Tuesday, February 28, 2023

World Series: Did You Know

The battery played a role for Oakland's 1972 win.

Charles O Finley's Oakland Athletics seemed to have a breakout year in 1971, as their ace Vida Blue won 24 games. The team itself seemed primed to overtake Baltimore as the American League representive in the Fall Classic. The 101 win season came to an end in a sweep at the hands of the Orioles in the American League Championship Series.

But 1972 changed the landscape.

Blue was just 6-10 that season, but his earned run average was 2.80. It was Catfish Hunter who led the team with 21 wins. The big stat that the Cincinnati Reds, the team that would face Oakland in the World Series that year, had to be aware of was this: Any pitcher who started at least 14 game for the Athletics that year had an ERA under 3! Another starter, Joe Horlen, albeit with just six games pitching from inning one on, posted an ERA of exactly 3.00.

The team's bullpen was great, too. Darold Knowles had an earned run average of just 1.37, and went 5-1. Bob Locker was even better, 6-1. Knowles saved 11 games, Locker 10. But the team's big guy in the bullpen was closer Rollie Fingers. Fingers finished 1972 with 11 wins and 21 saves. Gary Waslewski would be left off the postseason roster, but had an earned run average of just 2.04 in eight appearances.

There was also a notable player on the disabled list for Oakland come October, Reggie Jackson. He was not "Mr. October" yet, but it was clearly a big loss. Reggie was second on the team in home runs with 25. He'd suffered a hamstring injury during a double-steal in the fifth contest of the ALCS.

So after edging Detroit in the ALCS, it was Cincinnati vs. Oakland in the Fall Classic (The two teams would meet again eighteen years later). 

So what about the catcher for the A's. Dave Duncan hit just .218 in the regular season, but had also hit 19 home runs. There was also Gene Tenace, who'd hit 5 home runs in 82 regular season contests. But he wasn't hitting for an average. In the ALCS, Tenace appeared in all five games, hitting .059. He'd hit just .225 in the regular season.

I, for one, am shocked that manager Dick Williams would choose to stick with Tenace in the World Series. Cincinnati didn't even bother to scout him prior to the October Classic. And they'd pay dearly for it.

The first two games were played at Riverfront Stadium. Gene would catch Ken Holtzman for the opening tilt. Holtzman had won 19 games in 1972, but had lost his only ALCS appearance.

Holtzman's afternoon was short, but he pitched well. He got the side 1-2-3 in the bottom of the first. His pal Gene Tenace came up in the next inning with George Hendrick on first and two away. Gary Nolan, the Reds' pitcher, threw him a 2-1 pitch that at the letters. Tenace deposited the offering over the wall in left. The A's had a quick 2-0 lead for Ken Holtzman to work with. He'd need those two runs.

The Reds, you see, woke up in the bottom of the frame, and had a man on third when Gary Nolan fanned to end that. The A's would watch as the Reds tied the game two innings later, but just when Gary Nolan appeared to be settling down, Tenace had another surprise for him.

Blasting another one to left, the Oakland catcher made it two times downtown in two plate appearances, becoming the first player to do that in the World Series (Andruw Jones of Atlanta would join him in 1996). This, however, was the last time the Athletics would cross the plate in this game.

Ken Holtzman raced through the fifth frame, getting the side 1-2-3, including a strikeout of Hall-of-Famer Joe Morgan (In which Tenace couldn't handle, and would have to go to first for the K 1-2). In the top of the sixth, Johnny Bench, Cincinnati's counterpart to Tenace behind the dish, greeted Holtzman with a leadoff double. The pitcher would next be seen testing the showers at Riverfront Stadium.

So closer Rollie Fingers came in, and he and Tenace worked some magic. Fingers got out of the sixth, standing Bench at second, fanning two. Dave Concepcion led off the next inning for Cincinnati, and singled. He was then caught stealing. The inning was an eventful one for Oakland. Fingers put a man on via a walk. Vida Blue came in to relieve Fingers. Blue threw a wild pitch. He walked a man. Finally, with Pete Rose on second and Joe Morgan on first, Blue got Bobby Tolan to pop out.

Vida got Cincinnati out 1-2-3 in the eighth. But the ninth inning was a struggle as the Reds had the tying run at third when the last out was recorded.

So Oakland had needed all they could from three pitchers this afternoon. Ken Holtzman was solid in five innings, getting the win. Rollie Fingers got the hold for a fine 1 2/3 inning. Vida Blue ended up with a save before he could win his first World Series game. An odd accomplishment for a starting pitcher. Gene Tenace hit two home runs, and seen all three pitchers from behind the plate.

Game two was more the Catfish Hunter show than anything else. The Oakland pitcher was superb, limiting Cincinnati to just six hits and one run. One out away from a shutout in the ninth, Hal McRae's single spoiled that. It was also the last batter Hunter would face. Fingers hopped in from the A's bullpen, getting pinch-hitter and former Cardinal Julian Javier to pop out to first. Gene Tenace didn't seem so tough in this game, however, as three Reds' pitcher held him to 0-4.

Oakland was coming home up 2-0. But any thoughts of a sweep would quickly vanish. Worse still, the A's offence was trending in the wrong direction. The Reds blanked 'em, 1-0. So they'd scored 3, 2 and 0 runs through three games.

Saving Oakland from this trouble had been their pitching. Blue Moon Odom, Vida Blue and Rollie Fingers held Cincinnati to just four hits. However, they were overshadowed by the opposition's pitching. Jack Billingham and Clay Carroll had stopped the Athletics on just three hits.

So the A's needed a bounce-back in the pivotal fourth contest. It was back to Ken Holtzman. Ken had won the first game of the series, but probably wanted to go more than five innings. His start not only was better, but it seemed to rub off not only on Gene Tenace, but some of his other teammates, too.

The Reds got runners to second and third in the top of the first, but Holtzman made sure none of them scored. The game remained scoreless as Cincinnati starter Don Gullett matched Holtzman in a scoreless game. That is, until Gene Tenace came back up in the bottom of the fifth.

Gullett had gotten Tenace to ground out in the third. Two innings later, the pitcher wasn't so lucky. Though Gene came up 0-9 since his second long ball in game one, it was time for more four-bagger heroics.

The hit itself was just a solo shot, so Oakland had a slim 1-0 lead. But Ken Holtzman protected it until the top of the eighth. That's when Dave Concepcion got things started for Cincinnati with a leadoff single. Julian Javier, again pinch hitting, bunted Concepcion into scoring position. Pete Rose was retired on a grounder, but the tying run was now ninety feet away from home.

Dick Williams took Ken Holtzman out of the game. It had been a magnificent start for Ken: 7 2/3 innings, five hits allowed! Would it be enough?

Joe Morgan was the next batter. The new pitcher was Vida Blue again. In this lefty-lefty situation, it was the batter that would coax a bases on balls from the pitcher. Bobby Tolan followed with a clutch double, and suddenly, Oakland trailed 2-1.

Come the ninth inning, the score was still the same. Rollie Fingers came in to pitch after Tony Perez opened the inning with a single. Fingers picked off Perez and managed to get the next two batters out. That set the stage for an amazing bottom of the ninth.

Pedro Borbon, working his second inning of relief, got off on the right foot by retiring Mike Hegan. That is always big, as getting the first batter out usually means the other team isn't going to have a big inning. Oakland, however, didn't need a big inning. They needed just one run. They ended up doing better than that.

Gonzalo Marquez stroked a pinch-hit single to get the tying run aboard. Allan Lewis ran for him. Gene Tenace was back up, having fanned against Don Gullett last time up. But here, the Oakland catcher singled.

No pinch runner was used for Tenace, but Don Mincher batted for second basemen Dick Green. Mincher had played in the World Series with the Minnesota Twins seven years earlier, so he had experience in the Fall Classic. The move by Dick Williams to call on Mincher to pinch hit paid dividends.

Mincher would stroke one to centre. Lewis scored. Tenace made it to third. Now, the winning run was ninety feet away.

It would be a third pinch-hitter in the bottom of the ninth. The A's also wanted to avoid an inning-ending double play. So pitcher Blue Moon Odom, who'd stolen four bases that season, came in to run for Mincher.

Oh, and the pinch hitter was Ángel Mangual. Mangual would grab all the next-day's headlines. He sent a grounder to right that made it to the outfield, and Gene Tenace crossed home.

This seemed to be the end of the 1972 World Series. Oakland now led 3-1, with game five at home. It seemed like a foregone conclusion that this Fall Classic wasn't heading back to Cincinnati. The Athletics battery had been too strong. So strong that Vida Blue was just coming out of the bullpen. Would he ever get a start?

But the Reds, who'd lost the 1970 World Series to the Baltimore Orioles, would end up being one of the very best teams of the decade. They had character players. And they had guys like Tony Perez, Joe Morgan, Pete Rose, Johnny Bench.

Rose was the first batter of game five, and hit a home run. Gene Tenace overcame that with a three-run shot in the bottom of the second. It was 3-1 Oakland, in the series and this contest. Tenace was up to four home runs in just five games. This tied a single World Series record at the time. Ironically enough, the very man who missed this entire extravaganza, Reggie Jackson, would break it five years later.

Catfish Hunter appeared to have things under control until the top of the fourth. Another blast, this time by Denis Menke, cut the margin to just a run, 3-2. Oakland was quick to respond.

Sal Bando opened the bottom of the fourth with a walk. George Hendrick bunted him into scoring position. The Reds, who had not scouted Gene Tenace, were now fully aware of the problem with pitching to him. So they put him on. The move backfired, however, as Oakland manager made a smart move of his own. Having had great success with pinch hitters in their last at bats of the previous contest, A's manager Dick Williams sent up another here early.

Gonzalo Marquez singled. Bando scored, and Tenace hustled to third. A big inning was brewing!

At least it was until Pedro Borbon got them out of it. Allan Lewis was inserted as a pinch runner for Marquez, as this inning was really resembling the bottom of the ninth inning of the previous contest. Catfish Hunter was now up. To try for a fifth run of the contest, Oakland tried a suicide squeeze. However, Borbon threw a strike past Hunter, and Tenace was a dead duck. It was a huge play.

Lewis had advanced to second on the play, so Catfish Hunter had a chance to cash in a fifth run in any event. But all Hunter could do is fly out. He wouldn't be around much longer.

Cincinnati got rid of Catfish in the top of the fifth. They scored a run with two away, before Rollie Fingers put out the fire. It was still 4-3 for the home team.

But Oakland's offence stalled. Reds' reliever Tom Hall easy got through the fifth and sixth inning, keeping Cincinnati within a run. Bobby Tolan's single in the top of the eighth cashed in the fourth Reds' run, tying the contest.

Fingers stayed in the game, but the Reds now had his number. Cesar Geronimo singled to start the ninth. Ross Grimsley got him to second with a sacrifice bunt. Dave Concepcion reached on an error. Pete Rose singled home the go-ahead run.

There was one last chance for the Athletics to tie it. And ironically, more batteries were included.

Gene Tenace go on via a bases on balls. Ted Kubiak failed to get him to second on a bunt attempt. However, this led to a series of moves that got a forgotten man on Oakland into this game.

Jack Billingham, a tall left-handed pitcher (And like Vida Blue, normally a starter), entered the game for Cincinnati, trying to preserve the contest and sent it back to Riverfront Stadium. Oakland then brought in a pinch runner, Blue Moon Odom, to run for Tenace.

So there would also be a pinch hitter, as pitcher Dave Hamilton was the scheduled batter. Dave Duncan had been a regular on Oakland during the regular season, but given what Tenace had done so far, there was no way he'd be catching. Still, here in a very big situation, he singled. Odom motored towards third.

This put the Athletics into a situation where any extra base hit would win the 1972 World Series for Oakland. The batter would be Bert Campaneris, who had once played all nine positions in one game back in 1965. The inning was becoming a chess match between the two managers. Don Gullett, who'd pitched well the previous game, was now warming up in the Reds' bullpen. Presumably, he would come in to face Matty Alou (They were both lefties). However, the game never got to that point.

