Tag: World Series

Forgotten Game 7 of Reds-Red Sox ’75 World Series Still Haunts Players, Coaches

It is the baseball equivalent of losing American Gothic. Misplacing the master tape of Springsteen’s Born to Run. Suddenly being unable to locate the Empire State Building or the Washington Monument.

Forty years after it was played, the clinching game of the 1975 World Series has become lost in the fog of time.

Somehow, Game 7 between the Reds and Red Sox wandered off into the shadows over the years while everyone was watching endless replays of Carlton Fisk frantically waving that home run ball fair (Game 6). It took a wrong turn and it just kept going while fans looked back at the Ed Armbrister controversial non-interference call (Game 3).

“I really don’t remember much about that game,” Fred Lynn, the star center fielder of that Boston team, emailed last month. “Couldn’t tell how we scored or who pitched. Having said that, I’ll do what I can to help.”

“It’s going to be like pulling teeth,” said Dwight Evans, the cannon-armed former Red Sox right fielder. “I’m trying to think. I remember the bloop single….”

“I remember we won,” said Terry Crowley, pinch-hitter extraordinaire for the Big Red Machine, struggling for details. “I remember Joe Morgan got a hit. It wasn’t a bullet line drive. We were fortunate it fell in.”

“It won’t take long,” said Bob Montgomery, the backup catcher who pinch hit in the ninth inning and made the second out in his only World Series at-bat. “I really don’t remember much about it.”

“I thought the Red Sox won that World Series on Carlton Fisk’s home run?” sneered an email from Cincinnati.

Indeed, for years, Fisk has joked to people that the Red Sox did win that World Series, three games to four.

There no doubt are legions of fans who believe that is exactly what happened, following four decades of focus centered on Fisk’s iconic, 12th-inning, walk-off Game 6 homer that set up one of the most overlooked Game 7’s in history.

A few years ago, MLB Network named Game 6 as the greatest World Series game ever played. ESPN named 1975 as the second-greatest World Series ever played, behind the Twins-Braves (1991).

And yet, its decisive Game 7 draws blank stares and scratched heads…until you poke a few memories.

Then, the tales come pouring forth: The Spaceman, the pitching coach banished to the bullpen, biblical rain, a lost bus driver causing Sparky Anderson to stomp into a gas station for directions in full Reds uniform, too-tight kangaroo-skin cleats (hey, it was the 1970s), lobsters on airplanes and a manager who had lost the respect of many of his players.

Game 7 was played on Oct. 22, 1975, just 11 days after the debut of a brand new hipster television show called Saturday Night Live, less than two months after the Aug. 25 release of the seminal album Born to Run and just hours after Game 6 bled into the early morning hours of Oct. 22.

Some American masterpieces, you just shouldn’t let slip away.


The story of Game 7 really begins in the wee hours of the morning of Oct. 22, after Fisk’s suitable-for-framing home run crashed down and the church bells rang in his hometown of Charlestown, New Hampshire.

“We basically played a doubleheader,” Fred Lynn said one morning last month, sitting in a Southern California coffee shop not far from his home, wearing shorts, flip flops and, yes, a vintage Boston Red Sox cap. “Because we played the next game the same day.”

While the New England poets filled their ink quills, poised for what surely would be Boston’s first World Series title since 1918, the Red Sox felt they had plenty of material to feed them. Fisk’s home run was only the latest rallying cry.

“We weren’t even supposed to be there,” Evans recalled over the telephone from his home in Florida. “We weren’t even supposed to beat Oakland in the playoffs.

“Now, we’re facing the Big Red Machine and we’re not even in the equation.”

Said Crowley: “When the series started and we lined up for introductions on the field, I knew the firepower we carried. The team was loaded with future Hall of Famers. I looked at both teams and said, ‘This is going to be OK. I doubted it was going to go very many games. I was really overconfident in our team.

“Then, as the series started, they were a resourceful, competitive, clutch, tough team. Really tough.”

The Red Sox had finished 95-65 that season and witnessed the spectacular emergence of two rookies, Lynn and Jim Rice. They had shocked Oakland with a three-game sweep in the American League Championship Series.

And now, after playing an epic and draining instant classic long before the term became part of our everyday lexicon, they were one win from polishing off the Reds despite the fact that exactly one month earlier, on Sept. 21, they had lost Rice for the season to a broken wrist suffered when Detroit’s Vern Ruhle hit him with a pitch.

“We knew who we were playing but, individually, for me, coming out of Southern California [both geographically and, following high school, the university], we had never lost a championship game,” Lynn said. “We won every tournament we played. We won the College World Series three times in my three years there. We had won the Triple-A World Series.

“My teams had never lost a championship game. So I was right where I should be. To my way of thinking, this is where I was meant to be. We were never overconfident, but we knew we were going to win. And the rest of the team knew it, too.

“But not the Reds.”

It had been 35 years since Cincinnati won a World Series. Not since a Reds club led by Ernie Lombardi, Frank McCormick, Bucky Walters and Paul Derringer nipped the Detroit Tigers in seven games in 1940 had the title resided in Cincinnati.

Under Sparky Anderson, the Reds were defeated by the Baltimore Orioles in the 1970 World Series and by the Oakland A’s in the 1972 World Series. In 1973, they were beaten by the New York Mets in the NLCS. In 1974, they failed to make the playoffs despite going 98-64. The Los Angeles Dodgers won the NL West by four games.

Now, heavy favorites to win it all in ’75, the Reds returned to the tiny visitors’ clubhouse in Fenway Park just after 1 a.m. with the Series even at 3-3 and the noise still deafening from Fisk’s home run.

Just when the walls should have been closing in, there was a surprising calm as the Reds digested what had just happened to them.

“We don’t feel down,” Hall of Famer Tony Perez said over the telephone from his Florida home. “We know we lost, but we know we’ve got another game to play and we know we still have a chance to win the series.

“I remember after the game we were sitting in the clubhouse—Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan, myself, a few of the guys. Dan Driessen. We were talking, and Pete was saying it was one of the greatest games he’s ever seen. We and the Red Sox both made great defensive plays. We waited three days to play this game. (Following a travel day on Oct. 16, three straight days of rain delayed Game 6 until Oct. 21.)

“As he was saying that, Sparky came by and said, ‘We just lost a chance to win the World Series. We’re supposed to be the Big Red Machine. We lose tomorrow we’ll lose our reputation.’

“We were like, ‘Hey, we’ve got another game tomorrow, it was still a great game tonight and we’re going to win tomorrow.’ Sparky just looked at us and said, ‘You guys are a bunch of crazies.’

“He called us ‘Crazies.'”


Anderson wasn’t feeling much better as Game 7 started several hours later. His pitcher, left-hander Don Gullett, was fighting himself from the beginning, walking five batters in four innings and digging a serious hole for his team in the third. 

Gullett delivered a one-out walk to Bernie Carbo, who already had tormented the Reds by smashing two home runs in the first six games. Up next, Denny Doyle singled and Carl Yastrzemski followed with an RBI single.

In the dugout on the NBC national telecast, Anderson is seen pacing like a condemned man. He phones the bullpen. He stuffs his hands into his jacket pockets. Pedro Borbon and Jack Billingham warm up in the Cincinnati bullpen as Fenway Park roars.

Three batters later, Gullett, who led NL starters that season with a .789 winning percentage by going 15-4, lost Rico Petrocelli on a full count and delivered a bases-loaded walk. Next, he walked in another run by throwing four consecutive balls to Evans.

“I didn’t know it was four straight balls,” Evans says. “But I knew Petrocelli walked and then I walked.

“I didn’t have anything to offer at. It kind of seemed to me that Gullet was working quick. He liked to work quick, but he was out of sync.”

