As the World Series Resumes in DC

Two names to focus on: Walter Johnson, who pitched four shutout innings to earn the win as the Senators took the seventh and deciding game of the 1924 World Series -- the only baseball championship in Washington history. This somewhat abstract statue honoring the Senators greatest player ever is displayed on the outfield concourse at Nationals Park.

Darryl Strawberry has a place in this conversation, if you're an Astros fan. Even though the lefty slugger never suited up for Houston, he might be the inspiration for the club that lost the first two games at home and then headed out on the road for game three. Strawberry holds the distinction of being on the last two teams to lose the first two games of a World Series at home -- the '86 Mets and '96 Yankees -- and then rally to win it all. Doing it once is thrilling; being part of two teams a decade apart (let alone from the same city!), is close to unbelievable. No one else I can think of brings THAT kind of experience.
Sanchez and Greinke, game three tonight at Nationals Park, as baseball's Fall Classic returns to Washington for the first time in 86 years!


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Rare Remnant of a Lost Ballpark

Another Yankee Trade

Will He Wear Zero in the Bronx?