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My Favorite Baseball Game Ever.

2/1/2012

2 Comments

 
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Orioles Manager Joe Altobelli
August 24, 1983: The Orioles were hosting the Toronto Blue Jays at Baltimore's Memorial Stadium. It remains my favorite single baseball game of all time. Even now, the box scores look like something in need of decryption by the NSA. The 1983 Orioles team was not comprised of the stellar that made up the 1969-71 Orioles' teams. Brooks Robinson had been gone for five  years by 1983. Frank Robinson was managing the San Francisco Giants. Boog Powell was off fishing somewhere before establishing "Boog's Barbeque" when the Orioles would move from Memorial  Stadium to Oriole Park at Camden Yards. But Jim Palmer was still in an Orioles uniform and would get a win in relief during the 1983 World Series--the only pitcher to get World Series wins in three separate decades (1960's, 70's, 80's).

What this team had was workhorses, maybe even warhorses. There were some greats to be sure: Eddie Murray and Cal Ripken, Jr., to name two. I would probably include Ken Singleton but that's because I love the guy.

I have to give you the dramatis personnae just so you know why this game was so wild and so very much fun.

The great manager Earl Weaver was gone and Joe Altobelli had taken his place. Joe was kind of a run-the-numbers kind of guy. Weaver flew by the seat of his pants.

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The catcher was Rick Dempsey--talk about a workhorse. He would actually win the MVP for the 1983 World Series. Left-field duties were shared by John Lowenstein and Gary Roenicke. It was called the platoon system. One would play against right-handed pitchers, the other against lefties. Jim Clancy was the starting pitcher this day for the Blue Jays, so Lowenstein started in Left. Dan Ford was in Rightfield. Ripken was the Gold Glove-winning shortstop and Eddie Murray was a great firstbaseman. Lenn Sakata was a utility infielder who would usually  replace Rich Dauer at Second or Todd Cruz at Third. Scott MacGregor was the Orioles starting  pitcher, another favorite of mine. Tippy Martinez was the closer for Baltimore. His go-to pitch  was a great curveball. He didn't have much of a pick-off move to first but, with Dempsey at  catcher,he didn't need much of one. Like I said, the roster had some truly great players but mostly they were really solid players.

On August 24th, everybody would play a wild and important part.  Tippy Martinez called it  "the oddest game I ever played in." At that date, the Orioles were in second place in their division and the Blues Jays were just getting their feet under them.

By the bottom of the ninth inning, everything had been pretty much ordinary. The game was  tied after three innings and Toronto scored a go-ahead run in the fifth then added one in the eighth to lead 3-1 after eight innings. The Orioles were down by two runs in the bottom of the ninth.

By this point, Orioles manager Joe  Altobelli had already used John Shelby, Jim  Dwyer and Joe Nolan in pinch situations (Shelby had pinch-run for Kenny Singleton who was a great  hitter but a bit slow on the basepaths. Dwyer had pinch-hit for Todd Cruz and Nolan had pinch-hit for the catcher Rick Dempsey), and Lenn Sakata had been inserted as a defensive  replacement. Shelby was still in the game, however, since he had pinch-hit for the Designated Hitter.

Joe Altobelli took some pages from Earl Weaver's playbook apparently because he substituted like a madman. Shelby bunted for a single and Lenn Sakata got a base on balls. Altobelli pinch hit Benny Ayala for Joe Nolan because Benny was great against lefties. But Nolan was the second and only remaining catcher! It was the bottom of the ninth , however. The move paid off as Ayala smacked a single, scoring Shelby and slicing the deficit to one run. Al Bumbry followed with another single to tie the score.
 
There it was, the score was tied with runners at second and third and two outs. Dan Ford  struck out to end the ninth inning and take the game into extra innings. 

This is when it got wild...

Everyone and I mean everyone was stunned when the Orioles took the field in the top of the  tenth. It wasn't really who took the field as much as who took the field where.

Pinch-hitter Benny Ayala trotted out to left. So where was Lowenstein? He was at second base  for Rich Dauer who had been pulled for pinch-hitter Gary Roenicke. Lowenstein had not played secondbase in eight years! Roenicke, who had pinch  hit for Rich Dauer, stood at third, where he had never, ever played.

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Now the most dire of situations was that  Altobelli had pinch-hit for both of his catcherss, violating one of baseball's cardinal rules; Don't run out of catchers.

So imagine seeing poor Lenn Sakata behind the plate.  Sakata had not played at that position  since he was in Little League! Still, he kept his  mouth shut and put on the catcher's gear.

