Tuesday April 13, 1982
. . . where the 1970s live forever!

MLB standings at the end of April 13, 1982

A.L. East
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
Milwaukee Brewers 4 3 1 0 .750 4020 0-03-13-1Won 2
Boston Red Sox 4 2 2 0 .5001.0 138 0-12-12-2Lost 1
New York Yankees 4 2 2 0 .5001.0 2219 0-22-02-2Won 2
Baltimore Orioles 5 2 3 0 .4001.5 2322 2-20-12-3Lost 2
Detroit Tigers 5 2 3 0 .4001.5 1521 0-02-32-3Won 1
Toronto Blue Jays 5 2 3 0 .4001.5 2340 2-30-02-3Lost 1
Cleveland Indians 3 1 2 0 .3331.5 2418 1-20-01-2Lost 1


A.L. West
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
Chicago White Sox 3 3 0 0 1.000 128 0-03-03-0Won 3
Kansas City Royals 5 3 2 0 .6001.0 2124 3-10-13-2Won 1
California Angels 7 4 3 0 .5711.0 3118 1-03-34-3Won 1
Minnesota Twins 7 4 3 0 .5711.0 2735 4-30-04-3Lost 1
Oakland A's 7 4 3 0 .5711.0 2830 3-31-04-3Won 2
Seattle Mariners 7 2 5 0 .2863.0 3033 0-02-52-5Lost 2
Texas Rangers 4 1 3 0 .2502.5 1932 0-21-11-3Lost 3


N.L. East
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
New York Mets 6 4 2 0 .667 3023 1-03-24-2Won 1
Montreal Expos 3 2 1 0 .6670.5 134 0-02-12-1Lost 1
St. Louis Cardinals 7 4 3 0 .5710.5 3931 2-12-24-3Won 3
Chicago Cubs 7 3 4 0 .4291.5 2730 2-31-13-4Lost 1
Pittsburgh Pirates 3 1 2 0 .3331.5 2119 0-01-21-2Lost 2
Philadelphia Phillies 5 1 4 0 .2002.5 825 1-30-11-4Lost 1


N.L. West
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
Atlanta Braves 7 7 0 0 1.000 4018 3-04-07-0Won 7
Los Angeles Dodgers 6 4 2 0 .6672.5 3319 3-11-14-2Won 1
San Francisco Giants 6 3 3 0 .5003.5 2128 1-02-33-3Won 3
Houston Astros 8 3 5 0 .3754.5 2245 3-20-33-5Lost 1
Cincinnati Reds 7 2 5 0 .2865.0 2732 2-50-02-5Lost 4
San Diego Padres 5 1 4 0 .2005.0 1320 0-21-21-4Lost 2



Today's scores and summaries:

Angels 4, Mariners 3 at California (night game):
In a game suspended by curfew in the 17th inning and completed the following day, the Angels won, 4-3, over the Mariners in 20 innings in the longest game ever played at Anaheim Stadium. It ended in the 20th inning when Don Baylor led off with a single, advanced to second on a sacrifice by Doug DeCinces and, after an intentional walk to Rick Burleson, scored on a single by Bob Boone. The Mariners had first tied the score at 2-2 in the ninth on an RBI double by Jim Essian with two out and went ahead, 3-2, in the top of the 15th on a bases-loaded walk. But the Angels came back in the bottom of the frame when Rod Carew doubled, reached third on a sacrifice bunt by Juan Beniquez and tallied on an infield hit by Baylor.

Brewers 9, Indians 8 at Cleveland (day game):
Charlie Moore lined a one-out single to score Paul Molitor in the top of the 10th inning and give the Brewers a 9-8 victory over the Indians. The game was deadlocked, 8-8, when Molitor laced a one-out triple off Dennis Lewallyn. Moore followed with a hit that dropped just in front of center fielder Rick Manning. Lewallyn had held Milwaukee scoreless since entering the game with two out in the fourth inning.

