Thursday, October 20, 2011

Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame the Yankees for 2004

The biggest thing to happen in baseball history on an October 20, aside from the birth of Mickey Mantle, was in 2004.

In 2007, shortly before the Red Sox won another title, ESPN did, as part of a regular series, The Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame... "The Yankees for Losing a 3-0 Lead in 2004 ALCS."

Their reasons:

5. "Do you believe in miracles? Yes!" Red Sox manager Terry Francona had shown his team the film Miracle, about the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team. In a previous post, I showed why that win was no miracle. A big upset, yes; a miracle, no.

4. "Grady Little." Since he screwed up the 2003 ALCS, he was fired and thus wasn't there to screw up the 2004 ALCS. Is this the lamest reason? No, the next one is:

3. "The Splendid Splinter." Because the Red Sox moved the right field fence in for Ted Williams in 1940, a Tony Clark shot bounced into the stands for a ground-rule double, preventing a runner on 1st from getting past 3rd in Game 5.

Never mind that Ted had been dead for 2 years, and retired for 44 years. Or that he never asked the Sox management to do that. And even if he had, how could he know that, 64 years later, after his own death, it would help the Red Sox win a Pennant and the subsequent World Series?

2. "Frankenstein's Monster." The test run for the procedure on Curt Schilling's ankle, which was done on a cadaver. If there's one thing Red Sox fans know about, it's dead men. They've been watching enough of them play for the Red Sox.

1. "Big Papi." The hitting of David Ortiz.

*

What were the real top 5 reasons?

5. Yogi's Advice. Yogi Berra had said, "We've been playing these guys for 80 years. They can't beat us." But he also once said, "It ain't over 'til it's over." Maybe the Sox listened to him more than the Yankees did.

4. Hunger. Unlike in 1978, when the Sox slunk back into their dugout feeling totally defeated, 25 years later Trot Nixon walked off the field after Aaron Boone's homer, and slapped the Gatorade cooler off the dugout bench. He was sending a message: "This is unacceptable." And the Sox did seem, in 2004, to have a now-or-never approach. With Pedro Martinez's contract running out at the end of '04, it probably was then or never.

Whereas the Yankees, perhaps, had taken winning for granted. This was after the TV series NCIS had premiered, but before the revelation of Gibbs Rule Number 8: "Never take anything for granted."

3. The Schilling Surgery. It probably shouldn't have worked. It did. Whether Yankee manager Joe Torre was wrong to not tell his players to bunt on the bastard is debatable, but there should have been at least a 50-50 chance the guy didn't belong out there anyway. And I want the blood on that sock tested for steroids!

2. The Houston Boys. The Yankees' starters for those 7 games were as follows: Mike Mussina, Jon Lieber, Javier Vazquez, an aging Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez, Mussina, Lieber and Kevin Brown. Now, Lieber has been all but forgotten, but he was pretty solid for the Yanks that season. The problems were Vazquez and "Brown-out."

If Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte -- or even either of them -- hadn't shuffled off to Houston in the 2003-04 off-season, then one of them might have started Game 4, instead of the nearly-washed-up Duque, and the Yanks might have led 4-2 going into the bottom of the 9th. The walk to Kevin Millar, the stolen base by pinch-runner Dave Roberts, and the RBI single by Bill Mueller would only make it 4-3 instead of 4-4.

Or if the Yankees had Clemens or Pettitte ready to go in Game 7 instead of Vazquez, would they have let the Sox jump out to a 6-0 lead after 2 innings? Well, Clemens, maybe, he fell behind 4-0 in Game 7 the season before. But not Pettitte, a lefty who would have put Ortiz, Nixon, Johnny Damon, and the switch-hitting but better from the left side Mueller, Jason Varitek and Mark Bellhorn at a bit of a disadvantage. But he followed Clemens "home," leaving the Yankees without a lefty in the rotation.

1. The Red Sox Cheated. And they got caught. And they lied about it for years. And they got exposed. And they still lied about it.

