{"id":18064,"date":"2011-10-29T08:49:57","date_gmt":"2011-10-29T15:49:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/seamheads.com\/?p=18064"},"modified":"2011-10-29T08:49:57","modified_gmt":"2011-10-29T15:49:57","slug":"gracias-terry-tito-many-thanks-terry-tito","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/2011\/10\/29\/gracias-terry-tito-many-thanks-terry-tito\/","title":{"rendered":"Gracias Terry (Tito).  (Many thanks Terry (Tito))"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Ver a Terry Francona bajar la cabeza y descender los escalones hacia el club house&#160; de los Medias Rojas de Boston en Camden Yards, luego de perder el &#250;ltimo juego de la temporada y toda<br \/>\noportunidad de ganar el comod&#237;n de la campa&#241;a 2011; me hizo regresar a una noche de octubre de 2004. Los Yanquis maceraban a los patirrojos 3 juegos a cero en la Serie<br \/>\npor el Campeonato de la Liga Americana.<br \/>\nMe preparaba a coleccionar una nueva desilusi&#243;n cuando apareci&#243; aquel robo de base de Dave Roberts, aquel batazo de Bill Mueller. Roberts hab&#237;a entrado a correr por Kevin Millar qui&#233;n hab&#237;a iniciado el cierre del noveno con boleto. Tres o cuatro veces Rivera intent&#243; sorprender a Roberts en primera. Eso acicate&#243; al corredor a salir con el primer env&#237;o hacia el plato y lleg&#243; con<br \/>\nvida a segunda base. Si hab&#237;an logrado aquello ante el gran cerrador Mariano Rivera en el noveno episodio&#160; de aquel cuarto juego. &#191;Por qu&#233; no so&#241;ar con la victoria? Los innings pasaban y el<br \/>\nempate persist&#237;a y con &#233;l la agon&#237;a de que todo terminara con alg&#250;n batazo atravesado de los implacables Yanquis.<\/p>\n<p>En los momentos m&#225;s aciagos de aquel noveno episodio, Francona permanec&#237;a imperturbable. De brazos cruzados pero con la mirada firme entre el campo de<br \/>\njuego y el dugout. Cuando Roberts lleg&#243; a segunda, Tito casi sonri&#243; desde su esquina del dugout. Cuando la pelota sali&#243; indetenible&#160; del bate de Mueller, Tito agitaba los brazos<br \/>\nsobre su cabeza como si fuese el coach de tercera base. Desde la oscuridad de la sala respir&#233; profundo con los brazos entumecidos de tanto nadar sobre la<br \/>\nsilla de extensi&#243;n, pod&#237;a sentir todo el vapor concentrado sobre el plato y el dugout de los Medias Rojas.<\/p>\n<p>En el und&#233;cimo episodio a Francona no le tembl&#243; el pulso para traer a Mike Myers y Curtis Leskanic a controlar un intento de rebeli&#243;n de los bombarderos del Bronx y lo<br \/>\nconsigui&#243; como lo hab&#237;a hecho al traer a Mike Timlin en el sexto, Keith Foulke en el s&#233;ptimo y a Allan Embree en el d&#233;cimo tramo.<\/p>\n<p>Para el cierre del duod&#233;cimo episodio David Ortiz vino a batear con Manny Ram&#237;rez&#160; en primera luego de batear sencillo ante Paul<br \/>\nQuantrill. Para ese momento me parec&#237;a que el juego iba a durar una sumatoriade eternidades. Por eso cuando sali&#243; aquel trancazo que se hundi&#243; en la<br \/>\noscuridad del right field grit&#233; sin voz y salt&#233; sobre las rodillas hasta la&#250;ltima repetici&#243;n.<\/p>\n<p>Regresar de un 0-3 en una serie de campeonato era tarea poco menos que impensable, m&#225;s a&#250;n cuando se jugaba ante los implacables Yanquis de Nueva York. Aquella noche sent&#237; en la celebraci&#243;n de los<br \/>\nMedias Rojas y en el paso de Tito hacia el clubhouse que algo hab&#237;a cambiado, que iba a ser otro el equipo patirrojo que saltar&#237;a al terreno. Por eso para el<br \/>\nlunes 18 de octubre de 2004 me plant&#233; frente al televisor desde las 6 de la noche. Mike Mussina versus Pedro Mart&#237;nez. Ser&#237;a otro juego dur&#237;simo,<br \/>\naunque&#160; Boston sali&#243; adelante 2-0 en el primer inning. Los bombarderos pasaron adelante con tres anotaciones en la apertura del s&#233;ptimo. Tito trajo a Mike Timlin a relevar en el s&#233;ptimo y luego<br \/>\na Keith Foulke en el octavo, as&#237; mantuvo el juego 4-2, hasta que David Ortiz se la sac&#243; a Tom Gordon para empezar el cierre del octavo. Kevin Millar negoci&#243;<br \/>\notro boleto y Francona volvi&#243; a traer de emergente a Dave Roberts quien lleg&#243; hasta tercera con imparable de Trot Nixon. Joe Torre trajo a Mariano Rivera y<br \/>\nJason Varitek empat&#243; el juego con elevado de sacrificio. La batucada de la noche anterior ten&#237;a una segunda parte que sonaba m&#225;s duro, quer&#237;a irme por un<br \/>\nmomento al ba&#241;o para bajar la tensi&#243;n pero la intensidad del juego no me dejaba.