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We meet again

Fisk, Perez, Anderson hold reunion in Cooperstown

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  Tony Perez Carlton Fisk had the best look at Tony Perez's home run in Game 7 of the 1975 World Series. AP

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) -- Longevity landed Carlton Fisk and Tony Perez in the Baseball Hall of Fame, but one game defined their careers.

Twenty-five years after the Reds and Red Sox played in the 1975 World Series, baseball planned to celebrate one of its greatest moments with the induction of two of the series' heroes at Cooperstown.

"To have it come back full circle to here, I think it's more than a coincidence," Fisk said Saturday on the eve of the induction. "To be sitting here with him here, there must have been something in the stars. And I'm just glad the stars were shining on us."

Former Cincinnati manager Sparky Anderson, who was elected by the Veterans Committee, and longtime Reds announcer Marty Brennaman, who will receive the Ford C. Frick award, will also be there.

Also expected for the impromptu reunion are previous inductees Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench and Carl Yastrzemski -- all of whom played in the '75 Series and its unforgettable Game 6, which Fisk won with his body-bending, game-ending homer in the 12th inning.

"I remember when he hit that homer, I was pulling foul and he was pulling fair," Perez said at the inductees news conference. "I also remember that we had another game the next day. But that home run ended the best game we ever played in the World Series."

Also being honored in Sunday's ceremony are Negro League star Norm "Turkey" Stearnes and Veterans Committee selection Bid McPhee, a 19th Century defensive specialist for Cincinnati who was the last second baseman in baseball to play without a glove.

Although best known for his Game 6 homer, Fisk earned his Hall credentials game by game, catching 2,226 of them -- more than any catcher in history. He also hit a major league record 351 of his 376 homers as a catcher.

"I think people will connect me with that home run in the 1975 Series," he said. "But after that '75 Series I played 20 years after that."

Fisk was elected with 79.56 percent of the votes after a career in which he had 2,356 hits and 1,330 RBIs and was selected to the All-Star team 11 times. Although he spent 11 years with the Red Sox and 13 with the White Sox, the native New Englander will be enshrined wearing a Boston cap.

Carlton Fisk Frozen moment: Carlton Fisk celebrates his dramatic walk-off home run in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series. AP  

"I thought maybe I wouldn't wear a hat, I'll just put my name up there and say, 'I played baseball,'" he said. "But my first dream was to play for the Red Sox ... to play in Fenway Park, to hit one off the Green Monster."

Perez never led the leagues in batting, homers or RBIs, but he drove in at least 90 runs in 11 consecutive seasons from 1967-77. He finished with 1,652 RBIs, which ranks 18th, hit 379 homers and batted .279 while also playing for Boston, Philadelphia and Montreal.

After retiring in 1986, he fell short of election eight times before making it this winter with 77.15 percent of the vote.

"For nine years, I waited for the call," he said. "One year I was disappointed because they didn't vote anybody in. Then [Phil] Niekro went in and [Don] Sutton went in and I was left out, and I said, "Well, I might never make it."

"One time I got less votes than I had the year before, and I said, 'Everything is going backwards.' But this year I was feeling good about it because a lot of people came up to me and said, 'I think this is going to be your year.'"

Patience served Perez well, just as it did for his Reds in 1975. Because even though Fisk's homer won Game 6 for the Red Sox, Cincinnati won the series in the seventh game, thanks in part to a two-run homer by Perez.

That was the first of two consecutive championships for the Big Red Machine under Anderson, who also won it all in 1984 with the Detroit Tigers -- the only manager in baseball history to win the World Series in both leagues. He won 2,194 games in all -- third most in history behind Connie Mack and John McGraw, and his .691 postseason winning percentage (34-21) is the best ever.

He chose to be honored in a Reds cap, because that's where it all started.

"I would have never been in Detroit if it hadn't been for the players in Cincinnati," Anderson said of the Big Red Machine. "Cincinnati made me smart. I'm a dummy, so the players had to work pretty hard to make me look smart."


 
Related information
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All-Time Stats: Tony Perez
All-Time Stats: Carlton Fisk
Multimedia
Carlton Fisk said catching for a lot of great pitchers is what he is most proud of. (143 K)
Tony Perez said his biggest thrill came in the 1967 All-Star game when he hit a home run and was named MVP. (169 K)
Sparky Anderson said the moment he was first named manager of the Reds was his most special moment. (217 K)
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