Campaneris popped up to right. It was second basemen Joe Morgan who scrambled into foul territory to make the catch for the second out. Morgan lost his footing. So Odom at third sought to take advantage of it by racing home. Cincinnati's second basemen bounced right back up. Morgan's throw beat the runner to the plate. The double play meant the Reds had won the game, and would head home.

Obviously, it was still a "must win" situation for Cincinnati. Yet, this was the one rout in this Fall Classic.

Vida Blue did finally start, and for a while he seemed to have it. The Reds got to him in the bottom of the fourth via Johnny Bench. The Cincinnati catcher hit a knee-high fastball outta here. But Oakland quickly recovered from that setback.

In the top of the fifth, Sal Bando again got his team off on the right foot in an inning. Oakland would pound the ball, but Gary Nolan would get the next two batters out. First, Ángel Mangual appeared to have enough to get Bando home as he hit one to left. It seemed like extra bases until Pete Rose jumped at the wall and hauled it in. Gene Tenace was next. A moment of humour then happened as the batter sent a foul ball into the broadcast booth. "We got a World Series souvenir right herein the booth!" said Oakland's radio announcer Monte Moore. Moore would then see a surprising star below him try and deliver again. Bob Locker was loosening up for the visitors. With the count 1-2, Gary Nolan threw Gene Tenace a curveball that nearly resulted in a wild pitch. Johnny Bench blocked it, holding Sal Bando at first. Gene Tenace would get a hold of one, and sent it to centre on a 2-2 pitch to centre. Bobby Tolan went back to the warning track, and was able to settle under it. But the A's were getting to Nolan. It seemed quite possible that both pitchers would soon be gone. Vida Blue would hit after Dick Green, and there was the possibility that Dick Williams would pinch hit for him.

Green did his part, doubling to the gap in right, and we had ourselves a tie ballgame. Vida Blue would then bat for himself, but not against Gary Nolan. Sparky Anderson brought in a new pitcher, even though there was two away, and the light-hitting (Vida hit just .044 in 1972) pitcher up.

Blue drew a walk from Ross Grimsley, as Oakland was having themselves a good inning. They'd score a run, they'd hit the ball hard, and now had runners on first and second. Bert Campaneris ended the fun by popping out.

The Reds scratched out a tie-breaking run in their half of the inning. Hal McRae was cashed in via a grounder and sacrifice fly. Cincinnati was ahead for good. Vida Blue kept battling, but on this day, the Reds seemed to have the book on him and nearly every other Athletics pitcher who appeared.

Blue actually got the first two batters out the next inning, and Oakland seemed safe. However, Bobby Tolan ended any thoughts of a 1-2-3 inning as he singled. Blue threw a high ball to Johnny Bench, who took it. 1-0. Oakland was holding Tolan on first, and with Vida Blue being a left-handed pitcher, the odds of a stolen base here seemed slim. Ball two outside. Bob Locker was summoned from the bullpen by Dick Williams to put out this fire. However, Tolan added some gasoline to it by swiping second on the next pitch, which was ball three. Locker threw a deliberate ball four.

The strategy backfired on Oakland, however. Tony Perez came up with a single, having himself a terrific Fall Classic. It was 3-1 for the home team. This insurance run made the rest of the game a lot easier for Cincinnati. 

Gene Tenace was still hitting the ball well. He came up with a man on first in the top of the seventh. Tenace fouled a potential strike three with the count 1-2 (The pitch, though, was a ball two if Gene had taken it). But Johnny Bench couldn't hold on to it. Tenace got under the next one, but it was just a short fly to centre.

In the ninth, things went a little better. The trouble was, the game was over. The only real rout of the 1972, the scored was a laugher, 8-1, for Cincinnati as the defiant Oakland Athletics came up one last time in the ninth.

With two out and the bases empty, Ángel Mangual collected his second hit of the game. Gene Tenace followed with his first base hit of the afternoon. But Ted Kubiak forced Mangual at third, and the 1972 October Finale was heading to a seventh and deciding game.

It was Blue Moon Odom vs. Jack Billingham. But Dave Duncan would finally get his first start behind the plate in the World Series. But what about the hot bat of Gene Tenace? Well, he was in the lineup at first, replacing Mike Epstein, who wasn't hitting.

The stage was quickly set for the new first basemen. Ángel Mangual had made it all the way to third on an error. Tenace came up with two away, but delivered a clutch single.

The game stayed 1-0 Oakland until the bottom of the fifth. That's when Cincinnati tied it on a Hal McRae sacrifice fly. Catfish Hunter had taken over on the hill as the Reds had loaded the bases. Hunter averted any further trouble as Pete Rose sent one to the gap in right. That's where Ángel Mangual caught it on the warning track.

Hunter had really done the job, plus the momentum could carry over. Due up in the top of the sixth inning was speedster Bert Campaneris. Campy singled. A bunt and a grounder brought Tenace back to the dish. And the first basemen drove home his second run of the contest with a double. On the second pitch from Pedro Borbon, Tenace got an offspeeder, and delivered a clutch double to break the tie.

Sadly, this was Gene's last contribution to the Oakland Athletics in 1972. He parted for pinch runner Allan Lewis. Sal Bando followed with a double, and Lewis scored. Oakland had all the runs they needed.

Still, the Athletics loaded the bases, and failed to get another run. They could have broken the game wide open. It was merely a two-run lead. Hunter had to pitch his way out of a jam in the bottom of the sixth as Cincinnati got runners to second and third. Denis Menke ended the inning by flying out.

But Pete Rose sent Catfish Hunter to the showers in the bottom of the eighth. Pete singled to start the inning. The new pitcher was Ken Holtzman. Joe  Morgan greeted him with a double. The Reds had the tying run at second. Rollie Fingers came in to pitch. A popup and intentional walk brought Tony Perez to the playe. Perez delivered, hitting a sacrifice fly. The Reds had their second run of the ballgame.

But Rollie Fingers was through with giving the Reds anything. The Athletics' bullpen ace got Dennis Menke out after Johnny Bench surprised everyone by stealing second.

In the ninth, Fingers got the first two men out. Darrel Chaney batted for pitcher Tom Hall. Rollie hit Tom, bringing Pete Rose to the plate. When Rose flied out to left, Oakland had the 1972 World Championship.

A quick look at the battery of Oakland for the 1972 reveals they were clicking. Rollie Fingers was 1-1 with two saves and an earned run average of 1.74. Vida Blue got just that one start, took the loss and posted an ERA of 4.15. However, Blue picked up a save and showed potential in the clutch. Ken Holtzman won a game, made two other appearances, and had a 2.13 earned run average. Catfish Hunter was the best among Athletic starters. He won 2, lost none, and posted a 2.81 ERA.

Perhaps most surprising were Blue Moon Odom and Gene Tenace. White Odom, you'd see him out there more than you might have expected just any other pitcher. He appeared twice as a pinch runner. In the two other games, where Blue Moon pitched, he posted a 1.59 earned run average. True, he'd lost his only decision, but had kept Oakland in it.

But how about Tenace? Four home runs. Nine RBIs. No one else on Oakland had more than one home run and one run batted in. Tenace even topped all Athletics in runs scored with five. This marvelous performance helped Oakland capture it's first major professional sports championship. So it was no small feat. It was true a first.

The A's would return to the Fall Classic the next two years. And come away with a three-peat.


References



Enders, Eric. 100 Years Of The World Series. Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 2005.


Neft, David S., Richard M. Cohen, and Michael L. Neft. The Sports Encyclopedia: Baseball, 1992. 12th ed. St. Martin's Press, 1992.


--------------. The World Series: Complete Play-By-Play of Every Game, 1903-1989, St. Martin's Press, 1990.


Nemec, David et all. 20th Century Baseball Chronicle: A Year-by-year History of Major League Baseball. Collector's Edition. Publications International, 1993. 


“1972 World Series.” Baseball Wiki, Wikimedia Foundation, https://baseball.fandom.com/wiki/1972_World_Series. 28 Feb. 2023.


Society for American Baseball Research, SABR, https://sabr.org/. 28 Feb. 2023.


Snyder, John S. World Series!: Great Moments and Dubious Achievements. Chronicle Books, 1995.


Sports Reference LLC. Baseball-Reference.com - Major League Statistics and Information. http://www.baseball-reference.com/. 28 Feb. 2023.


“They Were There: The TGG Interview with Joe Rudi.” This Great Game, This Great Game, 31 July 2020, https://thisgreatgame.com/joe-rudi/. 28 Feb. 2023.


YouTube, Google, www.youtube.com/. 28 Feb. 2023.

World Series: Did You Know?

Edd Roush was only second on Cincinnati in RBI in 1919. During the regular season, Edd had led the Reds with 71 RBI.

It was a meager total. Another player, who's totals seemed meager, very meager, was Pat Duncan. Duncan had only 17 RBI in the regular season, but in just 31 games played. The Cincinnati would soon turn to these two men to get 'em across the dish.

Both would have a great Fall Classic against the Chicago White Sox. Were the White Sox trying?

Well, eight members of this squad, which was pretty much the same as the one that had won it all two years later, were banned from baseball after the 1920 season. Some of the players had taken money from gamblers. This alone, tends to take away from the efforts of the Reds, which is unfortunate. 

It seemed like the game would be tough for Cincinnati. The visiting Sox seemed to have something going in the first. But thanks in large part to Roush, the Reds survived it, unscathed.

Shano Collins led off the sixteenth edition of the World Series with a single. A bunt by Eddie Collins, who was not related to Shano, ended up as just a force at second. Buck Weaver was next. Chicago tried a hit-and-run play, but for some reason Buck just took the pitch. Collins was erased at second. Weaver, though, was still up. He rocketed one that the Reds' centre fielder showed off his leather on. With a spectacular one-handed grab, Roush had robbed Weaver of a double. 

Roush, playing in front of his fans at Redland Field, must have had a big grin on his face the first time up in the opening tilt. There was Jake Daubert on first. The Reds had a 1-0 lead on the White Sox, and Edd Roush wanted to extend that. But then, Daubert then got caught stealing. So much for an opportunity to drive in an insurance run. With two away, Edd drew a bases on balls of Chicago pitcher Eddie Cicotte, and then stole second. This gave the aforementioned Pat Duncan a chance at an RBI himself, but Cicotte got him to ground out.

Chicago countered with a run in the top of the second, so Cincinnati didn't get to enjoy the lead long. Chick Gandil got a single to centre, but Roush sure made an effort to catch it.

Cincinnati's big inning came in the bottom of the fourth. It was Pat Duncan that got it all going with a one-out single. The Reds were about to blow open this opening tilt to this awesome extravaganza!

With two out, Greasy Neale kept the inning alive with a single. This brought catcher Ivey Wingo to the dish. Ivey had failed the first time up, but here, he gave the Reds the lead for good with a clutch two out single. The scoring had merely begun. By the time the inning was over, the home team had put a "5" on the scoreboard. The game was effectively over. Eddie Cicotte had been routed.

The Reds didn't stop there. The new pitcher was Roy Wilkinson. In the fifth, he got Edd Roush out on a long fly to centre. He'd given it quite a ride back in the third. Despite hitting the ball so well, Roush did not end up getting a hit this game. But Pat Duncan was a man on a mission. Proving he belonged in the Fall Classic, as a Red regular, he singled. Nothing came of it, but when Duncan batted again two innings later, something did!

Cincinnati had already scored one run that frame, and were looking for more. Edd Roush laid down a bunt to third. Buck Weaver, the Chicago third basemen, picked it up. But his throw to first took Chick Gandil into Roush, who was scrambling to first. Contact was made between the Roush and Gandil, the end result a dropped ball. The error opened the door for Pat Duncan.

Pat could only hit into a fielder's choice which erased Roush, but it scored Heinie Groh. Remarkably, enough the home team continued to pour it on. They scored a ninth run in the eighth, and looked to Edd Roush for more.

Pitcher Dutch Ruether had added a run-scoring single to make it 9-1. But Morrie Rath then retired for the second out. The Reds then manufactured two more runners to load the bases, without the benefit of a hit. Jake Daubert was hit by a pitch. Heinie Groh walked.

