

I’ll take a little longer on this one to re-introduce these guys. You may remember the Subway Series from this year. But the Yankees won just 87 games and the Mets were a wild card. The best teams were the White Sox (95 wins) and the Giants (97). For the first time since 1959, no major league team was above .600 or below .400 in winning percentage. True balance, right? But the only thing anyone remembers is that the Yankees won their fourth World Series in five years.
But not in our world, they didn’t. To recap, the Indians won in 1996, the Braves in ’97 and the Yankees in ’98 and ’99. So we’ll have a new champ again, and ending a long drought either way.
This is a rematch, if you count waiting 83 years for a rematch. Since then, the Giants switched coasts, moving from the Polo Grounds in New York to San Francisco. Coincidentally, this was the last White Sox championship season. They only appeared in two more Series before the end of the 20th Century, in 1919 (we all know what happened there) and the aforementioned 1959, which they also lost. So it was a 40-year wait, and then 41 until “now,” although with no 1994 Series, you could say it was 40 years of World Series play.
The Giants, seemingly about to win their first Series title on the West Coast, bounced back after losing in six games to Pants Rowland and the 1917 White Sox. John McGraw’s boys won consecutive Series in 1921-22, lost in 1923-24 but won again in 1933. But the once-powerful NL franchise was being chased down by the Dodgers and Cardinals. The 1954 title was their last one in New York, or anywhere until 2010.
Both of these teams, of course, eventually made the real Series, the Giants in 2002 and the White Sox in 2005.
As a White Sox fan, I’m not sure people really remember the 2000 team – some of the names were ones even I hadn’t thought about in quite a while. It was a one-time champion and was swept out of the division series by Seattle. Frank Thomas (.328, 43 HR, 143 RBI) finished second to Jason Giambi in the MVP voting. Magglio Ordonez (.315, 32, 126) was the other big force on an offense that scored the most runs in the American League. Mike Sirotka (15-10, 3.79) was the staff ace – remember, the offenses were really scoring a lot of runs then – followed by Jim Parque (13-6, 4.28) and All-Star winning pitcher James Baldwin (14-7, 4.65). Keith Foulke, who would close out the 2004 Series for Boston, had 34 saves to lead a strong relief corps that included a rookie lefty named Mark Buehrle.
The Giants were eliminated by the Mets in the division series, but before that they were all about Barry Bonds (.306, 49 HR, 106 RBI). But Bonds’ teammate, Jeff Kent, was the MVP that year, with a .334 average, 33 homers and 125 RBI. All of the Giants’ regulars had double figures in homers. Livan Hernandez, Orlando’s older half-brother, gets the ball to start the series with his 17-11, 3.75 record. Shawn Estes (15-6, 4.26), Russ Ortiz (14-12, 5.01) and Mark Gardner (11-7, 4.05) follow. Robb Nen and his 41 saves are waiting to finish.
Even though both teams had quick trips to the playoffs, they managed to use all of their players except one. The Giants used all 25, so no disputes there.
The only Sox who didn’t appear against Seattle was Sean Lowe, a swingman who was supposed to start the Game 4 that never happened. There will be a Game 4 here, at least. One note: Parque opened the ALDS instead of Sirotka because of an injury suffered in Sirotka’s last tune-up start. Sirotka pitched Game 2, lost, and his career was over at age 29 because of a shoulder injury. I’m going to start Sirotka in the opener, not that it really matters because he is not going to come back to pitch three times in the series. Also, the Sox had a very odd playoff roster, which I’d like to adjust but I won’t. There are basically two DHs, Thomas and Harold Baines, a backup catcher (Josh Paul) who bumped another guy from the team and McKay Christensen, who was there for pinch running or something. So they’ll be at a disadvantage when the series shifts to the Bay.
But it opens at New Comiskey Park, yes, that was the name until 2003.
GAME 1 at Chicago San Francisco … 100 010 000 – 2 8 0
Chicago …………001 000 002 – 3 7 0
W: Bradford L: Nen HR: Snow, Johnson
The White Sox rallied with two outs in the ninth, first tying the game on Carlos Lee’s RBI triple, then winning on Paul Konerko’s single.
Livan Hernandez left with a five-hitter going and a 2-1 lead. Robb Nen, who had 41 regular-season saves, came on. But he walked Frank Thomas with one out – the only walk of the game for either team – and pinch runner Tony Graffanino went to second on a wild pitch. After Magglio Ordonez flied out, Lee and Konerko delivered a victory for Chicago.
The rally made Chad Bradford, who got three outs in the ninth, the winner. Mike Sirotka went eight innings, giving up seven hits including Jeff Kent’s RBI double in the first and J.T. Snow’s solo homer in the fifth. Charles Johnson homered in the third for the only Sox run off Hernandez.
GAME 2 at Chicago San Francisco … 001 000 001 – 2 3 2
Chicago ………... 000 300 00x – 3 4 0
W: Parque L: Estes S: Foulke HR: Rios
Herbert Perry’s two-run single in the fourth held up as the difference as the White Sox headed west with a 2-0 lead.
Shawn Estes was leading 1-0 in the fourth when he walked Frank Thomas, and Ellis Burks dropped Magglio Ordonez’s fly to right. Carlos Lee walked to load the bases and Paul Konerko popped up for the second out. Estes then hit Jeff Abbott to force in a run and Perry followed with a two-run single to center. Charles Johnson walked and Alan Embree relieved Estes, getting Ray Durham to end the inning.
