SUPER-REGIONAL G: There were five pennant winners that began in this group of 64 teams, but none of them made the super-regional level and only one even survived to their regional final. Of the eight teams that did make up this batch, not a one was the top seed in their regional, but most (with one #8 seed exception) had ratings indicating that they were good teams, and their presence here was evidence that they were survivors. Going by those rankings, the matchup in the final would be between two very different teams, the pitching and defense-rich 1954 White Sox and the homer-happy 2019 Twin, with the Sox rated as being the favorite. However, taking my White Sox jinx into account, I figured that was unlikely, so I guessed that it would be the 1924 Reds would take the bracket in a 100th anniversary celebration, as they had outscored their opposition 25-7 in blowing through Regional #51.
Round 4 action
The 103-loss 1993 Mets were one of the worst teams to have won a regional, and now it was time to see if the clock was going to strike midnight on Cinderella in the super-regional. They weren’t helped by a lingering injury to starting CF Ryan Thompson, although #4 starter Anthony Young (1-16, 3.77) was nowhere near as bad as his atrocious record would suggest. The 78-win 1961 Indians were 20 games better than the Mets in real life, and they had powered through Regional #50 riding the longball and defeating the formidable 1984 Tigers in the finals. It would be up to Wynn Hawkins (7-9, 4.07) to see if they could keep their run going. The Indians get on the board first as 3B-4 Bobby Bonilla earns his perpetual Mets salary with a 2-base error that scores a run in the bottom of the 3rd, but Bonilla leads off the 4th with a single and he eventually races home on an Eddie Murray single to tie it up. Chuck Essegian leads off the bottom of the inning with a tape measure homer to put Cleveland back on top, but Hawkins falls apart after getting two outs in the 6th, yielding three straight singles including a Jeff Kent RBI hit and Frank Funk is summoned from the pen and gets the final out but the game is tied once again. However, in the 8th Bonilla triples and scores on a Murray single, both off Funk’s card, and the Mets lead for the first time in the game. When Jimmy Piersall leads off the bottom of the 8th by missing Young’s HR 1-13/DO split with a 14 roll, the Mets move to Mike Maddux, but he’s not his brother and Tito Francona singles with Piersall racing home to tie the game entering the 9th inning. However, that doesn’t last long as backup catcher Charlie O’Brien knocks a 2-run homer in the top of the 9th to send the Indians fans into a funk, and after three more straight hits the Indians are indeed de-Funked as they try Dick Stigman, but Bonilla laces a hit through a drawn-in infield and although Stigman then strikes out the side, the Indians enter the bottom of the 9th down 7-3. With the big lead the Mets preserve Maddux and ask Jeff Innis to close out the game, but that looks unwise as a leadoff walk and a double on a missed HR 1-12 split from John Romano sets up an RBI single for Johnny Temple. Innis then gets two outs but walks Piersall to bring up Francona with the bases loaded and the winning run at the plate. But Francona pops out and the Mets’ unlikely run continues with the 7-4 win.
