Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Cards Force Game 6!


Albert Pujols launches his 3-run homer that stunned the Astros and kept the Cards breathing in the NLCS. By David J. Phillip, AP




CARDS SEND ASTROS REELING WITH DRAMATIC VICTORY IN GAME 5!
By Mike Lopresti, Gannett News Service

HOUSTON — So back to St. Louis they go. The revived Cardinals and the unfulfilled and shattered Houston Astros, who must now be looking over their shoulders, hoping history is not catching up to them yet again.

With one swing of the incomparable Albert Pujols' bat, everything changed in the National League Monday night.

With a three-run, two-out homer in the ninth inning, Pujols turned roaring cheers into shocked silence, and a 4-2 fatal St. Louis loss into a 5-4 victory of salvation.

With a stunning blast off closer Brad Lidge, Pujols transformed a Houston celebration into a shock that may be impossible to get over.

"It couldn't be better than this," Pujols said. "I just couldn't believe I did it."

"You saw some magic there," St. Louis manager Tony La Russa said. "Once in a while, you get a miracle."

But in the other clubhouse? "Well," manager Phil Garner began, "it's terrible."

The National League Championship Series is tied 3-2. No misprint, that. The Astros still lead, but the Cardinals have forced the issue to Busch Stadium, with a lightning bolt that made a pennant disappear before the Astros' eyes.

And after keeping the Houston champagne bottles corked Monday night — after not only winning but breaking a city's heart — the Cardinals can reasonably feel their chances now are at least even.

"It's not over until you make 27 outs," Pujols said. "That's the attitude we were doing all year long. That's why we win this game tonight, because we believe in ourselves."

"Tough loss, no question," Garner said. "But we've still got a lot of baseball to play."

They all remember last October.

That's when the Astros took a 3-2 lead to St. Louis, and watched all their World Series hopes fall part.

"It feels different than last year," La Russa said.

The difference this year is the Astros, who had the chance to finish off the Cardinals Monday night in the warm and noisy embraces of roofed-over Minute Maid Park. The first opportunity the Astros had to clinch a pennant at home since 1980.

And it seemed meant to be, when Lance Berkman took a Chris Carpenter pitch the opposite way for a three-run homer and 4-2 lead in the seventh inning. The hit Houston had waited four decades for, or so it seemed at the time.

Until then, Carpenter and Andy Pettitte been in a willful, determined duel, evading threats, each give up soft run-scoring hits early and nothing more.

With the score 4-2, the matter was turned over to the Astros bullpen for final closure. The bullpen that has so rarely given way. Especially Lidge.

This time he did.

It began with two outs. Actually with two strikes on David Eckstein. One more pitch, and the Astros' long wait would be over.

"You're high as a kite," Garner said.

But Eckstein singled into left. "It wasn't pretty," he said. "It found a hole."

Jim Edmonds walked. Lidge did not quite seem himself, perhaps forcing the moment, knowing how much it meant.

"You can't walk him," Garner said. "Brad knows that and that was a mistake."

Pujols. As dangerous and revered a hitter as there is in baseball, but shackled this night. He had struck out with two men on in the third, and grounded out with a man on in the seventh.

But Pujols never sleeps for long. He had put his batting gloves on as the ninth began, as a gesture of hope, even though he was scheduled fifth to hit. No matter what happened, he wanted the game in his hands.

"I wanted to make the last out," he said. "If it's anybody that wants to make the last out, I wanted to make it. Which I didn't.

Kneeling in the on-deck center, watching Edmonds work his walk, he prayed.

"Just give me strength ...

Garner visited Lidge on the mound. Told him it didn't matter if he walked Pujols. Just don't give in and make a mistake.

The first pitch was a strike. A good slider. Lidge thought, go to it again.

Pujols was waiting, not even thinking about the shocker to come.

"Don't try to be a hero," he said to himself. "Don' try to hit a three-run homer. Just try to hit a base hit."

But he caught the Lidge pitch full and square, and sent it deep into the night.

"I knew it was gone," Lidge said. "I wish I had that pitch back was the immediate feeling.

"This will sting. But I'm the closer. I have to put it behind me."

"He distinguishes himself everyday in his whole career," La Russa said of Pujols.

Especially Monday.

So now the shadows of the past begin to crowd in on the Houston faithful, who now must yearn for deliverance in a hotly hostile place.

There's the grief of 1980, when they had two chances to clinch a pennant in the Astrodome and lost both in extra innings to Philadelphia.

The torment of 1986, when they were eliminated in a 16-inning classic by the Mets.

The anguish from last season.

And this foreboding number. The Astros, who entered the National League as the Colt .45s in 1962, are now 2-9 all-time in clinching opportunities. They led in six of those nine games, including Monday.

That was about to be wiped clean. One more out ... a few more seconds ...

Then Pujols took his swing.

"It will just make it all the more meaningful," Astros owner Drayton McLane said, "when we do it in St. Louis."