Alas, all Edd Roush could do was force Groh at second. There was no more scoring in the contest. It was a laugher.

The Reds trotted back out the next day, to try and make it two straight over the White Sox. Edd Roush drew a walk off Lefty Williams in the last of inning two. Lefty, who's first name was actually Claude, pitched a pretty good game. Cincinnati would have to make due with just four hits.

They did not get one in the last of the second. Pat Duncan lined to second basemen Eddie Collins. The legendary second basemen doubled Roush off first.

So it became clear early on that Lefty Williams was "on". Both he and Eddie Cicotte would later be kicked out of baseball for their part in throwing this World Series. However, each would later imply that they had tried, at least in their second and third starts of the 1919 Fall Classic. So maybe we shouldn't say that what Roush, Duncan or any of the Reds accomplished is tainted.

Williams pitched well this game, too. However, perhaps the issue was not that he couldn't give up a hit. Rather, it was his control that was the the enigma.

The Reds had two men on via (you guess it) walks in the bottom of the fourth. Up stepped the Cincinnati centre fielder. Edd Roush came through for the visitors with a single, cashing in Morrie Rath. Roush, though, may have hurt a potential big inning. He was caught stealing.

It was up to Pat Duncan to keep this inning alive. He drew Williams' third free pass of the inning. The Reds took advantage, adding a second and third run of the frame on Larry Kopf's triple. It was 3-0. However, it could have been 4-0.

Cincinnati had to wait three innings to score again. And again it was an inning that featured a walk by Edd Roush. Pat Duncan bunted him into scoring position. Eventually, Roush scored a run (The Reds' last of the ballgame) on a Greasy Neale two-out single.

The run was big. Chicago rallied with two runs of their own in the top of the seventh to break the shutout. Roush, though, appeared to have his second hit of the ballgame (To go along nicely with a pair of bases on balls) in the bottom of the eighth.

Heinie Groh became the sixth Red to read first off Lefty Williams via ball four. This put one on with one out. So Edd Roush sent one to shallow centre. It appeared to be a hit, and Cincinnati seemed destined for another run or two.

That is, until Happy Felsch arrived. Rushing in, the Chicago centre fielder made a spectacular catch (Ironically, Felsch himself was later implicated in the scandal). The end result was Groh doubled off first.

Slim Sallee pitched a fair ballgame for Cincinnati, although he allowed two singles in the ninth before getting the last out. When the series moved to Chicago, the Reds' momentum seemed to dissappear.

Dickie Kerr, the left-hander for the White Sox, had no involvement in the fixing of the 1919 Fall Classic. It seemed, also that his team was trying their best in the third contest.

The very man that put the fix together, Chick Gandil, singled home two runs in the bottom of the second. Before that, Pat Duncan had come up with a one-out single in the top of the frame. There was a bit of a suspicious play that followed. Larry Kopf hit a ball that Swede Risberg took too long with. They got the out at first, but Duncan had made it to second in time. But the Reds failed to take advantage of it, stranding Duncan at second when Greasy Neale grounded out to Eddie Collins.

Heinie Groh led off the third with a walk. Edd Roush then grounded out, but it worked like a bunt, as Groh was now at second. Pat Duncan took a rip at a pitch and sent it to left. But this time, Swede Risberg was there. The shortstop not only made the catch, he doubled Groh off second, ending the the top of the fourth. A Risberg triple would lead to an eventual third Chicago run in the bottom of the frame.

The Reds were essentially beaten right there and then. Kerr pitched amazing. Cincinnati got just one more hit. They were frustrated by the superb effort by the Chicago lefty, who ended the game in style. The last fifteen Cincinnati batters were sent back to the dugout in frustration. Roush was scheduled to bat next as Heinie Groh grounded out to end the contest.

So Dickie Kerr had a three-hit shutout. Edd Roush and Pat Duncan were a combined 0-6.

Game four of this best-of-nine affair was big. It turned into a superb pitchers' duel. Jimmy Ring started for Cincinnati, and had some trouble. Edd Roush was one awesome centre fielder. However, he couldn't come up with Joe Jackson's hit to centre. Joe ended up on second with a leadoff two-bagger. The next two men were retired via a sac bunt and a pop up. Ring seemed safe, but walked Swede Risberg to keep the inning alive. Swede made the Reds pay by stealing second. The White Sox had two men in scoring position. Ring walked catcher Ray Schalk intentionally. Eddie Cicotte, the opposing pitcher, actually made quite bid for a hit, but a fine play by Morrie Rath at second ended the inning.

The next inning saw Chicago have Eddie Collins on third and Joe Jackson on first with two away. Again, Jimmy Ring made sure to get the next batter to hit it on the ground. Happy Felsch was retired 5-3.

So Ring had survived two tough innings. Though he settled down after that, he'd need some help from his left fielder to keep Chicago at bay.

With one out in the top of the fifth, it was Pat Duncan with a hard grounder to Cicotte. While the pitcher got to it, his throw to first missed the mark. Duncan had done little, but now was on second base. And Pat would score as Larry Kopf hit the ball to left. Joe Jackson fielded it and threw it home to stop Duncan. But, Eddie Cicotte made a bad play on the ball, redirecting it out of catcher Ray Schalk's position behind the dish. The costly mistake not only scored a run, but meant another runner was at second. Greasy Neale doubled to left over Joe Jackson's head to cash in a second Red run. It actually appeared as though Cincinnati would get more. Red-hot catcher Ivey Wingo was next. Wingo was 1-1 in this contest (To go along with 1-3 in the opening tilt), with another base hit on the way. But Ivey couldn't come through in the biggest moment for him in this game, only grounding out. Neale advanced to third, so there was still a chance for more. But Reds' manager had to let pitcher Jimmy Ring bat, and he too, grounded out.

Cincinnati had all the offence they needed, however. But Pat Duncan would find a way to contribute in other ways. With one away in the bottom of the sixth, he robbed Happy Felsch of extra bases by making a great catch. Just a few feet shy of the stands in left. 

Poor Edd Roush didn't get to do much, sadly. He failed to get a hit in three times up at the dish. Pat Duncan was also held hitless. The final score was only 2-0 for the visitors. The teams combined for just eight hits.

But it was all about great timing when it came to the Reds. The fourth game was big.

Edd Roush came up with a man on second in the top of the first. Two outs. He hit a grounder to Chick Gandil at first. Lefty Williams got over to cover the bag. The pitcher received the ball before the batter made it to first, for the putout. The play ended the inning.

Chicago looked to get it going in the bottom of the first. The White Sox had runners on the corners. But with one out, Joe Jackson popped to third. So two men were on, but now two were out. The batter was Felsch, who would hit the ball well all series, but not always get the results. Here, he lofted one to short left, where Pat Duncan put the squeeze on it.

The game seemed to evolve into a strikeout affair. Williams fanned two in the top of the second (Including Pat Duncan), but the Reds were inspired by pitcher Hod Eller's own exploits. At one point, the Cincinnati starter fanned six batters in a row!

Edd Roush reached on an error by shortstop Swede Risberg in the fourth, then stole second (Catcher Ray Schalk couldn't come up with a pitch when Roush broke). All this with two away. The Reds' centre fielder was making what looked like an easy 1-2-3 inning for Lefty Williams, interesting. Pat Duncan sent one to Joe Jackson in left, and that was it.

Roush would play the hero role in this contest, or maybe co-hero with his pitcher. The Reds would use a big sixth inning to go ahead of the Sox. 

Hod Eller had started it all with a double. This was somewhat a result of poor managing. Chicago manager Kid Gleason had his centre fielder, Happy Felsch, playing Eller a bit towards right. This created the space needed for the Cincinnati pitcher to drop one it. This was the start of a huge rally. Happy Felsch then made a throwing error, and suddenly Cincinnati had a man on third, no outs. Morrie Rath brought Eller home with a single. A bunt and a walk brought Roush back to the dish, and the centre fielder of Cincinnati did not disappoint.

Edd turned on a Williams pitch, and sent it to centre. It appeared to fool Felsch. The misjudgment resulting in him seemingly having butter fingers, or a butter glove. The triple by Roush plated both Morrie Rath and Heinie Groh. 

Well, not everybody thought that Groh was safe. Catcher Ray Schalk of Chicago was sure thought Heinie was DOA at the dish. All that anger resulted in him bumping into someone of authoritative measures who was also behind the plate. Needless to say, Schalk was ejected for bumping home plate umpire Cy Rigler. Byrd Lynn came in, and Pat Duncan came up with a way to challenge the new catcher.

Duncan again sent one to left for the second out. Roush tagged and scored when the catcher for Chicago couldn't handle the heave from Joe Jackson. It was 4-0 for the visitors.

Roush started a mild rally in the eighth when he reached on an error by Eddie Collins. Pat Duncan followed with a walk. Lefty Williams had departed the game when Eddie Murphy batted for him in the bottom of the seventh. And new pitcher Erskine Mayer couldn't stop the bleeding.

Larry Kopf got the two runners into scoring position with a bunt. And then Greasy Neale grounded to short, Edd Roush scoring the fifth (And final) run of the ballgame. Hod Eller completed the shutout, and it seemed Cincinnati now had a stranglehold on the series. Roush had driven in two and scored as many runs. Pat Duncan had to settle for just one RBI.

So going into the potential clincher in the sixth contest at Redland Field, Pat Duncan had played outstanding. He'd only joined the Reds in August, but now was proving he belonged in left for Cincinnati. Roush was Roush in centre, but was hitting just .133. However, looking at the RBI totals from the first five games, Duncan was a little short of them. Driving in 17 in just 31 regular season games was impressive. But here, Pat had just two in five games. Normally, the World Series was a best-of-seven affair, as this was the first extended Fall Classic since 1903 (Although 1912 had a tie, making it eight contests).

Roush's three RBIs actually looked good when you look at his batting average, but he'd wowed the Chicago White Sox with his glove. And the White Sox hadn't seen it all from Roush yet. His fielding in the sixth contest was amazing.

Heinie Groh was on second in the bottom of the second. Roush singled to short. However, Groh overran third base, and Swede Risberg nailed him there. A potential big inning came to an end on that miscue.

Roush would get a second attempt at greatness in the third, and heroically extended the inning by taking one for the team. The hit by pitch took away an RBI chance for Edd, as Jake Daubert had singled earlier in the inning, then stole second as Roush batted.

And Pat Duncan delivered a clutch hit. His two-out double to right scored both Daubert and Edd Roush, and the Reds were off and flying against the White and pitcher Dickie Kerr. Duncan wasn't just waving his bat this game. In the top of the fourth, he took a base hit away from Buck Weaver.

The Reds saw Duncan doing it all, and they in turn touched home two more times in the bottom of that inning. 4-0, and the champagne was all but on ice.

The White Sox appeared to have a big rally going in the bottom of the fifth. But they still hadn't figured out a way to eliminate the great Reds' centre fielder as a factor. The bases were loaded, and only one out. And the batter was Eddie Collins. The future Hall-of-Famer sent one to centre that cashed in Swede Risberg. However, Dickie Kerr ran from first to second after the catch, not realizing that Ray Schalk had remained there. So when third basemen Heinie Groh received the toss from centre, he noticed Kerr's flight towards second. Groh motored over and applied the tag on the Chicago pitcher. That play meant Edd Roush to collect an assist to go along with his putout. The double play got Cincinnati out of a potentially big inning. They still led, 4-1.

Pat Duncan extended the Cincinnati half of the inning, but only when centre fielder Happy Felsch muffed his fly. Larry Kopf grounded out to end the fifth.

The sixth inning was a lost one for the Reds. The White Sox had their biggest inning of the Fall Classic (So far) by crossing home three times to square it. Schalk capped it by sending home Felsch with a single.

Cincinnati, although at home, failed to score again. Dickie Kerr didn't pitch anywhere near as well as he had in game three, but was conceiving to nothing. Roush ended the seventh by hitting into an inning-ending 6-4-3 double play (Started by fixer Swede Risberg, ironically).

