The Denver Bulls.
It wasn't pretty. Actually, it was pretty darn ugly. 70 wins sits as the second lowest in franchise history only squeaking by 1985's 69 win travesty. The bright side is that season began a run of improved years that culminated in a three 90-win seasons, two Pilsner Division titles and a crushing 7-game loss to Maine in the 1990 DLCS (Denver once led that series 2-0).
1993 will be remembered for very little. There was the torn UCL for Jeremiah Gray which will take him out of action for 1994. Norm Seltzer going from a .308/.370/.509 to a .256/.319/.397 and Scot Borkholder following up a fascinating career-high .297 batting average, 13 home runs and .803 OPS in 1992 to an ugly -9.7 VORP and .224 average.
There was Pete Jones closing out a great AAA season with an 8-6 record and 2.03 ERA in 133.1 IP to surrendering 5, 5, 6, and 6 runs in each of his last four BLB starts. And T.J. Cook partially tore his labrum ending a season in which he collected 10 wins with a 3.71 ERA in 165 IP.
With all that, there was some good. Pedro Zamarida, coming off an injury-riddled '92 campaign, knocked in 18 home runs and a 109 OPS+. He surpassed the 1,500 RBI mark. Collected his 500th career double and even used his 36-year-old tires to add to his 87 triples (3rd most all-time) by legging out another four.
But brightest of all was Pancho Alvarez who hit .321 with 24 home runs and 102 RBI becoming only the third Denver Bulls player to hit .300, punch 20+ home runs and drive in 100 RBI in a season. The others being the immortal Toby Rochester back in 1978 and '79 and Pat Washington in 1991.
That about wraps up 1993 in Denver. It was a mile high disappointment, but Alvarez gave the fans something to cheer over.
It wasn't pretty. Actually, it was pretty darn ugly. 70 wins sits as the second lowest in franchise history only squeaking by 1985's 69 win travesty. The bright side is that season began a run of improved years that culminated in a three 90-win seasons, two Pilsner Division titles and a crushing 7-game loss to Maine in the 1990 DLCS (Denver once led that series 2-0).
1993 will be remembered for very little. There was the torn UCL for Jeremiah Gray which will take him out of action for 1994. Norm Seltzer going from a .308/.370/.509 to a .256/.319/.397 and Scot Borkholder following up a fascinating career-high .297 batting average, 13 home runs and .803 OPS in 1992 to an ugly -9.7 VORP and .224 average.
There was Pete Jones closing out a great AAA season with an 8-6 record and 2.03 ERA in 133.1 IP to surrendering 5, 5, 6, and 6 runs in each of his last four BLB starts. And T.J. Cook partially tore his labrum ending a season in which he collected 10 wins with a 3.71 ERA in 165 IP.
With all that, there was some good. Pedro Zamarida, coming off an injury-riddled '92 campaign, knocked in 18 home runs and a 109 OPS+. He surpassed the 1,500 RBI mark. Collected his 500th career double and even used his 36-year-old tires to add to his 87 triples (3rd most all-time) by legging out another four.
But brightest of all was Pancho Alvarez who hit .321 with 24 home runs and 102 RBI becoming only the third Denver Bulls player to hit .300, punch 20+ home runs and drive in 100 RBI in a season. The others being the immortal Toby Rochester back in 1978 and '79 and Pat Washington in 1991.
That about wraps up 1993 in Denver. It was a mile high disappointment, but Alvarez gave the fans something to cheer over.
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