1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:07,000
This is Retro Sports Radio. Visit RetroSeasons.com for more sports history.

2
00:00:07,000 --> 00:00:13,000
The New York Yankees faced the Seattle Manorers at the Kingdome for a Thursday night game on May 6th, 1982.

3
00:00:13,000 --> 00:00:18,000
New York was managed by Gene Michael and were coming off a World Series loss to the Dodgers in 1981.

4
00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:25,000
Yankees owner George Steinbrenner had been playing musical chairs with Bob Lemon and Gene Michael as manager in 1981-82,

5
00:00:25,000 --> 00:00:28,000
hiring, firing or demoting each of them on two different occasions.

6
00:00:28,000 --> 00:00:33,000
The Yankees also entered 1982 without Reggie Jackson, who had left for the Angels during free agency,

7
00:00:33,000 --> 00:00:38,000
signing a contract that doubled his income and now earning him over $1 million a year.

8
00:00:38,000 --> 00:00:44,000
Seattle had never finished higher than 6th or 7th place in the AL West during the franchise's five years in existence,

9
00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:49,000
but were hoping they could turn the team around by saying goodbye to veterans Jeff Burrows and Tom Paciorek,

10
00:00:49,000 --> 00:00:51,000
along with the hiring of new manager Rene Lachman.

11
00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:58,000
This audio recording is from the New York Radio broadcast featuring announcers Frank Messer and Bill White.

12
00:01:21,000 --> 00:01:24,000
Batting in the number five spot and playing in left field Dave Whitfield.

13
00:01:24,000 --> 00:01:27,000
Batting 6th is the designated hitter Oscar Gemble.

14
00:01:27,000 --> 00:01:31,000
Batting 7th the Yankees third baseman Roy Smalley.

15
00:01:31,000 --> 00:01:33,000
Batting 8th and catching Rick Saron.

16
00:01:33,000 --> 00:01:37,000
And batting 9th and playing shortstop will be Bucky Dent.

17
00:01:37,000 --> 00:01:40,000
Yankees picture tonight, no wins and no losses.

18
00:01:40,000 --> 00:01:42,000
Third start, Doyle Alexander.

19
00:01:42,000 --> 00:01:45,000
Now for the Seattle Mariners.

20
00:01:45,000 --> 00:01:49,000
12 and 15 on the year, presently in 5th place in the American League 1.

21
00:01:49,000 --> 00:01:52,000
Leading off playing in second Julio Cruz.

22
00:01:52,000 --> 00:01:55,000
Batting second and playing in third Manny Castillo.

23
00:01:55,000 --> 00:01:58,000
Batting third and playing in left Bruce Bocchi.

24
00:01:58,000 --> 00:02:01,000
Batting fourth is the designated hitter Ricky Zitz.

25
00:02:01,000 --> 00:02:04,000
Batting fifth the shortstop Pat Cruz.

26
00:02:04,000 --> 00:02:08,000
Batting sixth and playing in right field Al Cowen.

27
00:02:08,000 --> 00:02:10,000
Batting seventh the center fielder Joe Simpson.

28
00:02:10,000 --> 00:02:13,000
Batting eighth and playing in fifth Jim Baylor.

29
00:02:13,000 --> 00:02:17,000
And batting ninth and playing a conjecture will be Terry Boyd.

30
00:02:17,000 --> 00:02:21,000
And ladies and gentlemen, it's come out here, perhaps some 30,000.

31
00:02:21,000 --> 00:02:24,000
Much more than they expected before.

32
00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:28,000
They knew Gaylord Perry would be seeking that coveted 300th win.

33
00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:32,000
And running in anticipation of the Seattle Mariners right hander Gaylord Perry.

34
00:02:32,000 --> 00:02:35,000
Being a history making figure here tonight.

35
00:02:35,000 --> 00:02:38,000
Our upfiring crew, Ken Kaiser will be the plate umpire.

36
00:02:38,000 --> 00:02:42,000
Jerry Newdecker at first base, Bill Holler at second base.

37
00:02:42,000 --> 00:02:44,000
And George Filoni at third.

38
00:02:44,000 --> 00:02:50,000
So we'll have the opening pitch of tonight's game with the Mariners and the Yankees right after this.

39
00:02:50,000 --> 00:02:55,000
Hello there adventurers of Radio Land. You can call me Danger.

40
00:02:55,000 --> 00:02:58,000
I'm paying a visit to someone's backyard right now.

41
00:02:58,000 --> 00:03:02,000
The person who lives here leaves his place in all his yard to a lying around day and night.

42
00:03:02,000 --> 00:03:04,000
He practically invited me to make trouble.

43
00:03:04,000 --> 00:03:06,000
I can cause his tools to serve him.

44
00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:08,000
It doesn't take much. Just one call, step and...

45
00:03:08,000 --> 00:03:09,000
Ow!

46
00:03:09,000 --> 00:03:11,000
Don't hit me in the face.

47
00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:14,000
I better put these dogs away.

48
00:03:14,000 --> 00:03:17,000
Another time for the guys. Maybe you are.

49
00:03:17,000 --> 00:03:20,000
Brought to you by the Allstate Network.

50
00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:22,000
It's Freeborn Radio Theater.

51
00:03:22,000 --> 00:03:27,000
Low budget recreation of old time radio proving nostalgia isn't what it used to be.

52
00:03:27,000 --> 00:03:30,000
Today's the Ken Sir Guy. He'll answer any question you ask.

53
00:03:30,000 --> 00:03:32,000
But I'm sorry, thanks for stopping.

54
00:03:32,000 --> 00:03:33,000
Wait till I ask the question sir.

55
00:03:33,000 --> 00:03:34,000
Oh, that is?

56
00:03:34,000 --> 00:03:37,000
A man for Eureka queries, can you weigh yourself on the richest scale?

57
00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:39,000
Absolutely, but only if the list says what you use it.

58
00:03:39,000 --> 00:03:42,000
A lady from Bemidji asks, how often should the average person get a checkup?

59
00:03:42,000 --> 00:03:45,000
Now, that is a question that deserves answering.

60
00:03:45,000 --> 00:03:47,000
Sir, aren't you going to answer it?

61
00:03:47,000 --> 00:03:48,000
What?

62
00:03:48,000 --> 00:03:49,000
That question.

63
00:03:49,000 --> 00:03:50,000
Oh, Francis Scott Key.

64
00:03:50,000 --> 00:03:51,000
The checkup question.

65
00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:54,000
Right. First of all, health wise, there's no such thing as the average person.

66
00:03:54,000 --> 00:03:59,000
The American Cancer Society says how often you need a checkup depends on many things,

67
00:03:59,000 --> 00:04:00,000
like being in a high risk group.

68
00:04:00,000 --> 00:04:01,000
Can you give us an example?

69
00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:02,000
Yes.

70
00:04:02,000 --> 00:04:03,000
Well?

71
00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:06,000
Oh, figure out smokers, for instance, fall into your high risk group.

72
00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:09,000
So let your doctor tell you which health case to apply to you.

73
00:04:09,000 --> 00:04:13,000
Right, and help fight cancer with a check to your American Cancer Society.

74
00:04:13,000 --> 00:04:16,000
Now, our final question. Who wrote the Star-Spangled Banner?

75
00:04:16,000 --> 00:04:17,000
I'll bite.

76
00:04:17,000 --> 00:04:18,000
Who?

77
00:04:18,000 --> 00:04:34,000
Well, the Seattle Mariners are just coming off that East Coast road trip where they won

78
00:04:34,000 --> 00:04:40,000
three and lost five, and the Yankees are coming off one of their longest home stands of the

79
00:04:40,000 --> 00:04:44,000
season, as a matter of fact, their second longest home stand of the year, and it was

80
00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:49,000
not a very successful one for them as they won only four of 12 games, but included in

81
00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:54,000
those four victories was their first home series win when they beat this very same Seattle

82
00:04:54,000 --> 00:04:58,000
Mariners team two games to one in a weekend series last weekend.

83
00:04:58,000 --> 00:05:05,000
Included in the one victory for the Seattle Mariners was Gaylord's Marys' 6-3 win over

84
00:05:05,000 --> 00:05:06,000
the Yankees.

85
00:05:06,000 --> 00:05:14,000
Well, Alexander started that game for the New York Yankees and was the losing pitcher

86
00:05:14,000 --> 00:05:15,000
in the contest.

87
00:05:15,000 --> 00:05:18,000
All right, Willie Randolph is stepping in to lead it off for the Yankees as New York

88
00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:22,000
hopes to put things together here with a couple of new additions.

89
00:05:22,000 --> 00:05:26,000
John Mayberry, who's in the lineup tonight, and Steve Balfoni, who is in uniform and in

90
00:05:26,000 --> 00:05:27,000
the Yankees dugout.

91
00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:31,000
Randolph stepping in to bring you all the play-by-play action.

92
00:05:31,000 --> 00:05:32,000
Here's Bill White.

93
00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:36,000
All right, John Gordon, Willie Randolph batting a 3-41 this year, a couple of home runs, a

94
00:05:36,000 --> 00:05:37,000
dozen runs batted in.

95
00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:41,000
It'll be Randolph, Ken Griffey, and Jerry Mumfrey against Gaylord Perry.

96
00:05:41,000 --> 00:05:47,000
As John mentioned to you the last time out on Friday, Barry Beechley Yankee for his 299th

97
00:05:47,000 --> 00:05:51,000
win and the first pitch to Randolph in the call.

98
00:05:51,000 --> 00:05:53,000
Perry gave up seven plays in that game.

99
00:05:53,000 --> 00:05:54,000
Randolph got two of them.

100
00:05:54,000 --> 00:05:55,000
Mumfrey got two.

101
00:05:55,000 --> 00:05:56,000
Wentzfield also stopped one.

102
00:05:56,000 --> 00:05:59,000
Luke Vannella as a pitcher got the center foot.

103
00:05:59,000 --> 00:06:05,000
Gaylord pitched eight and two thirds in him, gave up three runs on seven hits.

104
00:06:05,000 --> 00:06:08,000
And the next pitch to Randolph.

105
00:06:08,000 --> 00:06:10,000
What a net miss.

106
00:06:10,000 --> 00:06:12,000
Two strikes on Randolph.

107
00:06:12,000 --> 00:06:24,000
Gaylord Perry trying to become the 15th pitcher in Major League history to win 300 ball games.

108
00:06:24,000 --> 00:06:27,000
Of course, the number one winner, Justin Siyon.

109
00:06:27,000 --> 00:06:31,000
The last one to do it, early win.

110
00:06:31,000 --> 00:06:33,000
Before him, let's see it grow.

111
00:06:33,000 --> 00:06:35,000
Here's the two-strike pitch to Willie Randolph.

112
00:06:35,000 --> 00:06:36,000
Fung on, bounce for his first base.

113
00:06:36,000 --> 00:06:38,000
Backing up there is the first base.

114
00:06:38,000 --> 00:06:39,000
He's got it.

115
00:06:39,000 --> 00:06:40,000
And Maylor will take it himself.

116
00:06:40,000 --> 00:06:43,000
There's one away.

117
00:06:43,000 --> 00:06:45,000
Jim Maylor on a bounce off.

118
00:06:45,000 --> 00:06:49,000
It's Randolph and here's Ken Griffey.

119
00:06:49,000 --> 00:06:52,000
Is this the first time this year Griffey's batted second, John Dork?

120
00:06:52,000 --> 00:06:54,000
Yeah, there's a little bit of a shakeup in the lineup once again.

121
00:06:54,000 --> 00:07:00,000
Bumper is in the number three spot and he has been dropped down to number six in the series against the Oakland A's.

122
00:07:00,000 --> 00:07:05,000
But Griffey's up there in number two and hopeful of being able to snap out of his recent slump.

123
00:07:05,000 --> 00:07:07,000
That's 239 coming into the ballgames.

124
00:07:07,000 --> 00:07:12,000
Griffey for the first time in his American League career playing on artificial surface,

125
00:07:12,000 --> 00:07:17,000
which he was used to at Cincinnati.

126
00:07:17,000 --> 00:07:19,000
So Griffey batting 239.

127
00:07:19,000 --> 00:07:24,000
No home runs, four runs batted and maybe he'll feel more at home on the surface.

128
00:07:24,000 --> 00:07:27,000
Here's Barry's first pitch to Griffey.

129
00:07:27,000 --> 00:07:32,000
And it's a strike from the outside corner.

130
00:07:32,000 --> 00:07:34,000
Manning can see a third base for the Mariner.

131
00:07:34,000 --> 00:07:36,000
Todd Cruz is the shortstop.

132
00:07:36,000 --> 00:07:42,000
Second base is Julio Cruz and at first base, New Yorker, born in New York, Jim Maylor.

133
00:07:42,000 --> 00:07:46,000
Bruce Moxey on the left, Joe Simpson in center and Al Cowan's on the right field.

134
00:07:46,000 --> 00:07:49,000
The one strike pitch is low and inside.

135
00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:51,000
It's one and one on Griffey.

136
00:07:51,000 --> 00:07:54,000
Todd, go ahead.

137
00:07:54,000 --> 00:07:57,000
As expected, a lot of media coverage here tonight, Bill.

138
00:07:57,000 --> 00:07:59,000
All the networks are here.

139
00:07:59,000 --> 00:08:02,000
There's been a lot of hoopla before the game.

140
00:08:02,000 --> 00:08:05,000
Family members, is Gaylord Perry in attendance?

141
00:08:05,000 --> 00:08:07,000
Here's the one-one to Griffey.

142
00:08:07,000 --> 00:08:10,000
Her ball is high, two balls and a strike.

143
00:08:10,000 --> 00:08:15,000
I guess the Perry brothers have won more games than any other brother combination baseball.

144
00:08:15,000 --> 00:08:19,000
Jim is here tonight.

145
00:08:19,000 --> 00:08:23,000
Of course, the Negros have got to catch it.

146
00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:26,000
Here's the two-one pitch.

147
00:08:26,000 --> 00:08:34,000
Sixth wave, cold strike, two balls, two strikes on Griffey.

148
00:08:34,000 --> 00:08:39,000
Jim Griffey coming to the Yankees from the Cincinnati Reds.

149
00:08:39,000 --> 00:08:42,000
Having a slow break.

150
00:08:42,000 --> 00:08:46,000
Two and two on Griffey with one out, nobody on top of the first.

151
00:08:46,000 --> 00:08:50,000
Perry pitch, too high, three and two.

152
00:08:50,000 --> 00:08:53,000
Perry mumbling on deck.

153
00:08:53,000 --> 00:08:59,000
The count is full on Ken Griffey.

154
00:08:59,000 --> 00:09:01,000
Perry taking plenty of time.

155
00:09:01,000 --> 00:09:05,000
When he's on the mound, you've got a three-hour ball, there's a pitch inside.

156
00:09:05,000 --> 00:09:08,000
So get relaxed there and hold.

157
00:09:08,000 --> 00:09:15,000
And the pitch, bounce for a second, Cruz backs up, plays a tough out, lifts the first, and it's got Griffey.

158
00:09:15,000 --> 00:09:18,000
Two out.

159
00:09:18,000 --> 00:09:23,000
William Cruz backs up on that ball and played a bad off and then almost threw it past his first baseman, Jim Mailer,

160
00:09:23,000 --> 00:09:28,000
but Mailer kept his foot on the back for out number two and here's Jerry Muprey.

161
00:09:28,000 --> 00:09:33,000
He almost turned a regular routine ground ball into a bad play, didn't he?

162
00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:37,000
Well, that's what happens sometimes when you put on the dog a little bit.

163
00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:40,000
Cruz is an excellent player, he really doesn't have to do that.

164
00:09:40,000 --> 00:09:44,000
When he does do it, I think it overshadows the fact that he's playing well.

165
00:09:44,000 --> 00:09:52,000
Here's Jerry Muprey, the center fielder. He's batting a 2-76 with nine runs batted in.

166
00:09:52,000 --> 00:09:54,000
Two outs, nobody on top of the first.

167
00:09:54,000 --> 00:09:57,000
And here's the pitch to Muprey.

168
00:09:57,000 --> 00:10:01,000
And it's a strike on the outside corner.

169
00:10:01,000 --> 00:10:06,000
Ken Kizer is the home plate outfired, Jerry Newdecker is the first base, Bill Haller is the second.

170
00:10:06,000 --> 00:10:10,000
And George Maloney is over the third.

171
00:10:10,000 --> 00:10:13,000
Count, one strike on Muprey.

172
00:10:13,000 --> 00:10:16,000
Jerry Ropp kicks the needle to one strike fifth.

173
00:10:16,000 --> 00:10:32,000
That's ball low on end, it's one and one.

174
00:10:32,000 --> 00:10:36,000
Perry taking plenty of time.

175
00:10:36,000 --> 00:10:42,000
The one-one pitch, low on inside.

176
00:10:42,000 --> 00:10:46,000
See, the Perry brothers have 512 wins between them.

177
00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:54,000
Now add two more for Gaylord here in 1982, so that's 514.

178
00:10:54,000 --> 00:10:58,000
Three brothers, John Art and Walt Sarkin have 386.

179
00:10:58,000 --> 00:11:03,000
Bill and Joe Nicol have 385. That ball was foul straight down by Muprey.

180
00:11:03,000 --> 00:11:10,000
Count remains 2-2.

181
00:11:10,000 --> 00:11:14,000
I don't think the Nicolts will catch it.

182
00:11:14,000 --> 00:11:16,000
Bill, 43.

183
00:11:16,000 --> 00:11:17,000
Here it goes.

184
00:11:17,000 --> 00:11:21,000
That's Gaylord, Perry, 43 years ago.

185
00:11:21,000 --> 00:11:23,000
Joe's with the jump.

186
00:11:23,000 --> 00:11:28,000
The national pitching is filled in with a lot of the skills that are on the table list.

187
00:11:28,000 --> 00:11:31,000
It's just now getting cranked up in the Atlanta Braves.

188
00:11:31,000 --> 00:11:35,000
This is the first three weeks of the National League season.

189
00:11:35,000 --> 00:11:38,000
Here's Perry, 2-2 pitch to Muprey.

190
00:11:38,000 --> 00:11:41,000
Fung on, lifted in the right center, off the run is the right fielder.

191
00:11:41,000 --> 00:11:43,000
Cowan will not get to it, he'll go to the wall.

192
00:11:43,000 --> 00:11:45,000
Muprey around first, digging for second.

193
00:11:45,000 --> 00:11:47,000
He's going to start for three.

194
00:11:47,000 --> 00:11:51,000
The throw will not be in time.

195
00:11:51,000 --> 00:11:57,000
Muprey has tripled with two outs here in the first inning.

196
00:11:57,000 --> 00:12:01,000
Kind of surprised that he went for the three bagger, but he did like it.

197
00:12:01,000 --> 00:12:04,000
The relay was just a little bit late.

198
00:12:04,000 --> 00:12:06,000
Muprey gets the three base hit.

199
00:12:06,000 --> 00:12:08,000
Pretty close play at third base.

200
00:12:08,000 --> 00:12:11,000
And he doled in head first, might have winded himself a little bit.

201
00:12:11,000 --> 00:12:12,000
He has his head down.

202
00:12:12,000 --> 00:12:15,000
There's Austin, Joe Alcabelli, the Yankee third base.

203
00:12:15,000 --> 00:12:17,000
But no, he's back at third base.

204
00:12:17,000 --> 00:12:23,000
So a triple by Jerry Muprey with two down here in the first inning, that'll bring on John Mayberry.

205
00:12:23,000 --> 00:12:26,000
Big John making his first plate appearance as a Yankee.

206
00:12:26,000 --> 00:12:28,000
He wasn't used much in Toronto.

207
00:12:28,000 --> 00:12:32,000
He's only up 30-somethings, bat a two-definite three for the Blue Jays.

208
00:12:32,000 --> 00:12:35,000
Two home runs, three runs bad against.

209
00:12:35,000 --> 00:12:40,000
For John Mayberry, facing Gaylord Perry.

210
00:12:40,000 --> 00:12:45,000
And the first pitch to Mayberry, the strikes on the outside corner.

211
00:12:45,000 --> 00:12:47,000
Frank Messer has the story, John Gordon.

212
00:12:47,000 --> 00:12:52,000
Mayberry hit his first major league home run off Gaylord Perry.

213
00:12:52,000 --> 00:12:58,000
That was in the National League, and he hit his first American league home run off Gaylord Perry.

214
00:12:58,000 --> 00:13:02,000
Maybe he could hit his first New York Yankee home run off Gaylord Perry.

215
00:13:02,000 --> 00:13:08,000
Well, Mayberry, a low ball hitter, and of course, when Perry loads the ball up, it usually sinks.

216
00:13:08,000 --> 00:13:13,000
There's a pitch to suck down and away, one-and-one on Mayberry.

217
00:13:13,000 --> 00:13:16,000
No score, top of the first.

218
00:13:16,000 --> 00:13:21,000
Bumprey, who tripled in the third base, the two outs.

219
00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:26,000
On deck is Dave Winfield.

220
00:13:26,000 --> 00:13:29,000
With Bumprey's third, Perry taking a set position.

221
00:13:29,000 --> 00:13:31,000
He's not winding up.

222
00:13:31,000 --> 00:13:36,000
The pitch to Mayberry, checks wing, a low, two balls, and a strike.

223
00:13:36,000 --> 00:13:39,000
This is a good park for the long ball hitter.

224
00:13:39,000 --> 00:13:45,000
316 down the right field foul line and the left field foul line, 410 feet straight away.

225
00:13:45,000 --> 00:13:54,000
Understand they used to have signs 356 left center-right center, but it's closer to 336.

226
00:13:54,000 --> 00:14:01,000
Two on Mayberry, swung on foul to first foul, that by Mike Perero, the Yankee first base coach, two and two.

227
00:14:01,000 --> 00:14:05,000
So I understand the wall in right field is extended for the 1982 season.

228
00:14:05,000 --> 00:14:06,000
Is there an extra?

229
00:14:06,000 --> 00:14:07,000
Higher?

230
00:14:07,000 --> 00:14:09,000
It looks higher.

231
00:14:09,000 --> 00:14:10,000
Double, though.

232
00:14:10,000 --> 00:14:13,000
Frank Buster says the height's double out there.

233
00:14:13,000 --> 00:14:24,000
Not having seen this park, this is the first time here in Seattle, but they just put too many outs in right field, I guess, so they put an extension on it.

234
00:14:24,000 --> 00:14:26,000
23 feet high.

235
00:14:26,000 --> 00:14:28,000
Now, Perry's set.

236
00:14:28,000 --> 00:14:34,000
Two to Mayberry, checks wing, low, ball three, three and two.

237
00:14:34,000 --> 00:14:48,000
That wall evidently used to be 11 feet, six inches all the way around, but starting out in a little bit in right center field, almost straight away center, they added another 12 feet, right?

238
00:14:48,000 --> 00:14:51,000
Yep, made it 23 feet.

239
00:14:51,000 --> 00:14:54,000
So now Perry's going to wind up as Muffrey moves off third base.

240
00:14:54,000 --> 00:14:56,000
Here's the payoff fix to Mayberry.

241
00:14:56,000 --> 00:15:02,000
Swung on, popped up left side, the truck stop, Todd Cruz is there, makes the play and now reaches out of the side.

242
00:15:02,000 --> 00:15:07,000
The Yankees in the first inning, no runs on one base yet, and they leave Muffrey at third base.

243
00:15:07,000 --> 00:15:09,000
That's the end of what happened in the play.

244
00:15:09,000 --> 00:15:12,000
The Yankees nothing, the Mariners are coming to back.

245
00:15:12,000 --> 00:15:18,000
Time goes by so quickly, and the day you once felt was so far away is upon you before you know it.

246
00:15:18,000 --> 00:15:25,000
I'm E.G. Marshall reminding you that now is the time to open an individual retirement or Keough account at Albany Savings Bank.

247
00:15:25,000 --> 00:15:31,000
Deposit up to $2,000 a year in an IRA, up to $15,000 in a Keough if you're self-employed.

248
00:15:31,000 --> 00:15:35,000
Tax deductible deposits, even if you already belong to a pension plan.

249
00:15:35,000 --> 00:15:41,000
Get full details at any office at Albany Savings Bank, the Savings People Bank, committed to you.

250
00:15:41,000 --> 00:15:45,000
A reminder, there is a substantial penalty for early withdrawal.

251
00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:48,000
You could win a fabulous Atari 400 home computer.

252
00:15:48,000 --> 00:15:54,000
That's right, your family could enter the computer age with the help of WROW Radio and the Computer Room.

253
00:15:54,000 --> 00:15:56,000
Here's how you can win.

254
00:15:56,000 --> 00:16:00,000
On a standard postcard, write this phrase, the Computer Room, your Atari headquarters.

255
00:16:00,000 --> 00:16:03,000
Write the phrase as many times as you can on the back of the postcard.

256
00:16:03,000 --> 00:16:13,000
The listener who writes the Computer Room, your Atari headquarters, the most times on the back of a standard postcard, will win the famous Atari 400 home computer, valued at $750.

257
00:16:13,000 --> 00:16:18,000
Prize in exchange for promotional considerations by the Computer Room, 1694 Central Avenue, Albany.

258
00:16:18,000 --> 00:16:24,000
Send your postcard to WROW Radio, 341 Northern Boulevard, Albany, 12204.

259
00:16:24,000 --> 00:16:29,000
That's WROW Radio, 341 Northern Boulevard, Albany, 12204.

260
00:16:29,000 --> 00:16:31,000
And don't forget your return address.

261
00:16:31,000 --> 00:16:35,000
To be eligible, all entries must be received by midnight May 14, 1982.

262
00:16:35,000 --> 00:16:41,000
Besides the grand prize, we'll also give away great-looking Computer Room interface t-shirts on a random drawing basis.

263
00:16:41,000 --> 00:16:47,000
Listen for more details on the Bill Shaw Cross Show, mornings on Radio 59, WROW.

264
00:16:47,000 --> 00:17:02,000
...the Yankees tonight. Doris Watt was to the Detroit Tigers when he was defeated 7-2 in a game at Yankee Stadium, and then he had a no-decision game against Gaylord Ferry in the Seattle Mariners last Friday night.

265
00:17:02,000 --> 00:17:13,000
He went 7 innings and when he lost the game, the Yankees were leading, and Goose Gottfried was on to try to save it for him, but Goose was roughed up in the ball game, and he was the losing pitcher.

266
00:17:13,000 --> 00:17:27,000
Gaylord is 0-1, got fired this year, and right-time against the...he had a probably 5-4, but all of his decisions against Seattle have been from his time with the Texas Rangers when he pitched with them.

267
00:17:27,000 --> 00:17:31,000
Here are the Mariners now, Julio Cruz to lead it off, but once again, Bill.

268
00:17:31,000 --> 00:17:35,000
All right, John first picks the Cruz, takes the curve ball for Coltschreis.

