Wednesday, June 21, 2023

May 14th, 1993: Gant Hardly Wait

 May 14th, 1993: Philadelphia Phillies (24-8) vs  Atlanta Braves (20-16)  

Gant Hardly wait


An Introduction…

I’m the guy who once started an “MVP” chant for Alfonso Soriano when he returned to left field after he ended the previous inning getting picked off… The Philadelphia Phillies in the meantime did something in 2022 that blew the minds of every one of their fans with a World Series run that could only be compared with a similar run (almost) thirty years previously so I’ve decided once more to go back in time and revisit the greatest season of baseball of my childhood, the 1993 Phillies.  Thanks to the internet and more specifically the saint who runs the ClassicPhilliesTV youtube channel (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWb6dGkCnKBlrQLJAjZ-4-w), I’m going back and watching every 1993 Phillies I can find just like if it was 30 years ago (but with the internet)... Previously I attempted to go day for day with every Phillies game in the month of June, which was a bold idea but proved to be futile. Now the plan is to start from the beginning of the season and attempt 1 game recap per week until we get to game 5 of the 1993 World series and then decide if I really want to torture myself with game 6. Come along for the ride to reminisce about the legends of John Kruk, Mitch Williams, and Darren Daulton, to mix the knowledge we have now, with jokes of how dumb things were then.  


Where We Last Left Our Intrepid Heroes (and Villains)

The boys in red pin stripes are coming off a series against Pittsburgh where they took 2 out of 3 from the cross state Pirates. On their day off before this series against the Braves, the Phils took a sojourn to Scranton/Wilkes Barre for an exhibition game against their AAA affiliate the Red Barons. The Red Barons became the Phillies Triple A team in 1989 before that the Phillies top minor league affiliate was the Maine Guides (changing to the much lamer Maine Phillies in their last season) from 1986-1988, before that it’s quite the adventure. From 83-86 their AAA affiliate would be in Portland… Oregon, and before that Oklahoma City. For a decade when the Phillies needed to call up a minor league player that guy would have to travel cross country to join the big leagues, which is weird. Even weirder, the triple AAA affiliate for the Phillies from 1966-1968? Why of course the San Diego Padres (before the minor league owner sold the franchise, but kept the name to start the major league Padres). Before this, I thought the triple AAA team playing the major league team only occurred in sequels of Major League, but apparently this was a near annual occurrence. Last night (in 1993) the Red Barons upset the future NL Champs (sitting a majority of their regulars and starting Jose De Leon) thanks to a 3 run home run by Ruben Amaro Jr in front of a sold out crowd. That aside the Phils come into Atlanta winning 5 of their last 6 and 8 out of the last 10, cementing their lead in the NL East. At this point in the 1992 season the Phillies were 12-19 and 9 games out of first place.    



The Atlanta Braves, with their super racist chant (if you’re of the thought that “the chop” is totally fine because it’s honoring indigenous culture or that the indigenous “don’t mind”, you’re wrong and you're wrong and also you're kind of a piece of shit) are in year 3 of their fascist rule over the National League. As mentioned a few times in the previous series, the Barves (misspelling intended) won the last two pennants over the Pirates, but as was their wont, the Atlanta team couldn’t finish the deed, losing to the Minnesota Twins in 91 and the Toronto Blue Jays in 92. Their manager is the stalwart Bobby Cox who followed the 80’s trend of hiring himself as coach while he was the General Manager of the team from 1986-1990 (he actually coached the team from 1978-1981 as well). As GM, Cox was responsible for assembling the murderer’s row of pitchers that would lead them through the next 14 years of dominance, as well as drafting some guy named Chipper number 1 overall in 1990 just prior to moving back to the dugout. Bobby Cox would retire after 20 years of managing the Braves in 2010 with the 4th most wins by a manager in the history of baseball, the next closest active Manager (Dusty Baker) is still 400 wins away from him. The Braves came into the season as heavy favorites to win the NL West but have stalled at the gate, currently sitting in 3rd place behind the Giants and Astros with a 20-16 record after having won 8 of the last 10.

