Posts Tagged ‘gaming’

We’ve looked at the AL Alpha Division here:

We’ve looked at the AL Beta Division here

We examined the NL Alpha Division here

Now let’s go and check out the final division in our 1973 Dynasty the NL Beta division.

TeamWinsLossesPercentageGBWCGB
Los Angeles Dodgers8140.669—–+22
Pittsburgh Pirates7462.5978 1/2+13 1/2
Chicago Cubs5962.48822—–
New York Giants5170.42130-8
Montreal Expos5171.41830 1/2-8 1/2

Los Angeles Dodgers:

LA has risen from the ashes of a last place season to the top of their division and like the Reds in the Alpha division has not been shy about big deals. Nolan Ryan dealt to the NY Giants while Tom Seaver and Denny Doyle acquired from the Daytraders. Vida Blue to the daytraders, Ted Sizemore from the Giants.

Some rookies have been dealt. Davey Lopes and Mickey Rivers to the Daytraders but others have remained to be the core with Don Sutton 16-7 2.15 ERA with 193 K’s leads the rotation while Wayne Twitchell 13-5 2.38 in his 2nd full season along with veteran Reggie Cleveland having the best season of his career and Grant Jackson has been perfect in the bullpen 12 saves in 12 chances and an ERA of only 1.25. Young J. R. Richard has not quite gotten there yet although he has 94K’s in. The team ERA of 2.53 is a full .7 runs less than every other team giving up only 63 home runs and the 307 earned runs are a full 100 less than any other MLB team.

Veteran slugger Willie McCovey meanwhile has done the job with 29 HR and Dave Roberts has put up fair numbers but the offense has not been the star of this show but they’ve managed a bit of slugging 3rd in the NL

The Dodgers have winning records against both the Braves and the Dodgers and every current playoff team except Baltimore (1-2) and Pittsburgh (3-4) with a series left against each. This bodes very well for the post season in a division that they have pretty much locked up.


Pittsburgh Pirates

Pittsburgh surprised everyone by easily eliminating Cincinnati last season and fought the Giants in one of the most epic playoff series in league history. This year they’re led by Hammering Hank Aaron who leads the majors with 40 Home Runs and 112 Runs Batted In while Rod Carew sets the table hitting .349 with 172 hits and 14 triples all best in the majors and OPS of .948 and 92 runs scored (4th in the league). Rookie Dave Parker looks promising, Bill Melton’s 16 HR are below is peak but up from last year’s injury prone season, George Scott keeps flashing the glove with enough hitting to go along with it

On the mound Gaylord Perry is having another great year, 12-6 with a 2.41 ERA 5th in the majors. Bill Singer 13-9 with 2.61 8th in the majors. Starters Jim Colburn 12-6 2.98 & Tom Bradley 11-6 3.45 are both having career years. And keeping the games they pitch in hand at 9-5 with 21 saves blowing only 3 is Mike Marshall.

Put simply Pittsburgh has the stars and the pitching to win any series they’re in and only Cincy is more deadly on turf.

Between LA & Cincy they are .500 and as well managed as they are will be a deadly threat to any team that faces them in the playoffs. They have the stars and the pitching to carry them all the way all they have to do is get past the two best teams in the league and I wouldn’t want to be the guy who has to bet against them.


Chicago Cubs

The Cubs are an enigma. While Starters Burt Hooten & Rick Reuschel have done yeoman’s work Jerry Koosman is still not up to his days with Oakland although in fairness he’s doing better than last season’s disaster. Fortunately John Hiller 25 saves with only 5 blown means if Chicago can get a lead to him they’ll usually keep it.

Le Grande Orange Rusty Staub has been instrumental in getting those leads, his numbers .320 17HR 63 RBI are the best he’s had. Young Jeff Burroughs 20 home runs are making Washington regret not keeping him and Steve Garvey is also putting up the best numbers of his career. With a supporting cast hitting .259 as a team (2nd in NL 3rd in majors) they’re getting on base a lot but not enough. Their -44 run differential does not impress.

Nevertheless they have a commanding lead for the final wild card spot but are the same distance away from Atlanta for the 2nd. So a playoff spot is nearly assured, what remains to be seen is if they can do better than just a playoff spot. They’ll have to punch up to win a wild card series but with the potential competition they’ll have to get by (LA, Pittsburgh & Cincinnati) they’ll really have to go above their weight grade to even think about going farther.


New York Giants

The only thing more surprising than the the franchise swap between the A’s and Giants was the decision to return to NYC and share the Polo Grounds with the Yankees.

It’s very clear the Giants are building for next year and their acquisition of fireballer Nolan Ryan is a real sign of it. His 4-2 record and 1.67 ERA since joining the team and his .185 avg against leading the Majors means the NY ace is capable of stealing a game from any team they face by pitching alone.

But he’s not alone Reggie Jackson’s 39 HR and 98 RBI and .305 avg is just behind Aaron for the lead and Craig Nettles, now playing for his 3rd NYC team keeps improving. but this is a team building for the future. Their team ERA of 4.69 is rock bottom despite

  1. the top rated Defense in the Majors
  2. Bill Freehan who, while not hitting remains one of the best game callers in baseball
  3. The addition of Ryan

Unless the young bats develop and the pitching improves It will be a while before we see this team back in contention for a pennant.


Montreal Expos

On paper Montreal should be a lot better team that it is. Rookie Starter Steve Rogers 10-6 2.74 ERA WHIP 1.02 is top 10 in multiple categories. They boast of Luis Tiant with a 2.81 ERA despite a 10-12 record and Lou Brock who has stolen 39 bases while hitting .315 and Dave Nelson stealing 29 of his own while only being caught 4 times.

