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OOTP 18 - Historical Simulations Discuss historical simulations and their results in this forum.

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Old 08-21-2016, 10:00 AM   #81
Det42
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1928 New York Yankees (#24) 4, 1942 St. Louis Cardinals (#9) 2
MVP: Lou Gehrig (NYY 1928) .500/.586/.958, 2 HR, 6 RBI
Game 1 wasn't really a blowout, but the Cardinals never had a chance against George Pipgras, who held them to 2 hits and 3 walks. The fact that they committed 6 errors didn't help St. Louis' cause. The Yankees stormed out to a 5-1 lead in Game 2, but the Cardinals sent 9 men to the plate in a 5-run 7th to take a 6-5 lead. Not to be outdone, New York sent 12 men to the plate in the 9th, scoring 7, including a 3-run blast by Bob Meusel. Game 3 wasn't as close as the score indicates. The Yankees had a 5-0 lead after 5, and 6-1 after 7. The Cardinals scored 3 in a 9th inning comeback, but it wasn't enough. The Cards had better luck in Game 4 though, scoring in the 8th to break a 3-3 tie and adding 2 more in the 9th to avoid the sweep. Marty Marion went 4-for-5 in Game 5 to extend the series even further, as his Cardinals easily pounded the Yankees. New York wasn't going to let a 3-0 series lead turn into a 7th game, and Herb Pennock allowed only 5 hits in a dominant shutout in Game 6. Lou Gehrig and Tony Lazzeri each had 3 hits in that game. NOTE: The 1928 Yankees' loss in Game 4 was their first of the tournament. They won their first 11 games, and are now 12-2.
Scores:
NYY 5 SL 1
NYY 12 SL 6
NYY 6 SL 4
SL 6 NYY 3
SL 8 NYY 2
NYY 5 SL 0
The 1928 Yankees' next opponent will be the winner of the 1912 Red Sox / 1968 Tigers series.
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Old 08-21-2016, 11:54 AM   #82
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1998 New York Yankees (#4) 4, 1964 St. Louis Cardinals (#93) 2
MVP: Paul O'Neill (NYY 1998) .615/.655/.962, 2 HR, 8 RBI
The Yankees led Game 1 3-0 for most of the game, but the Cardinals came back with 2 in the 8th. Mariano Rivera got the save by pitching the 9th inning on only 6 pitches. Game 2 wasn't nearly as close. Already leading 4-0, New York exploded for 7 runs in the 5th, mostly on singles (with only a couple of doubles thrown in). Series MVP Paul O'Neill went 3-for-4 with 2 runs and 2 RBI. The Cardinals came back in Game 3 with a decisive victory, scoring 3 runs in two different innings. Despite this, O'Neill went 3-for-4. St. Louis was fairly dominant in Game 4 as well, going up 9-1 after 5. The Yankees came back with 4 in the 7th, but their rally was stopped by Bob Humphreys, who got Tino Martinez to ground out. Once again, O'Neill was an offensive powerhouse, going 4-for-5. The Yankees went up 6-0 in Game 5, but the Cardinals cut the lead to 6-4 in the 5th. New York added runs in the 7th and 8th, and the Cardinals came back in the 8th to cut the deficit to 8-6. In the bottom of the 9th, Lou Brock brought the Cards to within 1 with an RBI single that scored Bob Uecker. But with 2 out and Brock on 3rd, Rivera struck out Bill White to end the game. Game 6 wasn't dramatic at all. The Yankees scored early and often, and the Cardinals couldn't keep up. By the time New York got 3 runs in the 7th and another 7 in the 8th, it was already over. Tino Martinez went 4-for-6 with 3 runs and 3 RBI, and 4 other Yankees had 3 hits. Chuck Knoblauch and Scott Brosius each had 4 RBI.
Scores:
NYY 3 SL 2
NYY 11 SL 2
SL 8 NYY 3
SL 10 NYY 6
NYY 8 SL 7
NYY 17 SL 6
The 1998 Yankees' next opponent will be the winner of the 1910 Athletics / 1986 Mets series.