Face it, even if you don't count the exposed Manny Ramirez, the confessed Bronson Arroyo, and the other suspects (Schilling, Millar, Mueller, Bellhorn, Varitek, Nixon, and possibly others, including the not-yet-there Kevin Youkilis), it all comes down to ESPN's Reason Number 1.

Ortiz had played 4 seasons of at least 324 plate appearances with the Minnesota Twins, prior to coming to the Red Sox -- at which point he was 27 years old and should already have been in his prime. Keep in mind that the Twins then played at the Metrodome, one of the best hitters' parks ever. These are the 1998, 2000, 2001 and 2002 seasons. (He had just 25 plate appearances in 1999.) Then, in 2003, he began the 1st of what is now 9 seasons in Boston.

In the columns you'll see, the first number is the year, the second his home runs, the third his RBIs, the fourth his batting average, the fifth his on-base percentage, the sixth his slugging percentage, the seventh his OPS, and the eighth his OPS+.

Year HR RBI BA OBP SLG OPS OPS+
1997 1 6 0.327 0.353 0.449 0.802 107
1998 9 46 0.277 0.371 0.446 0.817 111
2000 10 63 0.282 0.364 0.446 0.810 101
2001 18 48 0.234 0.324 0.475 0.799 106
2002 20 75 0.272 0.339 0.500 0.839 120

Got that so far? He was 7, 11, 1, 6 and 20 percent better than the average hitter in the major leagues up to that point.

Now, if we presume that he was naturally coming into his own at age 27, going on 28, when he arrived in Boston, he should show an increase from '02 to '03 similar to that which he showed from '01 to '02. However, Fenway Park is a bad park for a lefthanded hitter: Although it features baseball's shortest home run distance, 302 feet, to its right-field pole, the fence curves out so that it's 380 feet to straightaway right. So, without pharmaceutical help, he could have gotten better, but he shouldn't have gotten that much better in '03 than in '02. But look:

2003 31 101 0.288 0.369 0.592 0.961 144
2004 41 139 0.301 0.380 0.603 0.983 145
2005 47 148 0.300 0.397 0.604 1.001 158
2006 54 137 0.287 0.413 0.636 1.049 161
2007 35 117 0.332 0.445 0.621 1.066 171
2008 23 89 0.264 0.369 0.507 0.877 123
2009 28 99 0.238 0.332 0.462 0.794 101
2010 32 102 0.270 0.370 0.529 0.899 137
2011 29 96 0.309 0.398 0.554 0.953 154

So he went from an up-til-then-peak of 20 percent better, and only that once was he over 11 percent better, to: 44, 45, 58, 61, 71, 23, 1, 37 and 54 percent better. The 1 being in the year he was exposed as a big fat lying cheating bastard.

So why the 37 and 54 in the last 2 seasons? Maybe he's got a masking agent now. Or maybe the supplementation has been done.

But if Ortiz had been in Boston what he was in Minneapolis...

* 2003: Chances are, the Seattle Mariners win the AL Wild Card, and if Aaron Boone still hits a walkoff homer to win the Pennant, it's great, but not nearly as great as it would have been against The Scum.

* 2004: The Oakland Athletics might have won the Wild Card.

* 2005: The Cleveland Indians would have won the Wild Card.

* 2006: The Red Sox still wouldn't have made the Playoffs in 2006.

* 2007: The Red Sox are probably only the Wild Card, rather than the Division Champions, and maybe they have to deal with the Lake Erie Midge. Can't you just imagine Jonathan Papelbon with those things crawling all over him? Or would that be professional courtesy? And the Indians probably end the Curse of Rocky Colavito.

* 2008: The Red Sox might not beat the Yankees out for the Wild Card.

* 2009: The Red Sox probably still get the Wild Card, so that doesn't change.

* 2010: The Red Sox still don't make the Playoffs.

* 2011: They don't get close enough for a massive choke.

