Home Run Theater

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Edgy MD
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Home Run Theater

Post by Edgy MD » Mon Oct 07, 2024 10:01 pm

These are big, not so much because of their momentousness, but in the sense that they contain some of the most area within the arc of the ball's travel. Not great captures of what went down at all, but a video record of any sort gives you an idea. Fran Healy with the play-by-play in both clips.

Darryl Strawberry makes Tim McCarver question his sense of what is possible, 4/29/86, Fulton County Stadium.



Darryl hits the roof of the Big O, 4/4/88.

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Re: Home Run Theater

Post by Edgy MD » Mon Oct 07, 2024 10:10 pm

Kingman goes deep twice, 9/10/1975. The Mets still lost, 8-4. Nelson and Kiner had the first call, Murphy had the second.

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Re: Home Run Theater

Post by Edgy MD » Mon Oct 07, 2024 10:56 pm

Steve Henderson Game, 6/14/80. What's amazing is the festival of powerlessness that greets him at the plate. Alex Treviño, Doug Flynn, late-stage José Cardenál who is just passing through. Henderson and Stearns looked like they were going to be putting up some home run numbers three years earlier, but by mid-June 1980, gravity had done a number on the both of them and the entire Torre era. The sluggingest guy in the scrum at home plate is Claudell Washington, who inexplicably still doesn't have a name on his jersey a week after he's been acquired.

The moment is so rare that ushers or ground crew staff are clapping outside the dugout as he enters the clubhouse.



Right about that time, the Mets were drafting Darryl Strawberry.
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Re: Home Run Theater

Post by Edgy MD » Mon Oct 07, 2024 11:20 pm

First trip to the plate:

Brett Baty, who has hair that suggests hockey more than baseball.

Also, his dad is so stiff and straight, he's like a Will Ferrell character.



The Jake Monster.



Kazzy:

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Methead
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Re: Home Run Theater

Post by Methead » Wed Oct 09, 2024 11:32 am

I miss Bob Murphy's home run calls. You could tell how well the ball was hit just based on his inflection and tone on the word "deeep".
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Re: Home Run Theater

Post by whippoorwill » Wed Oct 09, 2024 4:16 pm

Edgy MD wrote: Mon Oct 07, 2024 10:56 pm Steve Henderson Game, 6/14/80. What's amazing is the festival of powerlessness that greets him at the plate. Alex Treviño, Doug Flynn, late-stage José Cardenál who is just passing through. Henderson and Stearns looked like they were going to be putting up some home run numbers three years earlier, but by mid-June 1980, gravity had done a number on the both of them and the entire Torre era. The sluggingest guy in the scrum at home plate is Claudell Washington, who inexplicably still doesn't have a name on his jersey a week after he's been acquired.

The moment is so rare that ushers or ground crew staff are clapping outside the dugout as he enters the clubhouse.



Right about that time, the Mets were drafting Darryl Strawberry.
What was this?
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Re: Home Run Theater

Post by Edgy MD » Wed Oct 09, 2024 5:40 pm

whippoorwill wrote: Wed Oct 09, 2024 4:16 pm What was this?

https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxe ... 6140.shtml


The Mets were down to the Giants and John Montefusco, 6-0, through five innings, with Mets starter Pete Falcone exiting after only 1 1/3 innings, having yielded five runs. The offense, meanwhile, was being no-hit, managing a single walk through those first five. It was another near-pointless day in the near-pointless existence of the 1980 Mets, with The Count's sinker inducing groundout after groundout after groundout.

But Doug Flynn, of all people, led off the sixth with a single. Ron Hodges popped out as a pinch-hitter, and then fate opened a door, as what looked one more groundout by Lee Mazzilli was ticketed for a double-play, but instead led to two on and no out as secondbaseman Rennie Stennett booted it.

It's crazy to bunt people over down by six, but Joe Torre is a little crazy, and bunt singles were Frank Taveras' best weapon, so bunt is what Frank did, and damned if he didn't get a hit. A sacrifice fly by Claudell Washington later, and the Mets were on the board, down 6-1.

But hope, you may guess, was scarce in those days under any circumstances, even moreso in a five-run hole. But it was Sunday, Father's Day, and so families filled the stadium as much as one may guess Shea Stadium was ever filled at such times (official attendance: 22,918) and damned if folks didn't hang around and try to enjoy the day. The Mets scratched together another modest rally in the eighth, also involving a Taveras infield hit, with Steve Henderson driving home the run.

Now, as bad as the 1980 Mets were, Steve Henderson did not get the memo. Henderson had knocked a dozen homers in a half a season as a rookie in 1977, so he and everybody else expected future seasons with twice that and more. But the homers didn't come, and by 1980 he was reinventing himself as a gap-to-gap hitter, and as the team careened toward another fallow season, Hendu was enjoying a revival of a season, akin to Cleon Jones' 1969, mostly eschewing power in favor of finding the outfield grass every chance he got. He had been red hot for two full months at this point, and had his average at .340 going into the afternoon.

As the Mets went to the ninth, their loss seemed de rigueur — a fait accompli. If there was going to be any comeback, one imagined that they'd have to find a way to bring the lineup around to Henderson again. But realistically, teams generally don't have much chance coming back from four runs down in the ninth inning, but even moreso, we were dealing with the 1980 Mets. We were dealing with a low-offense team in a low-offense year, in a low-offense park, in a low-offense era.

The outlook wasn't brilliant for the Mudville Nine that day. Reliever Greg Minton had gotten the last out of the eighth and he returned to the mound in the ninth. But it bears repeating. People didn't leave. It was a nice day, it was a family day, new Mets managing partners Nelson Doubleday and Fred Wilpon were in the house, and people didn't leave. Minton just had to get through the wet-noodle back end of the Mets' mostly wet-noodle of a lineup, and people didn't leave.

When Elliot Maddox — a punchless outfielder pretending to be a punchless thirdbaseman that season — grounded out, people didn't leave.

Up came Doug Flynn, pretty generally understood to be the most relentlessly inoffensive offensive player in the franchise's history. Having gone to the bench early in the game, there weren't too many pinch-hitting options for Joe Torre, so Flynn, unable to dazzle 'em with brilliance, decided to baffle them with bullshit, pushing a bunt toward Stennett and beating it out. People didn't leave.

José Cardenál — acquired the previous season from the Phils and switching sides between games of a doubleheader — had entered the game earlier and was hitting in the pitchers spot, and he grounded out to short for the second out. The Mets were one out short of their 29th loss of the season, and the people — and I should have mentioned this earlier, but the crowd included a young Willets Point attending his very first Mets' game with his family — didn't leave. The might have stood up to stretch in some anticipation of the end of the game, but they didn't leave.

Top of the order. Lee Mazzilli came up and drove a single to center. Flynn scored, and the tally was now 6-3. A full and complete comeback was still highly unlikely, but hey, everybody had something to cheer about before they left. They didn't leave.

Taveras was up again. Will he, like Flynn, bunt again? He offered a bunt, but found his way on instead via a walk, and suddenly people weren't on their feet stretching, but on their feet cheering. The tying run was up, and they didn't leave.

The tying run was Claudell Washington, acquired a week earlier and already the team's #3 hitter, despite not yet having a uniform with his name on the back. He drove one to center, scoring Mazzilli, and PEOPLE WERE GOING NUTS!!!

But still, sure, how long can they keep this going? Do they have two more hits in them? Because the Mets don't homer. Henderson might have been hitting an unlikely .340, but it's important to note that he had zero homers. It was June 14, and he hadn't homered yet. And please also note, despite that sad, sorry stat, he was batting cleanup.

The Giants had seen enough. The hooked Minton and turned to young Allen Ripley. The Talented Mister Ripley was the son of a big leaguer, and he had given up only one earned run in 12 2/3 innings so far this season. He only needed one out. The least likely thing in the world would have been a game-winning three-run homer by Steve Henderson, but people didn't leave ...



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Re: Home Run Theater

Post by whippoorwill » Wed Oct 09, 2024 6:26 pm

This is excellent! I am quite sure dad and I were watching!

People didn’t leave! Lol
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