Let's start this week off right.
Monthly Archives: November 2020
2003 Rewind: Game Thirty-eight
MINNESOTA 4, KANSAS CITY 2 IN MINNESOTA (10 INNINGS)
Date: Tuesday, May 13.
Batting stars: Matthew LeCroy was 2-for-3 with a double. Dustan Mohr was 2-for-4. Todd Sears was 1-for-1 with a two-run homer and a walk.
Pitching stars: Kyle Lohse struck out seven in seven innings, giving up one run on eight hits and no walks and striking out seven. LaTroy Hawkins pitched two shutout innings, giving up one hit and striking out one.
Opposition stars: Kyle Snyder pitched 6.1 innings, giving up one run on five hits and no walks and striking out three. Desi Relaford was 3-for-4 with a stolen base, his fifth. Ken Harvey was 2-for-4 with a double. Carlos Beltran was 2-for-4 with a walk and a stolen base, his fourth. Mike Sweeney was 2-for-5.
The game: The Royals had a man on third with two out in the first and had two on with none out in the fifth, but it was still scoreless through five. Beltran led off the sixth with a single. A force out meant that it was Raul Ibanez on first with two down. Harvey singled, and then Relaford delivered an RBI single. Relaford was out trying to stretch it to a double, but it was till 1-0 Kansas City.
The Twins tied it in the seventh. LeCroy hit a one-out double and scored on a two-out single by Doug Mientkiewicz. The tie lasted until the next half-inning. In the eighth, Beltran and Ibanez walked and Harvey delivered a double to put the Royals back up 2-1.
It was still 2-1 until the bottom of the ninth. But Chris Gomez led off with a single, went to second on a wild pitch, and scored on a Bobby Kielty single to tie it 2-2.
We went to the tenth. Kansas City got a two-out single, but no more. In the bottom of the inning, Mohr singled with one out. With two out, Sears hit a walkoff two-run homer to give the Twins a 4-2 victory.
WP: Hawkins (2-0). LP: Albie Lopez (4-2). S: None.
Notes: Chris Gomez was at shortstop in place of Cristian Guzman. Mohr was in left in place of Jacque Jones. Denny Hocking was in right field.
Tom Prince pinch-ran for LeCroy in the seventh. Sears pinch-hit for Hocking in the eighth and stayed in the game at first base, with Mientkiewicz moving to right field. Jacque Jones pinch-hit for Luis Rivas in the eighth. Cristian Guzman then came in to play short, with Gomez moving to second. Bobby Kielty pinch-hit for Prince in the ninth.
Jones was 0-for-1 and was batting .340. LeCroy raised his average to .318. Kielty was 1-for-1 and was batting .306. Mohr was batting .302.
Hocking was 0-for-2 and was batting .095.
Lohse lowered his ERA to 3.27. Johan Santana gave up one run in one inning to make his ERA 1.57. Hawkins lowered his ERA to 1.62.
LeCroy was 9-for-20 in his last five games and 15-for-39 in his last ten games.
I mentioned Sears' first home run the other day. This was his second and last. He didn't have a long or particularly good career, but he has this one story of a walkoff home run that he can tell his grandchildren some day.
Neither starter walked a batter, and there were only three walks in the entire game. Either the pitchers had excellent control, the batters were swinging at everything, or the umpire had a really big strike zone.
If you remember Mike Sweeney as a Twins-killer, you're right. For his career he batted .325/.384/.554 with twenty-five home runs against them. His slugging average and OPS were higher against the Twins than against any other team, excluding National League teams against which he had fewer than fifty at-bats. In 2003, however, not so much: he hit .281/.369/.421 with just two home runs.. That's good, but it's nothing to get particularly excited about.
I couldn't quickly find out how many times Prince was used as a pinch-runner in his career, but it can't be very many. That he was used in this game, at age thirty-eight, when he'd lost any little bit of speed he had, says something about LeCroy's running ability.
Record: The Twins were 21-17, in second place in the American League Central, 2.5 games behind Kansas City.
