Monday, January 26, 2015

SERIES #8 - (8) 1993 BLUE JAYS v (9) 1974 ATHLETICS

Two World Series champions square off in our next matchup as the 1993 Toronto Blue Jays take on the 1974 Oakland A's.  This is one of three entries from the Oakland franchise, along with their 1988 and 2002 teams.  For Toronto, this their lone entry in the competition.  It's a battle between the #8 and #9 seeds so it should be a good one.  Let's see how the teams stack up.

1993 Toronto Blue Jays
If you were asked to remember one moment from Toronto Blue Jays history, the moment most of us would remember is Joe Carter's walk-off home run blast off Mitch Williams to give the Jays their second consecutive Fall Classic crown.  Carter's shot was only the second Series-ending home run in baseball history.  Toronto became the first team to win back-to-back World Series crowns since the 1977-78 New York Yankess.

The Blue Jays went 95-67 in 1993, the best record in the American League.   The team was led by a potent offense that featured the top-three finishers in the batting race in John Olerud, Robbie Alomar and Paul Molitor.  Joe Carter added the pop to the lineup, finishing with 33 HRs and 121 RBI.  Molitor actually finished 2nd in the MVP voting, Olerud 3rd.  The team led the league in slugging and stolen bases, was second in runs scored and batting average, and ranked third in on-base percentage and OPS.  The Jays were only shutout once during the entire 162-game regular season.

Pitching was not this team's strong suit, as they finished the season 5th from the bottom of the American League in runs allowed.  The team was led by young All-Star Pat Hentgen, who went 19-9 with a 3.87 ERA.  A solid bullpen though, led by Duane Ward, Danny Cox and Mark Eichhorn, allowed the team to close out games late.

1974 Oakland Athletics
Probably the last true dynasty, if you will, in professional baseball, the Oakland A's of the early 1970's won four straight American League West titles and went to three consecutive World Series from 1972-1974, winning them all.  The 1974 team went 90-72 in the regular season before dispatching the Baltimore Orioles in the ALCS three games to one.  They then defeated the Los Angelas Dodgers in the Fall Classic 4-1 in the first World Series played entirely on the West Coast.

Some individual stats from the 1974 A's are worth noting. Catfish Hunter, in his final season with the A's, won the Cy Young award for his 25-12 record and 2.49 earned run average, pitching 318 innings with 23 complete games, including six shutouts. Gene Tenace, despite a .211 batting average, had a .367 on-base percentage. Bill North stole 54 bases. Sal Bando drove in 103 runs. And Reggie Jackson had one of his best seasons with 29 homers, 25 steals, and a .391 on-base percentage.  In the MVP voting that year, Joe Rudi, Bando and Jackson finished 2nd, 3rd and 4th respectively, splitting the A's vote and allowing Jeff Burroughs to take home the honor.


PREDICTION
This series promises to be a close, hotly contested battle.  The seedings would indicate that.  Neither team had spectacular regular season records, Toronto finishing with 95 wins, Oakland with "just" 90.  But both of these teams were known for their strong postseason play.  The pitching will definitely favor Oakland, as they led the American League in ERA in 1974.  Toronto, of course, had an offense to be reckoned with.  I could see this series going either way, but in the end I'll predict the A's come out on top.  Pitching usually rules the day in the postseason, and in this spot it's no contest.  The top three Oakland starters in Hunter, Vida Blue and Ken Holtzman, are all better than Toronto's best.  ATHLETICS 3-1

GAME 1
Stadium: Alameda/Network Assoc Coliseum
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 81 degrees, clear
Wind: 16 mph out
123456789RHE
Toronto 1993 (0-1)000000000040
Oakland 1974 (1-0)00000101X261
W: C. Hunter (1-0)   L: P. Hentgen (0-1)
HR: R. Jackson (1, 8th inning off P. Hentgen 0 on, 2 out)

A pitching duel to open up the series as Oakland's Catfish Hunter and Toronto's Pat Hentgen held the teams scoreless through five innings.  The A's mounted a rally in the 6th when Sal Bando singled to open the inning and was moved to third on a double by Reggie Jackson.  Joe Rudi lifted a sac fly to center to plate Bando, and that's all the runs Oakland would need in this one.  Jackson belted a long homer in the 8th for insurance.  Hunter went the distance, scattering four hits.