Tim Stoddard came in to relieve Scotty McGregor. Stoddard was pretty solid and he just had this huge, menacing presence on the  mound. But almost immediately, he gave up a monster home-run to Cliff Johnson. The  Orioles were down by one run again.

After  allowing another hit, Stoddard was gone and in came my favorite closer Tippy Martinez.

What a surreal situation! Martinez didn't want to put the ball in play because he was afraid of the lack of infielding ability of Lowenstein and Roenicke. "They both had the range of a dime, so not much coverage there," Martinez had said.  Roenicke and Lowenstein didn't want the  ball hit to them, either. In fact, Gary Roenicke later said that he was just praying that the ball  would be hit to Cal Ripken or Eddie Murray who were the only infielders left in their own  positions!

Sakata and Martinez held a conference on the mound. It was just unreal to look across from  one to another. Lenn told Tippy,"I don't know what I'm doing." 
 
Martinez was hoping to at least be able to use his best pitch. "Well, can you catch a curveball?" he asked his "catcher."

"No," Sakata confessed.

So, not only can Sakata not catch Martinez' best pitch, there is no way that Lenn will be able to throw out any runner attempting to steal a base.  "I think Lenn was probably the strongest  guy on the team, but I'm not sure he could have even thrown the ball to second  without bouncing it," Oriole broadcaster Tom Marr later said.

Those Toronto base runners were going to steal on every opportunity.  "Their eyes got as big as  silver dollars," Marr said of the Blue Jays' runners. "It was like they were going to commit a bank robbery with no one  in town and the vault already open." 

Like I said above, Tippy was not known for a great pick-off move. But maybe... just maybe... the Blue Jays' eagerness to steal on the unfortunate Sakata could be made to work against  those Toronto baserunners.

Sure enough, Barry Bonnell was on first (having been allowed on by Stoddard) and he took a  big lead off the bag, ready to challenge Lenn's untested arm behind the plate. Tippy Martinez quickly threw the ball to Murray to catch Bonnell in a rundown. Bonnell was tagged out. One out in the top of the 10th inning.

Tippy then walked Dave Collins. Collins was fleet-footed and was ready to steal second at his first opportunity. He took a big lead off the bag and... Martinez threw to Murray to pick him off. Two outs!

Due up: Willie Upshaw. He smacked a grounder that slipped past Lowenstein for a single. Upshaw took a big lead off first. No way he will be picked off, right? 

Wrong.

Oh, my God...Martinez made a quick throw to Murray, who  tagged out Upshaw to end the  inning for the Blue Jays. Announcer Tom Marr shouted, "Martinez to Murray once,  Martinez to Murray twice, Martinez to Murray three times!" All three outs made off of three pick-offs.

There it is in the box scores; Tippy Martinez, 3 Assists.
 
Now all that was wonderful, extraordinary, beautiful... but the Orioles were still behind by a  run going into the bottom of the tenth inning. "I really don't want to go  back out there," Martinez later remembered thinking.

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No worries. Ripken, who would be the  American League MVP that year, hit a solo homer to tie the score at 4-4.  And how great was that? It happened to be Cal's birthday.

Eddie Murray got on base with a walk. Lowenstein grounded out. John Shelby was walked  intentionally. Gary Roenicke struck out. 
 
 It was tied in the bottom of the 10th inning. Oriole runners on first and second. Two outs.

Toronto  pitcher Randly Moffit started his delivery, Murray and Shelby took off  from second and  first. The batter was...Lenn Sakata.

Yes,  that  Lenn Sakata. The nice young Japanese-American boy from Hawaii who was made to play a position he was woefully unprepared to play. The guy who was rescued from humiliation by a teammate making moves he normally did not make. The guy who did not want to put on that mask, that vest and those shin-guards ever again. 
 
And he didn't have to. Sakata drove that ball screaming over the outfield wall for a three-run homer. The game was exactly what Earl Weaver described as the Orioles' formula for winning which was "Good pitching. Good Defense. And Three-run Homers." It was one of only three homers that Sakata would hit in the 1983 season. The Orioles won 7-4.

After the game, Tippy Martinez said, "You couldn't have written  a story any better."

I love baseball.

2 Comments

    Baseball Stories

    Travis

    Baseball is my other great love. I was never a great (or even good) ball player but I have loved the game all my life. My wife has convinced me to tell you the stories that I have told her. I hope you enjoy them, too.

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