Wednesday, October 19, 2011

October 19 Not a Good Day in NY Baseball History


An update of a piece I did 2 years ago:

October 19 has not been a good day in the history of New York City baseball. To wit:

October 19, 1976: For the first time, a World Series game is played at the renovated version of Yankee Stadium. Dan Driessen, the first designated hitter in World Series history, contributes 2 singles and a homer to the Cincinnati Reds’ 3rd straight triumph over the Yankees. The final score is 6-2.

The Reds wrapped up back-to-back titles the next day, and, for only the 2nd (and so far last) time in their history, the Yankees were swept in a World Series. That has never happened to the Mets. Small consolation for them.

Speaking of whom...

October 19, 1986, 25 years ago today: The Boston Red Sox pound Dwight Gooden and 4 Met relievers in a 9-3 win. The Sox have now won the first two games of the World Series, both at Shea Stadium.

The next three – that’s if a Game 5 is even necessary – will be at cozy Fenway Park. Suddenly, it looks like the Mets do not, as their arrogant fans believed pretty much since the end of the ’85 regular season, have, as their new fight song says, “the teamwork to make the dream work.” The dream is dying, and the little green pinball machine in the Back Bay is not a fitting emergency room in which to save its life.

Shocked at the defeat of the “inevitable” World Champion-to-be Mets, the Daily News puts out a next day’s headline of surprise and anger, referencing a food familiar to Bostonians: “BEANS!”

Of course, we know how that story ends. Don't we? DON'T WE????

October 19, 1999: A wild NLCS, just two days after Robin Ventura’s “Grand Slam Single” won Game 5 at Shea Stadium, moves on to an even wilder Game 6 at Turner Field in Atlanta. The Braves blow Al Leiter off the mound with 5 runs in the 1st inning, and later lead the Mets 7-3.

But the Mets storm back, with Mike Piazza tying the game with a home run. The Braves take an 8-7 lead late, but the Mets tie it. The Mets take a 9-8 lead in the 10th, but the Braves tie it.

In the bottom of the 11th, the Braves load the bases, and Met manager Bobby Valentine, instead of bringing in righthanded reliever Octavio Dotel to pitch to righthanded hitter Andruw Jones, brings in lefthander Kenny Rogers. Rogers has been one of the top pitchers in baseball in regular-season play the last few years, but his postseason experience has been limited to some terrible outings for the Yankees in 1996 and ’97. For whatever reason, Valentine brings him in to face the Braves’ kinderwonder from the Netherlands Antilles.

I watched this game on TV with my father, who’s a nominal Met fan, and it was this series, with all its twists and turns, that led him to finally understand what lunatics like me see in the game of baseball. And I remember telling him, at several points in the game, that this game and this series deserved to end with a hero, and that it would be a shame if it ended with a goat.

With a 3-2 count on Jones, Rogers threw a pitch low and outside. Ball four. 10-9 Braves. Winning run forced home. Ballgame over. Pennant dream over. Mets lose. Theeee Mets lose.

If Jones had gotten a hit, to drive home the Pennant-winning run, he would have been a hero, and you couldn’t really criticize anyone on the Mets. They had fought gallantly, at moments even brilliantly, from a 3-games-to-0 deficit.

Of course, no one had ever come back from such a deficit to win a postseason series. Not in baseball, anyway. None had even forced a Game 7. None had even forced a Game 6 until the Braves themselves did it the year before against the San Diego Padres in the NLDS. Back from 3-0 to win the series? That’s never going to happen in baseball. Everybody who had ever watched baseball was thinking that in October 1999. If only it had stayed that way for 5 more years, plus a few more days.

Was the goat Rogers, for pitching poorly when his team needed him to get one more out and get out of the 11th-inning jam? Or was the goat Valentine, for yet another dimwitted bullpen move? (Paging Mel Rojas, and that was in a game with far less significance.) Did this move convince him to leave Leiter in to face Luis Sojo in Game 5 of the next year’s World Series after 141 pitches? Who knows. Bobby V himself probably doesn’t know.