You say the Yankees were also using steroids in 2004? Yes, there was Jason Giambi (confessed), Alex Rodriguez (confessed, and although he didn't confess to using them as a Yankee, the effects would still have been there from the season before), and Gary Sheffield (still denies he knowingly took them, but who's kidding who).

All that would mean is that the Yankees were equally undeserving that season. Actually, no, it wouldn't, because we have confessions, while the Red Sox still lie about it. (Except for Arroyo.) It means the Yanks didn't deserve the 2004 World Championship, but the Sox still deserve it less.

The right thing to do is not to award the 2004 American League Pennant to the Yankees, but to simply declare it vacant, and let the St. Louis Cardinals, the team the Sox beat in the World Series, decide whether to accept the 2004 World Championship.

*

What else happened in baseball history on October 20?

October 20, 1803: The U.S. Senate ratifies the Louisiana Purchase, making possible the major-league cities of St. Louis, Kansas City, Minneapolis and Denver. If you count cities that have major-league teams in other sports but not baseball, add to the list New Orleans and Oklahoma City.

October 20, 1910: The Philadelphia Athletics dispose of Chicago Cub starter Ed Reulbach in 2 innings‚ then pin the loss on reliever Harry McIntire‚ who lasts a third of a inning. Coombs coasts on one day's rest‚ 12-5‚ and helps himself with 3 hits.

Cub manager/first baseman Frank Chance becomes the first player ejected from a World Series game when umpire Tom Connolly chases him for protesting a Danny Murphy home run drive against a sign over the right field bleachers. Chance opines too loudly that it should be a ground-rule double.

October 20, 1927: Joyce Diane Bauer is bornin Manhattan, and grows up in Far Rockaway, Queens. Today, we know her as famed psychologist Dr. Joyce Brothers. She appeared on The $64,000 Question in 1955, and won the eponymous top prize (worth about $540,000 in 2011 money). Her subject was boxing, and it led to her becoming the first female commentator for a televised prizefight, a 1957 bout on CBS, in which Carmen Basilio took the middleweight from Sugar Ray Robinson at Yankee Stadium.

In 1958, he became the first advice columnist to have her own TV show. In 1981, she played herself as a guest on “James Brown’s Celebrity Hot Tub Party” on Saturday Night Live, with Eddie Murphy playing “The Godfather of Soul and Hot Tub Man Number 1, James Brown!” Great sketch. Dr. Brothers now lives in Fort Lee, New Jersey.

October 20, 1932: Roosevelt Brown is born. The greatest offensive tackles of his time, he anchored the New York Giants line that reached 6 NFL Championship Games in 8 years, including the 1956 World Championship. Although his Number 79 has not been retired, he is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and was named to the NFL’s 75th Anniversary All-Time Team.

Also on this day, William Christopher is born. Best known for playing Lieutenant, later Captain, John Patrick Francis Mulcahy, S.J, on M*A*S*H, he says he has often been asked near his Southern California home, “Father Mulcahy, say a prayer for the Dodgers.” “I suppose I should actually say one for the Angels,” he says, “but I do root for the Dodgers.”

In a first-season episode, the officers are listening to Armed Forces Radio for the Army-Navy football game, when Mulcahy walks in with his Notre Dame pennant. He’s told Notre Dame, America’s unofficial Catholic university due to its legendary football program, isn’t playing today. “Then what’s all the commotion?”

In another early episode, he is playing in a pickup game in camp, wearing a helmet that’s Notre Dame gold, but anachronistically has a two-bar facemask. Hawkeye asks him how the game’s going. He says, “Protestants 7, Catholics 3, but we’ll get ‘em!”

Mulcahy was also a big boxing fan, having coached boxing at the CYO in his native Philadelphia, and would minister to a former boxing champion who ended up dying at the 4077th while on a tour for the troops. He also had “my sister the Sister,” who took the nom de nun of Sister Angelica, who first played and then coached basketball at her all-girls’ high school.

