2001 World Series
The 2001 World Series (the "November Series") was arguably one of the most exciting World Series in recent memory. The best-of-seven-games series determined the World Champion of Major League Baseball of 2001. It featured two extra-inning games and three late-inning comebacks (against two of Major League Baseball's best closers), and went to the maximum 7 games.
The Series
Game 1
Saturday, October 27, 2001 at Bank One Ballpark
Related Topics:
October 27 - Bank One Ballpark
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Arizona showed no opening day jitters and chased Yankee's starter Mike Mussina after just three innings. The Yankees gave up 5 unearned runs and the Diamondbacks rode Curt Schilling's seven strong innings to a 9-1 rout. Craig Counsell homered off Mussina in the first and Luis Gonzalez homered in the third, drove in two runs, and scored twice.
Related Topics:
Mike Mussina - Craig Counsell - Luis Gonzalez
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Game 2
Sunday, October 28, 2001 at Bank One Ballpark
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Arizona continued to take control of the series behind the arm of Randy Johnson. The Big Unit pitched a complete game shutout, allowing only four baserunners while striking out 11 Yankees. Matt Williams hit a three-run homer in the seventh off Yankee starter Andy Pettitte. Arizona won 4-0 and took a commanding two games to none lead as the series headed back to New York City.
Related Topics:
Randy Johnson - Matt Williams - Andy Pettitte
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Game 3
Tuesday, October 30, 2001 at Yankee Stadium
Related Topics:
October 30 - Yankee Stadium
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The series was opened in New York by President Bush, who memorably threw out the ceremonial first pitch, a strike to Yankees backup catcher Todd Greene. Interestingly, the pitch was a strike. As Aaron Margolis said, "By throwing a perfect strike, he in effect told the terrorists that for them, this was the third and final strike, they are out." Bush became the first sitting President to throw out a World Series first pitch since Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956. Yankees starter Roger Clemens allowed only three hits and struck out nine in seven innings of work. Yankees closer Mariano Rivera pitched two innings for the save. Scott Brosius broke a sixth inning tie with an RBI single to left. The Diamondbacks wasted a great outing from starter Brian Anderson by committing three crucial errors and running themselves out of the first inning.
Related Topics:
President Bush - Dwight D. Eisenhower - 1956 - Roger Clemens - Mariano Rivera - Scott Brosius - Brian Anderson
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Game 4
Wednesday, October 31, 2001 at Yankee Stadium
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Arizona manager Bob Brenly decided to gamble and start Curt Schilling on three days' rest. The gamble worked: Schilling pitched seven strong innings and left the game with a 1-1 tie. The Diamondbacks took a 3-1 lead in the top of the eighth on an Erubiel Durazo double and a fielder's choice, which prompted Brenly to bring in closer Byung-Hyun Kim for a two inning save.
Related Topics:
Bob Brenly - Curt Schilling - Erubiel Durazo - Byung-Hyun Kim
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Kim struck out the side in the eighth. However, in the ninth the Yankees began their comeback. With one out, Paul O'Neill lined an opposite-field single in front of left fielder Luis Gonzalez. After Bernie Williams struck out, Tino Martinez drove the first pitch he saw from Kim over the wall in right-center field to tie the game at 3-3. Brenly stuck with his closer as the game headed into extra innings. As the clock in New York struck midnight, and with two outs in the tenth on a 3-2 pitch, Derek Jeter completed the comeback with a walk-off solo homerun to right, earning the title "Mr. November". The Yankees won 4-3 and evened up the series at two games apiece.
Related Topics:
Paul O'Neill - Bernie Williams - Tino Martinez - Derek Jeter
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Game 5
Thursday, November 1, 2001 at Yankee Stadium
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For game five, Brenly started Miguel Batista, who pitched a strong seven and two-thirds scoreless innings. Mussina bounced back from his poor game one start, but allowed solo home runs to Steve Finley and Rod Barajas in the fifth. With the Diamondbacks leading 2-0 in the ninth, Brenly again went to his closer and again the Yankees dramatically came back and sent the game to extra innings. Jorge Posada doubled to open the inning, but Kim retired the next two batters. Then, with two outs in the bottom of the ninth, Scott Brosius knocked the 1-0 pitch out for a home run to tie the game at 2-2. For the second night in a row, the game went into extra innings and the Yankees won it in the 12th when Alfonso Soriano knocked in Chuck Knoblauch with a base hit off Albie Lopez. New York went ahead three games to two in the series as the teams headed back to Arizona.
Related Topics:
Miguel Batista - Steve Finley - Rod Barajas - Jorge Posada - Scott Brosius - Alfonso Soriano - Chuck Knoblauch - Albie Lopez
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Game 6
Saturday, November 3, 2001 at Bank One Ballpark
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With Arizona in a must-win situation, the Diamondbacks provided Randy Johnson all the offense he would ever need. Johnson struck out seven in six innings of work, giving up just two runs. The Diamondbacks rocked Yankee starter Andy Pettitte for six runs and chased him after two innings. Jay Witasick relieved him and fared even worse, yielding nine runs in one and a third innings. The Diamondbacks hit six doubles and Danny Bautista went 3-4 with 5 RBIs. They set a World Series record with 22 hits and crushed the Yankees 15-2. Arizona handed New York its most lopsided loss in 293 postseason games. The win evened the series at three games apiece and set up a game seven for the ages between Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling, again pitching on three days' rest.
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Game 7
Sunday, November 4, 2001 at Bank One Ballpark
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It was a matchup of two 20-game-winners in the series finale that would crown a new champion. Clemens at 39 years old became the oldest game seven starter ever. Schilling had already started two games of the series and pitched his 300th inning of the season on just three days' rest. The two aces matched each other inning by inning and after seven full, the game was tied at 1-1. Many felt that Schilling had pitched long enough, but Brenly stayed with his ace into the eighth. The move backfired as the Alfonso Soriano hit a solo home run on an 0-2 pitch. After Schilling got one out, he gave up a single to David Justice, and he left the game trailing 2-1. Brenly brought in Miguel Batista to get out Derek Jeter and then in an unconventional move, brought in the previous night's starter Randy Johnson, who had thrown 104 pitches, in relief to finish out the game. It proved to be a smart move, as Johnson got out all four Yankees he faced.
Related Topics:
Alfonso Soriano - David Justice - Miguel Batista
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With the Yankees ahead 2-1 in the bottom of the eighth, manager Joe Torre turned the game over to his ace closer Mariano Rivera for a two-inning save. Rivera was one of the surest things in the late innings, and he had pitched brilliantly throughout the postseason up to that point. Rivera struck out the side in the eighth and lowered his ERA in the postseason to a major league-best of 0.70. He was not at his sharpest in the ninth, however, and it would cost him. Mark Grace led off the inning with a single to center. Rivera then made an errant throw to first on a bunt attempt by Damian Miller, putting runners on first and second. Rivera appeared to regain control when he fielded Jay Bell's bunt and threw out pinch-runner David Dellucci at third base. However, the next batter, Tony Womack, drove a double down the right-field line that evened the score. After Rivera hit Craig Counsell with a 1-1 pitch, Luis Gonzalez would become the hero, knocking a soft single to center on an 0-1 pitch that plated Jay Bell with the winning run. This ended New York's bid for a fourth consecutive title and brought Arizona its first championship in just its fourth year of existence.
Related Topics:
Joe Torre - Mariano Rivera - Jay Bell - David Dellucci - Tony Womack - Craig Counsell - Luis Gonzalez
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Summary |
| ► | September 11 and the Month of November |
| ► | The Series |
| ► | External Links |
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