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1997 World Series

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The 1997 World Series was widely regarded as one of the most exciting Series in recent memory. It featured the Cleveland Indians, who were heading to their second World Series in three years. Their opponents were the Florida Marlins, who had set a record by reaching the Series in only their fifth season of operation. The Marlins were huge underdogs as they capped a stunning season by beating the Indians in seven games, four games to three, becoming the first ever Wild Card team to win the Series. The final of Game 7 was decided in extra innings on an Edgar Renteria single. This World Series was the first won by a wild card team. It is sometimes called "The Latino Series," "The Hispanic Series" and "The Latin Series" because of the many players of Latin-American descent that figured prominently in this World Series.

Managers: Mike Hargrove (Cleveland), Jim Leyland (Florida)

Umpires: Ed Montague (NL), Dale Ford (AL), Joe West (NL), Greg Kosc (AL), Randy Marsh (NL), Ken Kaiser (AL)

Series MVP: Liván Hernández (Florida)

Television: NBC (Bob Costas, Joe Morgan and Bob Uecker announcing)

Contents

[edit] Game 1

October 18, 1997 at Pro Player Stadium (Florida Marlins)


Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Cleveland 100 011 010 4110
Florida 001 420 00x 771
W: Livan Hernandez (1-0)   L: Orel Hershiser (0-1)  S: Robb Nen (1)
HR: CLEManny Ramirez (1), Jim Thome (1)  FLAMoises Alou (1), Charles Johnson (1)


Game 1 featured a youngster versus a veteran facing each other on the mound. Fresh off his NLCS MVP performance, Livan Hernandez took the hill for the Marlins and quickly gave up a run in the 1st thanks to a double by leadoff man Bip Roberts and an RBI single by David Justice. Indian starter Orel Hershiser got by the first two innings unscathed. However, after the Marlins tied the game in the 3rd they scored 4 runs in the 4th. The inning climaxed when Moises Alou and Charles Johnson hit back-to-back homers (Alou's was a three run shot off the left field foul pole). The Fish added two in the 5th to knock Orel out of the game. The Indians crept back in the game slowly thanks to solo shots by Manny Ramirez and Jim Thome and entered the 9th inning down only 7-4. Florida closer Robb Nen came in and was able to get out of a jam by striking out Sandy Alomar and Thome with two men aboard.

[edit] Game 2

October 19, 1997 at Pro Player Stadium (Florida Marlins)


Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Cleveland 100 032 000 6140
Florida 100 000 000 180
W: Chad Ogea (1-0)   L: Kevin Brown (0-1)  
HR: CLESandy Alomar Jr. (1)


Game 2 matched up Florida ace Kevin Brown against little known Chad Ogea who had lost 2 games in the ALCS. Both teams scored in the first, thanks to RBI singles by Justice for the Indians and Jeff Conine for the Marlins. However, Ogea barely escaped further damage when Alou got under a hanging curveball, but merely flying out to the warning track, missing his second three-run homer in as many nights by inches. After that, Ogea settled in and did not allow any more runs. Brown pitched well until the 5th when the Indians strung together three straight singles by Matt Williams, Sandy Alomar, and Marquis Grissom. Later in the inning, with runners on second and third, Bip Roberts drove in a pair of runs with a single up the middle giving the Tribe a 4-1 lead. The three-run lead ballooned to five when Alomar hit a laser into the left field stands for a two run homer in the 6th.

[edit] Game 3

October 21, 1997 at Jacobs Field (Cleveland Indians)


Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Florida 101 102 207 14163
Cleveland 200 320 004 11103
W: Dennis Cook (1-0)   L: Eric Plunk (0-1)  S: Robb Nen (2)
HR: FLAGary Sheffield (1), Darren Daulton (1), Jim Eisenreich (1)  CLEJim Thome (2)