GAME 2
Stadium: Alameda/Network Assoc Coliseum
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 79 degrees, clear
Wind: 18 mph left to right
123456789RHE
Toronto 1993 (1-1)0020200015110
Oakland 1974 (1-1)000100000160
W: J. Guzman (1-0)   L: V. Blue (0-1)
SV: T. Castillo (1)
HR: R. Henderson (1, 3rd inning off V. Blue 0 on, 0 out), J. Carter (1, 5th inning off V. Blue 1 on, 0 out)

Toronto evens the series up in game two behind the strong pitching performances of starter Juan Guzman and reliever Tony Castillo.  Guzman went 5.1 innings, allowing just five hits and one earned run.  Castillo closed out the game, pitching the final 2.2 innings while allowing just one hit.  Ricky Henderson and Joe Carter both went deep off of A's starter Vida Blue.  The series now heads North all even at one game apiece.

GAME 3
Stadium: Skydome
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 60 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind: calm
12345678910111213RHE
Oakland 1974 (2-1)00210010000015131
Toronto 1993 (1-2)10010020000004132
W: D. Knowles (1-0)   L: D. Cox (0-1)
SV: D. Hamilton (1)

A back-and-forth affair in game three.  Toronto jumped out early with a run in the 1st.  Oakland came back with two in the 3rd and another in the 4th to go up 3-1.  A's starter Ken Holtzman was forced to leave the game in the 3rd with an injury, turning the ballgame over early to the bullpen.  Blue Moon Odom allowed a Jays run in the 4th cut the lead to one.  Oakland plated another in the 7th, but Toronto came back with two of their own in the bottom half of the inning to tie the game up a four apiece.

Both bullpens were now fully entrenched in the contest.  Duane Ward pitched three scoreless innings in relief, striking out seven batters.  The game headed into extra frames with no scoring coming from either side.  Finally, the A's broke through with a run in the 13th off of Danny Cox to go up 5-4.  After the first two batters reached base off of Darold Knowles in the bottom of the 13th,  Oakland turned to Dave Hamilton, their seventh pitcher of the day, to close it out.  He did just that, getting Devon White to hit into a fielder's choice, then ending the game when Roberto Alomar grounded into a double play.

Both teams combined to leave 30 runners on base.  They also combined for nine stolen bases as both teams were trying to manufacture runs throughout.  Oakland now takes a 2-1 series advantage, putting the Jays one game away from elimination.

GAME 4
Stadium: Skydome
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 64 degrees, closed roof
Wind: calm
123456789RHE
Oakland 1974 (2-2)000000000051
Toronto 1993 (2-2)10000000X150
W: J. Morris (1-0)   L: C. Hunter (1-1)
SV: D. Cox (1)
Facing elimination, Toronto turned to one of the best big-game pitchers of all-time in Jack Morris.  The veteran right-hander was up to the task, out-dueling Hall-of-Famer Catfish Hunter by pitching seven full innings without allowing a run.  Hunter, for his part, was exceptional as well.  He went the distance, allowing only five hits and a single run.  The Blue Jays bullpen closed the game out, pitching the final two innings while only allowing a single hit.  A day after stranding 30 runners, the two teams could only combine for 12 baserunners the entire game.  Series heads to a fifth and deciding game.


