2004 Toronto Blue Jays season
The 2004 Toronto Blue Jays season was the franchise's twenty-eighth season of Major League Baseball. It resulted in the Blue Jays finishing fifth in the American League East with a record of 67 wins and 94 losses, their worst record since 1980. The Blue Jays' radio play-by-play announcer, Tom Cheek, called every Blue Jays game from the team's inaugural contest on April 7, 1977 until June 3, 2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father – a streak of 4,306 consecutive regular season games and 41 postseason games.
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2004 Toronto Blue Jays season
The 2004 Toronto Blue Jays season was the franchise's twenty-eighth season of Major League Baseball. It resulted in the Blue Jays finishing fifth in the American League East with a record of 67 wins and 94 losses, their worst record since 1980. The Blue Jays' radio play-by-play announcer, Tom Cheek, called every Blue Jays game from the team's inaugural contest on April 7, 1977 until June 3, 2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father – a streak of 4,306 consecutive regular season games and 41 postseason games.
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The 2004 Toronto Blue Jays sea ...... games and 41 postseason games.
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Торонто Блю Джейс в сезоне Гла ...... В плей-офф команда не попала.
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12,205,709
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743,741,322
after
ballpark
before
city
current league
American League
division
divisional place
managers
name
Toronto Blue Jays
owners
Rogers; Paul Godfrey
season
television
title
years
subject
hypernym
type
comment
The 2004 Toronto Blue Jays sea ...... games and 41 postseason games.
@en
Торонто Блю Джейс в сезоне Гла ...... В плей-офф команда не попала.
@ru
label
2004 Toronto Blue Jays season
@en
«Торонто Блю Джейс» в сезоне 2004
@ru