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Old 08-21-2016, 01:00 PM   #83
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Hope the 86 Mets face the 98 Yankees.
That would be the ultimate subway series since 27 yankees are gone.
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Old 08-23-2016, 04:51 PM   #84
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Due to ongoing family issues, my updates for the tournament will be sporadic at best this week. I may postpone it until after next weekend. Sorry for the delay.
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Old 08-23-2016, 04:52 PM   #85
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BaseballMan View Post
Hope the 86 Mets face the 98 Yankees.
That would be the ultimate subway series since 27 yankees are gone.
If the '86 Mets can beat the 1910 A's, that'll happen. And that should be a strong series. Two great teams.
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Old 08-28-2016, 10:57 AM   #86
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1963 Los Angeles Dodgers (#64) 4, 1984 Detroit Tigers (#33) 1
MVP: Marv Breeding (LAD 1963) .444/.444/.611, 1 HR, 4 RBI
After taking down the #1 team in Round 2, the Dodgers made short work of the '84 Tigers in Round 3. Sandy Koufax threw a 3-hit shutout in Game 1, with the Dodgers exerting their dominance early. The Tigers took a 3-1 lead in Game 2, but by the 6th inning it was tied at 3. They fought it out in the last 2 innings, with the Tigers regaining the lead in the 8th on a Lou Whitaker solo shot, and the Dodgers tying it again in the top of the 9th on an RBI single by Don Zimmer. Lance Parrish started off the bottom of the 9th by hitting a walk-off home run on the second pitch he saw. L.A. made sure Game 3 was never in doubt, not only scoring 11 runs, but scoring them all by the 4th inning, and before Detroit even had a hit. Parrish did hit a 3-run home run in the 5th, but that's all the scoring the Tigers would get. Game 4 was close, with the Dodgers took a 2-1 lead, which the Tigers turned into a tie in the top of the 7th. But L.A. took the lead for good in the bottom of the inning on a Larry Herndon error, followed by a Ron Fairly double. Detroit started out Game 5 with a 2-run 1st inning. With the exception of Game 2, this is the only time the Dodgers trailed in the entire series, and it didn't last long; they came back with 5 of their own in the bottom of the 1st. It essentially stayed that way the rest of the game, with both teams scoring a single run in the 6th.
Scores:
LAD 4 Det 0
Det 5 LAD 4
LAD 11 Det 3
LAD 4 Det 2
LAD 6 Det 3
The 1963 Dodgers' next opponent will be the winner of the 1948 Indians / 1970 Orioles series.
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Old 08-28-2016, 12:48 PM   #87
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1968 Detroit Tigers (#40) 4, 1912 Boston Red Sox (#8) 3
MVP: Denny McLain (Det 1968) 2-1, 25.2 IP, 0.70 ERA, 12 K, 19 HA, 5 BB
The Red Sox came out strong in Game 1, despite giving up a run in the 1st. They made up for it by scoring 1 in the 2nd, 2 in the 3rd, and another in the 4th. They added a few more late in the game before giving up a pair in the 9th, but by then they were too far ahead. Duffy Lewis went 3-for-4 with 3 RBI. Game 2 followed essentially the same script. The Tigers scored a run in the 1st, then the Red Sox came right back to take the lead and never give it up. Game 3 was scoreless until the 4th, when Tris Speaker scored on a fielder's choice to give Boston a 1-0 lead. The Tigers tied it in the 8th, then ended it in the 9th with a walk-off single by Dick McAuliffe. Game 4 was another close, low-scoring affair, that Boston never trailed after scoring in the 3rd. Despite giving up 7 hits and 2 walks, Hugh Bedient only gave up 1 run on his way to giving the Sox a 3-1 series lead. The Tigers extended the series with a 3-run 4th and a 4-run 7th in Game 5. Jim Northrup and Tommy Matchick each had 3 hits, and Northrup had 4 RBI, including a 3-run home run in the 7th. Game 6 was a 5-hit shutout by Denny McLain, setting up a deciding game. The Tigers were up 4-1 in the 7th, when Boston pushed 2 across and threatened more in the 8th with 2 out and the bases loaded. But Mickey Lolich struck out Harry Hooper to end the inning, and pitched an almost-perfect 9th for the win.
