The other semifinal also went 7 games. My opponent in the finals was thunder1008, with an excellent OL team that had lost only 1 game in the first 3 rounds before going the distance in the semis. His 9th Inning Gumbo team had Castillo, Ozzie, McGee plus some terrific power in 19 Ruth and 44 Wakefield. 96 Lajoie was part of a solid platoon with AAA, and 07 Joss and 06 Doc White led the staff.
After reviewing the state of my pitching staff, I decided to go for the 3rd big gamble of the tournament. I tanked game 1. Rested all my position players and let 1910 Cy Alberts take a beating to rest the beleagured staff. No surprise that 07 Joss pitched a 2-hit shutout.
Cy Moore started game 2 at 100, and pitched very well, but as usual had to leave the game early. In the 5th, Morgan (also at 100 for the first time since very early in the tournament) came on. He didn't pitch badly, but walked Castillo in the 7th with the bases loaded for the first run. Slim Sallee pitched 6 shutout innings against us, but we broke through with another 9th inning rally, this time against George McQuillan. With two outs and Foxx on first, we got consecutive singles from Sisler, Rice, and Stripp. The latter drove in 2 runs for a 2-1 lead, which Northrop (at 93) almost gave away immediately. With 1 out in the bottom of the 9th Castillo and McGee singled to put runners on 1st and 3rd. Ruth walked to load the bases. The infield elected to play deep and concede a run, but Pendleton hit sharply to Collins for a 4-6-3 game ending DP. Series tied 1-1. Bullpen exhausted.
In game 3, for the first time in the tournament, we were victimized by a late inning comeback. Williams and Foxx homered, and Ruth pitched 7 strong innings. Frank Smith (at 97) came in to relieve in the 8th, with the score 5-2, and fell apart with 2 outs and 2 on in the 9th. Ruth doubled in a run, Pendleton made up for his failure in game 2 with an RBI single. Vaughan bobbled the third out allowing Ruth to score the tying run (his 2nd error of the game and 12th of the tournament), and Wakefield singled in the go-ahead run. Jack Quinn closed out the 9th.
Joss started game 4 for the first time since his 1 hit shutout in the semis. He pitched pretty well, going 8 1/3. Vaughan made his 13th error but atoned with 4 RBIs. Nehf (at 94) got the final two outs for an 8-4 win and a 2-2 tie.
In game 5, Smith started at 100, but got shelled. It had been a tough TOC for him, and with the loss (11 hits, 6 runs in 6 1/3 IP) he fell to 2-5 with a 5.33 ERA. Coupled with the blown save in game 3, he was looking like the goat of the finals, though by the time the series was over he would have stiff competition for that title from Arky Vaughan. Cy Williams hit his 4th homer and delivered 3 RBIs (21 for the tourney), upping his average to .280, but we were down 3 games to 2.
Two games . Smith and Joss would not be able to start again, but they would be available in relief in game 7 if we got that far. They rested in game 6, as did Nehf. I needed Moore to get out of the 5th inning and would need a strong relief effort from Morgan. Decided to save Babe to start game 7. Doc White was on the mound for thunder1008. A nice rally in the 3rd inning gave us a 3-0 lead, as Stripp doubled in a run and scored on Collins's triple. Moore pitched perhaps his best game, going 5 2/3 shutout innings. Morgan came on and promptly allowed a run, but got through the 7th and 8th unscathed. Northrop pitched the 9th, and despite a Snodgrass-like dropped flyball by Williams with 2 outs, Northrop retired Ozzie and it was 3-3.
In assessing the staff for game 7, I had 5 pitchers at or above 90. All were made available in any inning. Northrop and Morgan were done. Ruth got the start at 99. Smith (96), Joss (93), Nehf (91), and Moore (somehow still at 90) were in the pen. I would need them all.
Joss started for my opponent at 96. Foxx singled in a run in the top of the 1st for a 1-0 lead, but Ruth couldn't hold it. He gave up a three run homer to the 1919 version of himself in the bottom of the inning.
In the top of the 2nd we retook the lead, as Collins singled in 2, and Cree just beat out a double play grounder for the go-ahead run. Ruth allowed the tying run on a wild pitch in the 3rd, then gave up another homer to his namesake in the 5th. Joss had settled down and was holding the 5-4 lead until he was removed for a pinch hitter in the 6th. Dizzy Dean held us scoreless in the 7th, while our version of Joss pitched 1 1/3 IP of scoreless relief as well. In the 8th, Cy Williams led off with a game tying homer off Dean, his 5th round tripper (and 22nd RBI) of the TOC. Two outs later, Sisler also homered, and it was 6-5!
Frank Smith (96) pitched a scoreless 8th. Art Nehf got 2 outs in the 9th, but Pendleton singled to put runners on 1st and 3rd, and for the 2nd time Arky Vaughan made an error on what should have been the game ending play. This time his bobble allowed Castillo to score the tying run. It was Vaughan's 14th error of the TOC.
Steve Kline had pitched the 9th inning for thunder1008 and stayed in for the 10th. Williams led off with a walk. Foxx singled him to 3rd. Pinch hitter Warner grounded out, moving Foxx to 2nd. Sisler promptly singled in both runs, and we had an 8-6 lead. Wilcy Moore (at 90) came on to pitch. If he could not hold the lead, we were in trouble, as there were no other available pitchers, and I figured Sparky would use one of the mop-ups rather than a tired Northrop or Morgan. But Moore got it done in the bottom of the 10th, allowing a 2-out double but retiring Castillo to end it.
If we had played more innings, or more games, this team was done. But somehow squeezing every last pitch out of the 7-man staff they won it.
I learned a lot going through this - mostly about managing a pitching staff in a TOC (you need to be very flexible). But also about the risks/rewards of tactical gambles - when to rest a pitcher you might otherwise need, when to start a pitcher you normally use in relief, when to even perhaps tank a game, in order to buy your guys some rest for the future. If we hadn't tanked game 1 of the finals, I doubt we would have won.
Arky Vaughan could easily have been the series goat. His 14 errors included 2 that allowed the tying run to score with 2 outs in the 9th. And despite his .309 average, he really didn't contribute much with the bat (2 walks, 2 XBH in 27 games, for a .673 OPS). Still, I think this shows you can still win, even playing a C- fielder at SS.
Eddie Collins (.362, .408 OBP, 9 2Bs, 16 RBI, 20 runs, .543 SLG) was brilliant. Williams (5 HR, 22 RBI, 18 runs) provided necessary power. Birdie Cree slumped a bit at the end but still hit .371 with 6 doubles and 21 runs. Foxx hit .299, drove in 17, and was mostly good enough behind the plate.
The real stars though were the pitchers. The "Big 7" pitched 242 1/3 IP across the tournament - many of them at less than 100%. Smith (2-5, 1.99 WHIP, 5.23 ERA) and Morgan (2.12 WHIP, 6.35 ERA) were disappointments, though each had their moments. The other 5 were terrific. Joss (4-1, 1.13 WHIP, 2.98 ERA), Ruth (a surprising 2.70 ERA), Nehf (3-1, 4 saves, 0.86 WHIP, 0.35 ERA), Moore (2-1, 6 starts, 7 relief appearances, 1.09 WHIP, 2.27 ERA), and Northrop (2 saves, 1.09 WHIP, 0.82 ERA) all pitched wonderfully. All told, the team ERA was 3.34 for the TOC, which included the tanked game. The big 7 allowed a total of only 4 homers (we hit 12), despite playing in a +2 HR park.
If you read this far, thanks for coming along for the ride. I know this is a bit of a narcissistic exercise, but who knows if I'll ever win another TOC, and this one was so much fun that I had to share some of it with you.
7/5/2010 11:08 PM (edited)