Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Saturday, December 25, 2010
KOD 11 – MVP’s & Cy Young Award Winners
You all voted and here are the results !!!
- AL MVP - B.J. Upton 2007 Tampa Bay Rays
- NL MVP - Ralph Kiner 1947 Pittsburgh Pirates
- World Series MVP - Bill Melton 1968 CHI White Sox
- AL Cy Young - Frank Tanana 1980 California Angels
- NL Cy Young - Rick Reuschel 1980 Chicago Cubs
- FIREMAN - Ugueth Urbina 1998 Montreal Expos
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
World Series Game #4
10/22 - Comiskey Park - GAME #4
White Sox 2, Reds 1 (10 inn)
No reason to pull any punches here. Cincy had one option: win or go home. The Reds were now in a position where they needed 4 straight wins to take the series. Athletes speak in sound bites and when asked what they needed to do Cincy starter Gene Schott said, "We need to take it 1 game at a time and not look to far ahead". Schott might have amended his statement to say "1 inning at a time", which is exactly what he did. Through the first 5 innings of play Schott was locked in mortal combat mano y mano with Chicago's starter Jack Fisher. Neither man would budge. Neither man would allow a run. After yesterday's blowout victory the White Sox offense fell back into the coma that afflicted it during the regular season. Schott's pin point control and pitch selection had just as much to do with Chicago not hitting as the cold dreary rainy day that the Windy City offered. Buck Jordan would single off of Fisher with 1 out in the 6th, then move to second on a wild pitch. Sensing that Fisher was not up to the task of being perfect Chicago's manager lifted him in favor of all world reliever Wilbur Wood. Wood was able to get lefties Goodman and Hafey to line out and end the inning.
Despite a single by Wood and an error by Riggs at 3rd, which allowed Aparicio to reach base Schott was able to reach back and get Alomar and Davis to ground out and end the inning and keep the game scoreless. Schott was looking for some break and he got in by way of a solo homer by Billy Myers to lead off the top of the 7th. Wood's knuckle ball didn't knuckle and Myers launched it out of the huge cavern called Comiskey Park. Schott would set the Pale Hose down in order in the 7th and get a 4-6-3 DP on No Neck Williams to fix an error by Kampouris at second. Bob Locker would replace Wood and set the Reds down in order in the 9th. All Schott needed to do was get 3 more outs and Cincy would live to see another day. After Aparicio grounded out to short to lead off the inning Schott needed just 2 more outs. Alomar came to the plate and took matters into his own hands when he noticed that Riggs was playing him way too deep at third. On 2-1 curve ball Alomar layed down a beautiful bunt that only Brooks Robinson or Clete Boyer could have gotten him on. Tommy Davis followed with a frozen rope to left center to put runners on 1st and 2nd with 1 out. Schott looked into his dugout, but his manager gave him that nod that tells a pitcher that this was his game to win or lose. Schott took that sign of confidence as an adrenaline boost, which gave his fastball some extra hop. Tommy McCraw was a victim of that fastball which caused him to loop a ball right into Riggs' glove for out number 2. One more out to go and Schott will have pulled off one of the greatest post season pitching performances in league history. All that stood in the way of that glorious ending was centerfielder Ken "F-Troop" Berry. Berry, who had grounded out weakly in his previous 3 trips to the plate needed to scratch his way on. After fouling off 2 potential third strikes Berry found a pitch to his liking and punched it just over the outstretched arms of Kampouris at second base. Alomar was moving on the pitch and scored the tying run easily. Schott was that close to saving his team from elimination, now he would need to get one final out in the 9th to keep the game tied. Schott, who was clearly out of gas, never got the chance to face Pete Ward and do battle. Instead Ted Kleinhans was called in from the pen to do the job. Kleinhans easily dispatched of Ward who grounded weakly to second to send the game into extra innings.
