Monday, August 31, 2020

Game 163, Part IV: Unheralded Heroes

The 10th inning of Game 163, as recounted in Part III, was one for the ages.  Each team had scored a run in exciting fashion.  Each team had players in the bottom third of their lineups come through with RBI base hits.  By all rights Nick Punto's liner to left should have ended the game, but the resulting double play was nothing short of miraculous.  Even after the first few pitches of the eleventh inning had been thrown, the crowd was still buzzing with disbelief and astonishment.

Perhaps the baseball gods sensed that we needed a time out before things got ginned up again, so they brought us the 11th inning.  The 11th was everything the 10th was not.  Both sides went three up and three down.  That is not to say the managers put their feet up and relaxed.  Twins skipper Ron Gardenhire used three different pitchers to face the three Detroit batters.  If there's anything Gardy loved when his team was in the field it was lefty versus lefty and righty versus righty.  After witnessing the 10th inning double play, Tigers manager Jim Leyland must have felt his team was destined to win at some point.  He was sticking with his closer, Fernando Rodney, even though Fernando by this time had thrown almost twice as many pitches (27) as what he'd typically throw on a short relief outing.

Despite its brevity there were a couple of noteworthy moments in the Twins' half of the 11th.  Denard Span hit a soft liner to centerfield to lead off the inning.  One would think centerfielder Curtis Granderson would have learned a "safety first" lesson after watching his teammate, left fielder Ryan Raburn, misplay Michael Cuddyer's leadoff single into a triple to start the 10th.  But no.  Granderson slid feet-first for Span’s sinking ball and...voila!  He came up with it.  Good for him because, had he missed a la Raburn, Leyland may have killed him on the grounds of justifiable homicide.

Orlando Cabrera followed Span by taking Rodney's first pitch for a strike.  It was another questionable call by home plate umpire Randy Marsh, as the ball was caught by catcher Gerald Laird only a few inches off the ground.  Cabrera took two steps back toward Marsh to argue, which of course was only asking for trouble.  Marsh pointed toward the batters' box as if to say, "You've got exactly one second to get back in there."  Cabrera complied but he was not pleased.  He fought off some tough pitches from Rodney but then got rung up by Marsh on another questionable call.  Once again the animated Columbian got into it with the man in blue, only this time Gardy came sprinting out of the dugout to pull his shortstop away before he got tossed.  This is pure conjecture on my part, but what might have made the difference enabling Cabrera to keep from getting ejected is that he was probably chirping at Marsh in Spanish.

***

Entering the 12th inning the Tigers had used five pitchers, one pinch hitter and two pinch runners, plus they had made a defensive replacement at a moment late in the game when they had a lead to protect.  The Twins going into the 12th had used one pinch hitter, one pinch runner, and like their opponent, had made one defensive replacement when they had a lead.  It is interesting to note that for each team, the player removed for a defensive replacement was one of their big boppers who had hit a home run in this game, Magglio Ordonez for the Tigers and Jason Kubel for the Twins, coincidentally both starting right fielders.  What their managers wouldn't give to be able to reinsert them now in this extra inning affair!

The biggest difference between the two managers was the manner in which they handled their pitching staffs. The Twins were on their eighth and final pitcher, Bobby Keppel, originally brought in by Gardy to get the last out in the Tigers’ half of the 11th.  Keppel needed only 4 pitches then to retire Placido Polanco, so Gardy had him start the 12th.  This, even though Keppel’s record this season was pretty dismal with a 4.96 E.R.A. and an opponents’ batting average of .300.  As for how Gardy's bullpen strategy differed from his counterpart's, you'll see when we get to the bottom of the 12th.

Keppel made short work of leadoff man Clete Thomas, Ordonez' defensive replacement who entered the game in the bottom of the 10th, getting him to hit a harmless liner to Carlos "Go Go" Gomez, Kubel's defensive replacement since the top of the 8th.  (Denard Span slid over from center field to right in the 8th, with Go Go taking over in center.)  Dangerous Miguel Cabrera coaxed Keppel for a seven pitch walk.  Don Kelly, who'd entered the game as a pinch runner in the 10th, made his first plate appearance as designated hitter, and this is where things got roiling again.  The weak-hitting Kelly, owner of a .236 batting average with 0 home runs to his credit, punched a Keppel fast ball into left center field.  Cabrera got a good read, correctly predicting left fielder Delmon Young would not be able to arrive at the ball before it hit the turf, so Cabrera easily reached third.  Young got to the ball on the first bounce but he was running back and to his left, meaning that, fighting inertia, he would have to do a 180 degree spin to throw the ball to an infielder.  The proper play, as any experienced outfielder would attest, was for Young to throw the ball into second base, because (i) that would force Kelly to stay at first, thus keeping the double play in order, and (ii) there was no chance whatsoever of throwing out Cabrera at third.  Instead, Delmon did throw into third to no avail, and Kelly scampered to second.  The Tigers now had two runners in scoring position with just one out.  At first Gardenhire tried to disguise his emotions, slightly shaking his head subtly in disbelief at his left fielder's bonehead play.  After a few seconds he could not contain himself any longer, as he could be seen pacing through the length of the dugout waving his cap in agitated fashion and expressing himself verbally to anyone within earshot.

Gardy smartly instructed Keppel to intentionally walk Ryan Raburn, thus loading the bases but also setting up a force at any base.  To this point Keppel had not walked anybody nor had he hit a batter, but doing either of those now would force in the go-ahead run.  Up stepped Brandon Inge, a money player who had stroked a double his last time up.  Another controversial call from home plate umpire Randy Marsh was on the way.

