By Yours Truly
http://throneberryfields.com/2017/10/26/the-nuts-hunt-the-squirrels-in-game-two/Was the second game of this World Series played in Dodger Stadium—or Bellevue? Were those baseball 
players we watched—or the inmates becoming the asylum?
World Series heroes past had nothing on Wednesday night’s, and no past Series goat ever got as much 
time to redeem himself as Wednesday’s, or proclaimed it with such becalmed near-defiance.
Bill Mazeroski, Carlton Fisk, Dave Henderson, Mookie Wilson, Tino Martinez and Derek Jeter, Scott Spiezio 
and Darin Erstad, Miguel Cabrera, Dave Roberts and David Ortiz, Lance Berkman and David Freese, David 
Ross and Rajai Davis? Who they?
Taken strictly alphabetically, Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa, Charlie Culberson, Marwin Gonzalez, Enrique 
Hernandez, Joc Pederson, Yasiel Puig, and George Springer did their level best to turn those past movers 
and shakers into pretenders for insanity Wednesday night. The 7-6 final score was almost incidental.
For eight innings it was Dodger Stadium. Even when Alex Bregman lined one to the gap in left center 
in the third to score Josh Reddick and the ball caromed off the cap of Dodger center fielder Chris Taylor, 
toward left fielder Pederson, which probably kept the ball from turning into a triple. At minimum.
After Gonzalez belted a very unlikely home run off Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen to tie the game at three 
leading off the top of the ninth, the morphing into Bellevue looked almost complete. Between them, the 
Astros and the Dodgers went from that to back and forth helpings of you-ain’t-seen-
nothing-yet. And the
Astros picked one hell of a way to get their first-ever win in a World Series game.
With the Dodgers forced to use their low-leverage bullpen arms after expending the higher arms before 
and including the shock of Gonzalez’s bomb, Altuve and Correa greeted home run-prone former Astro 
Josh Field with back-to-back bombs to the same region beyond the center field fence in the top of the 
tenth.
Puig returned the favour in the bottom off Astros closer Ken Giles, working a second inning after keeping 
things tied in the bottom of the ninth, by driving a 2-1 meatball into the left field bleachers, before 
Hernandez drove Logan Forsythe (two-out walk) home with a single.
Correa channeled his inner Jose Bautista when he flipped his bat. Puig, ever the puckish one, simply laid 
his bat near the plate. Both almost figured. Normalcy left the building long before the Astros, the Dodgers, 
and the audience in the joint did.
About the only thing missing from Game Two’s mayhem was the ancient Dodgers Sym-Phony Band, who 
once regaled Ebbets Field with some of the most cheerfully off-key, off-beat, off-the-wall musical punctuations 
ever heard in a ballpark. They’d have been right at home in the madhouse Wednesday night.
All Brandon McCarthy had to do for the Dodgers in the top of the eleventh was keep things tied at five. All 
late-game Astros insertion Cameron Maybin did was lead off with a liner that floated over the outstretched 
glove of shortstop Corey Seager for a single. And all Springer did after that was drop one over the right 
field fence.
With two out in the bottom and Chris Devenski the last man standing for the Astros on the mound, 
Culberson hit one into the left field bleachers and up came Puig. Puig fought an epic back from 0-2. 
He fouled one off, then waited out three straight balls, and fouled off another pair. Then he swung 
mightily on a Devenski changeup and missed by a hair enough to end the insanity at long enough 
last.
You could hear the dearly departed, original Sym-Phony Band lineup blowing a chorus (if that’s the 
proper word for it) of the theme from 
Dragnet. Or maybe 
St. Elsewhere.
It’s not that anything really went according to plan. The Astros no further expected Justin Verlander 
to prove only human, after all, than the Dodgers expected their heretofore shutdown bullpen to fall 
under the thunder of three of the Astros’ most visibly struggling hitters. And Dodger manager Dave 
Roberts plotted and executed the way he should have done.
Verlander looked like he’d be the story yet again at first. He even took a no-hitter into the fifth inning 
and had two out when Pederson—who’d had a down regular season and wasn’t exactly striking fear 
into the hearts of opposing pitchers in the postseason until now—tore a hanging 2-1 slider over the 
right field fence to tie things at one.
So the venerable righthander settled for the next best thing. As the game went to its eleventh inning, 
Verlander could be seen in the Astros dugout, looking to the naked eye as though bawling his teammates 
out. He was doing anything but. As had Jason Heyward to his Cubs mates during last year’s Game 
Seven rain delay, Verlander wanted to brace them up.