Alas closer Tug McGraw has an ERA over 5. Rookie Ron Cey while showing power (14 HR) has not reached anywhere near his potential and the rest of the batting crowd while hitting a respectable .251 and driving in runs above the league avg just aren’t getting it done. The .980 fielding percentage tied for 3rd worst in the Majors might have something to do with it.

They’re good enough to make a team pay that takes them lightly but they’re just as likely to let a game get away. By the numbers they should be doing better perhaps even contending for a wild card spot, but the breaks just haven’t been there.

Write-up of the AL Alpha here:

NL Alpha here

Now let’s go and check out the AL Beta division.

TeamWinsLossesPercentageGBWCGB
Milwaukee Brewers6556.537—–+6
Washington Senators5962.4886—–
Boston Red Sox5863.4797–1
Minnesota Twins5764.4718-2
Oakland A’s 5470.43512 1/2-6 1/2

Milwaukee Brewers:

Full disclosure This is my team.

It is very rare in this league that a team repeats a division win but Milwaukee has managed to sneak by with pitching (WHIP 1.26 best in AL fewest hits given up in the league) despite the 4th fewest k’s in the majors. They also are 4th in RBI’s and 1st in walks in the majors and 3rd in the AL in hits thanks to Pete Rose (169 2nd in majors 1st in AL). And Ron Fairly tied for the MLB lead in walks (101). All of this is despite being 2nd to last in homers.

There are some weak spots. Don Wilson despite a 14-7 record a .201 avg against (7th in MLB) and a no-hitter thrown this season has given up 27 home runs in only 192 1/3 innings and Ken Holtzman 221 2/3 innings and 20 home runs. Jerry Bell 2nd year man has been 8-13 with a 5.31 ERA. Elias Sosa has been on and off with 10 saves but seven saves blown. Dennis Menke has 88 walks but is only hitting .152 and has been a defensive liability but his move to DH with the Harrelson & Davis for Carbo trade will mitigate this at least vs RHP

The lead is only six games and Washington, Boston and Minnesota are all only one good run away from catching up so if Milwaukee is going to pull this off their huge trade of on base Machines and incredible arm Bernie Carbo for SS Bud Harrelson and CF Willie Davis is going to have to pay off in addition HR’s and better defense


Washington Senators:

Washington has spent a ton of time in the cellar this season, due to the worst defense in the AL (.980) and a team batting avg (.233) tied for worst in the majors. However in their last mainly to their inability to get on base.

Yet they’ve gone 19-10 in their last 29 games including series wins against the powerhouse Reds, and Boston and sweeps of both Cleveland all teams that are either playoff teams or were playoff teams at the time of said series wins. They now hold the 3rd wild card sport and are only 6 games out of first.

Del Unser’s 11 triples (tied for the AL lead) and Dave Kingman’s 33 HR leading the AL have something to do with this along with the steady numbers of Jim Northrup along with Bob Johnson’s 19 saves in 22 chances and the workhorses of the staff, Bill Lee, Joe Coleman and Carl Morton have made a big difference.

The wild cards? Jim Kaat missed some time due to injury and Blue Moon Odem who was a winner in Milwaukee last season has been a bust at 1-10 his only win coming in relief. Furthermore while Washington is only a game behind Cleveland for the 2nd wild card spot and 6 out of 1st in the division they are a full 13 games behind the Royals for the top spot and Boston and Minnesota are right on their heels.

In short with 4 teams vying for 2 playoff spots and less than 3 games separating the top from the bottom there isn’t a lot of margin for error but so far Washington’s determination to keep fighting has paid off


Boston Red Sox

The Red Sox started the season at the top of the division and then began dropping, first slowly then faster till at the moment they find themselves a game behind Washington for the final playoff spot and the Twins right behind them. How far has Boston fallen? You won’t find a single Red Sox player on any of the leaderboards.

Still Carlton Fisk has 20 HR in his sophomore year and they have a great crop of young players from Dave Winfield to Dwight Evans to Cecil Cooper. If Yaz and Petrocelli can start hitting a bit more anything can happen but Boston seems to be selling rather than buying trading starter Claude Osteen who was 9-3 for Boston and closer Lindy McDaniel to Pittsburgh and veteran Slugger Willie Davis and slick fielding but fragile SS Bud Harrelson for young on base machine Bernie Carbo all sings seem to be a youth movement for 1974 rather than a run in 73.

Oddity: Despite the green monster in left Boston is in the bottom half of the league in doubles.


Minnesota Twins

Minnesota is the epidemy of what you would call an average team. In all kinds of offensive categories they are at or near the league average with one exception this is true on the pitching side as well. The exception is walks allowed. They lead the AL in fewest walks allowed and both Jim Barr (1.80 per 9 innings) and Ross Grimsley (2.11 per 9 innings) are among stingiest in the majors on free passes. This explains their 6-1 record vs Milwaukee which lives by the walk who had the previous year swept the season series against them but in a team that is mostly average closer Sparky Lyle shines with a 6-1 record 24 saves in 30 chances, a 1.16 ERA and not a single home run given up in 38 relief appearences.