Benefitting the Twins was having Miguel Cabrera as the runner at third.  The big man was not fleet of foot, so the possibility of Leyland putting on a squeeze play was almost nil.  But in the Tigers' favor was this statistic from Inge's track record: In the previous seventeen times Inge had come to bat this season with the bases loaded, he had nine hits (for an eye-popping .529 average) including two grand slams.  This moment would have been excruciatingly tense even for a pitching staff's ace.  Imagine what it was like for Keppel, one of the low men on the food chain of the Twins' staff, whom Gardy had used this season mostly in middle innings and in blowouts.

Keppel's very first pitch to the right-handed Inge appeared to be a two-seam fastball that tailed inside an inch or two above the belt.  As Inge spun with his front shoulder starting to aim toward the catcher, the ball appeared to graze his shirt, which was tucked in but loosely fitting.  Inge immediately reacted as one would who had been hit by a pitch, but Marsh emphatically shook his head "no."  Leyland rushed out of the first base dugout to plead Inge's case.  I saw Leyland pointing toward third base umpire Gary Cederstrom, obviously in an attempt to get Marsh to ask his partner for help.  Also obvious was Marsh tapping his own chest a couple of times, signifying that the call was his, not Cederstrom's, to make.  I was surprised Leyland remained unruffled, at least outwardly.  I wonder what his disposition was when he saw the same televised replay I did that evening.  It showed that Inge probably, but not conclusively, was hit by Keppel's pitch.

The drama surrounding the Inge at bat was not over.  Catcher Joe Mauer saved a run by making a fabulous block on a fast ball which ricocheted off the dirt several feet wide of the plate.  After fouling off a 2-2 pitch, Inge knocked a fastball into the dirt directly in front of home.  The chopper was headed on a path very similar to Matt Tolbert's game-tying RBI single in the 10th.  But Inge's ball never made it out of the infield, thanks to quick-thinking second baseman Nick Punto.  The Twins infield had been at double play depth, hoping to turn a DP which would end the Tigers' threat.  When Punto saw how high Inge's ball was heading he did not lie back waiting for the ball to come to him.  Instead he charged the ball, and with his momentum carrying him toward the mound made a perfect throw off the wrong foot to Mauer to force out the sliding Miggy.  It was the Twins' defensive highlight of the evening for several reasons.  Punto had to decide immediately (and most likely correctly) that the ball was hit too slowly to allow for a 4-6-3 double play; the hustling Inge, even on bad wheels, would have had time to beat the relay throw from shortstop Orlando Cabrera.  And, getting the ball to Cabrera would have required Punto to throw in the opposite direction from where he was headed.  Punto also had to contend with second base umpire Jerry Layne and pitcher Keppel getting in his way.  Layne, anticipating a Punto throw to the shortstop, was starting to move toward second base.  Keppel also seemed surprised that Punto was throwing home; the 6' 5" pitcher was in the line of fire and had to duck to afford Punto a clear throwing lane.  Catcher Mauer also keenly observed that a 4-2-3 DP was out of the question, so he concentrated on getting the force-out by stretching his 6' 5" frame like a first baseman to secure the throw.  The force-out illustrated what can be done defensively with smart, heady ball players.

After the excitement of that bang bang play, it felt like the inning should be over.  The Twins fans were high-fiving all over the Metrodome, some offering toasts with whatever adult beverages they had snuck into the place.  The decibel level was off the charts.  But alas, there were only two outs and the bases were still loaded with Tigers.  Gerald Laird, a very fine catcher but a weak hitter, slowly made his way to the plate.  Laird had already batted three times today with a runner in scoring position.  In each instance he proceeded to make the final out of the inning.  The fourth time was not to be the charm.  Although he got into a 3-1 hitter's count, he ended up whiffing on a nasty, sinking, full count fastball.  Leyland may have felt destiny was on his side after the Raburn-to-Laird double play in the 10th, but it faded after Punto's stellar 12th inning play, and evaporated immediately thereafter with Laird's K.  They would prove to be the final two offensive outs of the Tigers' 2009 season.

***

By the time the Twins came to bat in the bottom of the 12th, Game 163 had been going on for four hours and thirty-two minutes.  How ironic that the endurance test came to a quick consummation with a five minute, four batter half-inning.

I thought I was seeing things when Leyland sent Rodney out to the mound to start the home half of the 12th.  The poor guy had already thrown 36 pitches since coming on in the 9th.  Sure, Rodney was a perfect 36 for 36 this season in save opportunities, but were the Tigers pressing their luck?  No one was warming up in the Tigers bullpen.  Was the manager worrying about tomorrow's game, resting his other pitchers to face the Yankees?  Jimmy, my man, to get to the Bronx you first have to win this game.  Rodney was a closer, not a long reliever!  The last time he pitched three innings was August of 2008, fourteen months ago.

Carlos "Go Go" Gomez led things off for the Twins.  Gomez was hitting only .226, but his excellent speed made him well-suited for this role, if only he could get on base.  Rodney was losing some velocity, causing him to resort to more off speed stuff.  Gomez drilled a changeup through the hole into left field, a hole made a little wider than usual by virtue of third baseman Inge having to play up on the infield grass to guard against a bunt.

The chatter among the baseball gurus in the stands was in full swing.  Most figured the Twins would try to get Go Go to second via one of two ways, either a Gomez steal or a sacrifice bunt by the next batter, Michael Cuddyer.  Neither tactic was used.  Gomez took a huge lead off first but he did not test Laird's cannon arm.  Instead of bunting, Cuddy grounded out to Inge along the line, 5-3, with Go Go taking second on the play.  Cuddy didn't get credit for a sacrifice, but he did manage to get Go Go into scoring position.

Leyland then had to decide whether to walk Delmon Young intentionally to set up a double play, or to pitch to the usually undisciplined hitter who was one for five in the game.  Leyland chose the former, not what I would have done given the fact that the on deck hitter, Alexi Casilla, was fast enough to beat out most DP attempts.