GAME 5
Stadium: Skydome
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 68 degrees, closed roof
Wind: calm
1234567891011RHE
Oakland 1974 (2-3)00000000000010
Toronto 1993 (3-2)00000000004480
W: D. Ward (1-0)   L: R. Fingers (0-1)
HR: J. Carter (2, 11th inning off P. Lindblad 3 on, 2 out)

In a game that can only be described as an instant classic, the Toronto Blue Jays win in a way that should seem overly familiar to them.  With two outs and the bases loaded in the bottom of the 11th inning, up to the plate stepped Joe Carter.  A hanging slider by lefty reliever Paul Linblad later, and the Blue Jays are advancing into the second round of the tournament.  Carter's walkoff grand slam blast measured 501 feet and sent the home crowd into a frenzy.

Overshadowed by the late game heroics by Carter was the performance of the Toronto pitching staff.  For the second consecutive game, the Jays shutout the A's, this time through 11 innings of play.  Oakland could only manage a single hit in the contest as starter Pat Hentgen was brilliant.  He was the hard luck loser in the series opener 2-0.  Duane Ward came in and closed out the final 2.1 innings for the victory.  The A's were only able to push a single run across the plate in their final 26 innings of play.  Toronto advances in the most dramatic of fashion.

SERIES RECAP
1993 Fleer #333 Joe Carter FrontWhat a series this one turned out to be.  The seeding of the two teams promised that the games would be close, but nobody could have predicted this outcome.  Surprisingly, pitching ruled the day.  Toronto's staff compiled a 1.44 ERA and only allowed Oakland batters to hit .181 in the series.  Pat Hentgen tossed two gems, including his one-hit performance in the finale.  Jack Morris also held the A's scoreless in his outing.  The bullpen tossed 12.1 innings and only allowed one run.  The Jays were known for their hitting prowess, but it was their pitching that got them into the 2md round.

Several players could take home the MVP honors.  Obviously Hentgen makes a case, allowing only two runs in 16.2 innings of work.  Morris kept the Jays alive with his performance in game four.  Duane Ward pitched 5.1 innings without giving up a single run while striking out eight.  Roberto Alomar went 11-21 and stole two bases. But in the end, how can you not go with Joe Carter?  He hit two homers in the series, with the last one obviously one of the biggest ever.  He had eight of the team's 13 RBI.  Despite the other worthy candidates, Carter gets the nod.

Toronto will have their hands full in the next round as they take on the winner of the #1 seeded 1939 New York Yankees and the #16 seed 2008 LA Angels


Sunday, January 25, 2015

SERIES #7 - (5) 1934 CARDINALS v (12) 1977 PHILLIES

Back to the National League for a matchup in the Sparky Anderson Bracket between the 5th seeded 1934 St. Louis Cardinals and the 12th seeded 1977 Philadelphia Phillies.  This is one of five representatives for St. Louis in the competition.  This particular Cardinals bunch is right in the middle of the five.  For the Phillies, this is one of two teams they bring to the competition.  Let's take a look at how both teams earned their seeding.

1934 St. Louis Cardinals
This version of the Cardinals was affectionately known as the Gas House Gang.  It got the moniker for the team's general shabby appearance and rough-and-tumble tactics on the field.  The team was led by playing manager Frankie Frisch and included other stars such as Joe Medwick and Ripper Collins.  Many of the other players on the roster, including the Dean brothers, Bill DeLancey, Pepper Martin, Spud Davis and Burgess Whitehead were either Southerners or Southwesterners from working-class backgrounds.

The team featured five regulars who hit at least .300 (Frisch, Davis, Medwich, Collins and Ernie Orsatti).  Brothers Dizzy (30-7, 2.66 ERA) and Paul Dean (19-11, 3.43 ERA) fronted a pitching staff that had the second-best ERA in the league.  Dizzy's 30-win season is the last a pitcher has recorded in the National League.


The team didn't move into first place in the NL until there were just three games left in the season, eventually winning the crown by two games over the New York Giants.  In the World Series, the Cards and Detroit Tigers split the first two games in Detroit.  The Tigers then took two of the next three games in St. Louis to get within one win of the series.  But in the end, the Cardinals prevailed, taking the final two games back in Detroit, including an 11-0 embarrassment in the finale.