Ross Grimsley, Gary Gentry and Stan Bahnsen , Doyle Alexander are all average pitchers who have performed as advertised only Dave McNally has disappointed with a 4.00 ERA and a record near .500. At the plate they have guys who can get the job done. Al Oliver’s 21 HR & 83 RBI’s lead the team and both he and Richie Hebner (18 HR 71 RBI) are flirting with .300 and Lou Piniella has been destroying left handed pitching (.352 4 HR vs southpaws) but on the down side young Jose Cruz is suffering sophomore blues slumping to .190 and committing 9 errors in the field, while Luis Aparicio has gotten his avg back to his career level from last seasons low with the Reds (.272 vs .193) he hasn’t been the spark plug he has been in the past.

In the field Aparicio and young Bobby Grich have been double play machines but Hebner’s 24 errors are a bit much but at the other corner the platoon of Mike Hegan & Oliver have put up range numbers through the roof

In short the Twins are good enough to win games but have not managed to get beyond that level. But being only 2 games out of a playoff spot they like Boston, Washington and Cleveland are just one big streak away from a return to the postseason while one bad streak away from obscurity.


Oakland A’s

It was a wild time when the San Francisco Giants and the Oakland A’s last season swapped names. The A’s moved east to become the NY Giants back in the polo grounds while San Francisco abandoned the city by the bay to take advantage of the DH rule.

SF had been a solid playoff team last season playing in two of the most exciting series of the year, their victory vs the Pirates and their defeat by the Daytraders and they brought some of their star power to the AL with Bobby Bonds (.288 23 HR 88 RBI) and five outfield assists in right against the few who dare run against his arm. Darrell Evans adds 24 HR and 86 RBI’s of his own.

Alas while Ron Hunt at 2B has as usual been an on base machine (.440) he missed three full months due to injury and while Bill Sharp has done yeoman work getting on base at a .375 clip the rest of the supporting cast have not given the stars what they need to shine. They are dead last in the majors in both average at .233 and first in strikeouts. Of course when they hit the ball they can move their 41 triples are 2nd in the majors

The downturn in the pitching hasn’t helped. While Ron Bryant’s 13-11 record & 3.81 ERA is not bad it’s a far cry from last season’s 14-7 record and 3.44 ERA while ace Jim Palmer seems to be keeping up his pattern of outstanding seasons (26-5 1.87 last year) followed by mediocre seasons (11-12 3.04 this year). Their team ERA of 4.12 is not inspiring and while Dave Gusti does have 18 saves in 23 chances holding batters to a .203 avg he has given up six dingers this season so far while surrendering only a single one in 1972.

In theory Oakland is close enough to have a shot to return to the post season but has too many teams ahead of them to get around and no thump to get there. With a better supporting cast next season via the draft there is every chance that they will return to their winning ways as long as they can get Giusti, Palmer and Bryant back to their 1972 form.

Write-up of the AL Alpha here:

Now let’s look at the NL Alpha Division

TeamWinsLossesPercentageGBWCGB
Cincinnati Reds (Cin City)8635.711—–+27
Atlanta Braves (Bravos)6656.54120 1/2+6 1/2
St Louis Cardinals5468.44332 1/2– 5 1/2
New York Mets (Daytraders)4973.40237 1/2-10 1/2
Philadelphia Phillies 4777.37940 1/213 1/2

Cincinnati Reds (Cin City):

Last season the Reds despite a powerful team squeaked into the final wild card spot only to be swept by Pittsburgh. This season they have built a juggernaught that is steamrolling everything in sight and anything they didn’t have they traded for. This Reds team that has been so active in the trade market that they should be called the day traders. Cincy leads the NL in slugging and despite playing most games without a DL has a slugging avg 2nd to only Baltimore in the AL. The are also 3rd in the majors in ERA and that combination has given them an insurmountable lead both in their division and best record in the majors. They’re led by Willie Stargel (acquired from the Daytraders) with 24 HR for the team (31 over all) Ken Singleton (acquired from Cleveland) hitting .331 for them (.314 over all) Bill Sudakis (acquired from the Yankees along with Thurman Munson for Johnny Bench) with 16 HR (24 over all). Ironically Joe Morgan one of the few stars who has been here all year is having an off year but still leads the league in walks and SB’s.

On the Mound Randy Jones (8-2 2.38) Mel Stottlemyre (acquired from Cleveland) 6-2 (14-7 overall) Sonny Siebert (7-2) Jack Billingham (acquired from Montreal) 12-8 (13-12 overall) and Don Gullet (10-7) have all bee adequate but it’s the bullpen that has shined with the ever young Don McMahon (acquired from St Louis) at 4-0 1 save 0.96 ERA, Dick Barney 10-0 1.76 ERA and Pedro Borbon 11-7 2.33 ERA with 16 saves (but 7 blown ones) that have really done the job. Add to that a .985 fielding percentage (3rd in NL) and you have a team that’s almost impossible to beat.

The one danger to the team is a short series and a hot pitcher or a spate of injuries. The question is who will they bench to save for the playoffs? The irony almost nobody on the team is among the league leaders because so many have come from elsewhere and don’t quality. Only Stargell who was traded early competes 2nd in doubles and 3rd in HR & RBI.


Atlanta Braves (Bravos) Atlanta won the beta last year but like the reds were stunned last year by the Daytraders (Mets) who would go on the win the Pennant. This year Atlanta is defying the odds of a division winner and have built a strong team with Caesar Cedeno making a strong case for MVP being in the top 10 in almost every offensive category and Dusty Baker who has 9 triples to go along with 14 HR and 22 doubles.

One the mound Ferguson Jenkins has already matched his 17 wins from last season. Tom Hilgendorf has gone 10-3 out of the pen while Rollie Fingers has managed 13 saves with only two blown ones.