And now a word about Mr. Casilla.  To be fair, Gardenhire used him more as a utility player than someone who could be counted on to be an important part of the Twins' offensive arsenal.  In 256 plate appearances this season, the twenty-five year old had only 17 RBIs.  In mid-season there was a stretch of games in which Casilla had a chance to do something big, but he seldom rose to the occasion.  Gina and I attended one of those mid-season games in which Casilla struck out, leaving important runners stranded on base.  In one of my finer moments I opined to my daughter, "Casilla could not hit his way out of a paper bag."  I remembered those words of wisdom now as he strode to the plate.

Once again the Tigers' respect for Gomez' speed affected the infield's positioning.  Shorstop Everett and second baseman Polanco were "pinching" second base, i.e., playing closer to the bag to undermine Go Go's desire to take an aggressive lead.  Even though first baseman Miggy was not holding Young (whose potential run meant nothing) on the bag, the fact that Polanco was playing near the second base bag left a large hole on the right side of the infield for the lefty Casilla.  Such defensive strategy was a risk Leyland was willing to take partly because his left and right fielders, Raburn and Clete Thomas, had strong arms.  In other words, the Tigers hoped an outfield single would not necessarily score Go Go if he was not allowed to take a big lead off second.

In his career to date, Casilla was three for five (.600) against Rodney.  The kid looked unfazed as he glanced from the batter's box toward third base coach Scott Ullger for a sign.  If he saw the big gap on the right side of the infield, he did not let on.  Rodney's first two pitches, a ball and a strike, were changeups.  Maybe Rodney was incapable of throwing a fastball anymore due to arm fatigue.  Or, maybe the wily veteran was really trying to set the kid up for a fastball.  The set up didn't fool Casilla, who hit a 95 m.p.h. fastball through that right side hole.  The ball bounced at least seven times before Thomas could scoop it, while Gomez was flying around third.  Before Thomas' very high throw reached Laird's catcher's mitt, Go Go slid on his chest across the plate with the division-winning run. Final score: Twins 6, Tigers 5.

The ecstatic Twins ran full speed out of their dugout to mob Gomez, who had slammed his helmet to the ground with joy.  Somehow Mike Redmond, the thirty-eight year old reserve catcher who never got into the game, was the first to reach his teammate.  After almost bludgeoning Gomez with slaps and pats on the back and the head, the crazy mob turned to Casilla and repeated the assault.  The players were beside themselves with glee, as were the lucky fans who filled the Dome.  This is what walk-off victories are supposed to look like.  Conversely, the dejected Tigers, led by an exhausted Fernando Rodney, slowly retreated into the first base dugout.  Their season was over.

***

This was an epic game that had everything: extra base hits, superlative plays in the field, relatively solid pitching, some controversy regarding the perceived strike zone, and runners almost continually on the bases.  (In the game's twenty-four half-innings there was at least one baserunner in all but seven of them.)  If there were ever a game in any sport where the cliche "It's a shame one team had to lose" applied, this was The One.

Four things stand out in my memory.  First, I will always remember the Raburn-to-Laird double play in the bottom of the 10th and the Punto play in the top of the 12th.  Both incredible displays of athleticism in do-or-die moments.  Second, the constant stream of situations which compelled the two veteran managers, Gardenhire and Leyland, to make one decision after another: when to pinch hit, pinch run, bunt, steal, put in a defensive replacement, call on the bullpen, adjust the depth of the infielders, and maybe even offer words of encouragement from time to time.  The wheels were always turning.  In an interview a day or two later, Gardy said he and his counterpart met briefly and privately to congratulate each other on their respective team's efforts.  Third, redemption times two, both involving the 10th inning DP.  Raburn had made a horrible decision to attempt a diving catch on Cuddyer's leadoff triple.  But he redeemed himself after snagging Punto's liner with his throw to Laird to complete that inning with the 7-2 double play.  Casilla failed to tag properly at third base on the Punto liner, and as a consequence got thrown out at the plate.  His redemption came in the form of the game winning hit in the 12th.

The fourth item ties in to the sub-title of this Part IV: "Unheralded Heroes."  For the Tigers it was Brandon Inge, playing hurt yet temporarily saving the game with his amazing effort on Orlando Cabrera's rocket in the 9th, and whose double gave the Tigers a 5-4 lead in the 10th.  Not bad for a 7-hole hitter.  I also tip my hat to Fernando Rodney, whose manager kept asking for more.  (The lyric from U 2's song With Or Without You comes to mind: "You give it all but I want more.")

For the Twins I recognize two pairs of players.  Matt Tolbert and Nick Punto were the 8 and 9-hole hitters, but without their contributions -- Tolbert's dramatic game-tying RBI single in the 10th and Punto's multi-pitch at bats in the 7th and 9th plus his gutsy web gem in the 12th -- the Twins would have been in trouble.  (Also, let's not forget that if Casilla had tagged properly at third in the bottom of the 10th, Punto's liner to Raburn in left would have been a game-winning sac fly.)  The second pair is Carlos Gomez and Alexi Casilla, neither of whom were in the starting lineup.  But when their team needed them most in the final inning they did not disappoint.                    

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Game 163, Part III: Risky Business & Second Chances

I remember watching the Twins' two victorious World Series epic battles against the Cardinals and the Braves in 1987 and 1991. Each of those series went the maximum seven games, with the home team prevailing in all fourteen games.  Everyone in "Twins Territory" was completely drained, living and dying with every pitch.  People would show up for work or school the next day looking almost like zombies.  We were so connected to our team that the games became the focal point of our days for long stretches.

When the Twins won their second World Championship in 1991, only four years removed from their first, a feeling of inevitability overtook many fans.  Now that the Twins had it figured out, we fans could reasonably anticipate more World Series appearances without having to wait more than a handful of years before each one.  Making it to the World Series on a semi-regular basis became a reasonable expectation.  Would one appearance every four years be too much to ask?  Okay, we’ll settle for once every six years.  (Spoiler alert: The Twins’ have not made it back to the World Series since 1991. “Minnesota Twice,” a popular cheer and apparel logo in the fall of 1991, has taken on a new meaning.)