“I just wanted to really remind these guys how great they are,” Verlander said after the game. “I’ve 
pitched against them, I know how good they are. It doesn’t matter how good a pitcher you are, this 
lineup can hurt you so quickly. And I guess maybe that was just my message, is stay positive. Remember 
how good you are.”
“They’re always one swing away from getting back into a game,” Springer said after the game. But in the 
right moment so are these Astros, after all. Don’t be shocked if it turns out the biggest morale boost for 
them is the re-awakening of Springer’s, Altuve’s, Correa’s, and Gonzalez’s bats.
Neither the Astros nor the Dodgers expected Jansen to prove only human, either, which is what he was 
when, with an 0-2 count on Gonzalez and the Dodgers three defensive outs from banking Game Two, he 
threw Gonzalez a cutter that flattened unexpectedly, and Gonzalez drove it over the center field fence.
“I wanted it to be up and in,” Jansen said after the lunacy ended at last, “and it just flattened out down 
the middle. He got it up and hit a line drive. The ball had been carrying out all night. You can’t do anything 
about that. I missed a pitch, he got me.” His conqueror agrees. “He’s the best closer in the game,” said 
Gonzalez, one of the Astros’ offensive flops until then, “but he made a mistake.”
“Believe it or not,” said Springer, “I was actually in the tunnel. And I heard everyone start going crazy. 
And the ball—I heard them scream.”
Until that moment, Jansen was as automatic as closers get and then some. Automatic enough that Roberts 
felt entirely comfortable with his earlier decision to lift starter Rich Hill after four innings. Retrospectively, 
a look at the box score alone will cause you to wonder whether Roberts had finally lost his marble: Hill 
struck out seven and surrendered only one run when Bregman singled home Reddick.
But practically every inning Hill threw was a dance on the high wire with a band of hungry lions beneath 
him ready to make dinner out of him, including and especially leaving multiple men on base to end the 
third and the fourth. Escaping the lions with the prospect of dancing over a trio of righthanded panthers 
in the fifth, Hill’s night was done despite the measly 1-0 deficit.
So Roberts went to Kenta Maeda, a starter during the season but a bullpen bull in the postseason, and 
Maeda got four outs until Correa singled to left to open the Houston sixth and Yuli Gurriel fouled out on 
a popup around the plate. Out came Maeda, in came Tony Watson, and Brian McCann dialed Area Code 
5-6-3 on the first pitch.
Maybe the only real mistake Roberts made was sending Ross Stripling out to open the top of the seventh. 
Stripling walked Gonzalez on four pitches. Then Roberts went to fellow righthander Brandon Morrow, who 
got a prompt Area Code 5-6-3 from Josh Reddick and shook off pinch hitter Evan Gattis beating out a 
tough play from third for an infield single to get Springer to force Gattis for the side.
But Bregman opened the Houston eighth driving one toward the right field line on which Puig drew a 
bead and dove to catch. He missed by a measly inch, the ball bounding off the web of Puig’s glove and 
over the wall for a ground rule double. That’s when Roberts decided to take no chances and go to Jansen.
Allowing an inherited runner to score is one thing, especially when it closes your lead to a single run, 
even if it ended the Dodger bullpen’s 28-inning scoreless streak. Throwing the cutter you don’t want to 
stay near the middle is something else. Which gave Gonzalez his chance to be something else again at 
last.
“The bottom line is I’ll take Kenley any day of the week with a one-run lead going into the ninth inning,” 
Roberts said after the game. The bottom line was really that even Jansen, like the best of those who 
preceded him, is only human.
Ask Hall of Famers Goose Gossage and Dennis Eckersley, both of whom were ruined in World Series games 
by Kirk Gibson. Ask The Mariano, Hall of Famer-in-waiting, whose greatness was rudely interrupted in 
more than one postseason, by the likes of Sandy Alomar, Jr., Luis Gonzalez, and Roberts himself.
“I’ll be back for Game Three,” Jansen said without flinching. Dallas Keuchel surely said much the same 
about his next Series start, and Game One was a mere 3-1 score. As for the nervous systems of both 
teams and the fans in Houston? Good question.
“That game was probably as nerve wracking for every player on both teams as it was for the people in 
the stands,” Springer said. “That’s the craziest back-and-forth game I’ve ever been in, and it’s only 
Game Two.”
Just wait until he, and everyone in Astros and Dodgers silks Wednesday night, shows the game to their 
grandchildren. Don’t be shocked if someone dubbed onto its soundtrack the ancient stomping comic 
rap, “The Place Where the Nuts Hunt the Squirrels.”
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