1977 Philadelphia Phillies
The 1977 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 95th season in the history of the franchise. The Phillies won their second consecutive National League East division title with a record of 101-61, five games over the division/state rival Pittsburgh Pirates.  The power tandem of third baseman Mike Schmidt and leftfielder Greg Luzinski anchored the best offense in the National League. They combined for 77 home runs and 231 RBIs. Each had an on-base percentage over .390 and a slugging percentage over .570. Though Schmidt would have a much better career, it was “The Bull”, as Luzinski was nicknamed, that was actually a little bit better with the bat in 1977.

Steve Carlton led the piching staff, going 23-10 with a 2.64 ERA in 283 innings of work and earning himself his second of four career Cy Young Awards.  The rotation behind Carlton was more of a question mark, requiring the bullpen to play a major role.  Gene Garber and Ron Reed combined for the saves. Tug McGraw and Warren Brusstar all helped carry the load. All four pitchers had ERAs at 2.75 or lower.

Philly matched up with the LA Dodgers in the NLCS, and after winning the opening game on the road, optimism was high.  But unfortunately, the game one win was their last of the season as the Dodgers went on to win the next three to end the Phillies season.

PREDICTION
So far, through the first six series of the tournament, the higher seed team has won every matchup.  On paper, this should be more of the same.  But I'm gonna go out on a limb here and say the Phillies prevail in this spot.  Carlton can easily win two games alone.  I think the deep bullpen, along with their powerful offense, can carry Philadelphia to at least one other victory.  PHILLIES 3-2

Game 1
Stadium: Veterans Stadium
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 53 degrees, overcast
Wind: 16 mph out
123456789RHE
St. Louis 1934 (0-1)000100100241
Philadelphia 1977 (1-0)00232000X7100
W: S. Carlton (1-0)   L: D. Dean (0-1)
HR: B. McBride (1, 3rd inning off D. Dean 1 on, 1 out), G. Luzinski (1, 5th inning off D. Dean 1 on, 1 out)

Game one featured a matchup of two Hall-of-Fame starting pitchers as Steve Carlton took to the hill to face Dizzy Dean.  Cardinals held hitless through three innings.  Phillies got to Dean for a pair in the bottom of the 3rd on a Bake McBride wind-blown blast to right.  The Cardinals came right back with a run in the 4th.  But Philadelphia plated three more in the 4th and and two in the 5th to break the game open.  Greg Luzinski goes 3-4 with a homer.  Carlton scatters four hits and goes the distance for the victory.  The Phillies picked up the game they needed to open the series.

Game 2
Stadium: Veterans Stadium
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 51 degrees, clear
Wind: calm
123456789RHE
St. Louis 1934 (0-2)0011010003132
Philadelphia 1977 (2-0)2000010014101
W: G. Garber (1-0)   L: J. Haines (0-1)
HR: G. Luzinski (2, 1st inning off P. Dean 1 on, 2 out)

Philadelphia struck first in the 1st inning on a 485 foot monster two-run blast to left-center by Greg Luzinski, his second of the series.  St. Louis had their chances against Phillies starter Jim Lonborg.  Frankie Frisch was thrown out at the plate in the top of the 1st trying to score.  They stranded the bases load with only one out in the 2nd.  The Cards managed to push across single runs in both the 3rd and 4th innings to tie the score, but stranded runners in scoring position in both frames.

The game headed into the 6th still knotted at two apiece.  Warren Brusstar had relieved Lonborg on the hill for the Phils.  After retiring the first two batters he faced in the inning, the Cards mounted a rally, loading the bases before Ripper Collins singled home the go ahead run.  The inning could have continued for St. Louis if Frisch was not thrown out at the plate for the second time in the game!  Paul Dean continued on the mound for the Cards in the bottom half.  After giving up a leadoff walk to Luzinksi to start the inning, Greg Maddox drove him home with a double off the wall one batter later.  The game was again tied heading into the 7th.