We should have known better.  Despite many very good seasons during which the Twins fell short of qualifying for the Series, by the time the 2009 season arrived the fandom had become resigned to the fact that it might be awhile before the Twins would be good enough to return to the Fall Classic.  As if we needed a reminder, who could forget that just one year before, the Twins lost a Game 163 in Chicago to the White Sox?  The final score was 1-0, the only run coming on a home run by future Twin Jim Thome.  In early September of '09 when it appeared Detroit had the AL Central title locked up, resignation in Twins Territory was ripe.  Well, at least we had football to look forward to.  But on that October day of Game 163 against the Tigers, after the Twins' late bloom during the last three weeks of September, maybe this was finally going to be our year after all.

***

Joe Nathan, the Twins' incomparable closer, had to be used earlier than manager Ron Gardenhire had wanted, being called upon to get the last two outs of the 8th inning plus three more in the 9th.  Only a near-miraculous double play turned by the infield, coupled with a base running mistake by Tiger veteraan Curtis Granderson, had enabled Nathan to escape the 9th.  He had thrown only twenty-one pitches, yet Nathan looked gassed.  There was no way he could be used to start the 10th.  That responsibility fell to Jesse Crain.

The scouting report on Crain was that he was a hard thrower, with probably the highest velocity on the staff, but his ball did not move.  His two-seamer looked like his four-seamer.  The first man he had to face was the Tigers' cleanup slugger, Miguel Cabrera, who had doubled and homered in his first two at bats.  Cabrera went after Crain's first pitch and meekly grounded out to his namesake, shortstop Orlando Cabrera.  A good start for Crain, getting the leadoff man, but smiles turned to frowns when he hit pinch hitter Aubrey Huff with an 0-2 slider.  The home crowd's collective mood swung back up when Crain blew a 95 m.p.h. fastball by Ryan Raburn for the second out.  Brandon Inge, the 7-hole hitter whose praises I sang in Part II, stepped to the plate.

Crain got ahead of Inge 0-1, and followed it up with a slider that was clearly a strike but ruled a ball by home plate ump Randy Marsh.  Did this cause Crain to lose focus?  It sometimes happens to pitchers.  Inge drove the next pitch, a 96 m.p.h. belt high cookie, into the left field corner.  With two outs, pinch runner Don Kelly was off from first base with the crack of the bat.  Third base coach Gene Lamont, about to make possibly the biggest decision of the year, saw the bounding ball die against a billowy advertising banner tied to the wall, momentarily hindering the retrieval by left fielder Delmon Young who was anticipating a carom.  Lamont waved home Kelly, barely beating a strong relay by Orlando Cabrera.  Lamont's decision is what's known as a "good send."  Good for the Tigers; bad for the Twins, who were now down 5-4.  Crain got 8-hole hitter Gerald Laird to bounce out to end the inning.  The Twins found themselves staring in the face of elimination.  But one of the most memorable (albeit non-walkoff) half-innings in Twins history was about to begin.

***

To appreciate fully the drama which unfolded in the bottom of the 10th inning, we must go back to a lineup decision by Tigers manager Jim Leyland before the game.  For six of the eight non-pitching fielding positions, Leyland almost always penciled in the same players every game: Laird catching, Miguel Cabrera at first, Placido Polanco at second, Inge at third, Granderson in center and Magglio Ordonez in right.  At shortstop, Leyland usually favored Adam Everett over Ramon Santiago by a 2 to 1 margin, although he started the latter in Game 163 due to their respective stats against Twins starting pitcher Scott Baker.  The toughest decision for Leyland was whom to start in left field, Ryan Raburn or Marcus Thames, both right-handed batters.  The dimensions of the Metrodome were such that there was more ground to cover in left field than in right.  Raburn was four years younger and 35 pounds lighter than Thames.  The boss went with the younger man who, putting ages and physiques aside, was simply a better fielder.

As related in Part II, Tigers closer Fernando Rodney had snuffed a Twins rally in the ninth, getting the final two outs but almost surrendering a season-ending base hit by Orlando Cabrera.  In the process, Rodney had only needed to expend seven pitches, of which four were light tosses to his catcher while issuing Joe Mauer an intentional walk.  The first Twins batter to face Rodney in the 10th was 5-hole hitter Michael Cuddyer, who so far had not managed to hit the ball out of the infield.  The Tigers, clinging to a one-run lead and needing just three outs for the victory, were in a no-doubles defense, with the corner infielders and outfielders playing a little closer to the lines than normal.  The outfielders also played a few paces deeper.  If the Twins were to get a base hit, the Tigers wanted the batter to pull up at first base, i.e., not in scoring position at second.

Cuddy weakly flared a fly ball which was destined to land in between shortstop Everett and left fielder Raburn. Raburn had to run a relatively long way toward the infield, but as he approached the ball he should have realized that there was almost no way he was going to get to the sinking ball in time.  The safe and smart play -- the only play -- would be to concede the base hit, play the ball on the bounce and throw it into second base to hold Cuddyer at first (and to keep a double play in order).  Instead, much to the amazement and delight of the 54,000 screaming fans, Raburn dove for the ball and did not come very close to catching it.  Even worse, he could not block the ball from hopping away toward the outfield wall.  Centerfielder Granderson, probably as surprised as anyone about Raburn's ill-fated decision, had been sauntering over to back up his teammate, never expecting he'd be called into action.  Granderson now had to change course and run like mad to retrieve the ball which made its way to the wall while Cuddyer dashed around second.  Cuddyyer was "held" to, and credited with, a triple -- proving once again that there is much to a baseball game that can't be discerned by reviewing the box score.