In the dugout, trailing 3-0, Sparky is seen on TV pulling off his hat and running a hand through his hair.

In the Cincinnati bullpen, the man whose pivotal moment was still five innings away allowed his mind to wander.

“Me personally, I’m thinking, ‘Gosh, what’s a loser’s share of the World Series? What’s a National League Championship ring going to look like?'” reliever Will McEnaney, a 23-year-old in his first full big league season in ’75, said over the phone from his home in Florida.

“And I’m an optimistic person by nature. But it’s not looking good for the Reds.”


Watching that night’s NBC broadcast today is like viewing a time capsule. There are no advertisements on the green walls in Fenway Park, making the deep, dark night seem even deeper and darker. Many men in the crowd are dressed in coats and ties. The warning track appears to be pure mud.

Just getting to this point was a challenge. Once the Nor’easter blew in, it seemed like the rain would never stop. This was a time before fields were built to drain and dry quickly. There were no indoor batting cages or workout facilities.

So during the three days of rain, trying to keep the Big Red Machine from going completely stale, Anderson arranged for an indoor workout at Tufts University, located just outside of Boston. The Reds dressed at Fenway and then clambered onto their bus. Which promptly got lost en route to Tufts.

Finally, the livid future Hall of Fame manager ordered the bus driver to pull into a service station.

“It was funnier than hell,” McEnaney says. “You’ve got Sparky walking into a gas station with the bus driver, wearing our road uniform, to get directions.

“Finally, we get to Tufts University, we’re walking through campus in our uniforms, all of these college students are gawking at us. We get to the gym, and this gym is huge. Absolutely huge. They’ve got it all netted off, they’ve got mounds for us to throw off of for batting practice, we get our running and throwing in, and then we went back to the stadium to shower and change and then we went back to the hotel.

“Ironically, during those rainouts, the Moody Blues were playing in Boston. I couldn’t get a ticket to go.”

You’d think a key relief pitcher on a World Series team could score a ticket to a concert in town, wouldn’t you?

“One would think,” McEnaney said. “But I’m young and stupid and didn’t know the right people to contact. I didn’t get to see the show.

“But I figured I’m there for a reason, and it wasn’t to see the Moody Blues.”

The rain also interfered with the amateur writing career of Crowley, who had been asked before the Series started to author a short, daily column during the World Series by his hometown newspaper, the Staten Island (N.Y.) Advance.

“I said, ‘I’m not a writer,'” Crowley says. “They said, ‘You put together the first paragraph, talk to a writer who’s a friend, and he’ll ghostwrite it for you.'”

Deal. So Crowley made his debut as a columnist after Game 1.

“Real easy to do,” Crowley says. “I wrote about Sparky, my honest-to-God feelings about how I felt about him as a manager and as a man. We played another game and I did a story on one of our pitchers, Gary Nolan. Fabulous guy, he was a star at one time, then his shoulder started hurting and a lot of people questioned his makeup.

“Then they operated and took a golf-ball sized piece of calcium out of his shoulder. I wrote about that.

“Then we got three rainouts in a row and finally I told the Advance, ‘Look, I have the utmost respect for writers, because after two days of rain and having to write, I have no more stories.’

“So they put it on hold until another game was played.”

The Big Red Machine came out of the monsoon only to run into Fisk, Carbo, Lynn and Luis Tiant in Game 6.

And now, in the middle innings of Game 7, with Billingham relieving Gullett to start the fifth, it most certainly was not looking good for the Reds.

Nevertheless, when they came off the field to bat in the top of the sixth, Perez bumped into Sparky in the tunnel behind the dugout.

“He was walking up and down, scratching his head, worried,” Perez says. “I was hitting that inning and I said, ‘Sparky, what happened?’

“He exploded: ‘We’re down 3-0 in the sixth inning. What happened?!’ I said, ‘Don’t worry about it. We still have three innings to go. We get somebody on and I’ll hit one.'”

Perez was due up fourth in the top of the sixth.


On the mound, one of the game’s most eccentric characters was dealing.

Known as “The Spaceman,” Bill Lee was as far out in the groovy ’70s as the baseball establishment would allow. Born in Burbank, California, and, like Lynn, a product of the University of Southern California, Lee was a free-thinker who consistently drove authority figures bananas.

“His father is here tonight, and he says Bill Lee is not as far out in space as everyone says he is,” Curt Gowdy says on the national broadcast just before the first pitch. “He says, ‘Sometimes I don’t understand him, but he’s a very sensitive, intelligent young man who’s a lot of fun to be around.'”

Lee was particularly fun for Bostonians to be around on this night for the first five innings, being that he was shutting out the Reds. Chapped because Boston manager Darrell Johnson picked Tiant over him to start Game 6 following the Mother Nature-induced break in the Series, Lee crowed that it was fine, because that made the Game 7 spotlight even brighter.

Facing Perez to lead off the second inning, Lee’s first pitch was a ball outside. His second pitch floated through the New England air like a slow-moving beach ball: His famous—infamous?—eephus pitch. A big, slow, looping curve that broke over the plate for a called strike.

“Look at Tony’s expression,” Tony Kubek says in the NBC booth as they showed the replay. “As the ball loops over the plate, he wants to go, he wants to go, but he can’t pull the trigger.”

At 9:29 p.m. ET, as Lee stepped into the box to lead off the bottom of the fourth, the Spaceman narrative continued on television. The broadcasters talk about how Lee brings honey and ginseng to the park, enjoys transcendental meditation and “reads Kurt Vonnegut.”

What kind of freak reads Kurt Vonnegut?

In the fifth inning, as Lee overcomes Davey Concepcion’s leadoff single to preserve Boston’s 3-0 lead, Kubek talks about how determined Lee is, and of the “purpose” in his walk to the bullpen to warm up before the game.

“He usually is determined,” says Ned Martin, the Red Sox broadcaster whom NBC also was employing for the Series. “Despite all the shenanigans and the Frisbee throwing.”

In a rigid society not nearly as open as it is today, Lee dared to question authority.

Unfortunately for New England, he would do so one too many times on this evening.

The Cincinnati sixth started with Rose rapping a single to right field, a hard ground ball between the first and second baseman. The Red Sox bullpen immediately saw its first action of the evening: Jim Willoughby stretched and started to warm up.

Lee retired Joe Morgan on a fly ball to right. Then, Johnny Bench smacked a ground ball to shortstop that appeared to be the first part of an inning-ending double play. Shortstop Rick Burleson’s feed to second baseman Denny Doyle was true, but Rose barreled into the bag like Boobie Clark, coach Paul Brown’s star fullback that year for the Cincinnati Bengals, hitting the hole. Doyle’s throw to first was out of Yastrzemski’s reach, and Bench was safe and advanced to second.

Years later, Doyle would tell Peter Gammons, then the Red Sox beat writer for the Boston Globe, that the baseball’s seams were coming apart and that’s why the ball slipped out of his hand.

“So many weird things happened that night,” Gammons said.

Up stepped Perez.

“And Bill Lee decided things were going so good that he was going to throw that big, slow curve to Perez again,” says Stan Williams, pitching coach for the ’75 Red Sox and the only member of the coaching staff still living.

Not only did Lee go back to the eephus pitch on Perez, but he did it in the exact same spot: on the second pitch of the at-bat, after throwing ball one.

It was the third time Lee teased Perez with the eephus during this World Series. He also had thrown one in Game 2. Perez swung and missed so badly at that one that it resembled a Saturday morning cartoon.

“My teammates were laughing at me in the dugout,” Perez said, chuckling. “It bounced, and I swing at it anyway. Everybody was laughing.”