The big danger for Atlanta has been fielding their 106 errors and .976 fielding percentage is the worst in the majors. Don Money (acquired from Montreal) has hit .271 while making 13 errors at short which isn’t bad. The question is can Jenkins, Catfish Hunter (11-7) and the pen and Jenkins overcome those extra gift outs?


St. Louis Cardinals

St. Louis has some serious strengths Matty Alou is hitting .290, Lee May has slugged 25 HR and managed 7 triples Bob Gibson has 164 k’s and 2.50 ERA along with Ken Brett 3.16 ERA can beat any team but on the down side Jim Bibby despite a respectable 3.64 ERA is only 3-10 while Tom Hall out of the bullpen is having the worst season of his career with an ERA a full 2 runs over his lifetime stats (5.10 vs 3.16) and alas May’s 25 HR is more than the rest of the team combined (17).

Despite this the Cardinals have the 2nd best ERA in the majors (3.26) and WHIP (1.22) however their save percentage is barely over 50% 18 saves 17 blown saves and are near the bottom of the majors in on base percentage (.304). Still they’ve also caught 20 of 25 people trying to steal so you never know which Cardinals team will be there.

Put simply the well managed Cards are close enough to make a run for that final wild card spot but will their front office decide that they’d rather sell and retool or make a run? We’ll find out.


New York Mets (Daytraders)

Last year’s pennant winners started strong but began to fade and have begun to trade assets. Willie Stargell has been dealt to Cincinnati. Tom Seaver to LA with rookie Davey Lopes coming back along with Vida Blue currently leading the NL in ERA (who LA got from the Giants) while retaining Phil Niekro and Jim Perry who they hope will return to his winning ways from his days in Cleveland.

The biggest disappointment has been Lefty Steve Carlton who ERA has only gone up slightly from last season (3.30 vs 3.14) but has put up a 5-12 record. Ron Bloomberg has respectable numbers (.291 12 HR 34 RBI). but their .238 avg is 2nd to last in the NL. Furthermore only Atlanta is doing worse in the field (.979) and their On Base percentage is less than .300 (.299)

In short the Daytraders are rebuilding and it’s only a question of what assets they will trade and which they will keep. With the trade deadline coming we will soon find out.


Philadelphia Phillies:

Philly has one of the most feared lineups in the league. Bill Robinson has 28 HR and 98 RBI’s Rookie Mike Schmidt despite a .176 avg has hit 18 HR and 2nd year man Greg Luzinski has 14 HR with a much better batting avg .248. Philly is 4th in the NL in runs scored , Home Runs, 3rd in the NL in doubles. No lead is safe against them and no hurler wants to face this lineup.

Unfortunately for them their 4.50 ERA is 2nd worst in the majors. Their 1.51 WHIP is the worst in the majors and their bullpen has blown more saves (26) then they’ve converted (22). Combine this with their Ace Fritz Peterson having one of his worst seasons (4.09 ERA) with batters hitting .375 with the bases loaded.

Put simply Philly isn’t going anywhere this season but with the worst record in the NL they’ll be able to keep all their power and Schmidt and Luzinski will only get better. If they can acquire anything resembling decent pitching they will be a force to be reckoned with for years.

It’s the Dynasty League’s first subway series. Here’s how it got there.

NL League Championship Series

Game 1 at Candlestick Park SF

The Daytraders began the final step on the quest to return to the world series with Roger Nelson on the mound who had gone 2-0 in playoff appearances this season to face lefty Mickey Lolich who like Nelson had begun his season in the Al Alpha division (Baltimore) but unlike Nelson had not yet had a decision in the postseason. The Giants stuck first in the 2nd with Ellie Rodriguez scoring on the Elliot Maddux Triple and Maddux scoring on a wild pitch that followed. The Daytraders answered immediately when with runners on 1st and 3rd (Graig Nettles double, Leo Cardinals single) Nelson excutted a perfect suicide squeeze plating Nettles and getting Cardenas to 2nd. A Steve Brye pinch single sent him to 3rd and Dwayne Josephson hitting for Willie Mays singed him home to tie it up but with 2 on and one out Lolich managed to get Jimmy Winn and Willie Stargell to keep the game tied. In the sixth NY jumped ahead. A one out single to Stargell and a two out walk to Leron Lee put men on 1st & 2nd vs Reliever Ron Bryant (Lolich was pinch hit for in the 4th) set up Graig Nettles who with the runners going singled to center Stargell motored home and Lee went to third where Leo Cardenas surprised everyone by bunting with two outs completely surprising Catcher Rodriguez enough to allow him to beat the throw to 1st and make it 4-2. That lead held till the 8th when Nelson gave up a leadoff single to Rick Monday and a walk to Chris Speier putting two on with none out. Lerrin LaGrow came in to relieve Nelson but put his 2nd pitch too far over the plate and Darrell Evans drove it to deep right. Ken Henderson tried to chase it down but it went over his head plating Monday and Speier to tie the game and put the go ahead run in scoring position with none out. It looked bad for the Brokers but LaGrow overcame his bad start but inducing three consecutive grounders from Bobby Bonds, Harmon Killebrew and Ellie Rodriguez to keep the game tied

Phil Hennigan came in for the giants in the 9th and held things down and managed to get out of a bases loaded one out jam in the 10th on a grounder to 1st with the infield drawn for the first out. Cardines tried again to bunt with two outs but Rodriguez forewarned this time made the play to end the inning. The Daytraders answered with Tom Seaver in the 12th who got both Bonds and Killebrew to start the inning but came too far inside on a fastball to Rodriguez hitting him and putting him on 2nd with two out setting up Garry Maddox who for the 2nd time in the game would drive a ball to center that would roll to the wall and score Rodriguez this time for the extra inning win and giving Seaver his 2nd loss in relief in the postseason.

