Oakland Athletics award winners and league leaders

This is a list of award winners and league leaders for the Oakland Athletics professional baseball franchise.

The team was first known as the Philadelphia Athletics from 1901 to 1954 and then as the Kansas City Athletics from 1955 to 1967.

American League Most Valuable Player

See: Kenesaw Mountain Landis Most Valuable Player Award

American League Cy Young Award

See: Cy Young Award

American League Rookie of the Year

See: Jackie Robinson Rookie of the Year Award

American League Manager of the Year

See: Manager of the Year Award

American League Gold Glove Award

Pitcher
First base
Third base
  • Eric Chavez (2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006)
  • Matt Chapman (2018, 2019)
Shortstop
Outfield

American League Platinum Glove Award

  • Matt Chapman (Third Base) (2018, 2019)

Wilson Defensive Player of the Year Award

See explanatory note at Atlanta Braves award winners and league leaders.
Team (at all positions)
  • (2012)
  • (2013)

American League Silver Slugger

First baseman
Third baseman
Outfielders

MLB All-Century Team (1999)

See: MLB All-Century Team

DHL Hometown Heroes (2006)

See: DHL Hometown Heroes

MLB All-Time Team (1997; Baseball Writers Association of America)

See: MLB All-Time Team

Baseball Prospectus "Internet Baseball Awards" Team of the Decade (1999)

  • Reliever of the Decade: Dennis Eckersley, Athletics–Cardinals–Red Sox
  • First Base: Mark McGwire, Athletics–Cardinals
  • 2001 Most Valuable Player, AL: Jason Giambi
  • 2005 Rookie of the Year, AL: Huston Street

Chuck Tanner Major League Baseball Manager of the Year Award

Babe Ruth Award (World Series)

See: Babe Ruth Award

Topps All-Star Rookie Teams

See: Topps All-Star Rookie Teams

Baseball America Major League Executive of the Year

See: Baseball America Major League Executive of the Year

Team award

Team records (single-game, single-season, career)

Minor-league system

MiLB Overall Minor League Hitter of the Year

  • 2009 – Chris Carter[2]

Organizational Player and Pitcher of the Year

Organizational Player and Pitcher of the Year
Year Player of the Year Pitcher of the Year Ref.
1995 Steve CoxDerek Manning[3]
1996 D. T. CromerWillie Adams[3]
1997 Ben GrieveBrad Rigby[3]
1998 Eric ChavezJay Witasick[3]
1999 Adam PiattTim Hudson[3]
2000 José OrtizBarry Zito[3]
2001 Esteban GermánMario Ramos[3]
2002 Graham KoonceRich Harden[3]
2003 Graham KoonceRich Harden[3]
2004 Dan JohnsonSantiago Casilla[3]
2005 Andre EthierDallas Braden[3]
2006 Jeff BaisleyJason Windsor[3]
2007 Daric BartonTrevor Cahill[3]
2008 Chris CarterTrevor Cahill[3]
2009 Chris CarterPedro Figueroa[3]
2010 Grant GreenIan Krol[3]
2011 Michael Choice
Jermaine Mitchell
Graham Godfrey[3]
2012 Miles HeadA. J. Griffin
Dan Straily
[3]
2013 Anthony AliottiSonny Gray[3]
2014 Matt Olson
Daniel Robertson
Seth Streich[3]
2015 Chad PinderRyan Dull[3]
2016 Ryon HealyDaniel Mengden[3]
2017 Matt OlsonA. J. Puk[3]
2018 Ramón LaureanoJesús Luzardo[3]
2019 Seth BrownDaulton Jefferies[3]

Other achievements

National Baseball Hall of Fame

See: Oakland Athletics#Hall of Famers

California Sports Hall of Fame

Athletics in the California Sports Hall of Fame
No. Player Position Tenure Notes
9, 31, 44Reggie JacksonRF1968–1975
1987
10, 11, 22, 29, 42Tony La RussaIF
Manager
1963
1968–1971
1986–1995

Athletics in the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame

See: Oakland Athletics#Athletics in the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame

Athletics in the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame

See: Oakland Athletics#Athletics in the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame

Retired numbers

See: Oakland Athletics#Retired numbers

Catfish Hunter Award

See footnote[4] and Catfish Hunter

The award is given to the Athletics' most inspirational player.[5]

YearWinnerPositionRef
2004Tim HudsonP
2005Mark Ellis (1)2B
2006Jason KendallC
2007Mark Ellis (2)2B
2008Mike Sweeney1B[6]
2009Kurt SuzukiC
2010Ben SheetsP[7]
2011Josh WillinghamOF[5]
2012Jonny GomesOF
2013Coco CrispOF
2014Stephen Vogt (1)C/OF/1B[8]
2015Stephen Vogt (2)C/OF/1B[9]
2016Stephen Vogt (3)C/OF/1B[10]
2017Jed Lowrie2B[11]
2018Matt Chapman3B

Sporting News Sportsman of the Year

See: Sporting News#Sportsman of the Year

Ford C. Frick Award recipients

See: Oakland Athletics#Ford C. Frick Award recipients

Sports Illustrated Top 10 GMs/Executives of the Decade (2009)

See: List of 2009 all-decade Sports Illustrated awards and honors#Top 10 GMs/Executives of the Decade
  • No. 10 – Billy Beane (the list's only other MLB GMs were Boston's Theo Epstein, No. 3, and Seattle and Philadelphia's Pat Gillick, No. 7)

American League Statistical Batting Leaders

Batting Average

On-base Percentage

Slugging Percentage

OPS

Games

At Bats

Runs

Hits

Total Bases

Doubles

Triples

Home Runs

RBI

Walks

Strikeouts

Stolen Bases

  • Topsy Hartsel 47 (1902)
  • Danny Hoffman 46 (1905)
  • Eddie Collins 81 (1910)
  • Billy Werber 35 (1937) Co-Leader
  • Bert Campaneris 51 (1965)
  • Bert Campaneris 52 (1966)
  • Bert Campaneris 55 (1967)
  • Bert Campaneris 62 (1968)
  • Bert Campaneris 42 (1970)
  • Bert Campaneris 52 (1972)
  • Billy North 54 (1974)
  • Billy North 75 (1976)
  • Rickey Henderson 100 (1980)
  • Rickey Henderson 56 (1981)
  • Rickey Henderson 130 (1982)
  • Rickey Henderson 108 (1983)
  • Rickey Henderson 66 (1984)
  • Rickey Henderson 65 (1990)
  • Rickey Henderson 58 (1991)
  • Rickey Henderson 66 (1998)
  • Coco Crisp 49 (2011) Co-Leader

Singles

Runs Created

Extra-Base Hits

Times on Base

Hit By Pitch

Sacrifice Hits

Sacrifice Flies

Intentional Walks

Grounded into Double Plays

At Bats per Strikeout

At Bats per Home Run

  • Socks Seybold 32.6 (1902)
  • Harry Davis 40.4 (1904)
  • Harry Davis 75.9 (1905)
  • Harry Davis 45.9 (1906)
  • Harry Davis 72.8 (1907)
  • Frank Baker 53.8 (1911)
  • Frank Baker 57.7 (1912)
  • Frank Baker 47.0 (1913)
  • Jimmie Foxx 10.1 (1932)
  • Jimmie Foxx 11.9 (1933)
  • Jimmie Foxx 14.9 (1935)
  • Gus Zernial 13.2 (1953)
  • Gus Zernial 13.8 (1955)
  • Reggie Jackson 16.8 (1973)
  • Mark McGwire 11.4 (1987)
  • José Canseco 14.5 (1988)
  • Mark McGwire 14.8 (1989)
  • José Canseco 13.0 (1991)
  • Mark McGwire 11.1 (1992)
  • Mark McGwire 8.1 (1995)
  • Mark McGwire 8.1 (1996)

