Author Topic: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round  (Read 1027 times)

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Offline EasyAce

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WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« on: October 28, 2019, 04:36:22 pm »
All the rocking in Nationals Park couldn't stop the road team winning for the fifth straight time.
By Yours Truly
https://throneberryfields.com/2019/10/28/the-washington-bury-go-round/


In his potentially final appearance as an
Astro, Gerrit Cole pitched a Game Five
masterpiece.


Hours before Game Five, the World Series weight on Nationals manager Dave Martinez’s shoulders went from that of the world to that of the universe. Scheduled starting pitcher Max Scherzer’s Saturday night neck spasms turned into a Sunday wakeup with his neck locked so tight he couldn’t lift his right arm and needed his wife’s help just to wash and dress.

Putting the Game Five fate of the Nats into the hands of Joe Ross. Who pitched a gutsy turn ruined only by a pair of two-run homers en route a 7-1 Astro win. On yet a third straight night in Washington that suggested the Nats left their offense behind in Houston after Games One and Two.

Hadn’t they manhandled Gerrit Cole in Game One? Hadn’t they out-scored the Astros 17-7 in Houston? That was then, this was Sunday night, and the Nats’ futility at the plate since the Series moved to Washington remained chronic enough to consider fitting them with GPSs to find their directions home when they did get men on in Game Five.

Now three games worth of the Astros outscoring the Nats 19-3 in Nationals Park suggests this World Series still has a chance of being only the second Series ever in which no home team wins a single game. Maybe an outside chance, but a chance nevertheless.

Ross brought the house down just walking out of the dugout for a pre-game round of stretches and limberings-up in the outfield. He sent it nuclear when he shook off George Springer’s leadoff walk to lure Jose Altuve into dialing Area Code 6-4-3 in the top of the first.

But after Yuli Gurriel bounced one high off Ross’s own glove for an infield hit leading off the second, Ross couldn’t stop Yordan Alvarez—getting his first start in the Washington leg after sitting two out due to the lack of designated hitter in the National League park—from hitting a 2-1 pitch almost into the middle of the left center field seats.

It was something Alvarez only waited for all Series long. “All my teammates were saying: ‘Today’s your day. Today’s your day’, ” he told reporters after Game Five. “And it happened.” Nobody ever accused his teammates of being dummies.

And in the fourth, with Alvarez aboard on a two-out single, home plate umpire Lance Barksdale called ball on what should have been strike three, outside corner, side retired with Carlos Correa at the plate. Two fouls and a wild pitch later, Correa hammered one into the left field seats.

Barksdale has a reputation as one of the better plate umpires in the business, but on Sunday night he called enough balls strikes and enough strikes balls against both the Nats and the Astros that calls began ringing out of the park and aboard Twitter for everything short of a federal investigation.

Postgame, the calls began ringing forth all over the Web to get the robots perfected, calibrated, and into service as soon as feasible. Who knows whether the Astros will get jobbed on critical calls in Houston? Who wants to take that chance too much longer?

“Just because the game itself is full of errors shouldn’t give leeway to its arbiters to be judged by that standard,” writes ESPN’s Jeff Passan. “Baseball is an extraordinarily fast game—so fast that umpires should have assistance. Technology has made their jobs even more difficult, exposing them when they miss a call and airing their conversations about those missed calls. Automated balls and strikes are their savior, not their enemy.”

With Donald Trump himself in the ballpark watching the game, it was tough to miss the irony when fans began chanting, “Lock him up! Lock him up!” in the bottom of the seventh. Not at President Tweety but at Barksdale.

Juan Soto, the Nats’ young star who’d found the home leg of the Series as trying as he’d found Game One a personal party in Houston, caught hold of enough of a 2-2 Cole service with one out to launch it just past a leaping Jake Marisnick’s reach and over the center field fence in the bottom of the seventh. A ground out later, Ryan Zimmerman worked a walk on a ball four that looked like it should have been an inning-ending strike.

Up stepped Victor Robles, heretofore one of the Nats most prominently seen in Washington with an invisible bat. In a Series full of full counts as it was, Cole and Robles wrestled to yet another full count with Anthony Rendon on deck. Then Cole threw Robles a nasty looking slider. The ball clearly crossed out of the zone off the low outside corner. Barksdale decided ball four was strike three, side retired.

If you were watching the game on television you could hear, “Come on, Lance! It’s the World Series! Wake up!” That was a miked Martinez. Even Astro fans in the stands—and there were many, including one wearing a Nolan Ryan jersey from his tour with the 1980s Astros, when their jerseys looked like striped orange-shaded pajama tops more than baseball uniforms—joined the calls to lock him up.

There wasn’t a Nat in the house who’d accuse Barksdale of costing them Game Five; Cole especially, but with just a little help from his friends Joe Smith and Ryan Pressley in the final two innings, did a splendid enough job of that. The third highest-scoring team in the Show on the regular season looked so lost at the plate in Game Five, with or without men on, that the GPS couldn’t help.

“Lance didn’t lose us the game tonight,” Zimmerman said. “Gerrit Cole beat us.”

The Nats’ bullpen did a splendid job of holding the fort after Martinez decided Ross had had it for the night. In a slightly surprising move, after Tanner Rainey all but zipped through the sixth with three fly outs, Martinez reached for Sean Doolittle, one of his only two reliable back-of-the-game men, for the seventh. And Doolittle coaxed Correa into dialing Area Code 5-4-3 after a leadoff single before shaking off a walk to get the side without damage.

Then Martinez decided Daniel Hudson was good to go for a second inning’s work after Springer’s leadoff double led to taking third on a ground out, an intentional walk to Michael Brantley, and Gurriel punching him home with a single through the right side of the infield. Despite having Wander Suero warm and ready.

A four-run deficit is still manageable after seven and a half. Except that the Nats once again couldn’t do anything with a man on base, this time Yan Gomes leading the bottom of the eighth off with a single. But it’s still manageable in the ninth. Until Martinez sent Hudson back out for the top of that inning.

And after a one-out single and a swinging strikeout, Hudson threw Springer a fastball with plenty of speed but no movement down the middle of the plate. Springer practically had no choice but to send it into the left field seats. Leaving even gimpy-kneed Astro reliever Ryan Pressly to put the Nats out of their miseries in order in the bottom of the ninth.

Forget the home run for a moment. The Nats would surely need Hudson in Games Six and (if the Series gets there) Seven. Suero took over after Springer’s launch and coaxed Altuve into an inning-ending lineout on a measly two pitches. They’d better hope they find their bats in Houston and make Hudson unneeded too soon in Game Six even with Monday’s travel day.

For Astros manager A.J. Hinch, who’s one of the more thoughtful men in his job today, it was simply a question of keeping his and his players’ wits about them no matter how badly they’d been bopped until they dropped in Houston last week.

“We feel like we’re in every game,” Hinch said. “We’ve had games where we’ve come from behind. We’ve had games where we’ve stretched the lead. We’ve had games like today where we just methodically kept going with big swings and we look up and we have a comfortable win.

“We took a pretty heavy punch in the gut when it came to the first two games,” he continued. “The Nats came out hot . . . And when you take a step back, and you’re like, ‘We’re still in the World Series and it’s still a race to four wins.’ You win that first win.” And the second. And the third.

It’s even easier when you have an Altuve hitting .360 in the Series and still threatening to break Darin Erstad’s record for hits in a single postseason. And, when you have Brantley hitting .400. And, when you have super-rook Alvarez and cagey veteran Springer re-discovering their previously missing batting strokes.

And, when you have a Cole—in what was his final performance as an Astro, potentially—who tightens up his case for the largest free-agency contract for a pitcher in the game’s history yet with a masterpiece of a Sunday night soiree.

But it still ain’t that easy, Clyde. “When we won in 2017, and then didn’t win last year, you remember how it feels,” Springer told The Athletic‘s Jayson Stark. “You remember the goodness that comes. The fun. The honor. To celebrate with your teammates and your friends and all that stuff. Once you get a taste of that, you never want it to go away.”

The Astros yanked themselves back to within a game of their second such taste in three years on Sunday night. And there went Martinez’s likely pre-Game Five hope that Ross and/or someone else could or would prove as surprise a World Series hero as had such previous until-then obscurities as Howard Ehmke (1929), Johnny Podres (1955), Don Larsen (1956), and Moe Drabowsky (1966).

No Series record-setting strikeout performance for Ross, as the end-of-the-line Ehmke did in Game One of the 1929 Series for the Philadelphia Athletics. No shutout heroics, as Podres, the number four man in the Brooklyn Dodgers’ rotation, did in Game Seven of the 1955 Series. Don’t even think about a perfect game such as Larsen delivered for the Yankees in Game Five, 1956.

And don’t even think about a Nat reliever, any Nat reliever, delivering what Drabowsky—until that point a veteran relief rat and superior prankster—delivered for the Orioles in relief of Dave McNally: eleven strikeouts, including striking out the side back-to-back in the fourth and fifth innings, in Game One, 1966.

Martinez wasn’t destined to be that fortunate. But now a World Series that went into Game Five at Defcon Three, before Scherzer’s literal pain in the neck bumped it up to Defcon Two-Five, goes to Houston with the Nats at straight Defcon Two. Even with Strasburg, taking a lifetime 1.34 postseason ERA into Game Six, starting the first of two potential elimination games.

As always, history doesn’t always favour one or the other going to Game Six. Ten teams have lost the first two World Series games before winning the next three, and three—the Cardinals (1987), the Braves (1991), and the Yankees (2001)—lost those Series, anyway. The Cardinals’ loss remains unique in World Series lore: every game won by the home team.

But so far so does this Series: it’s only the third time the road team has won the first five games. It last happened in the 1996 Series that the Yankees eventually won in Game Six, when the set moved back to New York. Now, for the fun part, or at least the part the Nats hope to make fun: they’d like to be the first to win a World Series entirely on the road.

The real road. The 1906 Series between the 116 game-winning Cubs and the “Hitless Wonders” White Sox was not only one of the greatest Series upsets of all time, the White Sox winning in six, but almost every game in that Series was won by the visiting team. (The White Sox won Game Six at home.) But let’s be real: it’s not as though the White Sox had to jump anything traveling farther than a crosstown trolley car to get from one ballpark to the other..

Well, sort of the road: the 1906 Series between the 116 game-winning Cubs and the “Hitless Wonders” White Sox was not only one of the greatest Series upsets of all time, the White Sox winning in six, but almost every game in that Series was won by the visiting team. (The White Sox won Game Six at home.) But let’s be real: it’s not as though the White Sox had to jump anything traveling farther than a crosstown trolley car to get from one ballpark to the other.

So if the Nats find a way to pillage and plunder the Astros in Games Six and Seven the way they did in Games One and Two, they’ll become the first team ever to win a World Series entirely on the bona fide road, with miles and miles between Nationals Park and Minute Maid Field. It ain’t just a trolley hop, kiddies.

But if Strasburg proves too human and the Nats don’t find the bats they left behind on Tuesday night, forget the trolley hop. They’ll go home for the winter in hearses.
-----------------
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« Last Edit: October 29, 2019, 04:21:39 pm by EasyAce »


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Offline Applewood

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #1 on: October 28, 2019, 05:05:56 pm »
@EasyAce   Thanks for the report on the game.  Nats had better get their act together tomorrow . 

Online DCPatriot

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #2 on: October 28, 2019, 05:18:37 pm »
@EasyAce   Thanks for the report on the game.  Nats had better get their act together tomorrow .

There's no way that Max Scherzer will be available for Wednesday, even in relief.

Not if last trip to the injured list for the same thing is any indication.  :shrug:
"It aint what you don't know that kills you.  It's what you know that aint so!" ...Theodore Sturgeon

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Offline GrouchoTex

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #3 on: October 28, 2019, 05:21:10 pm »
Verlander hasn't won a world series game.
I think that changes tomorrow night.

Offline EasyAce

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #4 on: October 28, 2019, 05:23:17 pm »
There's no way that Max Scherzer will be available for Wednesday, even in relief.

Not if last trip to the injured list for the same thing is any indication.  :shrug:
I suspect a Scherzer Watch coming.


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Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.

Offline corbe

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #5 on: October 28, 2019, 05:37:55 pm »
   Beautiful @EasyAce Thanks for sharing this.
No government in the 12,000 years of modern mankind history has led its people into anything but the history books with a simple lesson, don't let this happen to you.

Offline catfish1957

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #6 on: October 28, 2019, 06:48:34 pm »
Last night the fans in the stands provided more excitement than their team.   Take your pick.....

(1) Massive booing of Trump, and chants of "Lock Him Up"
(2) Breast Flashing ladies behind home plate in the 7th.
(3) Nats fan almost catches HR ball with his armpit, while two fisting Bud Lights.

I display the Confederate Battle Flag in honor of my great great great grandfathers who spilled blood at Wilson's Creek and Shiloh.  5 others served in the WBTS with honor too.

Offline catfish1957

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #7 on: October 28, 2019, 06:51:18 pm »
I suspect a Scherzer Watch coming.

My expereince with back spasms of that type is that you (at least I) am available to walk in a week.  Pitch?...LMAO, it'd be a medical miracle
I display the Confederate Battle Flag in honor of my great great great grandfathers who spilled blood at Wilson's Creek and Shiloh.  5 others served in the WBTS with honor too.

Offline EasyAce

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #8 on: October 28, 2019, 06:51:54 pm »
Last night the fans in the stands provided more excitement than their team.   Take your pick.....

(1) Massive booing of Trump, and chants of "Lock Him Up"
(2) Breast Flashing ladies behind home plate in the 7th.
(3) Nats fan almost catches HR ball with his armpit, while two fisting Bud Lights.
@catfish1957
I also thought it was fun hearing Nats and Astro fans chanting Lock him up! whenever plate ump Lance Barksdale blew obvious pitch calls.

But it was also fun catching Gerrit Cole signing autographs for some young Astro fans behind their dugout after he came out of the game.


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.

Offline EasyAce

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #9 on: October 28, 2019, 06:54:36 pm »
My expereince with back spasms of that type is that you (at least I) am available to walk in a week.  Pitch?...LMAO, it'd be a medical miracle
I wouldn't rule it out entirely. Remember: this is the guy who pitched when he was blue in the face from a broken smeller in June . . .



"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

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Offline GrouchoTex

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #10 on: October 28, 2019, 07:00:16 pm »
Last night the fans in the stands provided more excitement than their team.   Take your pick.....

(1) Massive booing of Trump, and chants of "Lock Him Up"
(2) Breast Flashing ladies behind home plate in the 7th.
(3) Nats fan almost catches HR ball with his armpit, while two fisting Bud Lights.

The guy would rather let the home run hit him than drop the beers.

Priorities, you've got to have priorities.
Home run ball\beer?
Home run ball\beer?
Home run ball\beer?

Hmmmmm......

Offline catfish1957

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #11 on: October 28, 2019, 07:00:27 pm »
I wouldn't rule it out entirely. Remember: this is the guy who pitched when he was blue in the face from a broken smeller in June . . .



If he does, he'll make Schilling look like a piker with his cut ankle.
I display the Confederate Battle Flag in honor of my great great great grandfathers who spilled blood at Wilson's Creek and Shiloh.  5 others served in the WBTS with honor too.

Offline EasyAce

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #12 on: October 28, 2019, 07:07:03 pm »
If he does, he'll make Schilling look like a piker with his cut ankle.
@catfish1957
He could, in theory, also take the route taken by a certain relief pitcher who first had to drop to three-quarters after tearing two shoulder muscles in high school and then go submarine after undergoing shoulder surgery in 1959 . . . and who, incidentally, began his major league career as an Ancien Nat . . .







"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

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Offline catfish1957

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #13 on: October 28, 2019, 07:15:24 pm »
@catfish1957
He could, in theory, also take the route taken by a certain relief pitcher who first had to drop to three-quarters after tearing two shoulder muscles in high school and then go submarine after undergoing shoulder surgery in 1959 . . . and who, incidentally, began his major league career as an Ancien Nat . . .



Remember Ted Abernathy well.  I guess mostly from his Chicub stint.  Didn't know the circumstances of his submarining style though.

My favorite submariner was the Quiz.  Always thought he'd slip, and drag his knuckles on the mound.  :silly:
I display the Confederate Battle Flag in honor of my great great great grandfathers who spilled blood at Wilson's Creek and Shiloh.  5 others served in the WBTS with honor too.

Offline EasyAce

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #14 on: October 28, 2019, 07:35:40 pm »
Remember Ted Abernathy well.  I guess mostly from his Chicub stint.  Didn't know the circumstances of his submarining style though.

My favorite submariner was the Quiz.  Always thought he'd slip, and drag his knuckles on the mound.  :silly:
@catfish1957
Then there was Chad Bradford, who looked like his knuckles actually went under the mound dirt as he delivered . . .



And, once upon a time, a submariner named Carl Mays threw the pitch that beaned and killed Ray Chapman---which led to the rule ordering clean, fresh balls in play at all times, because the ball Mays threw was possibly too dirty for Chapman to pick up in time to move out of the way fully.

Other notable submariners or near-submariners: Elden Auker, Gene Garber (who ended Pete Rose's 44-game hitting streak), and the only man in baseball who could have hidden behind a telephone pole in his pitching days . . .



"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.

Offline GrouchoTex

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #15 on: October 28, 2019, 07:40:30 pm »
Remember Ted Abernathy well.  I guess mostly from his Chicub stint.  Didn't know the circumstances of his submarining style though.

My favorite submariner was the Quiz.  Always thought he'd slip, and drag his knuckles on the mound.  :silly:

Quisenberry was my one of my High School English teacher's last name.
I never asked her if they were related.
With a name like that, the odds were pretty good.....

Offline GrouchoTex

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #16 on: October 28, 2019, 07:41:45 pm »
Quisenberry was my one of my High School English teacher's last name.
I never asked her if they were related.
With a name like that, the odds were pretty good.....

I saw Tekulve pitch at the Astrodome in 1982 (or was it 1983)?

Offline catfish1957

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #17 on: October 28, 2019, 07:41:54 pm »
@catfish1957
 and the only man in baseball who could have hidden behind a telephone pole in his pitching days . . .



Geez I hated Tekulve.  He owned us back in the day.
I display the Confederate Battle Flag in honor of my great great great grandfathers who spilled blood at Wilson's Creek and Shiloh.  5 others served in the WBTS with honor too.

Offline EasyAce

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Re: WS Game Five: The Washington bury-go-round
« Reply #18 on: October 28, 2019, 07:46:25 pm »
Geez I hated Tekulve.  He owned us back in the day.
@catfish1957
Be grateful you weren't a Giants fan. If Tekulve merely owned the Astros (2.45 lifetime ERA against them), he possessed the Giants. (1.50 lifetime ERA against them.)


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.