Giants 5 Daytraders 4 (11 innings) WP Hennigan 1-0 LP Seaver (0-2)

Game 2 at Candlestick Park San Francisco

Game 2 was a battle of Aces as Phil Niekro and Jim Palmer took the mound. Both pitchers would work deep into the game and both would be victimized by errors at first base. The Giants had taken a 1 run lead in the 2nd on a Sac fly by Evans that scored Rick Monday who had doubled to start the inning and moved to 3rd on a grounder. In the fourth Norm Cash misplayed an Evans grounder that put him on first. He went to single on a Bobby Bonds single and scored on another from Harmon Killebrew to make it 2-0 and getting Bonds to 3rd where a Garry Maddox sac fly plated a 2nd unearned run for the giants to make it 3-0. With a 3-0 lead and Palmer on the mound things looked good but Niekro kept the Giants off the board while in the 8th a Stargell leadoff triple gave Cash a chance to atone for his mistake singling him home to cut the lead to two. It looked like it was all over in the 9th when Palmer got Jimmy Wynn for the first out but a grounder to Killerbrew by Wayne Garrett was misplayed putting a man on first and the tying run at the plate with one out. Willie Mays drilled the next pitch down the first base line but Killer made up for his error with a diving stop that turned a sure double into the 2nd out Garrett moving to 2nd. Leron Lee walked and it looked like it was all over when Stargell grounded the next pitch to first but for the 2nd time in the inning Killebrew failed letting the ball go right between his legs. It rolled down the right field line scoring Garrett and sending Stargell to 2nd and Lee to 3rd. Palmer at this point was out of gas and Eddie Watt came into the game to face Ted Simmons with the game on the line. The good news for the Giants was Simmons didn’t hit the ball to Killebrew, the bad news was he drilled it to center Lee scored easily and Stargell rounded 3rd for the go ahead run but Garry Maddux threw a bullet to the plate for the 3rd out and when the Mets failed to capitalize on the Leo Cardenes two out triple in the top of the 9th and LaGrow put down the Giants in the bottom it was off to extra innings again. The Daytraders brought in Steve Carlton in the 10th where he would pitch out of the 2 out two on jam and hold them down till Willie Mays put a two out fastball over the right center wall to put the Stock brokers in the lead in the top of the 12th but a pair of leadoff singles put runners at the corners in the bottom of the inning when Tommie Agee put a ball to the warning track scoring the tying run and just missed ending the game. Again Carlton pitched out of the jam and the game went on until the 14th when Cardenes again bunted his way on off of Dave Giusti with one out. Jimmie Wynn drew a walk and then Jack Brohamer took a breaking ball and sent it rolling to the wall in right clearing the bases and giving Carlton a 2 run lead. That would be enough as lefty in his fifth inning of work would retire the Giants in order to even out the series.

Daytraders 6 Giants 4 (14 innings) WP Carlton (2-0) LP Giusti (0-1) HR Mays (1)

Game 3 Shea Stadium New York

After two exhausting extra inning games the series moved to New York with Tom Seaver hoping to do better in his normal starting role facing Ron Bryant. While his fastball was active striking out 12 he was also a little wild. In the 4th he walked Darrell Evans to start the frame and Harmon Killebrew with out out setting up Johnny Oats who would single to right scoring Evans and sending Killer to 3rd. One out later Dave Cash would double to right easily plating Killebrew and allowing Oates to just beat Stargell’s throw to make it 3-0. When Rick Monday led of the 5th with a solo shot and Garry Maddux scored in the sixth on pitcher Ron Bryant’s singled after his own double it seemed like Tom Terrific was set up for this 3rd playoff loss. The Mets would not break through till the 7th when Eddie Watt would walk pinch hitter Ted Simmons with the bases loaded and two outs but would strike out Leron Lee to end the inning and after 7 it was 5-1 Giants.

Then came the 8th and it all went pear shaped. Watt got Jimmy Wynn for the 1st out and pinch hitter Cash for the 2nd out but gave up a Solo shot to Willie Stargell to make it 5-2 and followed up with singles to Graig Nettles, Leo Cardenas and a walk to Wayne Garrett putting the tying runs on with only one out. Having put on 5 of the 8 men he faced in 2/3 of an inning Dave Giusti came in to try to put out the fire.

He failed. Willie Mays Pinch hit single scored Nettle and Cardenes to make it a 1 run game and after Hitting Ted Simmons to load the bases up Bob Montgomery pinch hit for reliver Jerry Reuss and singled to left. Garrett scored to tie the game and Mays forgetting his age rounded third and just beat the accurate throw to the plate by Rick Monday. The Giants had a shot in the 9th when Darrell Evans hit a two out double off Lerrin LaGrow. With 1st base open the Mets manager put Bonds on 1st risked the go ahead run on 1st rather than facing him and left it for LaGrow to face Killebrew who had already hit two HR in the playoffs. Alas for the Giants he grounded into a fielders choice to give the Daytraders the lead in the series and Giusti his second consecutive loss.

