Last night, for the second time in what has admittedly been a fabulous World Series, albeit one playing out far too late into the night and morning, I marveled at the incredible (13-12) Houston Astros’ win that gave them a three games to two World Series lead, vs the Dodgers.
The teams now travel to Los Angeles, where they will play game six tomorrow night and a seventh game, if necessary, on Wednesday night.
Alex Bregman’s run scoring single in the bottom of the tenth inning ended the five hour, seventeen minutes game, which featured Houston coming back from 4, 3 and one run deficits, only to dissipate a 3 run lead, they took to the ninth inning.
For the second time in this World Series a Dodgers’ player delivered in my book, THE clutch hit, knocking in the tying run, down to their last out, with a runner in scoring position, but in an eventual loss. Kike Hernandez did so in game 2 at home, but Houston won, while despite Chris Taylor accomplishing the great feat in game 5 last night, in the end it was in a loss.
Houston got three runs or more batted in performances from Yuri Gurriel, Jose Altuve and Carlos Correa, with Gurriel and then Altuve smacking game tying 3 run home runs, to tie the mind blowing tilt, in the 4th and 5th innings.
Additionally, George Springer was on base 5 straight times and as was the case with Brian McCann, both homered in the tilt and also reached base before Bregman, who has also played so well defensively in this post-season, delivered pinch runner Derek Fisher with an historic hit.
The irony of the name Derek Fisher (a namesake played on 5 Los Angeles Lakers’ title teams and remember L.A. has 20 major North American sports league crowns while Houston has but 2) and great efforts by Dodgers’ Cody Bellinger (4 runs batted in) and the aforementioned Chris Taylor are cited, deservedly so here.
A truly great game, I missed “(3-0) L.A,” but am so glad I watched it. It was well worth, though it should not be necessary, staying up past 2 in the morning, having seen something great and winding down afterward.

I’ll say it was an over!
Three slots on Fox and a two/two W.S. (I am a two plus two equals 5 guy, questioning and vs the networks and their control, but alas two/two equals $$$$$).
It “had to be” and was L.A. in #4, (at Houston vs the Astros), and now they went from a nine to five underdog to an eight to 5 series “fave,” after TWO big TWOb’s (aka doubles), by out of his slump, Cody Bellinger and an all important game tying hit by Logan Forsythe, led the Dodgers (6-2) in #4 and got Fox a TWO/TWO, definite profit, World Series.
As was the case in #4 of the ALCS, Houston relief pitcher Ken Giles took the loss, yielding a (Corey) Seager single, a tough walk to Justin Turner and Bellinger’s big blast/double, that scored Seager and set up an eventual 5 run L.A. 9th, capped by Joc Pederson’s 3rhr, his second home run of the series.
Did you see the look on Kershaw’s face as now he does NOT face pitching a potential 4th game Dodgers ousted loss with him losing and is a “bit much” (minus 146 and likely to climb, (perhaps) “fave” as the chalk bettors, after they lose in football, will bet more on Kershaw. Yesterday the bettors won as Alex Wood, who pitched so well as did Charlie Morton for “Hous,” was bet from plus 126 to plus 103) ‘fave” in the pivotal 5th game. (In referencing the 5th game John Smoltz, who was a great pitcher and has vast technical pitching knowledge, but is so sloppy and unprepared regarding names, keeping score et al –called it the 5th “INNING” not game, perhaps a “nit pick” on my part, but the Buck/Smoltz combo does not have the “good taste” of pastrami/corned beef, but the negative of it, “turning my stomach”).
OK— my perhaps offensive opinions, to facts you may not care about, but are both accurate and not likely to be found anywhere else.
Only once (’88) have the Dodgers lost #3 of a W.S. and still won the crown.
No L.A. sports team and they have won 18 or 19 in a final series (the ’51 Rams won a one game final), depending on whether you count the ’02 Angels, but the note applies for all L.A. titles, has ever “titled” after losing game 3 of a (1-1) final. They have won #3 of such a final and still lost, but never won when losing the third game of a (1-1) final.
One more, the Saturday game winner of an L.A. Dodgers World Series went on to win the crown in all of the previous eight L.A. Dodgers World Series with a Saturday game (there was no Saturday game in ’59), the Dodgers splitting the eight. Yesterday was Saturday and I should (there is that dreaded word again!!) have cited the above facts yesterday, but I did not!!

More: En route to the ’59 Dodgers and ’02 Angels’ W.S. wins L.A. baseball teams won #3 of a (1-1) World Series.
Six times en route to titles, the Lakers won #3 of a (1-1) final, doing so in ’72, ’80, ’85, ’88, ’01 and ’10.
I have some strong opinions about the college football playoff and the history involving so called titles in their competition.
Facts thus far today include two previously unbeaten teams falling, first Iowa State at home (recall the great movie, “The Hustler” “this is Ames”) defeating T.C,U.
Next Ohio State about a touchdown favorite rallying to defeat previously unbeaten Penn State.

Even I, once a “no matter what,” lover/watcher/listener of every pitch of the World Series, who truly has missed “mucho” W.S. action in the past say 20 years, admits last night’s game 2, Astros’ first ever Series win, that squared this, the ’17 version, was incredible.
However, the extremes and lack of perspective by television announcers Joe Buck and John Smoltz smack of that Fox thing, claiming “fair and balanced,” when only a little research or just listening, proves otherwise.
Your key words or comments regard Buck unabashedly worshiping at the shrine of Vin Scully, evoking his father Jack Buck and ignoring the fact/strong opinion by me, which I know I can back up, that Scully and Buck, while hometown icons, had styles, certainly Buck, less so Scully, not of saint status on national broadcasts. In fact, neither were ever deemed even great, no less at the point we are now where Scully is called the “no doubt about it, best baseball broadcaster ever.”
Far worse, as still what Buck said is an opinion, was Smoltz’s relative terms, completely missing the words/concepts of both “more important” and “ideal,” but in fairness, though it does not take away from my point, having the proverbial “horseshoe” somewhere, as his inane comment regarding getting ONE run, down TWO runs, top 8 and say one run, top 9 manifested.
Smoltz with Bregman (only regarding Smoltz’s points will I “game detail,” but again what a classic game, 6 home runs as late as the ninth inning, being one incredible note) at second, none out, top 8, vs reliever Kenley Jansen, talked of ideally tying the game, (I think he said one swing, so I will pass on that, but Smoltz and almost all of them continually use terms of the “it could not be better,” variety, when that is not the case), but get this, “MORE IMPORTANT,” getting one run.
If you do not see the gravity of that error, even though eventually “Hous” got the “one and one,” I still “cry foul” on Smoltz’s usage, evoking the recently passed Connie Hawkins (the book, “Foul” and the Hawk’s moves) by calling it a bad, even ridiculous, move on Smoltz’s part.
Later, in again what was a fabulous tilt, Smoltz used the word ideal regarding a situation that was not.
Thanks for listening, having endured my opinions, some andybsports.com typically unique (an opinion?) facts will follow.
Marwin Gonzalez, who hit a game tying home run top 9, without which it is very unlikely that a) Hous wins its first W.S. game ever and b) baseball gets a truly classic game, became the tenth player to hit a game tying World Series home run as late as the ninth inning (I believe, but am not sure, all 10 were in the 9th inning).
Six of the previous nine times, twice in the ’01 W.S. the team that got a game tying, ninth inning World Series home run, lost the series.
Four of the six times they still lost said game (twice the Yankees, who were the team to get two 9th inning, tying home runs in the referenced above, ’01 W.S. but eventually lost the series, also lost the game. Another time the Yankees after yielding a game tying, 9th inning homer, (Carl Furillo connected to tie the game for the Brooklyn Dodgers), won the game and in fact, clinched a still and long to be record, 5th straight title when Alfred “Billy” Martin singled home Hank Bauer in game 6 of the ’53 Fall Classic).
The Yankees got game tying home runs from Elston Howard in 1957 (#4) and Tom Tresh in #5,’64 off respectively two pitching greats, Warren Spahn and Bob Gibson, but lost the games and eventually the series in 7 games, first vs the Milwaukee Braves and then vs the St. Louis Cardinals.
In ’01, after first Tino Martinez in #4 and the next night Scott Brosius in #5, hit 9th inning tying 2 run home runs, the Yankees won the game but Arizona with, coincidentally a player named Gonzalez driving in the Series winning run (lost by far too many is Tony Womack’s far better and slightly more important hit, also in bottom 9, game 7) took #’s 6 and 7 and the title.
Twice great Philadelphia Athletics’ teams, their greatness, also largely lost by too many, in the midst of great multiple titles and certainly pennants, eras, won both the game and series after a game tying ninth inning home run.
In 1911 Frank “Home Run” Baker homered off the great, great Christy Mathewson to tie game 3, a game and series the Athletics won, to claim a second straight title, en route to three in four seasons, a span of time in which they notched 4 pennants in 5 seasons (1910-1914).
Before the stock market crash of 1929, (there are bears and bulls regarding “the market”) “Mule” Haas hit a game tying 9th inning, 2 run homer for the A’s in game 5. Subsequently in the inning, Bing Miller “tuned in” the great Al Simmons with the W.S. winning run. The A’s titled again in 1930, lost in 7 to a great Pepper Martin performance in 1931 and did not win another title or pennant, until 41 years later when the franchise having moved twice, first to Kansas City, and now in Oakland, won the first of three straight crowns (1972-1974).
It was the next year, in the glorious 1975 World Series, that Dwight Evans, so good a clutch hitter and not in the “Hall,” juxtaposed with non clutch, Dave Winfield, who is, homered to tie #3, a game and series in which both cases the Bo Sox were hard luck losers, albeit to a great, 108 regular season wins, Cincinnati Reds’ team.
The other time, (we shall see what transpires this time) a team won the series after a 9th inning game tying home run was after Alex Gordon of the Kansas City Royals tied #1 of the ’15 W.S.
Subsequently, K.C. “titled” in 5 games.

Recently at a great discussion at 92 Y, “instead of judgment, curiosity” was stressed, concerning opposing views.
I temper my strong opinions clearly stating I am curious regarding your opposing ones.
Concerning Mr. Scully pictured above, I was subjected to even greater “opposing views” when I hailed Vin as the best.
I am taken to a dream place when I hear Scully intone “Parker’s gottt it,” when Big D (Don Drysdale), somewhat fortuitously recorded a record tying 5th straight shutout, in volatile 1968.
This is what I wanted to do and that man did it so well.
However, was the wheel, the printing press or other, history’s most important invention?!!
Get the point, nothing is absolute and I feel when “it” tilts too far (Scully as the absolute best from a gushing Joe Buck, who respectfully based on his broadcasting, now doing a 20th W.S. (talk about a “well placed” horseshoe), knows mediocrity and as with any of us, including me, does not know what is absolute best!!
Once, at an event I attended, a long time Dodgers’ pitcher, John Podres was “holding court.”
I knew what others were surprised about and it is one of many reasons that although Clayton Kershaw who “7 innings’d” a World Series opening game win last night (if anything talk Justin Turner and yet another essentially game winning home run, as L.A. “opened” Houston and now are nearly 3 to 1 series “faves”) is an outstanding pitcher, he is not as good as Bob Gibson and maybe not even Tom Seaver. Comparing him favorably to Sandy Koufax, as Kershaw was routed in 2 elimination games and had other P.S. failures, is absurd.
Podres cited the National League he pitched in and for example going to or facing the eighth place Chicago Cubs. Easy, right? Wrong!
The excellent left handed pitcher, by the way not better overall than Kershaw, but to this point and maybe no matter what transpires in the future, a better post-season pitcher than Kershaw, cited facing that eighth place Cubs team, whose lineup included 3 future Hall of Fame players, Ernie Banks, Billy Williams and Ron Santo.
The rest of the loop was loaded with great talent, pitching yes but even more so, hitting. There were only 10 teams two more than 8, but EVERYONE was allowed to play, making the quality of play in that league, at that time, not so arguably, the best in baseball history.

Tonight in Los Angeles, where the temperature is hovering around 100 degrees Fahrenheit, the 113th World Series will commence, matching the Houston Astros, who in their 56th season are seeking their first World Series title and game win (they were swept by the White Sox in ’05) and Los Angeles Dodgers, who are bidding for the franchise’s 7th title, 6th in L.A. (the first was in ’59 vs the White Sox, a franchise that has made but 2 World Series appearances in 97 completed baseball seasons (1920-2017, the ’94 season was not completed, with both ’17 W.S. teams having played them in their first World Series and in the first World Series for both the huge states of California and Texas) and first in 29 years.
L.A. is roughly an 8 to 5 favorite and has the home advantage. After teams with the home advantage won a very impressive 23 of 28 Fall Classics starting in 1985 (the first year of best of 7 LCS play), the team sans home advantage, the ’14 Giants and ’16 Cubs won the title, winning road 7th games at Kansas City and Cleveland respectively, in two of the past three seasons.
The Astros are of course the first team to make the World Series from both the National and American Leagues and there is ‘offs history between the ‘Stros and Dodgers.
In 1980, L.A. had to win the final 3 “reg” tilts at home vs Houston to force a one game Monday afternoon one game playoff for the N.L. West crown.
They did win 3 straight to force the playoff, but Joe Niekro pitched Houston to their first N.L. West crown in that tilt.
The next year, neither L.A. or Houston had the best record in the N.L. West but a player’s strike led to split seasons and since L.A. won the first half and Houston the second half, it was deemed they and not the Cincy Reds, who did have the best record in the one quarter “div,” would meet in a best of 5 series for the crown.
Again, after losing the first two games in Houston, the Dodgers needed 3 straight wins but this time if they got them, it meant the N.L. West title and not an ‘off game.
The Dodgers again won 3 straight from Houston and eventually won their first World Series title in 16 seasons. (The other day Chris Russo on his show “High Heat, ” incorrectly stated it was the Dodgers’ first title in 18 years).

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest – Baseball Scene (Kinetic Typography)
In the iconic film, “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest,” for which Jack Nicholson and Louise Fletcher each won best acting awards and more important(ly?)–the question mark is for usage not what I feel— which is they each made an indelible impression on many, certainly me with their performances, Jack’s character “R.P” asks “who is pitching the opener of the 1963 World Series?
That fiction was set in a not so nice place, what was commonly called a mental institution.
In real, not “reel life,” but also in a not nice place, a prison, that year, Joe Green and the infamous, brilliant but misdirected Jack Molinas discussed whom they thought would win that opener, matching two of the greatest pitchers ever, Sandy Koufax and Edward “Whitey” Ford.
I was in third grade, a school year enriched with “ups” having a great teacher, June Drusin and another for Hebrew School, Rabbi Harry Goder and one horrible “down” when President Kennedy was assassinated, on that “bright” (another Harry, Mr. Bright lamented how he waited his whole life to appear in a World Series, only to have his home crowd root for him to strikeout, as to have Sandy Koufax break Carl Erskine’s single game strikeout record, which he did) day.
The Philadelphia Eagles are 5 plus point(s) “faves,” to better their league best (5-1) record tonight at home vs Washington.
5 NFL teams sport (5-2) records, with perhaps Philly joining that group after tonight.
Win, lose or tie (despite overtime being 10, not 15 minutes, there still has not been a tie in the NFL), the Eagles join the two NFC (5-2) teams, the L.A. Rams and Minnesota Vikings as fairly big, positive surprise teams, the Rams the biggest of those positive surprise teams.
It is more or less the opposite in the AFC as defending champion, New England (projected for 12 to 13 wins), Pittsburgh, projected for ten plus and Kansas City (considered at 9) are the three (5-2) teams.

The late Earl Morrall’s surviving ’72 ‘Phins celebrated early this year as Pitts’ win at K.C. in just the sixth week of play, took out the last unbeaten NFL team.
Remember the ’73 Dolphins (15-2) with one meaningful loss, the second was in a meaningless game, dominated in the post-season as few if any NFL teams ever have, and were, therefore, in my opinion, discernibly better than the ’72 team, which struggled in the ‘offs and by a great margin in comparison.
The Houston Astros won their second pennant, denying the Yankees a 41st, winning (4-0) in the first ever Saturday night decisive game in big league history.
Houston will take on the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 2017 World Series, beginning Tuesday night in Los Angeles.
L.A. has been established as roughly an 8 to 5 series “fave.”
The Astros, once (0-3) in LCS play have now won 2 straight LCS.
Meanwhile the Yankees once (10-1) in such series have lost 3 straight and 4 of their last 5 and are now (11-5) in baseball semis.
A Houston team came home and won #’s 6 and 7 vs a New York team for the second straight time after the Astros failed to do so vs the Mets in the ’86 NLCS.
The NBA Rockets took the ’94 crown, winning games 6 and 7 at home vs the New York Knicks.
In less advanced, but also one game winner take the entity, Houston has three more wins vs no losses against New York teams, the Rockets best of 3, third game win vs the Knicks in ’75, the Oilers now the Tennessee Titans, wild card round win vs the Jets in ’91 and the ‘Stros 4 vs 5 game win at New York vs the Yankees in ’15.
As usual, who but me would know this, care?!!

Tonight in what I am pretty certain to be just the third decisive game to be played on a Saturday, in baseball history, the Houston Astros host the New York Yankees, in the seventh game of the 2017 A.L.C.S.
It is the first night, Saturday decisive game in baseball history.
The home team has won the first 6 games of the series. This is the ninth time in baseball history that has occurred.
Before tonight’s result tips the record in favor of one result, (the home/road have split in the previous eight), the road team breaking through to win the first four, all in World Series play, while the home team has prevailed in the last four, all but one in World Series competition.
Houston was involved in the only previous LCS in which the home team won the first six games. St.Louis prevailed in the “all home team victories,” 2004 NLCS.
The Yankees have been involved in three previous such series, splitting in the first two when first Brooklyn broke through on the road to win their lone title in the 1955 World Series, with the Yankees reversing the result, winning game 7 at Brooklyn in 1956 and then losing in an all home World Series vs Arizona (Diamondbacks) 45 years later.
Brooklyn/L.A. Dodgers were also involved in three such series, the two cited above and a second win/breakthrough on the road at Minnesota, vs the Twins, in the 1965 World Series.
The Minnesota Twins, on the wrong end of the third loss for the home team in the first four loss skein as cited above, won the first two in the all home, 4 game win skein, taking all four at home to win the ’87 title vs St. Louis (Cardinals) and the ’91 crown vs the Atlanta Braves.
Pittsburgh, led by the great Roberto Clemente, who died less than 15 months later, hopefully, helping to put this all in perspective, and Steve Blass, were the last team to win game 7 on the road, after the home team prevailed in the first six games.

In the home in the first six, road 7th that the Yankees won, Don Larsen, pictured above, pitched a perfect game in #5,’56 World Series.