Here in the sixth inning, with Boston up 3-0 and now just 10 outs from winning its first World Series title since 1918, Lee’s slow curve did not bounce.

Kaboom! Perez unloaded on the pitch like he knew it was coming, drilling it over the Green Monster in left to pull Cincinnati to within 3-2.

“He almost looked like he was waiting for it,” Kubek analyzed on television. “You wonder if Bench had something to do with it, down on second relaying signs.

“Which can happen with a catcher on second base.”

But that wasn’t what happened.

“I remembered in the back of my mind that he stopped his motion with his right leg down” when he was going to throw the eephus, Perez says. “When I saw that, I said, ‘Hey, it’s coming.’ When he threw his sinker or fastball, he didn’t stop. He’d go right through his motion.

“He threw one too many, that’s what happened.”

Says Lynn: “As soon as he hit it, I went, ‘Uh-oh.’ It was a no-doubter.”

Promise to Sparky fulfilled. Reds back in the game.

“Billy was a fine pitcher, very, very intelligent, but sometimes he just couldn’t leave well enough alone,” Williams said. “When things were going too good, he had to get cute.

“That’s just Billy. He’s still that way.”

“We made it pretty clear to Bill that Tony was to see none of those pitches, period,” Montgomery said. “In Game 2, Lee threw one to Perez and he took the pitch. And I remember thinking to myself, ‘Don’t do that again.'”

From right field, the view Evans had sticks with him to this day.

“I can remember Tony seeing it, taking a stride, backing up and reloading, and then hitting it out of the ballpark,” Evans said. “That’s an exceptional thing right there.”

When Perez returned to the dugout and saw the faces of his teammates, he had one thought.

“You know what it’s like when you are sick and then you get medicine and you can get up again?” he said. “That’s how everyone reacted. When I see that, I said, ‘We’re going to win.'”


While Lynn always thought the Red Sox would have been better off being on the road instead of at home during all of those days of rain because they would have felt more together, the players nevertheless left Fenway Park after Game 6 certain that the World Series had turned in their favor.

“We were emotionally high,” Evans says. “Positive. There’s no time, no tomorrow. We knew that. We were happy for the opportunity. We felt we had the upper hand.

“We were very, very confident that we would win. We wanted to do it for Mr. [Tom] Yawkey. He owned the team since 1933 but never had a championship team. He had come close in ’46, and ’67. He was such a great owner.”

In fact, in the hours leading up to Game 7, the telephone rang in the visiting manager’s office. When Anderson picked it up, it was Yawkey, thanking him for helping to put on such a great World Series.

Now the seventh inning arrived on a very seasonable, 62-degree evening, and Gowdy promotes an exclusive interview coming soon on NBC with Dave DeBusschere, commissioner of the American Basketball Association, “on the explosive situation in his league.”

Earlier on that very day, the renegade World Football League folded, leaving Gowdy and Co. to wonder between pitches what would happen to former star Miami Dolphins running backs Larry Csonka and Jim Kiick.

On the field, The Spaceman delivered a one-out walk to Ken Griffey, and Boston manager Darrell Johnson called for 26-year-old reliever Roger Moret. In three years, Moret would slip into a catatonic trance while playing for the Texas Rangers, his arm extended, holding a shower slipper in the middle of the Rangers clubhouse, before a game against Detroit. He was taken to a psychiatric facility, placed on the disabled list and by season’s end, his career in the majors was finished.

On this night, he induced a pop to shortstop from Cesar Geronimo. But with Armbrister pinch-hitting for Billingham, the fleet Griffey stole second base. Moret lost Armbrister on a full-count walk, and Rose followed with an RBI single up the middle.

Now, it was 3-3.

As the tension boiled, Williams, Boston’s pitching coach, could do nothing about it except watch from the bullpen. Johnson had decided to station Williams in the Red Sox’s bullpen during the home World Series games. Pitching coaches then and now always work from the dugout.

“I remember going to the mound to calm Luis Tiant in Cincinnati,” Williams said. “But in Boston, I was in the bullpen. I didn’t really like being in the bullpen. I liked to be hands-on with my starter.”

Williams says he has his own ideas about why Johnson banished him from the dugout, but he will not share them. Not even off the record.

“A lot of our staff didn’t think a lot of our manager,” Lynn said. “I’m a rookie, so I didn’t think much of it. I’m used to respecting my manager. But the veteran players know what’s going on.

“Bill Lee said we won despite our manager.”

Johnson did not communicate well with the players. Many people around the team believe he appeared to have a drinking problem.

“He had a bench coach by the name of Don Zimmer,” said Montgomery, backup catcher to Fisk. “To be honest with you, a lot of the stuff that went on there, the winning side of stuff, other than the fact that we caught lightning in a bottle with Rice and Lynn, was Zimmer.

“Zimmer did a lot of strong work in the dugout as bench coach, assistant manager, whatever you wanted to call him.”

After the start of the next season, Zimmer would be named to replace Johnson as manager, and the man known as “Popeye” served as Boston skipper until he was fired during the 1980 season.


Perhaps the most important decision made that evening by Johnson, and one that remains a buried scar for some of the Sox players 40 years later, came as the ninth inning started when he summoned a 6’3″ rookie left-hander named Jim Burton into a 3-3 game.

Burton had worked in just 29 games in 1975, starting four, and had gone 1-2 with a 2.89 ERA. His only appearance in the first six games of the World Series came in Game 3, when he faced just two batters working in relief of Rick Wise.

Now, as Boston’s only left-handed reliever, he was plopped onto a stage that could not have been more enormous.

“Warming up, my whole body went numb,” Burton, who passed away in December 2013, told author Donald Hornig for the book The Boys of October. “It was surreal, like an out-of-body experience. In those days, they’d sent a golf cart to bring you in, and when it came for me, I knew I couldn’t ride in it. I had to trot in from the bullpen just to feel my feet on the ground. Otherwise, I might have floated away.

“I wasn’t ready. I’d hardly pitched all the previous month. I was rusty. When I was warming up, I couldn’t get loose. I could tell I didn’t have anything.”

First batter: Burton threw three straight balls to Griffey before Griffey took a strike and then fouled off a pitch. But Burton delivered the next pitch high to issue a leadoff walk.

Next, Cesar Geronimo sacrificed Griffey to second, a play on which third baseman Rico Petrocelli raced in to field the ball but slipped on the wet infield and landed on his rear end. Then, Driessen, the lefty pinch-hitting for Clay Carroll, pulled a ground ball to second, moving Griffey to third.

Now, with the lineup rolling over to the top of the order and Rose, Morgan, Bench and Perez due up, Burton had a hellacious battle on his hands.

With the pitching coach stationed out in the bullpen, Johnson, looking stern with the mutton chop sideburns that were fashionable at the time, walked to the mound for a chat.

“His wife calls him ‘Old Stoneface,'” the television broadcasters informed.

Rose worked a full-count walk.

Up stepped Morgan. Burleson scooted in to the mound for a quick visit with Burton. The tension was almost too much for the 35,205 fans in Fenway Park to bear.

It quickly became clear: Burton’s mission was to work Morgan away. First pitch: Slider away, ball one. Second and third pitches: Sliders away, foul balls. Fourth pitch: curveball, foul.

With the count at 1-2, Morgan stepped back in, flapping his left elbow four times, as was his custom, as he held his bat up and waited for the pitch.

In center field, out of necessity because of the field conditions and respect for Morgan’s power, Lynn was playing a few steps deeper than usual.

“The ground was wet, so my shoes were soaked,” Lynn said. “We only had two or three pairs of shoes back in those days. And they were waterlogged. They were Wilson[s], and they had leather bottoms and kangaroo skin. That was the big deal back then. You got them a size too small in spring training and you’d break your shoes in.