269
00:17:35,000 --> 00:17:40,000
Julio is flicked hitter, batting 229. The home run 5 runs batted in.

270
00:17:40,000 --> 00:17:46,000
Bottom of the first scoreless ball game, Cruz, Chantillo, and Bakke against Joel Alexander.

271
00:17:46,000 --> 00:17:51,000
Bat ball, big punt taken high, hits one and one.

272
00:17:51,000 --> 00:17:55,000
Oh, the Mariners have recalled former Yankee Bobby Brown.

273
00:17:55,000 --> 00:18:01,000
Dave Henderson has been placed on the disabled list by the Mariners, and Bobby Brown has been recalled.

274
00:18:01,000 --> 00:18:05,000
1-1 pitch, but it fouls back up on the straight.

275
00:18:05,000 --> 00:18:12,000
One ball, city strikes on Cruz.

276
00:18:12,000 --> 00:18:20,000
Molly, the third baseman, centers the shortstop, Wully Randolph in second, and John Mayberry, the first baseman.

277
00:18:20,000 --> 00:18:26,000
Winfield and Lefman-Pfrey in center, and Ken Griffey out in right. They're playing Cruz straight away, not too deep.

278
00:18:26,000 --> 00:18:34,000
The 1-2 pitch, fouls for second, Randolph's guard, digs it up, goes on the first base, and Cruz is the first stop here in the first inning.

279
00:18:34,000 --> 00:18:39,000
Well, Bill, the Texas Rangers go down to defeat for the 12th straight time. Boston beat them 5-2.

280
00:18:39,000 --> 00:18:48,000
Now, that means that the Red Sox will be 18-8 on the year, and the Yankees would have to win here tonight just to remain 6-1-1 behind the Eastern Division leading Boston Red Sox.

281
00:18:48,000 --> 00:18:57,000
To the ninth of Minnesota batting and trailing, Milwaukee, 6-2. Baltimore, California, Cleveland, and Oakland, other American league games tonight.

282
00:18:57,000 --> 00:19:03,000
Here's Manica Theo, another switch hitter in left-handed, and he takes the pitch low and away, ball one.

283
00:19:03,000 --> 00:19:06,000
You can read how a Texas loss last night.

284
00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:11,000
Yeah, they've had like three or four losses in the streak that have been just like that, very bizarre.

285
00:19:11,000 --> 00:19:17,000
1-0 pitch is a cold strike, it's 1-1. Put on the hit-and-run with the base and loaded one out.

286
00:19:17,000 --> 00:19:19,000
Picture the hitter doesn't get the hit-and-run.

287
00:19:19,000 --> 00:19:22,000
Bill Stein, I think, missed it in the A.F.

288
00:19:22,000 --> 00:19:25,000
They lose 6-4.

289
00:19:25,000 --> 00:19:33,000
Here's the 1-1 pitch to Kat Theo, bounce towards second, Randolph Garges plays the big hop, little flicks to their very first baser to us.

290
00:19:33,000 --> 00:19:39,000
Rangers had a couple of games where they were leading late in the game, and the double play would have ended the game and stopped the streak,

291
00:19:39,000 --> 00:19:44,000
and they threw the ball in the dugout both times to keep innings alive and keep the losing streak alive.

292
00:19:44,000 --> 00:19:48,000
Metz and Frisco, rain delay, 3-3 at J. Stadium.

293
00:19:48,000 --> 00:19:51,000
Dodgers beat Montreal 3-2 in Philadelphia.

294
00:19:51,000 --> 00:19:56,000
Bombarded San Diego 12-7, and a game at the Vets tonight.

295
00:19:56,000 --> 00:20:00,000
All right, here's Bruce Bocchi, the left fielder, batting 3-26, and he takes outside.

296
00:20:00,000 --> 00:20:02,000
Bocchi, a left-handed batter.

297
00:20:02,000 --> 00:20:04,000
The home run, 10-runs batted it.

298
00:20:04,000 --> 00:20:08,000
Yankees play it straight away.

299
00:20:08,000 --> 00:20:12,000
Too hot, nobody on, no score, bottom half the first inning.

300
00:20:12,000 --> 00:20:17,000
Alexander's best ball is low, it's 2-0.

301
00:20:17,000 --> 00:20:26,000
Doyle is 0-1 this year for the Yankees, making it his third start of the year as an ERF 4.15.

302
00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:28,000
Ross Dixon deals the 2-0 pitch.

303
00:20:28,000 --> 00:20:31,000
Bocchi takes high ball three.

304
00:20:31,000 --> 00:20:36,000
On deck is Richie Zitz.

305
00:20:36,000 --> 00:20:44,000
San Francisco just scored 2 in the ninth and now leads 5-3 over the match, so the game has resumed after the rain delay.

306
00:20:44,000 --> 00:20:48,000
Fastball hits Zitz, Pippen and Zitz right center field, FW up against the wall.

307
00:20:48,000 --> 00:20:53,000
Bocchi up against the wall, and Bocchi will go into second base with a stand-up double.

308
00:20:53,000 --> 00:21:06,000
Bocchi got a green right on a 3-0 pitch, got a fastball, and Dildon in the right center field for a stand-up double.

309
00:21:06,000 --> 00:21:17,000
Now these teams hitting the ball hard after two men are up, one free triple after two men were down on the first inning, but he was left stranded when Mayberry popped up.

310
00:21:17,000 --> 00:21:24,000
Bocchi just got the green right on a 3-0 pitch, Dildon in the right center field for a stand-up double with two out here in the bottom of the first.

311
00:21:24,000 --> 00:21:28,000
That'll bring on Richie Zitz, the designated hitter for the Marlins.

312
00:21:28,000 --> 00:21:37,000
He's batting a 3-0-1, a 2-0 run, and then runs back at it.

313
00:21:37,000 --> 00:21:44,000
Alexander wants another sign, now the right-hander steps, and the pitch to Zitz, fastball, one on a miss.

314
00:21:44,000 --> 00:21:50,000
No ball on center track.

315
00:21:50,000 --> 00:21:55,000
Bocchi has a short lead at second base.

316
00:21:55,000 --> 00:21:58,000
Oh, he takes a couple more sets.

317
00:21:58,000 --> 00:22:02,000
Alexander getting a sign, now he's at check.

318
00:22:02,000 --> 00:22:06,000
And backs off, and Bocchi goes back to second.

319
00:22:06,000 --> 00:22:07,000
Now time to call.

320
00:22:07,000 --> 00:22:10,000
Roman wants to talk to Alexander.

321
00:22:10,000 --> 00:22:20,000
Oh, this is the first of four teams that'll be playing here between the Yankees and Seattle Marlins, and honestly I think the Yankees need to win all four.

322
00:22:20,000 --> 00:22:24,000
They won nine, lost 13 this year.

323
00:22:24,000 --> 00:22:30,000
Got to get back at 500 again and work from there.

324
00:22:30,000 --> 00:22:38,000
Now Alexander's set, and the pitch in the dirt, blocked nicely by Sir Olenich, one and one.

325
00:22:38,000 --> 00:22:44,000
I think the Yankees want to try to avoid, I think more than anything else, Bill with Boston and Detroit playing as well as they are right now.

326
00:22:44,000 --> 00:22:48,000
You don't want to get 10, 11 games behind, and they're six and a half back right now.

327
00:22:48,000 --> 00:22:56,000
So putting together a little win streak on the road trip certainly would help their chances of staying or gaining on the Boston Red Sox.

328
00:22:56,000 --> 00:22:59,000
Oh, yes, normally don't play well here at the Kingdome.

329
00:22:59,000 --> 00:23:06,000
Pitch is this, Bill in the center field, oh, Jerry Buprey on the run, he's there, back-bending, makes the catch, that'll be down the side.

330
00:23:06,000 --> 00:23:09,000
This hit the ball hard, but Buprey ran it down.

331
00:23:09,000 --> 00:23:15,000
No runs to base hit, one man left on base at the end of one. Yankees nothing, the Mariners nothing.

332
00:23:15,000 --> 00:23:21,000
I've had enough, come on Bob, there's nothing like a good run first thing in the morning.

333
00:23:21,000 --> 00:23:30,000
I've already gone to my best parts and tumbled away. My feet, fresh scrambled eggs, breakfast, sizzling sausage, and golden hash browns.

334
00:23:30,000 --> 00:23:33,000
Hash browns. Or an Egg McMuffin. McDonald's.

335
00:23:33,000 --> 00:23:47,000
Start your morning run with the dawn of the sun, smell the cooking in the air. You know McDonald's is waiting there.

336
00:23:47,000 --> 00:23:57,000
Just a half mile to go, now it's worth it, you know. You're gonna pick up the pace to get the great race to taste.

337
00:23:57,000 --> 00:24:05,000
You deserve a break today. That was great, let's do this every day. Run, every day.

338
00:24:05,000 --> 00:24:14,000
You'll get up this morning and get away. I said run, I'll bring the car and meet you here. To McDonald's.

339
00:24:14,000 --> 00:24:23,000
There's a heritage at Anheuser-Busch that says never be satisfied until you've achieved the best.

340
00:24:23,000 --> 00:24:29,000
Budweiser light with its clean distinctive taste lives up to that heritage.

341
00:24:29,000 --> 00:24:36,000
Bring out your best Budweiser light. Bring out your best Budweiser light.

342
00:24:36,000 --> 00:24:41,000
The best never comes easy, that's why there's nothing else like it.

343
00:24:41,000 --> 00:24:43,000
Budweiser light.

344
00:24:43,000 --> 00:24:46,000
Anheuser-Busch, St. Louis, Missouri.

345
00:24:46,000 --> 00:24:54,000
I have a note from the game at Anaheim with the California Angels and the Baltimore Orioles.

346
00:24:54,000 --> 00:25:01,000
Tiffy Martinez is now pitching for Baltimore in the first inning. Jim Palmer, who started, faced only two batters and left the game with an injury.

347
00:25:01,000 --> 00:25:06,000
The report's to follow, so we'll see whether or not it's a serious one to the Orioles' right-hander, Jim Palmer.

348
00:25:06,000 --> 00:25:11,000
All right, John Day Winfield against the Gaylord's Perry, top of the second of the Cornwall ball game.

349
00:25:11,000 --> 00:25:17,000
It'll be Winfield and Gamble and Roy Smalley against their right-hander. Winfield now batting a 2-91, three-ohm run.

350
00:25:17,000 --> 00:25:22,000
D'Lea's Yankees with 16 runs batted in.

351
00:25:22,000 --> 00:25:26,000
Perry wants another sign from Bullingham, gets it, and the first pitch to Winfield.

352
00:25:26,000 --> 00:25:36,000
Swung on, drilled, fouled on the right side. That'll make the deep sonata play.

353
00:25:36,000 --> 00:25:46,000
No ball is in to strike on Winfield.

354
00:25:46,000 --> 00:25:52,000
They play Winfield straight away and deep the left field with Bocke.

355
00:25:52,000 --> 00:25:55,000
Should be a good ballpark for Winfield.

356
00:25:55,000 --> 00:25:59,000
The next pitch, Bill Fowle again down the right side.

357
00:25:59,000 --> 00:26:08,000
Down remain, top soul, to count runs, no ball, two strikes on Winfield.

358
00:26:08,000 --> 00:26:17,000
Dave took kind of a busman's holiday last night and watched the Seattle Supersonics and the San Antonio Spurs in their playoff game here at the Kingdome.

359
00:26:17,000 --> 00:26:21,000
Of course, he used to play basketball at the University of Minnesota.

360
00:26:21,000 --> 00:26:25,000
One of the few players who might have gotten drafted by all three major sports.

361
00:26:25,000 --> 00:26:29,000
That's right. Here's a two-strike pitch to Winfield.

362
00:26:29,000 --> 00:26:36,000
Breaking ball, checked his length, and checked it in time. One and two.

363
00:26:36,000 --> 00:26:41,000
Yankees, by bringing up Balboni, have some pretty big people who'll be in the middle of their lineup.

364
00:26:41,000 --> 00:26:46,000
Mayberry is 6'3", Winfield is 6'6", and Balboni is 6'6".

365
00:26:46,000 --> 00:26:51,000
If they should have played the, uh, how big is Balboni, Frank, 6'4"? 6'2".

366
00:26:51,000 --> 00:26:57,000
Right-message is Balboni, 6'2". Winfield plays, and then this is the hairball.

367
00:26:57,000 --> 00:27:01,000
Now that's the first, uh, first strikeout for Barry.

368
00:27:01,000 --> 00:27:06,000
Maybe they should have been playing the San Antonio Spurs last night instead of the Supersonics.

369
00:27:06,000 --> 00:27:09,000
Winfield and Mayberry and Balboni.

370
00:27:09,000 --> 00:27:12,000
Molly's not too short either.

371
00:27:12,000 --> 00:27:16,000
I think Willie ran off the quick guard, right? Yep, little point guard.

372
00:27:16,000 --> 00:27:21,000
Barry's 6'3", he's a little bit too slow though. I don't know if the guys run around, but he...

373
00:27:21,000 --> 00:27:25,000
Here's Gamble, off-court batting at 115 with a run batted in.

374
00:27:25,000 --> 00:27:28,000
George Frazier's 6'5".

375
00:27:28,000 --> 00:27:32,000
They've got a pretty good basketball team height-wise, but...

376
00:27:32,000 --> 00:27:35,000
Oh, the Sonny's got a couple guys seven feet.

377
00:27:35,000 --> 00:27:38,000
Sigma, Donald...

378
00:27:38,000 --> 00:27:40,000
Ha ha ha.

379
00:27:40,000 --> 00:27:41,000
First pitch to Gamble.

380
00:27:41,000 --> 00:27:46,000
Curve ball, come on a minute. Are you gonna coach the team or, uh...

381
00:27:46,000 --> 00:27:50,000
No, no, no, I would coach the football team. Is that right?

382
00:27:50,000 --> 00:27:53,000
I'd fastball, I would... I would presumably coach the basketball team.

383
00:27:53,000 --> 00:27:55,000
Ha ha ha.

384
00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:58,000
Just have to make sure the coach shows up, that's all.

385
00:27:58,000 --> 00:28:00,000
Get him off the golf course.

386
00:28:00,000 --> 00:28:04,000
One strike on Oscar Gamble.

387
00:28:04,000 --> 00:28:07,000
Barry Roxton deals a one-strike pitch to Gamble.

388
00:28:07,000 --> 00:28:11,000
Curve, hit in the air center field, backing up Patolia Simpson.

389
00:28:11,000 --> 00:28:16,000
Now he turns, back-pedaling, and makes the catch for the warning track 2-up.

390
00:28:16,000 --> 00:28:21,000
Well, here's my Oscar. You know, Bill, I wanted to comment, this is a guy we just gotta get hot here.

391
00:28:21,000 --> 00:28:27,000
Oscar Gamble, who's been from the left side in the D8 role, coming in at 115, and he's a street-hitter,

392
00:28:27,000 --> 00:28:33,000
and maybe he can find it here on this road trip and really get things going for himself and help the agents.

393
00:28:33,000 --> 00:28:38,000
Well, it's a 2-2 off, nobody on. Smalley's a batter, he's hitting 224.

394
00:28:38,000 --> 00:28:42,000
Two home runs and ten runs that it ends. Smalley a quick hitter and left-handed.

395
00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:50,000
And the first pitch to Smalley.

396
00:28:50,000 --> 00:28:56,000
Fastball is too high, ball one. 2-0, nobody on, no score, it's half of the second.

397
00:28:58,000 --> 00:29:01,000
Yankees on the Seattle Marlins, the first game of a four-game series.

398
00:29:01,000 --> 00:29:08,000
Yankees took two out of three at Yankee Stadium earlier from Seattle.

399
00:29:08,000 --> 00:29:11,000
Had to work for those wins.

400
00:29:11,000 --> 00:29:15,000
1-0 pitch is high, two balls, no strikes on Smalley.

401
00:29:18,000 --> 00:29:21,000
Perry is starting a sixth game, he has two complete games.

402
00:29:21,000 --> 00:29:24,000
He's won two loss two with a 3.72 ERA.

403
00:29:24,000 --> 00:29:27,000
It lasts, of course, coming over the Yankees last Friday at the stadium.

404
00:29:27,000 --> 00:29:33,000
Now the 2-0 to Smalley, swung on, hits it right field.

405
00:29:33,000 --> 00:29:38,000
Over the corner is Cowan and he'll get it in and Smalley will hold it first with a table.

406
00:29:38,000 --> 00:29:43,000
And we'll take ten seconds for station identification on the New York Yankee Baseball Network.

407
00:29:43,000 --> 00:29:51,000
Stay with the winners. Keep listening to Yankee Baseball on Radio 59, WROW all the way.

408
00:29:51,000 --> 00:29:56,000
Smalley a two-out single at first base, that'll bring on Rick Cerrone, the Yankee cat.

409
00:29:56,000 --> 00:30:00,000
Rick batting a 2-0-6, but the home run seven runs bad at this.

410
00:30:00,000 --> 00:30:03,000
The base hit by Smalley, the Yankees second.

411
00:30:03,000 --> 00:30:09,000
Smalley will be a triple by Gary Mumfrey with two outs in the first inning.

412
00:30:10,000 --> 00:30:14,000
Now Perry taking plenty of time, bending four per side.

413
00:30:14,000 --> 00:30:17,000
Now he's set. They have the pitch to Cerrone.

414
00:30:17,000 --> 00:30:21,000
It's in their call strike.

415
00:30:32,000 --> 00:30:37,000
Now Perry taking plenty of time. Smalley at first base, two down.

416
00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:42,000
Gaylord set. Looks over his left shoulder.

417
00:30:42,000 --> 00:30:47,000
The one strike pitch to Cerrone, bounce right back to Perry, backhand.

418
00:30:47,000 --> 00:30:51,000
Throw to first base, they've got a roll now, retirement side.

419
00:30:51,000 --> 00:30:55,000
No runs, the base hit. Once again the Yankees lose a man on.

420
00:30:55,000 --> 00:30:59,000
At the end of one and a half, the Yankees nothing, Seattle nothing.

421
00:31:00,000 --> 00:31:04,000
There's one thing that most homeowners learn early on.

422
00:31:04,000 --> 00:31:06,000
Garrity Home Center has what they need.

423
00:31:06,000 --> 00:31:14,000
Garrity Home Center carries only the finest material for repairs or remodeling. And they offer free expert advice to make any job a lot easier.

424
00:31:14,000 --> 00:31:18,000
Remodel with kitchen cabinets and baths and at least by tonnage.

425
00:31:18,000 --> 00:31:21,000
Or bring in the sun with robo roof windows.

426
00:31:21,000 --> 00:31:24,000
Make summer more fun with treated decking.

427
00:31:24,000 --> 00:31:27,000
Or install quality screen doors at a pleasing price.

428
00:31:27,000 --> 00:31:31,000
At Garrity Home Center you'll find just what you need for every room in your home.

429
00:31:31,000 --> 00:31:33,000
But that's just part of the story.

430
00:31:33,000 --> 00:31:36,000
Every home handyman can use some help from time to time.

431
00:31:36,000 --> 00:31:38,000
And Garrity Home Center is ready to help.

432
00:31:38,000 --> 00:31:44,000
They even hold free clinics with manufacturers representatives on hand to help with specific projects.

433
00:31:44,000 --> 00:31:49,000
Home owning is a lot easier because Garrity Home Center has what you need.

434
00:31:49,000 --> 00:31:53,000
Garrity Home Center at the corner of Fuller Road and Railroad Avenue in Albany.

435
00:31:56,000 --> 00:31:59,000
I'm Richard Hill, WROW Sports.

436
00:31:59,000 --> 00:32:02,000
For the full season of Yankee baseball, listen to WROW.

437
00:32:02,000 --> 00:32:06,000
And keep that radio tuned at 59 a.m. for my morning sports reports,

438
00:32:06,000 --> 00:32:10,000
all the major league scores, and the important local and national sports developments.

439
00:32:10,000 --> 00:32:13,000
Evenings at 5.05, write sports commentary.

440
00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:18,000
Then stay tuned for Bob Buck's sports report and Dr. Paul Dommie's report on sports medicine

441
00:32:18,000 --> 00:32:21,000
for the amateur athletes in our 6 p.m. news block.

442
00:32:21,000 --> 00:32:25,000
Each weekend afternoon, Don Chevrier has ABC weekend sports.

443
00:32:25,000 --> 00:32:32,000
For sports fans, WROW is all the radio you need.

444
00:32:36,000 --> 00:32:41,000
Well, no score after an inning and a half of play, and the Mariners coming to bat in the bottom of the second inning.

445
00:32:41,000 --> 00:32:44,000
Todd Crews, Al Collins, and Joe Simpson.

446
00:32:44,000 --> 00:32:49,000
Bill mentioned that this is the first of a four-game series with the Mariners and the Yankees.

447
00:32:49,000 --> 00:32:51,000
Floyd Bannister against Mike Morgan tomorrow night.

448
00:32:51,000 --> 00:32:56,000
Jim Beattie against Robin Goodry Saturday night, and a Sunday night game that starts at 7.05

449
00:32:56,000 --> 00:32:58,000
will feature Gene Nelson against Tommy John.

450
00:32:58,000 --> 00:33:01,000
All right, well Todd Crews then against John Alexander in the second inning,

451
00:33:01,000 --> 00:33:03,000
and he takes the ball to low ball one.

452
00:33:03,000 --> 00:33:08,000
Crews, a short stop for the Mariners, batting a 3-19, three home runs, eight runs, bat a dip.

453
00:33:08,000 --> 00:33:11,000
Bottom of the second, and a scoreless ball game.

454
00:33:11,000 --> 00:33:17,000
Alexander working quickly, overhand fastball, one and one.

455
00:33:17,000 --> 00:33:22,000
It'll be Crews, Collins, and Simpson for the Mariners.

456
00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:28,000
Here in the bottom of the second.

457
00:33:28,000 --> 00:33:35,000
The one-one-fifth to Crews, fastball, low two balls, and a strike.

458
00:33:35,000 --> 00:33:45,000
Chuck Scott here coaching at third base for the Mariners, and Beta Pempsons coaching first base.

459
00:33:45,000 --> 00:33:49,000
Now Alexander backs off.

460
00:33:49,000 --> 00:33:54,000
He wants another side from Sorrone.

461
00:33:54,000 --> 00:34:08,000
Two-one pitch, breaking ball, swung on, missed two and two on Crews.

462
00:34:08,000 --> 00:34:12,000
And the two-two delivery, swung on, and missed.

463
00:34:12,000 --> 00:34:19,000
And the ball going down and in, strikeout number one for Alexander, and there is one away in the second.

464
00:34:19,000 --> 00:34:25,000
Well, that man had a lot of strikeouts or walks for that matter in the 13-plus innings that he's worked for the Yankees.

465
00:34:25,000 --> 00:34:29,000
That's only his fourth strikeout, and he's only walked two, but he's that type of pitcher.

466
00:34:29,000 --> 00:34:33,000
He lets the defense win ball games for him behind him.

467
00:34:33,000 --> 00:34:38,000
Now Collins, the right fielder, is batting 186 with four home runs, and he 11 runs batted in.

468
00:34:38,000 --> 00:34:41,000
He's a right-handed hitter.

469
00:34:41,000 --> 00:34:46,000
And the first pitch to Collins, curve ball, breaks down and in for a strike.

470
00:34:46,000 --> 00:34:52,000
No balls and one strike on Collins.

471
00:34:52,000 --> 00:34:54,000
Collins stands well off the plate.

472
00:34:54,000 --> 00:35:01,000
The one-strike pitch, fast ball, just a bit low, which one at once.

473
00:35:01,000 --> 00:35:04,000
One out, nobody on, playing the bottom of the second here at the Kingdome.

474
00:35:04,000 --> 00:35:12,000
No score in the ball game.

475
00:35:12,000 --> 00:35:14,000
Here's the one-one pitch to Collins.

476
00:35:14,000 --> 00:35:18,000
Great change, hit in the air left field, coming on is Dave Wentfield.

477
00:35:18,000 --> 00:35:24,000
Wentfield is there, and one-handed for out number two.

478
00:35:24,000 --> 00:35:27,000
So two up, two down, here's Joe Sipton, the center fielder.

479
00:35:27,000 --> 00:35:29,000
Sipton's a left-handed batter.

480
00:35:29,000 --> 00:35:38,000
He's hitting 256 this year with four runs batted in.

481
00:35:38,000 --> 00:35:51,000
Well, if this ball game goes according to the way it's been going, Sipton will get a base hit.

482
00:35:51,000 --> 00:35:59,000
Alexander's first pitch to Joe Simpson, fast ball, the called strike, letter high, fast ball, strike one.

483
00:35:59,000 --> 00:36:02,000
Simpson and Henderson have been platooning in center field.

484
00:36:02,000 --> 00:36:06,000
Now if Henderson had, I guess Bobby Brown will probably play against left-handers.

485
00:36:06,000 --> 00:36:15,000
And the fast ball misses outside, it's one-and-one.

486
00:36:15,000 --> 00:36:17,000
Of course, Brown's the switch hitter.

487
00:36:17,000 --> 00:36:20,000
I think Bobby has some problems hitting right here.

488
00:36:20,000 --> 00:36:23,000
He does, he's not as good as KJell Brown.

489
00:36:23,000 --> 00:36:26,000
First, Mayfair has got it, and John will take it himself.

490
00:36:26,000 --> 00:36:29,000
He touches up in front of Simpson, that'll retire the side.

491
00:36:29,000 --> 00:36:34,000
Three up, three down, at the end of two, the Yankees nothing, the Baroners nothing.

492
00:36:34,000 --> 00:36:40,000
Of all the ways that we can thrive, of all the highways through the sky,

493
00:36:40,000 --> 00:36:50,000
of all the ways that breeze the sun, Eastern, is your number one.

494
00:36:50,000 --> 00:36:55,000
The pride of Eastern shining through, we earn our wings by sending you,

495
00:36:55,000 --> 00:37:04,000
come meet us soon, then we'll see why, we're America's favorite way to fly.

496
00:37:04,000 --> 00:37:08,000
For the third year in a row now, more passengers have flown Eastern

497
00:37:08,000 --> 00:37:11,000
than any other airline in the free world.

498
00:37:11,000 --> 00:37:15,000
If you helped make us America's favorite way to fly, we thank you.

499
00:37:15,000 --> 00:37:19,000
If you haven't flown Eastern recently, give us a try.

500
00:37:19,000 --> 00:37:24,000
We'll show you we really do earn our wings every day.

501
00:37:24,000 --> 00:37:41,000
Eastern, America's favorite way to fly, we're Eastern, America's favorite way to fly.

502
00:37:41,000 --> 00:37:44,000
Ever read a Michelob label? Very impressive.

503
00:37:44,000 --> 00:37:47,000
Says they use nothing but the finest ingredients.

504
00:37:47,000 --> 00:37:51,000
Of course, you can taste that for yourself.

