28th October 2011
According to my rough scan, last night was only the third time in basebal history where we had a post-season Game 6 or later where the home team drove in runs in both the bottom of the 8th and 9th innings:
.
Of course, the Cardinals, last night, scored in the bottom of the 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th innings. What a game!
Posted in Event Finders | 5 Comments »
7th October 2011
File this under: Taking the crowd out of it. How many players have homered in the top of the 1st inning of sudden death post season games? It's a small list:
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Tigers are now the first team to have two guys do it in the same game.
Posted in Event Finders | 22 Comments »
5th October 2011
It's happened more often than I thought it would have...
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Posted in Event Finders | 22 Comments »
2nd October 2011
How many times has a player hit a grand slam in the first game of a post-season series?
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Posted in Event Finders | 16 Comments »
21st August 2011
Today's Tigers-Indians game thrillingly ended when Austin Jackson threw out Kosuke Fukudome at home plate for a game-ending double play. The play was both exciting and rare. Tyler Kepner of the New York Times put it best when he wrote:
I let out a “Wow!” Couldn’t help it. Not often do you see a game end on a double play from center field to the plate.
Since my mind is warped by thousands of PI searches, I immediately ran the batting event finder, and searched for game ending double plays to the center fielder, eliminated the ones that did not end with the catcher and was left with this list. (This comes from the play-by play index which is complete since 1974 and almost complete 1950-1973.) Since there were no RBI's on any of these plays I included the responsible CF instead. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Event Finders | 38 Comments »
16th August 2011
Last night, with a runner on first and no outs in the top of the first inning, Derek Jeter came to the plate and promptly lay down a sacrifice bunt. Now, I can imagine that in certain environments such a play might be warranted. If Jeter was on a horrible offensive team, facing Sandy Koufax in his prime, with an equally impressive hurler going for Jeter's team and this could have been the one opportunity of the game for a run, then maybe, this play would have made sense . However, with one of baseball's most prolific line-ups facing a kid pitcher, and a starter who hadn't won in over a month going for his own team, you have to wonder what he was thinking. What's even more amazing is that Jeter is not nearly alone. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Event Finders | 32 Comments »
11th August 2011
When Jerry Meals called Julio Lugo safe at home in the 19th inning on July 27th, not only did it provide the Braves with a controversial win, it gave pitcher Scott Proctor a walk-off RBI. Proctor's was the first walk-off RBI by a player in the game as a pitcher since Randy Keisler in 2005 and only the second since 1994. Since 1974, 8 pitchers have done better than Proctor and ended a game with a walk-off hit. The PI database also shows 32 game ending hits for pitchers between 1950-1973 (1043 games from that time span are not included in the search; see here.) As you would expect, a single is the most common of these. However, due to managerial strategies, the home run easily surpasses the double for second place. Here are the plays: Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Event Finders | 46 Comments »
10th August 2011
I ran across this puzzling play description today:
Inn |
Score |
Out |
RoB |
R/O |
Batter |
|
|
|
Play Description |
b10 |
4-5 |
0 |
12- |
RR |
M. Lawton |
|
|
|
Triple to RF (Line Drive to Deep RF); Meares Scores; Nixon Scores; Lawton to 2B |
So Lawton hit a walk-off triple and ended up on second base? Did he go back to second after touching third? Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Event Finders | 35 Comments »
6th August 2011
Earlier today, there was a discussion in the comments of another thread about using the PI to find back to back triples to lead off a game. And while it is not possible to create a definitive list of such triples using PI, we can come really close. The key here is simply looking for triples by the #2 hitter in the first inning with a runner of third and no outs. This search gives us a list of 40 events since 1950. From those events, we can eliminate those which started with a non-triple and the runner advanced to third before the next batter tripled. This give us this list:
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We also need to figure out if there are any games in which the lead-off hitter tripled and then scored before the #2 hitter tripled. This is as easy as the first step. We can search for triples by the #2 hitter with no outs and no one on in the first inning and then manually check the results for games with lead-off triples. You can find the list here, but every game listed involves triples preceded by home runs.
The last thing we would need to figure out is if there are any games in which the lead-off hitter tripled and then was out on the bases before the #2 hitter tripled. I can't think of any way of doing this with the PI, but if such a game exists it is probably unique.
Please note that this post utilizes the PI event finder which is complete since 1973, but only mostly complete from 1950-1972.
Posted in Event Finders | 24 Comments »
27th July 2011
In honor of last night's Pirates/Braves game, here's a list to play with today.
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Posted in Event Finders | 21 Comments »