“It would kill your feet. But then the kangaroo skin was soft and pliable and would mold to your foot. But with leather bottoms, they’d get wet.

“You put my shoes on in Game 7, guys today would say, ‘I’m not wearing that. I’m not wearing that. It’s too heavy.'”

Right-center field is the most vulnerable spot in Fenway Park because of the depth and angles of the fence. At its deepest point, it angles out to 420 feet from home plate. Morgan could run. Lynn was worried about a ball scooting past him for a double, triple or even inside-the-park home run.

Looking back, the problem for the Red Sox probably was that Burton’s next pitch to Morgan was a tight, nearly perfect slider—one of the best he had ever thrown, he told Honig. It slid low and away from the swinging Morgan, who connected with the pitch on the end of his bat.

The ball flared toward shallow center field and sliced away from Lynn.

“If he got wood on it, it would have been an easy fly ball,” Lynn said. “And had he hit it at their place on the fast track [Riverfront Stadium’s artificial turf], I still might have caught it.”

But the three days of rain, the waterlogged field…Lynn had no chance. The ball fell in for a single, and Griffey danced home from third.

“To Joe’s credit, he got wood on it and it was in no-man’s land,” Lynn said. “A Texas Leaguer, a gork, a duck fart, whatever. And to lose that way…”

Forty years later, in the coffee shop in Southern California, wearing his vintage Red Sox cap, Lynn groans.

“It’s like missing a three-footer in golf and you lose like that. You’d rather have a guy drain a birdie to beat you.”

The Reds now leading 4-3, Johnson bounded out of the dugout, calling for Reggie Cleveland to replace Burton. But it was too late.

Forty years later, at a Red Sox reunion of the 1975 team in Fenway Park this May, Lynn and his wife sat at a table with Tiant and his wife and the former reliever Diego Segui and his wife.

“Diego was telling me he should have been in Game 7,” Lynn said. “He had a great forkball, and the Reds couldn’t hit him. He’s telling me this, that he was watching Burton warm up and his eyes were like this [Lynn makes big circles with his fingers here].

“I’m just learning this and going, ‘Really? S–t.'”

Forty years later, Montgomery still questions the move, too.

“I’ve always believed in the theory that whatever you’re doing, you do with your best,’ he said. “If you win, you win with your best. If you lose, you lose with your best.”

Dick Drago was Boston’s closer that year and collected 15 saves with a 3.84 ERA. Also in the bullpen was Willoughby, who had not surrendered an earned run to the Reds over three World Series appearances and six and one-third innings pitched.

Yet, Burton.

“The Burton thing was left against left,” Williams said. “That’s why Darrell made that decision. Sure, the guy’s a rookie. But he had been there the whole year. He did a good job for us.

“I don’t hold anything against Jim Burton. He gave his all.”


In the Cincinnati bullpen, the game was sucking the air out of another kid.

At 23, McEnaney was two years younger than Burton and had shared late-inning relief responsibilities that season with rookie Rawly Eastwick. But Eastwick had served up Carbo’s home run in Game 6 and Anderson, the notorious Captain Hook who had little patience with pitchers, did not trust him for the Game 7 moment.

So McEnaney had been delivered to the Reds dugout via one of those old golf carts fashioned to look like a baseball that once ferried relievers in from the pen, complete with a Red Sox cap atop it.

“Sparky comes up and says, ‘OK, this is what we’re going to do,'” said McEnaney, who today is the scoreboard operator at Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter, Florida, the spring training complex of the St. Louis Cardinals and Miami Marlins. “I said, ‘Shut up, I know what I’m doing.’

“This is my first full season in the big leagues and for me to say something like that was unheard of. So he says, ‘OK, OK, OK’ and walks off. I collect my thoughts, walk out to the mound and I’m scared to death.

“Literally, I am scared to death.”

The scouting report detailed Juan Beniquez, pinch hitting for Rick Miller to lead off the inning, as a first-ball, fastball hitter. So McEnaney started him off with a couple of breaking balls before Beniquez cracked a line drive to Griffey in right field for the first out.

Next, Montgomery pinch hit for Doyle. It was his first career World Series at-bat and, as he settled into the box, Gowdy noted on television that Montgomery “is a licensed pilot and model train enthusiast.” And there was another oddity: In lieu of a batting helmet, Montgomery was wearing a regular cap with a plastic insert, the last active player in the majors who had been grandfathered in and allowed to do this after batting helmets were mandated.

It was quick: First pitch, Montgomery drilled a sharp ground ball, but it was right at Concepcion, who was shaded toward the hole up the middle.

“Sparky used to tell me after that when I saw him, ‘We had a scouting report and you hit the ball up the middle all the time, and that’s why we had Concepcion positioned right there.’

“Had Concepcion been playing normal shortstop, it would have been a base hit.”

Said McEnaney: “Now we’ve got two outs and Pete Rose is at third base going, ‘C’mon Willie, this is it, this is it! You’re the money pitcher!’ Of course, that puts a little more pressure on me.

“Now, with two out, here comes Carl Yastrzemski, a boyhood idol for me. I remember when I was a teenager [in Springfield, Ohio], we’d play with a tennis ball in the backyard and I’d be Carl Yastrzemski hitting. I’d imitate his style.

“This is going through my mind. I’m thinking, ‘This is the wall I’ve got to climb.'”

The climb was brief. On a 2-1 pitch, Yastrzemski lofted a routine fly ball to center field. Geronimo squeezed it into his glove. McEnaney thrust his arms into the air and then leaped into Bench’s arms. A Sports Illustrated photographer snapped what would become an iconic cover.

The Big Red Machine stamped its place in history.

The next week, McEnaney was at his parents’ house in Ohio when the woman who was his first coach in youth baseball visited. In her hand was the Sports Illustrated magazine with McEnaney and Bench on the cover.

“I signed that magazine for her, and that was the first time I knew I was on the cover,” McEnaney said. “So I went out looking for it and couldn’t find it. I ended up finding it in a drug store. There were four copies left and I bought all four. Then Sports Illustrated sent me about a dozen copies. It was pretty nice.

“I was an instant success in my hometown, that’s for sure. Of course, everybody I knew in youth baseball, they all got a hit off of me. Remember when we played and I got a double off of you? If I gave up all of those hits, I never would have gotten drafted.”


Four decades later, Fisk and Game 6 continues to dominate memories of the 1975 World Series.

But just as Saturday Night Live‘s history would not be nearly the same without the John Belushi or Eddie Murphy years, and just as Born to Run would be much less a work of art without Thunder Road or Jungleland, so, too, would this American classic not pack the same punch without all seven of its games.

Six Hall of Famers wound up playing key roles in the legendary series: Anderson, Morgan, Bench, Perez, Fisk and Yastrzemski. Another, Rice, was a part of that Boston team but inactive.

And then there’s Rose.

“It wasn’t the end of the world, so to speak,” he told MLB Productions years later in an interview for the DVD edition of the ’75 World Series, of the Game 6 loss that set up the Game 7 classic. “We got to spend another night in the great city of Boston.

“Hey, man, when you’re in the World Series, you wish it would go on for 30 days.”

The scene in the Cincinnati clubhouse in the immediate aftermath of what everyone immediately recognized as a classic appears a mixture of pride, awe, relief and joy. Marty Brennaman, the legendary Hall of Fame voice of the Reds who joined the late Joe Nuxhall on the club’s radio team in 1974, was covering the Cincinnati clubhouse for the NBC broadcast that night.

“It looked like we were dead,” Morgan told Brennaman in a postgame TV interview. “But we never died.”

