This multi-part series talks about how the Brewers got to the World Series and offers a timeline of the 1982 campaign, including player profiles, game recaps, and other events that affected the season.
Part 1
Part 2
Off to a Good Start in May
The Brewers began May with two wins in Minnesota, after losing the first game of their three-game series on the last day of April. Trailing 4-1 late in the game to Minnesota on May Day, the Brewers tallied five runs in the eighth inning to defeat the Twins, 6-5. Gorman Thomas hit his first homer of the year to key the big inning. The next day, the Brewers romped 11-4, behind another homer by Thomas and a pair of homers by Ted Simmons.
Milwaukee returned home and lost two out of three to the Kansas City Royals, including a 10-inning loss in which Rollie Fingers was tagged with his third defeat. The mustachioed closer gave up two hits and one walk in a two-inning stint, one of his 26 multi-inning outings during the season. Minnesota came to town for a long weekend four-game series, but the Brewers were harsh hosts, sweeping the series to improve to 16-10, still 2 ½ games behind Boston. Things were starting to look up for the Brew Crew.
Two Weeks of Struggles
Far from continuing upward toward first place, though, the Brewers traveled to Kansas City and lost three straight, including another loss for Fingers. This time, he got out of a bases-loaded jam in the bottom of the eighth, before giving up a lead-off, walk-off home run in the ninth to Amos Otis. They split four games in Chicago against the White Sox before heading home again.
California, Seattle, and Oakland came to County Stadium for the next week-plus, but Milwaukee won only two of eight games, dropping to 20-21, 7 1/2 games behind Boston and in fourth place in the AL East. The Brewers then left the friendly confines of County Stadium for a 10-game road trip to the Left Coast, playing the same three teams that just trampled them at home.
“I hope getting away for a while will help us,” manager Buck Rodgers commented to the Wisconsin State Journal.
Little did Rodgers know that he wouldn’t return with the team in early June. On the West Coast swing, the Brewers split the first six games but dropped to sixth place in the AL East, seven games behind new leader Detroit. They won a one-run game on June 1, but it was not enough to save Rodgers’s job. General Manager Harry Dalton fired Rodgers and installed hitting coach Harvey Kuenn as interim manager.
“I excused the early part of the slump (14 losses in 21 games) because of the injuries to (Pete) Vuckovich and (Bob) McClure,” Dalton said in a telephone interview with Bill Brophy of the Wisconsin State Journal. “But when they returned and we still didn’t play well, I had to ask why.”
Harvey Takes Over
Kuenn addressed the players after his hiring.
“Don’t expect any trick plays from me. You guys can flat-out hit, so go out there and hit,” he said. It didn’t take long for the Brewers to tap into their power potential.
The Brewers won their last four games of the West Coast swing and finished 7-3 in their 10-game trip, which moved them up to third in the standings. Milwaukee scored 33 runs in those four games, powered by nine home runs. In an 11-3 win over Oakland on June 5, the Brewers got homers from Robin Yount, Cecil Cooper, Ben Oglivie, Simmons, and Thomas.
The next week was a roller coaster ride for the Brewers, as they went 3-5 against two top AL East teams, Baltimore and Detroit. In three games at Memorial Stadium, the Brewers and Orioles each won a game, lost a game, and tied a game. The tie was halted twice by downpours, including a 65-minute delay in the ninth inning. The game would be rescheduled for the last weekend of the season, which would include a doubleheader among four games October 1-3.
On their way back home, the Brewers beat Detroit four times at Tiger Stadium. They beat the Yankees twice at County Stadium, before falling to New York in the final contest of the three-game set. Milwaukee finished the month of June by winning five of six in New York and Boston. In the final game against New York, Thomas hit a two-run homer in the top of the 12th to get the victory, with the team improving to 42-31, just two games out in second place in the AL East.
In their first 26 games under Kuenn, the Brewers won 19, while hitting 40 home runs. Through June, Cooper led the team in batting with a .332 mark. Thomas and Oglivie each had 19 homers, Cooper had 16, and Yount had 11. Vuckovich had nine wins against three losses, on his way to the AL Cy Young Award. Fingers rebounded from a slow start to earn 16 saves in his first three months.
Coming soon, part 4: The weather heats up and so do the Brewers.
Are you interested in Brewers history? Then check out the Milwaukee Brewers Players Project, a community-driven project to discover and collect great information on every player to wear a Brewers uniform!