But if the bat of the Cincinnati centre fielder had ended one half of an inning, then his glove turned the trick as the game moved to the eighth. Chicago had Joe Jacksons on second and Chick Gandil on first. Risberg flied to centre, and Roush got even with the White Sox shortstop. He not only robbed Risberg of a hit, but he doubled Jackson off second! With that the Reds' centre fielder became the first outfielder to turn a pair of double plays in the same World Series contest!

But the defence of Chicago didn't make many mistakes the rest of the way. Kerr had a tough eighth inning as Cincinnati got two more men on via base hits. Cincinnati couldn't get either home. 

Jimmy Ring had relieved Dutch Ruether in the top of the sixth inning, and pitched a whale of a game. It looked as though Dickie Kerr would finally crack at any moment. Edd Roush himself came up with Heinie Groh on first in the bottom of the eighth. Roush never got to finish his plate appearance as Groh was caught stealing.

And Chicago rode the wave of the momentum created by Groh's attempt to pilfer second. They scratched across a run in the top of the tenth, then watched as their courageous pitcher retired the side in order. Dickie Kerr had extended the Fall Classic for Chicago. It took him 128 pitches.

Oddly, enough, the winning RBI came off the bat of Chick Gandil, the supposed ring-leader of the fix. Though he'd driven home five runs in the 1917 World Series, Gandil had only 60 in the 1919 regular season. The game-winning run driven in by Chick in the top of the tenth in this game six gave him four RBIs. This means he was threatening to lead this extended Fall Classic in that statistic. He actually had as many as Pat Duncan. Edd Roush was stuck at three. There was still a Fall Classic to win by Cincinnati, and some RBI work to be done by Roush and Duncan.

Still, the situation seemed in the Reds' hands, as they were at home for the next contest. Cincinnati had a second chance to clinch at home in game seven. Chicago sent Eddie Cicotte (0-2) out to the hill. The problem was Cincinnati sent Slim Sallee out to finish the White Sox off. However, the Reds should have known Sallee was not the man to get it done. He'd surrendered ten hits in the second contest.

Here, Chicago pounced on him. By the top of the fifth, it was 4-0 for the visitors. The big blow in the game was Happy Felsch's two run single that inning. As for the Reds' bat, they were being stymied. Cincinnati had one hit and one walk.

Greasy Neale got a one-out single in the bottom of the inning. Ivey Wingo was next. The catcher, who only got into three World Series games, was one tough out for Chicago. He was batting .500 coming into this game. The reason I'm bringing Wingo up is that Cincinnati would waste his fine game. Wingo walked for the second time here in the fifth, which could have led to a big inning.

Instead, Dutch Ruether was sent up to hit for pitcher Ray Fisher. Reuther, the pitcher, had hit .261 in the regular season, plus had pitched well in the first contest. But here, all he could do was pop out. Morrie Rath was then retired. The mini rally did mean, however, that the two big guns on the Reds would hit in the sixth.

Heinie Groh hit a one-out double, and it appeared Cincinnati was in business with Edd Roush up. The Reds' centre fielder could only hit one back to the mound. Groh made it to third, but now there were two away.

Just when things were looking bad, it was the bat of Pat Duncan that came through. Pat made it three games in a row with at least one RBI by singling Groh home. The shutout was gone, and Duncan was up to five runs driven in.

It's not as if Cincinnati went quietly after that. Actually, it was the Chicago bats that were silence on a superb relief outing by Dolf Luque. His pitching seemed to give the Reds hope.

With one away in the bottom of the seventh, Wingo made it to first on his third bases on balls of the afternoon. Then, with two away, Morrie Rath singled. Jake Daubert grounded out. From there, the last chance the Reds had to win this game came in the ninth.

Ivey Wingo and Sherry Magee singled with two away. But then Morrie Rath flied out to end it. So Roush and Duncan had been held to just one hit and one RBI.

It seemed like, aside from their RBI totals, Edd Roush and  Pat Duncan were in slumps. Roush was hitting .130 and Duncan just .227. Compare that to:

Greasy Neale, .360

Ivey Wingo, .571

Dutch Reuther, pitcher, .667

Neither Wingo or Reuther would appear in the eighth contest, which was back in Chicago. 

The vesting Reds decided it early.

Left Williams was back, and would retire the leadoff batter, Morrie Rath, to start the contest. This was the only batter Williams got out.

Jake Daubert singled. So did Heinie Groh. The Chicago bullpen got going as Bill James started to throw. Catcher Ray Schalk approached Williams. Most likely, this was to give James more time to get loose. It was obvious the White Sox starting pitcher didn't have it.

And then it was Edd Roush getting the scoring going with a two-run double. When Pat Duncan followed suit, it was 3-0, Cincinnati. Lefty Williams threw one more pitch, a ball. Bill James replaced him on the mound. James would end up not walking Larry Koft. Before the inning ended, Cincinnati had added another run.

Heinie Groh came back up with two away in the top of the second. He ended up collecting his second hit to keep the inning alive. That was all Edd Roush needed. Roush singled. Though Groh scored, Roush ran past first and was erased before he could scamper back.

It was 5-0, and Chicago did not score until the third inning. Joe Jackson's home run was just a solo shot. Cincinnati kept hitting Bill James well, as they got two singles that led to nothing in the top of the fourth. But it got the Reds to the big artillery come the next frame. Roush in fact, would lead off the bottom of the fifth inning, but James retired him. Pat Duncan didn't get the ball out of the infield for the second out, but Cincinnati still ended up tacking on a sixth run.

Edd Roush wasn't finished. He came back up again the next inning. Bases loaded. One away.

And two more runners would score thanks to Roush, who made it 3-4 at the plate with a single. Pat Duncan followed with a single of his own, which made it 9-1. Would the 1919 World Series end the same way it started?

Nah, Cincy wanted more.

A mini-rally died in the seventh with no scoring by the Reds. But again, it helped Edd Roush. Once again, he would lead off an inning. Roush took one for the team, as Roy Wilkinson (Who'd relieved Bill James in the top of the sixth) hit him.

Duncan bunted. Larry Kopf popped out for the second out, and it appeared that the inning would be for not. However, Greasy Neale walked and Bill Rariden singled. Roush scored!

So Cincinnati was feeling pretty good. Ahead 10-1 after 7 1/2. The bottom of the eighth was a frustrating adventure for the visitors.

Chicago made a comeback attempt. They scored twice on a Jackson double. But it appeared to be over when Happy Felsch was retired for the second out. Chick Gandil extended the inning, however, with a triple. Then the inning should have ended as Swede Risberg hit a harmless fly to centre. Edd Roush couldn't come up with it. Gandil scored, unearned. Ray Schalk was retired to finally end the eight inning.

Due up for Cincinnati in the top of the ninth was Morrie Rath, Jake Daubert and Heinie Groh. Roush batted after Groh, but would he get a chance?

Rath started the inning out on the right foot with a single. Daubert got a sac bunt down, and now Groh was looking at an RBI opportunity. Groh flied out to centre.

It was up to Roush to get 'er done. Alas, he grounded out to Buck Weaver at third.

The good news was, of course, the Reds were three outs away from champagne. But starting pitcher Hod Eller hit pinch hitter Eddie Murphy. Nemo Leibold hit one to centre. It seemed like a hit. A big inning for Chicago loomed.

At least, that was until Edd Roush got his glove on it. A great catch, and some redemption for Edd for his error the previous inning.

Eddie Collins followed with a single. The catch by Roush was huge by this point. Buck Weaver flied out to right. Murphy strode into third after the catch. With Joe Jackson back up (2-4 with 3 RBI). Collins stole second, and the pressure on Hod Eller mounted. But Jackson would ground out, and Cincinnati had won the 1919 World Series.

Although Hod Eller had won two games (Dickie Kerr, too), plus Greasy Neale finished with a .357 batting average (Topps among all Reds' regulars), the big Cincinnati guns were clearly two-thirds of their outfield. While Pat Duncan had to settle for a .269 batting average, he'd end up leading all players in RBIs in the Fall Classic, with eight.


References



Cook, William. The 1919 World Series: What Really Happened? Kindle ed., McFarland, 2001. 

Dunn, Jay. “Jay Dunn: A Look Back at the Infamous 1919 World Series Scandal.” Trentonian, MediaNews Group, 19 Aug. 2021, https://www.trentonian.com/2019/05/08/jay-dunn-a-look-back-at-the-infamous-1919-world-series-scandal/. 27 Feb. 2023.


Enders, Eric. 100 Years Of The World Series. Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 2005.


Neft, David S., Richard M. Cohen, and Michael L. Neft. The Sports Encyclopedia: Baseball, 1992. 12th ed. St. Martin's Press, 1992.


--------------. The World Series: Complete Play-By-Play of Every Game, 1903-1989, St. Martin's Press, 1990.


Nemec, David et all. 20th Century Baseball Chronicle: A Year-by-year History of Major League Baseball. Collector's Edition. Publications International, 1993. 


Society for American Baseball Research, SABR, https://sabr.org/. 27 Feb, 2023.


Snyder, John S. World Series!: Great Moments and Dubious Achievements. Chronicle Books, 1995.


Sports Reference LLC. Baseball-Reference.com - Major League Statistics and Information. http://www.baseball-reference.com/. 27 Feb, 2023.


Thorn, John, and Pete Palmer. Total Baseball. Vers. 1994. Portland, OR: Creative Multimedia Corp., 1994. 


Ward, Geoffrey C., et al. Baseball: An Illustrated History. Updated edition. Knopf, 2010.

Monday, February 20, 2023

World Series: Did You Know?

Jim Palmer's shutout in the second contest of 1966 was his first at the major league level. Palmer had many "firsts" crossed off his major league career by the end of the regular season in '66, but a shutout was not one of them. He'd even hit his first major league home run in May of 1965, his rookie season.

Palmer was just 5-4 in '65, as the Baltimore Orioles were loaded with pitching depth. He'd pitch here and there, but not regularly. How ironic, considering the very man on the wrong end of his shutout in the second game of the World Series a year later could relate to that!

But in 1966 things were different for Baltimore. They had a strong starting staff. They had a great bullpen. Jim Palmer took his game to the next level, whereas the Orioles experiment with John Miller didn't go as planned. Miller had been great in the bullpen for Baltimore in 1965, but a year later, wasn't much as a starter.

So, that opened the door for Palmer. He'd been only 5-4 the year before. Here, in 1966, he went 15-10 in 30 appearances. All of them were starts. Jim's earned run average was 3.46, down from 3.72 from 1965. There was progress. But there was also competition if Palmer wanted to be the ace of the Orioles' staff. You have Dave McNally. You had Wally Bunker. You had Steve Barber. None of those guys won more than thirteen games, however. So many Palmer was better than all of them?

Well, Dave McNally sure didn't look like the ace of the staff when the Fall Classic got going. The Orioles must have been underdogs to the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers had Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale and a rookie named Don Sutton. There was also the underrated Claude Osteen, who went 17-14. Drysdale, who'd start the opening tilt, was just 13-16.

It seemed like a contest of which pitcher was worse. The big Dodger righty just didn't have it. But neither did McNally. The Baltimore Orioles led 3-0 and 4-1, but the Los Angeles Dodgers seemed to wake up in the bottom of the second and third with comeback attempts. The bottom of the third spelled the end for Dave McNally. Fortunately, reliever Moe Drabowski put a stop to a bases loaded LA rally, holding them scoreless for the last 6 2/3 innings.

So Dave McNally hadn't looked too sharp in the first game. While he'd only given up two hits, Dave walked five batters in just 2 1/3 innings pitched. Drabowski, by comparison, allowed just two bases on balls. The good news was that Los Angeles only managed three hits the entire game. Their bats were in a slump that would last the entire 1966 World Series. But if Baltimore's pitchers were wild, LA could take advantage. They had some speedsters on the basepaths named Maury Wills and Willie Davis.

So this was no doubt on Baltimore's checklist for the second contest. Keep those two batters off the bases. But there was also the trouble with Sandy Koufax. While Jim Palmer won an impressive 15 games, Koufax was from another planet: 27 wins and a fifth straight ERA title!