505
00:37:51,000 --> 00:38:02,000
Yes, Michelob drinkers know a good thing when they taste it any day of the week.

506
00:38:02,000 --> 00:38:05,000
And how do Bush think? Who's Missouri?

507
00:38:05,000 --> 00:38:10,000
I hear the finals now from games that are played back on the East Coast or in the Midwest.

508
00:38:10,000 --> 00:38:15,000
Boston beat Texas 5-2, and that's 12 straight losses in a row for the Rangers.

509
00:38:15,000 --> 00:38:18,000
Milwaukee is a 6-3 winner over Minnesota.

510
00:38:18,000 --> 00:38:22,000
The Coast games just starting, California leads Baltimore 2-1 after an inning of flag.

511
00:38:22,000 --> 00:38:27,000
Cleveland didn't score against Oakland and Steve McHenry in their game at Oakland.

512
00:38:27,000 --> 00:38:31,000
The Giants beat the match 5-3. Dodgers beat Montreal 3-2.

513
00:38:31,000 --> 00:38:35,000
And Philadelphia beat San Diego 12-7. And here's the...

514
00:38:35,000 --> 00:38:38,000
All right, John, Bucky then up against Gaylord Perry.

515
00:38:38,000 --> 00:38:43,000
Top of the third of scoreless ballgame, the first pitch is outside, ball went.

516
00:38:43,000 --> 00:38:46,000
Bucky batting at 182 with two runs batted in.

517
00:38:46,000 --> 00:38:53,000
And then back up top with Randolph and Ken Griffey.

518
00:38:53,000 --> 00:38:55,000
Perry's 1-0 pitch to dip.

519
00:38:55,000 --> 00:38:58,000
Swung on popped up right side in foul territory.

520
00:38:58,000 --> 00:39:01,000
The first baseman, Jim Mailer, he's calling.

521
00:39:01,000 --> 00:39:04,000
And makes the catch for the first up.

522
00:39:04,000 --> 00:39:08,000
I want to mention that Frank Messer will have all the scores of all the games with the particulars.

523
00:39:08,000 --> 00:39:15,000
The winning and losing pitchers, home runs, updates on the standings on the Getty Scoreboard Show after a broadcast tonight.

524
00:39:15,000 --> 00:39:22,000
Willie Randolph has been up once, bounce the first.

525
00:39:22,000 --> 00:39:29,000
Willie, now it's 3-37.

526
00:39:29,000 --> 00:39:35,000
Perry goes through the ritual of peeking the cap, the hair to the air.

527
00:39:35,000 --> 00:39:38,000
A thunder on the brow, rods and bags.

528
00:39:38,000 --> 00:39:41,000
The hair again to the peek of the cap. Now he's ready.

529
00:39:41,000 --> 00:39:54,000
First pitch to Randolph is a called strike, a slider on the outside corner.

530
00:39:54,000 --> 00:39:59,000
The third baseman, Manny Castillo, even with the bag there.

531
00:39:59,000 --> 00:40:04,000
Randolph backs out, now he's back in.

532
00:40:04,000 --> 00:40:11,000
Perry's one strike pitch to Randolph. Check swing low, it's one and one.

533
00:40:11,000 --> 00:40:15,000
Yankees have a two-out triple by Mumford in the first inning, he was left-stretched.

534
00:40:15,000 --> 00:40:19,000
And a two-out single by Manny in the second, he was left-stretched.

535
00:40:19,000 --> 00:40:22,000
They've got no runs on two hits, the Mariners no runs on one.

536
00:40:22,000 --> 00:40:26,000
Surely we're just in the top half of the third inning with one out, nobody on.

537
00:40:26,000 --> 00:40:31,000
Perry's one-one pitch to Randolph. Swung on and bowled back, it's one and two.

538
00:40:31,000 --> 00:40:49,000
And the Perry gets a new baseball.

539
00:40:49,000 --> 00:40:56,000
Forty-three years old, two hundred and ninety-nine wins.

540
00:40:56,000 --> 00:41:09,000
One-two pitch, low, thinker, two balls, two strikes on Randolph.

541
00:41:09,000 --> 00:41:14,000
Spotlight certainly is on Gaylord denying to win number 300 and become one of 15,

542
00:41:14,000 --> 00:41:19,000
but he's also got a chance to become eventually the leading strikeout artist in Major League Baseball.

543
00:41:19,000 --> 00:41:24,000
Top of the third, big hop there for Castillo. High throw to the first and a two-out first base is in.

544
00:41:24,000 --> 00:41:28,000
And it'll go off to right field and Randolph will cruise in the second base.

545
00:41:28,000 --> 00:41:33,000
And Cowan's right fielder corrals the ball and the Yankee bullpen down the right side.

546
00:41:33,000 --> 00:41:38,000
That should be a two-base error on the third base with Manny Castillo.

547
00:41:38,000 --> 00:41:40,000
Whoa, he threw that one away, didn't he?

548
00:41:40,000 --> 00:41:43,000
Well, he's got a good arm. We saw in New York that he had an excellent arm.

549
00:41:43,000 --> 00:41:48,000
Right. That just got away from him. And Baylor's such a big target over his first base.

550
00:41:48,000 --> 00:41:52,000
He's got great size. He goes like about six-five and ball went way over his head

551
00:41:52,000 --> 00:41:54,000
and down to the right field bullpen area.

552
00:41:54,000 --> 00:41:59,000
Willie had to play in front of him for the most part so he could see where he could gain second base,

553
00:41:59,000 --> 00:42:01,000
tear him off the wall.

554
00:42:01,000 --> 00:42:04,000
So a two-base throwing error charged to Manny Castillo.

555
00:42:04,000 --> 00:42:07,000
The Mariner third base and Randolph at second base has run away.

556
00:42:07,000 --> 00:42:08,000
Here's Ken Griffey.

557
00:42:08,000 --> 00:42:10,000
Griffey's been up once, bounce to set.

558
00:42:10,000 --> 00:42:11,000
To set and to fit.

559
00:42:11,000 --> 00:42:14,000
Plunk on and foul back. No balls and a strike on Griffey.

560
00:42:14,000 --> 00:42:20,000
On deck is Jerry Mumfrey.

561
00:42:20,000 --> 00:42:25,000
Yankees trying to get on the board first here in the kingdom.

562
00:42:25,000 --> 00:42:27,000
They've had their problems here over the years.

563
00:42:27,000 --> 00:42:30,000
The Mariner seem to play better here.

564
00:42:30,000 --> 00:42:33,000
The Yankees don't play as well as they normally play.

565
00:42:33,000 --> 00:42:36,000
We're going to miss by Griffey. No balls, good a strike.

566
00:42:36,000 --> 00:42:41,000
Right here the Mariners have taken 17 of the 26 games played.

567
00:42:41,000 --> 00:42:49,000
So they're 17 and 9 against the Yankees here at the kingdom.

568
00:42:52,000 --> 00:42:55,000
Overall, the Yankees have 131 lost 22.

569
00:42:55,000 --> 00:42:59,000
Perry's pitch is quite foul down the left side.

570
00:42:59,000 --> 00:43:09,000
Back to 17 and 9, dome record against the Yankees is the Mariner's best dome record against all opponents.

571
00:43:09,000 --> 00:43:11,000
They like putting Yankees up in here.

572
00:43:11,000 --> 00:43:16,000
Not only do they get their attendance go up, but they play better.

573
00:43:16,000 --> 00:43:18,000
Or they seem to win.

574
00:43:18,000 --> 00:43:20,000
Now Perry's set.

575
00:43:20,000 --> 00:43:22,000
The Yankees are going to play better.

576
00:43:22,000 --> 00:43:24,000
They're going to play better.

577
00:43:24,000 --> 00:43:29,000
They play better, or they seem to win.

578
00:43:29,000 --> 00:43:30,000
Now Perry's set.

579
00:43:30,000 --> 00:43:32,000
Here's the city strike pitch to Griffey.

580
00:43:32,000 --> 00:43:34,000
Hose on line, right side right field.

581
00:43:34,000 --> 00:43:36,000
Randolph around third.

582
00:43:36,000 --> 00:43:42,000
The canny upie hell there as Cowan gets the ball and throws a strike to Bullock the catcher.

583
00:43:42,000 --> 00:43:48,000
Looks like it might have been a head-to-the-flank by Alza Belli with the throw coming from Cowan.

584
00:43:48,000 --> 00:43:51,000
He threw a strike to his catcher Terry Bullock.

585
00:43:51,000 --> 00:43:55,000
It was well stroked by Griffey and Cowan's had a good play.

586
00:43:55,000 --> 00:44:01,000
Randolph didn't get a real good break at second base, even with the ball being hit on the right side of the infield.

587
00:44:01,000 --> 00:44:11,000
And when it made it through, Willie then started to really turn it on and Alza Belli wisely held him up because I believe they would have had him with that throw that Cowan's had.

588
00:44:11,000 --> 00:44:14,000
Cowan's with a fine throw, holding Randolph at third base.

589
00:44:14,000 --> 00:44:22,000
So the Yankees have runners at first and third with one down and here's Jerry Mumfrey who's tripled with two outs in the first inning.

590
00:44:22,000 --> 00:44:24,000
Mumfrey a switch hitter in left-handed.

591
00:44:24,000 --> 00:44:27,000
Mariner in field back, looks to pitch to Mumfrey.

592
00:44:27,000 --> 00:44:29,000
Swung on, fouls to short, might be two.

593
00:44:29,000 --> 00:44:34,000
Throw to second for one, back to first, double play.

594
00:44:34,000 --> 00:44:37,000
It's four to three and the Mariner's got a double.

595
00:44:37,000 --> 00:44:39,000
No runs, one hit, one error.

596
00:44:39,000 --> 00:44:41,000
And the Yankees lead the man.

597
00:44:41,000 --> 00:44:43,000
At the end of two and a half innings of play.

598
00:44:43,000 --> 00:44:45,000
Yankees nothing, Seattle nothing.

599
00:45:13,000 --> 00:45:15,000
Good to see you.

600
00:45:15,000 --> 00:45:20,000
Night is falling and the Barnett's are up.

601
00:45:20,000 --> 00:45:22,000
The house is quiet.

602
00:45:22,000 --> 00:45:30,000
But suddenly the sound of blast shatters the night as a sinister figure breaks the Barnett's basement window and crawls inside.

603
00:45:30,000 --> 00:45:35,000
Meanwhile across the street a sweet old lady is holding a walkie talkie.

604
00:45:35,000 --> 00:45:38,000
Breaking and entering on Spring Street.

605
00:45:38,000 --> 00:45:44,000
Suddenly a slouched figure appears wearing a trench coat and is eating a dog biscuit.

606
00:45:44,000 --> 00:45:46,000
My Bob lady.

607
00:45:46,000 --> 00:45:48,000
Now solve that mystery.

608
00:45:48,000 --> 00:45:52,000
Will the crook get away? Who's the old lady? And who's that eating the dog biscuit?

609
00:45:52,000 --> 00:45:55,000
Oh what it's me, McGroth the crime dog here.

610
00:45:55,000 --> 00:45:59,000
And the little old lady is Mimi Marth of Hartford Connecticut.

611
00:45:59,000 --> 00:46:02,000
She's one of the many citizens working together to protect her and neighborhood.

612
00:46:02,000 --> 00:46:05,000
And she used her walkie talkie to call the cops.

613
00:46:05,000 --> 00:46:12,000
The cops just nabbed the crook. That's one way to take out right out of crime.

614
00:46:12,000 --> 00:46:15,000
A message from the Crime Prevention Coalition and the Ad Council.

615
00:46:21,000 --> 00:46:25,000
Now Jim Maillard the leadoff batter for the Mariners in the bottom of the third inning.

616
00:46:25,000 --> 00:46:27,000
He's the number eight hitter in the order.

617
00:46:27,000 --> 00:46:33,000
Followed by Terry Bulling and then Julio Cruz, Don Alexander and Gaylord Perry locking horns with no score so far.

618
00:46:33,000 --> 00:46:35,000
First pitch to Maillard is down low ball one.

619
00:46:35,000 --> 00:46:39,000
Youngster is in a slump. He's over 18.

620
00:46:39,000 --> 00:46:42,000
He's down into the eighth spot. He's batting 238 on the air.

621
00:46:42,000 --> 00:46:45,000
Three home runs, 16 runs batted in.

622
00:46:45,000 --> 00:46:47,000
Big fella, 6'5", goes 230.

623
00:46:47,000 --> 00:46:51,000
Fastball, then deep to left center on the run is Wilkree.

624
00:46:51,000 --> 00:46:53,000
And it's up against the wall.

625
00:46:53,000 --> 00:46:55,000
Bouncing back in towards center field.

626
00:46:55,000 --> 00:46:57,000
Winfield over there.

627
00:46:57,000 --> 00:47:00,000
Maillard will end up in third base with a stand up.

628
00:47:00,000 --> 00:47:04,000
Now that's a way to break the clock.

629
00:47:04,000 --> 00:47:06,000
Maillard jumping on a pitch out away from it.

630
00:47:06,000 --> 00:47:10,000
It hit the top of the wall and deep left center field for a stand up triple.

631
00:47:10,000 --> 00:47:14,000
Normally a ball hit to that area won't go for three bases.

632
00:47:14,000 --> 00:47:19,000
But Jerry Mumford felt as he was going to the ball that he had a chance of catching it.

633
00:47:19,000 --> 00:47:21,000
Then at the last moment he discovered that he didn't.

634
00:47:21,000 --> 00:47:24,000
And he could not play the carry but went by him.

635
00:47:24,000 --> 00:47:27,000
And Winfield had to chase it down in dead center field.

636
00:47:27,000 --> 00:47:30,000
By the time he did, Maillard had the three bases.

637
00:47:30,000 --> 00:47:33,000
So Maillard in third base with a lead off triple.

638
00:47:33,000 --> 00:47:36,000
And that will bring on Jerry pulling the catcher.

639
00:47:36,000 --> 00:47:41,000
Pulling batting an even 300 with no home runs and two runs batted in.

640
00:47:41,000 --> 00:47:46,000
Yankees will have the right side of their infield in.

641
00:47:46,000 --> 00:47:48,000
Smalls will also play in.

642
00:47:48,000 --> 00:47:50,000
Now Randolph backs out.

643
00:47:50,000 --> 00:47:54,000
So Denin Randolph will play back.

644
00:47:54,000 --> 00:47:56,000
But Mayberry and Smalley will play in.

645
00:47:56,000 --> 00:48:01,000
First pitch is fouled back and out of play.

646
00:48:01,000 --> 00:48:05,000
Now the Mariners trying to get on the board first here in the third inning of scoreless ball game.

647
00:48:05,000 --> 00:48:11,000
But Mayberry is third with nobody else.

648
00:48:11,000 --> 00:48:18,000
Now Alexander has his work cut out for him here in the third inning.

649
00:48:18,000 --> 00:48:20,000
He hits that.

650
00:48:20,000 --> 00:48:22,000
The one strike pitch to Bulley.

651
00:48:22,000 --> 00:48:39,000
The foul straight down to strike on Bulley.

652
00:48:39,000 --> 00:48:41,000
Alexander with the new baseball.

653
00:48:41,000 --> 00:48:46,000
Bulley's the right hand and hitter.

654
00:48:46,000 --> 00:48:50,000
Jim Eschen wanted to catch Gaylord Perry and Perry's quest for his 300 tonight.

655
00:48:50,000 --> 00:48:54,000
But Bulley has been doing a good job catching the right hander.

656
00:48:54,000 --> 00:48:56,000
Now the 0-2 pitch to Bulley.

657
00:48:56,000 --> 00:48:58,000
Change up, bounce foul outside of third base.

658
00:48:58,000 --> 00:49:08,000
The count remains, no balls, two strikes.

659
00:49:08,000 --> 00:49:12,000
Jim Mayberry third base, nobody out.

660
00:49:12,000 --> 00:49:16,000
Mayler just broke the 0-4-18 this month.

661
00:49:16,000 --> 00:49:19,000
Takes a short lead there at third.

662
00:49:19,000 --> 00:49:21,000
And the 0-2 pitch to Bulley.

663
00:49:21,000 --> 00:49:25,000
Swung on foul, off the pitcher out of the center field, base hit.

664
00:49:25,000 --> 00:49:28,000
Alexander puts control of the ball, base hit Bulley.

665
00:49:28,000 --> 00:49:29,000
Mayler scores easily.

666
00:49:29,000 --> 00:49:33,000
The Mariners lead 1-0.

667
00:49:33,000 --> 00:49:35,000
That'll be a base hit for Gary Bulley.

668
00:49:35,000 --> 00:49:40,000
Get a smack back up the middle, bounce off the glove of Doyle Alexander.

669
00:49:40,000 --> 00:49:45,000
High off his glove out of the center field.

670
00:49:45,000 --> 00:49:49,000
So Bulley has just given it his third run of the year.

671
00:49:49,000 --> 00:49:57,000
And given the Mariners a 1-0 lead, and here's Julio Cruz, the second baseman.

672
00:49:57,000 --> 00:49:59,000
Cruz has been up once and bounced a second.

673
00:49:59,000 --> 00:50:03,000
He bumps that, it misses it.

674
00:50:03,000 --> 00:50:05,000
Hot butt by Cruz.

675
00:50:05,000 --> 00:50:07,000
Strike one, stuff the bat at the ball.

676
00:50:07,000 --> 00:50:09,000
He didn't go after that one with a whole lot of authority.

677
00:50:09,000 --> 00:50:13,000
He was trying to get it down.

678
00:50:13,000 --> 00:50:16,000
Mayberry holding Bulley at first.

679
00:50:16,000 --> 00:50:20,000
The pitch outside, it's 1-1.

680
00:50:20,000 --> 00:50:21,000
Nobody out here in the third inning.

681
00:50:21,000 --> 00:50:26,000
Mariners have taken a 1-0 lead on a leadoff triple by Jim Mayler.

682
00:50:26,000 --> 00:50:34,000
And an RBI single by Gary Bulley.

683
00:50:34,000 --> 00:50:36,000
Now Alexander sets.

684
00:50:36,000 --> 00:50:39,000
The 1-1 pitch, he squares, but soft third.

685
00:50:39,000 --> 00:50:45,000
Pretty good front, Throne's up, throws the first, and he throws it away off the Randolph's Club.

686
00:50:45,000 --> 00:50:51,000
Mayler will be held at third base as Cruz goes into second base.

687
00:50:51,000 --> 00:50:53,000
Throne took quite a bit of time.

688
00:50:53,000 --> 00:50:58,000
He looked down at second base, not really realizing that Cruz could fly.

689
00:50:58,000 --> 00:51:01,000
And by the time he came up throwing the first, he threw too late the ball.

690
00:51:01,000 --> 00:51:10,000
Here it is, Randolph's Club went there to the stands with Bulley going to third and Cruz going into second base.

691
00:51:10,000 --> 00:51:15,000
That'll be a sacrifice. It'll be an E2.

692
00:51:15,000 --> 00:51:21,000
That was really a hard play for Randolph at first base because Throne's throw was getting there, so was Cruz.

693
00:51:21,000 --> 00:51:25,000
The ball actually almost hit Cruz as he was crossing first base.

694
00:51:25,000 --> 00:51:28,000
It wasn't the opportunity for Randolph to make the play.

695
00:51:28,000 --> 00:51:32,000
So with runners at second and third, nobody off, and he can deal with the batter.

696
00:51:32,000 --> 00:51:36,000
He's been up once and bounced a second in field back.

697
00:51:36,000 --> 00:51:43,000
Chain jump, one that I missed by Kat Dior.

698
00:51:43,000 --> 00:51:46,000
Mayberry now moves in at first base.

699
00:51:46,000 --> 00:51:50,000
I moved back a couple of steps, so Johns will have a play of old.

700
00:51:50,000 --> 00:51:52,000
Randolph and Dent playing at their normal position.

701
00:51:52,000 --> 00:51:55,000
That's second base and Cruz soft.

702
00:51:55,000 --> 00:51:59,000
Here's a one-strike pitch in the dirt blocked by Throne.

703
00:51:59,000 --> 00:52:01,000
It's one and one.

704
00:52:01,000 --> 00:52:04,000
Mariner's lead one to nothing and threatening to put more runs on the board here.

705
00:52:04,000 --> 00:52:10,000
They have runners at second and third, nobody else in the bottom of the third.

706
00:52:10,000 --> 00:52:13,000
One thing, Bulley doesn't have great speed at third base.

707
00:52:13,000 --> 00:52:18,000
Mayberry can afford to play back just a little bit, small as even with a bag at third,

708
00:52:18,000 --> 00:52:22,000
but that guy at second base, Cruz, he can fly.

709
00:52:22,000 --> 00:52:26,000
Alexander has a sign. It's a one-one pitch.

710
00:52:26,000 --> 00:52:30,000
Chain jump, lifted at the shallow left. Dent going back, he will not get to it.

711
00:52:30,000 --> 00:52:32,000
Face it. One run score.

712
00:52:32,000 --> 00:52:36,000
Cruz around third. The throw there will hold him now at third base.

713
00:52:36,000 --> 00:52:41,000
And on the throw home, Kat Dior goes into second base.

714
00:52:41,000 --> 00:52:44,000
Throw is from a low turnaround third.

715
00:52:44,000 --> 00:52:48,000
Winfield really made a good throw to Throne.

716
00:52:48,000 --> 00:52:52,000
Cruz held up and went back to third base.

717
00:52:52,000 --> 00:52:55,000
But on the throw, Castillo's not going to second.

718
00:52:55,000 --> 00:52:58,000
So the Mariners now lead at two-nothing.

719
00:52:58,000 --> 00:53:01,000
It took a lot for Cartier to stop Cruz at third base.

720
00:53:01,000 --> 00:53:03,000
He really wanted to score on that play.

721
00:53:03,000 --> 00:53:06,000
I think he's pretty jacked up and of course that's the way he plays anyway,

722
00:53:06,000 --> 00:53:09,000
but Winfield would have nailed him for sure had he tried to score

723
00:53:09,000 --> 00:53:12,000
because Dave had to play right in front of him.

724
00:53:12,000 --> 00:53:15,000
It was just a little looper in the shallow left field.

725
00:53:15,000 --> 00:53:19,000
And I don't think Cruz would have been able to score at all from second base.

726
00:53:19,000 --> 00:53:23,000
So the Mariners once again runner to second and third with nobody out.

727
00:53:23,000 --> 00:53:25,000
In the batter is Bruce Bocchi, the left fielder.

728
00:53:25,000 --> 00:53:29,000
He's double in the right center field his first time up.

729
00:53:29,000 --> 00:53:31,000
Nobody getting loose in the Yankee bullpen.

730
00:53:31,000 --> 00:53:34,000
Mariners lead two-nothing, two runs four hits.

731
00:53:34,000 --> 00:53:38,000
Yankees no run three. We're at the bottom half of third inning.

732
00:53:38,000 --> 00:53:42,000
Here's a pitch to Bocchi. Swung on and fouled back.

733
00:53:42,000 --> 00:53:49,000
He's got a little bit of a ball and a strike.

734
00:53:49,000 --> 00:53:55,000
The Mariners using a leadoff triple by Jim Mailer, an RBI single by Terry Bulling.

735
00:53:55,000 --> 00:54:08,000
The sacrifice and a throwing error on Rick Sorrone and an RBI single by Manny Cacillo lead two-nothing.

736
00:54:08,000 --> 00:54:12,000
The Yankees seem to be reverting to their former ways playing here at the Kingdome.

737
00:54:12,000 --> 00:54:17,000
We mentioned the Mariners have beaten them 17 times out of 26.

738
00:54:17,000 --> 00:54:22,000
Pitch is misses inside.

739
00:54:22,000 --> 00:54:30,000
A ball and a strike on Bocchi.

740
00:54:30,000 --> 00:54:34,000
Cruz off third base. Cacillo off second. Nobody out.

741
00:54:34,000 --> 00:54:37,000
1-1 pitch. Change up. Pop foul off third base.

742
00:54:37,000 --> 00:54:44,000
Smalley has Rome. Over there in the stands and makes the guess. Cruz has to hold.

743
00:54:44,000 --> 00:54:52,000
Smalley throws the ball in, but Sorrone blocks it and ends up halfway to third base, chasing the ball down.

744
00:54:52,000 --> 00:54:55,000
So there's one away. Runners still at second and third.

745
00:54:55,000 --> 00:54:59,000
Rick played that one like a hockey goalie and just blocked it off of his chest protector.

746
00:54:59,000 --> 00:55:04,000
The ball rolled in front of him and nearly rolled to where Cruz could have sailed past him

747
00:55:04,000 --> 00:55:09,000
except for the fact that Doyle Alexander was doing his job and backing up the play at home plate.

748
00:55:09,000 --> 00:55:13,000
Here's Richie Zisk batting with runners at second and third. One down now.

749
00:55:13,000 --> 00:55:18,000
Zisk has been up once and flied to Mumfrey and center field.

750
00:55:18,000 --> 00:55:23,000
On deck is Todd Cruz, the shortstop. Mariners lead two-nothing.

751
00:55:23,000 --> 00:55:29,000
They're batting at the bottom of the third. Runners at second and third. One away.

752
00:55:29,000 --> 00:55:37,000
Smalley and Mayberry playing in close. Randolph and Dettback.

753
00:55:37,000 --> 00:55:41,000
Here's a set. Pitch to Zisk in the dirt. Low and away. Ball one.

754
00:55:41,000 --> 00:55:48,000
They might pitch around Zisk. Got an open base and Richie, of course, he'll hit the ball wherever it's pitched.

755
00:55:48,000 --> 00:55:52,000
Gene Michael was up and almost out of the Yankees, I got.

756
00:55:52,000 --> 00:55:59,000
And was instructing the infield that it looked like they won't give Zisk anything real good to hit here.

757
00:55:59,000 --> 00:56:15,000
Now the set by Alexander. The one-oh pitch. Low. Ball two. Two and oh.

758
00:56:15,000 --> 00:56:20,000
Cruz walks off third base. At field. Walks off second.

759
00:56:20,000 --> 00:56:29,000
Alexander checks it. Here's a two-oh pitch to Zisk. Change up line. Bowel off third base. Ball almost hit to Julio Cruz.

760
00:56:29,000 --> 00:56:35,000
He had to go down in a hurry to avoid being hit by that line shot off the bat of Richie Zisk.

761
00:56:35,000 --> 00:56:44,000
They count two balls and a strike on Zisk.

762
00:56:44,000 --> 00:56:58,000
Alexander gets new baseball and he sets. Two-one pitch. Breaking ball. Gets the inside corner. It's two and two.

763
00:56:58,000 --> 00:57:05,000
Now Smalley backs up a couple steps to third base. May vary. The first baseman stays in.

764
00:57:05,000 --> 00:57:09,000
Here's a set. The two-two pitch.