What is known is that the Mets had taken their fans on a thrilling ride, their first October ride in 11 years, and provided them with treasured moments on the ride... and then they crashed. What a way for the Mets and their fans to end the 20th Century.

October 19, 2004: Game 6 of the ALCS. The Yankees had been 3 outs away from a sweep and the Pennant in Game 4. But the Sox had come from behind in both that game and Game 5 to make it a 3-2 series. No mater, the series had come back to Yankee Stadium, home of Mystique and Aura and 39 American League Pennants. All the Yanks had to do was win tonight, and all those brand-new Sox memories would have been as wasted as Carlton Fisk’s homer in ’75.

Except Curt Schilling was pitching for the Sox. So badly hurt that he couldn’t pitch well in Game 1, he’d had a special surgery on his ankle that allowed him to pitch tonight. And the Yankees refused to test that ankle by bunting on him. What good is “class” if you lose? Especially to The Scum?

Schilling pitched 7 solid innings, and Mark Bellhorn (cough-steroids-cough) hit a home run. It was a reverse of the Jeffrey Maier play in 1996: The ball hit a front-row fan in the chest and bounced back onto the field. It was an obvious home run, but the umpires ruled it went off the wall. Sox manager Terry Francona appealed, and the ruling was changed to a homer.

The Sox still led 4-2 in the bottom of the 8th, but the Yankees got Derek Jeter on first. With one out, Alex Rodriguez came to the plate. Now, keep in mind, while he hadn’t gotten a key hit that could have won Game 4 or Game 5, he does not yet have the reputation as a player who can’t handle the postseason or other clutch situations. And the pitcher is Bronson Arroyo, Captain Cornrows (cough-steroids-cough), whose purpose pitch to A-Rod’s back at Fenway back in July led to a nasty brawl.

Alex hits a weak grounder back to the mound, and as Arroyo tries to tag him out just before first base, Arroyo drops the ball. It’s been 18 years since Bill Buckner, and now, at another New York ballpark in October, a ball rolls away from first base down the right-field line, and a run scores! It’s 4-3 Boston, and A-Rod is on second with the tying run! The Stadium is going bananas! Red Sox fans are in full “Oh, noooo, not again! It can’t be happening again!” mode.

Except this call is reversed as well. It’s The Slap Play. A-Rod slapped the ball out of Arroyo’s glove. Now, I don’t know why that’s not allowed; after all, a runner trying to score is allowed to crash into the catcher and thus to try to knock the ball out of his glove, and in the 1951 World Series, Eddie Stanky infamously kicked the ball out of Phil Rizzuto’s glove to break up a double play and keep a Giants rally going. But the rule is in place, and A-Rod’s slap met the definition of interference, and he was called out.

What’s more, Jeter was sent back to first. That’s the part that bothers me, ruling-wise: Jeter had nothing to do with the interference, and he would have had second legitimately even if A-Rod had only been properly tagged out. It wasn’t his fault, second was rightfully his, interference or no, even if third and home were not.

This killed the rally, but as mad as I was at the umpires, A-Rod was rightfully the real target of Yankee Fans’ wrath, including my own. This was the beginning of A-Rod as "a player who can't hit in the clutch," and he has not shaken it yet. Though he's putting together a damn good attempt at doing so here in October 2009.

The Sox held on to win by that same 4-2 score, and the series was tied, the first time a team had ever come back from 3-games-to-0 down to force a Game 7.

I had no confidence that the Yankees would win Game 7, not even at home, especially with their starting pitching options so messed-up. As historian and Red Sox fan Doris Kearns Goodwin likes to say, “There’s always these omens in baseball.” This was an omen to rival Damien Thorn. For the first time since I became aware of the Curse of the Bambino, I believed it was not going to work.

