2003 Houston Astros season

2003 Houston Astros
LeagueNational League
DivisionCentral
BallparkMinute Maid Park
CityHouston, Texas
Record87–75 (.537)
Divisional place2nd
OwnersDrayton McLane, Jr.
General managersGerry Hunsicker
ManagersJimy Williams
TelevisionKNWS-TV
FSN Southwest
(Bill Brown, Jim Deshaies, Bill Worrell)
RadioKTRH
(Milo Hamilton, Alan Ashby)
KXYZ
(Francisco Ernesto Ruiz, Alex Treviño)

The 2003 Houston Astros season was the 42nd season for the Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise located in Houston, Texas, their 39th as the Astros, 42nd in the National League (NL), tenth in the NL Central division, and fourth at Minute Maid Park. The Astros entered the season having finished in second place in the NL Central division with an 84–78 record.

On April 1, pitcher Roy Oswalt made his first of eight consecutive Opening Day starts for the Astros, who hosted Colorado Rockies, and won, 10–4. In the amateur draft, the Astros' top selection was in the second-round with right-handed pitcher Jason Hirsh (59th overall).[Note 1] On April 26, Jeff Bagwell collected his 2,000th career hit, joining teammate Craig Biggio as the second Astro to recood all 2,000 with the team.

On June 11, six Astros pitchers combined to hurl a no-hitter against the New York Yankees, establishing a major league record for most pitchers contributing to a no-hitter. The six were Roy Oswalt, Pete Munro, Kirk Saarloos, Brad Lidge, Octavio Dotel and Billy Wagner. Moreover, Dotel became the first to strike out four batters in one inning during a no-hitter, and the 45th pitcher overall.

Wagner represented the Astros and played for the National League at the MLB All-Star Game, his third career selection. On July 10, Biggio became the 40th major leaguer to reach 500 doubles, while, Bagwell on July 20, hit his 400th career home run, becoming the 35th player in major league history to do so.

The Astros concluded the season with an 87–75 record, runners-up in the NL Central—one game behind the Chicago Cubs and two games ahead of the St. Louis Cardinals—after having led the division most of the season. In the NL Wild Card race, Houston also ranked second, trailing the eventual World Series champion Florida Marlins by 4 games. Hence, the Astros missed the playoffs by one game. This was the 10th winning season in the previous 11 for Houston, and the ninth time in 10 seasons since moving to the NL Central that they had finished in either first or second place.

Offseason

Summary

To commemorate the life and humanitarian qualities of former pitcher Darryl Kile, who had died suddenly prior to a game in Chicago on June 22, 2002, the Astros and St. Louis Cardinals—two of Kile's former teams—united to create the "Darryl Kile Good Guy Award." Intended for bestowal upon one Astros and one Cardinals player following each season, its recognition would signify that player exemplifies Kile’s qualities as "a good teammate, a great friend, a fine father and a humble man." During his career, Kile posted a 133-119 win–loss record (W–L) and an earned run average (ERA) of 4.12. Jeff Bagwell became the first recipient for Houston following the 2003 season, while Mike Matheny was the first for St. Louis.[1]

Following its issuance to Kile from 1991–1997, no other Astros have worn the uniform number 57 since.[2]

Outfielder Richard Hidalgo survived a scare and remained largely unharmed during a carjacking attempt on him in Venezuela on November 22, 2002. He had sustained a gunshot wound to his left arm. However, he appeared to have escaped significant injury, without signs either of fracture or ligament damage.[3]

On March 27, 2003, starting rotation mainstay Shane Reynolds was released, surprising Astros veterans. Reynolds was soon thereafter signed by the Atlanta Braves, posting an 11–9 win–loss record for the season.[4]

Transactions

Regular season

Summary

With Houston having signed second baseman Jeff Kent in free agency,[6] franchise stalwart Craig Biggio changed positions for the second time in his career. He served as the club's primary center fielder starting in 2003.[7]

