Santa Fe New Mexican

A dud of a Game 7 ruins a classic World Series

- By Paul Newberry

What a letdown. After six stellar games, this World Series finally ran out of magic.

Not to take anything away from the Houston Astros, who claimed the first Series title in franchise history with a 5-1 snoozer over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night.

For the eyes of Texas, this was a thing of beauty — especially considerin­g where this team was just four short years ago, wrapping up three straight 100-loss seasons while in the midst of a massive reconstruc­tion.

They’ll go down as a virtual textbook on how to tear down a franchise for the purpose of building it up again, an especially poignant championsh­ip for a city ravaged by Hurricane Harvey and desperate for something, anything to rally around.

“The people of Houston were never far from our minds,” Astros pitcher Lance McCullers Jr. said. “They deserve this as much as we do, and we’re going to party hard.”

But the final game of the season was a total bomb. Blame Dodgers starter Yu Darvish. And manager Dave Roberts for sending him to the mound.

Darvish was acquired by the Dodgers at the trade deadline, supposedly the final piece needed to return a championsh­ip to baseball’s biggest-spending team.

He didn’t even make it through the second inning for the second time in the series.

As a result, the Dodgers’ excruciati­ng 29-year championsh­ip drought will stretch to three full decades.

The Hollywood ending will have to wait.

Darvish surrendere­d five runs (four earned) in 1⅔ innings, joining a very small hall of infamy. Back in 1960, Art Ditmar became the first pitcher to start a pair World Series games and not make it to the third inning in either one of them. Now, he’s got company. Darvish didn’t look much more effective than 91-year-old Don Newcombe or 81-year-old Sandy Koufax, who threw out the ceremonial first pitches. George Springer led off the game with a double and trotted home when Cody Bellinger ventured too far to his right to field Alex Bregman’s grounder, a play that wouldn’t been much easier for second baseman Logan Forsythe. Springer came all the way home on Bellinger’s throwing error, and Bregman wound up

scoring too.

Then Series MVP Springer came through with the decisive blow of the game.

After MCullers made it 3-0 with a run-scoring grounder, Roberts had Brandon Morrow throwing in the bullpen with two outs. The manager hoped to get one more out from Darvish, a foolhardy gamble, it turned out, with Springer coming to the plate.

He launched a two-run shot deep into the seats in left-center field , his record-tying fifth homer of the Series. Darvish screamed in anguish on the mound almost as soon as the bat struck the ball. Just like that, it was 5-0 Astros.

They could’ve handed out the trophy right then and there.

Roberts will have to live all winter second-guessing himself for trotting Darvish to the hill for a second time, after he showed a total lack of command — especially with his slider — in Game 3. Whether it was nerves or just a sudden loss of form, it was clear that Darvish was the weak link in this Dodgers super team, which won 104 games during the regular season and romped through its first two playoff series, winning eight of nine games and knocking off the defending Series champion Chicago Cubs.

Roberts had Clayton Kershaw, the Game 5 starter, ready to go in the third inning. The left-hander threw four scoreless innings to at least provide the Dodgers with a chance for a comeback that never came.

What if Kershaw had started this game and turned in a similar performanc­e?

Chances are, it would have been the classic that everyone expected, everyone deserved, after the first six games had this series poised to go down as one of the greatest in baseball history.

Two extra-inning thrillers. Three other nail-biting games decided by two runs. Another that was 1-1 going to the ninth before the Dodgers put up a five-spot. Not to mention all those long balls, a record 23 to appropriat­ely cap off the Year of the Homer.

While Roberts stuck with his rotation in Game 7 and paid a huge price, A.J. Hinch made all the right moves in the Houston dugout. He would’ve been a worthy choice for Series MVP if they gave the award to a manager, deftly managing a suspect bullpen by largely ignoring ineffectiv­e closer Ken Giles.

Brad Peacock, normally a starter, pitched 3 2-3 hitless innings to close out Game 3 . Charlie Morton, the Game 4 starter, came out of the bullpen for the clincher and worked the final four innings for an unorthodox win, allowing just two and the lone Dodgers run, nothing at all over the final three frames.

It was a brilliant job of managing. Just a dud of a game. What a shame.

 ?? ALEX GALLARDO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Houston Astros celebrate Wednesday with the trophy after their win against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 7 of the World Series in Los Angeles.
ALEX GALLARDO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Houston Astros celebrate Wednesday with the trophy after their win against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 7 of the World Series in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States