It isn't often I feel sorry for an opponent, but as gleeful as I was to have Cuddy, the tying run, on third with nobody out, my heart went out to Raburn.  To their credit, the Tigers' brain trust in the dugout did not panic or give any hint of disorganization following this sudden turn of events.  Their first order of business was to play the infield in for the next batter, Delmon Young.  Delmon was the Twins' most unpredictable hitter, averaging roughly one strike out for every four at bats and yet sporting a solid .285 batting average.  Maybe being caught up in the moment caused him to swing impatiently at the first pitch, tapping out weakly to the shortstop.  Cuddyer remained at third, undoubtedly thankful the Twins did not have the contact play on for Delmon's at bat.  If so, Cuddyer would have been cut down by three strides at the plate.

Designated hitter Brendan Harris, who had entered the game as a pinch hitter in the sixth inning, was up next.  The chatter in the stands among the self-anointed gurus centered around two possibilities: Would manager Ron Gardenhire put on a squeeze play to get Cuddy in, and would Rodney, with five wild pitches on his 2009 resume, pick this time to unload number six?  The answers turned out to be no and no.  But, Rodney was definitely uncorking some wide fast balls which catcher Laird did well to corral, and Harris drew a five pitch walk.  Gardy inserted Alexi Casilla -- remember that name! -- to run for Harris, who returned to a hero's welcome in the Twins dugout.  Runners at the corners, one out, and 8-hole hitter Matt Tolbert stepped into what was left of the batters' box.

Of the ten men who were in the starting lineup for the Twins, Tolbert had the lowest profile.  He was about to become legendary.  For the last six years, Matt had been toiling away at various levels in the minor leagues.  Even now that he was playing on the Big Team, he had only been used sporadically until early September.  That's when Justin Morneau, one of the team's true superstars, was declared finished for the remainder of the season with a stress fracture in his back.  Ironically, as chronicled in Part I, that is also about the time the Twins got hot, thanks in part to the versatility of Cuddyer who moved from the hot corner to take Morneau's place as first baseman, and to Tolbert's ability to rise to the occasion as Cuddy's replacement at third.  Those were big shoes to fill for the twenty-seven year old.

Tiger skipper Leyland paid a visit to Rodney on the mound.  At this point Rodney had thrown nineteen pitches, most of them under duress.  Was Leyland going to bring in another reliever or stick with his closer?  Was he talking defensive strategy with his infielders who had congregated on the mound?  Should they play in (or perhaps just "corners in"), at double play depth, half-way or at regular depth?  What should Laird do if Casilla attempts to steal?  Hold the ball, throw down to second, or fake a throw to second and try to catch Cuddyer napping at third?  This pause in the action gave the grandstand cognoscenti another opportunity to speculate on what Gardy might do.  A squeeze play was still a possibility, but now one of the fastest guys on the team, pinch runner Casilla, was on first.  So, an attempt at stealing second was certainly a potential weapon.  Rodney was not very good at holding runners close to the bag, but his catcher, Laird, was a gunner who could throw a dart to second base if he had to.

How much could we expect out of Tolbert, a .228 hitter?  He had already come through with a base hit and scored the Twins' first run in the 3rd inning.  Leyland had his infield at double play depth, a strange decision given the fact that Tolbert, a lithe switch-hitting athlete batting from the left side, would be very hard to double up.  On an 0-2 changeup following a 97 m.p.h. fastball, Tolbert chopped a single directly up the middle -- what former Twins manager Tom Kelly used to call a "diamond cutter."  The ball first hit on the dirt a foot or two in front of the plate, but thanks to tremendous topspin barely eluded Rodney and second baseman Polanco, the latter making a desperate but futile lunge.  Cuddyer strode home from third to tie the game at 5.  Casilla, who had not shown any inclination to attempt a steal of second, was able to make it to third without drawing a throw.  As impossible as it seemed, the Metrodome crowd noise became even more deafening.  The division-winning run, Casilla, was just ninety feet away from paydirt, and there was only one out!  No sign of Leyland appearing from the Tigers dugout; he was sticking with his closer, Rodney.

There are at least a dozen synonyms for the word "Improbable."  There are at least a dozen more synonyms for the word "memorable."  I could use any combination of those twenty-six words -- or all of them -- to describe what we witnessed on the next play, and I still would not be doing it justice.

The very bottom of the Twins' order, Nick Punto, was coming to bat.  A casual Twins fan with a short memory might have bemoaned the fact that it was the number nine hitter's turn to bat.  Not me.  The last two times up Punto had forced the Tigers' pitchers to throw an aggregate nineteen crunch time pitches, an outstanding accomplishment in and of itself.  And, in those two plate appearances, both as the inning's leadoff batter, he reached base each time.  Leyland had his corner infielders in, ready to throw home if Casilla tried to score on a grounder.  Leyland hedged his bets with the shortstop and second basemen, playing them half-way but not quite as deep as double play depth.  As is typical in any similar situation where a sacrifice fly would end the game, Leyland signalled his outfielders to play very shallow.  Twins third base coach Scott Ulger could be seen with his mouth a few inches away from Casilla's ear, giving instructions to the twenty-five year old runner, most importantly a reminder to tag on an outfield fly ball.  The stage was set.  The tension was palpable.  I had a knot in my stomach and I was five stories above and a hundred-plus feet away from the field.

Rodney started Punto off with four straight fast balls, two of them at 98 m.p.h.  If anything, Rodney appeared to be getting stronger.  Punto was choking up slightly and shortening his swing, thus bettering his chances of making contact.  As soon as the count reached 0-2, Leyland brought all four infielders in.  Punto managed to foul off three of those four fastballs; the fourth was a brushback.  Rodney was not making Punto miss, a good sign for Twins fans.  Rodney then abandoned the fastball, trying to cross up Punto with an outside letter high changeup.  Punto laced it to left field where Raburn, the same guy whose blunder at the start of the inning had given the Twins life, caught the ball after having to move a few feet to his left.  Then Raburn did two things which 99% of the time should have led to Casilla scoring.  First, because Rayburn did not have time to set his feet and torso properly in motion before the catch, he took two extra mini-steps before unleashing the throw.  Second, his throw home was a bullet, but it was off-target to the third base side of the plate.  Only a fantastic maneuver by the husky Laird, first catching the ball and then diving across the plate to tag the sliding Casilla, saved the day for the Tigers and extended the game.  On a scorecard the double play looks like this: "DP 7-2."  You may want to add a couple of exclamation points after the "2."  