Said Rose: “Most teams would have quit. You can tell I’m hoarse from yelling the whole game. … This is the happiest moment of my life. I’m scared I’m going to have a coronary.”

Bench all but admitted that the Big Red Machine had come into the World Series overconfident when Brennaman asked him about the Red Sox and their effort.

“I think a little more of them now,” Bench said. “We didn’t know what we were getting into, I believe. Give them credit, but I think we just looked at them and said they can’t do the things that they sure did.”

There was champagne. Beer. And, yes, lobster on Cincinnati’s flight home.

“It was like, my God, what else could happen?” McEnaney said. “It was one big party. And when we got back to Cincinnati, you couldn’t even move at the airport, it was so crowded.”

The Red Sox were just exhausted.

“Personally, at that time of year, that’s the most baseball I had ever played,” said Lynn, who batted .280 with one homer and five RBI in the Series. “I was running on fumes. I missed pitches in that series that in June or July I would have crushed.

“I lost weight. I was skinny as hell. I’m not big anyway, If I was 180 going into the season, which I doubt, by the end of the season I was 170 for sure. You’d lose a little bit. Just a little bit. And it was enough. There wasn’t much margin for error in hitting anyway, especially if you’re facing Gullett or McEnaney.”

When it was over, 24 hours after the highest of highs with the Fisk homer, the Red Sox didn’t know what to think.

“Remember, I had never lost a championship game before,” Lynn said. “I had no idea what I was feeling. Never felt it before. Never been there. It was empty. Empty. Not numb, but just like, ‘Really? That’s it?'”

Said Montgomery: “I remember having the feeling when the game was over that you play and work hard to get yourself into a World Series, and having lost that one there may never be another chance for it again. That’s the only thing I can remember going through my mind.

“And as it turned out, that’s what happened.”

Another long, cold New England winter had arrived.

Lynn remembers that he did not go home to Southern California right away. Instead, he and Rice had been signed to appear at a small, traveling auto show that was going to three towns: Hartford, Connecticut, Boston and “some other place,” Lynn said.

“So we did that, three weeks, and I didn’t get out of there until November,” Lynn said. “It was a different auto show each week in a different area. I made as much money doing that as I did in the season almost.”

But as things turned out, it wasn’t just the money that helped.

“At least I had something to do,” Lynn said. “It was good for me. It was good for me to be in public and do some things. People were very nice to us.”

On his drive west later that month, Lynn was named not only the AL Rookie of the Year, but the MVP, too. And on the MVP plaque, they spelled Fredric Lynn’s name as “Frederic.” One MVP run, one incredible debut hit, one error on the engraver.

He still has that plaque, misspelling and all, displayed at his home today.

What he does not have, despite the fact that he, like Fisk, homered in Game 6, is a World Series ring.

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


World Series 2015: Latest Comments, Top Highlights After Game 2

The New York Mets are officially in trouble.

It was the Johnny Cueto show in Game 2 of the World Series Wednesday, and the pitcher threw a complete game and allowed a single run and two hits on the way to the 7-1 victory. The Kansas City Royals now lead the Mets 2-0 in the Fall Classic and are two victories away from their first championship since 1985. 

Only Lucas Duda tallied a hit for the Mets during the loss, and he only managed two singles. ESPN Stats & Info put Cueto’s performance into historical context:

Jacob deGrom failed to match Cueto’s effort on the Mets’ side and allowed four runs, six hits and three walks in five difficult innings. Kansas City’s hitters worked deep into the counts and frustrated the Mets ace throughout the evening.

In fact, the Royals only struck out three times during the entire game, two of which came against deGrom. Kansas City only struck out two times against Matt Harvey in six innings in Game 1, so it was more of the same against the typically dominant New York starters.

Eric Hosmer notched a two-run single in the fifth to break the 1-1 tie, and Alcides Escobar, who hit an inside-the-park home run in Game 1, tallied two RBI, one of which came on a critical triple in the eighth inning. 

Jim Rome of CBS Radio believes the Mets have an uphill climb ahead of them for the rest of the Fall Classic following Wednesday’s loss:

 

Comments

Cueto—who became the first pitcher from the Dominican Republic to throw a complete game in the World Series—discussed the most important performance of his career, per Anthony DiComo and Jeffrey Flanagan of MLB.com: “I want to thank God for this opportunity and this outcome. And it’s a lot of pride being able to do what I did out there today and to do it for all of the Dominican.”

Kansas City manager Ned Yost praised his pitcher in the aftermath, per DiComo and Flanagan: “Tonight was everything we expected Johnny to be. He was on the attack. He kept the ball down. He changed speeds. It was just a spectacular performance by him.”

While Cueto was excellent, deGrom struggled against the pesky and deep Royals lineup.

New York manager Terry Collins commented on his pitcher’s outing, per DiComo and Flanagan: “They did exactly what people said, and they put the ball in play. I told Jake, ‘Not everything has to be a strike. You’ve got to move it around. You’ve got to change speeds, give them something to look at. If you continue to pound the strike zone, they’re going to put it in play.’ And that’s what they did.”

Collins wasn’t the only one who recognized Kansas City’s greatness from New York’s side. Third baseman David Wright acknowledged his team’s overall issues against the Royals, per Matt Ehalt of the Record: “I think they’ve outplayed us. Simple as that. When you pitch better, hit better, play defense better you’re normally going to win.” 

There seems to be little reason for optimism for the Mets given the 2-0 deficit and the fact that 41 of 51 teams in baseball history to win the first two games in the best-of-seven World Series went on to win the series.

However, deGrom pointed to New York’s impending games at home as reason for hope, per DiComo: “We’ve still got to win four. We’re going home and we like playing at home. Hopefully we win those three there.” 

That would dramatically shift the momentum.

 

Highlights 

The star of the game was Cueto, and MLB.com provided the highlights of his outing:

The turning point for the Kansas City offense came in the fifth inning when Hosmer notched his two-RBI hit, as MLB.com shared:

The Escobar triple in the eighth inning essentially put the game on ice. Here is a look at that play, via MLB.com:

Escobar wasn’t just making plays with the bat, as MLB.com highlighted:

 

Game 3 Prediction

It would be easy to point to Kansas City’s contact-happy offense as the kryptonite for the Mets’ flame-throwing pitchers and say this series is over. While the Royals will eventually win the championship, New York will find a way to pull closer in the series with a victory in Game 3.

For one, scheduled starter Noah Syndergaard has been tremendous in the playoffs with a 2.77 ERA and 20 strikeouts in 13 innings. He even played the role of hero out of the bullpen in the divisional series against the Los Angeles Dodgers and will once again be asked to save this Mets team Friday.

He will do just that.

On the Kansas City side, Yordano Ventura has been somewhat inconsistent in the playoffs with a 5.09 ERA in four appearances. He hasn’t gone more than 5.1 innings in a single postseason start, either, and won’t be able to match Syndergaard’s effort.

What’s more, Citi Field will be rocking, and New York is 3-1 there in the playoffs. That record will be 4-1 after an emotional Game 3 win.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Johnny Cueto Deals Royals the October Ace They Coveted with Game 2 Masterpiece

The Kansas City Royals didn’t trade for Johnny Cueto to beat the Boston Red Sox in August or the Baltimore Orioles in September.

Good thing, too, because Cueto gave up 15 runs in those two games.

Doesn’t matter now, does it?

Doesn’t matter that Cueto had a 4.76 ERA in his 13 regular-season starts for the Royals. Doesn’t matter that he can crumble in big-stage starts on the road.

All of the above may well hurt his case as a free agent this winter, but all that counts for the Royals is that the two times they really needed Cueto, he delivered, and he delivered big.

