Only 2 series left to play: Portland and Chicago are all tied up, and Baltimore holds a 3-1 edge over the House of David.
#Portland Sea Dogs v Chicago American Giants, Game 5
We’re down to the proverbial best of 3 here, with a rematch of the opening game of the series, Walter Johnson for Portland and Tricky Nichols for Chicago.
Johnson struggled in the bottom of the first, but escaped with only a single run scoring: Eddie Collins walked, but was thrown out trying to steal; then a Joe Jackson single and a walk to Frank Thomas were followed by a double by Duffy Lewis, scoring Jackson. Dick Allen lined a shot into the gap, but not only did Harry Hooper make the diving catch, he sprang to his feet and threw a strike to cut down Thomas trying to score.
So, 1-0 Chicago after 1.
Portland would respond: back to back doubles by Rogers Hornsby and Buddy Bell tied the game, and Jim Fregosi plated Bell with a single, putting the Sea Dogs ahead, 2-1. But this Chicago lineup is rough: hits by Collins, Jackson, and Thomas tied the game again in the bottom of the 3rd.
Nichols couldn’t make it out of the 5th, when a–and here’s a surprise–triple from Kent Hrbek scored Joe Mauer to put Portland back in front, 3-2. In came Don Newcombe, but Gavvy Cravath singled in Hrbek, and after a Hornsby hit, Bell drove in 2 more. That made it 6-2 in this key game 5.
Johnson gave up a homerun to Jackson, but did make it through the 5th inning.
The rest of the game was … odd. A lot of baserunners, a few more tallies for Portland, but nothing to really threaten the outcome. The American Giants left 11 runners on base, which meant Joe Jackson’s record-tying 5 hits were for naught.
Bell and Hrbek had 3 hits each for Portland, who now sit 1 win from advancing to the second round.
POR 8 (Johnson 2-0; Miller 1 H; Cuellar 1 H) @ CAG 3 (Nichols 0-2)
HRs: POR – Murcer (2); CAG – Jackson (1).
Box Score
#Baltimore Black Sox v Wandering House of David
While Baltimore isn’t too bothered by their loss in game 4, they certainly don’t want to give the House of David any real hope. Game 5 will be a rematch of game one: Bill Byrd for Baltimore and Jack Taylor for the House of David.
Sometimes, it’s the little things: a surprise double from Paul Blair, a sacrifice bunt from Bobby Wallace and a single through the drawn in infield by Dan McGann, hitting second with Larry Gardner out injured.
Sometimes, it’s the big things: Frank Robinson depositing a pitch into the left field stands, increasing the lead to 3-0.
Pete Browning drove in 2 with a double in the bottom of the frame, making it 3-2. Which is how it stayed through 6, as both Byrd and Taylor settled down.
Gregg Olson relieved Byrd in the bottom of the 7th., while Wade Miley came in for Taylor in the 8th. Olson gave way to Joe Beggs, and everything stayed the same: 3-2 Baltimore, heading to the 9th.
Blair added an insurance run with an RBI single in the top of the frame, meaning it all came down to these final three outs against Baltimore’s closer, Buddy Groom.
Groom was perfect, and the Black Sox were through!
This was a well pitched game, with Taylor just a shade less effective than Byrd, making all the difference. Baltimore’s bullpen threw 3 no-hit innings in relief, closing the door on any possible comeback.
This was the least surprising result, given how strong Baltimore was in the regular season, but still, it was good for the Black Sox to seal the deal.
BAL 4 (Byrd 2-0; Groom 3 Sv; Olson 1 H; Beggs 2 H) @ HOD 2 (Taylor 0-2)
HRs: BAL – Robinson (1); HOD – none.
Box Score
The MVP choice was weird: Dan McGann hit .412 with 2 homeruns and 4 RBIs, which is certainly good. But Ken Singleton had 2 HR and 8 RBI, Bill Byrd went 2-0 with a 1.35 ERA, and Buddy Groom had 3 saves, so McGann had significant competition.