***

We found out later that Raburn had been a pitcher with 95 m.p.h. velocity at the University Of Florida.  Obviously he atoned for his "sin" at the start of the inning by his stupendous play at the end.  If I were still coaching baseball, I would show my team Raburn's involvement in the Cuddyer at bat and the Punto at bat.  It is often said in sports that athletes need to have a short memory.  Even if you make a terrible mistake, you can't let it affect your performance on future plays.  Raburn's adventurous 10th inning proves the point.

There was a second facet, a real head-scratcher, to the Raburn-Laird double play which we did not learn until viewing the game's highlights on television.  For reasons never to this day explained, Casilla did not leave third base until after Raburn had finished taking those two extra mini-steps.  What the rules clearly allow the baserunner to do, and what Casilla should have done, was take off from third as soon as Raburn (or his mitt) touched the ball.  That extra second Casilla gifted to the Tigers contributed to their execution of the tag out at home.  I would label Casilla's gaffe "contributory negligence."

***

As the battle proceeded to the 11th inning I knew that, regardless of the outcome, this was the greatest baseball game I had ever seen.  That remains my opinion today, almost eleven years and hundreds of games later.

Saturday, August 15, 2020

Game 163, Part II: Managerial Chess

Welcome back.  Our topic to which we return after a two week respite is Game 163 played in the Metrodome on October 6, 2009 between the Minnesota Twins and the Detroit Tigers.  I remember there was some discussion at the time among the media's talking heads about whether this game should be considered a "playoff" game or a "playin" game.  Hmm, an interesting if not purely rhetorical question.  The playoffs for each of the American and National Leagues in those days were comprised of four teams: the three (East, Central and West) division champions plus the next-best team.  In 2009, the New York Yankees were the American League East Division champions, while the California Angels claimed the AL West Division title.  The AL Central Division required a one game showdown, aka "Game 163," to determine the AL Central Division title.  Since the Boston Red Sox, who finished second to the Yankees in the AL East, had a better record than either the Twins or the Tigers (and also better than the Texas Rangers who finished second to the Angels in the AL West), the Red Sox were in, while the loser of Game 163 would fail to qualify for the playoffs.  The Game 163 winner, of course, would make the playoffs as the AL Central champ.  Thus, Game 163 was a Playoffs Or Bust duel.  By the way, Game 163 was also officially deemed part of the regular season, a fact of particular importance for statistical purposes.

Part I of this saga ended at the conclusion of the sixth inning.  As I noted, this turned out to be the exact midway juncture of the game.  But there is another aspect which makes the "intermission" well-placed, for it is the seventh inning where we as fans can sense the anxiety which the two managers felt heading into what they thought would be the last three innings.  At least one of them was pulling out all stops.

*** 

At the start of the seventh inning Detroit was clinging to a 3-2 lead.  The Twins had knocked out Tiger rookie starting pitcher Rick Porcello in the sixth.  By contrast, Twins starter Scott Baker had managed to survive six full innings, with a reasonable total of 84 pitches having been thrown.  Although the losing pitcher of record at this point, Baker's six innings with only three earned runs earned him what has become known as a "quality start."  That is a label created by modern media but scoffed at by old timers, like me.  I mention it here to preface one tidbit:  The Twins' record when receiving a quality start was a very impressive 37 games over .500.  A good omen?  

With the bottom third of the Tigers' batting order due up, Twins manager Ron Gardenhire decided to allow Baker to open the seventh.  This decision surprised many observers because Gardy, like many skippers, usually preferred to bring in his relief pitchers at the start of an inning, not mid-inning with men on base.  Having Baker start the seventh indicated that Gardy felt Baker could get three more outs.  But when Baker walked the first hitter he faced, Brandon Inge, on seven pitches, Gardy had a change of heart and brought in the giant, six foot eleven reliever Jon Rauch.  Rauch had only been a Twin since August 28, but was a key contributor during that brief span.  In 16 relief appearances he'd compiled a 5-1 record, with a measly 1.80 ERA and 14 Ks over 15 innings.  Rauch disposed of Gerald Laird on an infield popup, and got Ramon Santiago to fly out to center field where the super-athletic Denard Span ran laterally over 100 feet of turf to make the grab.  Rauch was barely warmed up; he'd only thrown four pitches to get two quick outs, and the man Baker had walked, Inge, had not advanced beyond first base.  Yet Gardy, as he was wont to do, decided to bring in a lefty, Jose Mijares, to face the Tigers' lead off hitter, the left-handed Curtis Granderson.  No doubt Gardy was aware of Granderson's dismal .180 batting average against lefties.

The selection of Mijares did not come without baggage.  In the final game of the Twins-Tigers series just five days before, Mijares was the instigator of an ugly dustup.  Following a sequence of several brush back pitches by both teams, Mijares actually threw behind the back of Tiger shortstop Adam Everett.  Throwing behind a hitter is an unforgivable no no among baseball's unwritten rules.  His selection of Everett for a target was puzzling because (i) Everett was not that good a hitter, and (ii) the two men were teammates on the Twins toward the end of the 2008 season.  Although there was no real bad blood between the Tigers and the Twins by the time Game 163 arrived, the thoughtlessness of Mijares was still fresh in the minds of the Tigers.

