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New York, New York

Yankees hold off Mariners, make Subway Series a reality

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Wednesday October 18, 2000 12:27 AM
Updated: Wednesday October 18, 2000 7:49 AM

  Yankees The New York Yankees set up the first Subway Series in 44 years by closing out Seattle 9-7 in Game 6 of the ALCS. AP

NEW YORK (AP) -- Derek Jeter thinks the city will go crazy.

Joe Torre predicts it will pit father against son.

For the first time in 44 years, New York has a Subway Series, thanks to David Justice's three-run homer -- a towering drive that, appropriately, headed toward the No. 4 train.

"I hope that people behave themselves because it's going to split a few families up, I think," Torre said after yet another thrilling comeback, a 9-7 win against the Seattle Mariners on Tuesday night that won the AL Championship Series 4-2.

"I have a feeling the city is not going to be the same for this next 10 days -- and maybe for some time after that," the Yankees manager said.

Fighting off weeks of doubts, the Yankees won their record 37th American League pennant, their third consecutive and fourth in five seasons.

Starting Saturday night at Yankee Stadium, it's baseball's equivalent of Hatfields vs. McCoys, Capulets vs. Montagues.

Yankees Locker Room:
Sports Illustrated's Stephen Cannella says the Yankees never get tired of winning AL pennants and the champagne celebrations that go with them.
Mariners Locker Room: With key players and maybe even their manager looking to move on, this may have been the last hurrah for this Mariners bunch, and they know it, reports Sports Illustrated's Jamal Greene.

Closer Look: CNNSI.com's Ken Klavon says for the second time in this ALCS, momentum shifted when Seattle reliever Arthur Rhodes entered the ballgame.
 

Despite his worst October outing, Yankees starter Orlando Hernandez lasted seven innings and became the first pitcher ever to go 8-0 in postseason play.

The Yankees were in an unaccustomed role this time: coming from behind.

They trailed 4-0 in the fourth and 4-3 in the seventh when Justice sent a pitch from Arthur Rhodes into the right-field upper deck, a drive that earned him the series MVP award.

Yankee Stadium shook.

"It was magical," said Justice, one of seven players on the 25-man roster acquired during the season. "It was unbelievable when I rounded the bases, to see this place erupt."

New York, seeking to become the first team to win three consecutive World Series since the Swingin' Oakland A's from 1972-74, had ended the season with 15 losses in 18 games. The Yankees lost the opener of their first-round series against Oakland and their second-round series against Seattle.

"We were written off," Justice said. "We stuck together."

It wasn't like 1998, when the Yankees won a record 125 games. Or even last year, when they went 11-1 in a postseason culminated by their second consecutive Series sweep.

"Probably the first easy thing we've done this year is get it over in six," first baseman Tino Martinez said. "It's been an absolute battle, but we never gave up, and here was are playing in the World Series again."

Once they went ahead, the Yankees broke open a tense evening. Paul O'Neill hit a two-run single and Jose Vizcaino, whose infield single started the inning, hit a sacrifice fly for a 9-4 lead.

It turned out they needed it. This year, they don't steamroll, they sneak by.

Alex Rodriguez, who went 4-for-5 in perhaps his final game for the Mariners, homered leading off the eighth and Hernandez left after a walk, having allowed six runs and seven hits in eight innings. He had never allowed more than three earned runs in a postseason start.

 
One-on-One
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Derek Jeter talks about the first Subway Series in 44 years. Start
•  One-on-One: Bernie Williams
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The Usual Suspects
Most World Series appearances
New York Yankees  37 
Brooklyn/L.A. Dodgers  18 
San Francisco/N.Y. Giants  16 
St. Louis Cardinals  15 
Philadelphia/Oakland A's  14 
Chicago Cubs  10 
Boston Red Sox  10 
 

Mariano Rivera relieved and allowed a double to John Olerud, then a two-run double by Mark McLemore that hit off first base as two more runs scored, ending his postseason scoreless streak at 33 1/3 innings over three years.

But Rivera held on in the ninth.

And just 24 hours, 38 minutes after Timo Perez caught the final out of the NLCS at Shea Stadium, about eight miles away, the final out of the Yankees' tense season ended when Edgar Martinez grounded to shortstop with a runner on at 12:17 a.m.

And so a half-century after Willie, Mickey and the Duke dominated baseball, it will be Bernie, Benny and El Duque in the first Subway Series since the Yankees beat the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1956.

"I was at that last one, when Don Larsen pitched the perfect game against Brooklyn," Torre said.

