Opening Day Is Almost Here, It's Baseball Trivia Time

I find the won-loss records by franchise on this page fascinating, for some reason. A number of teams are inching up to join the Giants and Cubs with 10,000 wins. The Braves look like the next team behind the Phillies to get 10,000 losses.

Here’s mine: which two of these franchises have .500 records for their entire history: A’s, Blue Jays, Mets, Pirates, Royals, Tigers, or Twins?

Mike Mussina lost both in the 9th. Was the other one Randy Johnson?
Q: At age 38, he was the oldest player to have a 20 homerun/20 steals season.

Wow, I would have thought the Mets had crossed over into an all-time winning record by now. But then, I guess it takes four 90-70 seasons to make up for 1962 all by itself.

WAG: Davey Lopes

Mussina is correct, Randy Johnson isn’t. The other is

Tom Browning, who threw a perfect game and then lost one in the 9th to Dickie Thon at Veteran’s Stadium, with a young Jimmy Chitwood in attendance

As to the 20/20 guy, is it Sheffield?

I guess Ricky Henderson,Paul Molitor and Bonds. I will narrow it later as I try to remember that kind of September.

What player had base hits for 2 different teams in 2 different cities on the same day? (I was at the second one, not that that helps you).

Joel Youngblood. August 4, 1982, for the Mets at Wrigley, then for the Expos at the Vet that night.

Even more amazing about that feat: both hits were off future Hall of Famers.

All good guesses and all wrong. The answer is very surprising - I had to give up and Google this one and never would have guessed it.

THIS one I finally know.

It wasn’t long ago, it was on a VERY prominent team, and it was the player’s last season.

(Think pinstripes.)

I first heard this question back in the late Eigties; I wasn’t sure if the answer was true then, and if it was, I’m not sure it REMAINS true today.

“Of all pitchers with 20 or more decisions against the New York Yankees, who has the best winning percentage?”

The SUPPOSED answer was Babe Ruth (who had a 17-5 record against the Yankees when he pitched for the Red Sox). That question gained popularity at the time because screwballer Teddy Higuera (who used to KILL the Yankees back in the Eighties) was supposedly on the verge of eclipsing that mark.

So, does anybody know whether Babe Ruth WAS the right answer at the time? Or whether he’s STILL the right answer now?

Paul O’neill, in 2001, his final season.

I watched a lot of his games that season and remember thinking how odd it was that he kept stealing second successfully. His 22 steals was a career high and he was only caught 3 times.

*I just discovered that Gary Sheffield became the oldest 20/20 player in 2007, with 25 homers and 22 steals. He was also 38.

I watched Sheff in Detroit the last few years and he still steals so easily. If an old guy like him can, whats wrong with the younger faster platers ?