Former President
Jimmy Carter threw out the first pitch, and you have to admit - it would have been rather amusing to see Atlanta native and Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich throw it out what with the budget battle ongoing with President Clinton. But Carter is not only a former President but also a former Governor of Georgia, a well-respected humanitarian, and probably the third-best known Braves fan behind team owner, Ted Turner, and his wife, Jane Fonda. (Come to think of it - can you imagine the reaction if Jane threw out the first pitch? Yikes!).
It was a 56-degree Atlanta night when Glavine took the mound in front of 51,000-plus fans hoping that finally - after 30 years in the city - the Braves would win it all. He began methodically, working the corners of the plate and absolutely refusing to throw anything out over the middle of the plate. He retired the side in order in the first, and
Mark Lemke singled with one out in the bottom of the first for the game's first hit. With the elder - for a baseball player - Tony Pena behind the plate, Braves Manager
Bobby Cox got aggressive quickly against Cleveland starter
Dennis Martinez, who has been suffering off and on from a sore shoulder. Lemke attempted to steal second but was thrown out, which became bigger when
Chipper Jones singled with two outs.
Fred McGriff struck out, though, and the Braves came up empty. Glavine then walked
Albert Belle leading off the second, but he, too, was caught stealing on a perfect peg by Lopez. Glavine then struck out
Eddie Murray and
Manny Ramirez, keeping his pitch count low and the ball away from the hitters.
Martinez, by contrast, was nowhere close to his best. He walked Justice and
Ryan Klesko to start the second, bringing Lopez to the plate, the same Lopez who chased Martinez from Game Two with what turned out to be the game-winning home run. Ordinarily this might call for a bunt, but light-hitting
Rafael Belliard and Glavine were the next two hitters. Lopez popped up an infield fly, and Belliard hit into a rally-killing double play that deflated the Atlanta crowd. Glavine worked another quick inning in the third, striking out both
Jim Thome and Martinez around a ground out to the mound by Pena. But the Braves went in order, too, and after Glavine got through the fourth with still nobody reaching first, the Braves had another golden opportunity in the fourth. With two outs, Justice doubled, and the Indians, knowing Klesko had slammed home runs in each of the three previous games, intentionally walked him to get to Lopez. Martinez worked him carefully and walked Javy to load the bases, which ended the inning again when Belliard flew out to center. Alarmingly for Braves fans with long memories, the game was shaping up like that Game Seven loss in 1991.
Glavine again gave Belle nothing to hit leading off the inning, walking him, and then retired Murray, Ramirez, and Thome, striking out the latter and reaching the halfway point having given up no hits. Martinez returned to the mound and quickly retired Glavine and Marquis Grissom, but he then walked Lemke and Chipper singled Lemke to second. With three lefties due up and Cleveland already having escaped trouble twice, Indians Manager Mike Hargrove opted to pull Martinez and bring in lefty
Jim Poole, who played his college ball just a few miles from the stadium at Georgia Tech. Poole did exactly what was needed, striking out McGriff to end the inning and leaving Atlanta frustrated for the third time in five innings. Then in the sixth, the Braves got the kind of scare they'd been avoiding all game.
Glavine's first pitch to Pena leading off the sixth was way outside, and after getting a strike off the corner and a foul, Pena lined Cleveland's first hit of the game into center field. The no-hitter was now gone, which as the game unfolded may have been the best thing for the Braves. Poole then came up for his first major league at bat - yes, in the World Series. And Poole looked like it, too, trying to bunt Pena to second and popping out to McGriff in foul territory for the first out. That's when
Kenny Lofton came to the plate, and while it seemed he was in the middle of everything in the post-season, he had actually not even been on base since Game Three. He hit a one bounce tapper back to Glavine at the mound, who fired a perfect strike to Belliard approaching the bag. Pena was out on the force, and Belliard gunned the ball in a bang-bang play at first, but Lofton was just fast enough to beat the throw, and now Atlanta's nightmare was on base, although two were already out. Hearts beat a little quicker, and they would go even faster with what happened next.