Scores:
Bos 7 Det 3
Bos 5 Det 2
Det 2 Bos 1
Bos 3 Det 1
Det 8 Bos 4
Det 3 Bos 0
Det 4 Bos 3
The 1968 Tigers' next opponent will be the 1928 Yankees, who beat the 1942 Cardinals in 6 games.
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Old 08-29-2016, 07:16 PM   #88
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1961 New York Yankees (#14) 4, 1962 New York Yankees (#83) 1
MVP: Bill Stafford (NYY 1961) 2-0, 0.54 ERA, 16.2 IP, 9 K, 13 HA, 7 BB
This might be one of the most confusing writeups of the tournament, due to these teams having basically the same roster, so bear with me. Game 1 was a pitchers duel, where 1962's Whitey Ford pitched a 2-hitter and lost. 1961's Bill Stafford gave up 8 hits, but pitched a shutout for the win. The only run came in the 1st inning, when 1961's Roger Maris hit a home run on the first pitch. Game 2 was also close, with the game tied at 5 from the 6th inning on, sending the game into extra innings. It didn't end until the 12th, when 1961's Tony Kubek hit a walk-off home run. Both teams started Ralph Terry in Game 3, and they had very different experiences. 1961's Terry gave up 2 runs on 6 hits in 8.0 innings, while 1962's Terry gave up 7 on 11 hits in only 6.0 innings. 1961 blew out 1962, including a 5-run 7th, en route to a 3-0 series lead. They looked ready to sweep, as they started Game 4 with 2 in the 1st. But that's all they'd get, and 1962 followed that up with 3 in the 3rd and 2 in the 5th to extend the series. That was all the good news for 1962, as 1961 ran away with Game 5, getting 19 hits. 1961's Elston Howard had 5 of those hits, including a solo shot in the 8th.
Scores:
NYY61 1 NYY62 0
NYY61 6 NYY62 5 (12)
NYY61 11 NYY62 2
NYY62 5 NYY61 2
NYY61 9 NYY62 1
The 1961 Yankees' next opponent will be the winner of the 1907 Cubs / 1917 White Sox series.
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Old 08-29-2016, 10:10 PM   #89
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1929 Philadelphia Athletics (#7) 4, 1980 Philadelphia Phillies (#103) 3
MVP: Jimmy Dykes (PhA 1929) .320/.438/.560, 1 HR, 7 RBI
If there were such a thing as a "Cinderella Team" in a tournament of champions, it would be the 1980 Phillies, and they once again looked like they could win. They went up 3-1 in Game 1, but the A's came back to tie it. It was still 3-3 in the 9th when the Phillies scored 3. The A's came back in the bottom of the 9th with 2 of their own on a Jimmy Dykes home run, but Max Bishop grounded out to end the game. The Phillies led Game 2 2-1 for most of the game. But the A's came back again, this time with 2 in the 7th and again in the 8th to win it. Game 3 was another close one, with the A's up 4-3 after 7. They then scored another 3 in the 8th to pad the lead. The Phillies scored one in the 9th, but it wasn't enough. Game 4 saw the Phillies score 5 in the 6th to take a 7-1 lead. It started to look like it wasn't enough in the 8th, as the A's went on a tear, scoring 4 runs. But that's where they stopped, and the Phillies tied the series again. The A's came back in Game 5 with another big inning: a 7-run 6th, taking their own 7-1 lead. It was more than enough, and they went up 3-2 in the series. The Phillies weren't done though, and Steve Carlton threw a 4-hit shutout in Game 6. The A's led nearly the whole way in Game 7, with a pair of 3-run innings.