October 19, 2006: Game 7 of the NLCS at Shea Stadium. Mets and St. Louis Cardinals for the Pennant. In the top of the 6th, Met starter Oliver Perez has held the Cards to a 1-1 tie, but Scott Rolen blasts a drive to deep left field. It looks like a 2-run home run, the kind of big-game shot that fans of the losing team will lament for the rest of their lives.

Except Endy Chavez jumps up, reaches over the top, and snares it. He then fires back to the infield to double Jim Edmonds off first and end the threat. Shea erupts in fan noise.

It seemed like one of “these omens in baseball”: The greatest catch made by a Met since Tommie Agee and Ron Swoboda in 1969. This was it. This was the Mets’ year. And the Yankees had already been eliminated. They’re taking New York back. Tonight!

In the top of the 9th, the score still 1-1, the Cards had a man on, and catcher Yadier Molina stepped up against Met reliever Aaron Heilman. If Heilman could just get out of this inning, the Mets would have the meat of their order coming up in the bottom of the 9th. And while Molina is one of the best defensive catchers of our time, he’s not regarded as much of a hitter.

But he hits a drive to left, and Chavez can’t reach this one. Home run. Cards 3, Mets 1, and the Mets are down to their last 3 outs.

In the bottom of the 9th, Jose Valentin and Chavez lead off with singles off rookie closer Adam Wainwright. But Wainwright strikes Cliff Floyd out looking, and gets Jose Reyes to fly out. Wainwright walks Paul Lo Duca to bring up Carlos Beltrán with the bases loaded and two men out.

Wainwright throws a curve on the outside corner. Just like Floyd, Beltran never even takes the bat off his shoulder. Strike three. Ballgame over. Pennant dream over. Mets lose. Theeee Mets lose.

An absolutely crushing defeat. How could the Mets blow it? After all, they were the best team in baseball, right? Certainly, the 97-win Mets were better than the 83-win Cards, right? Beyond any doubt, the Mets were now the best team in New York, better than the Yankees, right? How could this happen?

It could happen because the Mets choked. Again. The Curse of Kevin Mitchell lives.

No matter, they were a young team. Surely, they would be back in 2007, and beyond, and would take over New York from the Yankees, and take over baseball.

Instead, Game 7 of the ’06 NLCS remains their last postseason game. Like the Yankees from 2 years earlier, they’re still looking for that 4th LCS win. And looking. And looking.

Ironically, the temporary hero Chavez and the permanent goat Heilman would end up being traded away together, the Mets sending them to the Seattle Mariners after the 2008 season.

October 19, 2007: After 12 seasons and 12 Playoff appearances, including 10 AL East titles, 6 Pennants and 4 World Championships, manager Joe Torre rejects the Yankees' overture which calls for a pay cut.

The non-negotiable offer - a one-year, $5 million deal with $1 million incentives per playoff round and an $8 million option for 2009 if the Yankees reached next year's World Series - was considered by many to be insulting and a ploy to oust the popular manager without upsetting the team's fans.

Joe Girardi would soon be hired as manager. Torre would be signed to manage the Los Angeles Dodgers. He would lead them to the NLCS in 2008 and '09, but lose both times, and he has since retired. Girardi has now led the Yankees to 3 Playoff berths including a World Championship.

Maybe it was for the best.

*

October 19, 1216: King John of England dies in Newark. No, he wasn’t carjacked. This was Newark-on-Trent in Nottinghamshire, not Newark-on-Passaic in New Jersey. One of the worst English monarchs, he is succeeded by his 9-year-old son, Henry (later remembered as King Henry I).

October 19, 1453: In Champions League action, Bordeaux defeats Arsenal, and manager Harry Lancaster is sacked. Actually, no. The French army retakes Bordeaux, meaning that the only part of France still under English control is the port of Calais. The Hundred Years War is over, after 115 years. But by no means should England, and King Henry VI in particular, feel relief: Soon, the Wars of the Roses will begin.