Outs

American League Statistical Pitching Leaders

ERA

Wins

Won-Loss Percentage

WHIP

Hits Allowed/9IP

Walks/9IP

Strikeouts/9IP

  • Rube Waddell 6.84 (1902)
  • Rube Waddell 8.39 (1903)
  • Rube Waddell 8.20 (1904)
  • Rube Waddell 7.86 (1905)
  • Rube Waddell 6.47 (1906)
  • Rube Waddell 7.33 (1907)
  • Lefty Grove 5.30 (1925)
  • Lefty Grove 6.77 (1926)
  • Lefty Grove 5.97 (1927)
  • George Earnshaw 6.65 (1928)
  • Lefty Grove 5.56 (1929)
  • Lefty Grove 6.46 (1930)
  • Lou Brissie 5.89 (1948)
  • Vida Blue 8.68 (1971)

Games

Saves

Innings

Strikeouts

  • Rube Waddell 210 (1902)
  • Rube Waddell 302 (1903)
  • Rube Waddell 349 (1904)
  • Rube Waddell 287 (1905)
  • Rube Waddell 196 (1906)
  • Rube Waddell 232 (1907)
  • Lefty Grove 116 (1925)
  • Lefty Grove 194 (1926)
  • Lefty Grove 174 (1927)
  • Lefty Grove 183 (1928)
  • Lefty Grove 170 (1929)
  • Lefty Grove 209 (1930)
  • Lefty Grove 175 (1931)

Games Started

Complete Games

  • Rube Waddell 34 (1903) Co-Leader
  • Eddie Plank 35 (1905) Co-Leader
  • Scott Perry 30 (1918) Co-Leader
  • Lefty Grove 27 (1931) Co-Leader
  • Lefty Grove 27 (1932)
  • Lefty Grove 21 (1933)
  • Rick Langford 28 (1980)
  • Rick Langford 18 (1981)
  • Dave Stewart 14 (1988) Co-Leader
  • Dave Stewart 11 (1990) Co=Leader
  • Mark Mulder 9 (2003) Co-Leader
  • Mark Mulder 5 (2004) Co-Leader

Shutouts

Home Runs Allowed

Walks Allowed

Hits Allowed

Strikeout to Walk

Losses

Earned Runs Allowed

Wild Pitches

Hit Batsmen

Batters Faced

Games Finished

Oldest Player

Youngest Player

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See also

Footnotes

  1. The World Series Trophy was first awarded in 1967. In 1985, it was re-named the Commissioner's Trophy. From 1970 to 1984, the "Commissioner's Trophy" was the name of the award given to the All-Star Game MVP.
  2. Winston, Lisa (January 1, 2010). "A's Carter pays immediate dividends: Slugger earns MiLBY for Overall Minor League Hitter". MLB Advanced Media, L.P. Retrieved 2011-06-17.
  3. "2020 Oakland Athletics Media Guide" (PDF). Oakland Athletics. Major League Baseball. 2020. p. 592. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 22, 2020. Retrieved August 12, 2020.
  4. Catfish Hunter Award (2004–present). Baseball-Almanac. Retrieved 2011-08-19.
  5. Lee, Jane (Sep 20, 2011). "Willingham selected for Catfish Hunter Award". MLB.com. Retrieved 2014-04-04. [F]or the past seven years has recognized the A's most inspirational player ....
  6. http://oakland.athletics.mlb.com/news/print.jsp?ymd=20080914&content_id=3475064&vkey=news_oak&fext=.jsp&c_id=oak&affiliateId=CommentWidget
  7. http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/sep/21/as-pound-buehrle-white-sox-7-2/
  8. http://m.athletics.mlb.com/news/article/95584618/oakland-as-name-stephen-vogt-recipient-of-catfish-hunter-award
  9. http://m.mlb.com/news/article/151423600/stephen-vogt-wins-catfish-hunter-award
  10. Hickey, John (September 23, 2016). "Stephen Vogt wins A's Catfish Hunter Award for third time". East Bay Times. Retrieved September 21, 2019.
  11. Shea, John (September 26, 2017). "A's 2nd baseman Jed Lowrie wins Catfish Hunter Award". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved September 21, 2019.
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