New York 6 San Francisco 5 WP Jerry Reuss (1-0) LP Dave Giusti (0-2) SV LaGross (1) HR Monday (1) Stargell (1)

Game 4 at Shea Stadium New York

San Francisco sent Mickey Lolich to face Roger Nelson in game five. It remained a scoreless affair till the fourth when Darrell Evans put a ball over the right field fence for a 1-0 SF lead. It might have been 2-0 but Bobby Bonds drive to center came up just short. The lead held up til the 6th when with two outs Joe Lis would single and go to 2nd on a wild pitch. Duane Josephson came in to hit for Mays and was given 1b intentionally by manager Hazan which would prove costly as Ted Simmons would drive a 2-1 pitch to the gap in left center plating both Lis and Josephson and suddenly it was 2-1. An inning later Steve Brye would hit a pinch single to start the 7th for the brokers and after a Nelson K Leron Lee would put a ball just over the left field fence and NY was up 4-1. In the 8th the Giants answered. Ellie Rodriguez singled to right and after a strikeout to Garry Maddux Dave Cash would triple to center cutting the lead to 4-2 and bringing the tying run up to the plate in Terry Harmon hitting for Lolich. Dave Lemonds came in for Nelson and promptly hit Harmon putting the tying runs on the corners with one out. The Mets manager wasted no time pulling Lemonds and replacing him with Lerrin LaGrow who struck out Gary Matthews and got a grounder from Chris Speier to end the inning and the threat. In the 9th two pitchers put the Giants down in order putting the Daytraders one win away from a return trip to the Series.

Daytraders 4 Giants 2 WP Nelson (3-0) LP Lolich (0-1) SV Wilson (1) HR Evans (2) Lee (1)

Gave 5 at Shea Stadium New York

Jim Palmer took the mound for San Francisco to try to take the series back to the west coast and he didn’t disapoint. He worked seven innings giving up only a single unearned run when Darrell Evans who had homered in the top of the 1st to give SF a 1-0 lead made a throwing error on a Willie Stargell grounder which scored Willie Mays who had walked and took 2nd on a Jimmy Winn walk tying the game at one.

It wouldn’t stay tied for long as Niekro’s 2nd knuckler of the 2nd didn’t knuckle and Harmon Killebrew provided all the power necessary to put it out to left making it 2-1. It would go to 3-1 when Gary Maddux and Dave Cash singled in the top of the 7th putting runners at the corners and Rick Monday flied deep enough to allow Maddux to score but that was a formality as Palmer gave up only two hits over 8 and when John Strohmayer hit the first batter of the 9th to put bring the tying run to the plate,manager Hazan took no chances brining in Eddie Watt would would make up for his poor outing in game 3 by retiring all three men he faced to secure the win and send the series back to the city by the bay.

SF 3 NY 1 WP Palmer (1-1) LP Niekro (0-2) SV Watt (2) HR Evans (3) Killebrew (3)

Game 6 at Candlestick Park San Francisco:

With two chances to win a return ticket to the Big Apple the Daytraders turned to Tom Seaver despite having lost two game and pitching poorly in a 3rd while the Giants entrusted their season to Jim Willoughby who in limited action had been highly effective for San Francisco. Neither manager would be disappointed by their choices. While Seaver would give up a solo shot to Ellie Rodriguez in the 2nd to give the Giants the lead he would give up no more in 9 innings of work giving up only 2 hits and six walks. Meanwhile Willoughby would pitch 8 4 hit innings but two of those hits would come in the top of the 6th with Jimmy Wynn singling to left and Willie Stargell shooting a ball into the gap just beyond the reach of Maddux allowing Wynn to score and tie the game. And tied it would stay until the 11th when Wynn would again lead off an inning with a single. Two outs later Phil Hennigan would hit Norm Cash and Graig Nettles would single to right, the fleet footed Wynn would score and the Daytraders would be up 2-1. Steve Carlton who came in for the 10th would retire Harmon Killebrew and Ellie Rodriguez to start the 11th when the Giants would go all in with Dave Kingman who had gone hitless in the playoffs and hit .186 in this rookie season but had also hit 26 homers to lead the Giants. With everything on the line is was the veteran ace who would win the duel getting Kingman to ground to short and send the Daytraders to their first pennant since 1969.

Daytraders 2 Giants 1 (11 innings) WP Carlton (3-0) LP Hennigan (1-1) HR Rodriguez (1)

Game 1 at the Polo Grounds New York

You don’t get a more classic pitchers duel than game of this series with Cy Young winner Don Wilson facing knuckle baller Wilbur Wood. Both were excellent pitching complete games neither pitcher allowing a hit with runners in scoring position or an earned run. Wilson struck out 9 and walked only two on six hits while Wood struck out six without a base on balls with only three hits surrendered and it seemed like neither hurler would give in until the bottom of the 8th with two outs when American League MVP Bobby Murcer who had 2 of New York’s five hits fouled a ball toward first. With a lefty on the mound and a park which favors pull hitter Milwaukee slugger Earl Williams was playing first and tracked the ball in foul territory only to drop what would have been the 3rd out. Given this reprieve Murcer took the next pitch and deposited it into the left field stands for the only run of the game which was all that would be needed to give the Bronx Bombers the win

New York 1 Milwaukee 0 WP Wood (1-0) LP Wilson (1-1) HR Murcer (1)

