1969 Rewind: Game One Hundred Thirty-seven

MINNESOTA 8, OAKLAND 6 IN OAKLAND (18 INNINGS)

Date:  Saturday, September 6.

Batting stars:  Cesar Tovar was 4-for-8 with a home run (his ninth), scoring three times and driving in three.  Jim Holt was 2-for-4.  Tony Oliva was 2-for-8 with two home runs (his twentieth and twenty-first) and four RBIs.

Pitching stars:  Bob Miller pitched 3.1 scoreless innings, giving up a hit and a walk and striking out one.  Jim Kaat struck out ten in 9.1 innings of relief (!), giving up one run on eight hits and five walks.

Opposition stars:  Jose Tartabull was 3-for-9 with a triple and two runs.  Bert Campaneris was 3-for-9 with two stolen bases (his fiftieth and fifty-first) and two runs.  Reggie Jackson was 2-for-7 with a home run (his forty-sixth) and four RBIs.  Danny Cater was 2-for-7 with two walks.  Sal Bando was 2-for-7 with two walks.  Marcel Lachemann pitched six shutout innings of relief, giving up two hits and no walks and striking out one.

The game:  In the third, Rick Renick singled and was still on first with two out.  Then came a walk to Ted UhlaenderTovar hit an RBI single, and Oliva hit a three-run homer to give the Twins a 4-0 lead.  The Twins then loaded the bases with two singles and a walk, but Johnny Roseboro fanned to end the inning.

Oakland got on the board in the fourth when Tartabull tripled and Jackson singled.  The Twins got the run back in the fifth when Tovar singled, went to second on a ground out, and scored on a Bob Allison single.  The score was 5-1 Twins, and it looked good for the visitors.  In the bottom of the fifth, however, Tommie Reynolds reached base on an error.  He was on third with two out when Campaneris singled to make the score 5-2.  Tartabull then singled and Jackson followed with a three-run homer, making the score 5-5 through five.

There was no more scoring for a long time.  The Athletics put men on first and second with one out in the sixth, but a double play ended the inning.  They again had men on first and second with one out in the ninth, but a strikeout and a fly out closed out the threat.  They loaded the bases with two out in the thirteenth, but Gene Tenace struck out.  The again loaded the bases with two out in the fourteenth, but Sal Bando struck out.  They had men on first and second with two out in the fifteenth, but Tony LaRussa grounded out.

Meanwhile, the Twins were doing pretty much nothing.  They had only three hits from the sixth through the fifteenth.  With one out in the sixteenth, however, Oliva hit his second home run of the game to put the Twins up 6-5.  It was not enough, however, as in the bottom of the sixteenth the Athletics finally cashed in a threat.  Campaneris led off with a single and stole second and third.  Tartabull got an infield single, but Campaneris remained at third base.  With one out, Bando walked to fill the bases.  Oakland didn't make maximum use of the runners, but Dick Green hit a sacrifice fly to tie the score 6-6.

The game continued.  Neither team threatened in the seventeenth.  In the eighteenth, Holt led off with a single and Tovar hit a two-run homer to put Minnesota in the lead 8-6.  This time they would keep the lead.  Bando drew a one-out walk, but that was as much as the Athletics could do.

WP:  Kaat (12-11).  LP:  George Lauzerique (3-4).  S:  Ron Perranoski (27).

Notes:  Carew was still out of the lineup, so it was again Tovar at second and Uhlaender in center.  This time it was Graig Nettles in left, but Allison pinch-hit for him in the fifth and remained in the game.  Renick was at shortstop to give Leo Cardenas a day off, but after Charlie Manuel pinch-hit for Renick in the ninth Cardenas came in and essentially played a full game.

Rich Reese went 1-for-7 and was batting .328.  Oliva was batting .316.  Perranoski retired the last two batters of the game to make his ERA 2.15.

Tom Hall started for the Twins and pitched 4.2 innings, giving up five runs (one earned) on seven hits and no walks and striking out one.  Chuck Dobson started for Oakland and pitched 2.2 innings, allowing four runs on four hits and a walk.

I wonder when the last time is someone pitched over nine innings of relief in a game.

It's also pretty amazing that Kaat allowed thirteen baserunners but gave up just one run.  For the game, the Athletics stranded eighteen and went 4-for-19 with men in scoring position.  On the other hand, the Twins stranded just seven and went 3-for-7 with men in scoring position.

This had to be a particularly disheartening loss for Oakland in what was almost a must-win game.  They had so many chances to win and just could not push the deciding run across.  And then, not only to lose in extra innings for the second time in three games, but to have both losses come as the result of home runs by Cesar Tovar, of all people.  I'm sure they didn't give up and quit, but I suspect that deep down they knew the pennant race was over.

Record:  The Twins were 84-53, in first place in the American League West, leading Oakland by 7.5 games.

Happy Birthday–February 21

Jouett Meekin (1867)
Dummy Taylor (1875)
John Titus (1876)
Tom Yawkey (1903)
Mark Scott (1915)
Joe Foy (1943)
Jack Billingham (1943)
Tom Shopay (1945)
Charley Walters (1947)
Rick Lysander (1953)
Alan Trammell (1958)
Franklin Gutierrez (1983)
The birthday list (2009)

Tom Yawkey was the owner of the Boston Red Sox from 1933 until his death in 1978.

Mark Scott was the host of “Home Run Derby”.