November 8, 2020: Spider Summer
I don't want to use the Cleveland team name, but I'm just saying it's weirdly nice out, so go enjoy it.
Happy Birthday–November 8
Bucky Harris (1896)
Tony Cuccinello (1907)
Wally Westlake (1920)
Joe Nossek (1940)
Ed Kranepool (1944)
John Denny (1952)
Jerry Remy (1952)
Jeff Blauser (1965)
Eric Anthony (1967)
Henry Rodriguez (1967)
Jose Offerman (1968)
Edgardo Alfonzo (1973)
Nick Punto (1977)
Giancarlo Stanton (1989)
Bucky Harris was a star for the franchise when it was in Washington in the 1920s.
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit – Hope the High Road
Ah well it's Sunday so I'll just play these folks again and then go get more sleep
November 7, 2020: Well Earned Weekend
Let's take a break, gang, and let things run their course.
2003 Rewind: Game Thirty-seven
KANSAS CITY 3, MINNESOTA 2 IN MINNESOTA
Batting stars: Luis Rivas was 2-for-2 with two stolen bases (his fourth and fifth). Torii Hunter was 2-for-4 with a home run, his fifth.
Pitching stars: Joe Mays pitched seven innings, giving up three runs on six hits and three walks and striking out two. J. C. Romero pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit. Juan Rincon pitched a scoreless inning, giving up one hit.
Opposition stars: Jeremy Affeldt struck out eight in six innings, giving up two runs on seven hits and a walk. Jason Grimsley pitched two shutout innings, giving up two hits. Carlos Beltran was 3-for-4 with a home run (his fourth), a stolen base (his third), and two runs. Brent Mayne was 2-for-4.
The game: The Royals scored two in the first inning. With one out, Joe Randa walked, Carlos Beltran singled, and Mike Sweeney walked, loading the bases. Raul Ibanez delivered a two-run single, making it 2-0 Kansas City.
Hunter homered with two out in the fourth to get the Twins on the board, but Beltran homered with two out in the fifth to make it 3-1. With one out in the sixth, Corey Koskie singled and scored from first on a Matthew LeCroy double to cut the margin to 3-2. LeCroy got to third with two out, but did not score. In the seventh Dustan Mohr singled and was bunted to second, but did not advance. The Twins would not get a man past first after that.
WP: Affeldt (3-1). LP: Mays (3-2). S: Mike MacDougal (11).
Notes: LeCroy was behind the plate in place of A. J. Pierzynski. Bobby Kielty was the DH.
Tom Prince replaced LeCroy in the ninth. Denny Hocking pinch-ran for Doug Mientkiewicz in the ninth. Pierzynski pinch-hit for Luis Rivas in the ninth.
Jacque Jones was 0-for-4 and was batting .343. LeCroy was 1-for-4 and was batting .305.
Mays lowered his ERA to 5.85. Rincon lowered his ERA to 1.45.
The Twins were 0-for-5 with men in scoring position.
This was a battle between the top two teams in the Central Division.
Record: The Twins were 20-17, in second place in the American League Central, 3.5 games behind Kansas City.
Happy Birthday–November 7
Chris Von der Ahe (1851)
Ed "The Only" Nolan (1857)
Bill Brubaker (1910)
Dick Stuart (1932)
Jake Gibbs (1938)
Jim Kaat (1938)
Joe Niekro (1944)
Buck Martinez (1948)
Willie Norwood (1950)
Guy Sularz (1955)
Orlando Mercado (1961)
Russ Springer (1968)
Todd Ritchie (1971)
Glendon Rusch (1974)
Esmerling Vasquez (1983)
Danny Santana (1990)
Promoter/entrepreneur Chris von der Ahe, referred to as "Bill Veeck with a handlebar mustache", owned the St. Louis franchise from 1882-1899.
Tom Waits – Day After Tomorrow
November 6, 2020: The Pennsylvania Polka
This is starting to feel like Groundhog's Day.