Royals 6, Orioles 5 at Kansas City (night game):
Bouncing back from a 5-0 deficit, the Royals shaded the Orioles, 6-5. K.C. tied the game with a five-run outburst in the fifth inning on an RBI single by George Brett, sacrifice fly by Amos Otis, run-scoring double by Hal McRae and two-run single by Jerry Martin. John Wathan singled in the sixth inning, took second on a two-out walk to Willie Aikens and scored on a single by Otis. Dan Quisenberry pitched the final three innings to notch the save.

A's 8, Twins 3 at Minnesota (night game):
Outslugging Minnesota in a battle of home runs, the A's rocked the Twins, 8-3. Dan Meyer drilled a leadoff round-tripper in the third inning and added another leading off the seventh. Davey Lopes connected with a mate aboard in the third and Jim Spencer led off the sixth with a four-ply wallop. Twins rookie Kent Hrbek delivered his fourth homer of the season, a 400-foot shot into the upper right field deck in the bottom of the fifth, and one out later rookie Randy Johnson hit his second homer of the year.

Yankees 6, Rangers 3 at Texas (night game):
Homers by Lou Piniella and Rick Cerone helped power the Yankees to a 6-3 verdict over the Rangers. New York scored three runs in the fourth inning on an RBI single by Bob Watson, bases-loaded walk to Cerone and fielder's choice grounder by Willie Randolph that produced a run. Piniella drilled a two-run homer in the fifth and Cerone connected with the bases empty in the eighth.

Tigers 4, Blue Jays 2 at Toronto (night game):
Pitching a four-hitter, Jack Morris hurled the Tigers to a 4-2 decision over the Blue Jays. The game was tied, 2-2, when John Wockenfuss began the eighth inning with an infield single. Lou Whitaker then bunted and Toronto pitcher Dale Murray, trying for the force at second, threw the ball into the outfield. It rolled to the wall in left-center, allowing Wockenfuss and Whitaker to come home.

Cardinals 4, Cubs 3 at Chicago (day game):
Bruce Sutter choked off a rally in the bottom of the ninth inning, enabling the Cardinals to edge the Cubs, 4-3. The Cubs had one run in, the bases loaded and one out when Sutter struck out pinch-hitter Keith Moreland and got Gary Woods on a groundout to end the game. The Redbirds broke a 1-1 tie in the fifth on an RBI single by Keith Hernandez, picked up another tally in the sixth on a run-scoring single by Lonnie Smith and garnered their final run in the ninth on a solo homer by Ozzie Smith.

Braves 8, Reds 5 at Cincinnati (night game):
Rallying for three runs in the seventh inning, the unbeaten Braves posted their seventh straight victory, an 8-5 decision over the Reds. Brett Butler led off the seventh with a walk and, after one out, Rufino Linares singled. A double by Bob Horner plated Butler to tie the score at 5-5 and an intentional walk to Dale Murphy loaded the bases. After the second out, Bruce Benedict singled to left to score Linares and Horner. The Braves added a run in the ninth on a sacrifice fly by Chris Chambliss.

Dodgers 9, Astros 5 at Houston (night game):
Scoring five runs in their first two times at bat, the Dodgers outlasted the Astros, 9-5. Los Angeles picked up three tallies in the opening frame on an RBI single by Steve Garvey, sacrifice fly by Ron Cey and run-scoring single by Steve Yeager. Dusty Baker clouted a two-run homer in the second. Bob Welch, although needing relief, received credit for his second victory of the season.

Mets 5, Phillies 2 at New York (day game):
Randy Jones beat the Phillies for the second time this season and surpassed his 1-8 output in 1981 already this season as the Mets won their home opener, 5-2. New York scored twice in the fourth inning when George Foster singled, Dave Kingman doubled and Hubie Brooks delivered both runners with a single. Kingman blasted a three-run homer in the fifth following a single by Bob Bailor and a walk to Foster.

Giants 3, Padres 2 at San Francisco (day game):
Pitching six strong innings, Alan Fowlkes notched his first major league victory as the Giants won their home opener over the Padres, 3-2. The Giants broke a 1-1 tie in the third inning on a two-run double by Reggie Smith. The Padres narrowed the margin to 3-2 in the sixth and threatened to score more but second baseman Joe Morgan choked off the rally with a sensational play on a smash by Luis Salazar.


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