So that's what confronted Palmer in the second contest. The Dodgers, playing at home, could easily ride the brilliant pitching of Koufax to many-a-win. And in many-a-win for LA, Sandy would only need about one or two runs.

Well, Jim Palmer was up to the task. He took Maury Wills' hard grounder, and knocked it down. The ball bounced to the pitcher's right. But not too far. The result was a quick 1-3 putout to get the leadoff batter out in the bottom of the first. Part of a fine 1-2-3 inning.

The second inning wasn't so good. Ron Fairly, who'd been with the Dodgers since 1958 (And was a part of the three Los Angeles World Series triumphs since then), drew a walk to start the inning. Palmer fanned Jim Lefebvre for the first out. But the next batter was Lou Johnson. Lou always seemed to come up big when Sandy Koufax needed him to. He'd scored the only run in Sandy's perfect game on September 9th, 1965 vs. Chicago. Then he'd hit a home run to put LA up for good in game seven of the World Series that year. Now, here in the second contest in '66, Johnson doubled to right. Just like that, the Los Angeles Dodgers had two runners in scoring position with only one out.

John Roseboro was retired on a pop up. A crucial out. Palmer then walked Wes Parker, his second free pass of the inning. This one was intentional, though. That brought up the light-hitting Sandy Koufax to the plate. Koufax's hitting was nowhere near his pitching prowess. He popped out.

That had been a rough inning. But things were suddenly looking up for Jim Palmer. He kept not only Maury Wills and Willie Davis off the bases in the bottom of the third, he had another 1-2-3 inning.

If you were wondering how Koufax was faring with all this going on, it was just another typical Sandy outing - until the fifth, that is. The Dodgers pitcher had allowed one hit and one walk through four. Koufax had even shown Baltimore what happens when you get on: Following Luis Aparicio, single off him in the first, the LA pitcher picked him off! So Koufax had faced thirteen batters in four innings. Essentially, the great Dodger was picking up where he'd left off a year earlier. Koufax had thrown shutouts in games five and seven on the 1965 World Series. He was up to 22 consecutive scoreless frames in the Fall Classic.

Palmer, though, had another 1-2-3 inning of his own in the bottom of the fourth. He was giving the Orioles momentum. It carried over to the fifth frame. Baltimore surprised the Los Angeles fans' by scoring three times on two hits and three errors (All by Dodger centre fielder Willie Davis). Jim, as it turns out, had all the run support he needed. The O's didn't stop there. They scored a four run off Sandy Koufax in the sixth, but it was the only earned run the Dodgers' lefty would allow. Sandy averted further trouble by getting Andy Etchebarren to ground into an inning-ending double play with the sacks full. No one knew it at the time, but Sandy Koufax had faced his last major league batter.

The rest of the game wasn't much of a sweat for the Orioles' pitcher. Jim Palmer finished the game with a four-hitter. Baltimore got him two more runs, and Los Angeles lost 6-0. The Dodgers finished the game with a total of six errors.

Jim didn't make another appearance in the 1966 World Series. Wally Bunker edged Claude Osteen 1-0 in game three. Dave McNally made his second start a lot better than the first, and out-dueled Don Drysdale in a rematch from the opening tilt, 1-0. Sandy Koufax had been slated to go in the fifth contest, but now his team had been swept!

True, Moe Drabowski had started the Dodgers down the hole of bad hitting, but Jim Palmer got the starting pitching of Baltimore on a roll in this short series. Palmer might have had to share the spotlight with a terrific reliever and fellow starter Wally Bunker in throwing "0's" for the O's, but this was his first blanking at the big league level.

Palmer didn't really get much of a chance to savior the shutout, though. The Orioles came down to earth in 1967, and so did Jim. He nearly shutout the Minnesota Twins on April 13th, Palmer's first start of '67, then seemed to reach new heights as April turned into May. Jim's first start of the new month saw him go six strong innings and hold Detroit to just one run. Then, the big moment. May 12th. Jim Palmer of the Orioles against Whitey Ford of the New York Yankees.

The game stayed close, for a while. But a four-run uprising in the top of the fifth turned a 1-0 lead into a five-run cushion. Baltimore strafed the New York bullpen for nine more tallies in a 14-0 laugher. Whitey Ford, by the way, would last three innings, giving up just one run. He was beginning to experience shoulder pain, and had precisely one last major league game in him. But nonetheless, Whitey's earned run average in 1967 was just 1.47 after this loss. So Palmer beat an old pro who could still bring it.

Same scenario as had last Fall. This shutout, though, was one-hitter by the Baltimore star.

Ford wasn't the only pitcher who was hurt, though. Palmer himself would not do much in 1967, going just 3-1. Stiffness in his shoulder led to a demotion to the minor leagues. It took stints at Miami and Rochester to get back to the bigs in September.

The Orioles slump continued on into 1968. Palmer didn't make it back, despite time in Rochester, Elmira and Miami. However, Baltimore made a move that seemed to help Jim Palmer in the long run. Manager Hank Bauer was fired, and was replaced with Earl Weaver. Jim was back with Baltimore in 1969, he went 16-4, and remained an Oriole until his 1984 retirement.

References


Enders, Eric. 100 Years Of The World Series. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 2005.


Fonseca, Lew, director. The World Series of 1966. Major League Baseball Productions, 1966.


Grabowski, John F. Sandy Koufax. Chelsea House, 1992.


Neft, David S., Richard M. Cohen, and Michael L. Neft. The Sports Encyclopedia: Baseball, 1992. 12th ed. St. Martin's Press, 1992.


Nemec, David et all. 20th Century Baseball Chronicle: A Year-by-year History of Major League Baseball. Collector's Edition. Publications International, 1993. 


Reichler, Joseph. Baseball's Great Moments. Bonanza A Rutledge Book, 1987.


Society for American Baseball Research, SABR, https://sabr.org/. 20 Feb, 2023.


Seaver, Tom, and Martin Appel. Great Moments in Baseball. Carol Pub. Group, 1992. 


Snyder, John S. World Series!: Great Moments and Dubious Achievements. Chronicle Books, 1995.


Sports Reference LLC. Baseball-Reference.com - Major League Statistics and Information. http://www.baseball-reference.com/. 20 Feb, 2023.


Thorn, John, and Pete Palmer. Total Baseball. Vers. 1994. Creative Multimedia Corp., 1994. 


Ward, Geoffrey C., et al. Baseball: An Illustrated History. Updated edition. Knopf, 2010.

Sunday, February 19, 2023

World Series: Did You Know?

You know what doomed Oakland in 1988? Davis and Hatcher, plus a light's out pitcher. You know what doomed Oakland in 1990? Davis and Hatcher, plus a light's out pitcher.

The Athletics made up for losing the 1988 World Series by sweeping the San Francisco Giants the next year. Oakland didn't exactly stop there. In 1990, they were back in the Fall Classic for a third straight season. They swept the Boston Red Sox in the American League Championship Series.

So, the opposition was the Cincinnati Reds (91-71). The Reds polished off Barry Bonds and the Pittsburgh Pirates in the National League Championship Series. Looking ahead to the Fall Classic, were they overmatched?

Perhaps. Perhaps not. Their best player was Eric Davis, who was (At least for a time) a great overall player. The slugger had gotten three Gold Gloves in centre field. He'd hit 34 home runs and driven in 101 runs in 1989.

The problem was, in 1990, Davis came down a bit. He hit only .260, and his HR and RBI were down. Eric was still a feared slugger, but if you hit .174 in the NLCS, is Oakland gonna be worried about you? There still was his prowess as a slugger.

Eric wasn't alone with the big bat. Chris Sabo, at third base, hit 25 home runs. Paul O'Neill, future Yankee star, hit 16 home runs in right field. Billy Hatcher had only five home runs, but hit .276. The completed the outfield.

So Hatcher led the entire outfield in batting average. And he'd had some great postseason experience. His old team, Houston, had extended the 1986 New York Mets to six games in the NLCS. Four years later, Billy hit .333 with a home run at that same stage vs. Pittsburgh.

Maybe the biggest obstacle Cincy was facing was the pitching of Oakland. Sure, they still had guys like Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco, plus they'd added Ricky Henderson. But what about Dave Stewart? He'd won 20 games again in 1990, plus no-hit the Toronto Blue Jays that season. The no-hitter may have been his first. But the 20 wins? Fourth straight season for Stew.

So Stewart went up against Jose Rijo in the opening tilt. Jose was quite a pitcher. Though he'd struggled with the New York Yankees and Oakland Athletics, he was back to torment one of his old teams. It seemed as though Rijo might be a better pitcher than Dave Stewart. Since arriving in Cincinnati, his earned run average was below three for six consecutive seasons. Sort of a bit like J.R. Richard, his career got derailed right when he was in his prime, sadly. But, no matter what he'd do the rest of his career, Jose's 1990 World Series performance was one for the ages.

First, Rijo went out and whipped Dave Stewart 7-0 in game one. That 4.38 earned run average in the NLCS quickly gave way to a superb outing in the big showdown, eh? 

With Billy Hatcher on (via a bases on balls) in the bottom of the first inning, it was Eric Davis that provided Jose Rijo with all the offence he'd need. A two-run home run. Hatcher was going to have a big night.

In the third, he doubled home Billy Larkin, going to third on the throw home. Then Hatcher scored on a Paul O'Neill grounder. 4-0.

Count on Hatcher again to help in the fifth. Dave Steward had been removed for a pinch hitter in the top of the inning. The new pitcher was Todd Burns. So, after Barry Larkin was retired, it was Billy Hatcher with another hit, a double that hugged the left-field line. Paul O'Neill walked. Eric Davis was back up. He stroked a single to left. 5-0 for the home team.

Hal Morris then grounded out, but both runners advanced. The game was now essentially over, but there remained two questions: How many runs would Cincinnati score? Could Rijo pitch the shutout?

Well, Chris Sabo singled home two more runs, and that concluded the scoring in this opening tilt. However, the Reds tried for more as Joe Oliver got himself a two-out single. Sabo made it to third. But with runners on the corners, Oakland brought in a new pitcher, who did the job. Gene Nelson faced Mariano Duncan. With the count 2-0, Duncan got a hold of one and sent it to left. But instead of scoring two more runs, all that happened was Ricky Henderson made a catch, almost with his back to the fence.

Rijo himself had some issues in the fifth. Oakland had loaded the bases with two away. In perhaps the biggest moment of the game (Or the series), it was Jose retiring big Mark McGwire on a popup to end the threat. By the way, it had been Doug Jennings who hit for Dave Stewart, delivering a single. Not only did this not lead to any runs, but it was a big plus for Cincinnati to get Stewart out of the game. A bit of Oakland's aura left with Dave Stewart.

Rijo himself found other ways to contribute. Just as Orel Hershiser had two yeas earlier against the Athletics, the Reds' ace pitcher was using his bat, too. He singled on the first pitch in the bottom of the sixth. However, a double play followed. Billy Hatcher was still hitting hot. So far, two hits, a walk, and three runs scored. Billy fell behind 1-2, fouled off two pitches, and then hit it down the third base line. Carney Lansford came up with it some how. No matter, Hatcher made it three hits as he beat the throw to first.

Paul O'Neill walked to keep the rally going. Eric Davis had two on with two out. He'd delivered the big blow earlier in the first frame, with two away. This time, he failed to deliver. It really didn't matter. Jose Rijo had pitched seven shutout frames, went 1-3 at the dish, and Cincinnati had first blood. 

Game two was closer. Oakland wasted no time in scoring in the top of the first, but the defiant Cincinnati team erased that with two of their own in their half.

After Barry Larkin led off with a double, there was Billy Hatcher back up. Continuing on his fine play in this Fall Classic, Billy again came through. Again with two strikes on him. Hatcher went down the first base line this time, the ball sliced to right. But this ended up being a run-scoring double. Hatcher was up to three doubles already.

The next two batters did not get hits, but they produced a run. Paul O'Neill flied out, Hatcher made it to third. Eric Davis grounded out, but it cashed in Billy, and the Reds had the lead.