And this is where the Philadelphia bullpen earned their money.  Tug McGraw came in and tossed two no-hit innings in the 7th and 8th.  Gene Garber did the same in the 9th.  Jesse Haines had releived Dean in the 8th.and got out of that inning without incident.  But after giving up a leadoff single to Tommy Hutton to begin the 9th, Bake McBride came up one batter later and delivered a walk-off triple to center to send the home team home victorious.  St. Louis stranded 12 baserunners in the contest.  They managed to collect 13 hits off of Phils starter Lonborg along with three walks in only 4.1 innings, but couldn't make the big inning materialize.  Series now heads to St. Louis with Philadelphia holding a commanding 2-0 series lead.

Game 3
Stadium: Sportsmans Park
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 86 degrees, clear
Wind: 12 mph left to right
123456789RHE
Philadelphia 1977 (2-1)000000000050
St. Louis 1934 (1-2)20003000X5101
W: T. Carleton (1-0)   L: L. Christensen (0-1)

In game #3, another pitcher named Carelton comes through for his team.  This time it's James "Tex" Carelton throwing the gem, a five-hit shutout to keep the Cardinals hopes alive.  St. Louis plated two in the bottom of the 1st and that's all they would need.  Game was costly for the Phils as starting catcher Bob Boone was injured in the 3rd inning and he'll miss the remainder of the series.  Leo Durocher was also injured during the game for the Cardinals, but his injury isn't considered serious.  St. Louis will look to even things up in game #4 and send the series into a deciding fifth game.



Game 4
Stadium: Sportsmans Park
Game Time: 8:05 PM
Weather: 56 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind: 10 mph left to right
123456789RHE
Philadelphia 1977 (3-1)0000312017101
St. Louis 1934 (1-3)000001000171
W: W. Brusstar (1-0)   L: W. Hallahan (0-1)
SV: T. McGraw (1)
HR: L. Bowa (1, 9th inning off B. Walker 0 on, 2 out)

Both starting pitchers knew the importance of this contest from the first pitch, and both brought their "A" games to the mound.  St. Louis starter Wild Bill Halahan and the Phillies Ron Reed both held the other team in check through four innings of work.  But then the Philadelphia bats came alive, scoring three in the 5th, another in the 6th, and two more in the 7th to put the game out of reach and send the Phillies onto the second round of the tournament.

Series Recap
1977 O-Pee-Chee #118 Greg Luzinski FrontAs predicted, the Phillies were able to take down the higher seed in this matchup.  Game one was probably the key as Steve Carlton was able to go the distance and put the Cardinals on their heels.  Once Philadelphia dispatched St. Louis in the second game, it was too much for the Cardinals to overcome.  The Phillies as a team held St. Louis without a home run in the four games.  Frankie Frisch, the Cardinals player/manager, did have a fine series though, hitting .462 with a double and a pair of triples.  Several Phillies played key roles in the series victory.  Steve Carlton threw a complete game in the opener.  Bake McBride homered in the first game and was the hero in the second with his 9th inning walk off triple.  Reliever Tug McGraw threw five shutout innings and picked up the save in the fourth and final game.  But the guy that stands out for MVP honors is Greg Luzinski.  The Bull homered in each of the first two games at Veterans Stadium.  He also knocked two triples in the series and finished with a batting average of .429 in the four games.  Philadelphia will go onto the second round and play the winner of the matchup between the #4 seeded 1957 Milwaukee Braves and the #13 seeded 1998 San Diego Padres.

Saturday, August 2, 2014

SERIES #6 - (4) 2001 MARINERS v (13) 1986 RED SOX

In this installment, we head to the Connie Mack Bracket for the match-up between the 4th seeded 2001 Seattle Mariners and the 13th seeded 1986 Boston Red Sox.  This is the lone representative for the Seattle franchise.  They are also the highest ranked team in the tournament not to win a World Series title.  This is one of four Boston teams to be represented.  Let's take a look at how the team's compare.