765
00:57:09,000 --> 00:57:16,000
Swung on. Missed. Struck him off with a ball going down and in. Big strike out for Doyle Alexander. And they're two-ups.

766
00:57:16,000 --> 00:57:23,000
I wonder how close Gene Michael came to putting Zisk on at two balls and no strikes because with Alexander behind him like that,

767
00:57:23,000 --> 00:57:28,000
he certainly didn't want to give him anything good to hit that would score two runs. And then he comes back and strikes him out.

768
00:57:28,000 --> 00:57:34,000
So I know right now they're not totally out of the woods, but at least there's a little bit of daylight.

769
00:57:34,000 --> 00:57:41,000
Second strike out for Alexander. Now here's Cruz who struck out in the second. Todd Cruz swings and misses the breaking ball.

770
00:57:41,000 --> 00:57:52,000
No balls and a strike. Two-on-two-on. Mariners leading two-nothing. Bottom of the third. Here's the Kingdome.

771
00:57:52,000 --> 00:58:00,000
Oh, last night they had 23,000 here to watch the San Antonio Spurs beat the Seattle Supersonics.

772
00:58:00,000 --> 00:58:17,000
The one-strike pitch. Swung on and fouled back. Two strikes on Cruz.

773
00:58:17,000 --> 00:58:24,000
Alexander with the new ball. Now he doesn't like it. Flips it in. And Ken Kaiser will give him another one.

774
00:58:24,000 --> 00:58:37,000
So they count. No balls. Two strikes on Todd Cruz. Runners at second and third. Two outs. Mariners ahead. Two-nothing in the third inning.

775
00:58:37,000 --> 00:58:45,000
Now the set. The 0-2 pitch. Swung on. Base hit right field. That was 4-2.

776
00:58:45,000 --> 00:58:54,000
Riffy over quickly. He'll get the ball in the second base. The Mariners now lead 4-0. Cruz dribbling into right center field.

777
00:58:54,000 --> 00:59:07,000
Floring Cruz. Julio Cruz and Manny Cantillo. And Todd Cruz now has 10 runs batted in.

778
00:59:07,000 --> 00:59:18,000
Now both those runs are unearned. And it's an 0-2 pitch that's lined in the right center for the base hit. Ten seconds for station identification on the New York Yankees Baseball Network.

779
00:59:18,000 --> 00:59:29,000
This is Radio 59, WROW Albany, bringing you Yankee baseball.

780
00:59:29,000 --> 00:59:38,000
Now Cowan's the batter. He takes low and away. One ball and no strikes. Fifth base hit for the Mariners. Well, Alexander scored four runs.

781
00:59:38,000 --> 00:59:45,000
Yankees have made an error. Soft top to first base. Back easy. Todd Cruz.

782
00:59:45,000 --> 01:00:01,000
They get for Todd Cruz. Here's the one on notes. Now for the first base. Moves out the dive back in. He's taking. Good move by Alexander.

783
01:00:01,000 --> 01:00:26,000
Cowan's has been up once and slides to left field. Alexander sets. And the pitch. It's a call strike, one and one.

784
01:00:26,000 --> 01:00:52,000
Cowan's batting at 184. He's a right-handed hitter. Here's a one-one pitch. Curve called. Nope, it's a ball outside. It's two and one. Two balls and a strike on Al Cowan.

785
01:00:52,000 --> 01:01:14,000
Here's a two-one pitch. Low ball three. Three and one. Todd Cruz at first base, two outs, and a three-one count on Al Cowan with Joseph at the center fielder on deck.

786
01:01:14,000 --> 01:01:28,000
Here's the three. Nope, he'll go to first base. A little quick move to first by Alexander. Cruz does not have a big lead there.

787
01:01:28,000 --> 01:01:44,000
Now the three-one delivery. Swung on. Face hit right center. Might go in the wall and score a run. Cruz around second. Going for third. He'll score. Cowan's going for three and he'll make it there with a dribble.

788
01:01:44,000 --> 01:01:56,000
And the Yankee bullfinch gets up. Rudy May starts to throw. Mariner's not a lead by nothing.

789
01:01:56,000 --> 01:02:09,000
Now the last two hits, the single by Cruz, Todd Cruz, and the triple by Cowan's, they're really shots. That one made it to the gap in right center and by the time that Jerry Mumford could play it,

790
01:02:09,000 --> 01:02:17,000
Cowan's turned the afterburners on and made it to third with a stand-up triple. Stan Williams is coming out now and wants to talk to right-hander Doyle Alexander.

791
01:02:17,000 --> 01:02:25,000
And as you just mentioned, Bill, Rudy May starts to loosen up in the Yankees bullfinch.

792
01:02:25,000 --> 01:02:45,000
Well, the Yankees will return home on the 21st of May against the Minnesota Twins and on Saturday and Sunday, May 22 and 23, it's McDonald's Yankees Cap weekend. All fans coming to the stadium on McDonald's Yankees Cap weekend will receive a free official to your Yankees baseball cap, courtesy of the good friends at McDonald's.

793
01:02:45,000 --> 01:02:52,000
Excellent tickets for these games and all Yankees home games are on sale now. This is a night battered to come to the plate in the inning.

794
01:02:52,000 --> 01:03:01,000
Joe Simpson battles the first in the second inning. Bearers lead 5-0 and the pitch to Simpson is a fastball over the outside corner strike one.

795
01:03:01,000 --> 01:03:08,000
Now Cowan's at third base, two down. All five runs coming here in the bottom of the third inning.

796
01:03:08,000 --> 01:03:19,000
Simpson top one to third and right there is Smalley, a little humpback liner Smalley, he makes the catch out for down the side. But Seattle's four and five times.

797
01:03:19,000 --> 01:03:29,000
On five bases, one Yankee here and they lead one man on base. At the end of three, the Mariner's five Yankees nothing.

798
01:03:29,000 --> 01:03:50,000
You've got the power underneath your feet when golf is with you. You've got good feeling driving many streets when golf is with you.

799
01:03:50,000 --> 01:04:01,000
When you're trying to get up a hill and you've got a 10-ton truck staring you in the face, that's when you really need golf super un-leaded, the Gas with Guts.

800
01:04:01,000 --> 01:04:12,000
It's one of the highest octane un-leaded gasolines to help stop knocks and pings. It can rob your car of the power it needs to pass, climb and accelerate.

801
01:04:12,000 --> 01:04:19,000
Make sure you fill up on golf super un-leaded, the Gas with Guts.

802
01:04:19,000 --> 01:04:30,000
When you're driving on the road you travel, it's yours to do. Make sure that golf is with you.

803
01:04:30,000 --> 01:04:42,000
You know spraying is one of the most efficient economical ways to paint. And now for those small paint jobs around the home, Red Devil offers a 100% polyurethane spray enamel that gives you a long lasting diamond heart finish.

804
01:04:42,000 --> 01:04:58,000
Features a patented spray head that's the closest thing to a professional spray gun. You can get Red Devil 100% polyurethane spray finishes in a variety of decorator enamel as well as stove and barbecue black, rust proof primer and super fast drying lockers and other special spray finishes.

805
01:04:58,000 --> 01:05:07,000
Available at all channel stores and your local Red Devil dealer.

806
01:05:07,000 --> 01:05:19,000
Well we go to the fourth inning here at the Kingdome in Seattle with the Mariners leading 5-0 and the Yankees middle third of the batting order Mayberry, Winfield and Gabblin with the play by play here is John Gordon.

807
01:05:19,000 --> 01:05:29,000
Alright thank you Frank Messer and good evening to you as we bring you the top of the fourth there. The Yankees certainly have their work cut out for them now trailing by a 5-0 score.

808
01:05:29,000 --> 01:05:35,000
And don't you think that Gaylord Ferry has started counting the outs right now with that five spot right Frank?

809
01:05:35,000 --> 01:05:44,000
I'm sure he has no matter how many games you win when you are in a situation as Gaylord is tonight it's got to be just an exciting evening for them.

810
01:05:44,000 --> 01:05:51,000
Well the fans have been very enthusiastic for them and rightly so they'd like to see them get that 300 victory here tonight.

811
01:05:51,000 --> 01:05:55,000
Outside of ball to Mayberry it is one ball and one strike.

812
01:05:55,000 --> 01:06:07,000
John who is making his first appearance in a New York Yankees uniform just recently acquired in a trade between the Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays Mayberry coming to the Yankees and Dave Reverend and Jeff Reynolds.

813
01:06:07,000 --> 01:06:16,000
Reverend with the Yankees and Reynolds who was down on the farm traded to the Toronto club inside of ball and it's two balls and one strike.

814
01:06:16,000 --> 01:06:26,000
Rudy May will start warming up again for the Yankees he had stopped he went into the dugout and he goes back to the bullpen area he may be coming on in the fourth inning.

815
01:06:26,000 --> 01:06:36,000
Mayberry to be followed by Dave Winfield and then Oscar Gamble and the Yankees trailing by five runs after the Mariners scored five on the bottom of the third off of Alexander.

816
01:06:36,000 --> 01:06:38,000
By the way only two of the runs are earned off the doil.

817
01:06:38,000 --> 01:06:45,000
There's a strike the fastball is in and it's now a ball and two balls and two strikes to count to John Mayberry.

818
01:06:45,000 --> 01:06:50,000
Gene Michael very upset at playoff by Ken Kaiser on that call.

819
01:06:50,000 --> 01:07:02,000
Now Gene a very active manager in the dugout and he stands most of the time and you can just barely see him from our vantage point here at the Kingdome.

820
01:07:02,000 --> 01:07:17,000
What can a miss Mayberry goes down to the low breaking pitch and that's going to be strikeout number two of the game for Gaylord Ferry at number one for the Yankees here in the top half of the fourth inning and stepping in will be Dave Winfield.

821
01:07:17,000 --> 01:07:22,000
Mayberry told me that see this is Thursday he hasn't even had batting practice since Monday.

822
01:07:22,000 --> 01:07:30,000
They weren't using him at Toronto and he didn't have a chance to do any hitting until he joined the Yankees today.

823
01:07:30,000 --> 01:07:40,000
He's been used at first base and as a designated hitter for the Blue Jays but his activity with the Toronto Club was not on a regular basis.

824
01:07:40,000 --> 01:07:48,000
Well they upshot them playing first base mostly and I think Nornaden has been the designated hitter a lot for the Toronto Club.

825
01:07:48,000 --> 01:07:54,000
Here's Winfield struck out first time up, bouncer off the glove of Ferry, Todd Cruz at second has it on the first.

826
01:07:54,000 --> 01:08:05,000
A three scoring play will retire Dave Winfield, sharply hit but Gaylord Ferry knocks it down and Todd Cruz at short had time to make the play on the first.

827
01:08:05,000 --> 01:08:13,000
Almost Julio Cruz cutting in front of Todd Cruz to take the play away from him but he got out of the way in time and Todd Cruz throws him out.

828
01:08:13,000 --> 01:08:20,000
Winfield lost the step coming out of the batter's box for some reason and they still got him.

829
01:08:20,000 --> 01:08:24,000
Here's Oscar Gamble now, the designated hitter who flied out his first time up.

830
01:08:24,000 --> 01:08:32,000
You know we had mentioned a little bit earlier about the fact that tonight is the night for Gaylord Ferry if it is to be for him to win his 300th game.

831
01:08:32,000 --> 01:08:45,000
He has 299 career victories. Here's a strike of Ricky Critchicross but he now has 3,366 career strikeouts and it puts him only 142-1.

832
01:08:45,000 --> 01:08:53,000
From becoming the all-time strikeout leader for Major League Baseball, the record held by Walter Johnson of 3,508.

833
01:08:53,000 --> 01:08:58,000
Here's a little loop into the shallow left center on his bocce, he's there, got it for the out and the inning is over.

834
01:08:58,000 --> 01:09:06,000
The Yankees are down, 1, 2, 3 and the floor is setting, Gaylord's first. Perfect inning, no runs, no hits, nobody laughed through three and a half.

835
01:09:06,000 --> 01:09:10,000
The Mariners are leading the Yankees here, 5 to nothing.

836
01:09:10,000 --> 01:09:17,000
Investing can be risky and taxes really eat into your income but not with the Albany Savings Bank All Saver Certificate.

837
01:09:17,000 --> 01:09:23,000
It's a guaranteed investment. With as little as $500 you not only earn high interest, you keep more of your income.

838
01:09:23,000 --> 01:09:28,000
Since your first $2,000 of interest is tax free if you file a joint return.

839
01:09:28,000 --> 01:09:33,000
This is E.G. Marshall. Visit any Albany Savings Bank office for full details on the All Saver Certificate.

840
01:09:33,000 --> 01:09:40,000
Tax free income from Albany Savings Bank, the Savings People Bank, committed to you, member FDIC.

841
01:09:40,000 --> 01:09:43,000
A reminder, there is a substantial penalty for early withdrawal.

842
01:09:43,000 --> 01:09:51,000
It's time to tell you the answer to the Board and Sports Quiz number one and announce our winner.

843
01:09:51,000 --> 01:09:53,000
But first, let's review the quiz.

844
01:09:53,000 --> 01:09:57,000
It's the bottom of the ninth, home team is trailing by a run, they have runners at the corners, first and third.

845
01:09:57,000 --> 01:10:02,000
The opposing pitcher gets the side, starts his wind up, he notices the runner on first has a long lead.

846
01:10:02,000 --> 01:10:06,000
He whips the throw to first, the umpire calls the runner out, ending the game as a loss for the home team.

847
01:10:06,000 --> 01:10:09,000
But wait, the home plate umpire overrules the call.

848
01:10:09,000 --> 01:10:13,000
Waves the runner on third into home, tying up the game, the manager and umpire are joined.

849
01:10:13,000 --> 01:10:19,000
The question, why did the home plate umpire overrule the play, thus allowing the runner on third to score?

850
01:10:19,000 --> 01:10:23,000
The answer, when the pitcher threw to first base, he had already wound up his pitch.

851
01:10:23,000 --> 01:10:29,000
Under the rules, the pitcher committed a bulk, therefore the pick off at first was negated, and all runners advanced one base.

852
01:10:29,000 --> 01:10:33,000
That sent the scoring run home from third. Congratulations to Frank Rader of Schenectady.

853
01:10:33,000 --> 01:10:36,000
He'll receive a pair of tickets to see the Yankees in Yankee Stadium.

854
01:10:36,000 --> 01:10:40,000
We'll have a new quiz on May 7th. Remember with boardings, you're always a winner.

855
01:10:45,000 --> 01:10:49,000
Now we talk about Game of Life Marys, 299 wins.

856
01:10:49,000 --> 01:10:53,000
He has another record, I'm sure a lot of pitchers would like to have, it's going to sound strange.

857
01:10:53,000 --> 01:10:58,000
He's lost 241, I know a lot of pitchers like to have been around the Major Leagues long enough

858
01:10:58,000 --> 01:11:01,000
to have that many decisions even though they might be on the lost side.

859
01:11:01,000 --> 01:11:04,000
Rudy May is the new Yankee pitcher as we surmise.

860
01:11:04,000 --> 01:11:09,000
Joel Alexander, giving out five runs on five hits on the third, is through for the night,

861
01:11:09,000 --> 01:11:12,000
and Rudy May will be pitching to Jim Maylor.

862
01:11:12,000 --> 01:11:18,000
Alright, it was Maylor who started that big inning for the Mariners with a booming triple to deep,

863
01:11:18,000 --> 01:11:22,000
lots centers, first time up, snapping it over 18 slump.

864
01:11:22,000 --> 01:11:29,000
For Rudy May, his sixth appearance, and no record, 12 and two-thirds innings, 11 hits,

865
01:11:29,000 --> 01:11:34,000
and he has made one start, no saves.

866
01:11:34,000 --> 01:11:38,000
Foul back in our play, a ball and a strike to count to Maylor.

867
01:11:39,000 --> 01:11:46,000
Right-handed hitter, big, tall, strong youngster who is trying to make it here in the Major Leagues

868
01:11:46,000 --> 01:11:48,000
with the Seattle ball club.

869
01:11:48,000 --> 01:11:52,000
Here's the pitchers to strike in the outside corner and it's one and two.

870
01:11:53,000 --> 01:11:58,000
Sports ticker updates us on the Baltimore-California game, two to two now at the end of three and a half,

871
01:11:58,000 --> 01:12:00,000
and a footnote on Palmer will give you after this pitch.

872
01:12:00,000 --> 01:12:05,000
Alright, here it is, and it is just why the fastball misses two-two the cup.

873
01:12:05,000 --> 01:12:10,000
Jim Palmer left the game in the first inning with a sore neck, and now they have corrected the relief,

874
01:12:10,000 --> 01:12:16,000
but it was Ross Grimsley who replaced Palmer and not Tippie Martinez as the ticker had reported earlier.

875
01:12:16,000 --> 01:12:20,000
Two-two delivery, swing and a miss, strike three, Maylor is down.

876
01:12:20,000 --> 01:12:27,000
Rudy May opens his relief stint here with a strikeout, and the batter is going to be Terry Bulling, the catcher.

877
01:12:27,000 --> 01:12:33,000
Alexander, by the way, three innings pitching, six hits, five runs, but only two earned,

878
01:12:33,000 --> 01:12:36,000
and he didn't walk anybody and he struck out two.

879
01:12:36,000 --> 01:12:41,000
You know, Rudy May, even though he had a rough hitting his last inning he pitched in his last game,

880
01:12:41,000 --> 01:12:47,000
that was against Oakland in the 13th inning ball game, he had retired at one stretch,

881
01:12:47,000 --> 01:12:52,000
19 hitters in a row over three appearances.

882
01:12:52,000 --> 01:12:54,000
Down low and inside, and it's one ball to no strikes.

883
01:12:54,000 --> 01:13:01,000
I was chatting with Stan Williams today and asking Stan about what he felt the makings of the pitching staff would be

884
01:13:01,000 --> 01:13:03,000
in the next couple of weeks.

885
01:13:03,000 --> 01:13:08,000
He said, I wouldn't see any real different changes at all outside and low of all of two and ohs,

886
01:13:08,000 --> 01:13:13,000
except for the fact that we probably should have six starters with Rudy May as our sixth starter,

887
01:13:13,000 --> 01:13:19,000
or he could fill in as one of the five starters, but there just isn't any room for him to be a starting pitcher,

888
01:13:19,000 --> 01:13:21,000
so he'll be used in long relief, sometimes short relief.

889
01:13:21,000 --> 01:13:25,000
One hopper to Bucky Dennis Short, and on to first, Bulling retired.

890
01:13:25,000 --> 01:13:33,000
Two down in the inning, and the batter is going to be the leadoff hitter in the order for the Seattle Mariners,

891
01:13:33,000 --> 01:13:40,000
Julio Cruz. It really started against Detroit. He retired the last 10.

892
01:13:40,000 --> 01:13:46,000
Then he pitched in relief against Oakland and retired the side in order for 13 in a row,

893
01:13:46,000 --> 01:13:49,000
and then he retired the side in order his first two innings right before last,

894
01:13:49,000 --> 01:13:52,000
giving him 19 straight over the stretch of the three games.

895
01:13:52,000 --> 01:13:56,000
Then his third inning against Oakland, they got to him for three runs.

896
01:13:56,000 --> 01:13:59,000
Here's a swing and a foul back and out of play.

897
01:13:59,000 --> 01:14:04,000
He tackles it one strike to count to Julio Cruz, who has a sacrifice and a ground out,

898
01:14:04,000 --> 01:14:06,000
and is 0-1 in the game.

899
01:14:06,000 --> 01:14:10,000
He reached up the sacrifice, another foul back and out of play,

900
01:14:10,000 --> 01:14:17,000
when Rick Cerrone's throwing here allowed him to first and to second, and then he came on to score.

901
01:14:17,000 --> 01:14:18,000
Rick just took too long.

902
01:14:18,000 --> 01:14:22,000
A look at second base, wondering whether he might get Bulling, who was running between first and second.

903
01:14:22,000 --> 01:14:26,000
By the time he threw the first, he was just too late. Hit Cruz with a throw.

904
01:14:26,000 --> 01:14:31,000
Here's the two-strike delivery. Curve is inside, and it's one and two.

905
01:14:31,000 --> 01:14:37,000
The Mariners have won seven and lost three here at home at the Kingdome.

906
01:14:37,000 --> 01:14:40,000
The Yankees would sure go for a winning percentage in Yankee Stadium,

907
01:14:40,000 --> 01:14:45,000
like the Mariners have been able to total in their first ten home games.

908
01:14:45,000 --> 01:14:52,000
Here's the one-two delivery, bounding ball foul and out of play, and it's still a ball with two strikes.

909
01:14:52,000 --> 01:14:57,000
Yankees just finished that 12-game home stand, and they won only four while losing eight.

910
01:14:57,000 --> 01:15:04,000
And their overall record at home is four wins and ten losses.

911
01:15:04,000 --> 01:15:09,000
One ball, two strikes. Yankees are five and three in the road, swinging a foul on the curve,

912
01:15:09,000 --> 01:15:16,000
and it's back behind, oh, played again, and it is still a ball with two strikes.

913
01:15:16,000 --> 01:15:17,000
Mariners lead it five to nothing.

914
01:15:17,000 --> 01:15:24,000
They got five runs off of Doyle Alexander in the bottom of the third inning, and they did it with five hits.

915
01:15:24,000 --> 01:15:29,000
Here's the line of the one-two delivery, bounding ball on the right side, Willie Randolph charging,

916
01:15:29,000 --> 01:15:34,000
and on to first to retire Julio Cruz and the Mariners in the fourth inning.

917
01:15:34,000 --> 01:15:38,000
That's a one-two-three inning for Rudy May. No runs, no hits, no errors, nobody laughed.

918
01:15:38,000 --> 01:15:43,000
And now through four-full, the Mariners lead the Yankees five to nothing.

919
01:15:43,000 --> 01:15:49,000
I've had enough. Come on, Bob. There's nothing like a good run first thing in the morning.

920
01:15:49,000 --> 01:15:52,000
I've already gone two miles. The best part's just half a mile away.

921
01:15:52,000 --> 01:15:56,000
My feet. Fresh scrambled eggs. Breakfast. Sizzling sausage.

922
01:15:56,000 --> 01:15:58,000
And golden hash browns. Hash browns.

923
01:15:58,000 --> 01:16:01,000
Over an egg McMuffin. McDonald's.

924
01:16:01,000 --> 01:16:08,000
Start your morning run with the dawn of the sun.

925
01:16:08,000 --> 01:16:15,000
Smell the cooking in the air. You know McDonald's is waiting there.

926
01:16:15,000 --> 01:16:21,000
Just a half mile to go. Now it's worth it, you know.

927
01:16:21,000 --> 01:16:26,000
You're gonna pick up the pace to get that great breakfast taste.

928
01:16:26,000 --> 01:16:29,000
You deserve a break today.

929
01:16:29,000 --> 01:16:33,000
That was great. Let's do this every day. Run every day.

930
01:16:33,000 --> 01:16:38,000
You go get up this morning and get away.

931
01:16:38,000 --> 01:16:42,000
You said Ronald, bring the car and meet you here. To McDonald's.

932
01:16:49,000 --> 01:16:52,000
At Anheuser-Busch, our brewmasters face this challenge.

933
01:16:52,000 --> 01:16:55,000
Brew a light beer with a clean, distinctive taste.

934
01:16:55,000 --> 01:16:58,000
One made from the best ingredients and beechwood aging.

935
01:16:58,000 --> 01:17:01,000
Budweiser Life lives up to the challenge.

936
01:17:01,000 --> 01:17:05,000
Bring out your best Budweiser Life.

937
01:17:05,000 --> 01:17:08,000
Bring out your best Budweiser Life.

938
01:17:08,000 --> 01:17:10,000
Bring out your best Budweiser Life.

939
01:17:10,000 --> 01:17:13,000
The best never comes easy. That's why there's nothing else like it.

940
01:17:13,000 --> 01:17:15,000
Budweiser Life.

941
01:17:15,000 --> 01:17:18,000
Anheuser-Busch, St. Louis, Missouri.

942
01:17:21,000 --> 01:17:27,000
Gaylord Perry, 43 years old. You know he only won 74 games in the Major Leagues before his 30th birthday.

943
01:17:27,000 --> 01:17:31,000
He's won 225 since turning 30 years old.

944
01:17:31,000 --> 01:17:35,000
Only two others have won what, more than 200 past 30?

945
01:17:35,000 --> 01:17:39,000
Sy Young and Warren Spahn.

946
01:17:39,000 --> 01:17:46,000
Well, he knows right now that he's on the verge of a history-making night here at the Kingdome in Seattle with a big five-to-nothing lead.

947
01:17:46,000 --> 01:17:50,000
The Yankees will try to see what they can do about getting back into this one.

948
01:17:50,000 --> 01:17:52,000
And the leadoff batter is going to be Roy Smalley.

949
01:17:52,000 --> 01:17:56,000
Swings and misses on the first Gaylord Perry offering and it's no balls in one strike.

950
01:17:56,000 --> 01:17:59,000
Roy has a hit. He's singled in to right his first time up.

951
01:17:59,000 --> 01:18:01,000
The Yankees have three hits from the game.

952
01:18:01,000 --> 01:18:05,000
And they threatened in the third inning but failed to score off the fairing.

953
01:18:05,000 --> 01:18:07,000
Inside a ball and one ball and one strike.

954
01:18:07,000 --> 01:18:13,000
Sy Young won 318 games after his 30th birthday and he retired at the age of 44.

955
01:18:13,000 --> 01:18:19,000
Warren Spahn, who also retired at 44, won 277 games after his 30th birthday.

956
01:18:21,000 --> 01:18:24,000
One ball, one strike to count. Into the line and here's the pitch.

957
01:18:24,000 --> 01:18:28,000
Foul to the right, pass Mike Ferraro at the first base coaching box.

958
01:18:28,000 --> 01:18:32,000
And it'll be a 1-2 count still to Roy Smalley.

959
01:18:32,000 --> 01:18:36,000
Mariners 5, Yankees nothing. We're in the top half of the fifth inning.

960
01:18:36,000 --> 01:18:41,000
Seattle scored five runs off of Doyle Alexander in the bottom of the third.

961
01:18:43,000 --> 01:18:49,000
That five hits in the inning. They were helped along by an air charge to catcher Rick Sarone.

962
01:18:49,000 --> 01:18:53,000
Mailer had a triple in the inning. Cowans had a triple in the inning.

963
01:18:53,000 --> 01:18:57,000
And the pitch. Swing and a high fly in the shallow center.

964
01:18:57,000 --> 01:18:59,000
Here comes center fielder Simpson on. He's there.

965
01:18:59,000 --> 01:19:01,000
Mexiquette to the out and there's one down.

966
01:19:01,000 --> 01:19:04,000
Smalley has retired and here's Rick Sarone.