  

Today’s Game:

Tonight is Friday, May 14th 1993, and we are currently tuned into WPHL 17, the home of the Philadelphia Phillies (make sure to stay tuned to watch True Stories of state Highway patrol after the game). The broadcast crew of Harry Kalas, Richie “Whitey” Ashburn, and Chris “Wheels” Wheeler will guide us through all 9 innings tonight in Atlanta. The Barves’ Fulton County Stadium is sold out for the game (as well as the rest of the weekend) to host the 1st place Phils and the super white crowd is already doing the super racist chant. In Phillies news, Larry Andersen was placed on the disabled list and the Phillies brought up starting pitcher Mike Williams from Scranton/Wilkes Barre to fill the roster spot. This is a bit of surprise according to the Inquirer as most expected them to bring up a relief pitcher to replace Andersen, and thought that Tim Mauser who is a perfect 9-for-9 as the Red Baron closer. Some one who really expected Mauser to get called up? His wife. "She got all excited," Mauser said. "I got in the car and she said, 'Have you got any news for me?' I was like, 'No, what?' I didn't know what she was talking about. I had no idea (Andersen) got hurt in the first place." 


Watch for yourself at: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EF4T_vRIgVA&t=6922s


The Line-up

CF Lenny Dykstra .

SS Mariano Duncan

1B John Kruk

3B Dave Hollins

C Darren Daulton  

RF Wes Chamberlain

LF Pete Incaviglia

2B Mickey Morandini

SP Terry Mulholland


On the Mound:

The Ace of the Phillies, Terry Mulholland is on the bump for the visiting team. Currently (in 1993) Terry is 4-3 and leading the National League with a 2.29 era  Mulholland was drafted by the San Francisco Giants after winning a D-II College Baseball championship with Marietta College, and today in the current time line (I watched this game on Sunday June 20th 2023) is the 34 year anniversary of the day Terry was traded to the Phillies for Cy Young winning closer (and 1993 Atlanta Brave) Steve Bedrosian. On the same day the Phillies would also trade for Lenny Dykstra, Terry and Dennis Cook (and my sister’s favorite Phillie Charlie Hayes) were brought in to revamp a rotation that was starting the likes of Ken Howell (the number 1 starter for the 89 Phils was 12-12) Steve Ontiveros (who would never start a game after 1989), Mike Maddux (the Zeppo to Greg’s Groucho (parentheses inside parentheses alert: because Greg Maddux wears glasses)) and of course opening day starter Floyd Youmans (who went 1-5 in 10 starts and never played in a major league baseball game again). From the Philadelphia Inquirer, “The thought of watching this team, with this starting rotation, for an entire season was too much for any general manager, not to mention any Phillies fans, to endure.”  An unnamed scout quoted in the inquirer said about the trade, "Mulholland has an average fastball, better-than-average curve, average slider and control and also throws a forkball. He has a herky-jerky delivery and appears to short-arm the ball. He is an above-average major-league prospect." and further “They got themselves two young lefthanders (Dennis Cook and Terry Mulholland), and the reports on them are good. Everyone is looking for pitchers like that.” Cook would get traded a year later after starting the 1990 season 8-3, but Terry would stick around in Philly, throwing the first no-hitter by a Phillie at the Vet in 1991, and leading the 1993 rotation. In his last start, Terry went 10 innings to beat Rheal Cormier and the Cards, and in 1992 Terry was 2-0 with a 2.04 era against the Braves last year, so the entire pregame show is about the pitching match-up.


 

Pitching for the Braves, is the stone faced, lefthanded, future hall-of-famer, Tom Glavine. Drafted in the second round of the 1984 MLB draft, just months after he was drafted in the fourth round of the 1984 NHL Draft (drafted before Brett Hull and Bones guest star Luc Robataille) from Billerica, Massachusetts (home of my best friend, hi Ahni!), Glavine made his debut in 1987, but wouldn’t find his true form until 1991 when he won 20 games for the first of five(!) times in his career and his first of two Cy Young awards (the 2nd coming in 1998). In the 1993 season, Glavine is 4-0 with a 3.54 and so far in his career he is a smooth 10-3 against the Phillies including winning the last 9 against them. What set Glavine apart from most 90’s pitchers and led to him winning 164 games in the decade (second only to Greg Maddux’s 178) was Glavine’s athleticism and durability. Glavine was one of the best hitting pitchers of his era, collecting 5 silver slugger awards and hitting over the Mendoza line (.200) 9 times and finishing with a lifetime .188 batting average, and he wouldn’t land on the injured list until 2008, his 22nd season in the league, at the age of 42.     


Highs (Hopes) and Lows


High- Tom Glavine’s hilarious first inning woes- Top 1

The Phillies start this game like they start most games in the 1993 season, immediately getting guys on base to set up their big bats Dave Hollins and Darren Daulton. Dutch once again comes through for the boys in red with a 2 run double. And yes I went in depth into Daulton last time, let’s just take a quick look at Daultons stats from 1989 to June 1993 and compared to JT Realmuto’s Phillie stats from 2019 to June 2023. 




At Bats

Average

OBP

Slugging

WRc+

RBIs

HRs

JT

2139

.269

.335

.474

115

300

83

Dutch

2177

.244

.354

.432

118

311

74


Darren Daulton was good as hell. 2-0 PHI. Starting in Left Field for the Barves is future friend Ron Gant, who would spend a season and a half with the Phils (slashing .257/.348/.453 and accruing a barely above average 102 WRc+) at the end of the millennia before getting traded to the Anaheim Angels for Kent Bottenfield. He helps today’s cause by first completely losing a routine fly ball from Pete Incaviglia allowing Daulton to score.


A batter later Wes Chamberlain hits another catchable ball to Ron Gant who misplays it for the second straight time allowing another score.



Gant is able to gain a modicum of self respect by throwing out Chamberlain at the plate after a single from Mickey Morandini. Glavine at even this point in his illustrious career is well known for his difficulties in the first innings of games, while being near untouchable afterwards. Here he gives up four runs to the Phillies, but more recently in his last start with the New York Mets in 2007, Glavine was unable to finish the first inning against the Miami Marlins giving up 5 runs, while in Philadelphia the Phillies would take on the Washington Nationals and win the NL East championship with a big assist from Glavine.


Low- Ruh Roh- Bottom 1st

Almost immediately the Braves answer back by dinking and dunking all over Terry Mulholland when he gives up a walk and four singles in the first as the bad guys scratch out 3 runs before Lenny Dykstra makes a great diving catch to end the bleeding. “This first inning is unbelievable” Harry muses as the pitching duel everyone expected goes down the drain. 4-3 Phillies


Low- Redemption- Bottom 2nd

Chipper Jones' placeholder, Terry Pendleton is currently (in 1993) batting a putrid .188 as more and more people in Atlanta fat shame him as the reasoning (real talk Pendleton just has a weird body shape, Whitey tries to describe it as “He’s got long legs and a very short upper body” so he’s like squeezed in the middle like an accordion). Anywho, he just roped his 2nd hit of the day to tied the game, by the end of the game Pendleton will have raised his average over .200 and will end up .272 on the season. With one man on, Ron Gant reminds the Atlanta faithful why you accept defensive shortcomings from certain players by blasting a two run home run and taking a 6-4 lead for Atlanta. My notes: “I’m sad”.


Low- New Pitcher Same Results- Bottom 4th

Newly promoted Mike Williams takes over for Mulholland after the Ron Gant Home. The inning and two thirds outing by Mulholland is his shortest start in two seasons and immediately Wheels assumes that Terry is hurt. Later in the game they say Mulholland had an elevated temperature and chose to pitch anyway. Williams had been 15-1 in his career at AAA but his cup of coffee with the big league club in 1992 went very poorly, resulting in a 1-1 record in 5 starts and a 5.34 ERA, in this game he gave up another hit to Terry Pendleton to make it 7-4 then another double to Ron Gant, and then one of the stars of the Flintstones’ s husband hit another home run and suddenly the 4-0 Phillies lead is a 10-4 Phillies destruction. From my notes: 


The watching of this game has become torturous, and because I re-watched The Good Place this week,  I’m convinced that deciding to do this experiment was in fact a plot set forth by Michael the demon. “The Tomahawk chop is in full Chop” remarks Wheels.  Am I going to fast forward through the rest? I don’t think a six run comeback is in the cards (nor do I remember such a thing happening in my memory). There’s still 5 innings left!?!?


10-4 ATL


Sort of High- Don’t give me hope- Top 5th and 6th

With the aid of a Dave Hollins double, and a Darren Daulton fielder’s choice, the Phillies start clawing their way back in the top of the 5th to make it 10-6. Incaviglia then blasts a ball into the bleacher seats, only that it was a foul ball, and then ends the inning. It’s in the 6th inning when Wes Chamberlain blasts a solo home run to make it 10-7 that I start actually believing, hey just maybe this could happen. Maybe I just memory holed this comeback story after reading about it in the Phillies books over the year, maybe because it was a slow comeback no one needed to mention it. These are the optimistic thoughts I allowed into my brain even though they completely defy logic. 10-7 ATL



Mids- Paul McCartney at the Vet

Hey! Paul McCartney is coming to the Vet, and if you want to win free tickets all you have to do is watch Married with Children every day this week from 6-7 pm so that you’ll know when to call in on a toll free number to be entered into a chance to win free tickets! God I long for the day of contests like this. I wanna hear every story of every person who won something this way, that and every kid who had to put together the silver statue in Legends of the Hidden Temple. Just give me a podcast of interviews of those two things and I’ll never stop listening.


Low- Fregosi tossed- Bottom 7th

Mark Lemke lifts a fly ball to center field and Lenny Dykstra has a track on it, Dykstra closes out as the ball starts to tail down the earth. Dykstra catches it and slides to the ground to slow himself. This is what everyone watches happen on television and in person. Which is why it’s wild that the 2nd base umpire signals that Dykstra did not catch the ball and Lemke goes to second with a double. As one might imagine, this did not sit well with Lenny nor manager Jim Fregosi who quickly gets thrown out of the game after disagreeing with the umpire’s decision in a loud and disruptive manner. Judge for yourself. “Ground can’t cause a fumble, can it?” ponders Whitey



 or in 1993 slo mo instant replay





Wild Rides

The Braves bring in their closer Mike Stanton (not the same guy as Giancarlo Stanton) who is a perfect 13 for 13 on save attempts this season but with a bloated 4.02 era. After getting out of the 8th, Stanton puts two Phillies on base with 1 out as Dave Hollins and Darren Daulton come up to bat. Sadly they are not able to muster up the magic that had been a major hallmark of the season so far as they both fly out to end the ball game


Final: Philadelphia Phillies 7 (24-9) Atlanta Braves (21-16) 10


Words of Wisdom from Harry and Whitey (and I guess Wheels)

“Amazing this first inning, you talk about the great pitching match-up and all kinds of things are happening” - Harry Kalas


“Probably the scouting report from Bobby Wine” Harry Kalas commenting on the Braves game plan to take Mulholland the opposite way. Kalas says this with great joy because Bobby Wine, while currently an Atlanta Brave scout, is a longtime member of Phillie family, first playing in the 60’s (poor bastard was on the 64 Phils) then coaching during the golden era of 76-83. But more importantly to me, Bobby Wine while playing for the Phillies decided to move down the street from my house in the suburbs. His son Robby Wine Jr. remains the only baseball player to be drafted from my high school and play in the MLB (he also coached at Penn State).  


Final Conclusions

The Phillies lose the first game of the series against the Atlanta Braves after staking their best pitcher to a 4-0 lead.  If you enjoyed this wonderful blast from the past please feel free to share, like, or comment on it. The hope is to have more people watching 93 Phillies games on youtube and talking about it. So hit me up @Kevin_Seamus on twitter or @loudphilliesguy on Instagram, or get these e-mailed to you by signing up for my substack. Next up is Curt Schilling’s turn to take on the Barves in a sold out Saturday showdown at Fulton County Stadium.





Tuesday, June 13, 2023

May 12th, 1993: Dutch Ado About Nothing

May 12th, 1993: Philadelphia Phillies (23-8) vs  Pittsburgh Pirates (16-15)  


Dutch Ado About Nothing


An Introduction…

I’m the guy who got his mom to sew the front of his 1993 NL Championship shirt to another black shirt so that I can keep wearing it. The Philadelphia Phillies in the meantime did something in 2022 that blew the minds of every one of their fans with a World Series run that could only be compared with a similar run (almost) thirty year previously so I’ve decided once more to go back in time and revisit the greatest season of baseball of my childhood, the 1993 Phillies.  Thanks to the internet and more specifically the saint who runs the ClassicPhilliesTV youtube channel (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWb6dGkCnKBlrQLJAjZ-4-w), I’m going back and watching every 1993 Phillies I can find just like if it was 30 years ago (but with the internet)... Previously I attempted to go day for day with every Phillies game in the month of June, which was a bold idea but proved to be futile. Now the plan is to start from the beginning of the season and attempt 1 game recap per week until we get to game 5 of the 1993 World series and then decide if I really want to torture myself with game 6. Come along for the ride to reminisce about the legends of John Kruk, Mitch Williams, and Darren Daulton, to mix the knowledge we have now, with jokes of how dumb things were then.  


Where We Last Left Our Intrepid Heroes (and Villains)

There was no joy in Mudville last night (in 1993), as the Phillies lost their 8th game of the season and only their third game in May, starting the month 7-3 after and 18-5 April. The leader and unofficial captain of this Phillies team is their catcher Darren “Dutch” Daulton. A 25th round draft pick in 1980, Daulton has spent his entire career with the Phillies organization, and besides the three at bats as a September call-up in 1983, he’s never played for a winning baseball team. His ascent to his position among the Phillies was in all sense of the term “rocky”, blocked by Ozzie Vigil in his early seasons, in 1986 he was hit with his first major knee injury after a home plate collision with Mike Heath. He returned to the team to find himself once again a back-up this time to big name acquisition Lance Parrish (a million dollar contract and a “Lance us to the Pennant” campaigned resulted with 2.3 WAR in 2 years), finally in 1989 Daulton became a full time starter, and in 1990 had his first good season slashing .268/.367/.416 and earning a three year deal. In 1991, Daulton had another career setback when with Lenny Dykstra after John Kruk’s bachelor party the pair got into a drunk driving accident, putting them both on the shelf for most of the season (Kruk also did not take it well, blaming himself, and slumping on the field). Finally in 1992, it all clicked for Daulton (7.2 WAR, 3rd in baseball)  while the opposite happened with the rest of the team. Yet even while the team was firmly entrenched in the cellar, they all rallied around Daulton for the final month of the season on a team quest to have Daulton lead the NL in Runs Batted In. Daulton succeeded with a league high 109 RBIs in 1992 and became only the 4th catcher in history to lead the league in RBIs (something that wouldn’t be done again until 2021 by Salvador Perez). Before the 1993 season, Daulton was rewarded with a 4 year 16 million dollar deal “This means the best catcher in Baseball will be in a Phillies uniform for the rest of his career” said GM Lee Thomas at the time and though he was wrong about Daulton staying with the Phillies (traded to win a ring in 1997) he was right that Daulton is the best catcher in baseball. Just two games ago he beat the Pirates with a 7th inning grand slam to break a 1-1 tie. The Phillies enter the game 24-8 with a 6 game lead in the NL East over the St. Louis Cardinals.     



The Pittsburgh Pirates sit 1 game over .500 with a 16-15 record in the 1993 season which is pretty impressive when you remember the loss of Barry Bonds, and Doug Drabek in the offseason. They’ll be a season high 2 games over .500 on June 4th, but after that they’ll be in the basement of the league for the next 20 years until they finally returned to the playoffs in 2013.  While a lot of time and effort has been put into the 1992 NLCS against the Braves  because of the Sid Bream slide in game 7, let’s take a look at their 1991 squad. Arguably the best of the 3-peat NL East winners, the 91 version of the Pirates finished with the best record in baseball at 98-64 and a 14 game cushion over the 2nd place St. Louis Cardinals (20 games over the 3rd place Phillies). After surprising the league in 1990, the Pirates in 91 were settled in juggernauts, taking the NL East lead on April 27th and never falling out of first place. Led by outfielders Barry Bonds (25 home runs and 43 steals, suck it Ronald Acuna) and Bobby Bonilla (102 RBIs, 100 runs, 150 WRc+) the Pirates scored the most runs in the NL, while their two staff aces Doug Drabek and John Smiley racked up 15 and 20 wins respectively, Pittsburgh hasn’t had a 20 game winning pitcher since. Meeting the Pirates in the NLCS would be a team that went from last to first from 90-91, and would become the most dominant team for the next decade plus, the Atlanta Braves. The upstart Braves surprised the hell out of everyone in the league with their stellar young pitching (Tom Glavine and Steve Avery) and surprised the much favored Pirates when they beat them 4 games to 3. Bobby Bonilla would leave that offseason for the New York Mets and a contract that is still being paid out today, as the exodus from the Steel City began.         


Today’s Game:

Tonight is Wednesday, May 12th 1993, and it is a gross day in Southern Philadelphia (in those nascent days of a fully constructed 95) as the 29,000+  (announced) fans have sat through a 2 hour 13 minute rain delay. Today’s game will be presented on the aptly named SportsChannel which was the sister channel of PRISM on cable, but not premium, it’s essentially the grandfather of Comcast Sportsnet after Spectacor was bought in 1996 by Comcast and built the empire that would eventually buy the Philadelphia sports complex as well as (checks notes) the National Broadcasting Company. All 9 innings of coverage today will be brought to you by stalwart Phillies radio man Andy Musser (who as a teen won a contest to help do play-by-play for a Phillies game in 1956) and former relief pitcher Kent Tekulve (who is still kicking around after retiring from broadcasting in 2017)   


Watch for yourself at: 

https://youtu.be/ACu6f7u8MEg 


The Line-up

CF Lenny Dykstra .

2B Mickey Morandini

1B John Kruk 8-20 against Randy Tomlin

3B Dave Hollins

C Darren Daulton  

RF Wes Chamberlain

LF Pete Incaviglia 6-9 against Randy Tomlin

SS Juan Bell batting .320 at the Vet

SP Tommy Greene .200 lifetime hitter


On the Mound:

Taking the ball for the Phillies is Tommy Greene, the Right Hander is 3-0 with a 2.57 ERA so far in the young season. Greene is coming off an injury plagued 1992 (to be fair his entire career could be described as injury plagued) where in September when he returned he went 1-2 with a 4.36 era in 6 starts. Greene was such a question mark coming into camp that it wasn’t even assumed he would be in the rotation, after going 22 innings and only giving up one earned run in Spring Training the Philadelphia Inquirer added the caveat “Too bad he has to start the season in the bullpen”. The thinking was that Ben Rivera was guaranteed the 4th starting spot and with the schedule Greene could start the season in the bullpen. Luckily for Greene (and the Phillies) Ben Rivera got the flu and needed some extra time to get ready for the season and Greene started the season in the rotation. Acquired in 1989, Tommy Greene was essentially a throw-in added to the Dale Murphy trade, but GM Lee Thomas had optimism for the 6 foot 5 225 pound pitcher from North Carolina  “when Murphy's career is over, we'll still have another guy from the trade," Thomas said. Greene would make his Phillies debut just days after Terry Mulholland’s no hitter in 1990, giving up a three run home run to Jack Clark (the guy the Phillies targeted before Dale Murphy) and taking the loss “he threw one bad pitch” then Manager Nick Levya said at the time. From the Inquirer after his first start, 


“The fast-working, big righthander - who looks bigger, and mean, which he's not, with his five days' worth of beard stubble - threw a rising fastball that tailed away from lefthanded hitters and toward righthanded hitters.


He also threw a late-breaking slider and a sinker and demonstrated excellent location. And good velocity, too. When catcher Darren Daulton caught the rookie's heater in the pocket of his mitt, you could hear the pop throughout the ballpark. Even Tony Gwynn, who strikes out about once a week, swung right through a couple of his pitches, not even close to making contact.”


In his last start in 1993, Greene went 7.1 innings while giving up 3 runs with 6 strike outs in a victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. 


Pitching for the Pirates of Pittsburgh is Randy Tomlin, a left handed pitcher from Liberty University (where he became a born again Christian while at school and still holds the record for Complete Games). He enters today’s start with a 1-3 record with a 4.41 ERA in 6 starts. Kent “Tek” Tekulve is happy to report that Tomlin throws a “vulcan change” which means he holds the ball like Spock to throw a change-up (I didn’t know this was a thing!). Tomlin’s first start ever came against the Philadelphia Phillies in 1990 when he threw a complete game 3 hitter and impressed so much his spot start gave him a rotation position.  His best season came in 1992 when he went 14-9 with an impressive 3.28 FIP over 208.2 innings pitched, but his most memorable and impressive start occurred in the 1991 NLCS when the Pirates were down 2 games to 1 in the series and gave the ball to Tomlin. He would pitch 6 innings and give up 2 runs but importantly kept the Pirates alive as they would overcome the Braves in the 10th inning with a 3-2 win to tie the series at 2 games apiece. Injuries would limit Tomlin to only 16 more Major League starts, but he would spend the next few years on minor league contracts and Independent League stints before retiring and becoming a pitching coach. Fun fact: he’s the first pitcher to hit John Kruk with a pitch (1 of the 2 times in his career).


Highs (Hopes) and Lows


Low- Tommy Greene’s one mistake- Top 4th

On a night where Tommy Greene looks legitimately untouchable he gets touched up only slightly in the 4th inning when a long drive from the Pirates’ 3rd baseman Jeff King gets past Lenny Dykstra in a strikingly similar track down to Aaron Rowand’s memorable face breaking catch. This time though Dykstra just runs into the wall at a high speed and does not catch the ball and the only Pirate of the night passes 2nd base with a triple before a sacrifice fly from future Phillie Andy Van Slyke scores him. 1-0 PIT 



High- Clutch Dutch- Bottom 4th

After John Kruk’s second single (more on him later) and a walk by 3rd Baseman Dave Hollins, the old backstop Darren Daulton is up to bat. In Daulton’s section of Beards, Bellies, and Biceps both the writers and the quotes from former Phillies hammer down the fact that what made Daulton special was his leadership. “I could tell you a lot more about Darren Daulton, but I’d bore you with superlatives. He never sought admiration but I never saw a leader like him in baseball” said teammate and future GM Ruben Amaro Jr. “The bottom line is that Dutch had the rare ability to make people around him better than they were” said Pete Incaviglia. And on this night Darren Daulton takes the game into his own hands 3-1 PHI

 


High- Tommy Greene Dealing-

One of the best parts (there are no bad parts) of the 1993 video yearbook Whatever It Takes Dude (perfectly edited by Video Dan Stephenson) is when they interview Tommy Greene’s grandmom (to be fair it’s probably a segment from the weekly Sunday recap show) about teaching him how to pitch. The story goes (and you can watch it on youtube here) that a young Tommy had no catcher and turned to his grandmother to catch his fastball, but if he pitched too low and hit her legs is when she called it quits. It’s adorable. Both his mother and grandmother are at the stadium tonight and Tee the Greene is trying to impress. Seemingly infuriated by the 2 hour delay to his start, Greene is on a warpath tonight setting down the Pirates inning after inning at a pace that would give boners to the pitch clock enthusiasts of 2023, the duration of the entire game is 2:02 minutes and if it weren’t for the dumb Phillies hits, Greene could have got it done in 90 minutes. In the top of the 7th Greene puts two men on base for the only time in the game but strikes out Tom Foley to end the feeble attempt of a rally. 3-1 PHI


HIGH- John Kruk Profesional hitter- Bottom 8 (all game)

It’s time to take a moment and show some proper respect for the professional baseball hitter that was John Kruk. Yes, he is possibly the greatest color analyst in baseball, yes he did recently spend 5 minutes explaining the WWE match Money in the Bank and his fandom of Rhea Rhipley, yes he’s a rotund man,  but the true gift John Kruk was given by God was his ability to hit and people forget that. The first thing that ever comes up with John Kruk’s career is his weight and it’s wildly unfair, even a 200 word blurb about him getting an MRI starts with “The thought of Kruk’s plump body being put into a confining MRI cylinder- something akin to stuffing a two-pound sausage into a one-pound skin” Why? Because everyone seemed to think they knew what was best for John Kruk better than John Kruk. There’s never really been anyone like him, his ability to flick balls on the outside corner, seemingly miles away from his straight standing shoulders up approach in the batter’s box, to the opposite field is still unmatched. Yet his biggest advantage in his era was his batter’s eye, Kruk never had a walk rate lower than 10% with a career average of 14%, he controlled exactly what pitches he could control and turn into singles and doubles. While fans and pundits complained that he didn’t hit enough for power, Kruk quietly rivaled Barry Bonds in On Base Percentage, finishing 2nd to Bonds in 92 and 93 (Kruk is currently ranked 77th all time in OBP 77th! There have been so many baseball players). In the 8th inning tonight after Mickey Morandini reached second on an error, Kruk singled him in for an insurance run to go 4-4 on the night. And because he’s John Kruk, the fun doesn’t stop there as Kruk gets caught off first base and does the amazing strategy (it’s a bold strategy) of running backwards to avoid being tagged (Spoilers: he fails). 4-1 PHI


Wild Rides

Tommy Greene is at 91 pitches when he starts the bottom of the 9th inning and determined to get this thing finished so his grandmom can go to bed (“Look at her she’s a bundle of nerves,” Musser comments when they cut back to her fully covering her face and cowering). And like the rest of the night, he cruised, putting away the Pirates’ 4-5-6 hitters in order in 12 pitches (just missing the Maddux) striking out Dave Clark to cement the victory. Greene’s final pitching line: 9 innings 5 hits, 1 run, 1 walk, with 6 strikeouts as he improves to 4-0 to start the season with his first complete game since September 21, 1991. 



Final: Philadelphia Phillies 4 (24-8) Pittsburgh Pirates (16-16) 1


Words of Wisdom from Andy Musser and Tek

“He said he was ‘Amphibious’ I think he met ambidextrous” - Musser with the old joke about Randy Tomlin’s high school football prowess.


“He got h… wait a minute! Wait a minute!” Andy Musser with a literal premature ejaculation for the end of the game that’s prevented by it being a foul tip.


Final Conclusions

The Phillies take the rubber match and the series from their cross state rival on the back of a gem by Tommy Greene.  If you enjoyed this wonderful blast from the past please feel free to share, like, or comment on it. The hope is to have more people watching 93 Phillies games on youtube and talking about it. So hit me up @Kevin_Seamus on twitter or @loudphilliesguy on Instagram, or get these e-mailed to you by signing up for my substack. Coming up is the first series of the 93 season between the Phillies and the Atlanta Braves, I bet it’s not even that interesting.