Neil Best linked to this recently…pretty cool of Sports Illustrated to put up this article.
When Seaver finally took the mound after the festivities to honor Rizzuto, he found he had his good stuff. The
White Sox failed to take advantage of early opportunities and trailed 1-0 going into the sixth. But then they touched Joe Cowley and Brian Fisher for four runs and left it up to Seaver. In the eighth, a two-out single by
New York‘s
Don Mattingly put runners on first and third, but Seaver told pitching coach
Dave Duncan he wanted to finish, and Duncan—subbing for ejected manager Tony La Russa—allowed him to face
Dave Winfield. Seaver went to a full count and struck out
Winfield on a changeup.
He ran into trouble again in the ninth. Rookie
Dan Pasqua opened with a single. Seaver struck out
Ron Hassey, and
Harold Baines made a leaping grab of a
Willie Randolph liner against the wall in right. After walking
Mike Pagliaruloon four pitches,
Fisk and
Duncan went out to the mound to see if everything was all right.
Fisk later said that to keep
Duncan from taking Seaver out, “I would have picked Dune up and carried him back to the dugout.” Seaver thereupon got pinch hitter
Don Baylor to hit his first pitch into the air in left, and Nichols settled under it for the final out. There was something else in the air: Seaver’s number is 41, as is that of losing pitcher Cowley, and the score of both this game and the
Mets‘ victory that day was 4-1. Whatever the score, the very idea of a players’ strike seemed far away on Sunday afternoon.
You know you want to read the whole thing.
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