http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/BAL/2003.shtml Jay Gibbons and Melvin Mora walked 49 times that year. Deivi Cruz got 150 games played and 13 walks as the starting shortstop. They also had no one score over 80 runs. http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/DET/2002.shtml I believe the 2002 Tigers were the last team before the Cubs to not draw 400 walks. I might have glanced over one, but they had Robert Fick leading them with 46 walks. He also led them in runs scored (66). Simon led them in RBI (82) and no one hit twenty homers. The team scored 575 runs. With a DH. http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYM/1995.shtml They only played 144 games, but it's unlikely they would have had 50. Brett Butler led the team with 43 walks. They actually had a good walk rate as a team but there four biggest walk guys {Everett, Butler, Bonilla, Hundley} didn't play the full season but each had about 40 walks in half a season. They drew 446 walks in 144 games. You can throw out 1994, only about 30 guys in the game had fifty walks that season. I stopped at 1990. Here's what I've got for 1961-2005. National League only, teams with fewer than 400 BBs, ignoring strike years......... 1966 St. Louis 345
1964 New York 353
1967 New York 362
1967 Cincinnati 372
1968 St. Louis 378
1968 Cincinnati 379
1968 New York 379
1964 Houston 381
1967 Pittsburgh 387
1993 Colorado 388
1965 New York 392
1998 Pittsburgh 393
1966 Cincinnati 394
1978 Montreal 396