967
01:19:04,000 --> 01:19:09,000
Must be something about the water. Maybe it's the peanuts down there in eastern North Carolina.

968
01:19:09,000 --> 01:19:12,000
Gaylord and Jim Berry going on for so long.

969
01:19:12,000 --> 01:19:18,000
Gaylord's home, Williamston, North Carolina, is not very far from Hurtwick where Catfish Hunter is.

970
01:19:18,000 --> 01:19:21,000
Catfish Hunter, as his farm, still lives.

971
01:19:25,000 --> 01:19:29,000
Long way from Asheville though. About 450 miles.

972
01:19:29,000 --> 01:19:31,000
Whole length of the state.

973
01:19:31,000 --> 01:19:33,000
I was going to say, it's all the way on the other side, isn't it?

974
01:19:33,000 --> 01:19:34,000
Yep.

975
01:19:34,000 --> 01:19:38,000
Right here is Sarone. He bounced out to the pitcher first time up and he picks a pitch high.

976
01:19:38,000 --> 01:19:40,000
One ball and no strikes.

977
01:19:40,000 --> 01:19:45,000
Gaylord's wife is here tonight along with their 19-year-old daughter Amy.

978
01:19:45,000 --> 01:19:51,000
Two other daughters are at home in Williamston along with Gaylord's parents who are home in Williamston.

979
01:19:51,000 --> 01:19:54,000
The game is on national cable tonight on the USA Network.

980
01:19:54,000 --> 01:19:58,000
I don't know if the Ferries have an opportunity of watching the game.

981
01:19:58,000 --> 01:20:02,000
Here's a foul ball behind O'Blai, picked up quickly by catcher Bulling.

982
01:20:02,000 --> 01:20:07,000
He thought he had it in fair territory, but it is a one ball, one strike down to Rick Sarone.

983
01:20:07,000 --> 01:20:13,000
I believe it's prom weekend for two of Gaylord's daughters and his son is playing ball.

984
01:20:13,000 --> 01:20:18,000
Over the weekend it couldn't be here.

985
01:20:18,000 --> 01:20:26,000
Gaylord got a call from the president yesterday. They had a press conference here in Seattle.

986
01:20:26,000 --> 01:20:28,000
One ancient mariner calling another, huh?

987
01:20:28,000 --> 01:20:37,000
Yeah, that's what the conversation was about mostly.

988
01:20:37,000 --> 01:20:41,000
All right, here's Barry now in a 1-1 offering to Rick Sarone and the pitch.

989
01:20:41,000 --> 01:20:44,000
Strike on the outside corner and one and two.

990
01:20:44,000 --> 01:20:50,000
I believe Gaylord Perry worked in one of Mr. Reagan's campaigns for governor of California.

991
01:20:50,000 --> 01:20:58,000
That was when Gaylord was out pitching for the San Francisco Giants.

992
01:20:58,000 --> 01:21:01,000
Perry had a pretty good line for him yesterday when the phone rang.

993
01:21:01,000 --> 01:21:03,000
Here's the line now and they one-two delivery.

994
01:21:03,000 --> 01:21:06,000
Swing, a miss, strike three, second out.

995
01:21:06,000 --> 01:21:11,000
Third strike out for Gaylord Perry and a batter now is going to be Bucky Dent.

996
01:21:11,000 --> 01:21:15,000
Phone rang, Gaylord answered it, said hello, and the president said, who is this?

997
01:21:15,000 --> 01:21:18,000
And he said, this is Gaylord.

998
01:21:18,000 --> 01:21:20,000
The president said, hey Gaylord, how you doing?

999
01:21:20,000 --> 01:21:22,000
He didn't even have to tell him his last name.

1000
01:21:22,000 --> 01:21:24,000
Of course, I think the president knew who he was calling anyway.

1001
01:21:24,000 --> 01:21:28,000
Pretty much set up.

1002
01:21:28,000 --> 01:21:32,000
And understand the president spent a little extra money on the phone call.

1003
01:21:32,000 --> 01:21:34,000
He didn't limit it to the normal three minutes.

1004
01:21:34,000 --> 01:21:36,000
He got a long distance.

1005
01:21:36,000 --> 01:21:40,000
They spoke three minutes and 35 seconds.

1006
01:21:40,000 --> 01:21:45,000
After his over with, Gaylord had some jelly beans and he offered one to his brother who was in attendance.

1007
01:21:45,000 --> 01:21:47,000
Here's the strike to Bucky Dent.

1008
01:21:47,000 --> 01:21:50,000
No balls and one strike.

1009
01:21:50,000 --> 01:21:52,000
His brother's here mad, I believe I heard you mention that earlier.

1010
01:21:52,000 --> 01:21:55,000
I talked to Jim for a few minutes before the ballgame.

1011
01:21:55,000 --> 01:21:56,000
He looks good.

1012
01:21:56,000 --> 01:21:58,000
He's a pitching instructor for the Oakland A's.

1013
01:21:58,000 --> 01:22:03,000
I was going to say when you say he looks good, he looks like he could go out there and challenge his brother right now.

1014
01:22:03,000 --> 01:22:08,000
Outside and low and it's two balls and one ball and one strike now to count to Bucky Dent.

1015
01:22:08,000 --> 01:22:10,000
Jim looks like he's in better shape than came on.

1016
01:22:10,000 --> 01:22:12,000
That's what you're saying and you're right.

1017
01:22:12,000 --> 01:22:19,000
One thing about Gaylord, he looks his age.

1018
01:22:19,000 --> 01:22:27,000
One and one to count to Bucky Dent and here's the offering parry to Dent and a high fly to Lefeuille.

1019
01:22:27,000 --> 01:22:29,000
This will be an easy play for Bucky.

1020
01:22:29,000 --> 01:22:30,000
He's calling everybody off.

1021
01:22:30,000 --> 01:22:31,000
He's got it.

1022
01:22:31,000 --> 01:22:37,000
Since that double play ball in the third inning, the Yankees have now seen seven batters go down for eight outs.

1023
01:22:37,000 --> 01:22:39,000
No runs, no hits, no errors, nobody laughed.

1024
01:22:39,000 --> 01:22:46,000
Now through four and a half, Gaylord Parry in custom win number 300 and Seattle leading the Yankees five to nothing.

1025
01:22:46,000 --> 01:22:52,000
The revolutionary Monroe Radiomatic Shock is the best riding shock absorber America has ever made.

1026
01:22:52,000 --> 01:22:57,000
Radiomatic is the first shock to combine five proven ride control features in a single shock.

1027
01:22:57,000 --> 01:23:03,000
Right now, buy three, get one free. No matter what you're driving, you'll ride better on Radiomatic Shocks.

1028
01:23:03,000 --> 01:23:08,000
The available now at Andy Woods Auto Parts, Route 9, Latham, Sand Creek Road, Colony and Catlin Streets Connected.

1029
01:23:08,000 --> 01:23:14,000
Offer expires May 31st, 1982. Remember, America rides Monroe.

1030
01:23:14,000 --> 01:23:19,000
Our guest today is J.F. Woolard, the man who proved you can advertise anything on radio.

1031
01:23:19,000 --> 01:23:21,000
That's right. What a product, Mr. Woolard.

1032
01:23:21,000 --> 01:23:22,000
A bird wash.

1033
01:23:22,000 --> 01:23:23,000
You mean a bird bath.

1034
01:23:23,000 --> 01:23:24,000
No, I mean a bird wash.

1035
01:23:24,000 --> 01:23:27,000
You put your bird on top of your automobile and drive them through.

1036
01:23:27,000 --> 01:23:30,000
You get soap scrub, rinse, hot waxed and hand dried, 50 cent.

1037
01:23:30,000 --> 01:23:32,000
Question, why do I use radio?

1038
01:23:32,000 --> 01:23:33,000
Because it's economical.

1039
01:23:33,000 --> 01:23:34,000
I went through one.

1040
01:23:34,000 --> 01:23:37,000
Which means we can broadcast a lot more messages to a lot more folks more often.

1041
01:23:37,000 --> 01:23:39,000
Do the birds actually do that?

1042
01:23:39,000 --> 01:23:40,000
No, the announcers do that.

1043
01:23:40,000 --> 01:23:42,000
What do you mean? Do they sit on top of the car?

1044
01:23:42,000 --> 01:23:46,000
Well, sometimes they fall off and gum up the whole works, but that's why we use radio.

1045
01:23:46,000 --> 01:23:47,000
Excuse me.

1046
01:23:47,000 --> 01:23:49,000
We rush right on the air and say, we'll be closed today, a bird fell off.

1047
01:23:49,000 --> 01:23:50,000
I call that amazing.

1048
01:23:50,000 --> 01:23:55,000
We call it radio flexibility, means we don't have the expansion delay of change in a whole newspaper ad.

1049
01:23:55,000 --> 01:23:56,000
Is your bird wash a success?

1050
01:23:56,000 --> 01:23:58,000
You bet your shapsucker.

1051
01:23:58,000 --> 01:24:01,000
And it proves radio is the way to reach people, because it led to another good idea.

1052
01:24:01,000 --> 01:24:02,000
A car wash.

1053
01:24:02,000 --> 01:24:03,000
No bird tubs.

1054
01:24:03,000 --> 01:24:05,000
Heat them, fill them with water, blow air into them and let them choke.

1055
01:24:05,000 --> 01:24:06,000
That's a hot tub.

1056
01:24:06,000 --> 01:24:08,000
Ooh, there's another good idea.

1057
01:24:08,000 --> 01:24:09,000
Radio.

1058
01:24:09,000 --> 01:24:10,000
Red and hot because it works.

1059
01:24:10,000 --> 01:24:14,000
For more facts on radio, call the station of the Radio Advertising Bureau.

1060
01:24:14,000 --> 01:24:16,000
They brought you this message.

1061
01:24:16,000 --> 01:24:19,000
Cheryl, the excitement of Yankee baseball.

1062
01:24:19,000 --> 01:24:21,000
Stay with us. Radio 59.

1063
01:24:21,000 --> 01:24:23,000
Now we're pleased without Yankee Yankee.

1064
01:24:23,000 --> 01:24:24,000
W-O-W-R-B.

1065
01:24:24,000 --> 01:24:27,000
The Martin Brothers Taylor and American Pride sweepstakes.

1066
01:24:27,000 --> 01:24:30,000
Ciola Cooper, George DiMontalvo and Kevin Dunbar.

1067
01:24:30,000 --> 01:24:33,000
All of New York City, our congratulations.

1068
01:24:33,000 --> 01:24:37,000
By Manny Castillo as the leadoff hitter, and he lost the deep fly and a lap.

1069
01:24:37,000 --> 01:24:41,000
Winfield back at the warning track and leaping up to make the catch.

1070
01:24:41,000 --> 01:24:43,000
Castillo's out of the pitch and went away.

1071
01:24:43,000 --> 01:24:45,000
That's pretty close there, Frank Messer.

1072
01:24:45,000 --> 01:24:50,000
That's true, Castillo hits that ball 360 feet to the wall and he is out.

1073
01:24:50,000 --> 01:24:53,000
Last time up he's had a dying quail over Bucky.

1074
01:24:53,000 --> 01:24:54,000
That's that.

1075
01:24:54,000 --> 01:24:56,000
Got a base hit and run batted in.

1076
01:24:58,000 --> 01:25:00,000
All right, here's Bockeye now who is one for two.

1077
01:25:00,000 --> 01:25:05,000
He doubled in the first inning and that foul pop to Roy Swalney his last time up.

1078
01:25:05,000 --> 01:25:08,000
Now it doesn't take a whole lot to get one out of this ballpark.

1079
01:25:08,000 --> 01:25:11,000
Here's a strike in. No balls and one strike.

1080
01:25:11,000 --> 01:25:15,000
316 down both the left and right field lines.

1081
01:25:15,000 --> 01:25:18,000
Of course there's that extended wall now in right field.

1082
01:25:18,000 --> 01:25:22,000
They doubled the height of it from 11 and a half feet to 23 feet.

1083
01:25:23,000 --> 01:25:25,000
But Elville is close.

1084
01:25:25,000 --> 01:25:28,000
No balls and one strike into the line is Rudy Mang and here's the pitch.

1085
01:25:28,000 --> 01:25:30,000
Bounce toward third, bobbled by Swalney.

1086
01:25:30,000 --> 01:25:33,000
He might be able to make a play and throws him out.

1087
01:25:33,000 --> 01:25:37,000
Good play by Roy on the recovery as he bobbled it momentarily

1088
01:25:37,000 --> 01:25:40,000
and then recovered his time to throw out Bruce Bockeye.

1089
01:25:40,000 --> 01:25:42,000
Now Richie Zisk.

1090
01:25:42,000 --> 01:25:46,000
You know, I tell you, Swalney is not the most graceful third baseman I've ever seen,

1091
01:25:46,000 --> 01:25:47,000
but he's made some good plays down there.

1092
01:25:47,000 --> 01:25:50,000
That's the bottom line. He's knocked some balls down.

1093
01:25:50,000 --> 01:25:53,000
He's got that good strong arm.

1094
01:25:53,000 --> 01:25:58,000
He had a strange motion on that one, knocking the ball down with a cross body move.

1095
01:25:58,000 --> 01:26:01,000
Recovered it, got the man out with a good throw.

1096
01:26:01,000 --> 01:26:04,000
All right, Rudy Mang to Richie Zisk and he's low for a ball.

1097
01:26:04,000 --> 01:26:06,000
One ball and no strikes.

1098
01:26:06,000 --> 01:26:10,000
Zisk tonight held it loose in two trips, flying to center.

1099
01:26:10,000 --> 01:26:11,000
He hit the ball well.

1100
01:26:11,000 --> 01:26:14,000
Mumfrey made the catch in the first inning and then he struck out.

1101
01:26:14,000 --> 01:26:15,000
Alexander got him.

1102
01:26:15,000 --> 01:26:21,000
Here's the curve for a strike on the inside corner and one ball and one strike to count to Richie Zisk.

1103
01:26:25,000 --> 01:26:27,000
Into the line and here's the delivery.

1104
01:26:27,000 --> 01:26:28,000
Swing and a high fly.

1105
01:26:28,000 --> 01:26:32,000
Watch center. This ball's really hit and Mumfrey won't play it out.

1106
01:26:32,000 --> 01:26:34,000
He won't get it. He plays it off the wall.

1107
01:26:34,000 --> 01:26:39,000
Actually, Winfield is going to play it off the wall and Zisk is going to end up in second base with a stand-up double.

1108
01:26:39,000 --> 01:26:44,000
Second down, we've seen the ball hit the wall and bounce back over Mumfrey's head.

1109
01:26:44,000 --> 01:26:47,000
Winfield having to chase it down and center field.

1110
01:26:47,000 --> 01:26:49,000
That's the first hit off of Rudy May.

1111
01:26:49,000 --> 01:26:53,000
It's the seventh of the game for the Seattle Mariners.

1112
01:26:53,000 --> 01:26:58,000
And the batter is going to be Todd Cruz, the right-handed hitting shortstop.

1113
01:26:58,000 --> 01:27:06,000
And a very big head off of Doyle Alexander back in the third inning with two outs and two on both in scoring position at second and third.

1114
01:27:06,000 --> 01:27:13,000
Cruz hit an 0-2 pitch to right field and it was the single that scored two to give the Mariners a four-and-up in league.

1115
01:27:13,000 --> 01:27:17,000
Collins then drove across Cruz with a triple to make it five to nothing.

1116
01:27:17,000 --> 01:27:18,000
That's the score at the moment.

1117
01:27:18,000 --> 01:27:21,000
Strike and a curve to Todd Cruz. No balls and one strike.

1118
01:27:21,000 --> 01:27:30,000
Managers and pitching coaches get very upset on key base hits off 0-2 counts.

1119
01:27:30,000 --> 01:27:31,000
No balls, one strike.

1120
01:27:31,000 --> 01:27:35,000
Here's the set by the left-hander Rudy May as he looks to the runner in second and the delivery.

1121
01:27:35,000 --> 01:27:37,000
Check swing, he went around on it.

1122
01:27:37,000 --> 01:27:48,000
Low pitch and it is no balls and two strikes to count to Todd Cruz.

1123
01:27:48,000 --> 01:27:53,000
0-2 to the count, Cruz batting.

1124
01:27:53,000 --> 01:27:56,000
Now the set again is May, looks to the runner Ziskin second.

1125
01:27:56,000 --> 01:27:58,000
He just doubled off the left-center field wall.

1126
01:27:58,000 --> 01:28:01,000
Elibitch down low and it's one and two.

1127
01:28:01,000 --> 01:28:05,000
Well, you know, Frank, there are Yankees fans everywhere all over America.

1128
01:28:05,000 --> 01:28:11,000
And I guess there are many that are here tonight trying to root the Yankees from a comeback story here.

1129
01:28:11,000 --> 01:28:15,000
I saw some fans in the parking lot before the game from Nevada who have come up to the game.

1130
01:28:15,000 --> 01:28:17,000
Great.

1131
01:28:17,000 --> 01:28:20,000
Here's the two-strike delivery swing and a miss strike three.

1132
01:28:20,000 --> 01:28:26,000
And Rudy May gets his second strike out of the relief stint and retires the managers here in the fifth inning.

1133
01:28:26,000 --> 01:28:27,000
No runs, a hit, no errors.

1134
01:28:27,000 --> 01:28:33,000
One lap through five, Seattle five and New York nothing.

1135
01:28:33,000 --> 01:28:48,000
Of all the ways that we can fly, of all the highways through the sky, of all the ways that greet the sun, Eastern, you sure know our one.

1136
01:28:48,000 --> 01:29:03,000
The pride of Eastern shining through, we earn our wings by serving you, come meet us in the freeway where America's favorite way to fly.

1137
01:29:03,000 --> 01:29:10,000
For the third year in a row now, more passengers have flown Eastern than any other airline in the free world.

1138
01:29:10,000 --> 01:29:14,000
If you helped make us America's favorite way to fly, we thank you.

1139
01:29:14,000 --> 01:29:23,000
If you haven't flown Eastern recently, give us a try. We'll show you we really do earn our wings every day.

1140
01:29:23,000 --> 01:29:29,000
Eastern, America's favorite way to fly.

1141
01:29:29,000 --> 01:29:40,000
Eastern, America's favorite way to fly.

1142
01:29:40,000 --> 01:29:44,000
You ever notice all the beers these days talking about their fancy ingredients?

1143
01:29:44,000 --> 01:29:48,000
Special barley from here, exotic hops from there.

1144
01:29:48,000 --> 01:29:52,000
Funny thing is, they've been making nickelode like that for years.

1145
01:29:52,000 --> 01:29:54,000
They just don't talk about it.

1146
01:29:54,000 --> 01:29:57,000
Don't have to.

1147
01:29:57,000 --> 01:30:00,000
Oh, you can use a label if you're really interested.

1148
01:30:00,000 --> 01:30:04,000
It says right here every ingredient used is the finest obtainable.

1149
01:30:04,000 --> 01:30:09,000
Makes sense. Otherwise how can nickelode be so good?

1150
01:30:09,000 --> 01:30:14,000
I suspect the people who brew nickelode figure beer drinkers know a good thing when they taste it.

1151
01:30:14,000 --> 01:30:19,000
And I appreciate that because I don't want to spend my weekend, or weeknights for that matter,

1152
01:30:19,000 --> 01:30:22,000
pouring over long lists of ingredients.

1153
01:30:22,000 --> 01:30:26,000
When I can spend that time pouring another nickelode.

1154
01:30:26,000 --> 01:30:31,000
Oh, it can be a week.

1155
01:30:31,000 --> 01:30:35,000
Anheuser-Busch thing, Lewis New Jersey.

1156
01:30:35,000 --> 01:30:39,000
Okay, here's the sixth inning now, the leadoff batter for the Yankees.

1157
01:30:39,000 --> 01:30:45,000
Top of the order, Willie Randolph, first offering from the right-hander, Gaylord Ferry, outside of all one ball and no strikes.

1158
01:30:45,000 --> 01:30:50,000
And the slider is across, and it is one and one.

1159
01:30:50,000 --> 01:30:52,000
Five-nothing, Seattle leading.

1160
01:30:52,000 --> 01:30:55,000
And the Yankees batting in the top half of the sixth inning.

1161
01:30:55,000 --> 01:30:57,000
They've been out hit seven to three.

1162
01:30:57,000 --> 01:30:59,000
There are two errors on the board, one for the Mariners.

1163
01:30:59,000 --> 01:31:02,000
That was charged to third baseman, Matty Castillo.

1164
01:31:02,000 --> 01:31:04,000
And one for the Yankees, charged to Rick Sorrone.

1165
01:31:04,000 --> 01:31:07,000
Randolph is 0 for 2 in the game, out of it.

1166
01:31:07,000 --> 01:31:11,000
Outside of all, and 2 and 1 now to count to Willie.

1167
01:31:11,000 --> 01:31:16,000
He was out bouncing through the first baseman, Maylor, and assisted his first time up.

1168
01:31:16,000 --> 01:31:21,000
And then reached in an error, charged to Castillo in the third inning.

1169
01:31:21,000 --> 01:31:29,000
All the Mariners runs came in the bottom of the third, and the five with nine men batting, giving them the lead at five to nothing.

1170
01:31:29,000 --> 01:31:31,000
A pie, 3 and 1.

1171
01:31:31,000 --> 01:31:41,000
Randolph has not won to anybody, and he has struck out three.

1172
01:31:41,000 --> 01:31:52,000
Three balls and one strike to count, right-handed hitting Willie Randolph.

1173
01:31:52,000 --> 01:31:55,000
And Randolph, and here is the delivery.

1174
01:31:55,000 --> 01:32:01,000
Five at the letters, and 3 and 1.

1175
01:32:01,000 --> 01:32:06,000
Three more with Seattle tomorrow night, Saturday night, and Sunday night.

1176
01:32:06,000 --> 01:32:12,000
Sunday night game will start at 10 o'clock Eastern Standard Time, 10.05 actually.

1177
01:32:12,000 --> 01:32:13,000
And the pitch.

1178
01:32:13,000 --> 01:32:16,000
Bounding ball right out in front, Gaylord very quickly off the mound.

1179
01:32:16,000 --> 01:32:18,000
He's got it fired to first.

1180
01:32:18,000 --> 01:32:21,000
Willie Randolph out, one down, and before 10.50 steps in,

1181
01:32:21,000 --> 01:32:25,000
let's pause 10 seconds for station identification on the New York Yankees.

1182
01:32:25,000 --> 01:32:26,000
Baseball Network.

1183
01:32:26,000 --> 01:32:28,000
Don't miss a second of the action.

1184
01:32:28,000 --> 01:32:38,000
Keep tuned to Radio 59, WROW Albany.

1185
01:32:38,000 --> 01:32:41,000
Right here's Griffey, one for two, can't hit a single back in the third.

1186
01:32:41,000 --> 01:32:43,000
He's the last man to reach safely for the Yankees.

1187
01:32:43,000 --> 01:32:49,000
That's eight in a row that have been retired by Gaylord Ferry now, and nine outs and those eight batters down.

1188
01:32:49,000 --> 01:32:53,000
Yankees had a threat going in the third with no score in the game.

1189
01:32:53,000 --> 01:32:59,000
Runners at first and third and one away, and Jerry Mumfrey banged to a 6-4-3 double play that ended the threat, and the inning.

1190
01:32:59,000 --> 01:33:00,000
High fly.

1191
01:33:00,000 --> 01:33:02,000
Foul I believe.

1192
01:33:02,000 --> 01:33:04,000
Yes it is, down the right field line.

1193
01:33:04,000 --> 01:33:06,000
That was out of here, but foul.

1194
01:33:06,000 --> 01:33:07,000
Griffey comes back.

1195
01:33:07,000 --> 01:33:08,000
Boy, he stroked that one.

1196
01:33:08,000 --> 01:33:09,000
Wow.

1197
01:33:09,000 --> 01:33:10,000
He really did.

1198
01:33:10,000 --> 01:33:12,000
Griffey is looking for his first home run of the year.

1199
01:33:12,000 --> 01:33:14,000
That almost had it, but just foul.

1200
01:33:14,000 --> 01:33:21,000
Well, it's not really that much of a poke to the lower mezzanine here, a bind beyond that extended wall in the right field.

1201
01:33:21,000 --> 01:33:25,000
But if you get one up into that second deck, or even into that third deck, you really hit it.

1202
01:33:25,000 --> 01:33:29,000
And Griffey's carried into the second deck and just missed the third deck.

1203
01:33:29,000 --> 01:33:31,000
All right, here's the 0-1 delivery.

1204
01:33:31,000 --> 01:33:35,000
Foul, this one is off to the left and out of play, and it is the balls and two strikes.

1205
01:33:35,000 --> 01:33:45,000
I think there have been a couple of balls that have been hit to the third tier of the kingdom here in Seattle.

1206
01:33:45,000 --> 01:33:48,000
It seems like Reggie Jackson hit one up there.

1207
01:33:48,000 --> 01:33:50,000
One of those.

1208
01:33:50,000 --> 01:33:53,000
There's only a second deck in left field.

1209
01:33:53,000 --> 01:33:56,000
They don't have the third tier extended all the way around.

1210
01:33:56,000 --> 01:33:59,000
The scoreboard is out in the left center field area.

1211
01:33:59,000 --> 01:34:07,000
Doug Rader hit one to the second deck in left field, a pine inside, and it's one ball and two strikes.

1212
01:34:07,000 --> 01:34:13,000
I think they were saying Bruce Bocke hit one up into the third deck here at the kingdom.

1213
01:34:20,000 --> 01:34:21,000
One ball, two strikes a count.

1214
01:34:21,000 --> 01:34:24,000
Gaylord Perry working to Ken Griffey, one away, nobody on.

1215
01:34:24,000 --> 01:34:28,000
Yankees trailing five to nothing to the Mariners, and it's the top half of the sixth inning.

1216
01:34:28,000 --> 01:34:32,000
Gaylord with a big lead here as he goes for that.

1217
01:34:32,000 --> 01:34:34,000
There's a fair ball.

1218
01:34:34,000 --> 01:34:35,000
Griffey will have to run to first.

1219
01:34:35,000 --> 01:34:41,000
Bowling had a little trouble picking it up, and then Griffey goes down and is retired in a 2-3 scoring play.

1220
01:34:41,000 --> 01:34:42,000
Now Gene Michael's coming out.

1221
01:34:42,000 --> 01:34:45,000
Wait a minute, I think George Belloni might call it a foul ball.

1222
01:34:45,000 --> 01:34:46,000
Let's see.

1223
01:34:46,000 --> 01:34:50,000
Here's the appeal as Belloni is coming up now to Ken Kaiser.

1224
01:34:50,000 --> 01:34:55,000
Now Kaiser is claiming that it was a fair ball, and Gene Michael, if it is a fair ball, is going to argue the call.

1225
01:34:55,000 --> 01:34:59,000
The belly is also in, Mike Ferraro is in.

