2000 Los Angeles Dodgers season

The 2000 Los Angeles Dodgers season was the 111th for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 43rd season in Los Angeles, California. In 2000, the team set a club record for home runs with 211, led by Gary Sheffield, who tied Duke Snider's single-season club mark with 43. Eric Karros became the L.A. Dodger all-time leader with his 229th home run and Dave Hansen set a Major League record with seven pinch-hit home runs. Kevin Brown led the league in E.R.A. with 2.58 and rookie pitcher Matt Herges started the season 8–0, the first pitcher since Fernando Valenzuela to open the season with eight straight victories. The Dodgers won 86 games, but failed to make the postseason, finishing second in the Western Division of the National League. Manager Davey Johnson was fired after the season and replaced with bench coach Jim Tracy.

2000 Los Angeles Dodgers
Major League affiliations
Location
Results
Record86–76 (.531)
Divisional place2nd
Other information
OwnersFox Entertainment Group
PresidentBob Graziano
General managersKevin Malone
ManagersDavey Johnson
Local televisionFox Sports Net West 2; KTLA (5)
Local radioXTRA Sports 1150
Vin Scully, Ross Porter, Rick Monday
KWKW
Jaime Jarrín, Pepe Yñiguez
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Offseason

Regular season

Season standings

NL West W L Pct. GB Home Road
San Francisco Giants 9765 0.599 55–26 42–39
Los Angeles Dodgers 8676 0.531 11 44–37 42–39
Arizona Diamondbacks 8577 0.525 12 47–34 38–43
Colorado Rockies 8280 0.506 15 48–33 34–47
San Diego Padres 7686 0.469 21 41–40 35–46

Record vs. opponents


Source: NL Standings Head-to-Head
Team ARI ATL CHC CIN COL FLA HOU LAD MIL MON NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL AL
Arizona 3–65–42–57–64–56–17–64–54–52–78–17–29–46–75–46–9
Atlanta 6–34–52–55–46–65–47–26–36–77–68–55–28–16–33–411–7
Chicago 4–55–44–84–51–65–73–66–74–52–56–33–93–54–53–108–7
Cincinnati 5–25–28–46–33–67–54–55–8–16–35–43–47–64–53–67–67–8
Colorado 6–74–55–43–64–55–44–94–57–23–66–37–27–66–75–36–6
Florida 5–46–66–16–35–43–52–73–47–66–69–45–42–73–63–68–9
Houston 1–64–57–55–74–55–33–67–64–52–55–410–32–71–86–66–9
Los Angeles 6–72–76–35–49–47–26–33–45–34–55–44–58–57–53–66–9
Milwaukee 5–43–67–68–5–15–44–36–74–34–52–72–57–52–73–65–76–9
Montreal 5–47–65–43–62–76–75–43–55–43–95–73–43–63–62–57–11
New York 7–26–75–24–56–36–65–25–47–29–36–77–23–63–56–39–9
Philadelphia 1–85–83–64–33–64–94–54–55–27–57–63–62–52–72–79–9
Pittsburgh 2–72–59–36–72–74–53–105–45–74–32–76–37–22–64–86–9
San Diego 4–91–85–35–46–77–27–25–87–26–36–35–22–75–70–95–10
San Francisco 7–63–65–46–37–66–38–15–76–36–35–37–26–27–55–48–7
St. Louis 4–54–310–36–73–56–36–66–37–55–23–67–28–49–04–57–8

Opening Day lineup

Opening Day Starters
NamePosition
Devon WhiteCenter fielder
Mark GrudzielanekSecond baseman
Gary SheffieldLeft fielder
Shawn GreenRight fielder
Eric KarrosFirst baseman
Todd HundleyCatcher
Adrián BeltréThird baseman
Kevin ElsterShortstop
Kevin BrownStarting pitcher

