Marathon at Chavez Ravine

Last night's game three of the World Series was one for the books: the longest, with the most players used and pitches thrown ever. 561 pitches between the teams, a shake-your-head number. 7 hours, 20 minutes. And it ended with a player as I noted on Tuesday would "step out of anonymity and make his mark." OK, after a 35 home run breakthrough season, Max Muncy would probably not qualify as anonymous, but he far from a household name, playing parts of two seasons with the A's, before this year began.
Now he's in select company -- just the fourth Dodger ever with a walk-off hit of any kind in a World Series game. You know the previous one: Kirk Gibson with "that" home run in 1988. The others came from Ebbets Field: Jackie Robinson, whose 10th inning RBI single grabbed game six in 1956 (and proved to be his last hit ever) and Cookie Lavagetto, breaking up Bill Bevens no-hitter in the last of the 9th in game four of the '47 Fall Classic. Select company. Maximum drama. The Dodgers have breathe a ton of life back into a World Series that threatened to be a runaway bore.
(My image of Dodger Stadium is from opening day in 2008.)

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