He beat the Houston Astros in the decisive Game 5 of the division series, giving up two hits in eight innings. He beat the New York Mets in Wednesday night’s important Game 2 of the World Series, giving up two hits in nine innings in a 7-1 victory at Kauffman Stadium.

As my buddy C. Trent Rosecrans of the Cincinnati Enquirer tweeted going into the ninth inning:

He’s right. With their big lead in the American League Central, the Royals didn’t need Cueto to pitch like an ace in the regular season. They’ve needed him to be an ace two times—in Game 5 against the Astros and again on Wednesday.

He delivered both times. Sure, he mixed in a bad one in Game 3 of the ALCS, giving up eight runs to the Toronto Blue Jays.

But as Royals manager Ned Yost said Wednesday, “He’s had one bad start and two tremendous starts.”

If the bad start at the Rogers Centre raised some questions, it also provided the Royals with one very important answer as they planned their World Series rotation. Cueto pitched Game 2, and he’ll pitch Game 6 if the series gets that far.

Neither of those starts would be on the road.

So when Cueto ran into trouble in the fourth inning Wednesday, walking two of the first three batters he faced and getting frustrated with Mark Carlson’s strike zone, he didn’t hear the sing-song “Kway-toe! Kway-toe!” that haunted him in the 2013 Wild Card Game in Pittsburgh or last week in Canada.

All he heard was catcher Salvador Perez, reminding him to just follow his mitt.

“Keep aggressive, please,” Perez repeated after the game to Fox’s Erin Andrews.

Cueto gave up a run on Lucas Duda’s bloop single, but the Mets didn’t get another baserunner until Cueto walked Daniel Murphy with two out in the ninth. He finished off the first complete-game two-hitter in the World Series in 20 years (Greg Maddux threw the last one in 1995) and just the second in 44 years—and the first World Series complete game by an American Leaguer since Jack Morris’ 10-inning shutout in Game 7 of 1991’s Fall Classic.

It wasn’t the best game Cueto has ever pitched. He had a two-hit shutout against the Washington Nationals in July, with 11 strikeouts. He had a three-hit shutout last year, when he was a 20-game winner with a 2.25 ERA.

He was one of two true aces on the trade market in July. The other was David Price, who went to Toronto and had a great regular season followed by an underwhelming October.

Cueto got his underwhelming out of the way early on in his stay with the Royals, back when they didn’t need him. He always knew what the real goal was.

“That’s what they brought me here for was to help win a World Series,” Cueto said. “And that’s what I’ve worked for.”

The Royals have a real chance now to win a World Series. It’s certainly not over—Mets fans will point out that their 1986 champions lost the first two games at home, and Royals fans will remember that their 1985 champs lost the first two—but Cueto’s performance Wednesday has the Mets in a real bind as they head back to Citi Field.

Yes, the Mets are going home, but they’ve already lost two games started by Matt Harvey and Jacob deGrom. The two real kids in the rotation, Noah Syndergaard and Steven Matz, start the next two contests. Both are talented, but with neither likely to pitch deep into a game, the pressure will be on the Mets’ shaky middle relief and on the slumbering offense.

Game 2 was the one in which the pitching matchup supposedly favored the Mets, with the dominating deGrom against the inconsistent Cueto. Instead, Cueto was the one who dominated.

“This is why they got him,” Pete Rose said on the Fox postgame show. “This is the Johnny Cueto we knew in Cincinnati.”

This is the Johnny Cueto the Royals traded for. No matter what, that trade now stands as a total success.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Mets vs. Royals: Game 2 Score and Twitter Reaction from 2015 World Series

The Kansas City Royals used a brilliant complete-game outing from Johnny Cueto and a four-run blitz in the fifth inning to defeat the New York Mets, 7-1, in Game 2 of the World Series to take a 2-0 lead as things gets set to shift east. 

Cueto stayed perfect at home this postseason by striking out four and allowing a mere two hits over nine innings. The Royals have now won a franchise-best seven straight playoff games at home, per ESPN Stats & Info.    

Wednesday’s outing at Kauffman Stadium was strikingly similar to Cueto’s Game 5 effort against the Houston Astros in the American League Division Series. According to Grantland’s Rany Jazayerli, that puts him on a unique level

Mets starter Jacob deGrom didn’t allow a hit through three innings, but the Royals finally got to him for a single in the fourth before posting four runs on five hits in the bottom of the fifth, among those a two-run single from Eric Hosmer:    

Every Royal batted against deGrom in the fifth as they ultimately wore down New York’s ace. Hosmer’s go-ahead punch put him in elite company, per ESPN Stats & Info:  

Once again, Kansas City’s depth helped facilitate a rally, as Bleacher Report’s Scott Miller noted:  

Joe Lemire pointed to some staggering numbers regarding Kansas City’s plate discipline against deGrom, who struck out just two over five innings:   

After allowing four earned runs, deGrom became the first New York pitcher to surrender at least that many in a game since Logan Verrett on Sept. 22, per MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo

Unlike in Game 1, the Royals offense needed some time to grease the wheels Wednesday night as deGrom and Cueto engaged in a pitcher’s duel early on. 

The Mets tallied the game’s only hit over the first three innings as it appeared deGrom was locked in, which led Sporting News’ Ryan Fagan to suggest an alternate scoring process:

On the other side, the Kansas City Star‘s Andy McCullough took note of Cueto’s sensational start at home: 

Cueto only struggled in the fourth inning, when Lucas Duda briefly gave the Mets the lead on an RBI single. Joel Sherman of the New York Post explained how Cueto’s lack of command set up the game’s first run: 

The story, though, was the fifth-inning rally facilitated by Alcides Escobar’s game-tying single. According to ESPN Stats & Info, Escobar continued his climb up a noteworthy list with the base knock:  

Thanks to Cueto’s masterful display, the Royals are headed to Citi Field up 2-0 with the odds heavily in their favor. Historically, teams up 2-0 in the World Series wind up capturing the title 80.4 percent of the time, per WhoWins.com

However, the Royals will need to be on guard in Game 3. According to WhoWins, teams up 2-0 are just 24-27 all-time in Game 3s.

The Mets will turn the ball over to Noah Syndergaard (1-1, 2.77 ERA) against Kansas City’s Yordano Ventura (0-1, 5.09 ERA) for Friday’s 8 p.m. ET showdown in New York, and it’s safe to say the pressure is on the 23-year-old as he gets set to take the mound for his first-ever World Series start. 

 

Postgame Reaction

“That’s what they brought me here for was to help win a World Series,” Cueto said, according to MLB.com’s Jesse Sanchez. “And that’s what I’ve worked for.”

Hosmer discussed all things Game 2 with Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal following the win: 

Mets third baseman David Wright hesitated to fault his team for the deficit it faces.

“It’s not so much what we haven’t done,” Wright said, per the Wall Street Journal‘s Jared Diamond. It’s what they’ve done.” 

Looking ahead, deGrom sees a return to Citi Field as a positive development for the Mets, according to DiComo: 

“By no means are we done,” Duda added, per DiComo

Mets manager Terry Collins echoed the first baseman’s sentiment. 

“You’ve got to bounce back,” Collins said, according to Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Passan. “That’s big league baseball.”

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Edinson Volquez to Start Game 5 for Royals in 2015 World Series

Kansas City Royals right-hander Edinson Volquez will start Game 5 of the 2015 World Series, per USA Today columnist Bob Nightengale.

Volquez pitched six innings Tuesday in Game 1 of the World Series against the New York Mets, allowing six hits and three earned runs while earning a no-decision in the Royals’ 5-4 victory in 14 innings. 