Oakland might have been discouraged, but they pushed across three runs to take care of that trouble in the top of the third. It seemed like only a momentary solution, however, as Billy Larkin led off the bottom of the inning. He had Hatcher behind him, so getting on could mean a big inning.

Well, it was Larkin with a single. Hatcher then, you guessed it, hit a double. It was just a ground-rule two-bagger to the gap in left, alas. So Larkin had to stop at third. The rally died, alas.

The next inning was a better one for Cincinnati. They scored a run, and had a man at second for Larkin. Just get on! No, Barry grounded out.

So Billy Hatcher would lead off the bottom of the fifth. There would be no double this time, but this at bat illustrated how things were going to keep going Billy's way. He bunted, the ball hitting the ground hard and going to the left side of the infield. Well, Hatcher was safe at first. Six consecutive hits. This tied a World Series record, previously held by only Goose Goslin and Thurmond Munson. Hatcher would leave those two names in the rearview mirror before the night came to an end.

But, nobody is perfect. Bob Welch had given up three runs so far. But the fifth inning came to a quick end as he picked off Billy Hatcher at first. That was the second out. Eric Davis was the third.

Welch was still pitching in the bottom of the eighth, and the score was still 4-3, Oakland. But here's where Billy Hatcher did one better than Goslin and Munson. Actually, Hatcher did better than double. He stoked a leadoff triple. Jose Canseco, trying to play through an injured back, had made a valiant effort to catch the ball, but had gotten a late start on it. Jose merely got a piece of it.

A walk to Paul O'Neill and the Reds suddenly had the go-ahead run at first. They wouldn't get that runner home, but Glenn Braggs' clutch single off new pitcher Rick Honeycutt tied the ballgame.

Cincinnati was buoyed by Hatcher's heroics. They even looked poised to win the contest in the bottom of the ninth (Reliever Rob Dibble had gotten held Oakland scoreless in the top of the inning). Billy Hatcher and his teammates sensed victory.

Two quick outs seemed to put out any of those thoughts, the second on a fine catch by Ricky Henderson in left. But Barry Larkin was back up, and singled. Billy Hatcher was back up! Barry Larkin was thinking about getting into scoring position. Oakland tried to keep him close. On a toss to first, the result was an error by first basemen Mark McGwire, and the winning run now at second.

Now, in a way, Billy Hatcher had a shot at hitting for the record. Or collecting his fifth hit on the contest. The Athletics, however, wisely walked him. Dennis Eckersley, who normally only came in to close a game, started throwing. He would not appear in this inning, however, as Paul O'Neill was a left-handed hitter. Tony La Russa, the Oakland manager, let Rick Honeycutt stay in, to keep it a lefty-lefty matchup. O'Neill gave it a ride to centre, but Dave Henderson had it.

Rob Dibble held the A's scoreless in the top of the tenth. Eric Davis faced Dennis Eckersley in the bottom of the inning and grounded out. However, this was the last out Oakland got. Three straight singles won the game for the Reds!

It was on to Oakland for games three, four and possibly five. The first contest there was crucial.

The A's sure knew this. They were looking to get back in the series. Cincinnati was trying to put a stranglehold on it, and stuck quickly. They knew that it was Rijo and Stewart II in the fourth contest. A win here and Jose Rijo could put an end to this thing in game four.

Barry Larkin led off the game with a single. Oakland was in trouble right off the bat! Guess who was next? Why Billy Hatcher. Hatcher actually did something bad: He hit into a 6-4-3 double play! Paul O'Neill and Eric Davis followed with singles in an inning that ended with no scoring, so the twin-killing by the Athletics was huge. 

But then, Chris Sabo got a big hit by the Reds in the top of the second. A four-bagger. The home run broke the ice, but seemed to wake up the A's. Their bats had been cold in the first contest, better in the second, and still greater here in the early going. 

Harold Baines smacked a two-run home run in the bottom of the frame, and Oakland was up, 2-1. But rather than set the tone, this long ball seemed to wake up Cincinnati.

With one away in the third, Billy Hatcher was back up. His single ignited the biggest inning in the 1990 World Series. After Paul O'Neill reached on an error, it was Eric Davis with a game-tying single. The Reds never looked back. Chris Sabo's three-run home run highlighted a seven-run third for Cincinnati. Billy Hatcher grounded out to end it, but his team was up 8-3.

The Athletics actually came back with a run of their own in the bottom of the inning. Ricky Henderson hit a home run. It was only a solo shot. Tom Browning had given up three runs in just two-plus innings, but settled down. His team didn't exactly put their bats away.

In fact, Chris Sabo was looking to make it three home runs in three plate appearances. In the top of the fourth, he came up with two men on and just one out. He gave it quite a ride to centre, a bit to the right. Dave Henderson made the catch, and Paul O'Neill tagged. He motored on to third, putting runners on the corners. The Reds, however, did not score.

Hatcher was retired again in the fifth inning, but it actually was the last time Oakland would do that. In the eighth, the Reds' centre fielder kept the inning alive for Cincinnati by singling. Paul O'Neill was up, and Oakland pitcher Todd Burns threw a wild pitch. O'Neill walked, which gave Eric Davis a chance to widened the lead more. There'd been no scoring in this contest since the third inning. But all Davis could do was ground out to end that.

Cincinnati ended up with an impressive 8-3 win. But Billy Hatcher had a bad game. The nerve of him to get retire three times! How would that carry over to the fourth game?

Dave Stewart wasn't the type of pitcher that looked at a 3-0 deficit and decide to not care. No, today Cincinnati would see the real Dave Stewart.

Dave Henderson went a little to right to take Barry Larkin's fly. That was the first out of the ballgame. But next was Billy Hatcher. 9-12 at the dish with two walks. That's a batting average of .750 and an on-base percentage of .786.

The first pitch was at the letters, maybe higher. Home plate umpire Ted Hendry called it a strike. Hatcher realized with different umps comes different strike zones. He fouled off the next pitch, and was in a hole, 0-2.

Well, Hatcher got on again, but the painful way. Stewart hit him on the left hand. Hatcher stayed in the game, but didn't help. He was caught stealing. You don't want to make things too easy for Stewart.

Momentum was quickly Oakland's, and it would stay that way for a while. Cincinnati couldn't catch a break. The Reds put a "0" on the board in the top of the first, but the A's put a "1" on in their half.

And the way they did it hurt Cincinnati. Eric Davis caught Ricky Henderson's fly in left for the first out. But then things turned bad. Willie McGee hit one to the gap in left. Davis tried to catch it, but his attempt at a diving catch resulting in an injury. Just like that, two of the big reasons for a 3-0 series lead were walking wounded in the fourth contest. It was the bottom of the first inning.

Eric Davis had damaged his rib cage and additionally suffered a kidney laceration. That 1-0 lead at the end of just one frame was looking big.

Glenn Braggs batted for him in the top of the second, but Stewart got him. Herm Winningham would replace Billy Hatcher in the bottom of the inning. The Reds would have to either win it here the hard way, or come back in one of the three remaining games and get it done. As it turns out, Eric Davis was done for the series. Hatcher's injury was just day-to-day, should the Fall Classic continue.

Oakland looked poised for the knockout blow against Jose Rijo, as they got two men on. The A's would ultimately fail to score. The Reds were still very much in the ballgame, but Dave Stewart looked so poised.

Chris Sabo had a single in the top of the second, and another three innings later. In the top of the seventh, he doubled. None of his hits led to any scoring, and Dave Stewart allowed only two other hits by Cincinnati.

So the score was still 1-0 for the home team after seven. But Jose Rijo was matching Stewart. Or, in terms of his allowed, besting him. Oakland got two hits that led to their run in the first. They did not get another the rest of the contest.

And in the eighth, the opening the Reds were looking for, arrived. Barry Larkin and Herm Winningham (Who ended the game 2-3, not bad as Hatcher's replacement) opened it with singles. Winningham's single was a surprising two-strike bunt, which caught the Athletics off-guard. Paul O'Neill himself bunted, trying to move both runners over. The A's bullpen got going. Rick Honeycutt (Who'd worked 1 2/3 innings in this series) and Dennis Eckersley started to loosen up.

Dave Stewart was pitching great, but his fielding let him down here. Stewart picked up the ball and went to Willie Randolph covering first. The pitcher's peg to first was off the mark, so when Randolph caught it, the Oakland second basemen went from covering first, to off the bag. Well, that's how first base umpire Randy Marsh saw it. Replays show that while Dave Stewart's throw was a tad wide, Willie Randolph's foot was on the bag when he put the squeeze on the ball. The play was crucial, as now Cincinnati had the bases loaded with no outs, instead of second and third, one away. (Tony La Russa argued, in futility) Of course, this also meant there was a force at second, third and home. The A's could take advantage of that. They could concede the run, but two ground balls and the inning would be over with no more than one run across for the victors. 

Glenn Braggs hit into that force. At second. But Larkin scored the tying run. So with runners now on the corners in this 1-1 contest, Hal Morris was up. Morris sent a fly to Willie McGee that was deep enough to score Herm Winningham! The visiting Reds were up, 2-1.

Rijo, his spirits no doubt heightened, raced through the home team 1-2-3 in the bottom of the frame. The MVP trophy beckoned. Dave Stewart, fighting to the end, retired the Reds in order in the top of the ninth. He'd pitched brilliantly. 

But Jose Rijo fanned Dave Henderson to start the last of the ninth, and Dave Stewart and his teammates were two outs away from a loss. A sweep! Rijo, however, would once again be denied the opportunity to finish the game. Randy Myers, looking for his fourth save of the 1990 postseason, was summoned from the Reds' bullpen to put the finishing touches on the baseball season.

Jose Caneco grounded out. Two away. Billy Hatcher had donned a neato t-shirt in the Reds' dugout, having returned from the hospital (X-rays revealed a bad bruise, but no breaks). He watched as Carney Lansford popped it up foul. But it did not find the seats. Todd Benzinger caught it very close to the Cincinnati bullpen. Their relivers, who'd been excellent all series' long, caught a close view to the last out of this surprising Fall Classic. 

But that bullpen would have to take a backseat to Billy Hatcher, Eric Davis, and Jose Rijo.



References


“Breakdown of the Oakland Coliseum Seating Chart.” From This Seat, From This Seat, https://www.fromthisseat.com/index.php/blog/19895-breakdown-of-the-oakland-coliseum-seating-chart#:~:text=The%20Oakland%20Athletics'%20bullpen%20is,of%20sections%20105%20and%20106

Enders, Eric. 100 years of the World Series. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 2005. 


Neft, David S., and Richard M. Cohen. The Sports Encyclopedia: Baseball 1992. St. Martin's Press, 1992. 


Nemec, et al. The Baseball Chronicle: Year-By-Year History of Major League Baseball. Publications International, Ltd., 2008.


Sports Reference LLC. Baseball-Reference.com - Major League Statistics and Information. https://www.baseball-reference.com/. 19 Feb. 2023.


Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, https://en.wikipedia.org/. 19 Feb. 2023.


YouTube, Google, www.youtube.com/. 19 Feb. 2023.

Thursday, February 16, 2023

World Series: Did You Know?

Paul Blair was the last out for Baltimore in games three and four in 1969. The Orioles could have used a hit or a walk in those situations, but it wasn't to be.

Blair's Baltimore Orioles were fresh off a sweep of the Minnesota Twins in the very first American League Championship Series. They kept the momentum going as the World Series started. The O's were up against the surprising New York Mets. Two at home at Memorial Stadium to start this thing. Three years earlier, Paul Blair had hit a home run in the first World Series game played there. Baltimore beat Los Angeles 1-0 in games three and four of the 1966 October Finale, completing a sweep.

But New York had won 100 games in '69, so the 4-1 didn't discourage them. They bounced back with an impressive 2-1 win in the second contest. The win was crucial. Not only did it square the 1969 Fall Classic at one game all, but it sort of changed the momentum. The Orioles would not return home, much to Blair's chagrin.

