The Indians beat the Orioles 5-2, but the highlight of this game is the second inning triple play turned by Baltimore. Travis Fryman and Wil Cordero both singled and were on second and first respectively as Sandy Alomar came to the plate against Sidney Ponson. Alomar hit a groundball to Melvin Mora, and from there I’m not exactly sure what happened. My note says that Cleveland skipper Charlie Manuel was ejected for arguing. Apparently Fryman was ruled out for leaving the baseline, but the Indians contended (and I, still pretty loyal, must have agreed) that second base was touched first, eliminating the force on Fryman. In any event, it went in the (my) book as a TP643.
Tuesday, March 29, 2022
Tuesday, March 22, 2022
#239---CLE @ MIN, 7/6/1999
Most of the scoring came in the first inning, with Manny Ramirez’ two-out, two-run homer off Eric Milton countered by Jacque Jones' leadoff blast off of Jaret Wright. The Indians tacked on a single tally in the fifth, while Wright fanned five and walked three without allowing additional runs through sixth. Paul Assenmacher and Paul Shuey each allowed a single baserunner in shutout innings, turning it over to Mike Jackson. Brent Gates tripled with one out to bring the tying run to the plate, but Jackson froze pinch-hitters Javier Valentin and Corey Koskie to end it.
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
#238---BOS @ CLE, 4/24/1998
The Indians started quick, with the first three batters against Tim Wakefield scoring after David Justice’s homer. Jim Thome followed with a double and then Wakefield retired sixteen in a row as Boston knocked Dave Burba out with two down in the fifth, now trailing 5-3. Darren Bragg’s two-run homer in the sixth allowed Boston to cruise to a 7-5 win, although the Indians did have the tying run at the plate in the ninth when Nomar Garciparra made a good play to retire pinch-hitter Sandy Alomar for the last out.
One thing that really strikes me about this game though is the three pitchers who worked for Boston and their lofty career totals. There can’t be that many games in history in which a team used only three pitchers (Wakefield, Derek Lowe, and Tom Gordon) who had combined career totals as lofty as 514 wins (200, 176, 138 respectively) and 266 saves (22, 86, 158).
Tuesday, March 8, 2022
#237---Alabama @ Texas, 2/25/2022
This game was played on a Friday before the weekend that was supposed to mark the start of major league exhibition play, but with the lockout I was forced to settle for college baseball. I typically don’t watch a lot of lower level baseball (minors, college, etc.) not because I don’t enjoy lower level baseball (although I will say baseball is a game that needs to be played at a certain level of skill to be an enjoyable spectator sport – high school baseball can be tough to watch), but because there are rarely opportunities to do so that don’t conflict with opportunities to watch big league ball. So outside of choosing to watch my alma mater when I can, I don’t see much college ball.
Being a Big Ten guy, I have never really paid attention to the fact that I get the Longhorn Network on my cable package, but it came in handy to view this early season series between the Crimson Tide and Longhorns played in chilly conditions in Austin. It was an entertaining, crisply played affair with Alabama squandering multiple scoring chances, and Texas scoring the game’s only run on a passed ball and wild pitch on consecutive pitches with one out in the seventh.
Tuesday, March 1, 2022
#236---CHA @ CLE, 6/3/1997
This was a very memorable game for me; a friend called late in the
afternoon with the news that his dad had two extra tickets. And this wasn’t
just any game; it was Albert Belle’s first game back in
I remember taking my scorebook with me, but ended up keeping score in a
free program garnered outside the ballpark. With the Tribe selling out every
game and in a pre-smartphone era, there was apparently enough advertising
dollars to support a market in such things. The score is impossible to follow
here, but it was 9-5, White Sox. Dave Martinez (single, double, 2 homers),
Frank Thomas (single, double, homer), and the Belle of the ball himself (2
doubles, homer) carried
The game was almost secondary to the sideshow of Belle’s return. I would like to think that even then I had a mature attitude towards “betrayal” by former hometown heroes who departed in free agency; unfortunately, I did not yet have sufficient resolve to avoid being swept up with the crowd. Soon I was chanting “Joey, Joey” and laughing at the monopoly money being dropped from the home run porch in left field as Belle stood in the outfield. What a shame when there was such a valid target for opprobrium standing on the field – Ozzie Guillen.