2005 in baseball - Geography
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2005 in baseball

This year in baseball: 1999 - 2000 - 2001 - 2002 - 2003 - 2004 - 2005

Contents

Calendar

Events

January-March

  • January 18 - The New York Mets signed Carlos Beltrán to play center field for the next seven years. The team will be paying him for the next 14. Beltran's deal contains $22 million in deferred salary that will be paid out in the seven years after the contract expires. He will be 41 by the time he receives all the money, which will be paid each July 1 starting in 2012 in yearly installments of $3,142,857 plus interest that will accrue at the rate of 1.7175 percent annually.
  • February 6 - At Mazatlan, Mexico, Francisco Campos turned in another brilliant outing and Mexican champion Águilas de Mazatlán (Mazatlan Eagles) held on in the final game, edging the Dominican Republic 4-3 to win the 56th Caribbean World Series. The title is just Mexico’s fifth since joining the competition in 1970, the second in the last four years, but its first since hosting the series. Campos allowed just three hits --two infield hits and a bunt single-- and a run over his first eight innings of work, striking out 11. Previouly, Campos handcuffed the Venezuelan champion Tigres de Aragua (Aragua Tigers) 4-0 in the series opener. He allowed just three hits over eight innings and struck out 10. Campos was voted the Series MVP.
  • February 8 - Magglio Ordóñez, the last remaining premier free agent of the offseason, and the Detroit Tigers agreed to a $75 million, five-year contract, a deal with two option years that could raise the total to $105 million over seven seasons. The Tigers structured a contract for Ordóñez that gives the team some protection if he is hampered by injuries. He gets a $6 million signing bonus and a $6 million salary this year. His contract calls for a $15 million salary in 2006, $12 million in 2007, $15 million in 2008 and $18 million in 2009. Detroit has a $15 million option for 2010 with a $3 million buyout, and a $15 million option for 2011 with no buyout. In addition, Ordóñez's salary in each of the option years would become guaranteed if he has 135 starts or 540 plate appearances in the previous season, or 270 starts or 1,080 plate appearances in the previous two seasons. If his 2010 salary becomes guaranteed under this provision, it would be at $18 million. The 2011 salary would be $15 million.
  • February 16 - Baseball union signed an agreement calling for international drug-testing rules during a 16-team World Cup tournament in the 2006 spring training. Each team will select a provisional roster of 60 players 45 days before the start of the tournament, and players will be covered by the drug-testing rules until the end of the competition. The deal, signed by the union, the commissioner’s office and the International Baseball Federation, states that IBAF rules will cover the frequency of testing before and during the tournament, the list of prohibited substances, the procedures for taking samples and the laboratories used. More substances are banned by the IBAF than in major league baseball.

April

  • April 6 - Brad Wilkerson of the Washington Nationals hit for the cycle in the Nationals' first win since moving to Washington D.C., 7-3 against the Philadelphia Phillies. He became the twentieth player to hit for the cycle twice. One day after, Wilkerson continued his torrid hitting going 4-for-5, as the Nationals completed its first series by winning two of three against the Phillies.
  • April 14 - On a historic night at RFK Stadium, Liván Hernández and Vinny Castilla were up to the task. Hernández carried a one-hitter into the ninth inning and Castilla fell a single shy of the cycle as the Washington Nationals posted a 5-3 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks in the first major league game in Washington D.C. in more than 33 years. After beginning their first season in the nation's capital with a nine-game road trip, the Nationals opened the first game at RFK Stadium since the departure of the Washington Senators with former pitcher Joe Grzenda handing a ball to president George W. Bush, who threw the ceremonial first pitch. Grzenda tossed the final pitch in Senators history against the New York Yankees on September 30, 1971.
  • April 15 - Sammy Sosa hit his first home run at Camden Yards, giving him homers in 42 different ballparks. Currently seventh on the all-time list with 576 home runs, Sosa and Miguel Tejada had three RBI apiece as the Orioles defeated the Yankees 10-1.

Deaths

January-March

April

See also

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08-19-2006 14:53:14
 
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