The first and fourth pitches from Mijares to Granderson were clearly within the strike zone, but home plate umpire Randy Marsh ruled them balls.  Mijares looked like his blood was boiling as he stared Marsh down.  But knowing he was under intense scrutiny -- is there any other kind?-- because of the Everett incident in Detroit, Mijares said nothing.  Minnesota fans, ever quick to come up with conspiracy theories, may have figured Marsh was a closet Tiger fan.  Catcher Joe Mauer, always Mr. Cool, went out to the mound to simmer Mijares down.  In what might be called poetic justice or retribution by the Tiger faithful, Granderson stroked a sharp single to right on the seventh pitch he saw from Mijares, thereby moving Inge to third.  The Tigers were on the verge of blowing the game open.  Gardy popped out of the dugout and immediately signaled for the fourth Twins pitcher of the inning, Matt Guerrier, to enter.  Ron Darling, the former New York Mets all-star pitcher who was the analyst on the TBS telecast, made a profound observation: "Ron Gardenhire is managing this seventh inning as if it were the ninth."  Guerrier did his job, getting the Tigers' number two hitter Placido Polanco to ground into a forceout to end the threat, thereby making Gardy look like a genius.  Another tidbit:  2009 would be the last season of Randy Marsh's highly regarded twenty-nine year career as a MLB umpire.

*** 

Tiger manager Jim Leyland's decision to stick with relief pitcher Zach Miner to open the bottom of the seventh astonished a lot of the armchair bench coaches.  Miner had bailed out starter Rick Porcello when the kid ran out of gas with two out in the sixth, but Miner had not looked sharp.  After yielding a single to Delmon Young that inning, he hit Brendan Harris with a pitch before getting the final out.  Still, Miner had only thrown a paltry total of six pitches to the three Twins he'd faced in the sixth, so Leyland figured he was good to go for the seventh. 

The Twins had second baseman Nick Punto, with his skimpy .228 batting average, hitting in the 9- hole.  Despite his stats, which included just one home run and thirty-eight RBIs, Punto was a gamer, a guy whom a smart pitcher could never overlook in a big situation.  With the home team trailing 3-2 and down to their last nine outs, this certainly was a big situation.  Punto led off the inning by proceeding to have what I judge to be the greatest at bat of the game, and arguably the greatest at bat of the season.  Punto's nine (!) pitch at bat included fouling off three two-strike pitches before lacing a single to left field.  The crowd sensed a rally; every Twins fan was standing and most were either screaming or at least waving their homer hankies.  At that moment I tried to spot Leyland in the third base dugout.  He was known to duck into the walkway to sneak a smoke every once in awhile.  Not this time.  There he was near the dugout steps, probably wondering if he should follow suit with Gardy's strategy of parading in relief pitchers to get through a single inning.  Yep, here he came, walking stiffly toward Miner.  All eyes were on Leyland's arm, waiting for him to signal for a new pitcher from the bullpen.  Surely he would not allow the right-handed Miner to pitch to the left-handed Span.  But that's exactly what he did, and guess what?  Miner struck Span out on just four pitches.  Would Gardy's decision not to have Span even try to bunt Punto to second cost the Twins this game?  Lots of second-guessers sure thought so.  Span had eleven of the Twins' fifty successful bunts that season.  The man knew how to bunt!

Next up for the Twins was Orlando Cabrera, their 2-hole hitter.  Cabrera was another late addition to the Twins' roster, having been acquired from the Oakland A's in late July.  In 58 games with the Twins he was hitting an impressive .292, plus he was on a 15 game hitting streak. With one out the odds were better than 50-50 that Punto would now attempt to steal second base.  The Twins often employed that scheme under Gardy's tenure when a batter (such as Span this inning) had failed to move a runner from first to second with nobody out.  With the season on the line, would the Twins send Punto?  Punto was a perfect 10 for 10 in stolen base tries, but to send him here would be an extraordinary risk with catcher Gerald Laird behind the plate.  Laird had thrown out 42% of would-be base stealers that season.  (33% is considered good.)  We will never know whether the stealing gamble would have been attempted because Cabrera crushed Miner's first pitch, an 84 m.p.h. hanging curve ball, into the first row of the left field bleachers.  I would have thought it nearly impossible for the noise inside the Dome to climb higher than it had been minutes ago when Punto walked, but sure enough, the decibel level spiked upward to an ear-splitting level.  As Cabrera took his home run trot in his unique fashion, kind of listing as if he had a dislocated left shoulder, the Star Wars Theme blared over the speakers.  The Twins, who had trailed ever since the third inning, were now on top 4-3.  As seen through my binoculars, Leyland looked like he now needed something stronger than nicotine.    

Mauer followed Cabrera with a single to right, and may have had his second double of the game if he hadn't lost his footing rounding first.  That spelled the end for poor Zach Miner.  Leyland used two more pitchers, Fu-te Ni and Brandon Lyon, to get the last two outs of the seventh inning without further damage.

At this juncture let's take a quick moment to reflect on the two managers' tactical seventh inning maneuvers.  Both employed several pitchers, but the plans were not the same.  My impression was that Gardy used four pitchers by design, whereas his counterpart, Leyland, used three pitchers by necessity.  Part of my thinking is that going into the top half of the seventh, the Twins still had their starting pitcher, Scott Baker, in the game.  There was little chance that Gardy was going to have Baker pitch much deeper.  When he did yank Baker after the leadoff walk to Inge, Gardy had his right-left-right (Rauch-Mijares-Guerrier) middle relief triumvirate all ready to go, and he still had not been forced to use his two best relievers, Joe Nathan and Jesse Crain.  By contrast, I believe Leyland had hoped Zach Miner could get his team three outs in the seventh.  When Miner struck out the second batter he faced (Span), things looked "thumbs up" for Detroit.  But the Tigers were ambushed by Cabrera's knocker -- only his fifth since July 31.  Leyland was probably hoping to save his two best relief pitchers, Brandon Lyon and Fernando Rodney, for the eighth and ninth innings, but he also could not risk having the Twins add to their one run lead.  That is why he brought in Lyon to get the final out, a tapper to the mound by Michael Cuddyer.  

