It was about half
past 10 on a warm September evening in Los Angeles when the faithless,
literally turning their backs on their Dodgers, lit up the rolling hills of
Chavez Ravine with the international symbol of baseball surrender: a cortege of
red taillights, solemnly snaking into the dark of night while the home team
played on. It was a Monday evening, which meant the fast approaching morning of
school or work took priority, especially with L.A. trailing San Diego 9--5 and
down to its last three outs.
The trouble with that thinking--mentally dividing four runs by three outs and
coming up with zero chance--is an ignorance of one of the preternatural
beauties of baseball. Unlike the finite quantity of time in most sports,
sometimes parsed to tenths of seconds, outs are elastic. They don't abide by
the comeback math of other sports.
What happened next on that Sept. 18 at Dodger Stadium will forever be invoked
as a reason not only to go to a baseball game but also to remain until the
final out.
Ask just about
anyone who was there that night: from Padres general manager Kevin Towers, who
left his box seat for the clubhouse as the bottom of the ninth began with
victory apparently in hand, to the fan who, at the exact same time, was walking
toward his car in the centerfield parking lot when a baseball landed in front
of him, stopping him in his tracks. The shot, a home run hit by Jeff Kent,
might well have come from Fort Sumter for all the mayhem it begat.
Beginning with
that blast, the Dodgers, who hit the second-fewest homers in the National
League in 2006, tied the game by hitting four straight home runs on four
consecutive swings in a span of seven pitches. "You don't see that happen
in batting practice," Los Angeles G.M. Ned Colletti says. Indeed, only
three teams ever hit four straight homers (the 1961 Braves, '63 Indians and '64
Twins) but never to wipe out a deficit in any inning, much less the ninth.
The atmosphere at
Dodger Stadium that night was electric from the start. The joint was packed
with 55,831 fans, the most ever for a Monday night there, some lured by
giveaway fleece blankets but most by an NL West race in which San Diego clung
to a half-game lead over L.A. with 13 to play.
The first eight
innings were charged enough. Padres starter Jake Peavy and Dodgers first base
coach Mariano Duncan got into a shouting match, San Diego blew a 4--0 lead,
Padres reliever Cla Meredith escaped a bases-loaded, no-out mess in the sixth
with only four pitches, and L.A.'s Nomar Garciaparra whiffed to end the eighth
with runners at second and third, Dodgers down 6--5. After San Diego added
three runs in the ninth, the necklace of red taillights beyond centerfield
quickly lengthened.
The 9--5 lead
also prompted then Padres manager Bruce Bochy to order closer Trevor Hoffman to
stop warming up. He instead brought in Jon Adkins. "I was doing everything
I could not to use Trevor," Bochy says. "He had thrown the day before
and had a little soreness in his shoulder." Adkins, who had allowed one
home run in 51 2/3 innings, threw six pitches. Kent ripped the second, a
fastball, and J.D. Drew hit the sixth, another fastball, for a homer to right
center.
"By the time
I got [to the clubhouse]," Towers recalls, "it was 9--7. Unbelievable.
So I'm thinking, We're O.K. We've got Hoffy."
Hoffman had
allowed two home runs all year and was three saves shy of the alltime career
record. Towers, because of a superstition, does not watch Hoffman pitch. He
finds bunkers under stadiums in which he cannot hear the crowd or see a TV,
waiting for what he hopes is the sound of his happy team clattering back after
a win.
Meanwhile, out on
Stadium Way, the red taillights had turned into white headlamps. People were
swinging U-turns and driving to a baseball game at 10:30 at night, work and
school be damned.
Hoffman's first
pitch to Russell Martin was a fastball. Martin walloped it into the leftfield
stands. The roar reached all the way into a visiting clubhouse office, where a
concerned Towers turned the TV to the game. "I saw the score change to 9--8
and one of their players circling the bases," Towers says. "I thought,
We're still O.K."