October 20, 1937: Juan Marichal is born. Known for his high leg-kick during his windup, he won more games in the 1960s than any other pitcher, and until Dennis Martinez surpassed him his 243 career wins were the most of any Hispanic pitcher. He helped the San Francisco Giants to the 1962 National League Pennant and the 1971 NL West title, although they fell just short a few others times while he was there. They have retired his Number 27. He was the first Dominican, and the first Hispanic pitcher (aside from Negro League star Martin DiHigo, who was not strictly a pitcher), elected to the Hall of Fame.

Sadly, like the other serious contender for the title of the greatest Hispanic pitcher, Pedro Martinez, he is best known for a moment of violence, hitting Dodger catcher John Roseboro over the head with his bat in a tight Pennant-race game in 1965. Unlike Pedro, however, this was out of character for Marichal, and Roseboro not only accepted his apology, but after Marichal failed to be elected to the Hall in his first 4 years of eligibility, Roseboro spoke up on his behalf, and he was elected on the 5th try.

He went on to become a broadcaster for a Spanish-language network in the Caribbean, and called games in the 1990 World Series, including the 2 won by Cincinnati Reds pitcher Jose Rijo, who not only wore Number 27 in tribute to Marichal, but at the time was married to Marichal’s daughter Rosie, who can be seen on the official highlight film, yelling from the stands, “Let’s go, Rijo!”

October 20, 1951, 60 years ago today: Drake University of Des Moines, Iowa plays football against Oklahoma A&M – the name will be changed to Oklahoma State in 1958 – at Lewis Field in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Drake quarterback Johnny Bright, one of the first black players to receive serious consideration for the Heisman Trophy, is assaulted by white A&M defensive tackle Wilbanks Smith. “Unnecessary roughness”? Three times in the first seven minutes of the game, Smith knocked Bright unconscious, the last time breaking his jaw.

A&M won the game, 27-14, Drake’s first loss of the season. Photographs of what becomes known as "the Johnny Bright Incident," by Don Ultang and John Robinson were featured on the front page of the next day’s Des Moines Register, and won the Pulitzer Prize.

Neither the University nor the Missouri Valley Conference disciplined Smith, nor did the Conference discipline the school or any of its coaches, in any way. As a result, Drake and Bradley University, also integrated by that point, left the league in protest. The NCAA issued new rules about blocking and tackling, and mandated better head protection, including facemasks for helmets.

Bright recovered, and finished 5th in the Heisman balloting, which was won by Dick Kazmaier of Princeton, the last Ivy Leaguer to win it. Drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles, Bright knew there were a lot of Southern players in the NFL and didn’t want to play there. He would play in Canada and receive many honors (or, should I say, “honours”) there, including 3 straight Grey Cups with the Edmonton Eskimos. When he retired in 1964, he was the CFL’s all-time leading rusher, with 10,909 yards, a total then surpassed in the NFL only by Jim Brown, but Brown’s amazing 5.2 yards per carry is surpassed by Bright, with 5.5, making him North America’s all-time leader in that stat. Only two CFL players have passed him in rushing yardage since.

He belongs to the Eskimos’ Wall of Honour, and the College Football and Canadian Football Halls of Fame. Drake retired his Number 43 (he wore 24 with the Esks) and named the field at Drake Stadium after him. After serving as a teacher and principal at an Edmonton high school, he died in 1983 from complications from surgery. Ernie Davis of Syracuse became the first black Heisman winner in 1961.

October 20, 1953: Keith Hernandez is born. Elaine: “Who does this guy think he is?” Keith: “I’m Keith Hernandez!” He also thinks he’s the 1979 NL batting champion and co-MVP (a unique tied vote, shared with Willie Stargell), a member of World Series winners with the 1982 St. Louis Cardinals and the 1986 New York Mets, and one of the best-fielding first basemen ever.