Scores:
PhN 6 PhA 5
PhA 5 PhN 3
PhA 7 PhN 4
PhN 7 PhA 5
PhA 8 PhN 3
PhN 7 PhA 0
PhA 6 PhN 3
The 1929 Athletics' next opponent will be the winner of the 1905 Giants / 1903 Americans series.
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Old 08-30-2016, 11:11 AM   #90
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Although they're gone now, The 2002 angels would've been the perfect upset story.
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Old 08-30-2016, 05:00 PM   #91
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I don't know if I'll have any results today, but I did realize that I finished up yesterday without noticing we're halfway through Round 3! So here's an updated bracket for you.
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Old 08-31-2016, 06:42 PM   #92
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1977 New York Yankees (#54) 4, 1930 Philadelphia Athletics (#22) 1
MVP: Cliff Johnson (NYY 1977) .444/.565/.889, 2 HR, 11 RBI
The first half of Game 1 was close, with Philadelphia leading 2-1. Then the Yankees erupted for 4 in the 6th and another 4 in the 7th, giving them an easy win. Game 2 was all offense. The Yankees led 10-8, but the A's came back in the bottom of the 9th to tie it on an Al Simmons 2-run homer. New York answered right away in the 10th, with a Thurman Munson RBI single that won the game. Game 3 was everything Game 2 wasn't, in that it was a pitchers duel between Lefty Grove and Ron Guidry. However, it followed essentially the same script as the previous game. New York led 1-0, but the A's tied it in the 9th on a Max Bishop sac fly. The Yankees then won the game in the 10th when Grove overthrew 1st on a pickoff attempt, and Dell Alston scored from 3rd. Philly made sure to avoid a sweep, scoring 7 runs in the first 2 innings of Game 4, and led 11-1 by the middle of the 8th. The Yankees scored 3 runs in the bottom and another in the 9th, but it wasn't nearly enough. Game 5 had a big 3rd inning for both teams, with the A's getting 6 and New York getting 4, giving Philadelphia a 7-5 lead at that point. But the Yankees got another 4 in the 5th, and led the rest of the way.
Scores:
NYY 9 Phi 3
NYY 11 Phi 10 (10)
NYY 2 Phi 1 (10)
Phi 11 NYY 5
NYY 9 Phi 7
The 1977 Yankees' next opponent will be the winner of the 1932 Yankees / 1951 Yankees series. (This section of the bracket has plenty of Yankees left)
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Old 08-31-2016, 07:37 PM   #93
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1948 Cleveland Indians (#49) 4, 1970 Baltimore Orioles (#17) 3
MVP: Bob Lemon (Cle 1948) 2-0, 1.08 ERA, 16.2 IP, 6 K, 5 BB, 11 HA
The series started with a gem from Cleveland's Bob Lemon, who pitched a 3-hit complete game shutout. The Orioles began to take control on Game 2, breaking a 2-2 tie in the 3rd and tacking on some insurance runs in the 7th. Frank Robinson had 3 hits and 4 RBI, including a 2-run homer off of Bob Feller. The Orioles led Game 3 the entire way, although the Indians kept it close, coming within a run in the 7th but falling short. The series went 3-1 in favor of the O's in Game 4, with Baltimore taking a 5-1 lead. Cleveland kept it close again, scoring 3 in the 7th. They couldn't figure out pitchers Eddie Watt or Pete Richert, who combined gave up 2 hits in 2.1 innings. Game 5 saw Baltimore with a slim 1-0 lead in the 7th, but the Indians had yet another good 7th inning, scoring all 4 of their runs. This time it was Baltimore trying to make a late-game comeback, scoring 2 of their own in the 8th, but the Indians held on and stayed alive. They kept themselves going in Game 6, taking a 5-2 lead in the first 2 innings, and made it 6-2 in the 5th. The Orioles chipped away a little at that lead, but not nearly enough, and so the series went 3-3. Game 7 was also close, at least in the first half of it. A 1-1 game was broken open in the 6th, with 4 runs by the Indians, including a 3-run shot by Pat Seerey. They never looked back after that, and finished their series comeback.