1226
01:34:59,000 --> 01:35:05,000
Now Belloni is talking with Ken Kaiser at the moment.

1227
01:35:05,000 --> 01:35:09,000
Looks like Griffey's going to get his at bat, and it's going to be called a foul ball.

1228
01:35:09,000 --> 01:35:13,000
Ken Kaiser overruled by third base umpire George Belloni.

1229
01:35:13,000 --> 01:35:19,000
Now Renee Lachman will come out, and he'll get his two cents worth of.

1230
01:35:19,000 --> 01:35:23,000
Now Kaiser is explaining to Lachman, he says, hey, I thought it was a fair ball,

1231
01:35:23,000 --> 01:35:25,000
but I've been overruled by George Belloni.

1232
01:35:25,000 --> 01:35:28,000
Bill Haller, who is the crew chief coming in.

1233
01:35:28,000 --> 01:35:30,000
Nice to see Bill working again.

1234
01:35:30,000 --> 01:35:34,000
We hadn't seen him since the accident when he was banged into by Larry Herndon.

1235
01:35:34,000 --> 01:35:36,000
That's right, and Bill looks fine again.

1236
01:35:36,000 --> 01:35:41,000
I didn't get a chance to talk to him before the game, but it's good to see him back.

1237
01:35:41,000 --> 01:35:45,000
Now Lachman continues the argument now with play-off fire Ken Kaiser.

1238
01:35:45,000 --> 01:35:54,000
Terry Boykot kicks the ball around at home plate in the area there.

1239
01:35:54,000 --> 01:36:00,000
Now Lachman continues his beep, and he does get the last word as he comes off the field,

1240
01:36:00,000 --> 01:36:04,000
and Griffey steps back into the batter's box again.

1241
01:36:04,000 --> 01:36:06,000
Well, we have the benefit of a replay monitor here.

1242
01:36:06,000 --> 01:36:12,000
You mentioned the game was being televised on the table around the country.

1243
01:36:12,000 --> 01:36:18,000
If Griffey had run down the first base, there wouldn't have been too much argument on the Yankees' part.

1244
01:36:18,000 --> 01:36:22,000
I think he might have been able to beat him, but he stood there and looked at the ball himself.

1245
01:36:22,000 --> 01:36:26,000
Griffey swings and lots of high-fly to deep right field.

1246
01:36:26,000 --> 01:36:29,000
It is gone, a home run for Ken Griffey.

1247
01:36:29,000 --> 01:36:36,000
Well, that stirs the Seattle kingdom crowd even more as Griffey gets second life,

1248
01:36:36,000 --> 01:36:41,000
and it's his first home run of the season and the 11th of the year for the Yankees.

1249
01:36:41,000 --> 01:36:44,000
Griffey stroked it to the right field seat.

1250
01:36:44,000 --> 01:36:49,000
Hit number two in the game for Ken, and the Yankees are on the board here, trailing down by a score of 5-1.

1251
01:36:49,000 --> 01:36:54,000
Well, getty-gotter for Ken Griffey, and when you say stroked it, exactly right.

1252
01:36:54,000 --> 01:36:58,000
He turned loose to bat with his left hand, following through just one-handed,

1253
01:36:58,000 --> 01:37:02,000
but a nice sweet swing by Griffey, which just goes to show you don't have to crank up

1254
01:37:02,000 --> 01:37:05,000
and leap off your feet to hit a home run.

1255
01:37:05,000 --> 01:37:07,000
I hear it's Gary Mumfrey.

1256
01:37:07,000 --> 01:37:09,000
Mumfrey swings and bounds one to second.

1257
01:37:09,000 --> 01:37:14,000
Julio Cruz is up and brings it on to first for the out-two down, and Gary retired on a pitch.

1258
01:37:14,000 --> 01:37:16,000
Mumfrey won for three in the game now.

1259
01:37:16,000 --> 01:37:19,000
He tripled his first time up, then hit to that double play in the third,

1260
01:37:19,000 --> 01:37:22,000
and here he's out on the ground ball, second to first.

1261
01:37:22,000 --> 01:37:24,000
Julio Cruz to Jim Mailer.

1262
01:37:24,000 --> 01:37:32,000
By the way, the home run by Ken Griffey stops the string of retired in a row by Gaylor Perry at nine.

1263
01:37:32,000 --> 01:37:35,000
Excuse me, eight with the nine outs.

1264
01:37:35,000 --> 01:37:37,000
I hear John Mayberry.

1265
01:37:37,000 --> 01:37:42,000
Now Griffey hit a foul ball home run.

1266
01:37:42,000 --> 01:37:45,000
That would look like Perry was going to gain the advantage

1267
01:37:45,000 --> 01:37:48,000
and get him on that little number out in front of home plate and the overruling.

1268
01:37:48,000 --> 01:37:49,000
Founding ball to first.

1269
01:37:49,000 --> 01:37:50,000
Mailer's got it.

1270
01:37:50,000 --> 01:37:53,000
He'll go to the base himself, and Mayberry is easy up.

1271
01:37:53,000 --> 01:37:56,000
The Yankees get a run back, but they still trail by four.

1272
01:37:56,000 --> 01:37:57,000
One run, one hit.

1273
01:37:57,000 --> 01:37:58,000
The homer by Ken Griffey.

1274
01:37:58,000 --> 01:38:00,000
No errors, nobody left.

1275
01:38:00,000 --> 01:38:03,000
Two five-and-a-half innings of play at the Kingdom in Seattle.

1276
01:38:03,000 --> 01:38:06,000
The Mariners five and the Yankees one.

1277
01:38:06,000 --> 01:38:09,000
Bring out the goodness when you bring out the Fry Hoppers.

1278
01:38:09,000 --> 01:38:12,000
Bread and cakes naturally.

1279
01:38:12,000 --> 01:38:16,000
Taste bakery good as when you bring out the Fry Hoppers.

1280
01:38:16,000 --> 01:38:19,000
Goodness for your family.

1281
01:38:19,000 --> 01:38:26,000
Cause the Fry Hopper family puts goodness into everything we bake.

1282
01:38:26,000 --> 01:38:30,000
So you'll bring out the best when you choose our family name.

1283
01:38:30,000 --> 01:38:35,000
It's Fry Hoppers to bring out the goodness in you.

1284
01:38:35,000 --> 01:38:39,000
Dad, what's the dog in a trenchcoat doing playing the drum?

1285
01:38:39,000 --> 01:38:40,000
Gee, I don't know, Mary.

1286
01:38:40,000 --> 01:38:42,000
Maybe he can't play with food.

1287
01:38:42,000 --> 01:38:43,000
Oh, hiya.

1288
01:38:43,000 --> 01:38:45,000
McBruff, the crying dog here.

1289
01:38:45,000 --> 01:38:49,000
You know, I love a parade, but so do most crooks, pickpockets, and purse snatchers.

1290
01:38:49,000 --> 01:38:51,000
Because of all the excitement.

1291
01:38:51,000 --> 01:38:54,000
Nobody pays any attention to their wallets, purses, watches, or jewelry.

1292
01:38:54,000 --> 01:38:58,000
Gee, so when you're in a crowd, watch out for your valuables and help out.

1293
01:38:58,000 --> 01:39:00,000
Take a bite out of crime.

1294
01:39:00,000 --> 01:39:04,000
A message from the Crime Prevention Coalition and the Ad Council.

1295
01:39:04,000 --> 01:39:06,000
I'm Richard Hill, WROW Sports.

1296
01:39:06,000 --> 01:39:10,000
For the full season of Yankee baseball, listen to WROW.

1297
01:39:10,000 --> 01:39:13,000
And keep that radio tuned at 59 a.m. for my morning sports reports,

1298
01:39:13,000 --> 01:39:17,000
all the major league scores, and the important local and national sports developments.

1299
01:39:17,000 --> 01:39:20,000
Evenings at 5.05, my sports commentary.

1300
01:39:20,000 --> 01:39:22,000
Then stay tuned for Bob Buck's sports report,

1301
01:39:22,000 --> 01:39:28,000
and Dr. Paul Donahue's report on sports medicine for the amateur athlete in our 6 p.m. news block.

1302
01:39:28,000 --> 01:39:32,000
Each weekend afternoon, Don Chevere has ABC weekend sports.

1303
01:39:32,000 --> 01:39:36,000
For sports fans, WROW is all the radio you need.

1304
01:39:36,000 --> 01:39:40,000
The game is played on 77 WABC.

1305
01:39:40,000 --> 01:39:46,000
All right, now Collins stepping in now as the leadoff batter for the Seattle Mariners in the bottom of the sixth.

1306
01:39:46,000 --> 01:39:48,000
Rudy May, who's working in his third inning of relief,

1307
01:39:48,000 --> 01:39:51,000
came in for Doyle Alexander in the fourth inning,

1308
01:39:51,000 --> 01:39:55,000
and his breaking pitch is down low for a ball, one ball and no strikes.

1309
01:39:55,000 --> 01:39:57,000
Five to one, Mariners lead it.

1310
01:39:57,000 --> 01:39:59,000
And they've got it, the Yankee 7 to 4.

1311
01:39:59,000 --> 01:40:02,000
Down low and two balls and no strikes.

1312
01:40:08,000 --> 01:40:12,000
All right, Rudy May, working to Collins, who has a triple and an RBI of two trips.

1313
01:40:12,000 --> 01:40:15,000
He's lied to left first time up wide and three and oh.

1314
01:40:15,000 --> 01:40:22,000
Well, they're anticipating, of course, this big win for the Seattle Mariners

1315
01:40:22,000 --> 01:40:27,000
and the right-handed pitcher Gaylord Perry here tonight at the Kingdome in Seattle.

1316
01:40:27,000 --> 01:40:30,000
Mariners a strike and three and one.

1317
01:40:38,000 --> 01:40:40,000
Three balls, one strike, and here's the pitch.

1318
01:40:40,000 --> 01:40:42,000
High pop on the right side.

1319
01:40:42,000 --> 01:40:44,000
This may be playable for first baseman Mayberry.

1320
01:40:44,000 --> 01:40:48,000
He's over near the seats and he's got it right in front of the black seats.

1321
01:40:48,000 --> 01:40:51,000
So Collins is the opening out.

1322
01:40:51,000 --> 01:40:54,000
I understand, Frank, that they're going to give away, hopefully,

1323
01:40:54,000 --> 01:40:58,000
the anticipation of the win, certificates to all those there in attendance tonight.

1324
01:40:58,000 --> 01:41:02,000
Also, I was talking to one of the marketing directors of the Mariners before the game

1325
01:41:02,000 --> 01:41:07,000
and should Perry win it, they have thousands of T-shirts downstairs

1326
01:41:07,000 --> 01:41:12,000
and they have the screen ready to go to where they're going to run off the imprint of the T-shirts

1327
01:41:12,000 --> 01:41:18,000
that I was in attendance for Gaylord Perry's 300th win and sell those after the ball game.

1328
01:41:18,000 --> 01:41:22,000
So they're looking forward to a big night here at the Kingdome.

1329
01:41:22,000 --> 01:41:25,000
That's going to hold the crowd here until the game's over anyway.

1330
01:41:25,000 --> 01:41:26,000
That's right.

1331
01:41:26,000 --> 01:41:29,000
One ball, no strikes to count as Simpson is the batter.

1332
01:41:29,000 --> 01:41:31,000
Here's a bouncing ball hit towards second.

1333
01:41:31,000 --> 01:41:36,000
Easy play for Randolph and he brings it out to Mayberry at first for the second out of the Mariners' sixth.

1334
01:41:36,000 --> 01:41:40,000
And here's Jim Maylor who started that big rally for the Mariners in the third inning

1335
01:41:40,000 --> 01:41:43,000
with a triple to left center.

1336
01:41:43,000 --> 01:41:45,000
He struck out against Rudy May in the fourth inning.

1337
01:41:45,000 --> 01:41:47,000
One for two in the game.

1338
01:41:47,000 --> 01:41:50,000
He scored one of the five Mariners runs.

1339
01:41:50,000 --> 01:41:55,000
In that third the Mariners batted nine.

1340
01:41:55,000 --> 01:42:01,000
RBI hits from Terry Bulling, Manny Castillo, Todd Crews and Al Cowans.

1341
01:42:01,000 --> 01:42:03,000
And Todd Crews' hit was a two-run single.

1342
01:42:03,000 --> 01:42:14,000
Foul to the right, not a play, no balls and one strike.

1343
01:42:14,000 --> 01:42:17,000
Into the line now and here's the 0-1 delivery.

1344
01:42:17,000 --> 01:42:22,000
That's a strike, a fastball is across to Maylor and it's 0-2.

1345
01:42:22,000 --> 01:42:27,000
Now Maylor sat out the Tuesday game against the Orioles at Baltimore.

1346
01:42:27,000 --> 01:42:32,000
Renee Latchman giving him a day's rest just to try to shake that slump that he's been in.

1347
01:42:32,000 --> 01:42:36,000
Wide and one ball and two strikes.

1348
01:42:36,000 --> 01:42:42,000
And he came off of that rest on Tuesday and the rest yesterday.

1349
01:42:42,000 --> 01:42:45,000
It's that first pitch offered by Doyle Alexander for that triple.

1350
01:42:45,000 --> 01:42:48,000
And a ground ball is short, Bucky Dent plays a big hop.

1351
01:42:48,000 --> 01:42:52,000
On to first to retire Maylor and the Mariners go down in order in the sixth inning.

1352
01:42:52,000 --> 01:42:54,000
No runs, no hits, no errors.

1353
01:42:54,000 --> 01:42:57,000
Nobody laps and now through sixth hole at Kingdome in Seattle.

1354
01:42:57,000 --> 01:43:00,000
It's the Mariners five and the Yankees one.

1355
01:43:00,000 --> 01:43:18,000
The game is over.

1356
01:43:18,000 --> 01:43:20,000
Going, going, gone.

1357
01:43:20,000 --> 01:43:24,000
So to the man in the blue suit in the fourth row for $15,000.

1358
01:43:24,000 --> 01:43:26,000
But I was always flicking my pick.

1359
01:43:26,000 --> 01:43:32,000
You can count on the pick.

1360
01:43:32,000 --> 01:43:35,000
The privacy of the individual is gradually vanishing.

1361
01:43:35,000 --> 01:43:36,000
Uropriscy is growing.

1362
01:43:36,000 --> 01:43:38,000
Computers know everything about us.

1363
01:43:38,000 --> 01:43:44,000
And pretty soon we'll need Big Brother's approval to flick our own pick.

1364
01:43:44,000 --> 01:44:04,000
You know spraying is one of the most efficient economical ways to paint.

1365
01:44:04,000 --> 01:44:06,000
Now for those small paint jobs around the home.

1366
01:44:06,000 --> 01:44:12,000
Red Devil offers a 100% polyurethane spray enamel to give you a long lasting diamond heart finish.

1367
01:44:12,000 --> 01:44:16,000
Features a patented spray that's the closest thing to a professional spray gun.

1368
01:44:16,000 --> 01:44:24,000
You can get Red Devil 100% polyurethane spray finishes in a variety of decorator enamel as well as stove and barbecue black,

1369
01:44:24,000 --> 01:44:28,000
rust proof primer and super fast drying lockers and other special spray finishes.

1370
01:44:28,000 --> 01:44:34,000
Available at all channel stores and your local Red Devil dealer.

1371
01:44:34,000 --> 01:44:39,000
Well we go to the seventh and Gable are now looking at that scoreboard up there and seeing nine outs.

1372
01:44:39,000 --> 01:44:43,000
That's all he needs to record victory number 300 and the Yankees,

1373
01:44:43,000 --> 01:44:47,000
hopeful of getting back into this one, will start it with Dave Winfield at the top of the seventh inning

1374
01:44:47,000 --> 01:44:49,000
and here to tell you all about it, Frank Messer.

1375
01:44:49,000 --> 01:44:52,000
All right John Gordon, thank you very much and here we go.

1376
01:44:52,000 --> 01:44:54,000
The Yankees have only four hits.

1377
01:44:54,000 --> 01:45:02,000
A ferry, the one run, a homer by Griffey, Bumpery has triple, single by Smalley and a single by Griffey.

1378
01:45:02,000 --> 01:45:04,000
Ferry now to Winfield.

1379
01:45:04,000 --> 01:45:10,000
Davis struck out and hit back off the pitcher's glove, fielded by the shortstop that threw him out.

1380
01:45:10,000 --> 01:45:14,000
High five on out of the shallow left center field on the first pitch.

1381
01:45:14,000 --> 01:45:18,000
Joe Simpson, the center fielder, is under it, makes the catch.

1382
01:45:18,000 --> 01:45:23,000
One pitch, there is one away and we'll take a look at Oscar Gable.

1383
01:45:23,000 --> 01:45:41,000
Gable has flied to center and flied to left tonight.

1384
01:45:41,000 --> 01:45:45,000
Ferry goes through all the motions, touches Bill at the cap, back of the ear, back of the neck.

1385
01:45:45,000 --> 01:45:49,000
Now looks down, gets his side from Bulling, the Y at the pitch to Gable.

1386
01:45:49,000 --> 01:45:57,000
Strike one and it's gone.

1387
01:45:57,000 --> 01:46:05,000
Gaylord takes his time to clean pitches.

1388
01:46:05,000 --> 01:46:07,000
For the most part, big winning pitchers work quickly.

1389
01:46:07,000 --> 01:46:10,000
Gaylord, a bit of an exception I would say, Bill White.

1390
01:46:10,000 --> 01:46:14,000
Yeah, he takes a lot of time.

1391
01:46:14,000 --> 01:46:17,000
Starts the wind up and now the one strike pitch.

1392
01:46:17,000 --> 01:46:19,000
A low fastball, it's one and one.

1393
01:46:19,000 --> 01:46:21,000
I think he wants to make you think a ball, Frank.

1394
01:46:21,000 --> 01:46:24,000
He wants to make you think he's loaded the ball up when he is.

1395
01:46:24,000 --> 01:46:28,000
And every once in a while he will load it up and get a good singer.

1396
01:46:28,000 --> 01:46:32,000
Psychology, a big part of the game of baseball.

1397
01:46:32,000 --> 01:46:35,000
He's ready and one-one to Gable.

1398
01:46:35,000 --> 01:46:37,000
Get on the ground with the shortstop.

1399
01:46:37,000 --> 01:46:39,000
Todd Crews up to throw the first.

1400
01:46:39,000 --> 01:46:44,000
In the dirt, taken nicely by a mailer and Gable is out.

1401
01:46:44,000 --> 01:46:48,000
Dave Neos, one of the mariner broadcasters, interviewed Jim Barry,

1402
01:46:48,000 --> 01:46:51,000
Gaylord's older brother before the game tonight.

1403
01:46:51,000 --> 01:46:56,000
He went to Gaylord and he said, what question should I ask your brother Jim?

1404
01:46:56,000 --> 01:47:00,000
Gaylord said, ask him how come all those years he threw the spitball

1405
01:47:00,000 --> 01:47:07,000
and got by with it and I got all the blame?

1406
01:47:07,000 --> 01:47:11,000
Roy Smalley, of all the opposition players, Smalley has hit more home runs

1407
01:47:11,000 --> 01:47:13,000
here in the Kingdome than any other player.

1408
01:47:13,000 --> 01:47:15,000
He has 11.

1409
01:47:15,000 --> 01:47:16,000
More than Jackson even?

1410
01:47:16,000 --> 01:47:19,000
Yep, more than any visitor.

1411
01:47:19,000 --> 01:47:28,000
And he hits a high foul that's going to be out of play in left field.

1412
01:47:28,000 --> 01:47:31,000
One strike.

1413
01:47:31,000 --> 01:47:35,000
One strike, maybe that's a park in Texas that Jackson used to hit the ball well.

1414
01:47:35,000 --> 01:47:37,000
That's the Texas ball park.

1415
01:47:37,000 --> 01:47:42,000
Yeah, Jackson has a record down there.

1416
01:47:42,000 --> 01:47:46,000
One strike on Smalley.

1417
01:47:46,000 --> 01:47:48,000
Roy is one for two.

1418
01:47:48,000 --> 01:47:51,000
Switch hitter batting left, that's coming.

1419
01:47:51,000 --> 01:47:56,000
He takes it down low, has the play for downstairs.

1420
01:47:56,000 --> 01:48:00,000
Uh oh, now Bill Aller, that ball really went down and Bill Aller now is going to get into the act.

1421
01:48:00,000 --> 01:48:03,000
The second base up fire comes in and inspects the baseball.

1422
01:48:03,000 --> 01:48:06,000
Rubs it up and gives it back to Perry.

1423
01:48:06,000 --> 01:48:13,000
I think Bill just wants to let Perry know that he's back there and he's watching.

1424
01:48:13,000 --> 01:48:17,000
On account of a ball and a strike, and Perry again goes through all the bows.

1425
01:48:17,000 --> 01:48:20,000
Aller watching from out in right field now.

1426
01:48:20,000 --> 01:48:22,000
The wind up at the pitch.

1427
01:48:22,000 --> 01:48:27,000
It's high.

1428
01:48:27,000 --> 01:48:32,000
Reggie Jackson has hit nine home runs here in the Kingdome.

1429
01:48:32,000 --> 01:48:42,000
Roy Smalley 11, Ben Ogilvie, Ken Singleton, and Bobby Gritch of each hit 10.

1430
01:48:42,000 --> 01:48:46,000
Reggie Jackson, Dave Reverend, Jim Rice, and Robin Yowd of each hit nine.

1431
01:48:46,000 --> 01:48:47,000
Coming into the season.

1432
01:48:47,000 --> 01:48:48,000
Dave Reverend?

1433
01:48:48,000 --> 01:48:49,000
Yeah.

1434
01:48:49,000 --> 01:48:50,000
He has a ballpark he likes.

1435
01:48:50,000 --> 01:48:52,000
Yeah.

1436
01:48:52,000 --> 01:48:55,000
Two balls and a strike down on Roy Smalley.

1437
01:48:55,000 --> 01:48:56,000
Perry winds.

1438
01:48:56,000 --> 01:48:57,000
Here's his pitch.

1439
01:48:57,000 --> 01:49:02,000
Strike two is called.

1440
01:49:02,000 --> 01:49:04,000
Two balls and two strikes.

1441
01:49:04,000 --> 01:49:14,000
As we get later and later in this ball game, I feel sure the crowd will react more and more to every pitch thrown by Gayloid Perry.

1442
01:49:14,000 --> 01:49:15,000
We're in the seventh.

1443
01:49:15,000 --> 01:49:16,000
Two outs, nobody on.

1444
01:49:16,000 --> 01:49:18,000
The Mariners lead 5-1.

1445
01:49:18,000 --> 01:49:19,000
The wind.

1446
01:49:19,000 --> 01:49:20,000
And the pitch.

1447
01:49:20,000 --> 01:49:26,000
Outside.

1448
01:49:26,000 --> 01:49:29,000
Perry has done a pretty good job of keeping the pitches away from the hitters tonight.

1449
01:49:29,000 --> 01:49:36,000
They have not been pulling in with the exception of Griffey who pulled the home run to right center and also ripped a single to right.

1450
01:49:36,000 --> 01:49:41,000
And Mumfrey who tripled to right center.

1451
01:49:41,000 --> 01:49:43,000
Three and two pitch to Smalley.

1452
01:49:43,000 --> 01:49:44,000
High and it's called.

1453
01:49:44,000 --> 01:49:45,000
Four, Smalley is on.

1454
01:49:45,000 --> 01:49:49,000
That is the first walk given up by Perry in the ball game.

1455
01:49:49,000 --> 01:49:52,000
He struck out three, Matt.

1456
01:49:52,000 --> 01:49:59,000
And the batter will be Rick Sarone.

1457
01:49:59,000 --> 01:50:01,000
You're wondering about our broadcast partner, Phil Vizzetto.

1458
01:50:01,000 --> 01:50:03,000
He is a bit under the weather.

1459
01:50:03,000 --> 01:50:04,000
He is?

1460
01:50:04,000 --> 01:50:08,000
I heard.

1461
01:50:08,000 --> 01:50:10,000
And may be joining us tomorrow.

1462
01:50:10,000 --> 01:50:11,000
Brian, is that right?

1463
01:50:11,000 --> 01:50:14,000
He will.

1464
01:50:14,000 --> 01:50:17,000
Why can't you be on the weather two straight nights?

1465
01:50:17,000 --> 01:50:19,000
We don't do television until Saturday.

1466
01:50:19,000 --> 01:50:20,000
That's right.

1467
01:50:20,000 --> 01:50:21,000
We do television.

1468
01:50:21,000 --> 01:50:23,000
You better stay under the weather.

1469
01:50:23,000 --> 01:50:30,000
Sarone takes one inside, ball one.

1470
01:50:30,000 --> 01:50:31,000
Got a lot of uphires in the crowd now.

1471
01:50:31,000 --> 01:50:36,000
They want everything called a strike.

1472
01:50:36,000 --> 01:50:41,000
Perry in his five previous starts this year has two complete games.

1473
01:50:41,000 --> 01:50:46,000
Missed by one out is 299th win over the Yankees in New York.

1474
01:50:46,000 --> 01:50:47,000
Out of set.

1475
01:50:47,000 --> 01:50:49,000
Here's the pitch.

1476
01:50:49,000 --> 01:50:54,000
Foul ball will be coming back out of play in the crowd.

1477
01:50:54,000 --> 01:50:56,000
I think we're seeing something here, Frank.

1478
01:50:56,000 --> 01:51:00,000
A lot of people say with the free agency and maybe with trading,

1479
01:51:00,000 --> 01:51:04,000
the DeClair has no allegiance to a ball club,

1480
01:51:04,000 --> 01:51:07,000
and ball clubs are possibly losing identity.

1481
01:51:07,000 --> 01:51:09,000
But here's Gaylord Perry signed, what, in March by these people?

1482
01:51:09,000 --> 01:51:10,000
Yeah.

1483
01:51:10,000 --> 01:51:14,000
Seattle after a couple other clubs didn't want him, released by Atlanta.

1484
01:51:14,000 --> 01:51:16,000
And it seems that they're really pulling for him.

1485
01:51:16,000 --> 01:51:21,000
I think you pull for events, not for players.

1486
01:51:21,000 --> 01:51:23,000
Seems like he's been here 20 years, the way these people are pulling for him.

1487
01:51:23,000 --> 01:51:25,000
That's true.

1488
01:51:25,000 --> 01:51:26,000
One-one pitch.

1489
01:51:26,000 --> 01:51:32,000
It is bad on a check swing and fouls up.

1490
01:51:32,000 --> 01:51:34,000
They have not announced the crowd, or if they have,

1491
01:51:34,000 --> 01:51:35,000
I did not hear the announcement.

1492
01:51:35,000 --> 01:51:39,000
It hasn't gone up on the board yet.

1493
01:51:39,000 --> 01:51:41,000
But they're going to be way over their average.

