Oct 25: Through the legs

OCTOBER 25, 1986 | NEW YORK, NEW YORK – Today is the day in 1986 a seemingly routine grounder went through Bill Buckner‘s legs prolonging the Boston Red Sox agony of not winning a World Series since they sold Babe Ruth to the Yankees in 1919.

It wasn’t all Buckner’s fault though. When the day started the Red Sox had a 3 games to 2 lead over the New York Mets. It was the tenth inning of game 6. Boston had a 5-3 lead with 2 outs and nobody on base for the Mets.

The Mets started a rally, scored two runs to make the score 5-5. If Buckner had made the play it would have been the third out with the game still tied. Instead the Mets scored the winning run on that play, and won the Series in the next game.


Did you notice Buckner had high-top cleats on that night because he had a sore ankle? He’s the first player I ever saw wearing high-tops. It’s surprising they became so popular. Does anyone wear low-cut cleats anymore?

CONTRIBUTING SOURCE:
1986 World Series Game 6 box score & play-by-play

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Oct 15 – Punch for Punch

OCTOBER 15, 1986 – HOUSTON, TEXAS – On this date in 1986 the National League Championship Series (NLCS) ended with a 16-inning nail-biting marathon between the New York Mets and Houston Astros in game 6. Game 5 went 12 innings. The Mets eventually won the series 4 games to two.

In game 6 the Astros entered the 9th inning up 3-0. The Mets tied the game 3-3. Both teams fought on punch for punch. After neither team scored in the 10th, 11th, 12th or 13th, both scored a run the 14th, so they played on.

The Mets scored 3 in the 16th inning. Houston got a rally going in their half of the 16th (will the game ever end?), and scored 2 to make it 7-6, but Mets reliever Jesse Orosco struck out Kevin Bass with the tying run on second. The Mets advanced.

It would have been hard to top that series, but the Boston Red Sox and California Angels pretty much did in the ALCS that same year (see Oct. 12 story).

The World Series that year was also remarkable. It was won by the Mets with the help of a ball going through Billy Buckner’s legs to tie the Series at three games apiece. The Mets won game 7, a game that saw the lead change hands four times.

Contributing sources:
NLCS Mets-Astros Oct. 15 1986
ALCS Red Sox-Angels
1986 World Series game 7