Notable transactions

Roster

2000 Los Angeles Dodgers

Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Starting Pitchers stats

Note: G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; IP = Innings pitched; W/L = Wins/Losses; ERA = Earned run average; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts; CG = Complete games

NameGGSIPW/LERABBSOCG
Kevin Brown 3333230.013-62.58472165
Chan Ho Park3434226.018-103.271242173
Darren Dreifort3232197.212-94.16871641
Carlos Perez 3022144.05-85.5633640
Éric Gagné 2019101.14-65.1560790
Ismael Valdez9840.00-36.0813290
Orel Hershiser10624.21-513.1414130
Luke Prokopec5321.01-13.009120
Mike Judd114.00-115.75350

Relief Pitchers stats

Note: G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; IP = Innings pitched; W/L = Wins/Losses; ERA = Earned run average; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts; SV = Saves

NameGGSIPW/LERABBSOSV
Jeff Shaw60057.13-44.24163927
Terry Adams66084.16-93.5239562
Matt Herges594110.211-33.1740751
Mike Fetters51050.06-23.2425405
Antonio Osuna46067.13-63.7435700
Onan Masaoka29027.01-14.0015270
Alan Mills18025.22-14.2116181
Gregg Olson13017.20-15.097150
Jamie Arnold206.20-04.05530
Al Reyes606.20-00.00180
Jeff Williams705.20-015.88830
Trever Miller202.10-023.14310

Batting Stats

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; Avg. = Batting average; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases

NamePosGABAvg.RHHRRBISB
Todd HundleyC90299.284498524700
Chad KreuterC80212.26432566281
Paul Lo DucaC/LF/RF/3B3465.246616280
Adam MelhuseC11.00000000
Eric Karros1B155584.25084146311064
Mark Grudzielanek2B/SS148617.27910117274912
Alex CoraSS/2B109353.23839844324
Adrián Beltré3B/SS138510.29071148208512
Kevin ElsterSS/3B/1B80220.227295014320
Dave Hansen1B/3B/LF102121.28918358260
José VizcaínoSS/3B/2B/1B4093.204919041
Jim Leyritz1B/C/LF/RF4160.200312180
Chris Donnels3B/LF2734.294810490
Jeff Branson2B/3B/SS1817.23534000
Hiram Bocachica2B810.30023000
Shawn GreenRF/CF162610.26998164249924
Todd HollandsworthCF/LF/RF81261.234426182411
Gary SheffieldLF141501.325105163431094
Tom GoodwinCF/LF56211.251295311116
Devon WhiteCF47158.26626424103
F.P. SantangeloCF/LF/RF/2B81142.1971928193
Gerónimo BerroaLF/RF/1B2431.25828050
Bruce AvenLF920.25025240
Shawn GilbertLF/CF1520.15053130
Mike MetcalfeCF/LF/2B412.08301000

2000 Awards

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Albuquerque Dukes Pacific Coast League Tom Gamboa
AA San Antonio Missions Texas League Rick Burleson
High A San Bernardino Stampede California League Dino Ebel
High A Vero Beach Dodgers Florida State League John Shoemaker
A-Short Season Yakima Bears Northwest League Butch Hughes
Rookie Great Falls Dodgers Pioneer League Juan Bustabad
Rookie DSL Dodgers
DSL Dodgers 2
Dominican Summer League

Major League Baseball Draft

The Dodgers selected 50 players in this draft. Of those, eight of them would eventually play Major League baseball.

The first round pick was right-handed pitcher Ben Diggins from the University of Arizona. He was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers in 2002 and appeared in five games with them as a starting pitcher that season with an 0–4 record and an 8.63 ERA. Those would be the only Major League games he would appear in as he was out of baseball after a few more years in the minors.

The second round pick, pitcher Joel Hanrahan from Norwalk High School would be the only moderately successful player in this draft class. He became a two-time All-Star as a relief pitcher with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Catcher Koyie Hill (round 4) would catch on as a backup catcher for several teams, most notably the Chicago Cubs.

References

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