October 19, 1781, 120 years ago today: It took a combined U.S.-French all-star team, but the British are beaten at Yorktown, Virginia. Representatives of British commander Charles, Lord Cornwallis, handed over his sword and formally surrendered in person to George Washington and Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, Comte de Rochambeau.

The War of the American Revolution is not over, but this is the battle that ends what would, today, be called “major combat operations.” The British had the best navy in the world, and along with France one of the two best armies. But they fought this war as if their commander-in-chief was Juande Ramos.

But Cornwallis himself, later 1st Marquess Cornwallis, got a bum rap: Before the war, he argued against the Stamp Act in the House of Lords; during it, he won battles at Bound Brook, New Jersey and Brandywine and Germantown (now part of Philadelphia), Pennsylvania; after it, he served as Governor-General of India, and as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland argued for Catholic emancipation there. So he was actually a pretty good general, and not at all a bad guy.

October 19, 1810: Cassius Marcellus Clay is born. A State legislator in Kentucky, he became one of America’s foremost abolitionists and public speakers in the pre-Civil War years.

He would tell his audience, “For those of you who believe in the laws of God, I have this,” and reach into a pocket and pull out a Bible. “For those of you who believe in the laws of man, I have this,” and reach into a pocket and pull out a booklet containing the text of the Constitution. “And for those of you who believe in neither, I have these,” and reach into his pocket and pull out a pair of dueling pistols. Abraham Lincoln appointed him Ambassador to Russia, and he soon came home and commanded a regiment in the Civil War.

The irony is that, when he is remembered at all today, he is remembered as the namesake of someone whose great-grandfather, an emancipated slave, grew up on land owned by Clay. His name was Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr., but he changed it, calling it, of all things, “a slave name.” I wonder how much Muhammad Ali actually knew about the original Cassius Clay at the time?

October 19, 1812: Dyanmo Moscow defeats Paris-Saint-Germain under gaffeur Napoleon Bonaparte. Actually, Emperor Napoleon I of France retreats from Moscow, establishing the First Rule of European Warfare: Don’t try to invade Moscow if you know it’s going to get cold soon.

October 19, 1873: Yale, Princeton, Columbia, and Rutgers universities draft the first code of American football rules. At the time, however, “American football” still looked a lot more like soccer than the derivation of rugby it would soon become.

October 19, 1876: Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown is born. “Centennial” because 1876 was the nation’s 100th Anniversary. A farm accident as a boy left him with one finger missing and another one mangled and useless. But that disability became a strength, as it enabled him to grip a baseball in such a way that he had one of the best curveballs of all time. “Three-Finger” Brown became a Hall of Fame pitcher for the Chicago Cubs.

October 19, 1896: Bob O’Farrell is born. A fine defensive catcher, he played for the 1926 World Champion St. Louis Cardinals.

October 19, 1900: Roy Worters is born. A star with the New York Americans, he was probably the best goaltender the New York Tri-State Area ever saw, at least until Billy Smith. Yes, that includes Ranger Hall-of-Famers Chuck Rayner, Gump Worsley and Eddie Giacomin. He won the Hart Trophy as NHL MVP in 1929 – but not the Vezina Trophy as best goalie. That went to George Hainsworth of Montreal. But Worters did win the Vezina in 1931. Known as “Shrimp” because he was just 5-foot-3, he came up big many times for the Amerks.

He is in the Hockey Hall of Fame, along with teammates Red Dutton, Lionel Conacher, Billy Burch, Sweeney Schriner and Bullet Joe Simpson – quite a haul of honors for a franchise that only existed for 17 seasons, made the Playoffs 5 times and never reached the Stanley Cup Finals. They did reach the Semifinals in 1936, and again in ’38 after a hernia had ended Worters’ career.

