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Talking Chop

A Bad Baseball Team

Rick Mahler had already given up home runs to Jody Davis and Leon Durham, but things were starting to look up for the Braves by the bottom of the fourth. Behind home runs from Ken Oberkfell and Gerald Perry, the Braves would plate seven runs and take an 8-4 lead. The Cubs would bring the gap within reach after a three run homer by Shawon Dunston. The Braves would score one more, and with a 9-7 lead, manager Chick Tanner would give the ball to future Hall of Fame closer, Bruce Sutter. Sutter had missed the entire 1987 season due to injury and Braves fans everywhere were hoping he would return to form. A walk, a double and a single later, the game was tied. Four innings later, with the Braves Jim Acker on the mound, it was a double, a bunt and a sacrifice fly. The Braves would lose 10-9 in 13 innings. That was opening day. The Braves wouldn’t win until the 11th game of the season.

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If you’re a Braves fan and your baseball fandom began in 1991 or some point after, you have no idea just how long a baseball season can be. If there was any optimism to be had coming into the 1988 season, and there certainly wasn’t much, it was gone in the blink of an eye. The Braves won the NL West in 1982 on the strength of a 13 game winning streak to open the season. Well, in 1988, the Braves were out of it after just ten games.

I’m not sure how to describe the futility that was that season. The Braves would not win more than three games in a row all season. Other than three days in late May and early June, the Braves would occupy last place the entire season. The entire division would finish over .500. The Braves would finish thirty-nine and half games behind the first place Dodgers. As you would expect from a team that would lose a hundred and six games, they had the worst offense in the league and the second worst pitching staff in the league.

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There were few bright spots that season. Dale Murphy remained the team’s top offensive threat, but his decline from his career best numbers of 1987 was stunning. Gerald Perry had his own career best year in 1988, but it was nothing to scream about. Rookie second baseman Ron Gant showed some pop, but still needed seasoning. Rich Mahler and Pete Smith were solid, but unspectacular in the rotation. Even the stories that you wanted to make you happy, like the return of veteran utility man Jerry Royster, would ultimately disappoint. (Royster would turn in the worst season of his career. It would be his last.)

The 1988 Atlanta Braves were just awful. Historically awful. Thanks to TBS, they were on display for the entire nation. If you were a Braves fan, you still loved your team. It just wasn’t easy. Still, brighter days were ahead and many of the names that would lead the Braves franchise into an unmatched streak of post-season appearances began making their mark in 1988.

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After debuting in late 1987, Tom Glavine would spend the entire season in the rotation. He would lead the league with 17 losses, but he pitched better than that number would indicate. It was also Ron Gant’s first full season wearing a big league uniform. He finished fourth in Rookie of the Year balloting. It was Lonnie Smith’s first year in a Braves uniform, and while it was an awful year, he would begin a stretch of three solid seasons for the Braves in 1989. The two men who would man the middle for the Braves for a large portion of the 1990s, Mark Lemke and Jeff Blauser, would see limited playing time in 1988. John Smoltz would also debut by holding the Mets to a single run in eight innings for his first major league win.

It’s easy to remember how bad the Braves were in 1988. They would be bad again in 1989 and 1990 as well. It’s easy now to look back and see that the Braves were planting the seeds of what would blossom into a championship franchise. We may not have seen it then, but the team was starting to come together.

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At the time, it was excruciating. More painful than heartbreaking. They were simply a really bad baseball team. A really, really, really bad baseball team.

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Tom Glavine and John Smoltz will both make the Hall of Fame one day. Still, I doubt their rookie cards will ever make much of an impact on the hobby. Both are victims of the era of rampant overproduction. Glavine would appear in all four major sets released that year. (The manufacturers in 1988 were Topps, Fleer, Donruss and Score.) To say his rookie card can be found in abundance would be an understatement. The Fleer Update card on which John Smoltz would make his first appearance in a major set is only slightly rarer. Still, I highly recommend every Braves fan pick up these cards. After all, you can probably get all five for two bucks.

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Comments

'88 Braves

I was an usher for the Braves from 85-90, probably one of the worst stretches of any baseball team ever. Many nights there was nobody with a legit ticket in my section. Awful teams, but starting in ‘87, the commitment to the youth movement was exciting. Smoltz’s debut was on the road, so I had to listen to that one on the radio, but I loved seeing all the young guys come up. I was working behind home plate when Mike Stanton made his first appearance and all the scouts were raving about his 92 MPH slider that broke almost as much as a curve. And Kelly Mann (was that his name?) had a gun throwing down to second. There was a lot of anticipation for us Braves fan then, almost more fun that the anxiety of being the frontrunner (and annual disappointment) of the ’90s.

I remember Kelly Mann pretty well. He had quite a few cards come out in the late 80s. I scooped up as many as I could. He’s one of the reasons I don’t prospect anymore.

great post as usual.
Glav looks 15 on those cards.

