2002 Rewind: ALDS Game Five

MINNESOTA 5, OAKLAND 4 IN OAKLAND

Date:  Sunday, October 6.

Batting stars:  Cristian Guzman was 3-for-5 with two doubles and a stolen base.  Michael Cuddyer was 2-for-2 with a walk.  Matthew LeCroy was 2-for-3.

Pitching stars:  Brad Radke pitched 6.2 innings, giving up one run on six hits and no walks and striking out four.  J. C. Romero pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit and striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Ray Durham was 3-for-5 with a home run and a stolen base.  Mark Mulder struck out nine in seven innings, giving up two runs on nine hits and a walk.  Mark Ellis was 2-for-4 with a three-run homer.

The game:  The Twins got on the board in the second, but missed a chance for more.  LeCroy opened the inning with a single and Torii Hunter doubled, putting men on second and third with none out.  Doug Mientkiewicz lined to short, Cuddyer was intentionally walked, and A. J. PIerzynski popped up.  Denny Hocking singled in one run, but Jacque Jones fanned, leaving the Twins up by just 1-0.  They got another run in the third, as Guzman doubled and scored on a LeCroy single to make it 2-0.  The Athletics scored in the bottom of the third on a Durham homer, making it 2-1.  The Twins had men on second and third with one out in the fourth but did not score.  It stayed 2-1 all the way until the ninth inning.  Dustan Mohr led off the inning with a walk and Pierzynski homered to give the Twins a 4-1 lead.  With two out, Guzman got an infield single, stole second, and scored on David Ortiz' double to push the lead to 5-1.  The Twins needed every run.  Eddie Guardado came in to pitch the ninth.  Eric Chavez led off with a single.  Jermaine Dye popped up, but David Justice doubled and Ellis hit a three-run homer to cut the margin to just 5-4.  Terrence Long flied out, but Randy Velarde singled, bringing up the go-ahead run in Durham.  Durham fouled out to the second baseman to win the game for the Twins.

WP:  Radke.  LP:  Mulder.  S:  None.

Notes:  LeCroy started the game at DH.  Ortiz batted for him in the fourth inning.  The two combined to go 3-for-5 with a double and two RBIs.

Cuddyer again was in right field.  Mohr came in for defense in the eighth and, of course, got a key walk in the ninth.

Hocking started at second base in place of Luis Rivas.  He went 2-for-4 with a double.  He also caught Durham's foul popup for the last out of the game.  As you probably remember, he got his finger spiked in the celebratory dogpile after the game and missed the League Championship Series.

On a personal note, I was listening to the end of this game on the radio.  I was on my way to Rapid City, where the next day I would be arguing in front of the state Supreme Court for the first time.  As the bottom of the ninth wore on, and the Athletics came back to within one run and then brought the go-ahead run to the plate, I was prepared for the worst.  John Gordon was on the call.  Durham swung, and Gordo said, "There's a HIIIIIGH..." and I thought, "Oh, no, we've lost."  Then Gordo continued, "...pop up!"  And of course, Hocking caught the ball and the rest is history.

Record:  The Twins won the best-of-five series, three games to two.  They would next face the Anaheim Angels, who defeated the Yankees three games to one.

7 thoughts on “2002 Rewind: ALDS Game Five”

  1. I was in my internship for undergrad, and I was living at home until I graduated in December. So I watched this with my dad. When the pop-up happened, I screamed so loud the cat jumped three feet straight up in the air then took off.

    On another note, the A's really should have thrown Zito twice. Then that would have been four of five starters as lefties against the Twins heavy left-handed lineup.

  2. IIRC, I was at a Timberwolves exhibition intra-squad game when they were doing their preseason camp at SJU. I ducked out of the game to watch the 9th inning on a TV in the gym, then went back to join my brother at the game.

  3. As with most of the playoff games in 2002, I watched/listened to this game at work (a pub). I was in a holding pattern, waiting for a mandatory interview for my MOS before going to boot camp.* Even though they hadn’t shared a division for almost a decade, beating the Athletics to get to the ALCS felt awesome. The rest of that shift is a total blur.

    * This interview never materialized before I got tired of waiting (months) and changed my MOS to infantryman. Things progressed pretty quickly after that.

    1. Boot camp from Mar*-May, A-School through mid-September, and then home briefly before transfer to my first duty in Mayport (Jacksonville). I can’t remember where I was at for this game or series... a bar somewhere, but with all the games on ‘huge’ TVs (32” tube) and cheap Budweiser.**

      *CH - your lte got me thinking. Tomorrow is the 16th anniversary of actually leaving Minnesota for Great Mistakes after being in the delayed entry program for about 10 weeks. Holy sh!t on a shingle ... how can this be!?!

      ** AB brewery in Jacksonville, but no Mich Golden!

  4. Watched this in my dorm on E Street. Coverage of the ALCS was frequently interrupted in DC as they were hunting for the snipers in Montgomery County (Muhammad and Malvo), so this was the last one aired on the area without big chunks missing.

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