Relive four of the greatest moments in Padres baseball history. Each set comes with four laser-etched coasters depicting these historic plays:
1999 Regular Season vs Montreal - Mr. Padre's Number 3,000
1998 NLCS: Game 6 vs Atlanta - Back to the World Series
1984 NLCS: Game 5 vs Chicago - Pennant Winners
2006 Regular Season vs Pittsburgh - The Save Record
These slate coasters are laser-etched indelibly into the stone itself. - Size: 4" x 4" x 0.25" per coaster - Weight: 0.25lbs (4oz) - Natural edge
Notice: No sports player, team, league, or playoff is affiliated with Playbook Products or is the source of, is responsible for, or has endorsed, sponsored, or authorized these products or this website.
1999 Regular Season
Mr. Padre's Number 3,000
Padres vs Montreal
12 - 10
6 August, 1999
Tony Gwynn, also known as "Mr. Padre" is San Diego's greatest player of all-time and that likely won't ever change. When he hit number 3,000 and earned his place in the selective club, he gave San Diego something and someone to always hang their hat on.
1998 NLCS: Game 6
Back to the World Series
Padres vs Atlanta
5 - 0
14 October, 1998
San Diego had another chance to reach the World Series. Scoring five runs in the 6th inning, Hoffman closed out the shutout as San Diego won their 2nd ever pennant and secured their spot back in the World Series.
1984 NLCS: Game 5
Pennant Winners
Padres vs Chicago
6 - 3
7 October, 1984
It was San Diego's first postseason in team history and they made the most of it. Down in the series 0-2 against Chicago, the Padres stormed back winning the next two to force a Game 5. In the 7th inning, Tony Gwynn drove home two runners with his double, taking the lead and earning the pennant.
2006 Regular Season
The Save Record
Padres vs Pittsburgh
2 - 1
24 September, 2006
In 2006, Trevor Hoffman became the all-time career saves leader, surpassing Lee Smith for save number 479. A member of the Hall of Fame, Hoffman is a Padres legend spending 15 years with the team. He finished his career with 601 saves, a record eventually broken by the greatest ever, Mariano Rivera.