Diamondbacks' season most memorable for misery

Updated: August 10, 2004, 10:03 AM ET
Associated Press

PHOENIX -- In a year that began with playoff talk, the Arizona Diamondbacks have been awful.

The Diamondbacks are so bad they got manager Bob Brenly fired before the All-Star break, and may have helped topple their chairman five weeks later.

Jerry Colangelo, ousted Friday and replaced by high-profile agent Jeff Moorad in a coup by four partners, said on-field performance had nothing to do with him agreeing to step down -- that it hinged on philosophical differences. But the young players on a mostly young team feel like they let the boss down.

"We don't think about that, but you can't help but think, like, when Brenly was let go," third baseman Chad Tracy said. "In the back of your mind, you're saying, 'You know, I had a lot to do with that.' And it's tough knowing that."

There have been a few highlights.

Ace Randy Johnson pitched a perfect game June 18 in Atlanta and became the fourth pitcher with 4,000 strikeouts 11 days later. Right fielder Danny Bautista went on a 21-game hitting streak in April, and Steve Finley had 23 home runs through July.

But Finley was traded to Los Angeles on July 31, dumping another big salary, and most of the season has been marked by injuries to key players -- like first baseman Richie Sexson and left fielder Luis Gonzalez -- and the struggles of youngsters trying to replace them.

The Diamondbacks have a major-league high 13 players on the disabled list -- including Sexson, Gonzalez and closer Matt Mantei on the 60-day DL. Brenly and successor Al Pedrique have been forced to dress 17 players with less than three years' experience.

Tracy, left fielder Luis Terrero, second baseman Scott Hairston and catchers Juan Brito and Koyie Hill are rookies who play regularly, and that has guaranteed mistakes -- only the New York Mets have committed more errors than the Diamondbacks' 95.

Brenly, who led the Diamondbacks to baseball's pinnacle with a World Series title in 2001, got the ax on July 2.

Before that, the team lost 12 consecutive games. Since then, the Diamondbacks extended the franchise record to 14 straight in a separate skid under Pedrique and posted the first 0-11 homestand in major league history. After Sunday's 11-4 loss to Atlanta, Arizona has lost four in a row, 23 of its last 27, and sits at another franchise-worst, 43 games under .500.

The Diamondbacks (35-78) are on pace to lose 112 games, and their tailspin has accelerated to .180 ball (9-41) in the last 50 -- leaving fans to speculate on their chances of reaching the 1962 expansion New York Mets' record of 120 losses.

The Detroit Tigers were 43-119 in 2003, but rebounded to respectability, and that gives veterans like utilityman Carlos Baerga reason for optimism.

"It happens to every team that has been successful," Baerga said. "You cannot go to the playoffs every year, and what happened this year is everybody got hurt. We got Sexson hurt, myself, Louie had surgery. We lost Curt Schilling (in a trade). It's not the same team."

The veterans agree that Arizona can come back, but only if the parts can be reassembled.

Johnson has a year to go on his contract, and the fact he was retained past the trade deadline makes him a rallying point.

"It makes the team a lot better, sure," said Sexson, who becomes a free agent after the season. "He's one of the best pitchers in the game, so it's nice to have him."

But the slugging first baseman, who will collect $8.6 million this year after playing in 24 games, wasn't ready to guarantee his return.

"There are some moves that are going to be made to make this team better," Sexson said. "You know, I like it here. That's a good thing. So stuff will work itself out."

Gonzalez said he would go all-out to persuade Sexson to re-sign.

"We showed a lot of promise when he was here," Gonzalez said. "All of us were starting to play well, and then his injury happened, and then Mantei and things like that, and then we kind of went south."


Copyright 2004 by The Associated Press

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index

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