Immediately the press corps began second guessing Cincy's decision to leave Schott in 1 batter too long, but how can you second guess a decision to stick with a guy who made so many big pitches all afternoon. Bob Locker easily dispatched of Davis, Kampouris and Riggs in the top of the 10th by getting all 3 to fly out weakly. Duane Josephson would lead off the bottom of the 10th with a bomb down the left field line that hit about 3 inches below the top of the wall for a stand up double. Bill Voss successfully bunted Josephson over to third. With Locker due up next it was time for a pinch hitter. Rookie Bill Melton was selected for the task. Kleinhans quickly got Melton in an 0-2 hole, but got too fine and began to nibble, which eventually evened the count at 2-2. Rather than describe the 2-2 offering I'm going to throw it back up to the broadcast booth and let Jack Drees make the call: "Kleinhans toes the rubber. The 2-2 from Kleinhans. Looks like a change up. Melton swings...soft line drive back up the middle...it's a hit ! Josephson scores ! The Pale Hose are champs ! There mobbing Melton at first ! That young man is like a fine thoroughbred with some future ahead of him." As sweet as hearing those fine words from Drees it would have been even sweeter if they came from the mouth of the great Jack Brickhouse who left the White Sox booth only a year before after 20 years of service to the home team. Immediately after the game it was announced that Melton, who his a big grand slam in game #1 and the walk off single in game #4, was elected Series MVP. What an extraordinary feat for a guy who only had 5 at bats. His 2 hits were huge difference makers as the 1968 Chicago White Sox won their first KOD Championship.
Chicago wins the KOD11 World Series 4-0
World Series Game #3
10/21 - Comiskey Park - GAME #3
White Sox 12, Reds 6
Al Hollingsworth and the Reds took one on the chin as the Chisox inched one step closer toward bringing a world championship back to 35th street. After taking a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the 2nd on the first of Pete Ward's two homers the Chisox had a huge run breakout 3rd inning where 9 batters came to the plate. Duane Josephson's two out double plated the final two runs of the inning. The enigmatic Tommy John lost control and interest in the 5th when Cincy scored a solo run on a squeeze play engineered by Hollingsworth to score Riggs to make it 5-1. A 3 run blast by Alex Kampouris in the top of the 6th made this a 1 run game. Small ball came to the rescue of the reeling Pale Hose in the bottom of the inning. Pete Ward worked out a walk and moved to 3rd on a hit and run executed to perfection by Walt "No Neck" Williams. Tommy John was sent up to lay down a squeeze bunt. John's bunt was a beauty, but somehow Ward did not get the sign and decided to stay put on 3rd. Williams moved to second, but Chicago looked to have blown a golden opportunity to steal a run. Aparicio's grounder to second would right that wrong by easily scoring Ward and moving Williams to 3rd. Tim Cullen would lay down another exquisite bunt to easily score Williams who could have strolled home from third. Those 2 runs would make it 7-4 Chicago. The 5 runs that the Sox would score in the 7th would make it 12-4 and close the door shut on the Reds. Pete Ward's second homer of the game started off the scoring. 6 consecutive singles would take care of the rest. Hollingsworth had had it. The bell had tolled for him. John wasn't exactly stellar himself, but he did have a huge lead to work with. After giving up 2 runs in the 8th John was done for the day and Bob Priddy handled the final 4 outs as Chicago now had a commanding lead in the series. Alex Kampouris' 2 homers paced the overmatched Cincy offense. Every Chisox batter scored a run in this event. Tim Cullen, Tommy Davis and Duane Josephson all had 3 hits. Even Tommy John had 2 hits.
