Yet another steroids scandal got No Credentials thinking (always a dangerous thing)... what are my ten favorite baseball memories? A couple of facts to set the stage before we get to my list.
- 1995 was my first year as a die-hard sports fan. I was nine years old for 10 months of it.
- I’ve barely watched baseball over the past five years (fortunately, managing fantasy teams does not require watching real-life games).
- Pedro Martinez was the man.
10. Anaheim Defeats the Giants in “The Steroids Series”
What Happened = San Francisco Choked in Game 6, squandering a 5-0 lead that they carried into the bottom of the seventh inning. Both teams combined to hit 21 home runs in the seven game series (San Francisco hit 14 of them!), with final scores of 11-10 in Game 2 and 16-4 in Game 5.
Chances Steroids Were Involved = If it were ever
possible for the answer to this sort of question being 6,000%, this would be
time for it. I think Victor Conte was injecting Giants hitters with HGH in the
batter’s box. Barry Bonds stat line might have been the peak of his ridiculous
steroids run (even surpassing his 73 dinger season), as he put up a .471-4-6- batting line with an OPS of 1.994.
Bonds getting robbed of a World Series ring thanks to the Giants bullpen
collapse was one of the great karma moments of the 2000’s that we didn’t realize
was happening at the time.
Other Memorable Moments = Dusty Baker’s kid almost
got run over at home plate (because you know, letting a three year old be the
bat boy makes a ton of sense), but was saved by J.T. Snow.
9. Texas Chokes Twice, Giving St. Louis the World Series
What Happened = Ron Washington, higher than a kite on
cocaine (just kidding! I think…), used a bunch of weird people to try to close
out Game 6 of the 2011 World Series. Naturally, things didn’t work out. St.
Louis posted two rallies to tie the game, and went on to take Game 7.
Chances Steroids Were Involved = We’ll go fairly high
here, throwing out a number of 65%.
Other Memorable Moments = This is the only time I
remember watching a World Series game in the last three years. I just had to
use Google to make sure the Giants won last season.
8. Pedro Delivers a Giant F-U Performance in Tampa Bay
What Happened = Pedro Martinez hit Gerald
Williams with his fourth pitch of the night in a late August start in 2000. The
following video is what resulted from said hit batter.
After the
dust settled, Martinez went into overdrive, recording 24 consecutive outs before Tampa
Bay broke up the no-hit bid with a single in the bottom of the ninth.
Chances Steroids Were Involved = 100%. People don’t
get pissed off like that much anymore (unless of course, it involves Zach
Greinke), so roid-rage definitely had something to do with it. Also, there is
no way Brian Daubach would’ve made it to the Major Leagues without the benefits
of performance enhancing drugs.
Other Memorable Moments = It took four attempts (and
two pitchers!) by the Devil Rays to finally hit Brian Daubach during his at-bat
in the seventh inning.
Forgotten Moniker = Tampa Bay immediately became
relevant when they dropped “Devil” from their team name, which is one of the
great wins for God of the 2000s.
7. Mark McGwire Hits 50 Home Runs Over the Green Monster
in the Home Run Derby
What Happened = Alright, I think he only did it 12
times, but regardless of the quantity, Mark McGwire hit a bunch of fucking
baseballs about 500 feet in the Home Run Derby at Fenway Park. Sadly, MLB
hasn’t uploaded a video of this event to YouTube yet (couldn’t imagine why),
because it was incredible live television. Big Mac didn’t win the Derby, but he
was the star of the show.
Chances Steroids Were Involved = Um, you know who
Mark McGwire is right? 100%.
Extended Rant = There really isn’t more dated and
ignorant television programming from the late-90s and early-00s than the Home
Run Derbies. Watching Chris Berman go bonkers as juiceheads like Sosa and
McGwire crushed baseballs is retroactively hilarious.
6. Josh Beckett Puts the Sox on His Back, J.D. Drew Hits
the $13 Million Grand Slam
What Happened = I’m not sure if anyone remembers
this, but the Red Sox were down 3 games to 1 in the 2007 ALCS against the
Cleveland Indians (this was before Grady Sizemore’s career went off a cliff).
