Skip to main content

Roger and Out

I am rooting for George Mason in the Final Four this weekend because I like pulling for the Cinderella story in a situation where I really have no rooting interest whatsoever. It pleases me to know that, after reading a note in USA Today, that George Mason was a good person back in his day and a Cinderella story in his own right, though I doubt he would have liked the business that Division I college basketball has become.

He probably would have liked walk-offs though, something he became familiar with when he "walked-off" politically, so to speak, and refused to sign the Constitution because of its failure to contain a "declaration of rights." (his Wikipedia bio states that it cost him a friendship with George Washington). Eventually, Mason turned out to be a walk-off winner when the Bill of Rights, based on Virginia's Declaration of Rights was ratified in 1791.

I realize that this is a horrendous segue, but I'm going to pursue it anyway, to tell you the story of when a Mets Mason of Cinderellaesque ilk became a walk-off winner (George Mason had 58 grandchildren, so perhaps I'm writing about one of his descendants).

I speak, of course, of Roger Mason, the only ballplayer to ever come out of Saginaw Valley State University, an NAIA school based in Michigan. The 6-foot-6 Mason was signed by his hometown team, the Tigers, as an undrafted free agent out of college in 1980 and made it to the majors in September, 1984, earning a cup of coffee with the world champion Tigers, which must have been quite a thrill. It must have been that type of thing that kept him going, because he didn't get many chances in the majors the next six seasons with the Giants and Astros. In that span, he pitched in 23 big league games, and battled arm troubles.

Mason's big break came in 1991 when he pitched well enough in Triple-A to earn a recall by the Pirates. Jim Leyland, despite having a great team, had little to work with in terms of closers, so Mason got a couple opportunities to pitch in big spots, the most significant in the eighth and ninth innings of Game 5 of the NLCS against Atlanta. Mason got the last four outs to earn the save on the road and give the Pirates a 3-2 series lead.

Mason earned a reputation as a stellar pitcher, allowing only one run in 18 1/3 postseason innings for the Pirates and Phillies (slightly misleading because it doesn't take into account inherited runners he let in, or that a couple of occasions were games in which outcomes were already decided). He had enough appeal that the Mets signed him once, after the 1992 season (after which they quickly traded him for Mike Maddux) and traded for him in early 1994.

Mason filled a middle relief role for the 1994 Mets (and unlike the previously referenced Don Florence, I do remember him) and did so reasonably well for a guy who was almost 36 years old (a 3.51 ERA). By August a baseball strike was unfortunately imminent and that marked the end of the road for guys like Mason, whose last moment of glory came on August 3 at Shea Stadium, against the Braves.

The game was a pitchers duel between Bobby Jones and Steve Avery and Jones left after eight innings on the short end of a 2-1 score. Mason came on for the ninth and struck out two, holding the score as it was, giving the Mets the necessary chance to win in the home half.

The Mets bats were quite happy that Avery was out of the game, replaced by Greg McMichael. They greeted the would-be closer with three straight hits, as Jeff Kent, David Segui and Rico Brogna combined to produce a run. McMichael departed in favor of Mark Wohlers. A successful sacrifice by Ryan Thompson gave the Mets runners on second and third with one out, so Bobby Cox had Wohlers walk Joe Orsulak intentionally, loading the bases. Pinch-hitter Todd Hundley, came through, as he usually did in such situations (note sarcasm) by whiffing for the second out.

With Kelly Stinnett due up, Mets manager Dallas Green turned to the man who would prove to be clutch in a similar spot some six years later, Jose Vizcaino (Thursday marks the 12th anniversary of his Mets acquisition) to pinch-hit. The newspapers noted that Vizcaino was rather surprised to be utilized, so shocked that he couldn't find his bat.

Eventually the proper wood was located and Vizcaino gave Wohlers first pitch a nifty knock into left field for a clean game-winning single. Mason got the victory, the last moment of triumph for this Cinderella story, as it was the final one of his big league career.

True Metketball fans know...

Former Mets who went to LSU include Paul Byrd, Mark Guthrie, Barry Manuel and Joe Moock.

Former Mets who went to UCLA include Bob Apodaca and Tim Corcoran

The only Met I could find that went to Florida is Bill Graham

We'll provide the details of the only Met to attend George Mason University on Friday.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Best Games I Know: Phillies (Updated)

  The best wins against the Phillies in Mets history …   May 5, 2022 – Mets 8, Phillies 7 The Mets score 7 runs in the 9 th inning to overcome a 7-1 deficit and win in Philadelphia.   April 29, 2022 – Mets 3, Phillies 0 Tylor Megill and 4 Mets relievers combine on the second no-hitter in franchise history.   September 22, 2016 – Mets 9, Phillies 8 (11) The Mets tie it in the 9 th on a Jose Reyes home run and win it in the 11 th on a 3-run home run by Asdrubal Cabrera.   July 17, 2016 - Mets 5, Phillies 0 Jacob deGrom pitches a one-hitter. Only hit is a single by Zach Eflin in the 5 th inning.   August 24, 2015 – Mets 16, Phillies 7 David Wright homers in his first at-bat in more than 4 months. The Mets hit a team-record 8 home runs.   July 5, 2012 – Mets 6, Phillies 5 The Mets score 2 runs with 2 outs in the bottom of the 9 th to beat Jonathan Papelbon. The winning run scores on David Wright’s bloop down the right field line.   August 13

The best Mets ejections I know

When you think of the Mets and famous ejections, I'm guessing you first think of the famous Bobby Valentine mustache game, when after Valentine got tossed, he returned to the dugout in disguise. You know it. You love it. I remember being amused when I asked Bobby V about it while we were working on Baseball Tonight, how he simply said "It worked. We won the game." (true) But the Bobby V mustache game of June 9, 1999 is one of many, many memorable Mets ejection stories. And now thanks to Retrosheet and the magic of Newspapers.com , we have a convenient means for being able to share them. Ever since Retrosheet's David Smith recently announced that the Retrosheet ejection database was posted online , I've been a kid in a candy store. I've organized the data and done some lookups of media coverage around the games that interested me post. Those newspaper accounts fill in a lot of blanks. Without further ado (and with more work to do), here are some of my findings

Walk-Offs in Movies, TV, and Other Places

Note: I'm leaving this post up through the end of the week, a) because I don't have time to pump out something new and b)because I was hoping to build a really good list of entertainment industry walk-offs...so if you're looking for something new, check back on Monday or so... Of course, if there's a major trade or move, I'll adjust and try to post something... In the meantime, click on the "Table of Contents" link as well. It has been updated. SPOILER ALERT: Read at your own risk Caught the ending of "A League of Their Own" on one of the movie channels the other day and it got me to thinking that it would be fun to compile a list of walk-offs from movies, television, and other forms of entertainment. Here's the start, and only the start, as I spent about 30 minutes or so thinking it over Help me fill in the blanks by filling out the comments section. "A League of Their Own"-- Racine beats Rockford for the All-American Girls Profess