Jim Parque left in the sixth after walking the bases loaded. Mark Buehrle relieved and struck out Barry Bonds. Lorenzo Barcelo got Jeff Kent to pop up and Burks to line out. Parque gave up only two hits, one of them Armando Rios’ homer in the third. Keith Foulke pitched the ninth, giving up a run on Burks’ double play grounder. There were 12 pitchers used in the game despite only seven total hits.
GAME 3 at San Francisco Chicago ………. 001 000 000 – 1 4 0
San Francisco … 000 006 01x – 7 8 0
W: Ortiz L: Baldwin HR: Burks
The Giants blew open the game in the sixth against the Chicago bullpen, with Barry Bonds’ RBI double giving them the lead and Ellis Burks’ homer capping the six-run rally.
James Baldwin took a 1-0 lead into the inning, but pinch hitter Felipe Crespo singled with one out. Marvin Benard walked and Bill Mueller flied out. With Bonds coming up, sidearming lefty Kelly Wunsch came in for Baldwin, but Bonds doubled to the gap to make it 2-1. Chad Bradford came in and Jeff Kent doubled in another run. J.T. Snow was walked intentionally and Burks homered to put the Giants up 6-1.
Russ Ortiz got the win, going six innings and allowing just four hits and four walks. He gave up an RBI triple to Ray Durham in the third. Four relievers held the Sox hitless in the last three innings, and Chicago stranded 11 runners to the home team’s two.
GAME 4 at San Francisco
Chicago ………. 200 000 004 – 6 10 0
San Francisco… 000 200 000 – 2 4 0
W: Howry L: Nen HR: Durham, Ordonez
The White Sox beat Giants closer Robb Nen again, with Charles Johnson’s RBI double and Ray Durham’s three-run homer in the ninth giving Chicago a 3-1 lead.
Magglio Ordonez homered in the first off Mark Gardner with a man aboard in the first, but the Giants tied it in the fourth off Sean Lowe when Jeff Kent doubled home one run and J.T. Snow singled Kent in to make it 2-2.
Carlos Lee greeted Nen in the ninth with a double and after the next two hitters were retired, Johnson doubled to put Chicago ahead. Pinch hitter Harold Baines walked and Durham hit one out to right, sending many of the locals home and pushing the White Sox within one victory of its first Series win since 1917.
Bob Howry pitched a scoreless eighth for the victory.
GAME 5 at San Francisco
Chicago ……...... 101 011 102 – 7 11 0
San Francisco … 210 010 000 – 4 8 1
W: Sirotka L: Hernandez S: Foulke HR: Durham 2, Lee, Bonds, Kent
For the first time in 83 years, the World Series belonged to the South Side as Ray Durham homered twice and ignited the clinching two-run ninth with a single.
Durham homered to start the game against Livan Hernandez, but Jeff Kent hit a two-run homer off Mike Sirotka in the home half. Three hits and an infield out in the second made it 3-1 San Francisco but Durham walked and Jose Valentin doubled him in to cut the lead in half in the Chicago third.
Durham’s second homer tied it in the fifth but Barry Bonds’ only homer of the series gave the Giants the lead back at 4-3 in the home half. But Carlos Lee answered back in the Chicago sixth with a solo shot.
The White Sox went ahead for good in the seventh when Valentin walked with two outs, moved to third on Frank Thomas’ single and scored on Magglio Ordonez’s base hit. Three relievers – Lorenzo Barcelo, Kelly Wunsch and Bob Howry – got through the seventh and Keith Foulke pitched the last two innings for the save.
The Sox made it easier on Foulke by scoring twice in the ninth off Aaron Fultz and Felix Rodriguez. While Robb Nen stayed in the bullpen, Durham walked and moved up on Valentin’s bunt. Thomas doubled and scored on Lee’s two-out hit. Foulke got pinch hitter Bill Mueller on a groundout to Valentin for the last out.
WRAPUP
The mysterious points system gives Ray Durham the 2000 Series MVP and to me, he is the only choice. He hit .333 with three of Chicago’s six homers, with all of the homers coming in the last two games. Carlos Lee was the only other possibility for the White Sox with a .316 average and three RBI. With neither team sporting a great pitching staff, I was expecting a high-scoring series but it didn’t happen. Just 37 runs and offenses were held to a .211 average. Barry Bonds hit just .222, with a homer and three RBI. Actual 2000 MVP Jeff Kent was the leading hitter in the Series with a .421 average, a homer and six RBI.
Other notes: Keith Foulke retired Bill Mueller for the last out; they were teammates on the champion 2004 Red Sox. Durham, of course, later played for the Giants, and Burks was a former member of the White Sox. Tony Graffanino picked up another ring, he was with the 1997 Braves. Mike Sirotka got the win in the last game, and as was mentioned earlier, that was it for his career. That would have been some way to go out, if it had happened this way.
Now it’s on to 2001, where we have quite a change from the actual Yankees-Diamondbacks matchup. The AL champions are the Seattle Mariners, who won a league-record 116 games but didn’t get a chance in the Series. The NL representative is … well, we don’t know yet. We had a tie between the Houston Astros and St. Louis Cardinals with 93-69 records. Both made the playoffs, with Houston winning the head-to-head series in the season and therefore wearing the NL Central crown while the Cardinals were the wild card. Both lost in the divisional round. But for us, we’re going back to the old days, a two-of-three playoff.