<\/p>\n<p>Los Yanquis amenazaron con doble por reglas de Tony Clark que llev&#243; hasta tercera al corredor Rub&#233;n Sierra en el inicio del noveno inning. All&#237; empezaron mis<br \/>\nperiplos desde la sala a la cocina. Tito trajo a Bronson Arroyo a relevar en el d&#233;cimo episodio. En el cierre de ese tramo Doug Mienkiewicz destap&#243; doble y<br \/>\nlleg&#243; hasta tercera sin poder anotar. Francona relev&#243; con Mike Myers y Allan Embree en el und&#233;cimo y logr&#243; contener la bater&#237;a yanqui. En el und&#233;cimo<br \/>\nnuevamente las emociones llegaron a mi asiento cuando Boston puso hombres en primera y segunda sin outs pero Esteban Loaiza vino a relevar con un out y<br \/>\noblig&#243; a Orlando Cabrera a roletear para dobleplay.<\/p>\n<p>Tim Wakefield vino al mont&#237;culo en la apertura del duod&#233;cimo y recibi&#243; imparable deMiguel Cairo qui&#233;n pas&#243; a segunda por error de Manny Ram&#237;rez y all&#237; se qued&#243;.<\/p>\n<p>Abriendo el decimotercero Jason Varitek, qui&#233;n normalmente no le recibe a Wakefield, cometi&#243; tres &#8220;passed balls&#8221;, pero losYanquis se quedaron atascados en segunda y tercera.<\/p>\n<p>Loaiza estaba lanzando muy bien. Yo pensaba que ibamos a pasar toda la noche fajadosen ese juego, pero en el cierre del d&#233;cimocuarto episodio, Johnny Damon y Manny<br \/>\nRam&#237;rez negociaron boletos y&#160; David Ortiz vino a batear con 2 outs. Me levant&#233; y frot&#233; las manos hasta que casi sali&#243; fuego de mis dedos. El h&#233;roe de la noche anterior se meti&#243; en un turno de<br \/>\nleyenda y al d&#233;cimo env&#237;o meti&#243; una l&#237;nea hacia el center field que me hizo saltar con la silla en el hombro cuando Damon cruz&#243; el plato para decretar lavictoria 5-4 y poner la serie 2-3. Se<br \/>\nvio a Tito caminar con decisi&#243;n hacia el club house. Todav&#237;a me pellizcaba para obligarme a creer lo que estaba ocurriendo y lo que ligaba que<br \/>\nocurriera en los pr&#243;ximos dos encuentros.<\/p>\n<p>Alfonso L. Tusa C.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>English translation<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>To see Terry Francona dropping his head and going down the steps to the Boston Red Sox&#8217;s club house at Camden Yards after losing the last game of the season and any chance of getting the wild card<br \/>\nberth in the 2011 season, made me return to an October night of 2004. The Yankees were pulling the Red Sox &#160;apart 3 games to none in the American League Championship Series. I was preparing<br \/>\nmyself for a new bitter moment when it appeared that base steal of Dave Roberts, that shot of Bill Mueller. &#160;Roberts had pinch run for Kevin Millar who had&#160; led off the bottom of the ninth inning with a walk. Mariano Rivera tried to pick off Roberts at first base, three or four times. That motivated the runner to go with the first delivery to home and arrived safe to second base. I<br \/>\nkept telling myself &#8220;If they had got the tying run against the great Mariano Rivera why not to dream with winning the game?&#8221; The innings went by ant the tie remained and with it the agony that everything could finish with some big shot of the Yankees.<\/p>\n<p>In the most difficult moments of that ninth frame, Francona remained quiet. With his arms crossed but the stare steady between the field and the dugout. When Roberts arrived to second base, Tito<br \/>\nalmost smiled from his dugout&#8217;s corner. When the ball came out unstoppable from Mueller&#8217;s bat, Tito raised his arms over his head as if he was the third base coach. I breathed deeply from the darkness of the living room. I couldn&#8217;t feel my arms after swimming so hard on my extensive chair. I could feel all the vapor concentrated on the home plate and in the Red Sox dugout.<\/p>\n<p>In the eleventh frame Tito brought in Mike Myers and Curtis Leskanic to control the Yankees and he got it as he did in thesixth when he had brought Mike Timlin. Keith Foulke came in the seventh and<br \/>\nAllan Embree in the tenth to keep the game tied and the hearts flying.<\/p>\n<p>In the bottom of the twelfth inning, DavidOrt&#237;z came to bat with Manny Ram&#237;rez at first base after hitting a single before Paul Quantrill. By that moment I though the game was going to last a lot<br \/>\nof eternities. That&#8217;s why when that shot went beyond right field darkness Ishouted voiceless and jumped on my knees until the last repetition.