Game two at the Polo Grounds New York City

Game 2 didn’t bear a whole lot of resemblance to game one as the offenses came out of the gate early. Milwaukee having been shut out for 11 innings by Yankees pitching jumped on starter Steve Kline in the 3rd. With a man on first and one out Ron Fairly singled to right, Gene Clines who had singled earlier dug for 3rd and former Brewer Pat Kelly throw went wild. Cline scored and Fairly ended up at 2nd, which left a base open for an intentional walk to Pete Rose which proved costly as Earl Williams anxious to atone for his game costing blunder deposited a ball far above the left field wall for a 4-0 Milwaukee lead. In the bottom half of the inning a pair of pinch hitters, Roberto Clemente and Thurman Munson singled with one out and after retiring Reggie Smith Ken Holtzman who had shut out the twins in his previous outing delivered a ball that would have been the 3rd out in any other park but cleared the short left field wall at the Polo grounds to make it a 1 run game 4-3. Both sides held off minor rallies until the 7th when a one out error by Danny Thompson put pitcher Ken Holtzman on first. Ceasar Geronimo pinch hit for Clines and drilled a triple into the gap off of Jack Billingham to plate Holtman and Ron Hunt followed up with a single to plated him to make it 6-3. With Geronimo and Johnny Edwards now in for defense it looked pretty good for Milwaukee and 20 game winner Holtzman. Then came the 8th which started innocently enough with a John Mayberry ground out for the 1st out and then the bottom caved in. Bobby Murcer and Danny Thompson walked and old man Bill Mazeroski shocked everyone with a double into the gap scoring them both. When Roberto Clemente followed with a double of his own the seemingly safe lead was gone and the game tied at six. Milwaukee hurredly got Blue Moon Odem warming and intentionally walked Thurman Munson to buy time. Reggie Smith came up and hit a nubber in front of the plate. The normally solid defender Edwards was slow in getting to it and the speedy Smith was safe at first loading the bases. That brought up Ron Santo who drove in his 4th of the day with a single to center and suddenly it was 7-6 but the Yanks weren’t done yet. Odem walked Oscar Gamble to force in one run and gave up a single to Mayberry to plate another before finally getting the 2nd out on a force play at the plate on a Murcer grounder Santo being out at home, but he then gave up one more single to Danny Thompson scoring two more and another walk to Mazeroski loading the bases before finally getting out of the inning Milwaukee having given up 8 run on seven hits and allowing 14 men to bat. Milwaukee attempted to rally in the 9th on a pair of singles and a two out RBI from Pete Rose but the air was out of the balloon as were their hopes of a series split in the Bronx.

Yankees 11 Brewers 7 WP Beene (1-0) LP Holtzman (1-1) HR Williams (1) Santo (1)

Game 3 at County Stadium Milwaukee

With her series on the line Milwaukee turned to Blue Moon Odem despite his failure in game 2 while the Yanks turned to Bob Moose. The Yanks picked up where they left off with a two run shot in the first to take a 2-0 lead while Milwaukee answered immediately. Geronimo singled to the pitcher and reached 2nd when Moose hurried the throw to first in a vain attempt to nail the speedster. Ron Hunt singled and once again Pete Rose was intentionally walked and once again it burned the Yanks as Ron Fairly also waited out a walk scoring Geronimo. Up came Doug Rader who had hit three grand slams this season. He singled to center scoring Hunt. Pete Rose never hesitated rounding third and heading for the plate but Reggie Smith threw a perfect strike to the plate to nail him and when Ken Berry grounded to 3rd the game was tied after 1.

There it would stay. The Yanks would pull Moose after arm stiffness after is first pitch of the 2nd but it didn’t matter the yanks pitched out of a bases loaded jam in the 3rd stranded a lead off double from Odem in the 4th. Meanwhile Odom stopped Yankees cold managing to draw key double plays when things looked poor. By the 9th the Yanks were on their 5th pitcher and Milwaukee their 2nd but the score remained 2-2 until the 14th when starter Al Downing who was pressed into service in the 10th took the mound for his fifth inning of work. Like Holtzman before him Downing had not giving up a run in his previous start and was now up to this 13th consecutive scoreless playoff inning, but that would change. Clemente singled and was bunted to 2nd. After manager Ingemi called for an intentional walk to Santo to set up the double play Danny Thompson deposited a single to left scoring Clemente and sending Santo to 2nd where he was replaced by pinch runner Oscar Gamble who prompted scored on a Celerino Sanchez single to make it 4-2. Gary Waslewski came in to relieve Downing and k’d pitcher Terry Foster when Reggie Smith came to the plate and drove a ball into left center that would have been a long flyout in NY but in Milwaukee cleared left center with plenty to spare. Suddenly it was 7-2 and despite a couple of singles in the bottom of the inning the Brewers could come no closer.

Yankees 7 Brewers 2 (14 innings) WP Forster (1-0) LP Downing (1-1) HR Smith 2 (2)

Game 4 at County Stadium Milwaukee

With their season on the line and every pitcher that had won in their series against the Twins having failed the Brewers turned to hard luck starter Mike Torrez to face Jack Billingham with it all on the line. Torrez pitched seven strong innings giving up but a single run in the 2nd on the Danny Thompson single. Billingham however did better pitching seven shutout innings and when Wilbur Wood came in for the 8th with a 1-0 lead and struck out both Cesar Geronimo and Johnny Edward swinging it looked like the series was over then and there.