2001 Seattle Mariners
The 2001 Seattle Mariners tied the 1906 Chicago Cubs for most wins in a single season with 116.  They defeated a 102 win Oakland A's team in the West Division of the American League by a full 14 games.  In the playoff, they opened up by defeating the Cleveland Indians three games to two in the League Division Series to advance to the ALCS.  Unfortunately for the Mariners and their fans, that would be the end of the road as they were defeated handily by the New York Yankees four out of five games to end their magical run.

Ichiro Suzuki took the league by storm in 2001, leading the league in batting with a .350 mark while stealing 56 bases.  He won both the Rookie-of-the-Year and Most Valuable Player awards.  Veterans Bret Boone (.950 OPS, 37 HR, 141 RBI) and Edgar Martinez (.966 OPS, 23 HR, 116 RBI) also had big seasons.  The team offense as a whole led the American League in runs, batting average, on-base percentage and stolen bases.

The Mariners pitching was also excellent, leading the AL in both ERA an WHIP.  The staff was led by 38-year old Jamie Moyer (20-6 3.43 ERA) and second year starter Freddy Garcia (18-8 3.05 ERA).  Five starters actually won double-digit games.  The bullpen was also the best in the league.  Arthur Rhodes (8-0 1.72 ERA), Jeff Nelson (4-3 2.76 ERA) and Norm Charlton (4-2 3.02 ERA) provided the setup work.  Kazuhiro Sasaki recorded 45 saves as the closer.

1986 Boston Red Sox
For three consecutive batters in game 6 of the 1986 World Series, the Boston Red Sox were within one strike of winning their first series title since 1918.  In each instance, the result was a single by a New York Mets batter.  Everybody remembers Mookie Wilson's dribbler going between Bill Buckner's legs.  Boston lost that game, which forced a Game 7.  In the sixth inning of the deciding game, the Red Sox held a 3-0 lead, only to lose in the end 8-5.  It was one of the most agonizing defeats in the history of sports.

Boston made it to the series by going 95-66 for the best record in the American League.  They played a classic ALCS against the California Angels, eventually winning that series in seven games to advance to the Fall Classic.  The team was led by a 23-year old Roger Clemens, who won his first of seven Cy Young awards.  He also secured the MVP award in 1986 for a season that saw him go 24-4 with a 2.48 ERA while striking out 238 batters.  The offense was paced by Wade Boggs, who led the American League in hitting with a .357 average.

PREDICTION
The Red Sox have one thing going for them, and that's Rocket Roger.  But he will only be able to pitch in two games at most.  Seattle is just too strong in this spot.  It's a team with no real weakness.  We'll give the Sox one win with Clemens on the hill but that's it.  Mariners will advance.  MARINERS 3-1

Fenway Park
123456789RHE
Seattle 2001 (1-0)001010051890
Boston 1986 (0-1)000000201360
W: F. Garcia (1-0)   L: S. Crawford (0-1)
HR: E. Martinez (1, 9th inning off J. Sellers 0 on, 0 out)

Boston elected to throw a curveball right off the bat in the series, electing to start veteran Tom Seaver in game one over Roger Clemens.  If the future Hall-of-Famer could steal the opener, the Sox would be looking good heading into game two with the '86 MVP on the hill.  Unfortunately for the Red Sox, Freddy Garcia didn't want to cooperate.

Seaver, for his part, pitched quite well, throwing into the 7th while allowing only five hits and two runs.  The Sox could only muster a pair of hits off Garcia through the first six innings, but they tied the game up in the bottom of the 7th when Garcia finally started to tire.  But the Mariners struck for five big runs off of the Boston bullpen in the 8th to take control.  Garcia went the distance for the win.  Boston now needs Clemens in the second game at Fenway to avoid going in a 2-0 hole.


