BOONE
TOWN! OCTOBER 16, 17, 2003
By Harvey Frommer
The
following excerpt from my The Ultimate Yankee
Book celebrates
“Booney,” the new guy on the block as manager of the New York Yankees.
You can
read more about Aaron Boone and other Yankee moments, streaks, feats
and much
more in the book. Enjoy.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
It was a match up that all baseball fans looked forward to with so much
on the
line.
Pedro
Martinez vs. Roger Clemens.
It
was also at Yankee Stadium in 61 degree October temperature - -Yankees
against
Red Sox. It was the American League Championship Series. All tied up –
winner
take all.
Unfortunately
for Yankee fans Roger Clemens was off his game and Pedro Martinez was
on his.
The Rocket fizzled yielding four runs in three plus innings. Joe Torre
replaced
him with Mike Mussina, in his first career relief appearance. It
was some
spot for the “Moose” to be in - - no outs, runners standing on first
and
third.
Varitek
struck out. And Johnny Damon hit into a double play ending the threat.
Yankee
faithful cheered. Mussina held the Sox scoreless the next two innings.
He was
followed on the mound by Felix Heredia, Jeff Nelson, David
Wells.
Pedro
Martinez had the powerful Yankees on his string, just cruising along
even though
he surrendered solo homers to Jason Giambi in the fifth inning and
seventh
innings.
In
the top of the eighth, DavId Ortiz homered giving the Sox a 5-2
lead. Red Sox pilot Grady Little decided to let Martinez
start the
bottom of the eighth inning even though the Dominican star’s pitch
count was
high.
When
Nick Johnson popped up, the Yankees were down to their last five outs.
For the
many Red Sox fans in the stands, it seemed there team was destined to
“break”
the curse and finally get into the World Series.
Not
so fast.
A
Derek Jeter double.
A
Bernie Williams single. Jeter scored.
Hideki
Matsui, who had doubled twice off Martinez in the series, was ready.
The tired ace got two strikes on Matsui. Red Sox Nation relaxed a
bit. A
fastball inside. Matsui pulled the ball down the right field
line. It
bounced into the stands - - ground-rule double. Posada was ready
in the
batter’s box. The tying runs were on base.
There
was no move from the beleaguered BoSox manager who was aware that his
ace had
thrown 111 pitches, most under mounting pressure.
Later
Little said: “He had enough left in his tank to finish off Posada.”
On
the top step of the dugout Derek Jeter shouted to Posada: “Stay back.
Wait for
your
pitch.”
The
count was 2-2. The next pitch was an inside fastball that Posada lifted
over
second base as Posada Both Williams and Matsui scored.
Score
tied. Little removed Martinez. Alan Embree and then Mike Timlin held
the
Yankees back as the game moved deadlocked 5-5 to the 11th
inning.
Mario Rivera choked off the Red Sox in the ninth, tenth and 11th
innings -- the longest stint for the Yankee closer in seven
seasons.
Knuckleballer
Wakefield with two victories over the Yankees in the series, had hurled
a
scoreless tenth inning. He came in to pitch the eleventh inning.
The
Yankees had traded for Aaron Boone on July 31, 2003 with the plan of
his
holding down third base. Ineffective in the ALCS, Torre benched Boone.
In his
place was the less-experienced Enrique Wilson for Game 7. Boone, had
entered
the game earlier as a pinch runner. Now he came to bat.
The
time was 16 minutes past midnight, Friday morning
Wakefield’s first pitch was inside, below
Boone's hands. Boone swung. The ball jumped off his bat and went deep
over the
left-field wall.
There was so much stamping and movement that
it seemed like the big Bronx ballpark shook.
“I knew it was out. I finally put a good swing on it,” Boone said
later. The
6-5 New York win gave New York its fifth pennant in six seasons, its
39th
American League pennant.
.
"Damn Yankees!" was the Friday
front-page headline in the Boston Herald.
The
Daily News
banner headline read "Boone
Town!”
"I don't
know about a curse, but I
believe we have some ghosts in this stadium that have helped us out," Derek
Jeter
said. "We've just had some magical stuff that has happened to us
tonight."
Like
Derek told me, 'The ghosts
will show up eventually,'" Boone
said.
“I'm thankful that it's me instead of one of my players' taking
the
blame,” Little said afterwards. “If we don't win the World Series,
which is the
definition of winning here, somebody's got to be that man and I'm just
glad
it's me
instead.''
Boston
General Manager Theo Epstein remarked: “You can dwell on what happened
and wake
up in the middle of the night screaming, `Five more outs!' but I'm not
going to
do that.”
About
Harvey
Frommer: One of the most
prolific and respected sports journalists and oral historians in the
United
States, author of the autobiographies of legends Nolan
Ryan
, Tony Dorsett, and Red Holzman, Dr.
Frommer is an
expert on the New York Yankees and has arguably written more books,
articles
and reviews on the New York Yankees than anyone. In 2010,
he was
selected by the City of New York as an historical consultant for the
re-imagined old Yankee Stadium site, Heritage Field. A professor for more
than two decades in the MALS program at Dartmouth College, Frommer was
dubbed
“Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their alumni magazine.
His
ULTIMATE YANKEE BOOK can be ordered from AMAZON: http://www.frommerbooks.com/ultimate-yankees.html.