Apparently, there was an odd double play in Wednesday's Mets-Dodgers game.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are accustomed to gridlock. They just never expected traffic congestion to doom them at Shea Stadium.With a chance to take an early lead against fill-in Mets starter John Maine, the Dodgers instead ran themselves into a double play at home plate as New York opened Division Series play with a 6-5 victory Wednesday afternoon.
Considering that the Dodgers scored a run with two outs in that inning and the Mets went on to win by one run, the second-inning blunders proved crucial.
"I've never seen that," Mets closer Billy Wagner said after collecting the save. "I mean, that pretty much changed the momentum of the game. They have a chance to go up at least 1-0 on that play or 2-0. Then J.K. (Jeff Kent) gets thrown out, and you're expecting J.D. (Drew) to stay at third base. You look up, and for him to be tagged out, that was something you don't see every day."
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Kent led off the second with a single. Drew hit a dribbler to the left side for an infield single, and Russell Martin followed with a drive to deep right field. Shawn Green fielded the carom and delivered a perfect throw to cutoff man Jose Valentin.
"There's no outs in that situation for me," Kent said. "I'm standing on second base. You try to immediately read it. You don't know if he's going to catch it or not. If he catches it, you tag, and you're standing on third base with one out and in position to score.
"If not, you assume that if the ball drops, at least I score."
Third-base coach Rich Donnelly said he decided against stopping Kent when he saw Drew just a few steps behind him as they neared third base. Drew said he kept going because he noticed Donnelly didn't put up a stop sign.
Valentin's throw nailed Kent at home by a few feet. After catcher Paul Lo Duca showed the ball to umpire John Hirschbeck, he heard Maine alerting him that Drew was coming. Lo Duca responded by applying the tag for the second out.
Kent said he didn't notice how close Drew was until he saw him near home plate.
Here's a list of all the times a catcher has made two putouts at home on the same play. Of the six times it occurred, the Yankees were the victims thrice. Make of that what you will.
Posted by Charles Kuffner on October 06, 2006 to Baseball | TrackBackThe infamous 1985 play was shown between innings on the New York telecast. What was disturbing was that both men took off at the same time from second, while Berra could have stayed there. Granted, Yankee Stadium has a huge center field area, but a good throw can catch a runner coming home.
The play also inspired a scene in Major League 2, but that's another story.
Posted by: William Hughes on October 6, 2006 7:47 AMI just realized that that notorious play - I saw it live on TV too, I remember it well -- was in the same series as Tom Seaver's 300th win, which I was at the Stadium for.
What a weekend!
Posted by: Chris Quinones on October 6, 2006 12:45 PM