Fenway Park
12345678910RHE
Seattle 2001 (1-1)0010010000280
Boston 1986 (1-1)00100100013100
W: R. Clemens (1-0)   L: J. Nelson (0-1)

20-game winner Jamie Moyer had the unenviable task of dueling Roger Clemens in game two, but the crafty left-hander was up to the task.  Seattle struck first in this one, manufacturing a run in the 3rd to take an early lead.  But Boston came right back with one of their own in the bottom half of the inning to tie the game back up.  The Mariners pushed another run across in the 6th off of Clemens, only to see the Sox respond again in the bottom half with a run of their own.

Moyer pitched into the 8th, but after a leadoff double by Rich Gedman, he was relieved by Arthur Rhodes.  Wade Boggs was issued an intentional pass to setup the force play.  Both runners moved up a base when Bill Buckner grounded out for the first out of the inning.  With runners on second and third, Jim Rice was intentionally walked to load the bases.  Ed Romero was called upon to pinch-hit, and he laid down an attempted suicide squeeze bunt.  But the lead runner was gunned down at the plate to keep the game tied.  Dwight Evans struck out with the bases loaded to end the inning.

The game headed to the 9th still tied 2-2.
Neither team scored in the 9th to send the game to extra-innings.  Clemens, still on the hill for the Sox, struck out two batters in the 10th to keep the game tied.  Jeff Nelson relieved Rhodes for the M's.  Buckner opened the inning with a single.  After Jim Rice flew out to deep right, Dave Henderson stepped up and drilled a double to left, scoring Buckner and knotting the series at a game apiece.  Clemens goes the full ten innings, striking out 15 Seattle batters.  The series heads out West for the final games.

Game 3
Safeco Field
 123456789 RHE
Boston 1986 (1-2)200000100 380
Seattle 2001 (2-1)00001300X 470
W: A. Sele (1-0)   L: B. Hurst (0-1)
SV: K. Sasaki (1)
HR: R. Gedman (1, 1st inning off A. Sele 1 on, 0 out)
HR: D. Wilson (1, 6th inning off B. Hurst 2 on, 1 out)

Boston hit the ground running in this one.  Leadoff hitter doubled off Seattle starter Aaron Sele to open the game, then came home when second hitter Rich Gedman blasted a deep drive to right to give the Sox a super fast 2-0 lead.  Boston starter Bruce Hurst was crusing along through four, but was touched for a single run in the 5th to tie the game at one apiece.

Sele had settled down at this point.  He set the Sox down in order in the 6th.  The Mariners would take the lead for good in the bottom half of the inning when catcher Dan Wilson cracked a three-run homer.  Boston pushed a single run across in the 7th to cut the lead to one, but Arthur Rhodes and Kaz Sasaki closed out the final two innings to put the Mariners up two game to one in the series.  They look to close it out in game four.

Game 4
Safeco Field
 123456789 RHE
Boston 1986 (1-3)000000020 270
Seattle 2001 (3-1)20620001X 11110
W: P. Abbott (1-0)   L: O. Boyd (0-1)
HR: D. Bell (1, 3rd inning off B. Stanley 2 on, 2 out), M. Cameron (1, 8th inning off S. Stewart 0 on, 1 out)

The Mariners would not be denied in game four.  They scored two in the first to take the early lead off Boston starter Oil Can Boyd, then plated six in the 3rd and two more in the 4th to seal the deal.  Seattle starter Paul Abbott was strong in this one, tossing the complete game, giving up only seven hits and two runs.

Series Recap
This one pretty much played out as expected.  Boston almost turned the series on it's head though in the first game by throwing Tom Seaver on the mound to start the opener.  The game was actually tied, at Fenway, heading into the 8th inning.  If the Sox could have pulled that one out heading into game two with Roger Clemens on the hill, the outcome of the series could have been different.  But as it was, they lost game one.  Clemens came back and won game two, but Seattle was just too much at home and closed the series out in four.  Freddy Garcia earned series MVP honors for going the distance in the opener.  The Mariners advance to play the 1954 Cleveland Indians in the second round