October 19, 1923: Citing the unsavory characters associated with the sport‚ American League President Ban Johnson persuades AL owners to prohibit boxing matches in their parks. The National League declines to go along with it. A month earlier, Jack Dempsey and Luis Firpo had their wild heavyweight title fight at the Polo Grounds, an NL park.

But the Yankees had already hosted the first pro prizefight at Yankee Stadium, with Benny Leonard successfully defending the lightweight title in a unanimous decision against Lew Tendler on July 24. In July 1927, with Johnson having been forced out due to illness, the Yankees broke his taboo by staging former heavyweight champ Dempsey against future heavyweight champ Jack Sharkey, in between Dempsey’s two fights against Gene Tunney. This was the last significant fight Dempsey would win.

October 19, 1943: Streptomycin, the first antibiotic remedy for tuberculosis, is isolated by researchers at Rutgers University. Rutgers has had a lot of victories in the laboratory. On athletic fields, uh, let me get back to you.

October 19, 1945: One heck of a day to be born. Actor John Lithgow. Feminist activist Patricia Ireland. Country singer Jeannie C. Riley (best known for “Harper Valley P.T.A.”). And drag queen/actor Harris Glenn Milstead, a.k.a. Divine. As far as I know, though, none had anything to do with sports. I often find days where two famous people were born, or even three, but four, and I’ve heard of all of them? Not often.

October 19, 1949: Three weeks after acquiring shortstop Chico Carrasquel from the Brooklyn Dodgers organization for cash and 2 minor leaguers‚ the Chicago White Sox all but steal second baseman Nellie Fox from the Philadelphia Athletics for catcher Joe Tipton. If the A’s had hung onto Fox, who knows, maybe they would have been the team that stayed in Philly, and the Phillies would have been the team that moved.

Also on this day, Lynn Dickey is born. Probably still the best-known player in Kansas State’s football history, he was named the all-time quarterback in Big Eight history when that league evolved into the Big Twelve. He and his successor at KSU, Steve Grogan, are the only KSU players to have their number retired – both wore Number 11. He went on to play for the Houston Oilers and Green Bay Packers, helping the Packers to the 1982 NFC Central Division Title; famously outdueling Joe Theismann of the Washington Redskins in the highest-scoring Monday Night Football game ever, a 48-47 win in 1983; and steering the Pack through the biggest snowfall in NFL history, 15 inches, in a 21-0 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1985. He now hosts a sports-talk show on a Kansas City radio station.

October 19, 1954: Sam Allardyce is born. Big Sam – or Fat Sam, as those of us who don’t like him, those of us with taste, call him – is best known for both playing for, and later managing, Bolton Wanderers in the English Football League. He now manages the East End, London club known (incongruously) as West Ham United, and he’s mean, he’s corrupt, he’s a liar, and he’s a cunt.

Also on this day, Joe Bryant is born. He was an All-Star with the Philadelphia 76ers, known as “Jellybean.” He’s not a cunt, but his son is Kobe Bryant. And if you shorten the sounds of “KOH-bee BRIGH-unt,” well, you do the pronunciation.

October 19, 1956: Bruce Weber is born. He coached the University of Southern Illinois into the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16, and has now led the University of Illinois to 2 Big Ten Championships and a trip to the 2005 National Championship Game. Ironically, as an athlete, he played baseball at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, but was cut from their basketball team.

October 19, 1962: Evander Holyfield is born. He’s hardly without his flaws, but this multiple-time heavyweight champion of the world did boxing a huge favor by exposing Mike Tyson as what he is: A punk and a coward who could dish it out (as well as anybody ever has) but couldn’t take it. He’s also the only man to knock down, let alone the only one ever to defeat, Riddick Bowe, although he only won 1 of their 3 fights.

October 19, 1965: The Mets purchase Jerry Grote from the Houston Astros. He will be the starting catcher on their 1969 World Championship and 1973 Pennant teams.