I've been doing this for ten years now.  How time flies.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 21

1969 Rewind: Game One Hundred Thirty-six

OAKLAND 5, MINNESOTA 4 IN OAKLAND

Date:  Friday, September 5.

Batting stars:  Rich Reese was 3-for-4 with a double.  Johnny Roseboro was 2-for-4.  Tony Oliva was 1-for-5 with a home run, his nineteenth.

Pitching star:  Dean Chance pitched seven innings, giving up three runs on five hits and three walks and striking out three.

Opposition stars:  Bert Campaneris was 2-for-5 with two stolen bases, his forty-eighth and forty-ninth.  Tito Francona was 1-for-3 with a home run (his fourth) and a walk.  Paul Lindblad struck out two in two shutout innings, giving up a hit and a walk.

The game:  The Athletics threatened in the first, as Jose Tartabull singled and stole second with one out, but he was stranded there.  They got on the board in the second, as Dick Green led off with a double and scored on a Danny Cater single.  The Twins could do nothing with a two-out double by Ted Uhlaender in the third.  Oakland increased its lead to 2-0 when Francona led off the fourth with a home run.

The Twins got a run in the fifth.  Roseboro led off with a single.  With one out, Chance laid down a sacrifice bunt-plus-error, putting men on second and third.  They could only get one, though, as Uhlaender grounded out, leaving the Athletics ahead 2-1.

Oakland threatened in the fifth.  Campaneris hit a one-out single and promptly stole second and third.  Tartabull walked and Sal Bando was hit by a pitch with two out, loading the bases, but Francona grounded out.  It looked like it would cost them, as the Twins took the lead with three in the sixth.  Oliva tied the score with a home run.  Reese hit a one-out double, Graig Nettles walked, and Roseboro delivered an RBI single to give the Twins the lead.  Leo Cardenas followed with a sacrifice fly and the Twins were up 4-2.

The lead lasted until the eighth.  Chance again hit Bando with a pitch leading off the inning, bringing on Ron Perranoski.  He walked Francona, putting the tying run on base.  With one out, Cater hit a grounder to first.  The Twins got a force at second, but a throwing error on Cardenas cut the lead to 4-3 and put the tying run on second.  Pinch-hitter Bob Johnson was intentionally walked, but the strategy failed as Tommie Reynolds and Campaneris hit consecutive RBI singles to put the Athletics ahead 5-4.  The Twins went down in order in the ninth and did not get the ball out of the infield.

WP:  Lindblad (9-4).  LP:  Perranoski (9-9).  S:  Marcel Lachemann (2).

Notes:  Nettles was the left fielder, with Uhlaender moving to center, Cesar Tovar to second base, and Rod Carew out of the lineup.

Reese raised his average to .331.  Oliva was now batting .317.  Chance now had an ERA of 2.78.  Perranoski's ERA went up to 2.17.

This was Perranoski's ninth blown save.  To be fair, he pitched 2.2 innings or more in five of them.

The Twins used just ten players, their eight position players and two pitchers.  Oakland, on the other hand, used nineteen players.  They used four pitchers, three pinch-hitters, two pinch-runners, and two defensive replacements.

Before there was Herb Washington, there was Allan Lewis.  Nominally an outfielder, he appeared as a pinch-runner in 139 of his 156 career games.  In the minors he had hit for a decent average, but didn't draw many walks and had little power.  He could run, though.  In 1963 he stole 57 bases.  In 1965 he stole 76 bases (in 90 attempts).  In 1966 he stole 116 bases (in 134 attempts).  By that time, however, he was twenty-four and had not risen above Class A.  Despite that, he opened 1967 in the major leagues with the Athletics and stayed there through the end of July, appearing in thirty-four games but getting just six plate appearances.  He was 14-for-19 in stolen bases and scored seven runs.  That was pretty much the story of his career--he never spent a full season in the majors, but he would be up for part of almost every season through 1973 and be used almost exclusively as a pinch-runner.  For his career, he appeared in 156 games and had 31 plate appearances.  He was 44-for-61 in stolen bases and scored forty-seven runs.  His batting numbers were .207/.233/.345.  In the minors, he scored 486 bases in 581 attempts.  After his playing career ended, he was a scout and coach in his native Panama until his retirement.

Record:  The Twins were 83-53, in first place in the American League West, 6.5 games ahead of Oakland.

Happy Birthday–February 20

Sam Rice (1890)
John Wesley Donaldson (1892)
Muddy Ruel (1896)
Pete Monahan (1902)
Tommy Henrich (1913)
Frankie Gustine (1920)
Jim Wilson (1922)
Roy Face (1928)
Shigeo Nagashima (1936)
Clyde Wright (1941)
Bill Gullickson (1959)
Shane Spencer (1972)
Livan Hernandez (1975)
Ryan Langerhans (1980)
Justin Verlander (1983)
Jose Morales (1983)
Brian McCann (1984)
Johnny Field (1992)

John Wesley Donaldson pitched in the Negro Leagues and averaged nearly twenty strikeouts per game for the All Nations team in the 1910s.  He pitched three consecutive no-hitters in 1913.

Pete Monahan played in the minors from 1921-1940, batting .301 and collecting 2,462 hits, but never played in the major leagues.

Third baseman Shigeo Nagashima played for the Yomiuri Giants from 1958-1974 and is considered by some to be the greatest player in the history of Japanese baseball.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to CarterHayes' daughter.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 20