcher was Dave Telgheder, who finished with a 6-2 mark over 24 appearances with seven starts despite having a 4.76 ERA.

Anthony Young

One of the stranger stories of the 1993 season was the losing streak recorded by pitcher Anthony Young. After winning his first two decisions of the 1992 season, Young would lose his final fourteen of the year. He picked up right where he left off in 1993, dropping thirteen straight games where he factored into the decision[7] and breaking a record that was held by Boston Braves pitcher Cliff Curtis, who lost 23 straight decisions over the course of the 1910 and 1911 seasons.

Young's losing streak was snapped at 27 on July 28 against the expansion Florida Marlins. Young allowed an unearned run in the top of the ninth to give the Marlins a 4–3 lead.[7] The Mets scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth against closer Bryan Harvey to win the game 5–4. The win was the only one Young recorded in 1993, and he went on to finish with a team high sixteen losses in thirty-nine appearances with ten starts.

Season standings

NL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Philadelphia Phillies 9765 .599 5229 4536
Montreal Expos 9468 .580 3 5526 3942
St. Louis Cardinals 8775 .537 10 4932 3843
Chicago Cubs 8478 .519 13 4338 4140
Pittsburgh Pirates 7587 .463 22 4041 3546
Florida Marlins 6498 .395 33 3546 2952
New York Mets 59103 .364 38 2853 3150

Record vs. opponents

Team ATL CHC CIN COL FLA HOU LAD MON NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL
Atlanta 7–510–313–07–58–58–57–59–36–67–59–47–66–6
Chicago 5–77–58–46–74–87–55–8–18–57–65–88–46–68–5
Cincinnati 3–105–79–47–56–75–84–86–64–88–49–42–115–7
Colorado 0–134–84–97–511–27–63–96–63–98–46–73–105–7
Florida 5–77–65–75–73–95–75–84–94–96–77–54–84–9
Houston 5–88–47–62–119–39–45–711–15–77–58–53–106–6
Los Angeles 5–85–78–56–77–54–96–68–42–108–49–47–66–6
Montreal 5–78–5–18–49–38–57–56–69–46–78–510–23–97–6
New York 3–95–86–66–69–41–114–84–93–104–95–74–85–8
Philadelphia 6-66–78–49–39–47–510–27–610–37–66–64–88–5
Pittsburgh 5–78–54–84–87–65–74–85–89–46–79–35–74–9
San Diego 4–94–84–97–65–75–84–92–107–56–63–93–107–5
San Francisco 6–76–611–210–38–410–36–79–38–48–47–510–34–8
St. Louis 6–65–87–57–59–46–66–66–78–55–89–45–78–4

Opening Day starters

Notable transactions

Roster

1993 New York Mets
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; OPS = OBP + SLG (On base + slugging percentage)

Player Pos G AB H Avg. HR RBI OPS
Todd HundleyC13041795.2281153.626
Eddie Murray1B154610174.28527100.792
Jeff Kent2B140496134.2702180.765
Tim BogarSS7820550.244325.652
Howard Johnson3B7223556.238726.732
Vince ColemanLF92373104.279225.691
Ryan ThompsonCF8028872.2501126.747
Bobby BonillaRF139502133.2653487.874

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Joe Orsulak134409116.284835
Jeromy Burnitz8626364.2431338
Chico Walker11521348.225519
Dave Gallagher9920155.274628
Charlie O'Brien6718848.255423
Tony Fernández4817339.225114
Jeff McKnight10516442.256213
Kevin Baez5212623.18307
Darrin Jackson318717.19517
Doug Saunders286714.20900
Butch Huskey13416.14603
Ced Landrum22195.26301
Tito Navarro12171.05901
Wayne Housie18163.18801

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Dwight Gooden29208.212153.45149
Frank Tanana29183.07154.48104
Eric Hillman27145.0293.9760
Bret Saberhagen19139.1773.2993
Sid Fernandez18119.2562.9381
Bobby Jones961.2243.6535

Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Pete Schourek41128.15125.9672
Anthony Young39100.11163.7762
Dave Telgheder2475.2624.7635

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G W L SV ERA SO
John Franco3543105.2029
Jeff Innis672334.1136
Mike Maddux583853.6057
Mike Draper291104.2516
Mauro Gozzo100112.576
Paul Gibson81105.1912
Josías Manzanillo60003.0011
Jeff Kaiser600011.575
Mickey Weston40007.942
Kenny Greer11000.002

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Norfolk Tides International League Clint Hurdle
AA Binghamton Mets Eastern League Steve Swisher
A St. Lucie Mets Florida State League John Tamargo
A Capital City Bombers South Atlantic League Ron Washington
Short-Season A Pittsfield Mets New York–Penn League Howie Freiling
Rookie Kingsport Mets Appalachian League Ron Gideon
Rookie GCL Mets Gulf Coast League Junior Roman

[13]

References