Volquez’s father, Daniel, died Tuesday. Nightengale reported Wednesday the Royals broke the news of the death to the starting pitcher after he was taken out of the game, per his family’s wishes. Kansas City manager Ned Yost expressed his feelings on the situation after the contest, per Nightengale

The whole time I kept thinking, Eddie was out there pitching his tail off, and I kept thinking, his dad isn’t watching him. His first start in a World Series and his dad isn’t watching him.

I was really monitoring him. He was happy, upbeat. He was there talking to all of his friends. Ok, he doesn’t know anything.

According to Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal, Volquez flew back to the Dominican Republic on Wednesday. The Kansas City Star‘s Andy McCullough reported he will return to the team sometime when it is in New York. 

In the meantime, the series resumes Wednesday night with Johnny Cueto on the hill for the Royals, facing Jacob deGrom of the Mets. The Mets used six pitchers Tuesday, while the Royals sent seven to the mound in the 14-inning affair.

Not having Volquez in the rotation would have posed a major problem for the Royals.

Kansas City pitched Chris Young—whom it scheduled to pitch Game 4—three innings in relief Tuesday, and he ended up getting the win. The Royals announced Young, who lost his father to cancer in September, will pitch his scheduled start on three days of rest despite throwing 53 pitches in Game 1, per Major League Baseball’s Twitter account.

It’s not clear when Volquez will rejoin the team, but it seems he will be ready to go for his final start of the year. After winning 13 games in the regular season with a 3.55 ERA, Volquez has posted a 1-2 record and a 4.37 ERA in four postseason starts this year.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


World Series 2015: Pitching Predictions for Mets vs. Royals Game 2

Winning baseball starts on the mound, and that’s an understatement as far as the 2015 World Series goes with two stud pitchers lining up for Game 2 in Kauffman Stadium.

Both Edinson Volquez of the Kansas City Royals and Matt Harvey of the New York Mets pitched gems in Game 1 and canceled each other out with three runs apiece. That led to an incredible 14-inning affair as both bullpens battled adversity before the Royals took advantage of a Mets fielding error and loaded the bases for Eric Hosmer’s walk-off sacrifice fly.

Neither staff takes a step downward with pitching quality for Game 2. In fact, one could argue that the pitching will be even more dominant in Wednesday’s contest. 

 

Johnny Cueto, Kansas City Royals

It’s a battle of spectacular hair in Game 2 of the World Series.

While the mop of Jacob deGrom has generated a world of interest throughout this postseason (and long before it), he’s got some competition in the form of Johnny Cueto. And if you ask Cueto, he’s got the leg up in that category, as he told Jerry Crasnick of ESPN:

Well, that’s one advantage he might have over the Mets ace.

Otherwise, Wednesday spells a tough ask for Cueto, who looked shaky at best in his last postseason outing. He gave up eight runs against the Toronto Blue Jays and was yanked after just two innings.

He did do well to dispel his playoff struggles before that, pitching 14 combined innings in two victories over the Houston Astros in the ALDS. But Wednesday, he’ll be tasked with slowing down a desperate Mets lineup intent on jumping on him early.

Cueto should settle down in front of his home crowd eventually, but Royals fans haven’t seen the ace in Kansas City who emerged as one of baseball’s best pitchers with the Cincinnati Reds. He should pitch a strong game but not strong enough to outduel deGrom.

Prediction: 6 innings, 3 runs, 2 walks, 5 strikeouts

 

Jacob deGrom, New York Mets

Any Mets fans whose heart rates have spiked since their Game 1 defeat should rest easy heading into Game 2, knowing they have their best pitcher on the mound.

And that’s saying something, considering the rotation New York has dominated with throughout 2015. There’s little doubt, however, that deGrom is the bell cow of that rotation and best suited to pitch in what feels like a must-win game.

Should pitching on the road phase deGrom? He certainly doesn’t think so and in fact believes it’s to his advantage, per Neil Best of Newsday.

“I’ve actually enjoyed pitching on the road in the postseason,” deGrom said before Game 1. “You go out there, and you’re getting booed, and it’s fun to try to silence the crowd.”

It’s not just his talk that should have Mets fans confident—he has backed it up as well. All three of his starts have come on the road this postseason, and he’s been virtually unhittable while striking out opponents with ease, per ESPN Stats & Info:

When it comes down to it, pitching on the road hasn’t fazed deGrom in the least. It also hasn’t fazed him pitching in an elimination game, as he put together a gem in Game 5 of the NLDS and beat the Los Angeles Dodgers.

This game isn’t a must-win, but it feels like it. Expect deGrom to pitch in that fashion, putting together seven innings of marvelous work.

Prediction: 7 innings, 1 run, 2 walks, 8 strikeouts

 

Game Prediction

The Mets bullpen entered the stretch run of Game 1 with a one-run lead and didn’t prove able to hold on to it. But you can’t expect closer Jeurys Familia to give up a late game-tying homer in a second straight game.

New York will give the Royals’ opportunistic lineup a breath of life in the eighth, allowing them to trim the deficit to just one run. But in the same position as he was Tuesday, Familia won’t let his club down.

Prediction: Mets 3, Royals 2

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Mets vs. Royals Game 2: Live World Series Score and Highlights

The Kansas City Royals took a 2-0 lead over the New York Mets with a 7-1 victory Wednesday night at Kauffman Stadium. 

After a Lucas Duda single gave the Mets the lead in the fourth inning, Kansas City’s contact-driven lineup broke through against Jacob deGrom in the fifth inning. The Royals scored four runs behind singles from Alcides Escobar, Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas. 

Johnny Cueto out-pitched deGrom, allowing just two hits in the complete game effort. Cueto became the fifth pitcher since 2000 to log nine innings with one run or fewer in a World Series game. 

The series will move to Queens for Game 3 Friday night. 

SCORE UPDATE: Royals 7 – Mets 1, FINAL

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


World Series 2015: Odds, Prop Bets, Score Prediction for Mets vs. Royals Game 2

This 2015 World Series is going to be fun.

The opening night of it provided an obvious showcase of that, as Tuesday night’s Game 1 went well into the morning in one of the longest games in World Series history. After five hours and nine minutes, over 14 innings, the Royals emerged on top to take the 1-0 series lead.

Heading into Wednesday’s Game 2, there’s little time for reflection on that instant classic with another one right around the corner. With that in mind, let’s dive right into odds and predictions for Game 2 as well as the updated prop bets.

 

Game 2 Odds

Game 2 odds courtesy of Odds Shark.

 

Updated Prop Bets

Prop bets courtesy of OddsChecker.com.

 

Preview and Prediction

The opening game of the World Series unfolded just as we expected it—albeit with a handful more innings than initially thought.

Game 1 in Kansas City was indeed evenly matched, so much so that starting pitchers Matt Harvey and Edinson Volquez canceled each other out by conceding three runs each. The teams matched each other after that as well, largely thanks to Alex Gordon’s ninth-inning bomb that tied the game and sent it to extras.

Four more innings of even baseball followed as relief pitchers Bartolo Colon and Chris Young both pitched gems, until an error from the Mets allowed a bases-loaded situation with no outs that Colon couldn’t overcome.

With the Royals once again coming from behind, they tied an incredible statistic, as ESPN Stats & Info noted:

It wouldn’t be surprising at all if the Royals were forced to cut into a deficit again Wednesday night in Game 2—not with who the Mets are rolling out onto the mound.

New York ace Jacob deGrom has turned into a folk hero, more so for his dominance on the mound than his wild mop of hair (although the latter is nonetheless exceptional). The 27-year-old is coming into his own in his first postseason, winning all three of his starts.