<\/p>\n<p>Coming back from 0-3 ina Championship Series was an unthinkable task to be done, more if it&#8217;s against the New York Yankees. That night I felt in the Red Sox celebration and in the advancing of Tito to theclub house, that something had changed, that the Red Sox would be another team on the field. For that reason on Monday, October 18<sup>th<\/sup> 2004, I stayed in front of the tv set from 6 o&#8217;clock in the evening. Mike Mussina versus Pedro Mart&#237;nez. It would be another very hard game, no matter Boston scored 2 runs in the first inning. The Yankees got the lead wit three runs in the top of the seventh inning. Tito brought Mike Timlin in the seventh and Keith Foulke in the eighth. That way he kept the game 4-2 until David Ortiz hit a home run against Tom Gordon to lead off the bottom of the eighth. Kevin Millar got another walk and Tito again pinch ran Dave Roberts for Millar. Roberts arrived to third with a Trot Nixon&#8217;s single. Joe Torre brought Mariano Rivera and Jason Varitek tied the game with a sacrifice fly. My heart&#8217;s drumming had a second part that sounded louder. I wanted to leave for the bathroom to lower the tension but the game&#8217;s intensity was very high.<\/p>\n<p>The Yankees threatened with a ground rule double by Tony Clark that sent Ruben Sierra to third base in the top of the ninth frame. There I started my travels from the living room to the kitchen. Tito<br \/>\ncalled Bronson Arroyo for the tenth inning. In the bottom of that inning Doug Mienkiewicz hit&#160; a double andarrived&#160; to third base but didn&#8217;t score.<br \/>\nTito called Mike Myers and Allan Embree in the eleventh and got the Yankees under control. In the eleventh emotions visited my seat again when Boston had runners in first and seconds, no<br \/>\nouts, but Esteban Loaiza came to relieve with one out and made Orlando Cabrera hit a grounder to double play.<\/p>\n<p>Tim Wakefield came to the mound in the top of the twelfth and allowed a single to Miguel Cairo who went to second on MannyRam&#237;rez error, but there he stayed.<\/p>\n<p>In the top of the thirteenth inning Jason Varitek, who almost never is Wakefield&#8217;s catcher, committed three passed balls, but the Yankees left runners on third and second base.<\/p>\n<p>Loaiza was pitching very well. I thought we were going to spend the night watching that game. But in the bottom of the fourteenth frame, Johnny Damon and Manny Ram&#237;rez got walks and David Ort&#237;z came to the plate with two outs. Last night&#8217;s hero had a legendary at bat and hit a single at the tenth delivery. When the ball landed at center field I jumped with the chair on my shoulder when Damon crossed home plate to determine the win 5-4 and put the series 3-2. I saw Tito striving to the club house. I stillpulled my skin to make me believe all that was true and so it would be what I<br \/>\nhoped happened the next two games.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Alfonso L. Tusa C.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>Alfonso&#8217;s work has been featured in Venezuel&#8217;s daily newspaper, El<br \/>\nNacional and in the magazine Gente en Ambiente, and he has collaborated<br \/>\non several articles for newspapers, including the daily paper Tal Cual.<br \/>\nHe has also written three books and biographies for SABR&#8217;s BioProject.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ver a Terry Francona bajar la cabeza y descender los escalones hacia el club house&#160; de los Medias Rojas de Boston en Camden Yards, luego de perder el &#250;ltimo juego de la temporada y toda oportunidad de ganar el comod&#237;n de la campa&#241;a 2011; me hizo regresar a una noche de octubre de 2004. Los [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":75,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9],"tags":[17079,16285,17081,12745,9265,16632,17074,17076,17077,145,17075,6754,5105,4259,17080,8484,17078,5011,13236,9384],"class_list":["post-18064","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general","tag-agon","tag-bill-mueller","tag-boleto","tag-brazos","tag-camden-yards","tag-cimo","tag-comod","tag-curtis-leskanic","tag-descender","tag-dugout","tag-el-pulso","tag-kevin-millar","tag-mariano-rivera","tag-medias-rojas-de-boston","tag-mike-myers","tag-noveno","tag-respir","tag-segunda-base","tag-terry-francona","tag-yanquis"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18064","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/75"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=18064"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18064\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=18064"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=18064"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=18064"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}