These days, he thinks he’s a broadcaster with the Mets. He also thinks he’s really smart, which he is, but he’s not nearly as smart as he thinks he is. Although his acquisition made the Mets a contender and then a champion again after some very dark years, they have strangely not retired his Number 17. Nor has he been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

October 20, 1955: Aaron Pryor is born. The former junior middleweight champion of the world overcame drug abuse, and is now an ordained minister and an anti-drug counselor. His sons Aaron Jr. and Stephan have also become professional boxers.

October 20, 1959: Washington Senators owner Calvin Griffith makes a public statement that he will not move the team. As Congressman Joe Wilson would say, 50 years later, to a better man than either of them, “YOU LIE!”

October 20, 1960: Ralph Houk, former catcher, coach, and manager of the 1957 International League Champion Denver Bears, is officially named manager of the Yankees. He will lead them to the next 3 AL Pennants and the next 2 World Championships.

October 20, 1961, 50 years ago today: Ian Rush is born. The Welshman was a superstar in the English soccer league, leading Liverpool to 6 League titles. He scored more goals in FA Cup play than any player in the 20th Century, shares with 1966 World Cup hero Geoff Hurst the record for most goals scored in League Cup play, and is the all-time leading goalscorer in Merseyside derbies (Liverpool vs. Everton). After a brief spell managing Chester City, which had been his first pro club as a player, he has become a pundit for Sky Sports.

October 20, 1965: Just one year after he helped the Cardinals win the World Series and was named MVP, team Captain Ken Boyer is traded to the Mets, for pitcher Al Jackson and third baseman Charlie Smith. Jackson had been one of the few respectable players in the Mets’ early years, while Smith is best known for getting traded by the Cardinals just one year later, even-up, for Roger Maris. An insult to Maris.

October 20, 1967: Having just moved the Kansas City Athletics to Oakland, owner Charlie Finley names Bob Kennedy as their first manager. He does not, however, try to trade for Yankee third baseman John Kennedy. Nor does he try to hire Hockey Hall-of-Famer Ted Kennedy as a consultant.

October 20, 1969: Juan Gonzalez is born. The All-Star right fielder for the Texas Rangers hit 434 home runs in his career, won AL MVP awards in 1996 and 1998, and scared the hell out of us Yankee Fans by nearly ruining the 1996 season with his 3 home runs in the first 2 games of the ALDS.

But injuries ruined his career, leading him to being traded repeatedly, and his nickname “Juan Gone” began to refer less to his homers and more to his propensity for being out of the lineup. He had his last productive season at 33, and he was done at 35. Wow, he really, really fits the steroid profile. Fat chance of ever getting into the Hall of Fame, Juan.

October 20, 1973: As President Richard Nixon fires Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Richardson’s deputy William Ruckelshaus for refusing to fire Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox, who is then fired by Justice’s Number 3 Robert Bork (this becomes known as the "Saturday Night Massacre"), and the iconic Sydney Opera House opens in Australia, Game 6 of the World Series is played at the Oakland Coliseum. Reggie Jackson hits 2 doubles‚ scores one run‚ and knocks in the other 2‚ all off a tired Tom Seaver, as the A's even the Series with a 3-1 win over the Mets. Game 7 tomorrow.

October 20, 1977: A plane carrying the rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd crashes outside Gillsburg, Mississippi, killing lead singer Ronnie Van Zant and guitarist Steve Gaines along with backup singer Cassie Gaines, the road manager, pilot, and co-pilot. I’ve heard that the plane crashed because it ran out of gas. Maybe Neil Young was right after all, albeit in an incredibly different context: “Southern Man, better use your head.”

October 20, 1980: Jose Veras is born. The pitcher was a Yankee from 2006 to 2009, but was designated for assignment before he could pitch in that great postseason. He now pitches for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

October 20, 1981, 30 years ago today: Game 1 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium. A banner is hung: “Don’t the Dodgers Ever Learn?” Not yet, as Bob Watson’s 1st-inning homer and the pitching of Ron Guidry and Goose Gossage shut the Bums down, 5-3.

Also on this day, Willis McGahee is born. The former University of Miami star has been plagued by injuries, but is still a valuable part of the Denver Broncos’ offense.