Only 3 men have been starting catchers on Met teams that reached the World Series: Grote, Gary Carter and Mike Piazza; and only Grote and Carter have helped them go all the way. In fact, from 1969 to 1977, both starting catchers for New York’s baseball teams, Grote and Thurman Munson, wore Number 15.

Also on this day, Brad Daugherty is born. A star at the University of North Carolina, he was widely expected to be the top pick in the 1986 NBA Draft. The Philadelphia 76ers held that pick. Then, in one of the biggest bonehead trades of all time, Sixers owner Harold Katz that pick, and thus Daugherty, to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Roy Hinson and cash.

Now, Hinson is one of the best players ever to come out of Central Jersey (Somerset County's Franklin High School) and was a star at Rutgers, but Daugherty would go on to be named to the ACC 50th Anniversary men's basketball team in 2002 and inducted into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame. The Sixers also traded Moses Malone that day, so they traded a Hall of Fame center, who had only gotten them the one NBA Championship the franchise has now won in the last 42 seasons, and a guy who would have been an ideal successor as Malone aged.

Daugherty became the Cavs’ all-time leading scorer and all-time leading rebounder, distinctions he held until 2008, when those totals were surpassed, respectively, by LeBron James and Žydrūnas Ilgauskas. They never won a title, though, only getting as far as the 1992 Eastern Conference Finals. A back injury cut short his career, but he was a 5-time All-Star, the Cavs have retired his Number 43, and was a unanimous choice among fans as the center on the Cavs’ 30th Anniversary All-Time Team.

He has run several businesses, made a fortune above and beyond his basketball salaries, works for ESPN as an analyst for college basketball and NASCAR. Yes, a black man announcing for NASCAR. He loves it. He even sponsored a racing team before joining the ESPN NASCAR broadcast crew. (He had to sell it to avoid a conflict of interest.) The reason he wore 43 was in tribute to the number on the car of the man he calls “my favorite sportsman,” North Carolina’s own Richard Petty.

October 19, 1972: Keith Foulke is born. He was the closer who got the final out of the 2004 World Series * for the Boston Red Sox, a bouncer up the middle from Edgar Renteria of the St. Louis Cardinals, which Foulke caught and tossed to first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz.

He previously reached the postseason with the Chicago White Sox in 2000 and the Oakland Athletics in 2003, that time losing an ALDS to the Red Sox. Knowing how their bullpen had failed them that year, the Red Sox signed him. He spent the 2009 season with the Newark Bears, and is unlikely to appear in another major-league game. Maybe if he was a lefthanded reliever, somebody would take a chance on him, but he’s righthanded, so this could be it for him.

October 19, 1975: During a break in the World Series, The Boston Globe uses aerial photography to measure the exact distance from home plate to the foul pole at the left-field wall at Fenway Park, a.k.a. the Green Monster. Since the 1934 renovation, the distance has been listed as 315 feet. The recent trend of posting fence distances in the metric system led to a second posting of 96 meters. But hardly anybody believes that, and most fans think it’s even closer.

A man who’d studied aerial photos taken from World War II reconnaissance planes, to prepare for missions bombing the photographed targets later, decides that the distance is exactly 304.779 feet. That’s 304 feet, 9.3 inches. More than 10 feet shorter than it has been officially alleged to be. Art Keefe and writer George Sullivan measure it this month at 309 feet‚ 4 inches.

In 1990, the Red Sox finally concede that it’s not 315 feet. The Wall is relabeled as 310 feet, or 94.5 meters. I wonder who Ted Williams believed. After all, he not only had to play that Wall as the Sox’ longtime left fielder, but had been, himself, a pilot in World War II (and the Korean War), and was noted for his fine eyesight. I’ll bet he didn’t buy the 315 figure or the 310 one.

October 19, 1976: Michael Young is born. The third baseman for the Texas Rangers won the 2005 American League batting title, won the MVP award of the 2006 All-Star Game, and drove in the winning run at the 2008 All-Star Game. Tonight he will begin his 2nd straight World Series.

