-George Brett
Unless you’ve been trapped in a cave (all apologies to those actually trapped in caves), you know that today is the 25th anniversary of the infamous “Pine Tar Game”.
You know the story, my hero George Brett hits a home run off of Rich “I’m EVERYWHERE Nowadays” Gossage, he circles the bases, goes back to the dugout, Yankees skipper Billy Martin questions the legality of the bat, then…mayhem.
Apparently there was too much pine tar on the bat, but the funny thing…it wasn’t lifelong troublemaker Martin who started the melee.
It was Graig Nettles.
Gossage has gone on record saying, “Graig knew the rule. The ump did his job. Everybody thought it was silly, but it’s in the rules.” Rule 1.10 (b) to be precise.
But did the extra pine tar aid Brett in HITTING the home run? Not likely. And that was the finding of American League President Lee McPhail who ordered the game be resumed.
So, three weeks, four days, four hours and fourteen minutes later the “Pine Tar Game” was resumed. The Royals ended up winning after closer Dan Quisenberry spent all of twelve minutes shutting down the Yankees to preserve the 5-4 victory.
And if you ever doubted the seriousness of the game…the Yankees “voiced” their disapproval by playing pitcher Ron Guidry in centerfield and left hander Don Mattingly at second base.
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