Scores:
Cle 5 Bal 0
Bal 5 Cle 2
Bal 4 Cle 3
Bal 5 Cle 4
Cle 4 Bal 3
Cle 6 Bal 4
Cle 6 Bal 1
The 1948 Indians' next opponent will be the 1963 Dodgers, who defeated the 1984 Tigers in 5 games.
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Old 09-01-2016, 02:27 PM   #94
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1937 New York Yankees (#21) 4, 1969 New York Mets (#53) 1
MVP: Lefty Gomez (NYY 1937) 2-0, 0.50 ERA, 13 K, 2 BB, 15 HA
The miracles ran out for the 1969 Mets, as the 1937 Yankees were too much for them. Most of Game 1 was close, with the Yankees having a 2-1 lead after 7. But the Yankees busted out with 4 more in the 8th, winning it easily. Game 2 was similarly hard-fought. The Yankees took an early 2-0 lead, but the Mets tied it up with runs in the 4th and 5th. It stayed a 2-2 game all the way to the 9th, when Roy Johnson hit a 2-out walk-off single to give the Yankees another win. Game 3 saw both teams finishing with 11 hits, but the score wasn't nearly so close. The Yankees scored 5 in the 1st and added 3 more later on, while Lefty Gomez held the Mets scoreless the entire way, despite all of those hits. The Mets stranded 6 runners in scoring position. The Yankees had a good chance to finish the sweep, leading Game 4 4-1 after 6. But the Mets scored 3 in the 7th on walks and singles, tying the game. Then, in the bottom of the 9th, with one out and the bases loaded, Ivy Andrews threw a 3-2 pitch that went wide, walking Ed Kranepool and ending the game. There were to be no late-game heroics in Game 5, as the Yankees took control right from the start, scoring 2 in the 1st and another 6 in the second, dominating the game and taking the series.
Scores:
NYY 6 NYM 1
NYY 3 NYM 2
NYY 8 NYM 0
NYM 5 NYY 4
NYY 8 NYM 2
The 1937 Yankees' next opponent will be the winner of the 1939 Yankees / 1920 Indians series.
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Old 09-01-2016, 02:54 PM   #95
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1907 Chicago Cubs (#3) 4, 1917 Chicago White Sox (#30) 0
MVP: Happy Felsch (CWS 1917) .563/.611/.813, 0 HR, 2 RBI
The games were close, but the series was not. The White Sox opened the series with a 3-1 lead in Game 1, which they expanded to 6-1 in the 7th. But the Cubs came back with runs in the 7th and 8th, and then 3 more in the 9th to force extra innings. In the bottom of the 11th, White Sox SS Zeb Terry mishandled a ground ball, allowing the winning run to score. The White Sox had another late lead in Game 2, this time 2-0. The Cubs came back again, scoring 3 in the 8th and narrowly winning the game. Game 3 seemed to be a reversal of the first two: the Cubs had a 2-0 lead going into the last inning, and tacked on 3 more in the 9th. Then the White Sox made their comeback, scoring 2 in their half of the 9th, and having runners at 2nd and 3rd with only one out. But Chick Gandil hit a line drive right to Harry Steinfeldt, and Shoeless Joe Jackson hit a routine grounder that ended it. Game 4 was a low-scoring affair, with the White Sox taking a 1-0 lead in the 2nd, which quickly became a 2-1 Cubs lead in the 3rd. Both teams were held scoreless after that, completing the sweep for the Cubs. Happy Felsch was named MVP, despite being on the wrong end of the sweep.