April—May

Opening Day starting lineup
Uniform Player Position
7 Craig Biggio Center fielder
27 Geoff Blum Third baseman
5 Jeff Bagwell First baseman
17 Lance Berkman Left fielder
12 Jeff Kent Second baseman
15 Richard Hidalgo Right fielder
11 Brad Ausmus Catcher
4 Julio Lugo Shortstop
44 Roy Oswalt Pitcher
Venue: Minute Maid Park • Houston 10, Colorado 4

Sources:[8][9]

During his first at bat in an Astros uniform on Opening Day, Jeff Kent homered as the Astros downed the Colorado Rockies, 10–4. Jeff Bagwell ripped two home runs, while Geoff Blum also homered and collected three runs batted in (RBI). Starter Roy Oswalt earned the victory.[4]

On April 2, Craig Biggio swatted a single in the bottom of the ninth to plate both the game-tying and walk-off runs, stunning Colorado, 8–7. This capped a five-run rally, all in the bottom of the ninth. The Astros mustered four consecutive singles, while Orlando Merced doubled to precede Biggio's heroics. Billy Wagner was the winning pitcher.[4]

Catcher Brad Ausmus smoked two home runs—including a grand slam—on April 4. He hit the grand slam in the first inning, while going deep in the 12th to lead a 6–5 triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals. Behind the plate, Ausmus registered three runners caught stealing, including Fernando Viña for the final out of the contest. Meanwhile, Brad Lidge earned his first Major League save.[4]

On April 18, Biggio connected for his 200th career home run during the top of the eighth inning. Biggio hit the milestone blast off right-hander Luis Vizcaíno of the Milwaukee Brewers.[10]

During a 3–2 loss to the Montreal Expos on April 26, first baseman Jeff Bagwell hit an infield single for his 2,000th career hit—all as a member of the Astros—joining teammate Craig Biggio as the only players to achieve this feat[11] (May 4, 2001). Bagwell became the third player overall to reach 2,000 hits in Astros uniform, also joining José Cruz (September 15, 1985).[12]

In the first inning on May 1, Lance Berkman homered off former teammate Shane Reynolds to overtake Ken Caminiti for the club record in home runs among switch hitters.[13]

Following a game at Minute Maid Park on May 1, shortstop Julio Lugo was arrested and charged with assaulting his wife in their vehicle while driving on the Eastex Freeway the evening before.[14] He was then designated for assignment, subsequently cleared waivers, and given an unconditional release by the club.[15]

The Astros placed Oswalt on the disabled list (DL) on May 18 due to a right groin strain.[16]

June

In his return from the DL on June 7, Richard Hidalgo connected for a game-winning three-run home over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays which resulted in a 5–4 score. Part of a 3-hit night, Hidalgo had been hospitalized with tonsillitis just one week prior. Meanwhile, Lance Berkman hit a ballpark-record 464 feet (141 m) home run, and Billy Wagner converted the 199th save of his career to tie a franchise record,[17] first achieved by Dave Smith.

On June 8, Wagner earned his 200th career save against Tampa Bay.[18]

Oswalt—Munro—Saarloos—Lidge—Dotel—Wagner combined no-hitter

Following an early departure by starter Roy Oswalt due to a groin injury on June 11 at Yankee Stadium, five Astros relievers supervened to toss a no-hitter for the first against the New York Yankees in 45 years. Houston's early access into the bullpen segued into establishing the major league record for most pitchers contributing to such a contest during an 8–0 Astros victory. Succeeding Oswalt from the second inning on, Pete Munro, Kirk Saarloos, Brad Lidge, Octavio Dotel and Wagner each delivered in this historic contest.[19] Lidge (4–0), who worked the sixth and seventh innings, was credited with the win.[20]

In the top of the fourth, Berkman launched a deep blast to right field that also plated Geoff Blum, capping Houston's scoring while mounting a 4–0 advantage. In addition to Berkman's home run, the Astros aggregated five doubles, including two from Hidalgo, and a triple from Orlando Merced.[21]