It was not, Ron Hunt managed a single to left and Pete Rose singled to center. Gene Clines came in to pinch hit for lefty Ron Fairly and singled in the tying run before Wood coaxed a popout from Doug Rader to keep the score at 1 all. In the bottom of the 9th Milwaukee got two on with two outs and Fred Beene came in and promptly loaded the bases with a walk but with the winning run 90 feet away Roberto Clemente caught up to a ball driven over his head for the 3rd out and once again we were into extra innings. Milwaukee threatened again in the bottom of the 11th with a pair of leadoff singles from Ken Berry and Gene Michael. LIndy McDaniel came in for Beene and Tim Foli hit for Milwaukee Closer Ken Sanders who had kept the Bronx Bombers scoreless and bunted them over to 2nd and third with only one out. Earl Williams then hit a fly ball to center and Ken Berry tagged up dashing for home. For the second time in the game Reggie Smith would throw a strike to the plate and save the game. Jerry Bell would make his first playoff appearance in the top of the 12th and would give up a pinch hit single to Pat Kelly, which was followed by a pinch hit single allowing the speedy Kelly to reach third. With runners at the corners and nobody out and the season on the line Milwaukee was forced to play in with Reggie Smith at the plate who already saving the game for the Yanks twice anxiously swung at the first pitch popping to first for a key out. MVP Bobby Murcer was up next and hit a fly ball to center. With the speedy Pat Kelly at 3rd it was time for Ken Berry’s arm to be tested and it proved to be as solid at Smith as Kelly was a dead duck at the plate and the game would continue tied to the bottom of the 12th. Muercer while failing to deliver the run managed a great running catch to rob Jack Hiatt of a single for Pete Rose’s single came with the bases empty and the game would go to the 13th. For the 2nd inning in a row Bell would put himself in a jam loading the bases with none out on a Ron Santo, walk, a John Mayberry single and a Roberto Clemente walk, but this time there would be no miracle. Thurman Munson would single to left scoring two and while Bell would retire the next 3 in a row Milwaukee would face a bottom of the 13th down two with their season on the line and the bottom of the order up to face Terry Forster who would make short work of them ending the game and the season for the Brew crew and guaranteeing that the World Series trophy would go to New York although WHICH New York team is still in doubt

New York 4 Milwaukee 2 (13 innings) WP Johnson (1-0) LP Bell (0-1) SV Forster (1)

Series 1 at Shea Stadium NY April

Game one would see the 9-12 Daytraders surprising the 15-6 Yankees as Jerry Reuss would pitch six seven strong innings giving up only 3 hits and 1 run while Wilbur Wood would be tagged for 4 runs including three driven in by Leron Lee on a pair of homers in the 3rd and 7th. Leron Legrow would pick up his first save for quashing a bases loaded rally in the 8th and would double in one more run for insurance in the bottom of the 8th for the 6-1 final. In game 2 the yanks would build a 5-0 lead after 7 on a Bobby Murcer grounder driving in Pat Kelly who had tripled and a grand slam by Phil Roof in the 7th. The Daytraders would rally with 3 in the 8th on a Jim Holt sac fly and a Norm Cash Homer and would plate one more off of Closer Terry Forster one a Steve Brye single with one out to make it 5-4 but Forster would get Graig Nettles and Leron Lee on grounders to preserve the win. The Rubber game would go to the Daytraders as Lefty Carlton would after giving up a pair of unearned runs on a passed ball and a throwing error in the 2nd would work a complete game while the Daytraders would get to Bob Moose for a run in the 2nd on a Cardenas single and two more thanks three 5th inning doubles to Steve Carlton, Leron Lee and Ted Simmons for the 3-2 win.

Series 2 at the Polo Grounds New York

The 2nd subway series of the season started well for the Yankees as Steve Kline shut out the daytraders on five hits. Loser Tom Seaver also pitched a complete game and gave up no earned runs but a key two out error by Leo Cardenas on a Kline grounder loaded the bases for Reggie Smith who crushed it for a grand slam in the 2nd and another Cardenas error would put runners on 1st and third allowing Thurman Munson’s grounder to plate the fifth and final run of the game. In game 2 Bob Moose got his revenge on Steve Carlton giving up only one run in seven innings on a Ken Henderson double while Carlton would be tagged for a pair in the first when Santo singled in Reggie Smith and Roberto Clemente hit a ball over the head of Willie Mays that he might have caught up to in 1962 but didn’t have the speed to reach 10 years later. The Bullpen would surrender 4 more in the 8th for the Yanks 6-1 win. Game three would be a rout as the Daytraders would get 11 hits and 9 runs including 2 homers from Willie Stargell and one from Ted Simmons and go 5-13 with RISP while Phil Niekro’s knucker would baffle the Yanks for 8 1/3 innings with only a Danny Thompson grounder in the 2nd producing a run and a lead that would not make it through the top of the 3rd.

Season series 3-3.

This is a tough series to call. The Yankees have an overwhelming offense and solid pitching meanwhile the Daytraders have perhaps the best pitching staff in the majors with Niekro, Carlton and Seaver along with Dave Nelson who has been unbeatable in the playoffs. Given the Yankess sweep of the impressing rotation of Milwaukee you might naturally think they would get the nod here but there is one factor that I think is decisive. Unlike the Brewers they Daytraders have an offense that’s not only nothing to sneeze at but has a lineup of full of pull hitters (Stargell, Lee, Lis, Mays, Wynn, Nettles Cash) that are taylor made for the Polo Grounds and with the short left and right field fences even pull hitters with moderate power like Bob Montgomery and Dwayne Josephson or little Power like Wayne Garrett can go deep with ease. If the Yankess pitchers can keep the ball in the park at home they should have the edge, particualry if you consider their sweep gives them time to adjust their rotation, but with Carlton, Seaver, Niekro and Nelson I think it’s too tough a hill to climb against a team of power hitters who pull the ball. The Yanks will score their runs and win their games but I don’t think they’ll win 4.

Daytraders in 7.