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Top 50 Mariner Moments, 2007: #47

May 2nd: With two down and none on in the bottom of the seventh, Yuniesky Betancourt breaks a tie by taking a 1-0 fastball from John Danks over the left-center fence.

Box score & PBP

Game thread

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If something happens on the field, and no one's around to see it, how sure can we be that it actually took place? (The answer, of course, is 'very', as evidenced by every home game in Oakland ever.)

Back in early May, the Mariners were still trying to find their season identity. The snowed-out series in Cleveland wreaked havoc on their schedule and a spate of discouraging losses dropped them to 5-9, but then they picked it up and came into this game winners of six of seven. As modest as their success had been, the M's were above .500 at the 21-game mark for the first time in four years, and there was reason to think they were capable of more. All they had to do was demonstrate the ability to consistently beat the teams they were supposed to beat.

Chicago was one of those teams, and Jarrod Washburn had just kept them quiet the night before. Now to wrap up the little series two-fer, the M's wouldn't get much of a home field advantage, as the weekday start time had been moved up several hours to allow for a makeup flight to Boston, but the matchup of Miguel Batista against a very green John Danks worked in their favor, so this one felt like a game for the taking.

However, take it they didn't, at least not for a while. Through five and a half innings the score was 2-1 White Sox, powered by a trio of solo homers. The game, like so many other Seattle/Chicago showdowns in recent years, was flying by, but the Mariners were running out of at bats, as they were just bailing Danks out with bad swings and pop-ups time after time. For a while, this yawner had all the makings of being an afternoon of regret, both for those who played and for those who watched.

We thankfully got a little action in the bottom of the sixth, when Raul Ibanez doubled home Jose Vidro from first base to tie the game. Said Dave Sims, ever so cautiously: Vidro doesn't run...too well... The excitement momentarily stirred us out of our catatonic stupor, but as each of the following six batters walked up and sat down, we gradually became less cognizant of our surroundings and more cognizant of how eyelids feel like the warm down comforters of the cornea.

As a rule of thumb, if there's no one on base and two down, and Yuniesky Betancourt's at the plate, it's okay to get a jump on whatever you were planning to get done during the inning break. That way you're guaranteed not to miss anything more important on the other end of the commercials. Lucky for us I think this time we were all too bored to move, though, because two pitches into the at bat, the Yunibomber sent a fly ball to left that just never stopped carrying, much to the delight of the literally tens of people in attendance.

The homer - Yuni's third of the year - wasn't particularly impressive to the eye (none of his ever are), but the way in which it instantly turned an uncomfortable game into a near-certain win was enough to put it on this list. Sure enough, JJ Putz would induce a first-pitch double play off the bat of Rob Mackowiak a little while later to slam the door. Thanks to Yuni, the M's were up to 12-10, having put the finishing touches on their third sweep of the season (totaling five games). It wasn't a moment that many people saw, but the ones who did wouldn't soon forget.

(Incidentally - I know I've mentioned this before, but Betancourt had a massively clutch season in 2007, considering he wasn't much of a hitter overall. His Fangraphs Clutch rating of 1.26 ranked ninth in baseball, and of his nine home runs, seven either tied the game or gave the M's the lead. When you only have so many big hits in your bat, you might as well use them up when they'll do the most damage, I suppose.)

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Comments

Not to pick nits
But this made it in while two rookie first ever home runs didn't?  I know winning games has more weight, but as you say, it was a clunker game with no audience.  Hardly something with magic in the air.
Really?
After only four entries, you're complaining about what didn't make the whole list of 50?  Patience, grasshopper.
Does seem more than just a bit early
to start complaining.
How is that not picking nits?
Wlad's first home run sucked, and Clement's came in at #51.
Don't defend your list
until it's completely revealed.  There's no point.
NO SHlT!
Jeff, you must be smoking the ganjha to spend all this time constructing a backwards list.
Reading the Game Thread back over...
... and the observations of JJ not utilising the splitter.

Given the consternation over it, I presume that the re-emergence of the 2007 splitter will appear somewhere in this top fifty?

wither Clement?
I gotta agree about Clement's home run.  It won the game AND caused Yuni to run around the bases chasing after Clement.
Clement's first HR is not in the top 50
His second HR, the one you are thinking of, almost assuredly is on the list.
Remember guys, this is a top 50
and we're only at 47.  We don't know what is or isn't part of the list.  Why not wait until after the list is complete before you start asking "why isn't event X on the list" or "why isn't this higher up"?
We do know what isn't part of the list
because he listed many plays that I think should have been in the top 50 as "honorable mention".

get some education BOY.

John Olerud Sucks
wow
people already bitching about the rankings?
Sorry
Absolutely didn't intend to "bitch". I was just struck at the comments and recalled how big a thing JJ's absent splitter was at the time.

Not that it necessarily should appear on any list at all, I was just being simultaneously curious and impatient!

Enjoying it so far, looking forward to the next 46!

Cheers

More Chocolate
i'm pretty sure i was at that game
I sat right behind the 1st base dugout with my CF Bleacher seat
Jesus
I'm not bitching.  I'm just not sure what kind of criteria Jeff has for these moments.  To my perceptions, the kids taking their first big steps in the majors is more memorable then Yuni winning a game that, at the time, didn't seem like that big a deal.

I do find the replies to my questioning interesting, though.  Some people are knee-jerking on Jeff's behalf awfully quickly.

It's a timing thing.
To my perceptions, the kids taking their first big steps in the majors is more memorable then Yuni winning a game that, at the time, didn't seem like that big a deal.

Agreed.  But, there's 50 items on the list, and Jeff's only listed the bottom 4 of those 50; maybe let him get halfway through the list or so, before becoming concerned about what's on the list and where it's ranked?

And I think there's a lot of people here that will rush to Jeff's defense (or defence, if you're Graham), because he's done a hell of a lot of good here and gets nothing in return, so maybe that's why people sound like they're knee-jerking too fast.

I love Jeff's work
As much as anybody else.  Questioning what's on a list and what's off a list isn't like I'm calling him an idiot.

When he included a list of things that didn't make the cut (down below, and the two rookie first homeruns are on the list of things that didn't make the cut, so there's nothing to wait on) there were a lot of questions asked there, too.  I'm not acting incrediulous nor am I spreading dischord amongst the LL faithful.  I'm just curious as to what makes something a more memorable moment then another.

I will say it right now
My criteria is entirely subjective, and based on nothing scientific. I wouldn't expect anyone to put together an identical list, because we all take different things away from different events.
Everyone is just on edge
because the impending doom from the offseason is killing us mentally! UNITE BROTHERS!!!

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