Thank you!

Yeah, Glav was just a baby.

TBS...

I can’t remember if it was the end of the 1988 season (those years run together for all the reasons you describe), but at the end of the last game TBS played “don’t worry, be happy” over the credits.

I remember that! In its on way, that was pretty awesome.

Opening Day 1988 was my first Braves game (at least where they were the home team) and I remember getting a field-level seat for the occasion. Watching the Braves snatch defeat from the jaws of victory that night reminded me so much of the White Sox teams twenty years earlier that I knew that I’d love the Braves as much as the White Sox. It was symbolic that the Braves lost to the Cubs that night.

Thanks for the memories.

Those were some lean years to be a Braves fan

I remember going to my first game in 89 and was looking forward to seeing my hero, Dale Murphy play more than I was to them winning. They would lose to the Reds that night. But its amazing who was on that team and what they would go on to do later in their careers.

It’s amazing that Glavine and Smoltz had the self-confidence to struggle the way they did early in their career and not give up. 1991 wouldn’t be as special as it was if not for the struggles that came before it.

Don’t forget that Bobby Cox was the GM in the late ’80s. And he made sure the coaching staff emphasized to guys like Glavine and Smoltz and Gant that during that time, they were there to learn, not necessarily to win. Cox made a lot of public statements about how happy he was with the way the young players were progressing, and reminding the fans that it would pay dividends down the road. 1988 was a transition year as mistakes from the previous regime, like Ken Oberkfell and Bruce Sutter, were about to be shown the door. After that, it was just a matter of waiting for the young players to gain experience and confidence.

Smolt didn’t have so much self-confidence back then. He needed a psychologist to help him get his head on straight. I remember (I think it was in the fall of 88) that John had been giving up alot of walks because he didn’t trust his stuff. He was nibbling around the plate. In one particular game, he walked 3 straight guys in the second inning and Bobby pulled him. If he wasn’t going to go after batters, Bobby didn’t want him in the game. That game seemed to be John’s turning point. He still got lit up sometimes, but he started throwing strikes.

I have fond memories of those guys

despite the disappointment of those seasons. Well, not so fond memories of Chuck Tanner, but the players…

The one plus with Chuck Tanner is that they brought Willie Stargell in as batting coach. I hope the young guys on the team appreciated the opportunity to be around “Pops” and other classy vets like Ted Simmons and Ken Griffey.

One highlight from the 1988 season...

The 19-inning game against St. Louis on May 14. The Braves won the game 7-5 in 19 innings. Rick Mahler pitched 8 innings in relief for the win. Here’s an amusing line from the box score, for the Cardinals’ Jose DeLeon:

DeLeon lf,rf,lf,rf,lf,rf,lf,rf,lf,rf,lf,rf 1 0 0 0

Jose DeLeon was a pitcher.

88 Cards

The great thing about those 1988 cards though…. first year of baseball cards featuring the new tomahawk uniforms. That alone made them fun to collect back then!

the days the braves went worst to first....

Its nice to remember the big 4 (Smoltz, Maddux, Glavine, and Avery). Great pitching has always been a Braves tradition. And it looks like it will be for years to come. Glad we arent the worst team in the league anymore. Even with all the improvements the Marlins and Nationals have made I think the Braves can still pull off a Wild Card this year. Lets hope!

3rd Place is up for grabs DC and FLA!

I agree. I think the Marlins and Nationals will be fighting it out for 3rd place this year, and likely that new wild card spot will go to one of them. I see the Braves nipping at the Phillies’ heels this year.

DC did well with their drafting....

I like what they have done with their drafting the past couple years with Strasburg and Harper.. they will have a great team for years to come as well… but they are still young and will need a few years before they can compete completely with the big boys… Miami bought themselves a few more games this year but remember the Mets did the same a few years ago with Delgado and trading for Santana… even though their team doctors are a joke… I see Miami needing time to gel this year, and if Reyes keeps to trend he will spend time on the DL and so will Henley.. I think Miami MAY take 3rd but DC is right on their heals if not taking it themselves.

I mentioned this a few weeks ago but it bears repeating. Crummy as that team was (and it was…it’s the only time in my life as a Braves fan that I really felt despair) it had a HOFer (Sutter), two future HOFers (Tommy and John) and two should-be HOFers (Murph and Simmons.)

Granted, they were all either before or past their primes but it’s still interesting.

It’s funny, but when Bobby pulled off the trade for Smoltz in ’87, I really felt like things were going to start looking up at that point. Even though Smoltz was still in the minors at that point, I was a big reader of Baseball America back then and as soon as the trade was announced, I felt like the Braves had, for the long term, gotten the better end of that trade by far. After all of the miserable trades the Braves made in the ’80s, and all of the bad blood from the Barker trade in particular, that one was the first one that demonstrated that Bobby had really turned the front office around.

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