Blair should have had at least one hit in the third game at Shea Stadium. He was facing a relief pitcher by the name of Nolan Ryan. The game was seemingly over, as the Mets had forged ahead, 4-0. However, it's not like Baltimore wasn't getting their bats on the ball. Tommie Agee (Whose home run in the bottom of the first off Jim Palmer started the Mets on their way) had made a great catch off Elrod Hendricks in the top of the fourth.

So, after two quick outs in the top of the seventh, there didn't seem to be much chance of Blair getting to bat. But New York's starting pitcher was beginning to have control problems here. The previous six innings had gone by with Gary Gentry issuing just two free passes. But with two outs and the bases empty, Gary was wild. A walk. Another. Make it three in a row! Bases filled, two away.

So Paul Blair was the batter and now Nolan Ryan was the pitcher. With the count 0-2, the Orioles' centre fielder got a good pitch to hit. Hit it, Paul did. It seemed like a gapper to cut the Mets' lead to 4-3. At least that's what it appeared to be. Tommie Agee wasn't about to be upstaged in this game. He made it two great catches to go along with a longball as he slide face first, and snared it!

A big play, no doubt, as momentum appeared to be shifting towards Baltimore. It was New York that would tack on still another run (Courtesy of an Ed Kranepool home run the bottom of the eighth), putting the home team up five runs. The Orioles weren't saying, "Let's just give up and come back tomorrow," however. In the top of the eighth, Frank Robinson hit a 3-2 pitch off Ryan to the gap in left. Tommie Agee got over and made a catch that wasn't spectacular, but he had his back almost against the wall when he did it. 

Nolan Ryan was on to preserve the win in the ninth. He begane to experience the same issues Gary Gentry had two innings prior.

It seemed awfully familiar situation. There seemed to be no chance of Paul Blair coming up, as the first two batters were retired. A walk to Mark Belanger, who was not a difficult out, extended the game. Clay Dalrymple didn't walk, he did better! His single moved Belanger to second. And Paul Blair into the on-deck circle. Chico Salmon ran for Belanger. But if Ryan could retire Don Buford, Blair would not bat. Nolan Ryan managed to hit the strike zone once in the five pitches thrown to Buford. The bases on balls loaded 'em up.

So Paul Blair was back up again. Again with the bases loaded. Would Nolan Ryan stay in the game? Both Tug McGraw and Ron Taylor were throwing in the Mets' bullpen. Gil Hodges came out to the mound, and decided to stick with the hard-thrower from Refugio, Texas.

So it was down to the stuff of dreams: The big strikeout pitcher vs. the terrific slugger! Bases loaded, two outs. But Nolan reached back for his best stuff, fanning Blair on just three pitches, the third a nice 12-6 curve that the batter never even swung at!




The 5-0 win was big for the New York Mets. They were up in the 1969 World Series, 2-1. Plus, they had their ace, Tom Seaver, going in the fourth contest.

Well, the fourth contest was a gem of a pitcher's duel. Mike Cuellar was just as good as Seaver. He kept Baltimore in it, but trailed 1-0 in the top of the seventh. That's when his manager, Earl Weaver, pinch hit for him.

But Tom Seaver fanned Dave May, and had a 1-2-3 seventh. Eddie Watt pitched the bottom of the eighth and held the Mets at bay. This enabled the visiting Orioles to tie it in the top of the ninth. With any luck, they'd have gotten more. But there was right fielder Ron Swoboda, robbing Brooks Robinson of a double with a diving catch. Brooks had to settle for a sac fly.

Swoboda wasn't done tormenting Baltimore. With two away in the bottom of the ninth, Ron singled Cleon Jones to third. But pinch hitter Art Shamsky grounded out to second basemen Davey Johnson.

Johnson would then lead off the tenth, and just send a grounder to third. Wayne Garrett had come in for Ed Charles, who Art Shamsky had batted for. Garrett could not come up with it, and the home side had a problem.

With a man on, Mark Belanger tried to bunt, but popped to the catcher on the second pitch. Clay Dalrymple hit for Eddie Watt and delivered a single. It was conference time on the mound as bullpen activity was in full force. Both Tug McGraw and Ron Taylor were throwing. Pitching coach Rube Walker conversed with Tom Seaver, who ended up staying in the game.

Ron Swoboda was still in right, and the batter, Don Buford. Buford sent one Swoboda's way. Ron caught the ball on the warning track. Davey Johnson went to third after the catch. Paul Blair was next.

Two on, two outs. Seaver threw the first pitch, Blair swung and missed. A slider was then swung on and missed. Seaver was doing to Blair what Nolan Ryan had done one day and one inning earlier. Tom missed high, 1-2. But a breaking pitch was then missed by Blair.




The Mets would pull it out with some controversy. With runners on first and second, J.C. Martin was sent up to hit for Tom Seaver. Martin bunted, and as he ran to first, appeared to be to have exited the running lane to the left. When the throw from new pitcher Pete Richert hit Martin, it allowed the winning run to score. Baltimore had a strong case for interference. But their protest was to no avail.

Blair wasn't able to do much in game five, either. His team, however, appeared to get back on track. Blair fanned against Jerry Koosman in the top of the third, but that was about the only thing the Mets' pitcher did right that half inning (Jerry hit a double in the bottom of the frame, only to be stranded). Both Dave McNally and Frank Robinson hit home runs, and it was 3-0, Baltimore.

In the top of the sixth inning, Blair send a Koosman offering to deep centre. Tommie had a beat on it, appeared to misjudged it, but then reached out to his left and grab it. Another well-hit ball that Paul's counterpart in centre just gobbled up.

Koosman settled down after that. The New York Mets were a team of destiny, that overcame a great Orioles team. The Mets put together three rallies, scoring twice in the sixth and eighth frames, and one more time in the seventh. The 5-3 win game the underdogs a surprising Fall Classic.

As for Paul Blair, he'd be back in 1970. This time, Baltimore came out on top against Cincinnati. A year later, the Orioles came up just short against the Pirates (In the fourth contest, Blair was the first hitter in a World Series first, as the contest started at night). His experience in four Fall Classics (1966, 1969-1971) with Baltimore would come in handy years later. Maybe he'd lost to a New York team in the World Series. But he'd get on one by the time 1977 rolled around. Blair helped the New York Yankees win world championships in 1977 and '78.



References



Brown Jr., Thomas J. “October 15, 1969: Seaver’s Pitching, Swoboda’s Defense Help Mets Win Game 4.” Society for American Baseball Research, SABR, 17 Apr. 2020, https://sabr.org/gamesproj/game/october-15-1969-seavers-pitching-swobodas-defense-help-mets-win-game-4/. Accessed 16 Feb. 2023.



Enders, Eric. 100 years of the World Series. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 2005. 



Neft, David S., and Richard M. Cohen. The Sports Encyclopedia: Baseball 1992. St. Martin's Press, 1992. 



--------------. The World Series: Complete Play-By-Play of Every Game, 1903-1989, St. Martin's Press, New York, 1990.



Nemec, et al. The Baseball Chronicle: Year-By-Year History of Major League Baseball. Publications International, Ltd., 2008.



Snyder, John S. World Series!: Great Moments and Dubious Achievements. San Francisco: Chronicle, 1995. 


Sports Reference LLC. Baseball-Reference.com - Major League Statistics and Information. https://www.baseball-reference.com/. 16 Feb. 2023.



Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, https://en.wikipedia.org/. 16 Feb. 2023.


YouTube, Google, www.youtube.com/. 16 Feb. 2023.

Monday, February 13, 2023

World Series: Did You Know?

The Dodgers actually got a total of four home runs from unlikely sources in 1988. Well, maybe in a sense they were the type of player heroics would not have surprised you from if you look at from another angle.

Obviously, Kirk Gibson is the big one. Hobbled by bad knees, he reached down and pulled a rabbit out of a hat. Actually, he just hit a slider to deep right for a walk-off home run. But who would have thought, after all he'd gone through that season? And against Dennis Eckersley, Mr. Lights Out?

Gibson had to wait on the bench for game one until that awesome ninth inning. But in actuality, it's not as if the opening tilt to the '88 Fall Classic had lacked drama up to that point. Indeed, the game had enough exiciting moments prior to Gibby waving his magic wand, that Vince Scully, the great broadcaster, had declared game one, "...Not a bad opening act!" as the teams fought hard to draw first blood.

It had all started wat back in the bottom of the first. The Los Angeles Dodgers were up against the powerful Oakland Athletics. It seemed like the presence of sluggers Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire would be tough enough. The A's also had a slugger in Dave Henderson (Not related to Ricky, who Oakland would acquire the next season). Dave didn't have that one amazing year where he hit 30, let alone 40, long balls in one season. However, Henderson had four seasons with at least 20. His career year, you guessed it, was in 1988. 24 HR, 94 RBI.

But Oakland had a strong pitching staff, too. Their best starter was Dave Stewart, who'd not only won twenty games that year, but added two more "W's" in the American League Championship Series vs. Boston. And, the Athletics had Dennis Eckersley, one of the all-time great closers.

The poor LA Dodgers would have to find a way to get to both Stew and Eck, in all likelihood, if they had any intention of winning this Fall Classic.

So Los Angeles, playing at home, would feel a possible test of what was to come in the top of the first. Tim Belcher, just a rookie, was looking at a night of having his hands full. It didn't help that, with Dave Henderson on first (Having singled), he hit Jose Canseco. There was one out. Dave Parker, who'd won a World Series with Pittsburgh in 1988, flied out to centre. But the next batter was Mark McGwire.

Belcher quickly got ahead 0-2, but perhaps pitched too carefully to McGwire the rest of the plate appearance. Mark walked to load the bases. Terry Steinbach hit one just to the left of centre, but it was caught by John Shelby. This escape with no damage proved to be crucial.

Dave Stewart retaliated in the bottom of the first for the hitting of Jose Canseco. Stew himself hit leadoff batter Steve Sax. Franklin Stubbs flied out. The next batter was Mickey Hatcher. The big question going into this Fall Classic was, "What would Oakland would see of Mickey?"

Hatcher had hit a solid .295 in the regular season, but just .238 in the National League Championship Series vs. the New York Mets. Mickey's career high in home runs was nine, which he'd hit in 1983 with Minnesota. Traded to Los Angeles for 1987, Hatcher hit seven more. But in 1988, he'd had but one.

Before Hatcher could do anything, Dave Stewart made a mistake. A balk would suddenly move Steve Sax into scoring position. Things were now a little easier for Mickey. However, Hatcher would surprise everyone by belting Stewart's 0-1 offering to deep left. Into the stands! Mickey was so excited he motored around the bases, which soon prompted Joe Garagiola to quip, "...He [Hatcher] hasn't hit that many [home runs], [so] he doesn't even know how to run out [a home run]. He ran in [Around the bases] like they [Los Angeles] thought they were going to take it off the scoreboard. He really circled those bases in a hurry."




Hatcher, looking back on his tone-setting home run in the World Series twenty-nine years later, explained what he'd said to the pitcher who surrendered the four-bagger. "Dave Stewart was an old teammate of mine [They both started out in the Dodgers' organization in the late 1970s] and I told him before the game (We were joking around), I was gonna hit a home run off him my first at bat. He said, " 'Not if I throw it at your head.' "

The problem is, the 2-0 Los Angeles lead was quickly turned into a 4-2 Oakland edge. I mentioned Jose Canseco earlier. The second time he came up, in the top of the second frame, Jose hit a grand slam. Tim Belcher stayed in the game, although it sudden seemed like the Athletics had all the offence they would need.

Hatcher drew a two-out walk in the third, but was unable to contribute more in this opening contest. The Dodgers scored a third run in the bottom of the sixth, but still trailed 4-3.

So Dennis Eckersley came on to pitch the last of the ninth, and wasted little time in getting Mike Scioscia and Jeff Hamilton out. Alfredo Griffin was due up, but Mike Davis came to bat. Mike was trying to atone for a poor regular season. He'd hit just .196 with two home runs and seventeen runs driven in. It was all up to Davis to keep Los Angeles alive.

Davis worked well. After taking a strike, Davis would look at four straight balls from his old Oakland teammate.

Enter Kirk Gibson.