Scores:
ChC 7 CWS 6 (11)
ChC 3 CWS 2
ChC 5 CWS 2
ChC 2 CWS 1
The 1907 Cubs' next opponent will be the 1961 Yankees, who beat the 1962 Yankees in 5 games.
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Old 09-02-2016, 07:33 PM   #96
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1951 New York Yankees (#38) 4, 1932 New York Yankees (#6) 2
MVP: Vic Raschi (NYY 1951) 2-1, 1.38 ERA, 26.0 IP, 13 K, 11 BB, 16 HA
The 1932 Yankes had a 4-2 lead going into the 9th, where the 1951 Yankees started their comeback with a walk and a pair of singles, scoring a run and putting the tying run on 3rd with 1 out. But Yogi Berra flew out to center and Gil McDougald struck out, giving the '32 Yankees the win. They kept it going in Game 2, going up 3-2 in the 1st inning and 7-4 by the 4th. While the '51 Yankees did score a pair in the 8th, they weren't really in this one. The series turned around in Game 3, with the score tied at 1 in the 9th. Hank Bauer hit a walk-off single to give the '51 Yankees their first win. Vic Raschi pitched a 3-hitter. The '51 Yankees didn't let up in Game 4, easily tying the series with a blowout win. Game 5 was essentially a replay of Game 3. Tied at 1 in the 9th, the '51 Yankees again won on a walk-off, this time a single by Bobby Brown. Game 6 saw Vic Raschi throw his second 3-hitter of the series, this time a shutout, to give the '51 Yankees their 4th straight win. The '32 Yankees' Red Ruffing only gave up 4 hits, but did give up 2 runs in the loss. For the series, the '32 Yankees' Lou Gehrig, Earle Combs and Tony Lazzeri all hit under .200.
Scores:
NYY32 4 NYY51 3
NYY32 8 NYY51 6
NYY51 2 NYY32 1
NYY51 10 NYY32 1
NYY51 2 NYY32 1
NYY51 2 NYY32 0
The 1951 Yankees' next opponent will be the 1977 Yankees, who beat the 1930 A's in 5 games.
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Old 09-02-2016, 08:44 PM   #97
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BaseballMan View Post
Hope the 86 Mets face the 98 Yankees.
That would be the ultimate subway series since 27 yankees are gone.
It looks like you're getting your wish...
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Old 09-02-2016, 08:44 PM   #98
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1986 New York Mets (#20) 4, 1910 Philadelphia Athletics (#13) 1
MVP: Dwight Gooden (NYM 1986) 2-0, 1.50 ERA, 18.0 IP, 6 K, 3 BB, 12 HA
The Mets scored 3 in the 3rd inning of Game 1, and it stayed 3-0 for most of the game. The A's got 3 of their own in the 8th, and it stayed tied into extra innings. The top of the 10th saw New York's Danny Heep hit a pinch-hit solo home run that became the winning run. Game 2 saw a flurry of scoring in the first 2 innings, with the Mets coming out of it leading by 1. And then... no one scored the rest of the game, giving New York another win. New York scored in the 1st inning of Game 3 as well, and were up 2-1 after 7. Philadelphia came alive in the 8th, scoring 5 in that inning and then another 3 in the 9th, giving them a big win. The Mets responded in Game 4 with Dwight Gooden throwing a 3-hit shutout, for a 3-1 series lead. Game 5 was close, with the Mets scoring 1 in the 2nd and 2 in the 7th, and the A's answering with the same number of runs 2 innings later both times. The 3-3 tie was broken in the bottom of the 10th, with a walk-off, series-ending single by Lenny Dykstra. The first and last games of this series were both 4-3 wins by the Mets in 10 innings.
Scores:
NYM 4 Phi 3 (10)
NYM 5 Phi 4
Phi 9 NYM 2
NYM 5 Phi 0
NYM 4 Phi 3 (10)
The 1986 Mets' next opponent will be the 1998 Yankees, who beat the 1964 Cardinals in 6 games.