1494
01:51:41,000 --> 01:51:42,000
Oh, yeah.

1495
01:51:42,000 --> 01:51:44,000
They're only average about 11,000 here.

1496
01:51:44,000 --> 01:51:48,000
And this thing might be around 33.

1497
01:51:48,000 --> 01:51:54,000
Well, the crowd behind Gaylord Perry, as he has a count of one and two on Seron.

1498
01:51:54,000 --> 01:51:57,000
Smallie at first, the set and the pitch.

1499
01:51:57,000 --> 01:51:59,000
Locked up, playable on the right side.

1500
01:51:59,000 --> 01:52:04,000
First baseman stumbles, recovers, and is under it for the catch.

1501
01:52:04,000 --> 01:52:07,000
Jim Maylor stumbled over the bag, going into foul territory,

1502
01:52:07,000 --> 01:52:09,000
but he recovered and made the catch.

1503
01:52:09,000 --> 01:52:10,000
No runs, no hits.

1504
01:52:10,000 --> 01:52:14,000
That's a walk-and-man left there, but 6 1 half.

1505
01:52:14,000 --> 01:52:15,000
I'm E.G. Marshall.

1506
01:52:15,000 --> 01:52:18,000
Usually when I'm talking to you about Albany Savings Bank,

1507
01:52:18,000 --> 01:52:20,000
it's about a specific financial service.

1508
01:52:20,000 --> 01:52:24,000
But there are many other general advantages offered by Albany Savings Bank,

1509
01:52:24,000 --> 01:52:29,000
such as extended banking hours at many of the offices to conform to customers' needs

1510
01:52:29,000 --> 01:52:33,000
and the wide geographic range of offices for additional convenience.

1511
01:52:33,000 --> 01:52:38,000
But perhaps most impressive, the 160-year-old tradition of courtesy and interest

1512
01:52:38,000 --> 01:52:41,000
offered by every member of Albany Savings Bank,

1513
01:52:41,000 --> 01:52:44,000
the Savings People Bank, committed to you.

1514
01:52:55,000 --> 01:53:00,000
Bottom half of the seventh inning, and the catcher, Terry Buck Bulling, will lead off.

1515
01:53:00,000 --> 01:53:04,000
He has snickered and grounded out, scored a run and batted in a run.

1516
01:53:04,000 --> 01:53:08,000
Right-hander, Rudy May on the mound for the Yankees.

1517
01:53:09,000 --> 01:53:12,000
Larry Anderson, a right-hander, is in the Seattle ball path.

1518
01:53:12,000 --> 01:53:16,000
Rudy's pitch, line, base center to left field, down toward the corner,

1519
01:53:16,000 --> 01:53:18,000
Whitfield, which would come off the wall.

1520
01:53:18,000 --> 01:53:21,000
And Bulling is on his way to second, throw to second base.

1521
01:53:21,000 --> 01:53:23,000
He is safe in second.

1522
01:53:23,000 --> 01:53:28,000
Bulling is actually the number two catcher on this ball club behind Jim Essien.

1523
01:53:28,000 --> 01:53:34,000
Essien, I am told, was disappointed that he was not named to catch Terry in this game,

1524
01:53:34,000 --> 01:53:37,000
just to be the catcher in the 300th win.

1525
01:53:37,000 --> 01:53:40,000
But Bulling has caught Terry most of the time this year,

1526
01:53:40,000 --> 01:53:44,000
and the management manager says they work so well together.

1527
01:53:44,000 --> 01:53:48,000
He said that he hated for Essien not to catch Terry,

1528
01:53:48,000 --> 01:53:53,000
but he said that Bulling had caught Terry so well, that's why he named him.

1529
01:53:53,000 --> 01:53:56,000
And Bulling has responded with a couple of base hits.

1530
01:53:56,000 --> 01:54:00,000
First pitch to Julio Cruz, fouled off to the right side, strike line.

1531
01:54:00,000 --> 01:54:02,000
He's caught a four-hitter so far.

1532
01:54:02,000 --> 01:54:03,000
Yes, he has.

1533
01:54:03,000 --> 01:54:06,000
Only one walk and three strike-ups.

1534
01:54:08,000 --> 01:54:10,000
Bulling at second, nobody out.

1535
01:54:10,000 --> 01:54:11,000
5-1 Mariners.

1536
01:54:11,000 --> 01:54:13,000
The set by Rudy May, the corner man looked for the bot.

1537
01:54:13,000 --> 01:54:16,000
He's got the ball, he's got the ball, he's got the ball.

1538
01:54:16,000 --> 01:54:18,000
The set by Rudy May, the corner man looked for the bot.

1539
01:54:18,000 --> 01:54:21,000
He takes the bat away and a strike is called, 0-2.

1540
01:54:23,000 --> 01:54:29,000
Cruz tonight is 0-2, reached out an error in the third inning, following a sacrifice bot.

1541
01:54:31,000 --> 01:54:34,000
Sorrano took a little too much time looking for the runner going to second base,

1542
01:54:34,000 --> 01:54:38,000
was Bulling and threw the ball away at first.

1543
01:54:38,000 --> 01:54:45,000
May with the 0-2 pitch, blowing in.

1544
01:54:52,000 --> 01:54:56,000
Early Gus Wynn was 43 when he won his 300th game.

1545
01:54:56,000 --> 01:55:05,000
May comes, blow and foul-tip, just foul-tip it on a check-swing.

1546
01:55:08,000 --> 01:55:11,000
That was in 1963.

1547
01:55:13,000 --> 01:55:15,000
Early never won another game.

1548
01:55:17,000 --> 01:55:19,000
I guess you win 300, that's enough.

1549
01:55:20,000 --> 01:55:22,000
Well, don't tell Cy Young that.

1550
01:55:22,000 --> 01:55:26,000
No, I don't converse with Cy anymore.

1551
01:55:27,000 --> 01:55:29,000
I don't think anybody does, except maybe one person.

1552
01:55:29,000 --> 01:55:31,000
But what do you do, he won 511.

1553
01:55:32,000 --> 01:55:35,000
Yeah, he was, well they named the award after him.

1554
01:55:36,000 --> 01:55:39,000
He was the, I guess the, bigger the greatest ever.

1555
01:55:41,000 --> 01:55:43,000
The set by May, the 1-2 pitch.

1556
01:55:43,000 --> 01:55:47,000
High outside off the net and on to third base goes Bulling.

1557
01:55:47,000 --> 01:55:50,000
So, Rowe got leather on him but couldn't hold it.

1558
01:55:50,000 --> 01:55:54,000
And we'll see how the official score will roll in a wild pitch.

1559
01:55:54,000 --> 01:55:56,000
That's a curve ball, evidently the curve ball is signed.

1560
01:55:56,000 --> 01:55:58,000
And so Rowe thought the ball would come to him.

1561
01:55:58,000 --> 01:56:01,000
And Rudy let the curve ball go a little bit too soon.

1562
01:56:01,000 --> 01:56:03,000
It stayed up, it did not break at all.

1563
01:56:03,000 --> 01:56:06,000
And so Rowe tried to backhand the ball.

1564
01:56:06,000 --> 01:56:09,000
You might call that a backup curve ball.

1565
01:56:09,000 --> 01:56:12,000
It didn't break like it should, got past Rowe.

1566
01:56:12,000 --> 01:56:16,000
So a wild pitch puts the runner at third and Yankees have to pull the infield in now.

1567
01:56:16,000 --> 01:56:20,000
With a count of 2-2 on Julio Cruz.

1568
01:56:22,000 --> 01:56:26,000
The set by Rudy May and the left hander's pitch.

1569
01:56:26,000 --> 01:56:29,000
Low and inside, 3-2 count.

1570
01:56:33,000 --> 01:56:36,000
Cruz is a little better hitter for average left hand at that right hand.

1571
01:56:36,000 --> 01:56:39,000
The way he's batting right now against the left hander.

1572
01:56:39,000 --> 01:56:43,000
The right hander, the way he's batting right now against Rudy May.

1573
01:56:49,000 --> 01:56:51,000
Rudy straightens up, comes to the belt.

1574
01:56:51,000 --> 01:56:54,000
Here's the pitch, hit in the air to right field.

1575
01:56:55,000 --> 01:57:01,000
Pulling is tagged up, Griffey is under it, makes the catcher come for throw toward the plate and they hold him at third.

1576
01:57:02,000 --> 01:57:07,000
Pulling holes on Cruz's fly ball and we'll take ten seconds for station identification.

1577
01:57:07,000 --> 01:57:10,000
This is the New York Yankees baseball network.

1578
01:57:13,000 --> 01:57:17,000
There's much more Yankee baseball action coming up from Radio 59.

1579
01:57:17,000 --> 01:57:20,000
WROW Albany.

1580
01:57:22,000 --> 01:57:25,000
Manny Castillo will step in.

1581
01:57:25,000 --> 01:57:28,000
He is one for three with a run batted in and a run score.

1582
01:57:28,000 --> 01:57:31,000
Right hand hitting third baseman.

1583
01:57:31,000 --> 01:57:34,000
Right handed against left hand pitching, gives the switch hitter.

1584
01:57:34,000 --> 01:57:38,000
Batting 250 right handed, 130 left handed.

1585
01:57:40,000 --> 01:57:45,000
Pulling a third infield and the pitch. A pitch out by the runner with Knott Cutty.

1586
01:57:45,000 --> 01:57:58,000
Knott Cutty air goes through the sides again down at third and chats with pulling.

1587
01:58:04,000 --> 01:58:09,000
The set by May, no suicide and another pitch out. Two balls and no strikes.

1588
01:58:09,000 --> 01:58:15,000
What Gene might be doing here, he might throw a four straight pitch out, or at least another one.

1589
01:58:15,000 --> 01:58:18,000
Because he's got a right hander or a switch hitter batting right handed Castillo.

1590
01:58:18,000 --> 01:58:21,000
And he's got the left hander boxy up next.

1591
01:58:21,000 --> 01:58:27,000
So he does two things, just in case they want to squeeze, they'll have the pitch out.

1592
01:58:27,000 --> 01:58:30,000
He also gets around the right handed batter.

1593
01:58:30,000 --> 01:58:33,000
No squeeze and the pitch is over for a call strike.

1594
01:58:33,000 --> 01:58:37,000
They count now two and one.

1595
01:58:37,000 --> 01:58:41,000
And again Castillo steps out, looks down at Cutty air.

1596
01:58:41,000 --> 01:58:44,000
Cutty air goes over to the back to talk to pulling.

1597
01:58:47,000 --> 01:58:52,000
Infield in, the outfield spread with Mumford shallow in center.

1598
01:58:54,000 --> 01:58:56,000
The batters lead five to one.

1599
01:58:56,000 --> 01:58:58,000
We'll watch pulling.

1600
01:58:58,000 --> 01:59:01,000
He does not come, pitch is hidden here toward left field.

1601
01:59:01,000 --> 01:59:07,000
It's deep, it is at the wall and it is off the wall over left field net.

1602
01:59:07,000 --> 01:59:09,000
Here comes pulling in the score.

1603
01:59:09,000 --> 01:59:13,000
Castillo stops at second, draws a throw, throw gets away.

1604
01:59:13,000 --> 01:59:20,000
But he's in there ahead first, no chance to get up and go further as Maybury runs the loose base ball down.

1605
01:59:20,000 --> 01:59:22,000
I think Dave might have misjudged that ball, Frank.

1606
01:59:22,000 --> 01:59:23,000
He thought it was going out of here.

1607
01:59:23,000 --> 01:59:28,000
The ball, he tried to judge a leak to get up against the wall.

1608
01:59:28,000 --> 01:59:33,000
The ball actually hit, I don't think as far up on the wall as Winfield thought it might.

1609
01:59:33,000 --> 01:59:37,000
The fact that it's pretty low, I think Dave simply misjudged the ball.

1610
01:59:37,000 --> 01:59:41,000
And Castillo gets a double and a run batted in.

1611
01:59:41,000 --> 01:59:48,000
And the batters now lead six to one, that is their ninth hit, their third hit and first run off Rudy May.

1612
01:59:48,000 --> 01:59:51,000
Dave had gone back to the wall, I think he would have made the catch.

1613
01:59:51,000 --> 01:59:58,000
But he wanted to get a good leap at the ball and really just hit the eye off the wall in the fifth.

1614
01:59:58,000 --> 02:00:05,000
Now left hand hitting Bocque steps in with a runner at second, in field back and the pitch is outside.

1615
02:00:05,000 --> 02:00:09,000
One ball and no strikes.

1616
02:00:09,000 --> 02:00:17,000
Larry Anderson continues to throw down in the Seattle bat, a right-hander.

1617
02:00:17,000 --> 02:00:21,000
May's pitch, swing and a miss.

1618
02:00:21,000 --> 02:00:28,000
Rene Lachman, the Mariners manager, told me before the ball game it was strictly up to Gaylord

1619
02:00:28,000 --> 02:00:35,000
whether he stayed in or came out really under any circumstances.

1620
02:00:35,000 --> 02:00:39,000
He said he expected Gaylord to tell him the truth, he asked him.

1621
02:00:39,000 --> 02:00:44,000
If he had occasion to take him out, he said he would ask him.

1622
02:00:44,000 --> 02:00:48,000
Gaylord wanted to stay, he said he stays.

1623
02:00:48,000 --> 02:00:53,000
He said after all, how many times can a man go for his 300th win?

1624
02:00:53,000 --> 02:00:56,000
Only once, that's right.

1625
02:00:56,000 --> 02:01:00,000
One-one fence, checked his swing and checked it in time, says Maloney.

1626
02:01:00,000 --> 02:01:02,000
Well Anderson's throwing pretty hard down there.

1627
02:01:02,000 --> 02:01:14,000
I don't think Gaylord's told Lachman that he might be a little tired.

1628
02:01:14,000 --> 02:01:16,000
Two ball one strikeout.

1629
02:01:16,000 --> 02:01:19,000
Rudy Reddy and Deos filed it back off the hands.

1630
02:01:19,000 --> 02:01:23,000
George Frazier also throwing in the Yankee bullpen.

1631
02:01:23,000 --> 02:01:30,000
When early win won his 300th game, he pitched only five innings.

1632
02:01:30,000 --> 02:01:33,000
Jerry Walker came in, pitched the last four.

1633
02:01:33,000 --> 02:01:37,000
Jerry did the gift saves then.

1634
02:01:37,000 --> 02:01:45,000
Jerry's here in the booth with us as one of the Yankee personnel.

1635
02:01:45,000 --> 02:01:47,000
Two ball two strike pitch.

1636
02:01:47,000 --> 02:01:53,000
On the way, line to left, they sit and Castillo is being brought home.

1637
02:01:53,000 --> 02:01:56,000
The throw from Winfield, cut by Smalley.

1638
02:01:56,000 --> 02:01:59,000
They've got the runner hung up between first and second.

1639
02:01:59,000 --> 02:02:03,000
The ball is scored and Bocke is tagged out by Mayberry.

1640
02:02:03,000 --> 02:02:06,000
But Castillo's run counts, making it 7-1.

1641
02:02:06,000 --> 02:02:20,000
Bocke gets a single, a run but it in and he is out 7-5-3.

1642
02:02:20,000 --> 02:02:24,000
It's now 7-1, Byroners.

1643
02:02:24,000 --> 02:02:29,000
A million names in that Cleveland Kansas City game.

1644
02:02:29,000 --> 02:02:44,000
When win got his 300th, Dino Fraincola, the shortstop was former Yankee shortstop and manager Dick Hauser for Cleveland then.

1645
02:02:44,000 --> 02:02:46,000
I have the box score here in my hand.

1646
02:02:46,000 --> 02:02:48,000
I don't remember it myself.

1647
02:02:48,000 --> 02:02:53,000
Richie Zitt gets one in the outer right field and Griffey is there for the catch.

1648
02:02:53,000 --> 02:02:57,000
But the Mariners have added two runs on three bases.

1649
02:02:57,000 --> 02:03:01,000
And at the end of seventh, it's Seattle seventh, the Yankees won.

1650
02:03:01,000 --> 02:03:02,000
Hi, I'm Tom Siebert.

1651
02:03:02,000 --> 02:03:09,000
You know in 15 years in the big leagues, I've learned that all great teams have the same two qualities, consistency and professionalism.

1652
02:03:09,000 --> 02:03:13,000
But winning teams don't just exist in sports, they can be found in everything we do.

1653
02:03:13,000 --> 02:03:18,000
A real winner I admire for their excellence in professionalism is American Dynatel.

1654
02:03:18,000 --> 02:03:25,000
As a leader in the private telephone industry, American Dynatel has saved businesses more than 30% on their monthly phone bills.

1655
02:03:25,000 --> 02:03:33,000
Companies that buy or lease on an American Dynatel phone system can take advantage of a major league staff which custom designs each phone system

1656
02:03:33,000 --> 02:03:37,000
and stands behind their work with service 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

1657
02:03:37,000 --> 02:03:43,000
I've joined their team because although American Dynatel is a leader, they keep trying to be even better.

1658
02:03:43,000 --> 02:03:48,000
That's why season after season, American Dynatel is the winning team in business telephone systems.

1659
02:03:48,000 --> 02:03:55,000
To find out more about American Dynatel, call Dave Martin at 800-962-5478.

1660
02:03:55,000 --> 02:04:14,000
That's 800-962-5478.

1661
02:04:25,000 --> 02:04:30,000
And as a Bush, same Bush.

1662
02:04:30,000 --> 02:04:46,000
Well, Gaylord Perry comes out to pitch as we go to the eighth inning and he'll be working to Bobby Mercer batting for Bucky Net.

1663
02:04:46,000 --> 02:04:50,000
This has always been a classic confrontation over the years, Mercer and Perry.

1664
02:04:50,000 --> 02:05:01,000
So dead after popping up and flying out to left field as God, Mercer will bat for it.

1665
02:05:01,000 --> 02:05:04,000
Perry winds at the first pitch.

1666
02:05:04,000 --> 02:05:09,000
Now low. One thing about it, there'll be more people if Perry wins his 300 tonight.

1667
02:05:09,000 --> 02:05:16,000
More people see his 300 than saw Gus Wins. They had 13,565 in Kansas City.

1668
02:05:16,000 --> 02:05:19,000
But I bet you a million people have told Gus when they saw that win.

1669
02:05:19,000 --> 02:05:23,000
Oh yeah, sure they have.

1670
02:05:23,000 --> 02:05:31,000
Pitch coming, grounded at first base and knocked down, picked up by Malory. Goes to the back and gets Mercer and one out.

1671
02:05:31,000 --> 02:05:36,000
Although early pitch only five innings.

1672
02:05:36,000 --> 02:05:41,000
He got a key base hit. He let off the fifth inning with a single.

1673
02:05:41,000 --> 02:05:45,000
Before the inning was over, Whitman had scored four runs.

1674
02:05:45,000 --> 02:05:50,000
So he started a four run rally in a one to one ball game at that time.

1675
02:05:50,000 --> 02:05:52,000
When was the next one hitter?

1676
02:05:52,000 --> 02:05:56,000
I believe he was a switch hitter. I know he, I think he was a switch hitter.

1677
02:05:56,000 --> 02:06:02,000
I used to watch Winn and Lemon, Egan and all those guys, Rosen, all Cleveland players.

1678
02:06:02,000 --> 02:06:09,000
There's some other Yankee names in that box score. Jerry Lumpy was the Kansas City second baseman in that ball game.

1679
02:06:09,000 --> 02:06:14,000
Charlie Lowe was their catcher for Kansas City.

1680
02:06:14,000 --> 02:06:21,000
Willie Randolph steps in, takes inside from Perry. Randolph tonight is 0 for 3.

1681
02:06:21,000 --> 02:06:34,000
Grounded out to first, reached on an error and hit back to the box and Perry threw him out.

1682
02:06:34,000 --> 02:06:42,000
Wind up by Gaylord. Perry at the bench. Line fouled out toward the right field corner and into the seats.

1683
02:06:42,000 --> 02:07:02,000
After early win, one is 300th game. He made 15 more appearances for the Indians in 1963, but failed to post another tryout.

1684
02:07:02,000 --> 02:07:12,000
Randolph with a count of one ball, one strike. The Niners are leading 7 to 1, the wind up by Gaylord Perry in the right hander's pitch.

1685
02:07:12,000 --> 02:07:18,000
Just a little bit low, but that way wind up by Kaiser says it's a ball.

1686
02:07:18,000 --> 02:07:30,000
And again the paying umpires in the box seats and the bleachers disagree.

1687
02:07:30,000 --> 02:07:48,000
The wide, the pitch coming. A strike called at the letters and it's 2 and 2.

1688
02:07:48,000 --> 02:08:04,000
Here comes the 2 and 2 pitch. Inside with a fastball, 3 and 2 to Randolph.

1689
02:08:04,000 --> 02:08:11,000
One out, nobody on. We're at the top of the eighth inning.

1690
02:08:11,000 --> 02:08:19,000
Perry winds it up and turns it loose. Randolph hits a right back off the pitching hand of Perry. Failed it by Todd Cruz, throw to first.

1691
02:08:19,000 --> 02:08:24,000
Randolph is safe at first base.

1692
02:08:24,000 --> 02:08:29,000
Perry may not have touched that ball. I don't know. He did, it just barely flicked his throwing hand.

1693
02:08:29,000 --> 02:08:36,000
I think it's just got his throwing hand, Frank, it slowed it down enough for Willie to make it. Cruz had to come in from second base.

1694
02:08:36,000 --> 02:08:41,000
He was off behind Gaylord Perry. And Cruz got rid of the ball quickly.

1695
02:08:41,000 --> 02:08:48,000
Perry closed play at first base. Very close. The first base up by Jerry Doudeker gave the ball to Willie Randolph.

1696
02:08:48,000 --> 02:09:04,000
That is the Yankees' step in of the game. And with a man on and one out, here's Ken Griffey who has two of the five bases including his first, the 1982 and obviously his first Yankee home run.

1697
02:09:04,000 --> 02:09:08,000
Griffey two for three with a homer and a single grounded out his other grip.

1698
02:09:08,000 --> 02:09:15,000
Perry checks Randolph with a look to pitch to Griffey. He's outside, ball one.

1699
02:09:15,000 --> 02:09:27,000
Third baseman Manny Castillo gets Gaylord's attention to tell him that Mailer wants to let him know he's going to play behind Randolph now at first base.

1700
02:09:27,000 --> 02:09:33,000
Mailer's going to play the hitter and not the baserunner.

1701
02:09:33,000 --> 02:09:40,000
Perry sets and his pitch. A strike is called as he threw a breaking pitch that time to Griffey.

1702
02:09:40,000 --> 02:09:45,000
One ball, one strike. There's one out.

1703
02:09:45,000 --> 02:09:53,000
To a man, the Mariner players said before the game they were excited and thrilled and happy to be a part of what could be an historic event.

1704
02:09:53,000 --> 02:09:57,000
Well, they don't have too much of an opportunity to be excited about anything.

1705
02:09:57,000 --> 02:10:04,000
That's very true. One-one bench and Griffey bumps a butt and a strike is called.

1706
02:10:04,000 --> 02:10:18,000
The flag one try running butt that time for a base hit and guys are called to the strike. It's one and two.

1707
02:10:18,000 --> 02:10:34,000
That's the chowder of Gaylord in the background. One and two count on Griffey. Gaylord started up and stepped off. Broke the motion.

1708
02:10:34,000 --> 02:10:39,000
Nice starts up, comes set, the pitch coming. Get through the left side, base hit in the left field.

1709
02:10:39,000 --> 02:10:45,000
Randolph will have to stop at second as Buckeye feels the ball and brings it back in.

1710
02:10:45,000 --> 02:10:48,000
Griffey has his third hit of the game.

1711
02:10:48,000 --> 02:10:54,000
I think Ken likes it on the surface. Although he has said in the past that it's not good for his knees.

1712
02:10:54,000 --> 02:11:03,000
If he could play offense on it, play defense on grass, he'd probably be a lot more happy.

1713
02:11:03,000 --> 02:11:09,000
Well, he's got himself his third hit of the night.

1714
02:11:09,000 --> 02:11:19,000
And the batter will be Jerry Mumfrey. First game this year Griffey's had three base hits in a ball game.

1715
02:11:19,000 --> 02:11:25,000
Mumfrey tripled his first time up, then ground it into a double play and ground it out to second.

1716
02:11:25,000 --> 02:11:29,000
Takes a little fastball, ball one.

1717
02:11:29,000 --> 02:11:36,000
In the first inning with two outs Mumfrey drilled one up the outing and right center and went to third.

1718
02:11:36,000 --> 02:11:39,000
Mayberry popped up with that inning.

1719
02:11:39,000 --> 02:11:45,000
Then with runners at first and third and one out in the third Mumfrey ground it into a double play, started by the shortstop.

1720
02:11:45,000 --> 02:11:48,000
The pitch, wide base hit in the left field.

1721
02:11:48,000 --> 02:11:55,000
Randolph is held at third as again Buckeye gets the ball back in quickly and the Yankees have the bases loaded.

1722
02:11:55,000 --> 02:12:04,000
Three consecutive singles and the Yankees have loaded the bases against Gaylord Berry here in the eighth inning.

1723
02:12:04,000 --> 02:12:11,000
Once again the Mariner bullfin gets busy, left hander and the right hander up and they'll start throwing.

1724
02:12:11,000 --> 02:12:20,000
Probably Vandeberg the left hander and I guess might be funneled right hander until we can verify.

1725
02:12:20,000 --> 02:12:23,000
You're right.

1726
02:12:23,000 --> 02:12:26,000
Dave Duck and the pitching coach now jogging out to the mound.

1727
02:12:26,000 --> 02:12:34,000
He will give Scott Holand and Vandeberg more time to get loose. Bases loaded, one out and John Mayberry's a batter.

1728
02:12:34,000 --> 02:12:40,000
I don't think the left hander Vandeberg has had an opportunity to get loose enough to pitch to Mayberry.

1729
02:12:40,000 --> 02:12:44,000
So Mayberry is a pitch to being against Gaylord Berry.

1730
02:12:44,000 --> 02:12:50,000
Boston over section five to two, four in a row for the Texas Rangers on the left side.

1731
02:12:50,000 --> 02:12:57,000
Milwaukee beat Minnesota six to three. Baltimore and California tied two-two after seven and a half and it's open three.

1732
02:12:57,000 --> 02:13:00,000
Cleveland won at the end of six, right?

1733
02:13:00,000 --> 02:13:03,000
Mayberry with the bases loaded Bill, he's open three tonight.

1734
02:13:03,000 --> 02:13:09,000
Has not had the ball out of the infield. Full wind up by Berry and the pitch. Swaying on the miss by one.

1735
02:13:09,000 --> 02:13:24,000
You mentioned Dave Duck and the pitching coach going out. He used to be Gaylord's catcher. In Cleveland he caught Gaylord.