October 20, 1982: Game 7 of the World Series at Busch Memorial Stadium. The St. Louis Cardinals rally for 3 runs in the 6th to defeat the Milwaukee Brewers, 6-3.

The Cardinals win their 9th World Series, a total surpassed only by the Yankees and matched only by the A’s (and then only if you combine their Philadelphia and Oakland titles). The Cardinals will win 2 more Pennants in the decade and have remained more or less competitive ever since. The Brewers have never played another World Series game, and did not even play another postseason game for 26 years.

October 20, 1988: World Series MVP Orel Hershiser ends his dream season with a 5-2 four-hitter over the A's in Game 5 of the World Series. Mickey Hatcher starts the Dodger scoring with a 2-run homer in the 1st off Storm Davis‚ his 2nd homer of the Series.

The win gives the Dodgers a tremendous upset and their 5th World Championship since moving to Los Angeles 30 years earlier, their 6th overall. But in the 23 years since, they have never won another Pennant.

October 20, 1990: The talk of an Oakland dynasty is proven premature‚ as the Cincinnati Reds beat the Athletics 2-1 to complete one of the most stunning sweeps in World Series history.

Series MVP Jose Rijo (2-0‚ 0.59 ERA) retires the last 20 batters he faces to give the Reds their first World Championship since 1976, their 5th overall. However, the Reds have not won a Pennant since – in fact, haven’t even won an NLCS game since.

Not joining the celebration at the end is Eric Davis‚ who ruptures his kidney diving for a ball during the game and is taken to the hospital. It will take Davis several years to fully recover.

October 20, 1992: For the first time, a World Series game is played outside the United States of America, as Game 3 is played at the SkyDome (now known as the Rogers Centre) in Toronto.

The Blue Jays take a 3-2 win over the Atlanta Braves on Candy Maldonado's bases-loaded single in the 9th inning. Duane Ward gets credit for the victory in relief of Juan Guzman‚ and Joe Carter and Kelly Gruber homer for Toronto. In the 4th inning‚ Jays center fielder Devon White's sensational catch nearly results in a triple play. Deion Sanders was ruled safe on the play‚ but replays show he should have been the 3rd out.

Braves manager Bobby Cox is ejected from the game in the 9th‚ becoming the 1st manager to be thrown out of a Series game since 1985. By starting in right field‚ Toronto's Joe Carter becomes the 1st player to start the 1st 3 games of a World Series at 3 different positions. He started Game 1 at first base and Game 2 in left field.

October 20, 1993: Game 4 of the World Series at a rainy Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia. The Phillies blow a 14-9 lead in the 8th inning, capped by a Devon White triple, and lose to the Toronto Blue Jays, 15-14, the highest-scoring game in Series history, breaking the record of a Yankees-Giants game from 1936.

This was the last of 9 World Series game played at the Vet, of which the Phillies won just 4. If you’re a Phillies fan, this is when the Series was lost, not when Mitch Williams came in to relieve in Game 6. But then, if you’re a Phillies fan, you’ve felt much better the last few years.

October 20, 1994: Burt Lancaster dies. The great actor had played football players and boxers, and might be best remembered for the title role in Jim Thorpe, All-American. But his last film was as baseball player turned doctor Archie “Moonlight” Graham in Field of Dreams.

October 20, 1996: Game 1 of the World Series, the first Series game at Yankee Stadium in 15 years. The Atlanta Braves spoil the party with a 12-1 shellacking of Andy Pettitte and the Yankee bullpen. Andruw Jones, the Braves’ 19-year-old sensation from Curacao, becomes the youngest player in Series history to hit a home run – in fact, he hits, 2, joining Gene Tenace as the only 2 players ever to homer in their first 2 Series at-bats.

