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As was the case in
1987, the Twins had won all four games at the Metrodome and
lost three successive times on the road. Jack Morris, who had
been a Detroit Tiger for 14 years, and had won 198 games
there, came to the Twins as the ace of the staff in 1991, and
he beat Charlie Liebrandt in the Series opener, 5-2. Game
2, while decided by Minnesota rookie Scott Leius' tie-breaking
homer in the eighth inning, might best be remembered in the
years ahead because of a play at first base and not the final
score of 3-2. As Atlanta's Ron Gant tried to retreat to first base
after rapping a third-inning single, the 250-pound Kent Hrbek took
a throw from pitcher Kevin Tapani and seemed to lift the
172-pound Gant off the base while applying a tag. Umpire Drew
Coble didn't see it that way - Gant's momentum supposedly
carried him off the bag-and the baserunner was called out.
Game 3 went back
to Atlanta, where the Twins' manager Tom Kelly used all of his
position players by the end of the 11th inning of a 4-4 game.
He had to employ relief pitcher Rick Aguilera as a
pinch-hitter with the bases loaded in the 12th (he was retired
on a fly ball), and in a thriller Atlanta won in the bottom of
the 12th. Mark Lemke delivered a two-out single to score Dave
Justice, who had singled and stolen second. The Braves' 5-4
victory was the first of four games in this Series to end with
the winning team scoring the deciding run in the ninth inning
or later.
The Braves also won
Game 4. In yet another thriller, Lemke, a .234 hitter in the
regular season but a .417 batsman in this Series, tripled with
one out in the ninth and the score tied at 2-2. He then raced
home on journeyman Jerry Willard's fly ball to right, just
avoiding the tag by catcher Brian Harper. Harper
had a busy night. He was bowled over by Smith in a
fifth-inning collision - both needed airbags - as the Braves
player tried unsuccessfully to score on a double by NL MVP
Terry Pendleton.
Moments later, Harper tagged out Pendleton after the Atlanta
third baseman attempted to score from third on a pitch in the
dirt.
Game 5 featured some long balls - Justice whacked a home run
and drove in five runs and Lonnie Smith and Brian Hunter also
homered as Cox's crew coasted, 14-5. The homer was the third
in as many nights for the veteran Smith, who had taken over
Atlanta's left-field job in mid-September when offensive
catalyst Otis Nixon was suspended because of drug problems.
The Twins forced Game 7 when, down three games to two, they
won another spine-tingler at the Metrodome. Kirby Puckett
drilled an 11th-inning home run that netted the Twins a 4-3
triumph; Puckett, who in the third inning had made an
extraordinary leaping catch on a drive hit by Gant, belted his
homer off Charlie Leibrandt, who had just entered the game.
Game
7: The 36-year-old Morris, a longtime standout for the
Tigers, was matched against John Smoltz, 24, a Detroit native
who as a youngster had idolized his pitching opponent. It was
a classic pairing in what turned out to be a classic game. Morris and Smoltz were
in peak form, battling to a 0-0 tie after seven innings at the
Metrodome.
Only twice did a runner get as far as third. Dan Gladden of the
Twins got a double in the third and advanced on a fly ball, but
Smoltz fanned Kirby Puckett to end the inning. In the fifth, the
Braves put runners on the corners, but Morris got
Pendleton to pop up, then sat down Ron Gant on strikes.
Then came one of
the most momentous - albeit scoreless - innings ever in
baseball's autumn extravaganza. Atlanta
leadoff hitter Smith, playing with a record fourth team in
Series play, led off the Braves' eighth with a single to right
field and Terry Pendleton followed with a drive to deep
left-center, a smash that bounced off the wall and seemed
certain to snap the tie. However, running with the pitch and
not knowing where the ball was hit, Smith hesitated after
rounding second (the Twins' middle infielders acted as if they
had the ball) and could advance only to third on Pendleton's
double.
While the Braves and their fans agonized over the baserunning
blunder, Atlanta nonetheless was in an enviable position with
runners on third and second, none out and power-hitting Ron
Gant at the plate. But Gant grounded out to Twins first
baseman Kent Hrbek, with Smith holding at third. Dave Justice
was the next batter, but Twins manager Kelly ordered an
intentional walk to the Braves' cleanup man. That
filled the bases and sent Sid Bream to the plate, and Bream
slapped a grounder toward Hrbek, who threw the ball home for a
force out and then took the return peg from Harper for a
double play. Stunningly, Atlanta had been denied.
The Twins' ability to
dodge a bullet wasn't wasted on the Braves. Manager Bobby
Cox's team did some ducking of its own in the bottom of the
eighth when Minnesota had runners at third and first with one
out and Kirby Puckett due up. At this juncture, Cox summoned
Mike Stanton to replace Smoltz. Stanton
issued an intentional walk to Puckett, loading the bases, and
then went head-to-head with Hrbek. The big, usually dangerous
left-hander (he stood 6'4" and weighed 260 pounds) hit
.284 in 1991, with 20 HR and 89 RBI, was in a slump - he had
batted only .143 in the American League playoffs and was
hitting just .120 in the Series. Hrbek hit a soft line drive
up the middle, but Braves second baseman Mark Lemke snared the
ball and stepped on second to double up Chuck Knoblauch, who
had foolishly wandered off the bag at the crack of the bat.
Minnesota threatened
again in the ninth as Chili Davis singled and Harper,
attempting to sacrifice, pushed a bunt past Stanton and first
baseman Bream for a hit. Stanton injured his back while
chasing the ball, and he gave way to Alejandro Pena, who
induced Shane Mack to ground into a double play, issued an
intentional walk to Mike Pagliarulo and then struck out
pinch-hitter Paul Sorrento.
After the Braves went
quietly in the 10th inning against the impenetrable Morris,
Dan Gladden started the Twins' half of the inning with a
double and was sacrificed to third by Knoblauch. Intentional
walks to Puckett and Hrbek followed, loading the bases with
one out in this 0-0 standoff. Pinch-hitter Gene Larkin then
drove the ball to left-center, over a drawn-in outfield, and
the Twins were 1-0 winners and World Series champions for the
second time in five seasons.
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