Chicago leads the series 3-0
World Series Game #2
10/19 - Crosley Field - Game #2
White Sox 3, Reds 2
Game 2 was played under more seasonal conditions with the mercury hitting 65 and the winds blowing out at 15 mph. Chicago chose to start the winless Gary Peters in the hopes that he could finally wind up on the log side of the ledger. Peters came into the game 0-6 with an ERA in the mid 4's. His opponent, Paul Derringer, was 5-4 with an ERA in the mid 3's. Neither pitcher allowed a run over the first 3 frames. After yesterday's scorefest today looked to be a day for the arms to take control. the 4th inning would see both teams exchange solo runs. Tommy McCraw's 1 out solo shot gave the Chisox a short lived 1-0 lead that lasted about half an inning until Kiddo Davis bunted home Billy Myers. Ival "Goodie" Goodman's 2 out single in the bottom of the 5th easily scored Lew Riggs, who led the inning off with a gaper that turned into a standup double. Cincy nursed that 2-1 lead until the top of the 7th when with 1 out and runners on 1st & 2nd Riggs booted a sure double play ball that would have ended the inning. That faux pas enabled Leon Wagner's grounder to second to become a RBI play. When Ken Berry touched home the score was tied at 2 all. The 8th inning would see another big error by the Reds turn into a cheap Chicago run. With one out Sandy Alomar singled to left only to see Hub Walker misplay the ball just long enough for Alomar to turn 1st aggressively and head to second. Tommy Davis grounder to first moved Alomar up 90 feet and with 2 out Tommy McCraw slapped an RBI single to left to put the Chisox up 3-2. After 7 innings of 2 run ball Peters was gone for the day fully expecting to get a no decision. Hub Walker's error enabled the Chisox to take the lead and give Peters a chance to finally enter the winner's circle. Don McMahon would take care of the 8th inning allowing only a two out double before getting Walker to ground weakly to short to end the inning. Hoyt Wilhelm was given the ball to close out the 9th. After fanning Kiki Cuyler and getting Lew Riggs to ground out to second pinch hitter Phil Weintraub doubled to keep hope alive at Crosley. Lefty Buck Jordan stepped to the plate and immediately Chicago countered with lefty Wilbur Wood who go Jordan to ground out easily to third to end the game. Peters would get his first victory lap and Derringer would be the hard luck loser, the victim of his team's inefficiency with the leather. Both Ken Berry and Lew Riggs each had 3 hits for their respective teams. Derringer threw only 98 pitches in a heartbreaking complete game effort that deserved more than the fate that he met.
Chicago leads the series 2-0
World Series Game #1
10/18 - Crosley Field - GAME #1
White Sox 10, Reds 2
The World Series opened on a drizzly 72 degree day in the Queen City. The home team would start Peaches Davis (4-4, 2.48), while the visiting Pale Hose would go with ace Joe Horlen (9-2, 2.65). Chicago wasted no time at all by jumping all over Davis to ring him up for 3 big 1st inning runs. Little Luis Aparicio, who would go 3 for 5 on the day led off the game with a double. Surprise starter Tim Cullen bunted Looie over to 3rd and Tommy Davis singled him home. Tommy McCraw doubled to put runners on second and third and Ken "F-troop" Berry closed out the scoring with a 2 run single to right center. A Billy Myers single with 2 outs scored Ival Goodman in the bottom of the inning to make it 3-1 Chicago. The Pale Hose would answer right back with a RBI double from McCraw to score Luis Aparicio. Goodman's throw to the plate on that same play nailed Tommy Davis who attempted to score all the way from 1st to prevent the inning from being bigger. For the next 4 innings both pitchers settled into a nice rhythm and no further runs scored until the top of the 7th when Chicago posted 6 runs to turn their 4 run lead into a 10-1 rout. After Berry walked to force in a run and Josephson singled in another rookie Bill Melton hit a titanic shot that wound up on the interstate. Melton's shot was a game breaking grand slam that completely sealed Cincy's fate. Horlen would leave the game after 5 innings and Bob Priddy (1 IP) and Cisco Carlos (3 IP) would close it out. Carlos would be credited with the rare 3 inning save. Peaches Davis lasted just 1/3 of an inning before being replaced by Joe Cascarella who gave up only 1 run in close to 6 innings of work. Johnny Vander Meer was tagged for all 6 runs in the 7th. Vander Meer's lone bright spot was the triple he hit in the 8th.
Chicago leads the series 1-0