Even Justice, a New Yorker for less than six months, appreciated the significance.

"New York can't lose," he said. "Everything is going on between the city limits."

Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a life-long Yankees fan, made it clear who he wants to win.

"I might take the subway, but the main thing would be to get here on time," he said.

The Mets watched carefully from afar as the scene unfolded in the Bronx. They said all the pressure is on the Yankees.

"When you're the defending champion and the team to beat, people gun for you all year long and play their best baseball against you," Mets general manager Steve Phillips said.

Seattle stormed to a 4-0 lead, getting consecutive RBI doubles from Rodriguez and Martinez in the first, and a two-run, upper-deck homer from light-hitting Carlos Guillen in the fourth. It wasn't enough.

"We wanted to bring the World Series to Seattle in the worst way," said manager Lou Piniella, like Rodriguez, his free agent-to-be shortstop, spending perhaps his final night in a Mariners uniform.

But John Halama, a Brooklynite who blanked the Yankees for six innings in Game 2, was chased in the third, when Jorge Posada hit a two-run double and O'Neill, fighting the biggest batting worst slump of his life, singled in a run on the next pitch.

Justice Prevails
NEW YORK (AP) -- Upper deck swaying, sound effects blaring. The mayor standing and clapping in the front row, fans in the bleachers shouting and going crazy.

Late innings, game on the line. A trip to the World Series at stake.

Pressure? David Justice never shook.

Justice, who has played in more postseason games than anyone in baseball history, hit a three-run homer in the seventh inning that sent the New York Yankees over Seattle 9-7.

 Click here for full story 
 
 

Hernandez and Mariners reliever Brett Tomko both escaped jams in the middle innings, getting defensive help from their All-Star shortstops.

And then the game turned in a 39-minute seventh inning -- roughly the time it takes to go from Yankee Stadium to Shea, if the change of trains at Grand Central Terminal goes smoothly.

Vizcaino, one of the seven players who started spring training elsewhere, started the inning with a perfectly placed single in the hole between first and second base.

McLemore got to it, but his throw from short right field was just a little too late.

Chuck Knoblauch sacrificed him to second and Jeter singled just between Rodriguez, his rival and pal, and Guillen at third.

In came Rhodes.

In Game 2, the Yankees trailed 1-0 and been shut out for 21 innings when Justice doubled off Rhodes, sparking a seven-run eighth inning that gave New York a 7-1 win and tied the series.

In that game, umpires angered Justice by ruling he didn't check a swing on a 1-1 pitch,

This time, he got the call on a close 2-1 pitch.

"I was pretty sure he went around," Rhodes said. "Two-and-two, it makes a difference on my pitch selection. At 3-1, I came back with a fastball. I didn't want to walk the bases loaded."

Justice, a June acquisition from Cleveland, gave double high-fives when he met Jeter and Vizcaino at home plate, more high-fives to Bernie Williams, Martinez and Luis Sojo by the dugout, then slammed his helmet down, adrenaline rushing through his veins.

"I guess," Justice said, "you could say we're probably making history."

Notes: The Yankees are the first team to win three consecutive pennants since Oakland from 1988-90. Teams have won three consecutive 17 times, with the Yankees accomplishing it nine times. ... It will be the 14th Subway Series. The Yankees held a 4-2 edge over the New York Giants and 6-1 over the Brooklyn Dodgers. ... Dan Wilson's soft single to right leading off the fifth stopped a record 42 at-bat hitless streak in postseason play and a 26 at-bat hitless streak in the LCS. Marv Owen went 0-for-31 for Detroit in 1934 and '35.


 
Related information
Stories
ALCS Notebook: Game 6
Rodriguez, other Mariners ponder future
All aboard for first Subway Series in 44 years
The Hot Button: On board for a Subway Series
There's Justice for the Yankees: MVP of the ALCS
Closer Look: Yankees find Rhodes to the World Series
Locker Room: Yankees' celebration was especially sweet this time
Stats
Game 6 Box Score: Mariners-Yankees
Multimedia
New York shortstop Derek Jeter is asked if the Yankees had any doubt about reaching the World Series. (105 K)
New York manager Joe Torre contrasts the 2000 Subway Series to the last one in 1956. (134 K)
Jeter talks about playing in the first Subway Series in 44 years. (86 K)
New York rightfielder David Justice compares his three-run home run to the one he hit to win the 1995 World Series for Atlanta. (188 K)
Seattle manager Lou Piniella sums up Seattle's feeling after the loss. (107 K)
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