Dotel assumed the mound for Houston for the eighth frame, which culminated into its own unique event. The right-hander whiffed Juan Rivera on three pitches for the first out. Next, Alfonso Soriano fouled off three consecutive offerings before swinging and missing on a wild pitch bounced in the dirt that eluded catcher Brad Ausmus for an uncaught third strike, acquiescing passage for Soriano to scamper safely to first base. Derek Jeter then coaxed a full count, but struck out swinging, and Dotel retired Jason Giambi with a swing-and-miss on a 2–2 count. Not only did Dotel became the 44th pitcher to sling a major-league record tying four-strikeout inning,[22] but he became the first to do so during a no-hitter.[23]

During top of the opening frame, the Astros lineup leveraged the wild pitch from Yankees starter Jeff Weaver to ignite the scoring. Biggio led the contest off with a double. Blum then flied out deep enough to center field to advance Biggio to third. Next, Bagwell grounded out to the pitcher, and Jeff Kent followed with a walk. With Berkman at the plate, Weaver's wild pitch on a 1–2 count allowed Biggio to score and Kent to go to second, while the Astros assumed a 1–0 advantage. Berkman also grounded out to Weaver to retire the side.[21]

During the bottom of the first, Oswalt retired the Yankees in order, while concluding the frame via successive punchouts of Jeter and Giambi. Oswalt received a game score of 55 for his lone inning of work.[21]

After Merced's triple to left-center in the top of the second, José Vizcaíno lifted a sacrifice fly to center field to bring him home and increase the Astros' lead to 2–0.[21]

Munro, who replaced Oswalt, injected the bulk of the effort for Houston's bullpen. Over 2+23 total frames, Munro struck out a pair, while navigating three bases on balls. They were New York's only other batters who reached base besides Soriano: Jeter, Jorge Posada, and Todd Zeile.[21]

Wagner entered in the top of the ninth and proceeded to whiff both Posada and Bubba Trammell, who pinch-hit for Robin Ventura. The southpaw then generated a groundball tapper from Hideki Matsui back to himself, who flipped the ball to Bagwell at first to polish off the masterpiece.[21]

Dotel further became the second Astro to complete the comeback for that fourth strikeout during a single inning, and first since Mike Scott on September 3, 1986, versus the Chicago Cubs.[a][23][24] In all, Astros pitching induced 13 whiffs.[22] during the club's first-ever game in The Bronx.

This was the first combined no-hit effort in club history, tenth overall for Houston,[23] and the first occasion in a major-league record 6.980 contests that the Yankees had been no-hit. The previous occurrence was on September 20, 1958, when Hoyt Wilhelm of the Baltimore Orioles hurled a no-hitter that resulted in a 1–0 decision over New York.[19]

The most recent no-hit game by a Houston Astro had been Darryl Kile's gem on September 8, 1993, and the following such outing was posted by Mike Fiers on August 21, 2015.[25]

Rest of June

Oswalt missed time following that start in The Bronx, and was out of action until 26 days later on July 7, when he surrendered one run in six innings to lead a 7–1 victory over the Cincinnati Reds.[26]

Inserted as a pinch hitter for his first major league plate appearance on June 27, Dave Matranga connected for a home run off Joaquin Benoit in the fifth inning, which tied the game with the Texas Rangers at 4-4. However, Texas later rallied to win this contest, 10–7.[27] Matranga became the first Astros player to hit a home run in his first major league plate appearance since pitcher José Sosa connected off Danny Frisella of the San Diego Padres on July 30, 1975, at the Astrodome.[28][29] The next Astros player to accomplish this feat was Charlton Jimerson on September 4, 2006, also as pinch hitter, whose drive ended a perfect game bid by Cole Hamels after 5+23 innings.[30]

July

Highlighting a six-run first inning on July 9, shortstop Adam Everett hit his first career grand slam to lead a 12–2 rout of the Cincinnati Reds at Minute Maid Park. Everett also set a career-high 4 RBI on that first-inning swing. Lance Berkman and Hidalgo hit consecutive home runs for Houston, while Gregg Zaun had another. Biggio and Hidalgo collected three hits apiece to lead the Astros. Ken Griffey Jr. connected for his 478th career home run for Cincinnati.[31]

