Showing posts with label San Francisco Giants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco Giants. Show all posts

Monday, June 14, 2021

May 5th, 1993: Swifter Than A Tartar's Bow

 May 5th, 1993: Philadelphia Phillies (19-6) vs  San Francisco Giants (17-10)

Swifter Than a Tartar's Bow


An Introduction…

I’m the guy who drafted Randy Wolf with his last pick in every fantasy season till his retirement. Now that the 2021 season has begun, my attention has returned to the current Phillies, but as too the heartbreak of being a fan of this franchise has also begun, 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 28 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)

On a west coast swing of the California teams , the Phillies have gone 5 and 1 with the only loss on their record coming from Tom Candiotti on May 1st. Last night the Phillies took a 2-1 lead into the 9th inning with Curt Schilling on the mound, entering the inning he had thrown 100 pitches, and Mitch Williams was rested, but Jim Fregosi stuck with his starter, who then gave up a game tying home run to Giants Third Baseman (and current manager of the Kia Tigers of KBO league) Matt Williams. In the 12th inning, Dave Hollins hit his third home run of the season to help secure the victory (with a Mitch Williams save) over the NL West leading San Francisco Giants. They continue to lead the NL East, thanks to timely hitting and great starting pitching. 


The San Francisco Giants, after a relatively slow start (they were 11-8 last time we saw them), are starting to round into the powerhouse they will become in 1993, winning 6 of their last 8. Their new coach Dusty Baker, has the benefit of having Will Clark and Matt Williams in the infield and the ultimate weapon Barry Bonds, patrolling left, but what Baker showcases in his first year, and subsequently with every team he’s coached since, is his ability to garner great performances out of unknown players. Baker, who was drafted by the Atlanta Braves and essentially adopted by Hank Aaron, is one of the best nurturers of talent in coaching history, all five teams he’s been hired to coach eventually made the playoffs during his regime. He was promoted from First base Coach to Manager during the 1992 offseason after the new ownership group led by Peter Macgowan (you can read more about that sale in the April 26th post) fired Jim Craig, who at that point was the winningest coach in franchise history.  Dusty rewarded their trust by taking an early lead in the most difficult division in the league, the NL West. 


Today’s Game:

It is Wednesday, May 5th, 1993, with the Phillies visiting what is possibly the only stadium in America worse than the Vet, San Francisco’s Candlestick Park. This uncomfortable monstrosity, built in 1958, became home to the Giants in 1960, and was infamous for it’s terrible conditions for playing baseball. The entire stadium was essentially a big wind tunnel, and the sea air from the bay made the air thick with dew, and at night it quickly became very cold. It’s so bad, the Giants are thinking about going to all day games in the 1994 season except for Friday nights. Some nicknames for the field found on Wikipedia, “Windlestick” “The Quagmire” “The Cave of Winds” and “The Ashtray by the Bay”, help paint the picture.  Candlestick famously was the home of the 1989 World Series game between the Oakland A’s and the Giants that was postponed due to an earthquake (for ten days to make sure the building was still structurally sound). It’s also one of the locations used in the 1996 thriller The Fan where Wesley Snipes played a San Francisco Giant whose teammate in the film is a young actor named John Kruk. Today’s game is brought to you on Sportschannel where we get a nice change of pace with Andy Musser and Ken “Tek” Tekulve for all nine innings. Tek adds to the Candlestick Park discourse, “It’s nice during the day, but when the sun goes down, it turns into a house of horrors.” 


Watch for yourself at: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd4w_7nWZ8k 


The Line-up

CF Lenny Dykstra .

2B Mickey Morandini

1B John Kruk

3B Dave Hollins Batting .346 on road trip

C Darren Daulton 2 for last 27 

RF Jim Eisenreich 11 for last 18

LF Milt Thompson

SS Mariano Duncan 

SP Danny Jackson


On the Mound:

Pitching for the visiting Phillies is key free agent acquisition Danny Jackson, who though only 2-0 for the season with a 3.56 ERA, has been exactly what the Phillies needed, with the team going 5-0 in Jackson’s starts. A big wrestling fan, Jackson fit right in with the Macho Row crew (despite being a pitcher) with his goofy antics, particularly his affinity for ripping off his jersey and screaming. According to Kruk’s autobiography, “ After the game in the clubhouse Danny peeled his shirt off all of a sudden and started flexing, saying ‘Pump us up’ and we were looking at each other like, damn, look at this guy. Then he went out his next start and pitched a shutout. So he just kept doing it.”  (this is the game Kruk is referencing). Kruk also mentions “If it works for (Jackson), let him do it. He makes enough money to be able to buy new shirts” 


Pitching for the home team San Francisco Giants is former number 2 overall pick, Billy Swift. Swift, a Portland, Maine native (where he was named to the New England Sports Hall of Fame) came to the Giants in the trade that sent 1989 MVP Kevin Mitchell to the Seattle Mariners in the 1991 offseason. Swift started his career as a starting pitcher, but was converted to a reliever later to some success before the trade to San Francisco where he was stretched back out into a Starter. In his first season with the Giants (1992), the conversion was a great success as he would lead the National League in ERA with a 2.08. Yet there are still looming questions if Swift will be able to handle the workload of a highly competent starter for the full season of 1993. In 1995, Swift would sign a huge deal with the Rockies and like most pitchers would find that pitching in Denver was easier said than done, after a last hurrah in Seattle in 1998, Swift would retire with a 94-78 record with a 3.94 FIP and 22.5 WAR accumulated.  For more information about Swift, check out the SABR.org profile on him, and read about his amazing college career, his run in the olympics, and his business savvy. Also according to Wikipedia, Billy Swift’s career stats are eerily similar to Bill Swift of the 1920’s and 1930’s. So that’s cool.


Highs (Hopes) and Lows


LOW- Small ball- Bottom 2nd

In his first of what is now 28 years of professional Baseball managing, Dusty Baker decides to play a little small ball in the second inning. After a Barry Bonds double (who is hitting a cool .405 for the 1993 season so far) to start the inning, Baker sends out his 6 hole hitter Robby Thompson to bunt over Bonds with no outs in the inning. To quote Billy Beane in the film version of Moneyball “they’re giving you an out, just giving to you. Take it. Say thank you”. Yes, Barry Bonds is now at third base, but why give up the chance for your hitter, take the bat right out of their hands? This was not in the thought process of most coaches in 1993, and the next hitter grounded out to score Barry Bonds to make it 1-0 GIANTS, so maybe Baker was right?


LOW- Will Clark is Good- Top 3rd (the whole game)

Will Clark is entering this game in the midst of a slump to start the season, the 5 time all star and 4 time top 5 MVP finisher (including being a runner up for the award in 1989), is slashing a replacement level .202/.282/.288 over the first month of the season while hitting one (1) Home Run and knocking in 10. His season turns around today, with 2 hits and 2 runs scored, while continuing his above average defensive play. In the third inning, he robbed the Phillies of runs with a nifty catch on a Darren Daulton line drive with two men on base. This catch may have caused a certain Phillies fan (me) to say under their breath  “fuck you Will Clark”.




Over the rest of the season Clark will slash .302/.387/.469 with 135 wRC+ (weighted Runs Created).  


HIGH- Tying it up- Top 4th

The Phillies open up the fourth frame with a couple of singles from Jim Eisenreich and Milt Thompson, but after a ground out and a subpar sac bunt attempt from Danny Jackson, they remain on 1st and 2nd base, respectively. But “the Dude” Lenny Dykstra comes through with an RBI single to score Mariano Duncan to tie up the game.



This RBI is the first non-home run RBI from Dykstra all season. 


LOW- Tires Loosening- Bottom 4th

Sloppy glovework from John Kruk and Dave Hollins lead to Will Clark to score to make it 2-1 GIANTS.



Royce Clayton then hits a ball in “the perfect spot” says Tek, that is right between Morandini and Duncan at 2nd and short to score Bonds 3-1 GIANTS. The next batter hits another ball weakly through the infield, “perfectly placed for the second time”, adds Tek,  to score another Giant 4-1 GIANTS. With the pitcher Billy Swift up to bat, one out, and men on first and third, Baker decides to try another sacrifice bunt. Jackson fields the ball and easily throws out Swift at first, but the Giants runner at third then decides to try to score, and gets thrown out at home for the double play and ends the inning.




4-1 GIANTS.


LOW- Tires come off- Bottom 5th

After retiring one Giant, giving up a single to another, throwing a wild pitch, and walking a Giant, Manager Jim Fregosi finally decides to lift Danny Jackson from the game and replace him with Bob Ayrault who promptly allows 7 runs to cross the plate (2 are attributed to Jackson, the other 5 to Ayrault) after 2 singles from Matt Williams and Barry Bonds (4 for 4 on the day raising his average to .435), a walk, a triple and finally a home run by Royce Clayton. The inning (and game essentially) ends with the Giants ahead 11-1


mids- Some positivity- Top 8th

To add some happiness for the occasion, Darren Daulton hits a monster home run in the 8th inning to narrow the score to 11-2.



It’s Daulton’s 6th home run of the year. 11-2 GIANTS


Wild Rides

In an almost cruel punishment, Dusty Baker decides to use his closer against the Phillies in the 9th even with a nine run lead. Beck is 2-1 with a 2.20 ERA, 1.56 FIP, 21 strikeouts, 0.82 WHiP and 7 saves on the year over 16 ⅓ innings. He retires the Phillies 1-2-3 to secure a San Francisco Giants victory.


Final: Philadelphia Phillies 2 (19-7) San Francisco Giants 11 (18-10)


Words of Wisdom from Musser and Tek

“The worms are going to have a tough day if this keeps up” Musser is talking about Billy Swift’s ability to induce grounders (Swift led the NL in double plays in 1992), and it’s one of my favorite baseballisms. 


“Sporadic but timely scoring” Musser on the Phillies offense so far this season as they haven’t been setting the world on fire with their bats, but they’re still winning.


“Sometimes when it goes bad, it goes completely ugly” Tek perfectly describes the 7 run inning by the Giants. 


“Matt Williams could be comeback player of the year this year. He was awful last year.” Musser doesn’t not spare feelings on air. 


Final Conclusions

Maybe it was a good thing, the Braves ended up topping the Giants in the West in 1993, because I don’t think that NLCS would have been fun for the Phillies.  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. Next game available is May 8th against the Cardinals, it’s the day before Mother’s Day, so anything could happen (because 93 fans know exactly what occurs on Mother’s Day, I’m pumped). 


Thursday, February 11, 2021

April 26, 1993: Don't Call it a Comeback

 April 26th, 1993: Philadelphia Phillies (13-4) vs  San Francisco Giants (11-8)

Don’t Call it a Comeback


An Introduction…

I’m the guy that is psyched about the fact that the Phillies actually made moves with their bullpen this offseason.  It’s crazy, but the Major League Baseball season was actually played in 2020, and the Phillies have done everything they could do to try to ruin my fanhood. 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 27 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 1-2 game recaps 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 Philadelphia Phillies are coming off a sweep of the Los Angeles Dodgers and currently* have the best record in baseball (*April 1993) at 13-4. The great start is attributed mostly to a much improved rotation and a perfectly orchestrated platoon system by third year manager Jim Fregosi. In Robert Gordon’s “Then Bowa Said to Schmidt”… The Greatest Phillies Stories Ever Told Mitch Williams is quoted as saying “ Jim Fregosi went out and got a prison squad. I never saw a manager get so much out of a group of players. No other manager could have managed that team. We didn’t have any of the premier guys in the league- at least no one that the rest of baseball recognized as marquee players. But we had guys who would do anything to win. Some of us were just, let’s just say, a bit of a challenge to manage. Fregosi knew how to handle us.” 



The San Francisco Giants are still on the runway in the 1993 season, sitting at a record of 11-8, the Giants are in some sense a disappointment, but in reality are just lucky to playing in San Fran at all. After finishing 72-90 in 1992, good for 5th in the NL West, principal owner Bob Lurie,  who was losing 2-7 million dollars annually, decided to sell the team to an ownership group with the intention of moving the franchise to Tampa Bay, Florida. Beyond mostly losing in the 35 years the Giants were in San Fran, the real reason for the move was that Candlestick park was a terrible place to play and no fans ever wanted to go watch the team.  At the last second a San Francisco investor group led by Safeway magnate Peter Magowan bought the team from Lurie with plans to keep the Giants in San Francisco and build a vastly better ballpark. The Giants, despite losing former MVP Kevin Mitchell in 1992, still had a strong offensive club with veteran sluggers Will Clark and Matt Williams at First and Third base respectively, and decided to go out in the 92 offseason to sign (checks notes… checks notes) the greatest baseball player in the history of the sport (shut up, you know I’m right) Barry Bonds. Bonds had originally been drafted by the Giants in the second round of the 1982 amateur draft, his father Bobby Bonds had been a perennial all star for the Giants, and his godfather Willie Mays was the greatest baseball player in the history of the sport, up til Bonds, for the Giants so it seemed like a perfect match. But as rich Baseball owners are wont to do, the Giants tried to lowball Bonds with a 70,000 dollar offer to forego college, Bonds wanted 75k so he went to Arizona State and was subsequently drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates. Bonds at this point (in 1993) has already won 2 MVP awards in his six full seasons, but has also won very few friends in the game of baseball. The Pirates beat writers voted him “Most Despised Pirate”, and after a disappointing loss in the 1992 NLCS vs the Braves, Bonds opted for free agency and signed for a then ludicrous 6 year 43.75 million dollar deal, the biggest contract in baseball.  



Today’s Game:

It is Monday April 26th, 1993 and here at Veteran’s stadium it is 54 degrees and raining. For every kid who grew up in the Delaware Valley, this is the weather we associate with the worst memories of April. Where it should be warm and finally nice, it is instead windy, rainy and cold, and we’re all still forced to go outside because it’s technically Spring.  Tonigh’s game started at 7:41 which is only important since the second and last game of the series tomorrow starts at 1.  The television broadcast is brought to you on PRISM (stay tuned for the Shane Black classic The Last Boy Scout after the game) with Chris Wheeler all game, but Jay Johnstone and Garry Maddox help alleviate the tedium. I tend to give Wheels a lot of unfair grief in this space due to his continued presence as sage broadcaster following the deaths of Richie Ashburn and Harry Kalas, but I’ve finally put my finger on why Wheels bothers me. Wheels is the kid whose dad goes up to people and says, “My kid knows everything about baseball. Ask him anything… go ahead ask” and then they sit there until you ask and the kid does know the answer. 

  

Watch for yourself at: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rblAgf_cOfk


The Line-up

CF Lenny Dykstra .

2B Mickey Morandini 6 game hitting streak

1B John Kruk

3B Dave Hollins

C Darren Daulton

RF Pete Incaviglia

LF Milt Thompson

SS Mariano Duncan

SP Ben Rivera


On the Mound:

Making his first start since April 14th is Bienvinido Rivera, who is currently for the year has a 1-1 record with a 6.48 ERA. This is only his third start of the year, but his previous effort was a nice 6 inning affair where he gave up 0 runs against the Reds while striking out 7 and walking 4. Rivera owns a pretty basic repertoire of fastball curveball, but if he is able to keep the ball down, he can be very effective.


Pitching for the San Francisco Giants is a future Phillie, a man by the name of Jeff Brantley. Brantley is a product of Mississippi State and has spent most of his career as a relief pitcher, making an All Star team in 1990. After holding Left handers to a .180 batting average in 1992, the Giants in desperate need for starting pitching decided to try Brantley out as a starter (he briefly auditioned at the end of the 92 seasons with 4 starts going 3-0 with a .44 ERA over 20.2 innings). The experiment has given the Giants some mixed results as he sits with a 1-1 record and a 3.45 ERA but 5.29 FIP over 15 innings. Brantley goes back to the bullpen after 8 more starts (not including tonight) in the 93 season never to return to the role again. In 1996, Brantley would lead the league in saves for the Cincinnati Reds, and in 1999 he would join the Philadelphia Phillies. His time in Philadelphia was terrible, to the tune of a 3-9 record 28 saves a 5.77 ERA and 5.27 FIP over two seasons (though the first season was only a month long after and injury shortened his year). Brantley is currently a broadcaster for the Cincinnati Reds after a stint on Baseball Tonight for ESPN.  


Highs (Hopes) and Lows


Low, low, low, all the lows- The First Five and a Half Innings  

As New York Times bestselling author Shea Serano likes to remind people, “You can’t win a game seven without first losing three times.” And in that same vein, you can’t comeback from 8 runs without first giving up 8 runs. And that’s exactly what the Phillie pitchers did through the first six innings of tonight’s game in Philadelphia. As Lenny Dykstra puts it in the 1993 season video yearbook, Whatever it Takes Dude, “this was a nightmare, it was raining, and we were getting a big league butt kicking from the Giants.” Ben Rivera lasted only 2 ⅔ innings, giving up 4 runs (2 Earned) while walking 6 Giants and striking out 4 (he struck out the side in the first), relieving Rivera. Jose De Leon, didn’t do much to quell the fire by giving up 2 more runs (1 earned) with 3 more walks. On the day the Phillies pitchers would hand out 14 free passes to the Giants (1 intentional). “Everything they hit just seemed to find a hole” added Dykstra. The starting pitcher for the Giants, Jeff Brantley entered the game with two career RBIs and doubled his lifetime total with 2 more in tonight’s game with two hits of his own. The game gets so bad at one point, the person who taped the game on their vcr in 1993 starts tv surfing and misses an entire inning. 





High- Bottom 6th- Let it Begin

After spotting the Giants 8 runs, the Phillies offense finally decides to get to work in the bottom of the 6th inning as career reliever Jeff Brantley faces the line-up for the third time. Morandini walks to start the inning and moves to third on a John Kruk single. Kruk is then pulled from the game with an apparent hamstring injury, but Fregosi has already used back-up 1st Baseman Ricky Jord as a pinch hitter so Jim Eisenreich (who started 14 games at first base in 1991 for the Kansas City Royals and will go on to start 19 games at first base for eventual World Series winning 1997 Florida Marlins) is pressed into service. Morandini scores on a sac fly from Dave Hollins to finally put the Phillies on the board 8-1. After a walk to Daulton, Brantley hits the showers, and the Phillies score two more runs on an Incaviglia infield single and a Mariano Duncan double narrowing the game 8-3 when Wes Chamberlain pinch hit for the relief pitcher Bob Ayrault. The resulting play would really spark the fire for the Phillies, as Wes Chamberlain hits a shot right back to the pitcher Brian Hickerson, who snags it right out of the air for the third out of the inning. In an outburst of emotion, Hickerson spiked the ball onto the ground, and that really pissed off the Phillies.





“That was the wake-up call we needed” says Dykstra in Whatever it Takes Dude. Milt Thompson is quoted in William Kashatus’ Macho Row “I’ve never seen anything like that before. It ticked us off. And fired us up. We were destined to win after that.” The remaining Phillie fans, of the announced 17,000 who showed up for a cold rainy baseball game, decide to chant “Ass-Hole Ass-Hole Ass-hole” at Hickerson to end the 6th. 


High- Top 7th- Fregosi Playing Chess.

With the Phillies now trailing 5 runs in the 7th inning, Jim Fregosi makes a move that very few managers would make. With a Giant on third and two outs, Phillies’ reliever Mark Davis is facing off with GOAT Barry Bonds at the plate. For the season Bonds is batting .414 and is leading so many categories its humorous hearing Jay Johnstone list them all off. He hit a home run in his first game for the Giants and (spoilers) would win his third MVP in seven seasons when the year is all said and done. Fregosi intentionally walks Bonds (his fourth walk on the day btw), while down 5 runs with two outs. Larry Andersen said about the move in More Than Beards Bellies and Biceps "To me as a player, that move was a message. That's what we mean about being 'old-school,' a throwback team. We were trying to beat you right till the last out." This is the kind of stuff that Joe Maddon gets called a genius for day in and day out. I laughed so hard watching and Fregosi laughed (inside probably) when Davis retired Jeff Reed to end the inning. Fregosi would tell the media, "We still had a chance to win the game. It wasn't over."


High- Bottom 7th- Inch by Inch

New First Basemen Jim Eisenreich knocks home Lenny Dyskstra to make it 8-4, before the Giants decide to give out back to back walks to Dave Hollins and Darren Daulton to load the bases for Pete Incaviglia. It’s at this point (about 3 and a half hours of drinking into the game) that the Philly fans start to get really loud, and Incaviglia hits a tapper to 2nd baseman which promptly get thrown away for an error by Mike Benjamin to make it 8-5.





I should note that Wheel’s tv broadcast call of “Tapper to second and Benjamin BOOTS it and Incaviglia is safe!” is probably his best call of his career, and in fact this entire game he’s pretty great (which takes a lot for me to say). Thompson follows up with a two RBI single up the middle (just past the pitcher’s glove) to tighten the score 8-7. 


Low, but saved- Dave Hollins

Dave Hollins develops the yips in front of our very eyes in this game. After only committing 1 error in his last 51 games dating back to the 1992 season, Hollins commits 3 errors in this game, all throwing. His first comes after a nice stop, but he attempts to throw off balance to 2nd base and throws it into left field, his next comes when he’s thinking about a throw and the ball pops out of his glove. Further, Hollins gets so far into his own head (which is suiting given his nickname as “Headley” or “Head” for being a headcase), that he hesitates on an easy throw to second on a play which makes it impossible for Morandini to turn a double play. Now with Eisenreich at first base, Hollins is throwing the ball all over the place, Johnstone comments on Hollins’ throws, “Well at least (Hollins)’s is consistent he hasn’t had a good throw yet.” Eisenriech though is proving up to the task with some great snags, but after Hollins gains his third error of the game, the Giants have two guys on with Darren Lewis at the plate. What follows is that David West hits Darren Lewis. 100 percent, no doubt about it, David West hits Darren Lewis with a pitch.





Except… home plate umpire Randy Marsh (who may or may not have been the reasoning behind the name of the father of South Park character Stan Marsh) called it foul ball. David West then struck our Darren Lewis to end the inning. 8-7 GIANTS  


HIGH- Bottom 8- Tying Time.

With one out in the bottom of the 8th inning, Mickey Morandini “scoots” a ball into the right field gap for a triple to bring up Jim Eisenriech. Eisie had entered the game as a pinch runner in the 6th and delivered already with a rbi single in the 7th, and now comes to the plate as the go ahead run in the 8th. In the Phillies Clubhouse, the injured John Kruk is drinking beer and watching the game from the video room, and thankfully being filmed by Video Dan Stephenson who had the foreknowledge to grab a camera while Kruk was drinking. “I’m telling ya, Eisie is going to get another knock (RBI) and I’ll never fucking play again.” He is recorded as saying for Whatever it Takes Dude.

Eisie knocks in Morandini to tie the game at 8-8. 





Wild Rides

Tied at 8-8, Fregosi decides to stick with David West for a second inning as Mitch Williams warms up in the bullpen. West starts the inning with a walk but retired Matt Williams on a grounder before striking out Barry Bonds on three pitches for out number 2. Bonds ends his night going 0-2 with 2 strike outs and 4 walks. West then gives up another walk, the 13th and final walk of game given up by Phillies pitchers, before getting Royce Clayton to strike out to end the top of the 9th.


The Giants counter with the pitching version of John Kruk also known as Rod Beck. Beck along with Mitch Williams are the inspiration for Kenny Powers in Eastbound and Down played by Danny McBride, a mullet wearing, slightly overweight fireballer, Beck would make 3 all star teams in his career and finish top 10 in saves in 9 seasons, ending his career in 2004 a year after winning Comeback Player of the Year for the Padres in 2003. Beck would die of a cocaine and heroine overdose in 2007. Tonight though, Beck’s signature forkball completely flummoxes the Phillies hitters as he strikes out 4 of the 5 guys he faces and gets out of the 9th inning unscathed.


Extra Wild Rides

In the 10th inning with the game still tied, Fregosi opts to go with 39 year old Larry Andersen instead of Mitch Williams, who after warming up, joins John Kruk in the video room. Larry gets a pop up before allowing a single, and then strikes out the next two Giants to end the 10th leaving the game still tied.


Defensive replacement Juan Bell leads off the 10th and works a walk to get on base. Following back to back to pop ups by Dykstra and Morandini, once again Jim Eisenreich comes up to bat in a pressure situation. Eisie grounds a ball into the gap between short stop and 3rd base, but its fielded by Royce Clayton who tries to make a play at second, but like Dave Hollins earlier, throws the ball away allowing Bell to advance to 3rd and Eisenreich to 2nd.





In the video room, Mitch Williams tells the camera, “If it’s a wild pitch… we win”,





and Giants pitcher Gino Minutelli obliges the Wild Thing and throws a wild pitch allowing Juan Bell to score and the Phillies to win on a walk-off.  


Final: Philadelphia Phillies 9 (14-4) San Francisco Giants 8 (11-9)


Words of Wisdom from Wheels, Jay, and Garry

“Fans haven’t had much chance to boo this year, so some are taking advantage” -Wheels as Ben Rivera is being removed from the game. 


“Daulton can’t hit a 7 run home run hear so he’ll probably take one here”- Garry Maddox weighing the odds of Daulton taking a 3-0 pitch while the Phillies are down 8-1.


“You know what he would do. The next day he’d throw. A day after going 9, he would long toss right in front of you” Garry Maddox telling stories about how Steve Carlton was a machine of a human being. 


“He plays so shallow and he’s so good” Wheels is talking about Barry Bonds here, and reading the quote does not do justice to how good Bonds is. 


Final Conclusions

The Phillies complete a huge comeback against the San Francisco Giants, thanks mostly to Jim Eisenreich. In Kruk's book he writes about this game, 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. Join me next time as the Phillies head to the west coast to play a quick two game series against the San Diego Padres.