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Monday, November 05, 2001

Rivera finally blows one




The Associated Press Ù

        PHOENIX — Mariano Rivera on the mound in the ninth inning, protecting a one-run lead in Game 7 of the World Series. There couldn't be a better situation for the New York Yankees.

        “If you're going to ask one thing when the evening starts, it's to have Rivera in the game,” Yankees manager Joe Torre said. “We had it, and they beat our best.”

        Rivera, the surest thing in baseball the past four years, committed a key error and allowed two runs in the ninth, losing 3-2 to the Arizona Diamondbacks.

        “I did everything I could and they beat me,” a calm Rivera said in a subdued Yankees' clubhouse. “I feel good. I didn't pitch as well I wanted to. That's baseball.”

        The sudden turn of events left the Yankees stunned in their dugout.

        New York ended the season without a World Series title for the first time since 1997 — which just happened to be the last time Rivera blew a save in the postseason.

        “There's nobody in the history of baseball I'd rather have out there,” reliever Mike Stanton said. “Regardless of what happened tonight that hasn't changed. He's the best.”

        Perhaps the only Yankee not supremely confident was owner George Steinbrenner, who kicked out people setting up the New York clubhouse for a celebration because it was too premature.

        But the demanding Steinbrenner only had praise for his closer.

        “I will not say a bad word about Mariano,” The Boss said. “How many times has he won it for me? He's the best.”

        Rivera converted 23 straight saves since Sandy Alomar's game-tying homer for Cleveland in Game 4 of the 1997 division series, making the ninth inning the Yankees' domain.

        Never had that been more evident than in Game 4 and 5 when New York hit game-tying homers off Arizona closer Byung-Hyun Kim that carried them to extra-inning wins.

        Those are mistakes Rivera never makes. Not until now, that is.

        Rivera entered in the eighth inning after Alfonso Soriano's homer gave New York a 2-1 lead. Six-out saves are the norm for Rivera at this time of year and for the Yankees every year.

        “We put Mo in the game, and that's all we really wanted,” Torre said.

        New York hadn't lost a game it led after eight innings in the postseason since dropping Game 4 of the 1947 Series to the Brooklyn Dodgers. The Yankees came back to win two of the next three games and the Series — an opportunity they won't get this time.

        “I'm proud of my team,” Steinbrenner said. “That's all I will say. We played our hearts out. It was a very tough loss. I will be a gracious loser.”

        Rivera breezed through his first inning, striking out the side around a harmless single by Steve Finley. That lowered his ERA in the postseason to a major league-best 0.70.

        But things fell apart quickly in the ninth. Mark Grace led off with a single, and Rivera made an errant throw on Damian Miller's bunt attempt, putting runners on first and second.

        “If I get the out at second base things are different,” Rivera said. “But that's if. Things happen.”

        Rivera appeared to regain control when he hopped off the mound to field Jay Bell's bunt and threw out pinch-runner David Dellucci at third base.

        But then Tony Womack hit a line drive down the right-field line that tied the game. After Rivera hit Craig Counsell with a 1-1 pitch, Luis Gonzalez hit a soft single to center that ended New York's bid for a fourth straight title.

        “I just didn't have a good rhythm tonight,” he said. “I didn't have it.”

       



Sports Stories
D'backs dethrone Yankees
SULLIVAN: D'Backs have the last comeback
World Series box score
Schilling, Johnson share MVP
D'Backs revel in classic victory
O'Neill goes out with two hits
- Rivera finally blows one
Rookie manager aces his crash course
Sanders benched for Game 7
Turpin, St. Ursula focused on soccer titles
Volleyball trio underdogs at state
Boys state soccer schedule
Girls state soccer schedule
State volleyball schedule
Doerger coaching McNicholas again
LaSalle's Bader defends cross country title
Turpin girls win state cross country
Ohio boys cross country results
Ohio girls cross country results
St. Ursula makes state soccer tourney
Turpin boys reach state soccer tourney
St. X, Madeira lose in regional soccer
Bacon girls lose soccer regional
Kentucky boys cross country
Kentucky girls cross country
Three make state volleyball tourney
Cyclones 2, Richmond 1
Jets 16, Saints 9
Rochester 3, Mighty Ducks 2

Bengals could make playoffs with 5-4 finish
Jaguars lose fifth in row
Xavier picked to win A-10 West
Bengals' price too steep for preps
Ohio second-round pairings
Ohio first-round scores
Colerain 30, Hamilton 7
Elder 38, Lebanon 13
Princeton 56, Anderson 20
St. Xavier 41, Northmont 6
Dayton Carroll 18, Roger Bacon 13
McNicholas 56, Mount Healthy 13
New Richmond 42, Ross 38
Piqua 21, Edgewood 0
Washington C.H. 39, Indian Hill 31
Wyoming 49, Jonathan Alder 21
Badin 23, Valley View 16
Coldwater 54, Madeira 14
North College Hill 41, Chillicothe Zane Trace 10
Reading 39, Wheelersburg 31
Covington 47, Williamsburg 14
Kentucky second-round pairings
Kentucky first-round scores
Ballard 43, Dixie Heights 32
Beechwood 56, Berea 6
Bellevue 27, Nicholas Co. 13
Covington Catholic 44, Harrison Co. 22
Highlands 49, Bourbon County 30
Holmes 24, Montgomery County 0
Lexington Catholic 54, Grant County 14
Lloyd 46, East Carter 0
Newport Central Catholic 56, Raceland 7
Paris 37, Holy Cross 6
Shelby County 19, Boone County 17
Indiana playoff pairings
Indiana playoff scores

 

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