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Old 09-03-2016, 10:49 AM   #99
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1905 New York Giants (#10) 4, 1903 Boston Americans (#23) 2
MVP: Mike Donlin (NYG 1905) .542/.577/.833, 1 HR, 4 RBI
This was a matchup of the first two World Series champions ever (1904 didn't have one). Game 1 was a 5-hit shutout by Christy Mathewson. The rest of the Giants did their part by beating up on Cy Young as much as a team can hope for, including scoring 3 in the 1st. The top two in their order each had 3 hits, while those in slots 3-5 each had 2. Game 2 featured the same pitchers, and mostly the same result. The Giants got to Young early again, scoring 2 in the 1st, and he had a rare start where he didn't finish. And while Mathewson didn't pitch a shutout, he did throw a 2-hitter. Game 3 saw the two of them go at it yet again (it's the 1905 settings), but this time the two pitching legends both showed what they were made of (although the Giants scored in the 1st again). Boston tied it at 1 in the 6th, and it stayed that way for another 6 innings. The bottom of the 12th saw Candy LaChance hit a walk-off solo home run to give Boston their first win. They both finally went with different pitchers in Game 4, and Boston starter Bill Dinneen gave up 8 runs in only 4.2 innings. Both teams had a 4-run 4th, but the Giants kept pouring it on, while the Americans couldn't cross the plate at any other time. Boston stormed back in Game 5 to keep the series going, scoring 2 in the 1st and 3 in the 3rd. It's also the first time New York hadn't scored in the 1st. It also saw Dinneen make up for the previous game by only giving up 1 run (although he did allow 10 hits). Game 6 was Young vs. Mathewson again, and this time it was Boston jumping out to a 2-run 1st inning lead. The Giants tied it in the 5th, and then came on with 1 in the 7th and 3 in the 8th to finish it off.
Scores:
NYG 4 Bos 0
NYG 4 Bos 1
Bos 2 NYG 1 (12)
NYG 9 Bos 4
Bos 7 NYG 1
NYG 6 Bos 2
The 1905 Giants' next opponent will be the 1929 A's, who beat the 1980 Phillies in 7 games.
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Old 09-03-2016, 10:51 AM   #100
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1939 New York Yankees (#5) 4, 1920 Cleveland Indians (#37) 0
MVP: Red Ruffing (NYY 1939) 2-0, 0.56 ERA, 16.0 IP, 7 K, 3 BB, 7 HA
New York started the series with 2 runs in the first, and pitcher Red Ruffing throwing a 5-hitter, holding Cleveland to just one run. Despite the final score, Game 2 was much closer. The Yankees scored a run in the 1st, and it stayed 1-0 until the 5th, when the Indians tied it. New York then scored another 2 in the 6th, and Cleveland answered with 2 of their own in the 8th. But then this close came suddenly became a blowout in the bottom of the 8th, where the Yankees scored 5, capped by Joe Gordon's grand slam. Both Ruffing and Cleveland pitcher Stan Coveleski had great games in Game 3, and it was scoreless until the Indians took their first lead of the series with a run in the 5th. It stayed 1-0 until the 8th, when the Yankees scored 2 of their own. The Indians threatened to tie it or even take the lead in the bottom of the 8th, but Elmer Smith grounded out, stranding runners at 2nd and 3rd. They went down 1-2-3 in the 9th, giving the Yanks another win. Game 4 played out the same way as Game 3 did. Cleveland took a 1-0 lead in the 4th, then New York took a 2-1 lead in the 6th, this time on a Red Rolfe 2-run shot. The Indians once again got runners on 2nd and 3rd in the 8th, but Larry Gardner grounded out to end the inning. That was the only time they came close to scoring again, and New York finished the sweep.
Scores:
NYY 5 Cle 1
NYY 8 Cle 3
NYY 2 Cle 1
NYY 2 Cle 1
The 1939 Yankees' next opponent will be the 1937 Yankees, who beat the 1969 Mets in 5 games.
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