Zack Greinke Lays the Foundation for an Astros Comeback - 2 minutes read
Zack Greinke Lays the Foundation for an Astros Comeback
WASHINGTON — It is rare for a World Series to go three games without a win by the home team. That is how it stands now, after the Washington Nationals won twice in Houston, then squandered nearly all of their chances at home on Friday in a 4-1 loss to the Astros in Game 3.
One man on the field at Nationals Park during batting practice could relate. Joe Torre, the league’s chief baseball officer, managed the Yankees in 1996, a pivot point in World Series history. The Yankees lost the first two games at home to the Atlanta Braves, the reigning champions. But Torre had the pitcher he wanted for Game 3.
“A 2-1 Series is a whole lot different than 3-0,” Torre said. “What I did in ’96 was have David Cone pitch Game 3. I had called him in and explained why. I said, ‘You’re the only one that ever pitched down there in Atlanta, and I didn’t want people getting spooked by the launching pad.’ I think that was a big, big difference for us.”
Cone was not his sharpest (he walked four and struck out three) but he lasted six innings, allowed just one run, and the Yankees won by three. They became the third and last team to win the World Series after starting 0-2 at home.
Source: The New York Times
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Keywords:
Zack Greinke • Houston Astros • World Series • Games played • Win–loss record (pitching) • Home (sports) • Washington Nationals • Houston • Total chances • Win–loss record (pitching) • Houston Astros • Baseball field • Nationals Park • Batting average • Joe Torre • Baseball • New York Yankees • World Series • New York Yankees • First baseman • Games played • Atlanta Braves • Joe Torre • Pitcher • Joe Torre • David Cone • Pitcher • You're the Only One (Dolly Parton song) • Atlanta • David Cone • Strikeout • Innings pitched • Run (baseball) • New York Yankees • Win–loss record (pitching) • Third baseman • World Series •
WASHINGTON — It is rare for a World Series to go three games without a win by the home team. That is how it stands now, after the Washington Nationals won twice in Houston, then squandered nearly all of their chances at home on Friday in a 4-1 loss to the Astros in Game 3.
One man on the field at Nationals Park during batting practice could relate. Joe Torre, the league’s chief baseball officer, managed the Yankees in 1996, a pivot point in World Series history. The Yankees lost the first two games at home to the Atlanta Braves, the reigning champions. But Torre had the pitcher he wanted for Game 3.
“A 2-1 Series is a whole lot different than 3-0,” Torre said. “What I did in ’96 was have David Cone pitch Game 3. I had called him in and explained why. I said, ‘You’re the only one that ever pitched down there in Atlanta, and I didn’t want people getting spooked by the launching pad.’ I think that was a big, big difference for us.”
Cone was not his sharpest (he walked four and struck out three) but he lasted six innings, allowed just one run, and the Yankees won by three. They became the third and last team to win the World Series after starting 0-2 at home.
Source: The New York Times
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Zack Greinke • Houston Astros • World Series • Games played • Win–loss record (pitching) • Home (sports) • Washington Nationals • Houston • Total chances • Win–loss record (pitching) • Houston Astros • Baseball field • Nationals Park • Batting average • Joe Torre • Baseball • New York Yankees • World Series • New York Yankees • First baseman • Games played • Atlanta Braves • Joe Torre • Pitcher • Joe Torre • David Cone • Pitcher • You're the Only One (Dolly Parton song) • Atlanta • David Cone • Strikeout • Innings pitched • Run (baseball) • New York Yankees • Win–loss record (pitching) • Third baseman • World Series •