Maybe. But never have 40,000 people turned silent faster.

They won't be quiet in Busch Stadium when Game 6 starts Wednesday night.

Monday, October 17, 2005

White Sox '59 World Series Team!


Scrappy Nellie Fox was a catalyst for the "Go-Go" White Sox of the 1950s. The 12-time All-Star was the American League MVP in 1959, leading the White Sox to their first World Series in 40 years. He led the American League in hits four times and in fewest strikeouts 10 times. He compiled 2,663 hits, while striking out just 216 times in 9,232 at-bats. He was a three-time Gold Glove winner and set the major league record for consecutive games played at second base (798).


Quote
"I've never seen anybody who wanted to play more than Fox did. In spring training you had to run him off the field to get him to rest, and I mean literally run him off." — Paul Richards

Did You Know... that Nellie Fox holds the record for most consecutive years leading the league in singles (seven, 1954-1960).

After nearly a half-century of ho-hum baseball, the White Sox will get a chance at their first title since 1917.

And they will get a shot at some long overdue redemption — they lost the most infamous World Series ever, when Shoeless Joe and his "Black Sox" threw games against Cincinnati in 1919 and gave the sport a black eye.

The 46-year gap between Series appearances is the longest in major league history. The Chicago Cubs would end up with an even longer one, if they ever get back — their last NL pennant was in 1945.

"It finally puts us above the Cubs, because they've been getting all the credit," said bench coach Harold Baines, who played more than 13 of his 22 seasons with the White Sox.

The last time the Windy City's South Side team made it this far, it was all about Nellie Fox and his Go-Go Sox of 1959, who lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers in six games.

Here is a roster of the team that made it to the World Series in 1959 after winning 94 games in the regular season (154 game seasons). See if you remember any of these guys...

1959 Chicago White Sox

Complete Roster

# Pitchers Height Weight Throws Bats Date Of Birth
25 Rudy Arias 5-10 165 Left Left 06-06-1931
22 Dick Donovan 6-03 205 Right Left 12-07-1927
18 Barry Latman 6-03 210 Right Right 05-21-1936
27 Turk Lown 6-01 185 Right Right 05-30-1924
15 Ken McBride 6-00 195 Right Right 08-12-1935
29 Ray Moore 6-01 205 Right Right 06-01-1926
12 Gary Peters 6-02 200 Left Left 04-21-1937
19 Billy Pierce 5-10 160 Left Left 04-02-1927
28 Claude Raymond 5-10 175 Right Right 05-07-1937
15 Don Rudolph 5-11 195 Left Left 08-16-1931
35 Bob Shaw 6-02 195 Right Right 06-29-1933
21 Gerry Staley 6-00 195 Right Right 08-21-1920
36 Joe Stanka 6-05 201 Right Right 07-23-1931
24 Early Wynn 6-00 200 Right Both 01-06-1920

# Catchers Height Weight Throws Bats Date Of Birth
26 Earl Battey 6-01 205 Right Right 01-05-1935
44 Cam Carreon 6-00 198 Right Right 08-06-1937
10 Sherm Lollar 6-01 185 Right Right 08-23-1924
20 Johnny Romano 5-11 205 Right Right 08-23-1934

# Infielders Height Weight Throws Bats Date Of Birth
11 Luis Aparicio 5-09 160 Right Right 04-29-1934
8 Ray Boone 6-01 188 Right Right 07-27-1923
38 Norm Cash 6-00 190 Left Left 11-10-1934
14 Sammy Esposito 5-09 165 Right Right 12-15-1931
2 Nellie Fox 5-09 150 Right Left 12-25-1927
6 Billy Goodman 5-11 165 Right Left 03-22-1926
4 Ron Jackson 6-07 225 Right Right 10-22-1933
4,8 Ted Kluszewski 6-02 225 Left Left 09-10-1924
32 J.C. Martin 6-02 200 Right Left 12-13-1936
5 Bubba Phillips 5-09 180 Right Right 02-24-1928
17 Earl Torgeson 6-03 180 Left Left 01-01-1924

# Outfielders Height Weight Throws Bats Date Of Birth
9 Johnny Callison 5-10 175 Right Left 03-12-1939
32 Larry Doby 6-01 182 Right Left 12-13-1923
3 Del Ennis 6-00 195 Right Right 06-08-1925
28 Joe Hicks 6-00 180 Right Left 04-07-1933
1 Jim Landis 6-01 180 Right Right 03-09-1934
3 Jim McAnany 5-10 196 Right Right 09-04-1936
7 Jim Rivera 6-00 196 Left Left 07-22-1922
8 Harry Simpson 6-01 180 Right Left 12-03-1925
3 Lou Skizas 5-11 175 Right Right 06-02-1932
16 Al Smith 6-00 191 Right Right 02-07-1928

# Other Positions Height Weight Throws Bats Date Of Birth
32 Don Mueller 6-00 185 Right Left 04-14-1927