On July 10, Biggio extended his club record with his 500th career double.[7] Biggio became the 40th major leaguer to reach 500 doubles. During this contest, the Astros exploded for a club-record nine runs during the first inning to topple Cincinnati, 9–2. Geoff Blum registered two safeties and two RBI during that momentous first frame. Richard Hidalgo tallied 4 RBI. The triumph expanded the Spacemen's lead to two games in the Central while they sat five games above .500.[12]

Jeff Bagwell's 400th home run

In another contest versus Cincinnati on July 20, Bagwell hit two home runs for the 400th of his career off Danny Graves, becoming the 35th player in MLB history to do so.[32] The leader in club history since April 21, 1999,[33] Bagwell continued to add to his record. His drive became the highest milestone home hit by an Astros player since Eddie Mathews on July 14, 1967, who connected for his 500th home run at Candlestick Park.[34]

August—September

On August 6, Everett hit the first-ever inside-the-park home run at Minute Maid Park, one of four Astros home runs against the New York Mets.[35]

ESPN published "The List" on August 20, which profiled and ranked Bagwell and Biggio as the second- and third-most underrated athletes, respectively, of the top four North American professional sports leagues.[36]

Jeff Kent drove in six runs on August 26 to lead a 10–1 rout of the Los Angeles Dodgers.[4]

On September 9, Billy Wagner converted his 40th save of the season,[37] becoming the first pitcher in club history to reach the milestone. This surpassed his own club record of 39 saves each in 1999 and 2001.[b][38] The southpaw earned the save by tossing a scoreless ninth against the Milwaukee Brewers to finalize a 7–6 victory, including a pair of whiffs.[37]

At Coors Field on September 16, Hidalgo launched three home runs in a single game, becoming the seventh Houston Astro to accomplish the feat. Hidalgo went 3-for-4 with four runs scored and five RBI to lead a 14–4 win over the Colorado Rockies.[39]

Performance overview

The Astros nearly made the playoffs for the fifth time over seven seasons, in the midst of an unprecedented period of success in franchise history.[40] With an 85–77 record, Houston wound up second in the NL Central division, one game behind the division-champion Chicago Cubs. In the Wild Card race, the Astros trailed the Florida Marlins—that year's eventual World Series champion—by just 4 games, also in second place.[41]

Having scored 805 runs and yielded 677, the club underperformed their Pythagorean expectation of 94–68 (.580).[42]

Though Houston improved by one win from the year prior, it was the second consecutive season missing the playoffs, while missing on consecutive seasons for the first time since 1996. This was also the most games won missing the playoffs since 1993, the year before the Wild Card era. However, the 2003 season continued one of the greatest periods of success, in that it was the third of six consecutive with a winning record, through the 2006 campaign, the second-longest such in club history. They had also agglomerated 84 wins or more in six of each of the seven prior seasons (with 2000 being the exception) and continued to win 84 or more through 2005.[40]

Hidalgo, who led the major leagues with 22 outfield assists, was recognized with the club's Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award.[7]

Closer Billy Wagner set the Astros' single-season franchise record with a career-high 44 saves, [7] breaking his own club record of 39 (twice, 1999 and 2001).[b][38]

Starter Jeriome Robertson set a club rookie record with 15 wins, which led all MLB rookies[7] as well as the Astros' pitching staff.[42]

Standings

National League Central

NL Central
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Chicago Cubs 88 74 .543 44‍–‍37 44‍–‍37
Houston Astros 87 75 .537 1 48‍–‍33 39‍–‍42
St. Louis Cardinals 85 77 .525 3 48‍–‍33 37‍–‍44
Pittsburgh Pirates 75 87 .463 13 39‍–‍42 36‍–‍45
Cincinnati Reds 69 93 .426 19 35‍–‍46 34‍–‍47
Milwaukee Brewers 68 94 .420 20 31‍–‍50 37‍–‍44


