home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT2745>
- <title>
- Oct. 23, 1989: In The West:Play "Baysball!"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 23, 1989 Is Government Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 79
- In the West: Play "Baysball!"
- </hdr><body>
- <p>San Francisco and Oakland square off in a historic World Series
- </p>
- <p>By Lee Griggs
- </p>
- <p> As the crow -- or in this case the seagull -- flies, it is
- a mere eleven miles across San Francisco Bay from Candlestick
- Park, home of the National League pennant-winning Giants, to
- the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, where the American League
- champion Athletics play. That distance is only a tad farther
- than the mileage between Yankee Stadium in the Bronx and the
- Brooklyn housing project where Ebbets Field used to be, sites
- of the last public-transit World Series back in 1956. This week
- the A's and Giants, having finished off their respective
- challengers from Toronto and Chicago, are launched on the first
- ever Bay Bridge Series. BAYSBALL!, as the local newspaper
- headlines and posters put it.
- </p>
- <p> The confrontation has revived San Francisco's mostly
- unjustified arrogance toward its East Bay neighbor. The old
- cliches have been aired yet again about Giants fans partying on
- Chardonnay and quiche in Candlestick parking lots while A's
- adherents settle for beer and bratwurst at the Coliseum. San
- Franciscans sneer at the drug problem in "Cokeland," and last
- week Mayor Art Agnos took arrogance to new heights, initially
- declining to make the traditional World Series bet with his
- Oakland counterpart, Lionel Wilson, because "there's nothing in
- Oakland I want."
- </p>
- <p> Except maybe to emulate the success of the Athletics. The
- World Series is a novelty to the Giants, who haven't been in one
- for 27 years or won one in 35. The A's, on the other hand, are
- in their fifth since 1972 and have won three of their last four.
- </p>
- <p> After a spate of early-season injuries, the A's went into
- this week's games healthy and in the hitting groove. Their
- musclemen, designated hitter Dave Parker and the Bash Brothers
- -- first baseman Mark McGwire and rightfielder Jose Canseco --
- each homered at least once in the playoff series against
- Toronto. Canseco's was a tape-measure job estimated by an IBM
- computer at 480 ft. Nobody seemed more impressed than Jose
- himself telling callers on his personal hot line, (900)
- 234-JOSE, "I mean, this was one mammoth home run, and you really
- enjoy hitting those types. I mean, if you gotta hit it, you
- might as well hit it far, right?"
- </p>
- <p> But the one A's player most likely to give the Giants fits
- is left fielder Rickey Henderson, 30. All he did against Toronto
- was reach base on 14 of 23 times at bat, score eight runs, drive
- in five more, hit two homers and steal eight bases in as many
- tries. On the base paths he drove Blue Jay pitchers nuts. Like
- Canseco, Henderson is hardly humble. "I'd say I'm the decade's
- best lead-off man," he declares. "If people feel I'm one of the
- best who ever played the game, that's nice to hear." Opposing
- players call Henderson a hot dog, and frustrated fans in Toronto
- bombarded him with frankfurters in left field to show their
- displeasure.
- </p>
- <p> If anyone meant more to his team in the playoffs than "Hot
- Dog" Henderson to the A's, it was Will ("the Thrill") Clark of
- the Giants. The 25-year-old first baseman had a grand-slam homer
- and six runs batted in in the first game, and a bases-loaded
- single that drove home the winning run in the finale. For the
- five-game series, he reached base 15 times out of 22, batted
- .650, scored eight runs and drove in eight, with two homers.
- "It's no coincidence that at the most important time of the
- year, Will's at the very top of his game," says teammate Brett
- Butler. "That's what great players do, like Stan Musial and Ted
- Williams. Now you have to put Will in that class."
- </p>
- <p> But Clark cannot do it all, and despite impressive home-run
- help from his partner in the so-called Pacific Sock Exchange,
- Kevin Mitchell, as well as from slugger Matt Williams, the
- Giants seem outgunned overall by the Bash Brothers & Associates.
- More important, the A's boast the best pitching staff in
- baseball: Dave Stewart (21-9), Mike Moore (19-11), Storm Davis
- (19-7) and Bob Welch (17-8). For a closer in relief they call
- on Dennis Eckersley, who saved 33 games in the regular season
- and three more against the Blue Jays in the playoffs.
- </p>
- <p> Against that array, the Giants have converted reliever
- Scott Garrelts (14-5), 40-year-old Rick Reuschel (17-8) and the
- erratic Mike LaCoss (10-10). Fourth starter Don Robinson (12-11)
- pitches with a bad knee, and closer Steve Bedrosian barely
- avoided blowing a save in the pennant-clinching win.
- </p>
- <p> A's manager Tony LaRussa properly pooh-poohed the A's 8-1
- record against the Giants during spring training and professed
- concern about the Sock Exchange. Giants manager Roger Craig,
- ever the optimist, pointed out that "we've got men who respond
- to challenge. We've battled back all year long." But as the
- series opened last Saturday, hard-eyed bookmakers in Reno made
- the A's odds-on favorites to win the Battle of the Bay.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-