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New Yorkers make no apology for Subway Series

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Wednesday October 18, 2000 12:36 AM
Updated: Thursday October 19, 2000 2:05 AM

  Fans The New Yankees' 9-7 victory in Game 6 of the ALCS ensured the city's first Subway Series since 1956. AP

NEW YORK (AP) -- Mayor Rudolph Giuliani summed up what the Subway Series means for the Big Apple -- and points beyond.

"It will give New York an opportunity to be even more arrogant," he said Wednesday. "We'll be able to go around and say we have the two best teams in baseball."

Don't like the Yankees or Mets? Fuhgeddaboudit.

The whole thing will play out on the biggest platform of all -- the World Series.

Game 1 is Saturday night at Yankee Stadium, with Andy Pettitte probably pitching against Mets ace Mike Hampton.

New York, New York
Results of previous Subway Series
Year  Winner  Loser  Games 
1956  Yankees  Dodgers  4-3 
1955  Dodgers  Yankees  4-3 
1953  Yankees  Dodgers  4-2 
1952  Yankees  Dodgers  4-3 
1951  Yankees  Giants  4-2 
1949  Yankees  Dodgers  4-1 
1947  Yankees  Dodgers  4-3 
1941  Yankees  Dodgers  4-1 
1937  Yankees  Giants  4-1 
1936  Yankees  Giants  4-2 
1923  Yankees  Giants  4-2 
1922  Giants  Yankees  4-0 
1921  Giants  Yankees  5-3 
 
 
"This is our chance to get a place on the map," Mets outfielder Jay Payton said. "Whoever wins can walk around with their chins high and have bragging rights for a long time."

Even The New York Times, the old gray lady herself, is giddy. For the first time in memory, the newspaper ran a banner over its masthead, above news of the presidential debate and the Mideast crisis.

In red ink, no less.

"It's a Subway Series! Yankees Join Mets," the paper proclaimed.

Giuliani, a huge Yankees fan, predicted his favorite team will win in six games. He appeared Wednesday night on the "Late Show with David Letterman," reading a Top Ten list of "Cool Things About Having the World Series in New York."

Among them: "We're gonna add a Mike Piazza-style mustache to the Statue of Liberty."

Forgive fans in other parts of the country for being far from excited.

"It's a horror, is what it is," said Chris Gerstell, 24, who works at Boston Beer Works, next to Fenway Park. His Red Sox, haunted by the Yankees for most of the 20th century, lost the 1986 World Series to the Mets.

In Des Moines, Iowa, 48-year-old Stephanie Netolicky rolled her eyes when asked about the Subway Series.

"I thought you were talking about a sandwich shop," she said.

No matter. New Yorkers will be able to supply all the juice necessary for this matchup. It will be the 14th Subway Series overall, and the first since the Yankees played the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1956.

"There were only three channels then," recalled comedian Billy Crystal, celebrating in the clubhouse after the Yankees beat Seattle 9-7 late Tuesday night to win the AL Championship Series. "Now, the whole world will be watching."

How will it play in Peoria?
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- It's something many New Yorkers probably can't fathom, but not everyone is living and breathing the Subway Series.

Chicago Cubs fan Eric Ludwig, 31, of Des Moines shrugged off the excitement in New York over the World Series matchup between the New York Yankees and the New York Mets.

"They've already got a pretty big ego over being this big city," he said. "But there's just not that much interest in the series, here and, I would say, in the rest of the country."

"If it were anybody else, I might be interested," said retiree Lupe Lucero, a part of the early lunch crowd at the Coney Island restaurant in Tulsa, Okla.

Iowans at the convention center Wednesday were talking about Al Gore and George W. Bush, not the Mets and the Yanks.

"I could care less about baseball at a time like this. Are you kidding?" Stephanie Netolicky, 48, said as she waited for Gore to arrive. Netolicky responded with a blank stare when asked about the Subway Series -- "I thought you were talking about a sandwich shop, she said, rolling her eyes.

Farmers in Iowa are spending 12 to 16 hours a day out in the field -- thinking corn, not baseball.

Click here for full story.

 
 

A day earlier, the Mets finished off St. Louis in the NL Championship Series. They had their star power, too -- actors Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon poured champagne in the winning locker room.

And while the next few days will feature neat matchups on the field -- Tino vs. Timo, Bernie vs. Benny -- there also might be a lot to watch in the stands.

Mets star Piazza dates the Playboy Playmate of the Millennium. Yankees star Derek Jeter has been linked to Miss Universe.

The Yankees got a day off Wednesday to rest. A few Mets pitchers threw at Shea Stadium, though rain washed out a full workout. That just gave the Mets more time to talk about New York, New York.

"There're more Yankee fans than Mets fans in the city. That's just a result of winning. People like teams that win," Payton said. "The Yankees are definitely the team of the city."

The Yankees are trying to become the first team to win three straight World Series championships since Oakland in 1972-74. The Mets' last title came in 1986, when the team starred Dwight Gooden, now pitching for the Yankees.

The teams met six times in interleague play this year, with the Yankees winning four times. The rivalry -- already tense from the days when Yankees owner George Steinbrenner would put extra emphasis on beating the Mets in spring-training games -- was heightened after Roger Clemens beaned Piazza.

As a result, Mets management banned the Yankees from using the weight room at Shea Stadium, and also forbid its All-Stars from traveling with the Yankees' All-Stars to the game in Atlanta.

Mets GM Steve Phillips on Wednesday said the Yankees would be allowed to use his team's weight room, which is inside the Mets' clubhouse. Also, the Mets will probably take early batting practice at Shea before heading to Yankee Stadium.

City transit officials, meanwhile, planned to add extra No. 4 trains to the Lexington Avenue line that will carry fans to Yankee Stadium and additional No. 7 trains on the Flushing line to Shea Stadium. The routes meet at Grand Central Terminal.

Yankees second baseman Chuck Knoblauch has been known to ride the rails up to the Bronx. Don't look for Piazza, though.

"There's no subway near my house," the New Jersey resident said.

 
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Game 6: Yanks make Subway Series a reality
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