Game 3 was a wild affair that ended with the Marlins grabbing a 2-1 series lead. In the top of the 1st, Gary Sheffield started the scoring with a solo shot to left. In the bottom half, the Indians retaliated with two runs thanks the two broken bat RBI singles by Matt Williams and Sandy Alomar. Florida took the lead 3-2 on a Darren Daulton homer in the 3rd and four walks delivered by Indians starter Charles Nagy in the 4th. However, the Indians got a gift in the bottom of the 4th, when they drew four consecutive free passes by Marlins starter Al Lieter and then a throwing error by third baseman Bobby Bonilla allowed two more runs to score. The Tribe went up 7-3 on Jim Thome's 2-run blast to right in the 5th inning. His homerun was nullified in the 6th by Jim Eisenreich's 2 run homer that cut the lead to 7-5. In the 8th, the Marlins finished their comeback with Edgar Renteria and Sheffield each driving in a run, making the score 7-7. In the 9th, it all fell apart for Cleveland thanks to three errors and seemingly one hit after another by the Marlins, with Bonilla and Sheffield driving in a pair of runs each. When the carnage was over the Marlins led 14-7. Even though the Indians came back with 4 runs of their own in the 9th, it was not enough.

[edit] Game 4

October 22, 1997 at Jacobs Field (Cleveland Indians)


Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Florida 000 102 000 362
Cleveland 303 021 12X 10150
W: Jaret Wright (1-0)   L: Tony Saunders (0-1)  
HR: FLAMoises Alou (2)  CLEManny Ramirez (2), Matt Williams (1)


This back-and-forth World Series continued that way in Game 4. Both teams were greeted by snow during batting practice and freezing temperatures throughout the contest. Two rookies would oppose each other on the mound this night; Jaret Wright for the Indians and Tony Saunders for the Marlins. The Indians stormed out of the gate with three runs in the 1st, highlighted by Manny Ramirez's opposite field two run homer. The Indians got three runs in the third inning as well and never looked back. Matt Williams turned out to be the offensive hero by reaching base six times, which included a two run blast in the 8th to close the scoring.

[edit] Game 5

October 23, 1997 at Jacobs Field (Cleveland Indians)


Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Florida 020 004 011 8152
Cleveland 013 000 003 790
W: Livan Hernandez (2-0)   L: Orel Hershiser (0-2)  S: Robb Nen (3)
HR: FLAMoises Alou (3)  CLESandy Alomar Jr. (2)


Game 5 was a rematch of Game 1's starting pitchers Livan Hernandez and Orel Hershiser. The Marlins jumped out to a quick 2-1 lead heading into the 3rd. Indians catcher Sandy Alomar then turned the game around by launching a towering 3-run bomb. It remained 4-2 until the 6th, when Moises Alou hit his second 3-run homer off Hershiser in as many games and his 3rd homerun of the series. Livan pitched terrifically in the middle innings not allowing any runs until the 9th. Florida scored what seemed at the time to be two meaningless runs late in the game to extend their lead to 8-4 (Alou scored one and drove in the other). However, the 9th inning was a nailbiter with Livan and Robb Nen struggling to hold the lead. Omar Vizquel drove in one run with a hit, then Justice drove in two with a single up the middle. Jim Thome smashed a double in the left- centerfield gap to drive in Justice and make the score 8-7. With Thome at second, Alomar came up, having already driven in 20 RBIs throughout the playoffs and 4 in the game. Sandy flied out to right field to end the game thus giving the Fish a 3-2 series lead.

[edit] Game 6

October 25, 1997 at Pro Player Stadium (Florida Marlins)


Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Cleveland 020 101 000 470
Florida 000 010 000 180
W: Chad Ogea (2-0)   L: Kevin Brown (0-2)  S: Jose Mesa (1)


The series returned to the warmer climate of Miami for Game 6. Kevin Brown opposed Chad Ogea again and again Brown inexplicably struggled while Ogea flourished. Chad himself drove in the first two runs with a bases loaded single in the 2nd. Manny Ramirez hit a pair of sac flies in the middle innings (one in the 4th and the other in the 6th). With the Tribe leading 4-1 in the 6th, Ogea ran into serious trouble. The Marlins put runners on second and third with two out as reliever Mike Jackson replaced Ogea. Marlins catcher Charles Johnson stepped to the plate and proceeded to hit a sharp grounder that was headed for left field. Indians gold glove shortstop Omar Vizquel dove for the ball, grabbed it, sprung to his feet, and hurled a perfect strike to 1st base just before Johnson arrived. The play ended the threat and broke the Marlins spirits. In the 9th, closer Jose Mesa wrapped up the win, tying the series at 3-3.


