2003 Montreal Expos | |
---|---|
Major League affiliations | |
|
|
|
|
Location | |
|
|
Other information | |
Owner(s) | Major League Baseball |
General manager(s) | Omar Minaya |
Manager(s) | Frank Robinson |
Local television |
Réseau des sports (Rodger Brulotte, Denis Casavant) |
Local radio |
CKGM (AM) (Mitch Melnick, Elliott Price, guest minor league play-by-play broadcasters) CKAC (AM) (Jacques Doucet, Marc Griffin) |
< Previous season Next season > |
The 2003 Montreal Expos season was a season in baseball, and the 35th season for the Expos in Montreal. It involved the Expos attempting to win the NL East. On August 28, 2003, the Expos led the NL Wild Card, tied for first place with the Marlins, Astros, Phillies, and Cardinals, but faded away in the stretch and failed to make the postseason.
On August 30, 2002, MLB signed a collective bargaining agreement with the players association, which prohibited contraction through the end of the agreement in 2006.
Ultimately, the Expos finished 8 games behind the Wild Card (and World Series Champion) Florida Marlins.
Although their attendance increased from 7,935 per game in 2001 to 10,031 in 2002, MLB decided that the Expos would play 22 of their home games at Hiram Bithorn Stadium in San Juan, Puerto Rico in 2003. Despite being a considerably smaller facility (it seats approximately 19,000) than Montreal's Olympic Stadium, attendance in San Juan's Hiram Bithorn Stadium averaged 14,222, compared with 12,081 in Montreal. The Puerto Rican baseball fans embraced "Los Expos" (particularly Puerto Rican players José Vidro, Javier Vázquez and Wil Cordero, and other Latin players like Vladimir Guerrero and Liván Hernández) as their home team (as well as the Latin players from other teams), all the while hoping the team would make a permanent move to Puerto Rico. Thanks in part to the San Juan games, the Expos were able to draw over a million fans at home in 2003 for the first time since 1997. The Expos' season in Puerto Rico was chronicled in the MLB-produced DVD Boricua Beisbol – Passion of Puerto Rico.
Starting Players
Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
2003 Major League Baseball All-Star Game