Glavine, to this point, had done almost everything perfect. Except for the base hit, he was having about as great a performance as imaginable. But with an 0-1 count to Omar Vizquel, everyone in the park knew Lofton was going to try and steal second. Lofton knew it so well, he made a crucial mistake and took off too soon. Glavine remained calm, as he fired the pickoff throw to McGriff, who gunned the ball to second, but Lofton was too fast, beating the throw, and putting the Tribe's first runner in scoring position all night. A hit now would give Cleveland the lead. Glavine, though, almost looked relieved, figuring he could focus on Vizquel, whom he'd already struck out twice. He induced an inning ending fly out to McGriff - again in foul territory - and Justice came to the plate leading off the bottom of the sixth. In Game Six of the 1991 World Series, Justice had been up in a similar situation. The Braves and Twins were tied in the fifth, and a win by Atlanta would clinch the title. Justice had drilled a fastball over the plate high and down the right field line at the Metrodome that landed about four feet foul. Justice then grounded out, and it was nothing but a loud strike. Justice would launch another loud strike with substantially different results tonight.
With a 1-1 count on Justice, Poole put one right over the plate, and Justice turned on it with a vengeance, driving the ball deep into the right-field seats. Justice even shook a celebratory fist a he rounded first, and Fulton County Stadium erupted in prolonged cheers and, yep, you guessed it, the Tomahawk Chop. Hall of Famer Joe Morgan, every bit as bad an announcer as he was good as a player, declared, "It's okay to talk the talk, if you can walk the walk." The way Glavine was pitching, that one run was probably going to be enough, and Braves fans began counting the outs and just hoping nothing went sideways in Cleveland's last nine outs. And an Atlanta rally that fizzled in the seventh made things worse for the Braves because Glavine's shoulder stiffened with the extended time on the bench. In that long inning, the Braves loaded the bases for Mike Devereaux, but he popped to second. A grand slam there would have sealed the deal, but the Braves have played a lot of close post-season games, so what's one more? And then came the ninth.
Pitching coach
Leo Mazzone asked Glavine if he could close out the game.
Mark Wohlers, who had been nearly automatic for the last four months, was warmed up and ready to go. Glavine told Mazzone that he was tired, and he was also getting away with mistakes. And so Wohlers was perched on the mound needing three outs to clinch the series, and who happens to be in the batter's box but Kenny Lofton? Wohlers fired a blazing fastball right down the middle for strike one and then came inside on the next two pitches, both balls. Wohlers returned to the heat on the fourth pitch, and Lofton knicked one just enough to foul it off to the left-field side. It was at this moment that Belliard, all glove and no bat, raced between Devereaux and Jones and snagged the ball backhanded in foul territory for the first out of the ninth. The reality that Lofton was not going to be on base against Wohlers, who is easy to steal on even for below average runners, lifted the spirits of the Atlanta faithful, who now had only two outs to achieve the dream. Needing a home run - or at least a run - Paul Sorrento pinch-hit for Vizquel, and popped out to center. It was an eeire coincidence as Sorrento was on the 1991 Twins team that was one run better than Wohlers's Braves. Now it came down to
Carlos Baerga, who had made the last out of the game in both previous contests in Atlanta. If he could reach base - and it was far from sure he'd make an out - Belle would come up with a chance to possibly steal the game. Baerga got the first pitch fastball he expected, but he was behind the pitch and lifted a fly towards left centerfield. Not far from the sign commemorating Hank Aaron's 715th home run - which to this moment was the greatest in the history of Atlanta sports - Grissom, born in Atlanta in 1967, extended his glove with a one-handed catch and lifted his arms. The Atlanta Braves, after two near misses, had done it. They had finally won the World Series. Bob Costas said it best, saying, "The team of the 90s has its world championship."
And all hell broke loose.
Actually, that's not what happened at all. The crowd noise was nowhere near the decibel level reached when
Francisco Cabrera singled home the pennant in 1992, but it was loud and appreciative as the players gathered in the dogpile in the most fitting place for this Braves team...right there on the pitching mound. For the first time since the Braves that made Milwaukee famous in 1957, the Braves have won it all.
All that remains is the parade and the visit to the White House.
And a chance to play for the history books next year.
Atlanta-born Marquis Grissom lifts his arms in celebration.