[edit] Game 7

October 26, 1997 at Pro Player Stadium (Florida Marlins)


Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 R H E
Cleveland 002 000 00000 262
Florida 000 000 10101 380
W: Jay Powell (1-0)   L: Charles Nagy (0-1)  
HRFLA: Bobby Bonilla (1)


Game 7 turned out to be a classic World Series seventh game with the Marlins capturing the Crown. Cleveland would draw first blood in this game when in the third inning, starter Al Leiter allowed a walk to Jim Thome and a hit by Marquis Grissom. A sacrifice bunt moved the runners to second and third and with two outs Tony Fernandez laced a 2-run single to center. Indians starter Jaret Wright was dominant for 6 innings, holding the 2-0 lead. But in the 7th, Bobby Bonilla blasted a titanic home run off of Wright cutting the lead to 2-1. In the 9th, Jose Mesa was brought in to close out the series and bring Cleveland its first title since 1948. Moises Alou led off the inning with a single. With one out, Charles Johnson lined a single to right that advanced Alou to third base. Then Craig Counsell hit a sacrifice fly to right that tied the score at 2, sending the contest into extra frames. The Indians blew a golden chance in the 10th, when with 1 out and Alomar on third, Grissom grounded to short. With the infield drawn in, shortstop Edgar Renteria fired home to catcher Charles Johnson who tagged out Alomar trying to score. The bottom of the 11th started with a one out single by Bobby Bonilla off game 3 starter Charles Nagy. Counsell then hit a roller toward second. Fernandez moved in and to his left to field the ball but it skipped under his glove for an error. As the ball headed for right field, Bonilla scampered to third. A necessary intentional walk filled the bases with one out. Devon White then hit into a force play (shortstop to catcher) for out number two of the inning. But the next batter, Edgar Renteria, who had come through all season long for Florida in clutch situations, lined a Nagy slider up the middle. It would be high enough to skip off the top of Nagy's glove and continue to center field for a hit. Counsell charged to home plate with his both fists raised in the air as the Marlins took the series and won the Championship.

[edit] Trivia

  • This was third time in the 1990s that the World Series-winning run was scored on the final at-bat (as was the case in 1991 and 1993).
  • NBC commentators made light of Indians outfielder Bip Roberts' bout with the flu during the course of the series.
  • Soon after Game 7 was complete, rumors on the internet started to spread that the 1989 (four years before the Florida Marlins made their debut) film Back to the Future Part II accurately predicted their 1997 World Series victory. In reality, the movie stated that, in 2015, a Miami team with an aligator mascot would lose to the Chicago Cubs.


  • Midway through one of the games in Miami, "surprise guest" Joe DiMaggio joined NBC's Bob Costas, Joe Morgan, and Bob Uecker in the television booth. DiMaggio joked that Morgan was a "Hall of Famer", Costas was a "Future Hall of Famer", but he didn't know what to think of when it came to Uecker. Ironically enough, the Baseball Hall of Fame would present Uecker with its Ford C. Frick Award several years later.
  • NBC's West Coast president Don Ohlmeyer disturbed Major League Baseball when he publicly wished the World Series to end in a four game sweep so that it wouldn't derail NBC's fall entertainment schedule. (Game 5 fell on a Thursday, which had long been the highest rated night on NBC's schedule, if not on all of television.)
  • Many Marlins players wrote the #32 on their caps in support of pitcher Alex Fernandez, who tore his rotator cuff during the first round of the playoffs.
  • The Game 4 temperature in Cleveland, Ohio was fifteen degrees Fahrenheit (minus 9 degrees Celsius), setting a new record for the coldest game in World Series history.