The Zoom game of the week was actually a doubleheader for the 1954 White Sox, who had somewhat miraculously made the World Series of TT’s project involving 20 of the greatest teams of all time. In that project, I managed the Sox against the 1939 Yankees (the top ELO-rated team in history), and despite my Sox jinx they won the computer-based super-advanced game behind the strong arm of Sandy Consuegra. Well, it just so happened that in my tournament they were now up in the super-regional after winning Regional #52, and it also just so happened that it was Consuegra’s (16-3, 2.69) in the rotation. So, once again I would tempt my jinx and direct the Sox, this time in Basic form using good old cards and dice, against the 1924 Reds, who would be managed by ColavitoFan and who still retained many of the stars that rather suspiciously defeated the Sox in the Series in 1919. Although the Reds had no home run power to speak of, they did hit a ton of triples and they had a remarkably deep rotation, with Dolph Luque (10-15, 3.16) being a strong option. Consuegra had gone seven strong innings in the earlier computer game against the Yankees; perhaps he was showing signs of fatigue after that outing, because in the top of the 1st the Reds were relentless, batting around with particular assistance from Sox HOF 2B-2 Nellie Fox who booted a sure DP ball to provide Cincinnati with a quick 4-0 lead, a lead that could have been larger if they hadn’t left the bases loaded to end the inning. That was not encouraging news for the Sox, who were not exactly an offensive powerhouse of a team, but in the bottom of the 2nd George Kell ripped a 2-out 2-run double that cut the lead in half to provide a glimmer of hope for the Comiskey faithful. That glimmer seems to fade as an error by SS-1 Chico Carrasquel provides another unearned Reds run in the 3rd, but a Nellie Fox double in the bottom of the inning allows the Sox to keep pace and the Reds lead is 5-3 after three, but the Sox strengths of pitching and defense seem to have been left at home. In the 4th, an Ed Roush triple and I go out to the mound to visit Consuegra and politely tell him that if he allows another run to score, I’ll not only pull him out of the game but also out of the state of Illinois. This seems to strike a chord in him, as he settles in to strand Roush and proceeds to toss three consecutive perfect innings. Meanwhile, in the bottom of the 7th PH Ron Jackson contributes an RBI double and he scores on a Carrasquel single to tie the game, and the roar of the crowd can be heard in useless DH Phil Cavarretta’s old ballpark on the north side. ColavitoFan feels that Dolph has run out of Luque and Jakie May comes in to finish the inning, and he gets support in the top of the 8th with an RBI triple by Hughie Critz. Consuegra gets another mound visit involving vague threats after putting on the Critz, and once again the strategy seems to work as he strands the runner but the Reds take a 6-5 lead into the bottom of the 9th. A leadoff single by John Groth keeps the attention of the fans, and CF doesn’t like what he sees in May so Pete Donohue is brought in to try to finish things out. But Kell pokes a squib single and PH Cass Michaels draws a walk to load the bases and put the winning run in scoring position with nobody out, and the top of the Sox order steps to the plate in the form of Chico Carrasquel, who owes his staff an unearned run. In comes the infield, and Donohue delivers for a 2-9 roll, HR 1-8 and for a change I roll a low split of 6, and it’s a walk-off grand slam to the amazement of the Zoom crowd. The Comiskey scoreboard explodes, discos are demolished across the city, and the Sox move on with the epic 9-6 win.
The only two 21st century teams in this bracket had a round four face-off, with the 2019 Twins being the favorite, a squad that clubbed 12 homers in the three games of their regional; they won 101 games and hit 307 team homers in that season, but Kyle Gibson (13-7, 4.84) was a hittable #4 starter and their bullpen had been taxed in a high-scoring regional final. They faced the 89-73 2016 Orioles, who were built along similar lines as the Twins, but with less power and even worse pitching, as Wade Miley (9-13, 5.37) was their best option for a fourth starter. Despite all that, the game begins as a pitcher’s duel, which ends when Pedro Alvarez begins the top of the 5th with a long homer that puts Baltimore in front 1-0. In the bottom of the inning, O’s 2B-2 Jonathan Schoop drops a sure DP grounder because Twins 2B-3 Jonathan Schoop is bearing down on him, but Miley gets out of the jam with no damage. However, in the 6th Max Kepler converts a HR 1-5 for a 2-run shot and a Twins lead, and an Alvarez single off Gibson’s card in the 7th sends the Twins to the pen for Sam Dyson, who prevents any damage. When Miley starts off the 8th by issuing two walks, the O’s bring in closer Zach Britton and his 0.54 ERA, and he quickly dispatches the Twins to send the game to the top of the 9th with Baltimore still trailing by a run. The Twins opt to burn Dyson since he’s pitching well, and this Dyson doesn’t suck as he strikes out the double agent Schoop to close out a hard fought 2-1 win in which the teams combine for only nine hits.
