The following are the baseball events of the year 1964 throughout the world.
Champions
Major League Baseball
Other champions
Awards and honors
MLB Statistical Leaders
Major League Baseball final standings
American League final standings
National League final standings
Events
January-April
May-August
- July 23 - Bert Campaneris hits two home runs in his Major League debut; the first time this has happened since 1901.
- August 12 - Mickey Mantle hit a home run both left- and right-handed in a 7-3 win over the Chicago White sox. It was the 10th time in his career and a major league record for switch-hit homers in a game.
September-December
- September 27 - Johnny Callison hits three home runs, but the Phillies lose to the Milwaukee Braves, 14-8 (the 7th loss in the Phillies' 10-game losing streak), as the Reds sweep the Mets (4-1 and 3-1). These results put the Reds into 1st place in the NL, and the Phillies will never return there in 1964.
- September 29 - The Pittsburgh Pirates blank the Reds 2-0 at Crosley Field (despite the Reds getting 11 hits off Bob Friend) to end the Reds' 9-game winning streak. Meanwhile, the St. Louis Cardinals defeat the Phillies 4-2 at Sportsman's Park, the 7th win in the Cardinals' 8-game winning streak and the 9th loss in the Phillies' 10-game losing streak. The win, Ray Sadecki's 20th of the season, puts the Cardinals into a tie for first place with the Reds; St. Louis had been 11 games out of first on August 23.
- October 3 - As a result of the now-concluded Phillies' 10-game losing streak, this day begins with 4 teams still having a mathematical shot at the NL pennant. One of them, the San Francisco Giants, is eliminated today by a 10-7 loss to the Chicago Cubs. At the end of today's games, the Reds and the Cardinals are tied for 1st place, with the Phillies 1 game back. In recent days, the NL has had to scramble to schedule various possible playoffs.
- October 4 - The Phillies defeat the Reds, 10-0, in the last regular-season game for both teams unless there is a playoff. At the end of that game, both teams are 1/2 game back of the Cardinals (who as a result of that game have clinched a tie for the NL pennant), and await the result of the Cardinals-Mets game. Then, the Cardinals, never in first place until the last week of the season, clinch the NL pennant with an 11-5 win over the New York Mets, who had just beaten the Cardinals twice in the two preceding days. Today's win by the Cardinals averts a three-way tie for the NL pennant, with the Phillies and the Reds finishing one game back in a 2nd-place tie. It is the first Cardinals pennant since 1946.
- December 1 - The Houston Colt .45s officially change their nickname to Astros. The change coincides with the team's impending move from Colt Stadium to the Harris County Domed Stadium, also known as the Astrodome. The change in name for the three-year old franchise is necessitated due to a dispute with the Colt firearm company and the team's proximity to NASA.
Births
January-March
April-June
July-September
October-December
Deaths
- February 13 - Ken Hubbs, 22, second baseman for the Chicago Cubs and the 1962 Rookie of the Year, in a plane crash
- February 14 - Bill Stewart, 69, NL umpire from 1933 to 1954 who worked four World Series, four All-Star Games and the 1951 NL pennant playoff; also a hockey coach and referee who led the Chicago Black Hawks to the 1938 Stanley Cup title
- March 19 - John Henry Lloyd, 79, Hall of Fame shortstop of the Negro Leagues who became known as the black Honus Wagner
- April 1 - Casey Hageman, 76, pitched from 1911 through 1914 for the Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs
- April 8 - George Moriarty, 79, third baseman, manager and umpire in the American League for 35 years
- April 8 - Jim Umbricht, 33, relief pitcher for the Houston Colt .45s, who battled back from cancer surgery to post a 4-3 record for the club in 1963
- April 20 - Eddie Dyer, 64, pitcher and manager for the St. Louis Cardinals who guided the team to the 1946 World Series title
- June 11 - Jack Blott, 61, catcher for the 1924 Cincinnati Reds, and later a football coach in the Michigan and Wesleyab universities from 1924 through 1940
- July 19 - Len Swormstedt, 85, pitched from 1901 to 1906 for the Cincinnati Reds and Boston Americans
- July 22 - Bill Narleski, 64, shortstop who played from 1929 to 1930 for the Boston Red Sox
- August 21 - J.L. Wilkinson, 86, owner of the Negro League Kansas City Monarchs from 1920 to 1948
- September 11 - Tom Meany, 60, sportswriter for six New York newspapers, as well as Collier's magazine, from 1923 to 1956; publicity and promotions director for the Mets since their 1961 formation
- September 26 - Paul Zahniser, 68, pitcher for the Washington Senators, Boston Red Sox, and Cincinnati Reds from 1923 to 1929.
- September 27 - Jud McLaughlin, 52, pitcher for the Boston Red Sox between 1931 and 1933
- November 12 - Fred Hutchinson, 45, manager of the Cincinnati Reds since 1959, previously a pitcher for the Detroit Tigers
- November 19 - Fred Hofmann, 70, spent 36 years in the major leagues as a catcher, coach and scout, and also won two minor league pennants as a manager
- December 31 - Red Rollings, 60, utility infielder/outfielder who played for the Red Sox and Braves Boston teams betwenn 1927 and 1930
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