  • Game 7 of the 1997 World Series was the second longest seventh game ever played in any World Series to date.
  • Liván Hernández's mother, who resided in Cuba at the time, was permitted to attend Game 7 on a visa before having to leave early for security reasons.
  • Even though Liván Hernández was named the Most Valuable Player of the 1997 World Series, Moisés Alou in retrospect, was the true star as he led the Marlins by hitting .321 with three home runs and nine RBIs.


  • The Marlins became the first team ever to win a World Series seventh game after trailing entering the 9th inning.
  • If the Indians had held on to win, the MVP likely would have been either Sandy Alomar, Jr. (.367 batting average, 2 home runs, 10 RBI) or Chad Ogea (2 wins, 1.54 ERA).
  • Indians pitcher Chad Ogea became the first pitcher since Mickey Lolich in 1968 to have at least two hits and two RBIs in a World Series.
  • This marked the first time since 1988 that NBC televised a Series in its entirety. In 1995, NBC televised Games 2, 3, and 6, while rival ABC televised Games 1, 4, and 5.


  • 1997 marked the first time that the trophy presentation ceremony was done on the field as opposed to in the victors' clubhouse. To this day, the trophy presentation is always done on the field if the Champion is the home team of the deciding game.
  • The fall-out of Indians' closer José Mesa failing to save Game 7 ultimately ignited a heated feud between Mesa and his teammate Omar Vizquel. In Vizquel's autobiography, the Indians' shortstop publicly blamed Mesa for being a "choker" and blowing the 1997 World Series for the Cleveland Indians. Soon afterwards, Mesa and Vizquel ended their longtime friendship. Mesa has since vowed to "...hit him every time he faced him" and also stated that he wanted to kill Vizquel. On April 22, 2006, when pitching to Vizquel, now a member of the San Francisco Giants, Mesa, now a member of the Colorado Rockies, made good on his promise and plunked Vizquel in the back. As of June 11, 2006, Mesa has kept his promise and beaned Vizquel all three times the two have faced off.
  • 1997 World Series was highly profiled as the Latino World Series. 22 Latino players participated.
  • On October 31, 1997 most of the fan favorites of the 1997 Marlins were traded, including Moisés Alou who was traded to the Houston Astros, and Marlins ace Al Leiter to the New York Mets, World Series MVP hurler Liván Hernández was lucky enough to stay with the team for two more years.


  • This was the last World Series to date to be broadcasted by the CBS Radio Network, who had covered the World Series consecutively since 1976. Vin Scully and Jeff Torborg called the 1997 World Series for CBS Radio. ESPN Radio would take over the national radio contract for Major League Baseball.


  • Game 7 was the final Major League Baseball game called by longtime Indians radio announcer Herb Score, as he retired at season's end.

[edit] Quotes

   
1997 World Series
Thome hits it into deep right field, Gary Sheffield is back, at the wall, leaps, he got it!!....its the play of the series, is the play of the 1997 World Series.

- Bob Costas (NBC Sports) commentating on Marlins right fielder Gary Sheffield robbing a home run from Cleveland Indians first baseman Jim Thome.

   
1997 World Series
   
1997 World Series
A liner off of Nagy's glove, into center-field. The Florida Marlins have won...the World Series!!!.

- NBC Sports announcer Bob Costas calling Edgar Rentería series winning hit

   
1997 World Series
   
1997 World Series
The Men in Teal are for real!!!

-Bob Costas after Edgar Rentería's hit, while Jim Leyland is being carried by his players on the field.

   
1997 World Series
   
1997 World Series
I love you Miami!!!

- Liván Hernández while lifting the 1997 World Series MVP Award

   
1997 World Series
   
1997 World Series
A five-year old child becomes king!

- Marlins radio announcer Joe Angel, as Craig Counsell scored the winning run of the World Series.

   
1997 World Series

[edit] See Also

Modern Major League Baseball World Series

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