1736
02:13:24,000 --> 02:13:32,000
Infield back, shaded around to the right side. The outfield deep and the pitch. Foul out of play on the left side. That'll be in the crowd.

1737
02:13:32,000 --> 02:13:40,000
No ball, two strike out on Mayberry. Something was interesting to learn from Mayberry and I know that you and John talked about it earlier.

1738
02:13:40,000 --> 02:13:47,000
That his first ever major league home run came off Gaylord Berry and also his first American league home run came off Gaylord Berry.

1739
02:13:47,000 --> 02:13:53,000
John said something else. He said 17 years ago, evidently the Yankees drafted him.

1740
02:13:53,000 --> 02:14:01,000
I didn't get any further into it with him, but he said I should have been here 17 years ago.

1741
02:14:01,000 --> 02:14:06,000
No balls and two strikes on Mayberry. The pitch strikes big time.

1742
02:14:06,000 --> 02:14:17,000
That's a big strike out for Perry. Second time he's got Mayberry.

1743
02:14:17,000 --> 02:14:23,000
Perry is pretty gaugy. They like to go to him with the young pitchers on the fair.

1744
02:14:23,000 --> 02:14:33,000
Now he threw Mayberry a pitch outside. Mayberry just got a piece of him and followed off off the left side. Mayberry probably thinking he's going to go back out there and get a waste one.

1745
02:14:33,000 --> 02:14:37,000
Came back on the inside corner with a good pitch and John just walked away.

1746
02:14:37,000 --> 02:14:46,000
They tell me the young pitchers on this staff, when Perry is not pitching a ball game, they fight for a seat next to him on the dugout bench to listen to it.

1747
02:14:46,000 --> 02:14:54,000
They tell me he's been great with some of the kids on this club. Two outs and he'll pitch to Winfield where the bases loaded.

1748
02:14:54,000 --> 02:15:06,000
Again the full wind up and the pitch. Winfield bounces it off the plate. Perry's got to wait for it to come down. Bare handed, throws, save, and the run scores, they said.

1749
02:15:06,000 --> 02:15:16,000
Perry weighed that one very well. He did not glove it. He took the high bounce, waited for it in his bare hand to try to save half a second.

1750
02:15:16,000 --> 02:15:24,000
But his throw was not in time. Winfield has a single off the plate driving in Randolph and it's now a 7-2 ball game Seattle.

1751
02:15:24,000 --> 02:15:34,000
And a grand slam here will put it right back up pretty close.

1752
02:15:34,000 --> 02:15:46,000
The batter will be Oscar Gamble with the bases loaded.

1753
02:15:46,000 --> 02:15:53,000
Perry takes a little time now. He's allowing the men on the bullpen extra time to get warm.

1754
02:15:53,000 --> 02:16:01,000
You imagine all the media attention that Perry has had in addition to having to pitch a ball game. That takes a lot out of a man.

1755
02:16:01,000 --> 02:16:08,000
He winds and the pitch. He throws a strike to Gamble.

1756
02:16:08,000 --> 02:16:19,000
Griffey at third, Mumfrey at second, Winfield at first. It was Winfield's 17th run batted in this year.

1757
02:16:19,000 --> 02:16:25,000
No balls on a strike on Oscar Gamble. Oscar's 0 for 3. Here's the pitch.

1758
02:16:25,000 --> 02:16:33,000
And it is hit sharply on the ground to the shortstop. Throw to second. Safe. Julio Cruz got there too late.

1759
02:16:33,000 --> 02:16:39,000
As Winfield beat him to the back and it's now a 7-3 ball game as Griffey is in the score.

1760
02:16:39,000 --> 02:16:45,000
Very odd lineup for the Mariners. They had Cruz at shortstop almost out in shallow left center.

1761
02:16:45,000 --> 02:16:51,000
And Cruz, Julio Cruz at second base was playing deep and playing Randolph playing Gamble a full.

1762
02:16:51,000 --> 02:16:58,000
It became a foot race between Julio Cruz and Dave Winfield and Winfield beat him to second base.

1763
02:16:58,000 --> 02:17:06,000
They're going to give Gamble a base hit and a run batted in.

1764
02:17:06,000 --> 02:17:12,000
And now Roy Smalley, if we don't get Smalley, leads all visiting players in homerang in this ballpark.

1765
02:17:12,000 --> 02:17:17,000
Home run here tied up. Bases loaded and the pitch is fouled back.

1766
02:17:17,000 --> 02:17:30,000
Strike one. Smalley tonight is 1 for 2. He is single, fly to center and drawn the only walk given up by Gaylord Perry.

1767
02:17:30,000 --> 02:17:35,000
A dying run is at the plate.

1768
02:17:35,000 --> 02:17:40,000
Now it's Mumford at third. Winfield at second. Gamble at first.

1769
02:17:40,000 --> 02:17:48,000
Perry again, the full windup. The 0-1 pitch to Smalley. Popped up at a shallow left. Here comes Mochte calling for it.

1770
02:17:48,000 --> 02:17:58,000
Andre makes the pass. Yankees score 2 and lead 3. And in the middle of the inning, it's Seattle 7, New York 3.

1771
02:17:58,000 --> 02:18:02,000
Bigger is better, especially when it comes to shocks for pickups and vans.

1772
02:18:02,000 --> 02:18:06,000
And 4x4 Monroe Magnum 60 is as tough as they come.

1773
02:18:06,000 --> 02:18:13,000
Almost twice as big as standard one in shocks. Magnum 60 shocks help keep your truckin' firm and stable on road or off.

1774
02:18:13,000 --> 02:18:19,000
Right now, buy three, get one free. Monroe Magnum 60 is one big reason America rides Monroe.

1775
02:18:19,000 --> 02:18:25,000
They're available at Andie Wood's, Auto Parts, Route 9, Latham, Sand Creek Road, Colony, and Catlin Streets Connected-y.

1776
02:18:25,000 --> 02:18:31,000
Offer expires May 31, 1982. Remember, America rides Monroe.

1777
02:18:31,000 --> 02:18:42,000
Listen to the art of conversation at its very best. Listen to America Overnight, Monday through Saturday from midnight to 5.30, here on WROW.

1778
02:18:42,000 --> 02:18:51,000
America Overnight, co-hosted by Ed Bochendalos and Eric Tracy in Los Angeles, takes a fresh look at the celebrities, the issues, and people just like yourself.

1779
02:18:51,000 --> 02:19:02,000
It's the nation's premier talk and call-in show, America Overnight, Monday through Saturday from midnight to 5.30, here on Radio 59, WROW.

1780
02:19:02,000 --> 02:19:04,000
Well, Billings, you've got three choices.

1781
02:19:04,000 --> 02:19:05,000
What, sir?

1782
02:19:05,000 --> 02:19:06,000
You're in tar and feather, you know.

1783
02:19:06,000 --> 02:19:07,000
I was just trying to save us money.

1784
02:19:07,000 --> 02:19:08,000
You can go on the rack.

1785
02:19:08,000 --> 02:19:11,000
All I did was suggest our company cut back on advertising.

1786
02:19:11,000 --> 02:19:13,000
And every one of our competitors passed us.

1787
02:19:13,000 --> 02:19:14,000
I was just trying to save us.

1788
02:19:14,000 --> 02:19:17,000
The best way to stretch the budget is to advertise on radio.

1789
02:19:17,000 --> 02:19:19,000
It reaches more people and it targets the right audience.

1790
02:19:19,000 --> 02:19:25,000
Oh, I know that now. What's the third torture? Sharing an office with an art director? Is that too real hot?

1791
02:19:25,000 --> 02:19:33,000
Radio. Red hot because it works. For more facts on radio, call the station of the Radio Advertising Bureau. They brought you this message.

1792
02:19:33,000 --> 02:19:46,000
And Bill, we have the paid attendance. 27,369 has just been announced.

1793
02:19:46,000 --> 02:19:55,000
Doc Cruz will lead off the bottom half of the gate. He's one for three. Big base hit. Drove in two runs in the third inning when the Mariners tagged.

1794
02:19:55,000 --> 02:20:03,000
Don Alexander for five. Rudy May's pitch. Swing on a miss on a curve ball. Strike one.

1795
02:20:03,000 --> 02:20:07,000
In the ninth inning, the Yankees will have Serone.

1796
02:20:07,000 --> 02:20:16,000
Milborne, due up. Milborne now short. And then Randolph.

1797
02:20:16,000 --> 02:20:19,000
Pitch is a bit high to Todd Cruz.

1798
02:20:19,000 --> 02:20:26,000
That went out to the pinch hitting efforts of Bobby Mercer and Larry Milborne is now shortstop.

1799
02:20:26,000 --> 02:20:32,000
One more pitch. Get on the ground, back up the middle, and that's going to be a base hit.

1800
02:20:32,000 --> 02:20:39,000
On through to center field and Todd Cruz leads off the bottom half of the gate with his second base hit of the game.

1801
02:20:39,000 --> 02:20:44,000
The fifth off May and the 11th for the Mariners.

1802
02:20:44,000 --> 02:20:53,000
Al Collins, a triple of the show for three trips so far.

1803
02:20:53,000 --> 02:20:59,000
The Mariners scored five runs on five hits in the third inning. Jim Mailer led off with a three base hit.

1804
02:20:59,000 --> 02:21:05,000
Todd Bulley and a single for the first RBI.

1805
02:21:05,000 --> 02:21:11,000
Set by May and the pitch. Dagon for a strike.

1806
02:21:11,000 --> 02:21:16,000
Julio Cruz sacrificed and reached when Serone threw the ball away.

1807
02:21:16,000 --> 02:21:20,000
Castillo drove in a run with a base hit.

1808
02:21:20,000 --> 02:21:26,000
And then Todd Cruz drove in two and Collins got another one home with a triple.

1809
02:21:26,000 --> 02:21:39,000
Strike called. Oh and two on Collins.

1810
02:21:39,000 --> 02:21:46,000
Now the set by Rudy May and his pitch to Collins is down low more than two strikes.

1811
02:21:46,000 --> 02:21:50,000
I'd have to say Bill White making that decision and announcing it early.

1812
02:21:50,000 --> 02:21:57,000
Latchman took some pressure off himself saying he's going to leave it up to Perry. He said it's his fault.

1813
02:21:57,000 --> 02:22:05,000
Now this were late September and the Mariners were fighting for a penalty of different matter I guess.

1814
02:22:05,000 --> 02:22:11,000
Yeah it would be. It would surprise a lot of people. Grounded down the third base line foul ball this morning.

1815
02:22:11,000 --> 02:22:17,000
I think it will be a while before we have to worry about a late September stretch drive here.

1816
02:22:17,000 --> 02:22:25,000
But the point is I think Latchman did take pressure off himself by saying that. What else you going to do?

1817
02:22:25,000 --> 02:22:34,000
Well he can't lose the game if you take him out for one thing. Of course I guess he wants to pitch a complete game three hundredth win.

1818
02:22:34,000 --> 02:22:40,000
Rudy's pitch. Grounded back toward the box. May has it. Throws to second. Out at second base.

1819
02:22:40,000 --> 02:22:47,000
They get Todd Cruz. No throw by Randolph back across.

1820
02:22:47,000 --> 02:22:51,000
A one four force play.

1821
02:22:51,000 --> 02:23:00,000
And Joe Simpson will step in.

1822
02:23:00,000 --> 02:23:07,000
Simpson is over three. Has not had the ball off the infield. Grounded out twice and popped up to Smalley.

1823
02:23:07,000 --> 02:23:10,000
Left hand hitter.

1824
02:23:10,000 --> 02:23:21,000
And the pitch drive. In the dirt and ice play by Sorrone. Ball one.

1825
02:23:21,000 --> 02:23:31,000
Smalley is in shallow at third base at the edge of what would be the infield grass on a normal playing field.

1826
02:23:31,000 --> 02:23:34,000
And a throw to first. See.

1827
02:23:34,000 --> 02:23:39,000
Almost got him on a second tag as Collins getting back to the bag.

1828
02:23:39,000 --> 02:23:51,000
Lifted his foot for a second. But headed back down before Mayberry double tagged him.

1829
02:23:51,000 --> 02:24:02,000
Now a throw again over to first. And again Collins gets back.

1830
02:24:02,000 --> 02:24:09,000
In case you're joining us for the first time, I can update you on this. Steve Balboni is winning and he's called up from Columbus.

1831
02:24:09,000 --> 02:24:14,000
Dave LaRoche sent him back down to resume his job as pitcher and coach.

1832
02:24:14,000 --> 02:24:24,000
Strike called and the count goes one and one now on Joe Simpson. Jim Maylor is the on deck batter.

1833
02:24:24,000 --> 02:24:32,000
The batters are leading 7-3. We're in the bottom half of the eighth inning. Collins at first won out.

1834
02:24:32,000 --> 02:24:40,000
May's set. And the pitch to subset. Runner going. Bowled off. Fast ball in on the hands.

1835
02:24:40,000 --> 02:25:00,000
Collins was running with the pitch.

1836
02:25:00,000 --> 02:25:12,000
Sarone puts down a side. And the one-two pitch. Wide to Randolph who's got it and throws back to first to double off Collins.

1837
02:25:12,000 --> 02:25:20,000
No run to base it. And with the double play, nobody left. At the end of eighth, the score. The Mariners 7 and the Yankees 3.

1838
02:25:20,000 --> 02:25:30,000
Of all the ways that we can fly. Of all the highways through the sky. Of all the wings that greet the sun.

1839
02:25:30,000 --> 02:25:41,000
Eastern, get your number one. The pride of Eastern shining through. We heard our wings by serving you.

1840
02:25:41,000 --> 02:25:56,000
We'll meet a new injury why. We're America's favorite way to fly. For the third year in a row now, more passengers have flown Eastern than any other airline in the free world.

1841
02:25:56,000 --> 02:26:09,000
If you helped make us America's favorite way to fly, we thank you. If you haven't flown Eastern recently, give us a try. We'll show you we really do earn our wings every day.

1842
02:26:09,000 --> 02:26:29,000
We're Eastern, America's favorite way to fly. We're Eastern, America's number one chocolate soft drink.

1843
02:26:29,000 --> 02:26:40,000
Mmm, that great chocolate drink. That's what you like about Yoo-hoo. Cool, creamy, delicious, and so expensive. No wonder all our kids like Yoo-hoo.

1844
02:26:40,000 --> 02:26:47,000
Yoo-hoo, America's number one chocolate soft drink. Yoo-hoo!

1845
02:26:47,000 --> 02:27:04,000
Let's take ten seconds for station identification on the New York Yankee Baseball Network. Keep your dial right here to Radio 59, WROW Albany, for much more Yankee baseball.

1846
02:27:04,000 --> 02:27:20,000
We go to the ninth inning, Rick Sarone to lead off. Larry Nohbarn is on deck, and then Willie Randolph. The Mariners are out in front, 7-3, Gaylord Berry into the windup.

1847
02:27:20,000 --> 02:27:36,000
And the first pitch to Sarone. Blowing away ball one. Sarone tonight is 0-3, hit to the box, struck out and popped out. Yankees have nine hits, getting five of the nine in the eighth inning.

1848
02:27:36,000 --> 02:27:50,000
That's scoring but two runs. The pitch bowed off, one and one. Yankees got two runs on five hits in the eighth, and of the five hits, three were on the infield.

1849
02:27:50,000 --> 02:28:06,000
Lead off single by Randolph. Winfield fast went off the plate, and Gambels face it for the shortstop. Berry has the sign from Bowie.

1850
02:28:06,000 --> 02:28:23,000
The windup and the pitch. Breaking ball, missing low, two balls and one strike. Berry has one-one, struck out four.

1851
02:28:23,000 --> 02:28:36,000
He goes near the back of the head, bends, has the sign, strikes the wind, the 2-1 pitch. A fast ball for a strike of the Mariners, and the count is 2-2.

1852
02:28:36,000 --> 02:28:49,000
Sarone does not like to call. Has the word of two with plate on fire, Catten-Kaiser.

1853
02:28:49,000 --> 02:29:05,000
Two balls and two strikes on Sarone, leading off the ninth. Mariners out in front, 7-3. The wind by Perry, the pitch. Check swing, line drive back to the box, and Perry grabs it for the off.

1854
02:29:05,000 --> 02:29:24,000
Top liner, Perry, caught the ball just before it hit the ground, taking no chances on the way it would be called. He threw out the first base, but it was caught fair. A line out by Sarone. One down, and Larry Milborne will bat.

1855
02:29:24,000 --> 02:29:36,000
Milborne, former Mariner, should get a pretty good reception from the crowd. Ground's only thinking about Berry.

1856
02:29:36,000 --> 02:29:50,000
Milborne, switch under batting left, and he steps away. The pitch is outside for a ball.

1857
02:29:50,000 --> 02:30:16,000
Milborne is hitting 190. Batting left at it, he's hitting 286. And he lines one foul with the seats on the left side. One ball and one strike.

1858
02:30:16,000 --> 02:30:32,000
If Perry gets the last out himself, it will be his 291st complete game. It's his 633rd start. In his career, he has relieved 87 times. He winds, and the pitch.

1859
02:30:32,000 --> 02:30:51,000
Top foul off the left side, in pursuit, third baseman Castillo, and he will run out of room. The ball is three rows deep, just past the third base dugout. One ball, two strikes on Milborne.

1860
02:30:51,000 --> 02:31:06,000
Perry had said that he knew it would benefit him if he could win his 300th game against the Yankees because of the added New York media coverage.

1861
02:31:06,000 --> 02:31:22,000
He won his 299th in New York, and is well on his way to his 300th now, leading 7-3. The pitch to Milborne popped up right side. Julio Cruz, the second baseman, is under it, and makes the catch.

1862
02:31:22,000 --> 02:31:42,000
Well, Gaylord Perry, one out away from putting his name, indelibly, in the record books of Major League Baseball, as only the 15th pitcher in the history of the game to win a 300 Major League Baseball.

1863
02:31:42,000 --> 02:31:54,000
And the last out is the toughest one. We'll see. Randolph the batter. Willie is one for four tonight. He's going to run. Randolph has not had the ball off the infield against Perry.

1864
02:31:54,000 --> 02:32:12,000
The wind up, the first pitch to Randolph. A low fast ball, it's ball one. And Kaiser will fall to the baseball. Randolph has bounced to first, reached on an error by Castillo. Get back to the box and single.

1865
02:32:12,000 --> 02:32:32,000
Back off Perry's pitching hand. Everybody is standing here at the Kingdom now. They will really break loose. The pitch, as frank as ball, it's one and one.

1866
02:32:32,000 --> 02:32:56,000
The crowd of 27,369, riding now on every pitch. Two outs in the night. Seattle is leading 7-3. Gaylord Perry into the wind up. The right arm around, the pitch to Randolph, high and tight. Willie ducks away. Two balls and a strike.

1867
02:32:56,000 --> 02:33:12,000
Julio Cruz plays Randolph very deep on the right side. The third baseman, Castillo, is the only infielder in close. The outfield shaded toward right. Perry winds. And the two and one pitch. Get on the ground to Julio Cruz. He has it.

1868
02:33:12,000 --> 02:33:28,000
The throw to first base. The ball gave us over and Gaylord Perry has become only the 15th pitcher in Major League history to win 300 baseball games. He is being pummeled by his teammates.

1869
02:33:28,000 --> 02:33:52,000
The media racing on the field. Television cameraman, still cameraman, reporters. The first man to shake his hand was the rookie first baseman, Jim Mailer. And Gaylord Perry, surrounded by teammates and media people, knocks his cap to the ground.

1870
02:33:52,000 --> 02:34:15,000
He's enjoying, I would say, more emotion right now than I've ever seen at this man's show. He blows a kiss to his wife, who is in the stands, and now still surrounded by teammates and media, makes his way to the dugout and the ensuing press conferences to take place.

1871
02:34:15,000 --> 02:34:40,000
The Seattle Mariner's, winning by a score of 7 to 3 as Gaylord Perry goes the route, winning his third game this year. In his sixth start, a third complete game of the season, and the 300th career victory for Gaylord Perry. I'll be back with more, the totals and the recap, and more about the ball game right after this message.

1872
02:34:40,000 --> 02:34:45,000
Mrs. Jones is 100 years old today. To celebrate, she's going to ask her pharmacist about generic drugs.

1873
02:34:45,000 --> 02:34:48,000
Mr. Pharmacist, can you read this prescription?

1874
02:34:48,000 --> 02:34:50,000
Yes, ma'am. It says to take your medicine four times a day.

1875
02:34:50,000 --> 02:34:52,000
Not that. I mean the chicken track.

1876
02:34:52,000 --> 02:34:53,000
That's the name of a brand name drug.

1877
02:34:53,000 --> 02:34:57,000
That's what I thought. I want a generic drug instead. They do the same job, right?

1878
02:34:57,000 --> 02:34:58,000
Yes, ma'am.

1879
02:34:58,000 --> 02:34:59,000
They can cause less, right?

1880
02:34:59,000 --> 02:35:00,000
Yes, ma'am. They can.

1881
02:35:00,000 --> 02:35:06,000
So give me generic drugs, Sonny, and make it snappy. I got a birthday party to go to.

1882
02:35:06,000 --> 02:35:10,000
Generic drugs. Get the facts from your pharmacist. A tip from the FTC.

1883
02:35:10,000 --> 02:35:21,000
Hats off, America. Here's a vote to make it grow. Hats off, America. Say thanks to the ones who make it go.

1884
02:35:21,000 --> 02:35:32,000
Working nine to five, trucking round the clock. Growing on stone, making a mile on a dock. Hats off, America. Here's a vote to make it grow.

1885
02:35:32,000 --> 02:35:39,000
Here's hats off to the American worker, especially the millions of you who buy United States savings bonds to the payroll savings plan.

1886
02:35:39,000 --> 02:35:46,000
You not only help your savings grow, you help your country grow too.

1887
02:35:46,000 --> 02:35:56,000
Hats off, America. Here's what it's all about. Votes for love of America. Put a little back of what they take out.

1888
02:35:56,000 --> 02:36:05,000
Millions of working women and men buy U.S. bonds to the payroll plan. Take a stock in America.

1889
02:36:05,000 --> 02:36:08,000
Hats off, America.

1890
02:36:08,000 --> 02:36:15,000
Hats off, America.

1891
02:36:15,000 --> 02:36:28,000
Game on, Barry. It's just come out to take his curtain call as, again, he received a standing ovation. Nobody is leaving the Kingdome. Well, a few people now start going to the exits.

1892
02:36:28,000 --> 02:36:41,000
A crowd of 27,369 on hand as baseball history was made in the King County Stadium tonight, more familiarly known as the Kingdome.

1893
02:36:41,000 --> 02:36:50,000
The doubles on the ballgame. For the Seattle Mariners, seven runs on 11 hits. They committed one error and left three men on base.

1894
02:36:50,000 --> 02:36:56,000
For the New York Yankees, three runs on nine hits. They committed one error and left seven men on base.

1895
02:36:56,000 --> 02:37:01,000
Game on, Barry, the winning pitcher. His third win of the year. He has lost twice.

1896
02:37:01,000 --> 02:37:11,000
Doyle Alexander, who started for the Yankees, the loser. His record is 0-2. I'll be back with more on tonight's game in just a moment.

1897
02:37:11,000 --> 02:37:38,000
Oh yeah, you know it's you. The great American story telling. Clode at you.

1898
02:37:38,000 --> 02:37:58,000
400 for prints and Ektachrome 400 for slides are Kodak's fastest 35 millimeter color films.

1899
02:37:58,000 --> 02:38:09,000
Now I'm ready. Got my sneaks, my sweat, and Kodakolor 400 film for every kind of picture. Kodak has the right kind of film.

1900
02:38:09,000 --> 02:38:14,000
How would you feel if you couldn't tune into this game because your car radio and tape player were ripped off?

1901
02:38:14,000 --> 02:38:24,000
Or worse yet, you couldn't get to the ballpark because your car was stolen. It's hard to believe, but every 12 seconds in this country, another automobile is being stolen, stripped, or vandalized.

1902
02:38:24,000 --> 02:38:32,000
Vertronix manufactures the Bug, America's number one burglar detection system for the home, through continued scientific achievement that's created the Autobug.

1903
02:38:32,000 --> 02:38:38,000
A very affordable alarm that stops the thief and, what is most important, before he gets into your car.

1904
02:38:38,000 --> 02:38:52,000
That's right, the thief is struck out before he even gets to bat. Just let him tamper with your doors and locks and try to lift the hood or trunk, and the Autobug, with its sonic sensors, reacts immediately, causing your hazard lights to blink and flash in a frenzy and then wham.

1905
02:38:52,000 --> 02:39:00,000
The Autobug lets loose its own screaming Pearson siren. Holy cow, the thief is off and running. Do you think he's being chased by a gothish fastball?

1906
02:39:00,000 --> 02:39:10,000
So take it from the scooter, just like the speedy Yankee base runners. Keep your car and everything in it safe with the Autobug by Vertronix, now available at many new car dealers.

1907
02:39:10,000 --> 02:39:27,000
In winning the ball game tonight, 21 of the 27 outs against Barry were made on the infield. That included his four strikeouts and one double play in the game.

1908
02:39:27,000 --> 02:39:41,000
Barry gave up a triple to Mumfrey in the first inning, a single to Smalley in the second. An error by Manny Castillo and a single by Ken Griffey put him in trouble in the third, but he got Mumfrey to ground into a double play.

1909
02:39:41,000 --> 02:39:56,000
He got the side and order in the fourth and fifth. The Yankees scored in the sixth inning a one-out home run by Ken Griffey after a controversial call at home plate, as to whether Griffey's check swing grounder was fair or not.

1910
02:39:56,000 --> 02:40:04,000
The grounder was fair or foul. It was ruled a fair ball by play-off by Ken Kaiser, and Griffey was thrown out at first.

1911
02:40:04,000 --> 02:40:14,000
With that third base up by Jim Maloney, said no, the ball was foul. Griffey was given a new life, and he responded with his first 1982 home run.

1912
02:40:14,000 --> 02:40:30,000
Barry walked Smalley in the seventh inning. The Yankees scored two runs on five hits, only three of the five hits, or three of the five hits, were on the infield in the eighth inning. And then Barry came back to finish it, getting the side and order in the ninth.

1913
02:40:30,000 --> 02:40:49,000
He was thrown on a soft liner to the box, no-born on a pop-up to Julio Cruz, and rammed off on a ground-up to Julio Cruz. The Mariners scored five runs on five hits off Doyle Alexander in the third, and the game, as it turned out, was out of reach then.

1914
02:40:49,000 --> 02:41:05,000
They added two more against Rudy May in the seventh. So Gaylord Perry becomes the 15-300 winner in Major League history, and the first since early win, one-year's-300th game in 1963.

1915
02:41:05,000 --> 02:41:20,000
The final score, the Seattle Mariners, seventh, at the New York Yankees, three.