The 83-71 1953 Cardinals had defeated a pennant winner to take Regional #56 as the #3 seed, but after three strong performances from the rotation, Joe Presko (6-13, 5.01) did not have a record that inspired confidence. The 77-85 1990 Cubs had similar problems, with Steve Wilson (4-9, 4.79) facing his turn on the mound and 3B Luis Salazar was still out with a lingering injury from the regionals and would miss this round four game between old rivals. Presko gets into trouble immediately as Andre Dawson rips a three run homer in the top of the 1st, but the Cards strike back in the bottom of the 4th when Ray Jablonski converts a 2-run triple off Wilson’s card. Two batters later, Steve Bilko converts that same TR 1-5, and Del Rice follows with a “what’s that doing there” solid double on a 3-2 roll and the Cards take the lead. When Red Schoendienst become the third batter of the inning to convert that 6-6 TR 1-5 split, another run scores and the Cubs insert Paul Assenmacher, who has an out at that roll. When the Cubs single off Presko to begin the 6th, the Cards look for something in the pen but there ain’t much, so Presko continues and he immediately gives up a game-tying homer off his card to Mark Grace. That convinces the Cards to try Hal White, who retires the side, but in the 7th Shawon Dunston doubles off White and then races home on a single by Dwight Smith, and the Cubs have regained the lead. Mark Grace leads off the 8th with a double and he scores on a Ryne Sandberg single for additional insurance, which looks like it may be needed as Peanuts Lowrey doubles in the bottom of the inning and Assenmacher is out of gas. That means that it’s time for the Wild Thing, as Mitch Williams comes out and he retires the side with nary a walk. White holds in the top of the 9th, so it’s up to Williams in the bottom of the 9th, and a single by PH Eddie Stanky and two BBs off the Wild Thing’s card load the bases with two out for Jablonski. But he grounds out harmlessly and the Cubs survive and advance with Williams getting the save in the 7-5 win.
The survivors: Round 5
Two teams that seemed to get things done with smoke and mirrors face off, with the 103-loss 1993 Mets battling the 1954 White Sox, who required a walk off grand slam in their previous game to reach this point. Returning to the top of the rotation for round five was particularly good news for the Mets, who could send out Dwight Gooden (12-15, 3.45) against Virgil Trucks (19-12, 2.78) for the Sox, and the two starters had quite similar cards with nearly identical patterns. The Sox pick up where they left off with three straight hits, the last one an RBI single for Minnie Minoso but 1-15 Nellie Fox is cut down trying for third on the hit to kill the rally. Ferris Fain contributes a 2-out RBI single in the 3rd to make it 2-0 Chicago, and the Mets don’t get a baserunner until a Jeremy Burnitz single in the 5th. They do load the bases with two away in the 6th, but Trucks strikes out Eddie Murray to keep the Mets off the scoreboard. Burnitz leads off the 7th with a triple, and a sac fly from Jeff Kent makes it a one-run game while Gooden has found his groove and is blowing through the Sox lineup, assisted in the bottom of the 8th when Fox misses a HR 1-9 split with a 10 and gets stranded at second. But Trucks bears down, and sets the heart of the Mets lineup down in order in the 9th to finish with a 4-hitter and send the Sox to the super-regional final by winning the 2-1 duel.
This round five matchup between the 1990 Cubs and the hammerin’ 2019 Twins was a relief for both squads, because they now were able to loop around to the top of their rotation. For the Cubs, that involved a Hall of Famer in Greg Maddux (15-15, 3.46) although arguably the Twins’ Jose Berrios (14-6, 3.68) might have had a better season. The Twins get a 2-out RBI single in the top of the 1st by Miguel Sano off Maddux’s card for a quick lead, but in the bottom of the inning Andre Dawson hawks one into the stands and the Cubs move ahead 2-1. They squander an opportunity to move further ahead in the 3rd when 1-13+2 Mark Grace is cut down at the plate trying to score on a Hector Villanueva (or Villanova, if you’re Harry Caray) two-out single, and that run would have been useful because Sano leads off the 4th with a long homer. However, the Twins take their turn as victims of my bad split rolls when Jonathan Schoop misses a HR 1-14 and gets stranded at second and the game remains tied. In the bottom of the inning the Cubs quickly get two runners aboard but Joe Girardi hits into a triple play, taking note to recommend against that in his future managerial career. In the bottom of the 7th, Dwight Smith converts Rosario’s HR split, located at 6-5, and the Cubs take the lead while the Twins summon Sergio Romo from a depleted bullpen. But things don’t get any better, as Romo issues two straight walks and then two straight errors by C-4 Mitch Garver and SS-3 Jorge Polanco lead to a run on no hits for additional insurance. It’s now up to Maddux and he tosses a perfect 9th as it’s Cubs win, Cubs win by a 4-2 score and they move on to an unexpected appearance in the super-regional final.