Crippled by injuries to both his legs, it seemed like a desperation move by manager Tommy Lasorda. Eck's control was much better against Gibson than Mike Davis. At least at first. Quickly it was 0-2. But the two strikes were foul balls, so Kirk Gibson was catching up to Dennis Eckersley's offerings. Mike Davis was still at first.

And what was on his mind was no doubt to steal. At least give Gibby a look at a runner in scoring position. Eckersley was also aware of this. Oakland did try and get Davis at first. Gibson hit a foul down the first base line, barely getting anything good on the ball. Gibby was a fighter, and brought the count full, 3-2. On ball three, the ever daring Davis stole second! Things were suddenly just a bit easier for Kirk Gibson. But no one expected him to do what he did on the next (Eighth) pitch of the at-bat.

It was a slider. But Gibson hit it over Jose Canseco's head in right. And over the fence! An incredible 5-4 LA win.




There is much that can be said about the Gibson home run, however, one thing that is obvious is this was just the opening contest. Los Angeles needed three more wins to get the World Crown. However, that is not to say that Gibby's heroics didn't give the Dodgers a lift in the same way that Dusty Rhodes had with his walk-off back in 1954. Both were hit in the opening tilt. The Oakland Athletics were able to halt the Los Angeles' momentum come the third contest. Rhodes' New York Giants would go on to a sweep.

They had Orel Hershiser ready to pitch the second game. But for this contest, there would be no Kirk Gibson or Mike Davis, the two men who had helped so much.

Mickey Hatcher did play in this game, but sort of took a backseat to Hershiser. Orel, you see, went out and pitched a three-hit shutout. And then there was Hershiser's bat. He went 3-3 at the dish.

But it's not like Mickey Hatcher just stared at an ineffective bat all game long. Far from that. He singled in the first, but was stranded. Mickey would get another hit, that coming in the in the third. The Dodgers had broken the ice. Their 1-0 was widened to 2-0 courtesy of a Hatcher bouncer that scored Steve Sax and also moved Franklin Stubbs to third. Mickey would then take second as the throw from centre was an attempt to nail Stubbs. But LA now had two more runners on base. There was just one out. A three-run home run by Mike Marshall made it 5-0.

Hatcher had helped again, and now the Dodgers were up 2-0 as the World Series shifted to Oakland for the next three games.

LA's magic appeared to run out as Oakland won the third contest, 2-1. In the fifth, Mickey Hatcher had a chance to drive in the go-ahead run with the score knotted at one. But all he did was hit a liner back to the pitcher. 

But still, Mickey found ways to contribute. The game was a lost cause in more ways than one. First, starting pitcher John Tudor, who'd been a great veteran presence on the team (Not to mention his ten wins and 2.32 ERA), had to leave after just 1 1/3 innings. The game was shaping up to be a dominant one for John, as he retired all four batters that faced him. Poor Tudor would not appear again in the Fall Classic, ever. Tim Leary took over on the hill.

So LA was down a pitcher. Their left fielder, Mickey Hatcher was giving it his all out there. Soon, out there, would practically be the entire outfield.

First, there was his superb play on a carom. Glenn Hubbard lead off the bottom of the third for Oakland, and sent one past Hatcher in left. A sure double. At least it appeared to be two bases. That's when Mickey Hatcher played it perfectly off the wall and got off a good throw to Steve Sax, who was standing right on second base. Alas, Hubbard stole second, and made it to third on a throwing error. The Athletics would cash the man in.

More bad news would come to Los Angeles an inning later. 

First, they failed to score in the top of the fourth.

Mike Marshall was having back issues, so Tommy Lasorda sent up Danny Heep to hit for him. Heep was retired. John Shelby walked and stole second. Mike Davis came up. He sent one to the gap in left. But it was playable. The long out advanced Shelby to third. The next batter, Mike Scioscia, took strike three to end the threat.

Heep would take up position in left in the bottom of the frame, meaning Mickey Hatcher replaced Marshall in right.

Jose Canseco would test this  (forced) move by Lasorda. He only got a piece of an inside offering, but sent a sinking shot to right. It appeared to be a hit. But there was Mickey Hatcher, making a fine diving catch.

The Dodgers had a golden opportunity to break the game wide open in the top of the sixth. Mike Davis came up with two men on. He walked. Bases loaded. No one out. However, Mike Scioscia went down by sending a popup into foul territory. Then Jeff Hamilton forced Danny Heep at home on a force. When Alfredo Griffin grounded out to first, a potential huge inning for the Dodgers had ended. With no runs scored.

Though the Dodgers lost the game, Mickey Hatcher had done his best. He would start game four back in left, but this meant Mike Davis, who'd been only the designated hitter in the third contest, would be playing right field in the fourth game.

Neither Hatcher nor Davis were able to contribute what they might have liked to in probably the biggest game of the 1988 World Series. A win in game four by Oakland and the Series was tied 2-2. But an LA win, and the Dodgers would be up 3-1. Even if  Los Angeles lost the subsequent fifth contest, they'd play the sixth (And possibly seventh) game at home.

So, LA wasted little time in getting ahead of Oakland. Steve Sax faced off against Dave Stewart in the top of the first and walked. Getting the leadoff man on payed dividends for the Dodgers. With one out, and with Sax on the run, Mickey Hatcher singled through the hole created between first and second. The hit obviously did not produce an RBI, but Steve Sax being on third ended up being huge. It gave Mike Davis a chance to drive him home.

A passed ball by Terry Steinbach scored Sax, but advanced Mickey Hatcher into scoring position. Mike Davis send a grounder towards second that Glen Hubbard couldn't come up with. Runners on the corners. Mike Davis hadn't actually done much, however, he was about to do something crucial on the bases, just like in the opening tilt.

Davis stole second on the third pitch to John Shelby, and now the visiting team, ahead 1-0, had two more runners in scoring position. And little chance for a double play. Shelby hit a 1-2 pitch that Dave Stewart got a piece of. The ball still went to Glenn Hubbard at second, who made no mistake and got John Shelby by an eyelash at first. It seemed like more bad luck for Los Angeles, however, as Shelby pulled up lame. Shelby would stay in the game.

The first inning two-run rally put Oakland in a bad spot. They got one run back in the first, but Los Angeles went back on the attack two innings later. Franklin Stubbs doubled with one away. Mickey Hatcher was staring at a runner in scoring position. All he could do was send one to short left on the first pitch from Dave Stewart. Mike Davis also had an RBI chance. But all he could do was send one in the air to short. The ball ticked off Walt Weiss' glove and continued on into left field. Stubbs took off from second on contact, and continued on around third, crossing the plate. A crucial run.

Oakland got the run back again, but it merely narrowed the margin to 3-2 for the visitors in the bottom of the sixth. Tracy Woodson would quickly restore the two-run lead in the seventh for Los Angeles. The Dodgers looked for more as Steve Sax was on second. With two out, it was Mickey Hatcher back at the plate, with a chance to put to rest any doubt of the game's outcome.

Hatcher gave it a ride to the gap in left, but Dave Henderson was there. The Athletics, to their credit, clawed back with a run to make it a one-run game in the bottom of the seventh. But it was the visiting Dodgers grabbing a 3-1 lead in this Fall Classic.

Orel Hershiser looked like his game two self in the fifth contest for the first two innings. Los Angeles wanted it right here, right now. Mickey Hatcher helped Hershiser by hitting a two-run home run in the top of the first. Mike Davis walked in the top of the second, but was stranded.




Hatcher then came up in the top of the third. The scored was 2-0 for the visitors, and Steve Sax was at first. Poor Hatcher was unable to finish his plate appearance as Sax was a dead duck at second on an attempted steal.

Oakland scored a run, plus got runners to second and third in the bottom of the third. It appeared as though Hershiser wasn't the same as he'd been in game two. More offence would be needed.

Mickey Hatcher hadn't quite been able to put the game away himself the previous contest, yet came up in the top of the fourth, trying to restore the two-run lead. Mike Davis and him would do better than that.

Hatcher got it all going with a single. Although Storm Davis fanned the next two batters, there was still Mike Davis to deal with. It appeared as though Mike was going to draw a walk off Storm (No relation). Yet behind in the count 3-0, Storm threw a bad pitch, a fastball not where he wanted it. Mike Davis rocked a home run to right. The two-run shot put the visiting Dodgers up, 4-1.




And the fifth inning appeared to be another multi-run frame for the Dodgers. Would Hershiser ever have runs to work with! Jeff Hamilton led off, and hit a tough grounder to third. Alas, Carney Lansford made an excellent diving stop, and nailed Hamilton at first. Alfredo Griffin fanned against Storm Davis, who Tony La Russa was sticking with. By retiring the first two batters, Storm Davis may have kept the game reasonable at 4-1, Los Angeles. However, when Steve Sax singled to keep the inning alive, Storm would go where there was water raining down, but no thunder: The showers!

New pitcher Greg Cadaret was greeted with a single by Franklin Stubbs. Two on, two out. The batter was one of our boys, Mickey Hatcher. The Athletics brought in Gene Nelson to face Hatcher. Mickey was up to seven hits at this point. But he'd stay there as Nelson got him to ground out.

With a 4-1, and Orel Hershiser cruising along, there was little more run support needed. Orel breezed through the fifth, sixth and seventh, retiring all nine men to face him. As for the Dodgers, they had another run up their sleeves.

Gene Nelson retired the first two men to face him the top of the sixth. But Los Angeles still had Mike Davis. With the count 2-1, Mike popped it up to the seats in left behind third, near the bullpen. And near where commissioner Peter Ueberroth was sitting. Carney Lansford could not catch it. With the count 2-2, Davis gave it a thought at swinging at a low offering, but held the bat back. 3-2. Davis' patience paid off again. The count was full, and Davis looked at ball four. It was Mike's Series-leading fourth bases on balls.

Rick Dempsey had played in the 1979 and 1983 World Series with Baltimore. Here, as a Los Angeles Dodger, the catcher stroked a 1-2 pitch to right for two bases. Mike Davis had taken off on the pitch, and would cross home. The run proved crucial. There was no more magic from Mickey Hatcher and Mike Davis on this night. Davis grounded out in the top of the eighth to strand John Shelby.

Orel Hershiser did have some trouble in the bottom of the frame. Not only did Oakland score a run, but they got runners to second and third. The big inning didn't materialize, as Dave Parker went down on strikes. It wasn't quite the last moment of tension for Los Angeles, at Carney Lansford singled with two away in the last of the ninth. He took second and third on defensive indifference. Orel Hershiser made sure Lansford did not score. When he fanned Tony Phillips, the 1988 World Series belonged to the Los Angeles Dodgers.


References


Bodziner, Robert, and Roy Epstein. 1988 World Series Film. Major League Baseball Productions, 2006. 


Brenner, Richard J. “A Team of Destiny.” The World Series: The Great Contests, East End Pub., Syosset, NY, 1989, pp. 110–120. 


Coyle, Harry, director. 1988 World Series, Season 42, NBC, 1988. (Viewed on Youtube)


Enders, Eric. 100 years of the World Series. New York: Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 2005. 


KCAL News, "Former Dodger Mickey Hatcher On World Series Then And Now". Youtube, KCAL News, 22 Oct. 2017, https://youtu.be/qQPO61RT0MI?t=35  Accessed 12 Feb. 2023. (Quote appears at 0:35-0:56)


Neft, David S., and Richard M. Cohen. The Sports Encyclopedia: Baseball 1992. St. Martin's Press, 1992. 


--------------. The World Series: Complete Play-By-Play of Every Game, 1903-1989, St. Martin's Press, New York, 1990.


Nemec, et al. The Baseball Chronicle: Year-By-Year History of Major League Baseball. Publications International, Ltd., 2008.


Snyder, John S. World Series!: Great Moments and Dubious Achievements. San Francisco: Chronicle, 1995. 


Sports Reference LLC. Baseball-Reference.com - Major League Statistics and Information. https://www.baseball-reference.com/. 12 Feb. 2023.


Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, https://en.wikipedia.org/. 12 Feb. 2023.


YouTube, Google, www.youtube.com/. 12 Feb. 2023.