October 19, 1978: The Chicago White Sox fire Larry Doby‚ naming Don Kessinger as player-manager for the 1979 season. Kessinger will not work out, and will be fired the following June. The former All-Star shortstop with the Cubs then retires as a player. There has never been another player-manager in the AL, and only Pete Rose has been one in the NL.

October 19, 1981, 30 years ago today: In Game 5 of the NLCS‚ Rick Monday hits a solo home run with 2 out in the top of the 9th against Montreal's Steve Rogers to give Los Angeles a 2-1 victory and a trip to the World Series.

The loss becomes known as Blue Monday, due to having been played in bitterly cold conditions in Montreal (the roof hadn’t been finished yet), the Dodgers’ uniforms being blue, and the day being a very sad one for baseball fans in Quebec.

The Expos were within one run of reaching the World Series. They would never find that run. In fact, they would never play another postseason game. The story of that team is one of dashed hopes and awful losses, including, ultimately, the loss to the fans of the team itself.

October 19, 1985: Game 1 of the World Series at Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis, with the Cardinals facing their cross-State rivals, the Kansas City Royals. Governor John Ashcroft of Missouri shows up, wearing half a red Cardinal jacket and half a blue Royal jacket sewn together. Bipartisanship may not have been something he liked it politics, but if it would win him votes in the Show-Me State, then he would show the voters. The Cardinals win Game 1 of the “Show-Me Series” or the “I-70 Series,” 3-1, behind ace John Tudor.

October 19, 2002: An All-California World Series begins at the ballpark then known as Edison International Field of Anaheim, the first Series in 13 years for the San Francisco Giants, the first ever in 42 seasons of play for the team then officially known as the Anaheim Angels.

Tsuyoshi Shinjo becomes the first Japanese-born player to appear in the World Series, beating Yankee Hideki Matsui by 1 year. The Giant designated hitter goes 1-for-3 in the 4-3 victory over the Angels.

October 19, 2003: The Yankees bounce back behind Andy Pettitte to tie the World Series at 1 game apiece with a 6-1 triumph in Game 2. Hideki Matsui's 3-run homer in the 1st inning is all Pettitte needs. Alfonso Soriano also homers for New York. Mark Redman takes the loss for the Marlins.

Nobody knows it at the time, and it would seem truly shocking to those fans still on a high after the Aaron Boone homer 3 days earlier, but this is the last World Series game the Yankees would ever win at the House That Ruth Built.

October 19, 2005: The Houston Astros clinch the first Pennant in their 44-season history as they defeat the St. Louis Cardinals‚ 5-1‚ to win the NLCS 4-games-to-2. Roy Oswalt gets the victory for Houston while Jason Lane hits a home run. Oswalt is named the series MVP for his 2 victories. This was also the last sporting event ever held at Busch Memorial Stadium in its 40 years of operation.

October 19, 2008: Behind the solid performance of starter Matt Garza and the stellar relief work of rookie David Price to finish the game, which included striking out J.D. Drew with the bases loaded to end the eighth, the hometown Rays beat the defending world champion Red Sox, 3-1, in the decisive Game 7 of the ALCS to win their first Pennant.

After posting the worst record in baseball last season, the Rays advance to the World Series and will host the Phillies in Game 1 of the Fall Classic at Tropicana Field.

October 19, 2010: The Yankees pay tribute to Freddy Schuman, a fan favorite at the ballpark since 1988 due to his signs and the rhythmic banging of a spoon against a skillet, by putting some of his memorabilia inside Gate 4 at the Stadium, and with a moment of silence prior to Game 4 of the ALCS.

The fans also show their appreciation of 85-year old iconic “Freddy Sez” when they photographed friends banging his displayed pan, and with their chanting of “Fred-dy! Fred-dy!” during the contest against the Rangers.

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