Record vs. opponents

Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2003

Team AZ ATL CHC CIN COL FLA HOU LAD MIL MON NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL AL
Arizona 2–5 2–4 7–2 10–9 2–5 5–1 10–9 3–3 4–2 4–2 4–2 3–3 9–10 5–14 3–3 11–4
Atlanta 5–2 4–2 3–3 6–0 9–10 5–1 4–2 4–2 12–7 11–8 9–10 7–2 6–1 2–4 4–2 10–5
Chicago 4–2 2–4 10–7 3–3 4–2 9–7 2–4 10–6 3–3 5–1 1–5 10–8 4–2 4–2 8–9 9–9
Cincinnati 2–7 3–3 7–10 4–2 2–4 5–12 2–4 8–10 2–4 2–4 5–4 5–11 3–3 3–3 9–7 7–5
Colorado 9–10 0–6 3–3 2–4 4–2 2–4 7–12 5–1 3–4 2–5 2–4 3–6 12–7 7–12 4–2 9–6
Florida 5–2 10–9 2–4 4–2 2–4 1–5 2–5 7–2 13–6 12–7 13–6 2–4 5–1 1–5 3–3 9–6
Houston 1–5 1–5 7–9 12–5 4–2 5–1 4–2 9–8 3–3 2–4 2–4 10–6 3–3 2–4 11–7 11–7
Los Angeles 9–10 2–4 4–2 4–2 12–7 5–2 2–4 4–2 4–2 3–3 2–5 5–1 8–11 6–13 4–2 11–7
Milwaukee 3–3 2–4 6–10 10–8 1–5 2–7 8–9 2–4 0–6 6–3 4–2 10–7 5–1 1–5 3–13 5–7
Montreal 2–4 7–12 3–3 4–2 4–3 6–13 3–3 2–4 6–0 14–5 8–11 3–3 4–2 7–0 1–5 9–9
New York 2–4 8–11 1–5 4–2 5–2 7–12 4–2 3–3 3–6 5–14 7–12 4–2 3–3 4–2 1–5 5–10
Philadelphia 2–4 10–9 5–1 4–5 4–2 6–13 4–2 5–2 2–4 11–8 12–7 2–4 4–3 3–3 4–2 8–7
Pittsburgh 3–3 2–7 8–10 11–5 6–3 4–2 6–10 1–5 7–10 3–3 2–4 4–2 4–2 2–4 7–10 5–7
San Diego 10–9 1–6 2–4 3–3 7–12 1–5 3–3 11–8 1–5 2–4 3–3 3–4 2–4 5–14 2–4 8–10
San Francisco 14–5 4–2 2–4 3–3 12–7 5–1 4–2 13–6 5–1 0–7 2–4 3–3 4–2 14–5 5–1 10–8
St. Louis 3–3 2–4 9–8 7–9 2–4 3–3 7–11 2–4 13–3 5–1 5–1 2–4 10–7 4–2 1–5 10–8


Notable transactions

  • May 1, 2003: Julio Lugo was designated for assignment, and then released 10 days later after "hitting his wife in the face and slamming her head on a car hood" outside of Minute Maid Park.[43]
  • June 3, 2003: Josh Anderson was drafted by the Houston Astros in the 4th round of the 2003 amateur draft. Player signed June 13, 2003.[44]
  • August 21, 2003: Gregg Zaun was released by the Houston Astros.[45]

Roster

2003 Houston Astros
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Players stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
C Brad Ausmus 143 450 103 .229 4 47
1B Jeff Bagwell 160 605 168 .278 39 100
2B Jeff Kent 130 505 150 .297 22 93
SS Adam Everett 128 387 99 .256 8 51
3B Morgan Ensberg 127 385 112 .291 25 60
LF Lance Berkman 153 538 155 .288 25 93
CF Craig Biggio 153 628 166 .264 15 62
RF Richard Hidalgo 141 514 159 .309 28 88