After the game, George Steinbrenner barges into manager Joe Torre’s office. George yells about how the Yankees were embarrassed -- which, if we're being honest, they were. But Torre, who formerly managed the Braves to a postseason berth, and had just been clobbered in the first World Series game of his life at age 56, is unfazed. He tells George that they’ll probably lose Game 2 as well. “But we’re heading down to Atlanta,” he says, “and that’s my home town, and we’ll win 3 straight there, and come back here and win it.”

Joe later says, "He looked at me like I had two heads." (Well, his head is rather large.) George later says he thought Joe was nuts, but he appreciated the confidence. That confidence will be rewarded.

October 20, 1998: Game 3 of the World Series, in front of 64,000 at Jack Murphy – excuse me, Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego. Having hosted Super Bowl XXXII in January, this becomes the first time the Super Bowl and the World Series have been played in the same stadium -- or even the same city -- in the same calendar year. The Metrodome in Minneapolis hosted the World Series in October 1991, Super Bowl XXVI in January 1992, and the NCAA Final Four in April 1992. But no stadium has hosted a Super Bowl and a World Series in the same calendar year since, and Detroit in 2006 is the only city to do so (in stadiums built next-door to each other). In the pre-Super Bowl era, World Series and NFL Championship Games had been played in the same city in the same calendar year as follows: New York, 1936, 1938, 1956 and 1962; Detroit, 1935; and Cleveland, 1954.

The San Diego Padres take a 3-0 lead on the Yankees, but third baseman Scott Brosius, having the season of his life, hits a home run to make it 3-2. In the top of the 8th, with the Yankees trailing 4-2 but threatening with 2 men on, the Padres bring in their closer, Trevor Hoffman.

The Padre fans, believing him to be the world’s greatest relief pitcher, wave their white towels and cheer wildly. The words, “IT’S TREVOR TIME” appear on the scoreboard. The public-address system blasts the song “Hell’s Bells” by AC/DC. George Steinbrenner, not familiar with the hard rock music of the Seventies and Eighties, tells the media, “When they played that death march, it sounded like the WWF, when the Undertaker comes in. That’s who I thought they were bringing in!”

Certainly, for NL batters that season, Hoffman might as well have been an undertaker. The whole thing is one of the most intimidating scenes in baseball.

But these are not NL batters, these are the New York Yankees, and they fear nobody. Brosius takes him over the center field wall for a 5-4 Yankee lead, soon to be victory. The actual best closer in the game, Mariano Rivera, finishes it off, and the Yankees can wrap up the Series with a sweep tomorrow.

October 20, 1999: Calvin Griffith dies at age 87 – 40 years to the day after he announced he wouldn’t move the Washington Senators, before actually doing so a year after that. The nephew and adopted son of Hall-of-Fame pitcher and executive Clark Griffith, he inherited control of the Senators in 1955, and moved them to Minnesota to become the Twins in 1961.

In 1978, he told a Lions Club dinner why he took the Senators out of D.C., which was on its way to becoming a majority-black city: "I'll tell you why we came to Minnesota. It was when we found out you only had 15,000 blacks here. Black people don't go to ballgames, but they'll fill up a rassling ring and put up such a chant it'll scare you to death. We came here because you've got good, hardworking white people here."

Although the Twins came within one win of the 1965 World Championship, later decisions left the team mediocre through most of the Seventies. He was so cheap and shortsighted that he was said to have engaged in one of Minnesota’s great outdoor pastimes, hunting for a type of fish known as walleyes, caught his legal limit, brought them to the supermarket, and traded them for a box of Mrs. Paul’s fish sticks. He sold the Twins in 1984 to Carl Pohlad, a billionaire who, ironically, turned out to be nearly as cheap as Griffith.

October 20, 2002: Francisco Rodriguez, a 20-year-old righthanded reliever from Venezuela, becomes the youngest pitcher ever to win a World Series game. With just 15 days of major league experience, "K-Rod" throws 37 pitches, retiring 9 consecutive batters in 3 innings, to pick up the victory when the Angels outslug the Giants in Game 2 of the Fall Classic, 11-10.

No comments: