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Brewers strike first

Posted by John Autin on October 2, 2011

In 71 PAs before today by current Brewers against Ian Kennedy, the only home run came from Prince Fielder. But that HR came in their very first encounter; in the next 10 times they faced off, Kennedy got 6 Ks while allowing two hits.

Was that head-to-head record a factor in Kirk Gibson's decision to let Kennedy pitch to Prince Fielder in the 7th, after Ryan Braun's 2-out double?

Or maybe he was swayed by Kennedy's outstanding numbers in the 7th and 8th inning this year. Arizona's ace allowed a .148 BA (16-108) and just 2 runs in 31 IP in the 7th & 8th.

Maybe Gibson was just trying to nurse him through one more out, knowing his spot was due up in the top of the 8th.

Whatever the reason, Kennedy did pitch to Fielder, though briefly. After strike one, Prince drove Kennedy's 111th pitch, a down-and-in breaking ball that wasn't enough of either, and parked it in the RF seats for a 4-0 lead. IPK's pitch count would rise no higher.

It may have been a moot point, given the performance of Yovani Gallardo. He blanked the D-backs on 3 hits until a leadoff HR in the 8th, but he struck out the next 3 men to finish with 9 Ks against 1 walk. John Axford pitched a perfect 9th to close out the 4-1 win.

It was a far cry from Gallardo's other postseason start. In 2008, because of Milwaukee's frantic final week, Gallardo got the opening assignment against the Phillies, despite missing most of the season with injury and making just 1 return appearance before the playoffs. He lasted just 4 innings, walking 5; his control faltered in the 3rd when he followed a 2-out IBB with 2 more walks to force in the 3rd run of the inning.

But Gallardo's control has improved since then, his walk rate falling in even steps from 4.6 BB/9 to 3.6 last year and 2.6 this season. He walked just 16 in his last 15 starts this year, and carried that command right into Game 1.

Fielder, who went just 1-14 in his only prior postseason series, also had a double that helped set up Milwaukee's first run. Braun went 3-4 with 2 runs, and saved a run in the 1st with an accurate throw to the plate that cut down Willie Bloomquist.

Flashback: If Gibson didn't think about the 1984 World Series when Fielder stepped to bat in the 7th, he might have done so afterward. In the clinching 5th game of the '84 Classic, Gibson came up in the 8th against Goose Gossage with men on 3rd and 2nd with 1 out, the Tigers ahead by 1, and lumbering Lance Parrish on deck.

Although he'd been lucky to get a loud foul in his prior Goose encounters (1 bunt single and 7 Ks in 11 trips), '84 was Gibby's long-awaited breakout year, and after what he'd done in the postseason so far -- 10 for 29, 2 HRs including one in that game -- it seemed logical that the Padres would put him on and go for the DP against Parrish.

From the dugout, Sparky Anderson flashed 4 fingers, teasing the gung-ho Gibson that he wouldn't get a chance for revenge on Gossage. Dick Williams visited his closer, advising the free pass. But Gossage was adamant: "I can get him out."

When it was clear that no wide ones were coming, Sparky taunted his manchild: "He doesn't respect you! He thinks you can't hit him!" Gibson answered with a show of confidence: he flashed 5 fingers twice, offering Sparky a $10 bet: "I'm taking him deep." And then he blasted Gossage's fastball into the upper deck, sealing the win and the championship.

Four years would pass before Gibson faced Gossage again, once more with men on 3rd and 2nd. The Goose put him on. What will Gibson do with Fielder the next time this situation arises?

9 Responses to “Brewers strike first”

  1. Timothy P. Says:

    In all seriousness, do you think Bill James has anything to do with the Red Sox collapse?

  2. Timothy P. Says:

    @1 Let me put it another way, is Bill James to blame for the collapse of the Red Sox?

  3. DavidRF Says:

    @1,2
    How is this going to affect Frank Tanana?

    This is a recap of an NLDS game. Why are you asking a ridiculously absurd Red Sox question here? 🙂

  4. John Autin Says:

    Big Bill James hasn't pitched for the Red Sox since 1919, and Seattle Bill James helped bring a title to Boston in 1914 (albeit in the other league).

    I hardly think it's fair to blame them for the 2011 collapse!

  5. John Autin Says:

    Hmm ... realizing that Big Bill James was a teammate of Babe Ruth in the first half of 1919, and finished the season with the "Black Sox" -- maybe he does have some mysterious occult connection to the Double-Reverse Curse!

  6. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    Triple dog dare?
    Skimpy Lee gave you has a chance to see Moneyball?
    Do they have theaters in Yahoo?

  7. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    John, excellent story about Goose and Gibby.
    Where did you unearth that from?
    As much as I love stats, its nice to put a bit of hunch, luck and humanity into a story.

  8. John Autin Says:

    Duke -- The Gibby/Goose story has been known to Tigers fans for a long time. Even before the '84 Series, we were aware of Gossage's dominance of the matchup. Goose fanned Gibson on 3 pitches in his big-league debut (ending the game), and over the next few years he seemed to take special delight in tormenting Gibson.

    There are different versions of the WS story:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirk_Gibson
    (see 3rd paragraph under "Detroit Tigers" heading)

    http://espn.go.com/page2/s/list/readers/greatest/worldseries/moments.html (see item #9)

    http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070720&content_id=2098775&vkey=news_det&fext=.jsp&c_id=det
    (see 4th paragraph)

    There are slight differences in these versions; I used an amalgam.

  9. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    Baseball’s great for that…
    Except know for a mic in every dugout and 33 camera angels and instant replay, you’ll never get those great stories that are a bit fact a bit fiction.
    Ruth’s called shot for instance… I’m glad we don’t known the truth there.

    "You're not going to use the story, Mr. Scott?
    No , sir. This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend. … "