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Geoff Blum 123 420 110 .262 10 52
Orlando Merced 123 212 49 .231 3 26
José Vizcaíno 91 189 47 .249 3 26
Gregg Zaun 59 120 26 .217 1 13
Brian Hunter 56 98 23 .235 0 13
Julio Lugo 22 65 16 .246 0 2
Eric Bruntlett 31 54 14 .259 1 4
Raúl Chávez 19 37 10 .270 1 4
Colin Porter 24 32 6 .188 0 0
Jason Lane 18 27 8 .296 4 10
Mitch Meluskey 12 9 1 .111 0 2
Dave Matranga 6 5 1 .200 1 1
Tripp Cromer 3 4 1 .250 0 1

Pitching

Starters

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Wade Miller 33 187.1 14 13 4.13 161
Tim Redding 33 176.0 10 14 3.68 116
Jeriome Robertson 32 160.2 15 9 5.10 99
Roy Oswalt 21 127.1 10 5 2.97 108
Ron Villone 19 106.2 6 6 4.13 91
Jonathan Johnson 4 15.1 0 1 5.87 7
Brian Moehler 3 13.2 0 0 7.90 5
Rodrigo Rosario 2 8.0 1 0 1.13 6

Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Jared Fernández 12 38.1 3 3 3.99 19
Scott Linebrink 9 31.2 1 1 4.26 17

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G W L SV ERA SO
Billy Wagner 78 1 4 44 1.78 105
Brad Lidge 78 6 3 1 3.60 97
Octavio Dotel 76 6 4 4 2.48 97
Ricky Stone 65 6 4 1 3.69 47
Peter Munro 40 3 4 0 4.67 27
Kirk Saarloos 36 2 1 0 4.93 43
Mike Gallo 32 1 0 0 3.00 16
Dan Miceli 23 1 1 0 2.10 20
Nate Bland 22 1 2 0 5.75 18
Rick White 15 0 0 0 3.72 17
Brandon Puffer 13 0 0 0 5.14 10
Bruce Chen 11 0 0 0 6.00 8
Kirk Bullinger 7 0 0 0 6.75 5

Awards and achievements

Grand slams

No. Date Astros batter Venue Inning Pitcher Opposing team Box
1 April 4 Brad Ausmus Busch Stadium 1 Brett Tomko St. Louis Cardinals
2 September 1 Jeff Kent Dodger Stadium 9 Rodney Myers Los Angeles Dodgers

Awards

League leaders

NL batting leaders
NL pitching leaders

Minor league system

Level Team League Manager
AAA New Orleans Zephyrs Pacific Coast League Chris Maloney
AA Round Rock Express Texas League Jackie Moore
A Salem Avalanche Carolina League John Massarelli
A Lexington Legends South Atlantic League Russ Nixon
A-Short Season Tri-City ValleyCats New York–Penn League Iván DeJesús
Rookie Martinsville Astros Appalachian League Jorge Orta

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Just weeks after executing the four-strikeout inning, Scott tossed a no-hitter versus the San Francisco Giants on September 25, 1986.
  2. ^ a b Tied by José Valverde in 2008. Criteria: For single seasons, playing for HOU, in the regular season, requiring saves ≥ 25, sorted by ascending season.
  1. ^ Houston forfeited their first round selection to the San Francisco Giants by signing free agent second baseman Jeff Kent.

References

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  45. ^ Gregg Zaun Statistics Baseball-Reference.com
  46. ^ "Darryl Kile Award". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved July 20, 2025.
  47. ^ a b c d McTaggart, Brian (December 21, 2009). "Bourn highlights Astros' awards season". MLB.com. Archived from the original on December 8, 2010. Retrieved November 5, 2025.
  48. ^ "Houston Astros Player of the Year". The Baseball Cube. Retrieved August 24, 2025.
  49. ^ "MLB Players of the Week Awards". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved August 29, 2025.
1st half: Houston Astros Game Log on ESPN.com
2nd half: Houston Astros Game Log on ESPN.com