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1998 Playoffs

Extra effort

Caminiti bails out Hoffman as Padres win 3-2 in 10

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Posted: Thursday October 08, 1998 09:27 AM

  Coming through: Caminiti (right) was 2-for-18 in the postseason before his 10th-inning blast AP

ATLANTA (AP) -- This time, the San Diego Padres saved Trevor Hoffman.

Ken Caminiti hit a solo home run in the 10th inning and the Padres overcame a rare lapse by baseball's premier closer to beat the Atlanta Braves 3-2 Wednesday night in a rain-delayed Game 1 of the NL championship series.

On an evening when daring running sent the game into extra innings, Caminiti trotted around the bases after connecting with one out in the 10th off Kerry Ligtenberg.

"I was seeing the ball good. My timing was back. And I felt good," Caminiti said. "It was big."

It was the fourth postseason homer of Caminiti's career, and helped him atone for failing to come up with a key throw that let the Braves tie it.

Ashby's only mistake was a third-inning homer by Andruw Jones AP 

Ruben Rivera's double and dash home on Jim Leyritz's dribbler gave the Padres a 2-1 lead in the eighth. But in the ninth, Hoffman, who converted 53 of 54 save chances this season, could not protect the edge and gave up Andruw Jones' tying sacrifice fly.

"A loss is a loss," Braves manager Bobby Cox said. "We came back against their best reliever. We had him in trouble every inning."

In fact, Hoffman could not even close out the game. With two outs in the 10th, he walked pitcher Tom Glavine -- pinch-hitting because Cox ran out of position players -- and Donne Wall relieved.

Wall, who had only one save this season, walked Chipper Jones before retiring Andres Galarraga on a long fly to center field.

Hoffman pitched two innings and wound up with the win. The game ended at 1:43 a.m., pushed back by a two hour, one minute rain delay at the start.

  Worth the wait: Smoltz allowed only four hits in seven innings AP

The win was a good omen for the underdog Padres. The last five teams to win the opener of the NLCS have gone on to the World Series.

"Runs were scored off closers tonight," Padres star Tony Gwynn said. "It was just one of those nail-biting games."

San Diego sustained a loss, however, when 50-homer man Greg Vaughn limped off in the fifth inning because of a strained left quadriceps. Rivera replaced him.

"Not real good news on that. He could be out 3-to-4 days, that's the early prognosis," Padres manager Bruce Bochy said.

Game 2 will be Thursday night, with Braves nemesis Kevin Brown pitching against Glavine. Last fall, Brown beat Atlanta twice at Turner Field in the NLCS for Florida.

Sparkplug: Rivera scored the go-ahead run in the eighth after starting the rally with a single AP 

Steady rain, lightning and thunder threatened to cause the first rainout in the two-year history of Turner Field.

The bad weather might have helped hold the crowd down to 42,117 about 9,000 short of a sellout and the smallest in Atlanta postseason history. But even before the storm came, the game was not expected to be sold out.

Ryan Klesko walked with one out in the Atlanta ninth and surprisingly tried to take third on Javy Lopez's single to left. Rivera's throw beat him, but Caminiti did not catch the throw and Klesko his nose bloodied from colliding with Caminiti's shoulder was safe.

Andruw Jones, whose home run gave Atlanta an early 1-0 lead, swung away on a 3-0 pitch and hit a sacrifice fly.

Padres starter Andy Ashby and Atlanta ace John Smoltz dueled evenly into the seventh with the game tied at 1.

  Andruw Jones' homer was his first hit of the postseason AP

Rivera, usually Gwynn's late replacement, opened the eighth with a double off Smoltz. Caminiti followed with a fly to medium right-center, and Rivera tagged up and tested Andruw Jones' strong arm.

Rivera's head-first slide barely beat the throw, though his momentum carried him a couple of feet off the bag. But third baseman Chipper Jones was busy raising his glove to show the umpire that he'd made the tag, and Rivera scrambled back to safety.

That brought up pinch-hitter Leyritz, whose six postseason home runs included three in the first-round win over Houston.

Leyritz tapped a ball to the right of Dennis Martinez, and the reliever ran to field it. Martinez looked at Rivera, but elected to throw to first baseman Galarraga.

Rivera immediately broke home and again slid in headfirst, beating Galarraga's wide throw. Galarraga was charged with a double error, for leaving the bag early and his bad throw.

Gwynn picked on a familiar victim for an RBI single that made it 1-all in the fifth. For the eight-time NL batting champion, it was his second hit of the night and he's now 30-for-65 (.455) lifetime against Smoltz.

Atlanta averted even bigger trouble, though, when right fielder Michael Tucker followed by making the defensive play of the game, a backhanded, leaping catch as he ran into the fence on Vaughn's drive.

Atlanta went ahead in the third when Andruw Jones led off with his fourth career home run in postseason play.

Notes: Exactly 14 years ago, the Padres achieved the most significant victory in franchise history. With Gwynn grounding a hard double past Ryne Sandberg, San Diego beat the Cubs 6-3 in the deciding Game 5 of the 1984 NLCS to reach its only World Series. ... Because of the rain, the players did not line up along the foul lines for pregame introductions. ... The last pitcher to pinch-hit in the playoffs was Lance Painter for Colorado in the first round in 1995 against Atlanta.  

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CNN/SI Team page: Atlanta Braves
CNN/SI Team Page: San Diego Padres
Padres-Braves Box Score
CNN/SI Player Page: Ken Caminiti
Major League Saves Leaders
Padres-Braves Scoring Summary
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frame The Padres steal game 1 in Atlanta
  • Start(2.11 M .MOV)
Ken Caminiti comments on the position the Padres are in now and how the Braves might react (266 K)
Caminiti talks about what he was thinking before he hit the game-winning home run (334 K)
Caminiti on the performance of Andy Ashby (204 K)
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