What’s more, deGrom tends to come through when pitching following a Mets loss, as Baseball Tonight noted:

For all of deGrom‘s great pitching throughout the postseason, he has proven susceptible during one stretch of games—the first inning. He has gotten into an early jam in each of his last two postseason starts, including allowing two runs to the Dodgers early in Game 5.

But it’s no secret why he’s able to settle in after that, as Mets pitching coach Dan Warthen told Scott Miller of Bleacher Report:

“Because he’s able to breathe,” Warthen says, in referring to deGrom‘s ability to slow the game down. “He’s able to focus. Even when you watch him get behind in the count, I’ve watched him umpteen different times where he’ll get 3-and-0 or 3-and-1 and he’ll be able to come back and get quality pitches from that count.

“At any given time, he can throw a 3-1 changeup or a 3-0 breaking ball and get back in the count. His command of the fastball and, more than anything, his ability to focus on that individual pitch [is key].”

You can bet that deGrom‘s early shakiness will be on the Royals’ scouting report. However, that doesn’t mean they’ll be able to prevent him from getting into his groove after that.

Kansas City’s bats have proven opportunistic throughout this postseason and the last, but only when the opposing pitching gives them the opportunity. Harvey rarely conceded that in Game 1, and deGrom will be even less likely to do that.

In the other dugout, trade-deadline acquisition Johnny Cueto gets the ball—who was shaky in his last outing, allowing eight earned runs in just two innings (two innings!) last time out in Game 3 of the ALCS.

Pitching at home should allow for Cueto to settle down, and both pitchers should shut the door often. But the Mets undoubtedly have the edge in that department, and their desperation to avoid going into an 0-2 hole will have their bats making the plays to win a low-scoring affair.

Prediction: Mets 3, Royals 2

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Mets vs. Royals: TV Coverage, Start Time for World Series Game 2

On a night when the start of the NBA season—and a Steph Curry heat check—threatened to take the spotlight, the New York Mets and Kansas City Royals stole the show in Game 1 of the World Series.

The Mets and Royals played late into Tuesday night—or, rather, early into Wednesday morning—and in the bottom of the 14th inning, Eric Hosmer delivered a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to give the Royals a 5-4 win.

Hosmer redeemed himself after his Bill Buckner-esque error in the eighth inning led to the run that gave the Mets a 4-3 lead.

It was a tough loss for the Mets, who took their lead to the bottom of the ninth inning, with Jeurys Familia, who had been untouchable in the postseason, on the mound. However, Familia gave up a home run to Alex Gordon and, as ESPN Stats & Info points out, blew his first save since late July:

The stats department at ESPN also had some other interesting nuggets about Tuesday’s Game 1, including a mention of the one and only Babe Ruth:

Chris Young earned the win for the Royals after pitching three sterling innings and striking out four Mets. Young allowed only one baserunner, and it was on a walk. Meanwhile, the ageless Bartolo Colon took the loss for the Mets.

The two clubs have to get over the drama of the series opener right away, as they will come back Wednesday night for Game 2. You can watch Game 2 live from Kauffman Stadium on Fox, with the first pitch scheduled for 8:07 p.m. ET.

The Mets will send Jacob deGrom, arguably their best pitcher in the postseason, to the bump to take on Johnny Cueto of the Royals. DeGrom is 3-0 in the postseason with a 1.80 ERA, while Cueto is 1-1 in playoff starts with a robust 7.88 ERA—so the pitching matchup clearly favors the Mets.

But having been in the Fall Classic just last year, the Royals have the playoff chops to make deGrom work. He will have little room for error after his team fell into a one-game hole, and he’ll need to be on his game to send the series to Queens tied at a game apiece. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Why Travis D’Arnaud Is Key to the Mets Hoisting the World Series Trophy

No New York Mets player will be more active during the 2015 World Series than Travis d’Arnaud

The catcher for the Mets has not yet missed a postseason game. D’Arnaud should, so long as he remains healthy, be behind the plate for every pitch made by the Mets against the Kansas City Royals. The task at hand will be that much more difficult for the Mets if d’Arnaud is not, for whatever reasons, at his best. 

His World Series got off to a rough start on Tuesday night. 

With d’Arnaud crouched behind the dish, Matt Harvey began the bottom of the first inning by tossing a fastball over the plate. Alcides Escobar, to the surprise of nobody who watched him in the American League Championship Series, came out swinging. Escobar smashed a ball deep into center field, and Michael Conforto and Yoenis Cespedes failed to properly communicate on who would play the ball. 

Cespedes followed that up with a pair of miscues that allowed Escobar to complete his journey around the bases for an inside-the-park home run. 

Harvey and d’Arnaud not only needed to be on the same page before Harvey took the hill; both should have realized that tempting Escobar so early in the game was unwise. This point was not lost on ESPN analyst Buster Olney, who immediately questioned the pitch after Escobar scored.

What is particularly upsetting about that early mistake for fans of the Mets is that d’Arnaud has been terrific behind the plate for much of the playoffs. D’Arnaud is currently, per ESPN Stats and Info, the best catcher in Major League Baseball as it pertains to getting strike calls for pitchers. His ability to “frame” pitches during the National League Championship Series earned d’Arnaud praise from analysts and fans.

As Jonah Kari of Grantland pointed out in September, d’Arnaud has not always been known for his defensive skills:

Improvement has come behind the plate, too. As a rookie last season, d’Arnaud led the National League with 12 passed balls (in 105 games behind the plate); this year he’s allowed just one (in 53 games as a catcher). Last year, opposing base-stealers ran wild on d’Arnaud, swiping 58 bags in 72 attempts — marking a lousy 19 percent caught stealing rate. This year, they’ve stolen 26 times in 38 tries, good for a much improved 32 percent caught stealing rate. Amid that improvement, d’Arnaud has remained one of the better pitch-framers in the game, ranking 13th this year (and 14th last year) in that category per StatCorner.com.

The Royals will continue to be aggressive at the plate and on the basepaths during the World Series. It is what has gotten the club to within three wins of a championship. This was not lost on Kevin Kernan of the New York Post as he was previewing the World Series: 

The Royals steal bases, go first to third and even first to home as (Lorenzo) Cain did to send the Blue Jays packing in the ALCS.

The pressure will be on catcher Travis d’Arnaud.

“We just have to execute,’’ he said. “We’re definitely ready for this challenge. We all believe in each other and that’s all we can really do. Get your work in and get your routines down and just go out there and play the game. It’s tough to know what is going to happen. All I can do is be best prepared for it as I can.’’

ESPN’s Olney spotted something concerning while watching d’Arnaud during a Mets’ workout session on Monday:

The Royals tested d’Arnaud and his comfort in the bottom of the sixth of Game 1.

With Kendrys Morales at the plate and the Mets leading 3-2, Cain took a short lead from first. Cain broke for second when it could have been argued that d’Arnaud should have called for a pitchout. The New York catcher came up firing, but the throw from d’Arnaud was late and well off the mark.

Cain scored the tying run later in the inning.

It would, of course, be only a plus for the Mets is d’Arnaud were to catch fire as a hitter during the World Series. The same can be said about anybody in the New York lineup. D’Arnaud is currently batting just .200 in the playoffs, 68 points under what he averaged in the regular season (h/t ESPN). The Mets need better from his spot in the order.

What d’Arnaud will provide the Mets as a catcher, though, could make or break the team during the World Series. 

Calling smart games. Keeping pitchers from being overwhelmed by the moment. Earning strikes for starters and relievers. Preventing the Royals from taking extra bases. D’Arnaud must be spot-on in these aspects. He wasn’t in Game 1, and the Mets lost. 

He will hope to have at least four more nights to redeem himself. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress