Game 3 of the World Series: Ted Abernathy walks in the tying run.
Sunday, May 3, 2009
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
World Series Game 4: 88-MON 5, 72-KC 4 (11 inn)
GAME 4 (Stade' Oympique): (88)Expos 5, (72)Royals 4 - 11 innings







World Series Game 3: 88-MON 3, 72-KC 2
GAME 3 (Stade' Oympique): (88)Expos 3, (72)Royals 2




Monday, April 27, 2009
World Series Game 2: 88-MON 3, 72-KC 1
GAME 2 (Municipal Stadium - KC): (88)Expos 3, (72)Royals 1



World Series Game 1: 88-MON 9, 72-KC 7
GAME 1 (Municipal Stadium - KC) Expos 9, Royals 7




Saturday, April 25, 2009
The Bucs stop here, as the '88 Expos capture the NL Flag in 6
1988 Montreal Expos (M.Weiss) vs 1973 Pittsburgh Pirates (J.Elicker)
Montreal staked staff ace, Dennis Martinez, to a 4-0 lead, which on most days is an insurmountable lead for El Presidente. Today was not one of those days as Martinez felt a twinge in his right forearm and was removed for precautionary reasons. John Dopson came on and in 3 inning of work proceeded to undo all the good work the Expo offense did. Montreal opened the scoring off of Dock Ellis with 2 in the first thanks to a 2 run shot by Andres Galarraga. A Mike Fitzgerald solo shot in the 2nd and a small ball run in the 3rd put Ellis on the ropes and the Expos up 4-0. Dennis Martinez gave a run back to Pittsburgh in the 4th when Gene Clines, who doubled, scored off of a Richie Zisk ground out. Pittsburgh scored 4 big runs in the 6th off of Dopson to take a 5-4 lead and stun the Expos. Zisk hit a 3 run shot and Sanguillen doubled home Stargell, who was on third thanks to a passed ball. If we've learned anything from this Expo team, we've learned that they are a resillient bunch. With 2 out in the 7th Tom Foley doubled down the line then scored when "the rock", Tim Raines lined a double into the gap to tie it up. The game stayed tied until the top of the 13th when Mike Fitzgerald led off with a clean single and moved to second on a wild pitch. Rivera sacrificed him over to third and pinch hitter Nelson Santovenia scored Foley with a sac fly to deep right. Jeff Parrett came on in the bottom of the inning to set the Bucs down in order and save the game for Floyd Youmans, who won the game with 2 scoreless innings in relief.
GAME 2 (Three Rivers) PIT 7, MON 5:
GAME 3 (Olympic Stadium) MON 5, PIT 3:
The NLCS moved north of the border to the province of Quebec. Nelson Briles took the hill for the Pirates. He was opposed by Dennis Martinez, who felt fine after leaving game 1 with an injury. With the score tied at one the Bucs jumped on top of Martinez for 3 in the 5th to take a 3-1 lead, when Manny Sanguillen doubled home Rennie Stennett and Gene Clines. The Expos cut the Pirates lead to 3-2 with a run in the 6th. Briles faced the bases loaded with 1 out, but came up clutch by allowing only 1 run. By this time Martinez had hit the showers due to fatigue. Possibly his manager rushed him back into the rotation way too soon. Tough to tell. Briles would allow the Expos to score solo runs in the next two innngs, which enabled the 'Spos to carry a 4-3 lead into the 9th. Lefty Randy Johnson started the inning and was scheduled to face lefty Milt May, but instead Richie Zisk came to bat as a pinch hitter and lined a single to right. Johnson's sole job was to get 1 batter and he did not come through. Jeff Parrett took over and got the speedy Dave Cash to hit into a 6-4-3 DP. Stennett flew out to Hubie Brooks in deep right to end it and give Montreal a 2-1 lead in the series.
GAME 4 (Olympic Stadium) MON 3, PIT 2:
GAME 5 (Olympic Stadium) PIT 5, MON 3:
By this point it doesn't take a Rhode Scholar to realize that these two teams were evenly matched and every contest was going to be a 1 or 2 run nail biter. Game #5 proved to follow the same recipe. With their backs up against the wall, the Lumber Company needed to pull out a victory to force a game 6 and head back to the Steel Town. It took every bit of grit and resolve to do just that. Both starters (Bob Moose-PIT & Scott Holman-MON) posted goose eggs for the first 3 innings. As you could imagine the tension was definitely beginning to mount. The Pirates broke through in the 4th to score 2. Richie Zisk singled to lead off the frame. Holman got too cute trying to pick the corners with Stargell at the plate and he lost him, thus putting runners on 1st and second. Oliver flew out to deep center, which allowed the runners to tag and advance 1 base. Milt May singled home Zisk, but the plodding Stargell was forced to hold at third until Dave Cash plated him with a sac fly to the warning track in left. Two innings later Al Oliver scored on 2 past balls by Expo catcher Mike Fitzgerald after he doubled with 1 out. Pirate starter Bob Moose was cruising along until the bottom of the 7th, when the Expos struck for 2 runs and made it a 1 run game. Tom Foley doubled home a run and later scored on a wild pitch charged to Moose. With 2 outs in the top of the 9th the Bucs put together an old fashioned 2 run rally to post 2 insurance runs. Gene Clines and Richie Hebner singled, putting runners on 1st and 3rd until Richie Zisk hit a bases clearing double to make it 5-2. Nothing comes easy to the Bucs and the Expos opened the inning against reliever Ramon Hernandez with a Walk and a single. PH Nelson Santovenia grounded to short to score Mike Fitzgerald, but Hernandez was able to induce Foley into grounding out to end it. The series was now 3-2 Montreal and headed back to Pittsburgh.
GAME 6 (Three Rivers) MON 10, PIT 5:
GAME 1 (Three Rivers) MON 6, PIT 5:

GAME 2 (Three Rivers) PIT 7, MON 5:
Game 2 had miserable weather just like the opener. Both
games featured rain delays of nearly an hour. Many of the fans in attendance wondered just how the KOD commissioner could allow a game to be played in these conditions, but somehow it did get in and thankfully it did not have a hand in determining the outcome. Game two was pretty much a mirror of game 1. This time Pittsburgh jumped out to the 4-0 lead, and Montreal battled back to tie it 3 innings later. Montreal starter Bryn Smith was again not economical with his pitches and he was gone even before the end of the 5th inning. Pittsburgh's Jim Rooker, who did get the win, allowed 15 hits and 5 runs over 7 innings. It's amazing that he was around to get the win with such a poor pitching performance.

GAME 3 (Olympic Stadium) MON 5, PIT 3:

GAME 4 (Olympic Stadium) MON 3, PIT 2:
Dock Ellis and Pascual Perez treated the fans to a darn good pitching matchup. Ellis yielded 2
runs in 7 innings of work and Perez did the same in 7 1/3. Neither man would get a decision in this contest. The win would go to Montreal's Joe Hesketh, who came up clutch in the 9th. The loss would go to Dave Giusti who's defense betrayed him. With the score knotted at 2, Tim Raines led off the home half of the ninth with a gapper that turned into a two base hit. Without hesitation Pirate manager Jesse Elicker gave Andres Galarraga an intentional pass to setup a force at any base. Giusti got Hubie Brooks to line out to Dave Cash at second, who barely missed doubling El Ghatto off of 1st. Fearing the DP Montreal ordered up a double steal, but only Raines decided to go as Galarraga must have missed the sign. Raines landed safely at 3rd, which put him 90 feet away from winning the game. Giusti then got Tim Wallach to hit a fly to medium right, which Sanguillen (usually a catcher) caught, but his throw to the plate was airmailed 10 feet above Milt May's head as Raines came on to score. The Expos now had a 3-1 series lead and hoped to close it all out in game 5 in front of the home town fans.

GAME 5 (Olympic Stadium) PIT 5, MON 3:

GAME 6 (Three Rivers) MON 10, PIT 5:
With their backs up against the wall the Pirates came out swinging and broke the ice vs Expo
starter Bryn Smith by scoring 1 in the bottom of the first. Clines led off with a double and 2 batters later Hebner singled him home. No further scoring occurred until the top of the 4th when the Expos took the lead 2-1 on a 2 run shot by Andres Galarraga. Not to be outdone, the desperate Pirates plated 3 runs of their own in the bottom of the frame to take a 4-1 lead. Buc pitcher Jim Rooker singled with 2 out and the bases loaded to knock in 2. Clines followed that up with a single of his own to score the 3rd run of the inning. Montreal made the score 4-3 with a solo run in the 6th as Wallach singled home Raines. By this time Expo starter Bryn Smith was gone. Smith has made it a habit of not getting more than 5 innings of work in most of his starts. Game 6 was no exception to Smith's pattern. The top of the 7th saw the Expos bust it open with 4 runs. Luis Rivera led off with a single. Pinch hitter Tracy Jones walked on 4 pithes. Both runners advanced 9 feet into scoring position when Mitch Webster bunted them over. Rex Hudler grounded to second to score Rivera and move Jones to 3rd. Tim Raines singled home Jones on the 1st pitch and Galarraga hit his second 2 run shot of the day to cap it all off. The Pirates came back to score an unearned run in the bottom of the 7th, but the Expos were able to add on 3 more insurance runs to put the game out of reach. The key to winning game 6 was the power of the Expos pen. 5 relievers combined for 4 innings of work and only 1 run. Floyd Youmans came through again with his second middle relief stint of the NLCS. As his reward he got the win. conversely, Pittsburgh's pen gave up 5 runs in 3 innings of work in relief of Rooker who took the loss. Montreal closed out the series 4 games to 2 to advance to the World Series to play the comeback Royals.

'72 Royals capture AL Flag with Amazing comeback after being down 3 games to 0 to '64 Twins
72 KC (Milo Miller) vs 64 MIN (Marvin Sik)
GAME 1: MIN 8, KC 4
Jim Kaat and Steve Busby squared off in Game 1. The Royals held a 4 run lead after 6 innings, with Lou Pinella driving in 2 of the runs. Minnesota started their dramatic comeback scoring 8 runs over the final 3 innings to garner the victory. Hits by Zoilo Versailes and Earl Battey made the score 4-3 after 7. Bob Allison and Versailes hit back to back homers to give the Twins the lead for good. Minnesota banged out 18 hits in the victory.
GAME 2: MIN 7, KC 4
Camilo Pascual and Dick Drago squared off in Game 2. Minnesota jumped
on Drago for 5 runs in the 1st, highlighted by Bobby Allison's 3 run homer and Earl Battey's solo shot. Pascual surrendered 3 runs in 6 innings en route to the victory.
GAME 3: MIN 9, KC 8
Roger Nelson and Jim Roland met in Game 3 as the series shifted to Minnesota. The Royals built up an 8-4 lead after 7 innings, but the Twins exploded for 5 runs in the 8th. Rich Rollins and Jim Hall each had run scoring doubles in the inning and put the Twins on the brink of sweeping the Royals.
GAME 4: KC 2, MIN 1
Game 4 seen Paul Splittorff against Jim Grant. The Royals plated 2 in the 1st on a
John Mayberry homer and 5 KC relievers pitched 4 2/3 scoreless innings to slow down the Twin bats to push the series to a 5th game.
GAME 5: KC 7, MIN 4 (10 INN)
It was Drago and Kaat in Game 5. The Royals plated 7 runs off of Kaat to garner the 7-4 win. Mayberry and Paul Schaal each homered for the Royals to lead a 13 hit attack.
GAME 6: KC 6, MIN 5
Camilo Pascual and Steve Busby met in Game 6. The Royals had a 3-1 lead after 7
innings. Andy Kostro's 3 run homer highlighted a 4 run Twin rally to give them a 5-3 lead after 7 1/2 innings. In the bottom of the 8th, Lou Pinella hit a 3 run homer off of Al Worthington and the Royals escaped with a 6-5 victory.
GAME 7: KC 9 MIN 5
Dick Stigman and Roger Nelson met in the series finale. Minnesota built a quick 3-1 lead after 3 innings. Tony Oliva and Harmon Killebrew led the way with homers. Oliva made it 4-1 in the top of the 5th with a single, but the Royals plated 2 in the bottom of the inning on Bernie Allen's and Bob Allison's misplays of back-to-back grounders. The Royals tied it at 4 after 7 innings, only to have Rich Rollins get hit by a pitch with the bases loaded to give the Twins a 5-4 lead. The Royals bats came to life in the 8th scoring 5 times. Richie Scheinblum and Paul Schaal each drove in 2 runs in the inning. Bruce Dal Canton set the Twins down in order to send the Royals to the World Series.
SERIES MVP: Richie Scheinblum 28 AB 10 H 7 RBI 3 DOUBLES
--submitted by Milo Miller--

Jim Kaat and Steve Busby squared off in Game 1. The Royals held a 4 run lead after 6 innings, with Lou Pinella driving in 2 of the runs. Minnesota started their dramatic comeback scoring 8 runs over the final 3 innings to garner the victory. Hits by Zoilo Versailes and Earl Battey made the score 4-3 after 7. Bob Allison and Versailes hit back to back homers to give the Twins the lead for good. Minnesota banged out 18 hits in the victory.
GAME 2: MIN 7, KC 4
Camilo Pascual and Dick Drago squared off in Game 2. Minnesota jumped

GAME 3: MIN 9, KC 8

GAME 4: KC 2, MIN 1
Game 4 seen Paul Splittorff against Jim Grant. The Royals plated 2 in the 1st on a

GAME 5: KC 7, MIN 4 (10 INN)

GAME 6: KC 6, MIN 5
Camilo Pascual and Steve Busby met in Game 6. The Royals had a 3-1 lead after 7

GAME 7: KC 9 MIN 5

SERIES MVP: Richie Scheinblum 28 AB 10 H 7 RBI 3 DOUBLES
--submitted by Milo Miller--
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
NLDS: Bucs outlast not so hapless Cubbies in 5
1973 Pittsburgh Pirates (Jesse Elicker) vs 1995 Chicago Cubs (Bill Keller, subbing for Mike Kenney)
GAME 1 (Three Rivers): Cubs 5, Pirates 2

GAME 2 (Three Rivers): Cubs 7, Pirates 6
Game 2 saw both offenses slug it out toe to toe with the Pirates "O" coming out on top for 8 innings. Unfortunately for the Steel Town 9 you have to play 9 innings to close out a victory. Up by 1 the Pirates went to closer Dave Giusti to close it out. Mark Grace led off the top of the 9th with a clean single up the middle and Sammy "Say it ain't so" Sosa blasted one deep into the night to put the Cubs us by 1. Turk Wendell came on to get the final 2 outs and give the Northsider a 2 games to none lead in this best of 5 series.
GAME 3 (Wrigley): Pirates 11, Cubs 2
With their backs up against the wall the Lumber Company splintered the Cubs pitching for 11 runs in this big time blow out. Starter Jim Rooker yielded only 1 run against in eight solid innings of work. Chicago went through 5 pitchers on the day. Stargell was 2 for 3 with 4 RBI's and one mammouth 2 run homer.
GAME 4 (Wrigley): Pirates 12, Cubs 3
Different day, same results. The Pirates again blow out the Cubbies and knot the series at 2 apiece. Cub starter Telemaco gave up 9 runs in 5 miserable innings of work. Richie Hebner was 3 for 5 with 5 RBI's and a pair of homers.
GAME 5 (Three Rivers): Pirates 4, Cubs 3
The decisive 5th game was a made for TV classic. This game had it all: good pitching, good
hitting, great fielding, a walk off clincher and a 1 hour rain delay. What isn't there to love about a game like this ? The Cubs broke the ice when Mark Grace doubled home Sandberg and Gonzalez. The Bucs answered back in the bottom of the frame when Dave Cash singled home Milt May. Chicago increased its' lead to 3-1 with a solo run in the 5th and held tight until the 8th when Pittsburgh made it 3-2 when May hit a solo shot. PH Vic Davalillo led off the bottom of the 9th with a single. Al Oliver then flew to right and Manny Sanguillen flew to left to make it 2 outs and a runner on 1st. Cub reliever Turk Wendell looked to be in total control. Richie Hebner worked out a walk to put runners on 1st and 2nd. With the runners in motion Willie Stargell lashed a gapper that scored both runners and clinched the series for the Bucs in a moment that ranks right up their with Maz's walk off homer off Ralph Terry.

ALDS: KC outlasts Pale House in 5
72 Royals (milo miller) vs 71 White Sox (dan holm)
GAME 1: KC 6 WSox 2 Wilbur Wood vs Roger Nelson.
The Royals jumped on Woodie for 2 runs in the 1st on a run scoring single by John Mayberry and a Richie Scheinblum double. The Sox made it 2-1 in the top of the 4th on a Jay Johnstone double. The Royals came right back with 2 in the bottom of the inning on a Paul Schaal double and Fred Patek single. Kansas City plated single runs in the 6th and 7th and the Sox 1 in the 9th. The story was Nelson, who went the distance, allowing 2 runs on 7 hits, and striking out 5.
GAME 2: WSox4 KC 0 Tom Bradley vs Dick Drago.
Game 2 turned out to be a pitchers duel,
as the game was scoreless through 4 innings. Carlos May gave the Sox a 1-0 lead in the 5th with a triple. As Tom Bradley continued to baffle the Royals offense, the Sox added 3 insurance runs in the 8th with May, Jay Johnstone, and Ed Hermann each driving in a run. Bradley was brilliant, going 8 innings and scattering 3 hits, while striking out 6
GAME 3: KC 15 WSox 3 Paul Spittorff vs Wilbur Wood.
The series moved to Chicago for Game 3, and the Sox brought back knuckleballer Wilbur Wood for his 2nd start. Amos Otis got the Royals going in the 2nd inning with a 2 run double. The Sox made it 2-1 in the bottom of the inning. In the 5th the Royals started pulling away plating 4 runs, highlighted by John Mayberry and Richie Scheinblum back to back homers. The Royals added 5 more in the 6th, in route to a 15-3 victory. The Royals pounded out 22 hits, with Otis, Mayberry, and Lou Pinella all banging out 4 hits. Splittorff went the distance, allowing 3 runs and striking out 9.
GAME 4: WSox 4 KC 1 Monty Montgomery vs Bart Johnson
Game 4 turned into the Bart Johnson show, as the flame thrower
totally dominated the Royals and pitched a jem. Rick Reichardt delivered a 2 run shot in the2nd to get the Sox going. Ed Kirkpatrick lofted a Sacrifice Fly to draw the Royals within a run in the 4th. Reichardt delivered his 2nd homer of the game in the 5th, a solo shot and a Johnson Sacrifice Fly made it 4-1, and that's all the Sox needed. Johnson silenced the Royal bats, going the distance and striking out 9
GAME 5: KC 9 WSox 4 Tom Bradley vs Roger Nelson
The series moved back to Kansas City for Game 5. Bradley and Nelson both were making there 2nd start. The Royals jumped on Bradley for 2 runs in the 1st on a Scheinblum 2 run triple. Mike Andrews evened the score at 2 with a double in the 3rd. The Royals offense broke it open in the 4th, scoring 6 times. Amos Otis and Scheinblum each drove in 2 runs with hits in the inning. Roger Nelson went the distance for the 2nd time in the series. He did allow 4 runs, but struck out 6 to send the Royals to the ALCS. Scheinblum was 4-5 with 5 RBI's.
MVP: Richie Scheinblum, 22 AB, 11 HITS, 3 HRS, 9 RBIS
--submitted by Milo Miller--
GAME 1: KC 6 WSox 2 Wilbur Wood vs Roger Nelson.
GAME 2: WSox4 KC 0 Tom Bradley vs Dick Drago.
Game 2 turned out to be a pitchers duel,

GAME 3: KC 15 WSox 3 Paul Spittorff vs Wilbur Wood.

GAME 4: WSox 4 KC 1 Monty Montgomery vs Bart Johnson
Game 4 turned into the Bart Johnson show, as the flame thrower

GAME 5: KC 9 WSox 4 Tom Bradley vs Roger Nelson
MVP: Richie Scheinblum, 22 AB, 11 HITS, 3 HRS, 9 RBIS
--submitted by Milo Miller--
Saturday, April 18, 2009
"Minny Series": Twins advance to LCS with 3-1 series win over '21 Tigers
The Eastern Division Champions 1921 Detroit Tigers faced off against the top seeded Wild Card 1964 Minnesota Twins.
An early injury knock Grant out of the game. He was replaced by Gerry Arrigo who yield 3 runs to give Detroit a 3-2 lead. Detroit was leading going into the 9th when Minnesota tied the game to send it into extra innings. The score remained tied until the bottom of the 11th when Jim Perry gave up the game winning 2 run HR to Bobby Veach to give Detroit an 1-0 lead in the series. Carl Holling came in the game in the 11th inning to hold the Twins scoreless and earn the victory.
Game 2: Red Oldham vs. Jim Kaat.
Oldham held Minnesota to only
1 run going into the 9th. Detroit led 2-1 when Minnesota scored 3 runs to take a 4-2 lead. A leadoff walk to Killebrew in the 9th started the whole Twins rally. After Jimmy Hall lined out to Young at second Bobby Allison singled to make it first and second. Versalles worked out a walk to load the bases and the pressure really began to mount. Earl Battey grounded to short to score the tying run and put runners at 2nd and 3rd. Don Mincher was summoned to pinch hit for Jerry Kindall, and was immediately given a free pass to load the bases. Detroit's strategy was simple: Play for the DP and get out of the inning with minimal damage. The strategy backfired when pinch hitter Frank Kostro laced a two run double down the right field line, which gave Minnesota a 2 run lead. By the time Rich Rollins grounded weekly to third the damage was done and Detroit's 1 run lead was now a two run deficit with 3 outs to go. Al Worthington pitched the 9th to earn the save and even the series at a game a piece.

Game 3: The series moved to Minnesota with Camilo Pascual facing off against Howard Ehmke.
Game 4: Minnesota sent Dick Stigman out vs. Bert Cole for Detroit.
The Twins again trailed 3-1 going into the bottom of the 7th before scoring 3 runs to take a 4-3
lead. All 3 Twin runs were scored with 2 outs. The 7th started innocently with Rich Rollins popping up weakly to second and Versalles ground out to short. Tony Oliva hit a sharp single to right and promptly moved to third on a Killebrew parachute that just fell into shallow right field. With runners at the corners, Bobby Allison worked out a walk to load the bases. Jimmy Hall came up clutch by lacing a 2 run single to center plating Oliva and Killer. Early Battey singled home Allison for the much needed insurance run. Gerry Arrigo came in to pitch the final two innings and hold the potent Detroit offense scoreless to earn the save and send the Twins to the AL championship where they await the winner of the Kansas City Royals and Chicago White Sox series.

--contributed by Marvin Sik--
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
NLDS: '88 Expos sweep '06 Braves in 3
GAME 1 - Turner Field - 88-MON 8, 06-ATL 5:

GAME 2 - Turner Field - 88-MON 6, 06-ATL 1:
Montreal scored early and often in this contest and Atlanta's bats went cold. Brave manager
Terry Priest said this at his post game press conference, "After scoring 17 vs LA in the play in game I feared it would catch up to us and we would struggle for runs vs Montreal". After scoring 5 in the opener the Braves managed only 1 run in game 2 and could not capitalize on their 8 hits. Expo starter Bryn Smith threw 5 shutout innings before running out of gas. The bullpen carried them the rest of the way. John Smoltz did not come up aces for the Braves as he didn't survive the 6th inning and gave up 4 runs. Every Expo starter had at least 1 hit, except for catcher Nelson Santovenia. Tim Wallach had 3 hits, but did not score or knock in any runs. Luis Rivera continued his hot hitting by homering in his second consecutive game.

GAME 3 - Olympic Stadium - 88-MON 9, 06-ATL 1:

'06 Bravos destroy '79 Bums 17-1 in NL West 1 game playoff

Pale Hose win Play in Game over Brew Crew 8-2

Sunday, April 12, 2009
Motown drives to AL East Crown

Jints / Cubbies split. Cubbies clinch 2nd WC slot

--submitted by Tom "crash" Davis--
Bucs clinch best overall record by taking 3 games from Redbirds
65 St. Louis - Mike Roberts vs 73 Pittsburgh - Jesse Elicker
GAME 1: 73 Pit 6-4
The Cards come in needing at least a split to stay mathematically alive. The Pirates hold a 1-game lead on Montreal, but a playoff berth is in hand. After scoring a run in the 1st on Bill White's single, St. Louis added 3 more in the 2nd. Tim McCarver was hit by a pitch to start the inning. Mike Shannon doubled, then both runners advanced on Julian Javier's ground out, 2-0. Ray Washburn followed with a double to score Shannon, 3-0. An out later, Dick Groat's double plated Washburn, 4-0. It stayed that way until the 6th when the Pirate bats woke up. PH Milt May got a 1-out single. Gene Clines doubled. Richie Hebner singled, 4-1. Richie Zisk doubled in another run, 4-2. Willie Stargell's ground out plated Hebner, 4-3. Top of the 7th, another Pirate PH made a contribution. Manny Sanguillen singled to open the inning, then moved to 2nd on a ground out. With 2 down, PH Fernando Gonzalez' single brought home Sanguillen with the tie run, 4-4. Top of the 8th, relief ace Hal Woodeshick on for the Cards. He walked Hebner to open the inning. Then the lefty challenged Zisk, but lost the battle. Zisk's 2-run HR put the Bucs up 6-4. Ramon Hernandez worked the 8th, and Dave Giusti the 9th as the Pirates held on for the win.
GAME 2: 73 Pit 4-3
Game 2 was a reverse of game 1, except for the final score. The Pirates opened with 2 in the 2nd
on Milt May's RBI double and Jackie Hernandez' 2-out RBI single. In the 4th it was Hernandez again with a single to score Manny Sanguillen, 3-0 Pittsburgh. Top of the 6th, Bob Gibson gave up another run. A lead off walk to Willie Stargell, followed by Milt May's single made it 4-0 Pirates, as Bruce Kison took the shutout into the bottom of the 6th. But Kison ran into some trouble. A walk to Ken Boyer, a single by Bill White plus Stargell's bobble, put runners on 2nd and 3rd. Tim McCarver's sac fly made it 3-1, and another out later, Julian Javier's single cut the lead to 4-2. Bottom of the 7th, Bob Johnson now on for the Pirates. Consecutive singles by Brock, Groat, and Curt Flood made it a 4-3 score. Ramon Hernandez replaced Johnson and shut down the rally by retiring Boyer, White, and McCarver. On to the bottom of the 9th, Dave Giusti pitching. Dick Groat got a 1-out single to put the tie run on base. Giusti struck out Flood, and did the same to Boyer to end the game, a 4-3 Pirates' win.
GAME 3: 65 StL 9-1
With their backs at the wall, the Cards explode for 9 runs and 14 hits as they pound Bob Moose for a 9-1 win. The game's beginning gave an indication of what was to come. Singles by Lou Brock, Curt Flood, and Tim McCarver opened the game with a 1-0 Cards' lead. Two outs later Bobby Tolan's single made it 2-0. Moose and the Buccos hung on until the 6th when St. Louis put 5 runs on the board and sealed away the win. For St. Louis, Curt Simmons threw a complete game, allowing just 5 hits and 1 walk.
GAME 4: 73 Pit 3-1
Bob Robertson's sac fly and Al Oliver's 2-run single in the first was all that Jim Rooker would
need as he and two Pirate relievers took the finale 3-1. The lone St. Louis run can in the 3rd on Ken Boyer's solo HR. Rooker worked 6 innings, Bob Johnson worked 1.1, and Dave Giusti the final 1.2.
TURNING POINT: Richie Zisk's HR in game 1.
SERIES MVP: Dave Giusti - 5 innings, no runs, 3 saves
--submitted by Jesse Elicker--
GAME 1: 73 Pit 6-4

GAME 2: 73 Pit 4-3
Game 2 was a reverse of game 1, except for the final score. The Pirates opened with 2 in the 2nd

GAME 3: 65 StL 9-1

GAME 4: 73 Pit 3-1
Bob Robertson's sac fly and Al Oliver's 2-run single in the first was all that Jim Rooker would

TURNING POINT: Richie Zisk's HR in game 1.
SERIES MVP: Dave Giusti - 5 innings, no runs, 3 saves
--submitted by Jesse Elicker--
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