***

Now with the slim one run lead and the Twins only six defensive outs away from the division title, Gardy had another decision to make.  Should he insert his fastest player, fan favorite Carlos "Go Go" Gomez, into center field and move Span from center to right, or should he keep the defensive alignment as is?  He went with the former, even though it entailed taking his starting cleanup hitter, right fielder Jason Kubel, out of the game.  This decision played a huge role in the outcome of the game.

The Twins' 4-3 lead going into the eighth lasted exactly two whole pitches.  Matt Guerrier, still in the game for the Twins, served up a juicy letter-high fastball to Magglio Ordonez, and as they say in hockey, Ordonez one-timed it ten rows deep into the left field bleachers.  During his eight seasons with the Chicago White Sox, Ordonez had continually been a thorn in the side of the Twins.  Now in his fifth season with the Tigers, there was no let up; Twins pitchers never solved the puzzle of how to pitch to this six-time All Star and former AL batting champion.  The Metrodome crowd was stunned, disbelieving the game was now tied 4-4.  When Guerrier walked two of the next three batters, Gardy was forced to do what he did not want to do, viz., bring in his super closer, Joe Nathan, before the ninth inning.  Nathan would have to get at least five outs, two more than he was usually called upon to do.

Nathan overpowered the two men he faced to end the eighth, stranding two Tigers on the bases.  But, the Twins meekly went three up and three down at the hands of Lyon in the bottom of the eighth, failing to hit the ball out of the infield.  

***

Going into the ninth with the score knotted at 4 apiece, the Twins had to like their chances, even though momentum may have shifted with the Ordonez dinger.  Not only did they have the advantage of batting last as the home team, but Nathan was practically in a league by himself as a closer.  Entering the game he had 87 strikeouts in 67 innings, and his opponents' batting average was an abysmal .167.  The Tigers' 9-hole hitter Ramon Santiago led off by nubbing a dribbler down the first base line.  After fielding the ball, first baseman Cuddyer could do no more than dive at Santiago, hoping for a tag near the bag.  He missed.  Leyland wasted no time getting Everett into the game as a pinch runner.   For any team in a similar situation, a bunt was in order, but especially for the Tigers who were second in the American league with 53 sacrifice bunts.  Nevertheless, this was a predicament for Leyland because the following batter, Granderson, enjoyed tremendous prior success against Nathan, going 7 for 16 in his career.  His last three at bats against Nathan resulted in a home run, a double and a triple.  Would it be smart to have Granderson give himself up via a sacrifice bunt?  Fortunately for the Twins, Granderson immediately fell behind 0-2, thus removing the bunt possibility.  Unfortunately for the Twins, Granderson fisted an inside fastball into short right field for a single, moving Everett to third with nobody out.  Nathan was now in a bona fide jam.  He emitted one of his patented, puffed, oral exhales, not unlike that of a horse.  This was a circumstance he'd faced many times before -- the world of a closer.  What he really needed was a strikeout.

The third man to bat in the inning was Placido Polanco, the hardest Tiger on their roster to strike out.  In 676 plate appearances in 2009, Polanco had only struck out 46 times, although one of those times was in the first inning of this game.  Two dramatic things then happened.  For the second time in this game, Polanco got caught looking at a called third strike for the first out.  Then the Twins' nemesis, Magglio Ordonez, scalded a screaming line drive caught by shortstop Cabrera, who immediately threw to first to double off the shocked Granderson.  It may not have been pretty, but reliable Joe Nathan got the job done.

***

One little ol' run in the bottom of the ninth would send the Twins into the ALCS against the Yankees.  Punto, putting together another excellent at bat -- his second in a row -- drew a ten pitch walk from Brandon Lyon, who was still in the game.  Once again the crowd was stoked, reaching what seemed to be a state of delirium as Denard Span stepped to the plate.  I would venture to guess that every fan watching, whether on television or inside the Dome, absolutely knew Span would be bunting.  Of course that's what we'd all assumed, incorrectly, when Span batted in the seventh.  This time Span got the bunt sign and delivered a perfect 1-4 sacrifice.  Now with a runner in scoring position (Punto on second) and only one out, a single from any one of Minnesota's 2-3-4 hitters would end the game.  But as luck would have it, the defensive play of the game was about to occur.

Leyland brought in his closer, Fernando Rodney (a future Twin), to face the momentary hero from the seventh inning, Orlando Cabrera.  Rodney was a fireballer with one unusual statistic: His ERA in non-save situations was four and a-half runs higher (6.69) than in save situations (2.15).  This was a non-save situation due to the tie score.  Would Game 163 play out true to form?

Cabrera drilled Rodney's first offering in between third baseman Inge and shortstop Everett.  In a do-or-die effort Inge drove to his left and miraculously managed to glove the ball on the second bounce, then threw a dart to first to nip Cabrera for the second out.  This play would have made a perfectly healthy Brooks Robinson, probably the slickest-fielding third baseman ever to man the hot corner, extremely proud.  The fact that Inge was playing on two bum knees made the play one of the most heroic I have ever seen.  Chip Caray, the TBS play-by-play man, blew the call by exclaiming, "Inge saved a run."  No, Chipper, he saved the game.  Punto certainly would have scored the walk-off run if the ball had eluded Inge's desperate dive.

Rodney issued an intentional pass to Mauer to put runners on first and second, but the inning came to an end when Carlos Gomez, the defensive replacement inserted by Gardy after Cabrera's seventh inning homer, tapped into a force-out.  The ninth inning was in the books.  We were still tied at 4.

These two evenly matched teams had played 162 games only to finish with identical 86-76 records.  Is it any wonder they'd need to go extra innings to settle Game 163?