Josh Beckett destroyed the Indians in Game 5 (easy to forget that performance
the way his career in Boston ended), and then J.D. Drew capped a big first
inning in Game 6 with the only quality play he made during his debut season in
Boston.
5. Pedro Martinez Demoralizes Don Zimmer
What Happened = During Game 3 of the 2003 ALCS, Manny
Ramirez freaked out about a baseball that was closer to home plate than his
face. Chaos ensued, culminating in 146 year-old Don Zimmer going after Pedro
Martinez.
All right I
lied Zimmer was only 72. Regardless, that’s the high comedy point of the 2003
ALCS.
Chances Steroids Were Involved = 100%, with a hint of
Viagra thanks to Zimmer.
Other Memorable Moments = Aaron Boone’s walk-off Game
7 homer (which only happened because Grady Little left Pedro in one inning too
long…sigh) was the last stomach punch Red Sox fans took before their epic 2004
title.
Interesting Fact = On the same day as the epic
Pedro-Zimmer throw down, I had almost 100 people over my house to celebrate my
birthday. That scenario sounds great on paper, but I think only five of the
people in attendance knew it was my birthday.
4. Mariano Rivera Blows the Save in Game 7 Against
Arizona
What Happened = After an epic first six games of the
series (remember Derek Jeter earning the nickname Mr. November?), the Hammer of
God just needed to get three outs to give the Yankees their fourth straight
World Series victory.
BA = .325 (second
highest of his career)
HR = 57 (only had
one other season where he hit more than 30)RBI = 142
R = 128
OPS = 1.117 (that’s not a typo)
Call me a party-pooper, but those
numbers are a tad suspicious.
Other Memorable Moments = For my money, the 2001
World Series is the greatest playoff series I’ve ever seen in any professional
sport. From Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling (soccer mom) hoisting the
Diamondbacks on their backs, to the epic games in New York less than two months
after September 11th, there has never been another series like it
since.
Editors Note = I made money off of this series, so my
opinion is 100% biased.
3. Pedro Martinez Goes Bonkers in the 1999 All-Star Game
What Happened = Pedro nearly throws his right arm off
as he strikes out Barry Larkin (Hall of Famer), Larry Walker (fringe Hall
candidate, but he was the ’97 NL MVP), Sammy Sosa (Steroids Hall of Famer),
Mark McGwire (ditto), and Jeff Bagwell (soon to be Hall of Famer) during the
first two innings of the ’99 All Star Game at Fenway Park.
2. The Home Run Chase of ‘98
What Happened = Reeling from the devastating 1994
strike (that cancelled the World Series, and for all intents and purposes,
destroyed the Montreal Expos), Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa dragged MLB back
from the depths with their epic pursuit of 61 home runs.
Chances Steroids Were Involved = 800%. McGwire’s
whole career was a juiced concoction (he posted a league leading 49 dingers and
.987 OPS in his rookie year), and Sosa’s stunning 1998 season was truly
remarkable. Sosa was one of the better power-speed combo players of the mid-90s
(he posted 30-30 seasons in 1993 and 1995) before morphing into the Dominican
version of The Hulk. Here’s the stat line he put up in 1998, with previous
career highs in parenthesis.
BA = .308 (.300, 1994)
HR = 66 (40, 1996)RBI = 158 (119, twice)
OPS = 1.024 (.889, 1996)
1. Boston’s Improbable 2004 World Series Run
What Happened = If you don’t know the story of the
2004 Boston Red Sox, then I don’t understand how you've made it this far into the column.
Chances Steroids Were Involved = 8,000%. For grins
and giggles, here’s the list of likely juicers from the 2004 ALCS.
Alex Rodriguez
Manny RamirezDavid Ortiz
Mark Bellhorn (remember him?)
Gary Sheffield
Jason Giambi
Andy Pettitte
Dave Roberts (just kidding!)
Bill Mueller (post steroids cycle, his 2003 numbers were ridiculous)
That’s just going from memory. The
2004 Red Sox will probably be the most memorable sports team of my life time,
and it wouldn’t of been possible without good old fashioned PEDs.
No comments:
Post a Comment