Kenny Rogers took off his cap, waved it to the
crowd and twirled around for all to see. And that sent a real chill
to the fans packing Comerica Park.
Because of him, they can really start dreaming about seeing their
Detroit Tigers in the World Series.
Rogers pitched the game of his life once again and the Tigers
backed him with their bats, gloves and legs, beating the Oakland
Athletics 3-0 on a frosty Friday to take a 3-0 lead in the AL
championship series.
Manager Jim Leyland made another lineup hunch pay off as the
wild-card Tigers _ yes, the same team that looked lost in dropping
119 games only three years ago _ posted their sixth straight
post-season victory and moved within one win of their first World
Series since 1984.
Putting aside temperatures around 4 C that forced both teams to
put flame-throwing blowers in their dugouts, Rogers shut out the
Athletics on two mere singles over 7 1-3 innings.
He drew a thunderous ovation when he left, and the Detroit
bullpen did the rest.
Craig Monroe homered, Placido Polanco delivered two more hits off
losing pitcher Victoria's Rich Harden and Tigers closer Todd Jones
finished for his second save of the series.
At this rate, nothing seems able to stop the Tigers. Want
evidence? Leyland pulled Game 2 star Alexis Gomez, put Omar Infante
into his first post-season game and the DH singled and walked.
Certainly the Tigers' luck didn't change on Friday the 13th. And,
a day after the earliest measured snowfall in the city's history,
the cold was no problem, though it helped the game was switched from
nighttime to day.
The A's get one last chance Saturday in Game 4, with Dan Haren
starting against former Oakland draft pick Jeremy Bonderman. Only
once in baseball history has a team rallied from an 0-3 deficit in
the post-season, with Boston doing it against the New York Yankees
in 2004.
Frank Thomas remained hitless in the series, yet the Big Hurt
wasn't the lone Oakland hitter to feel the Big Chill against the
41-year-old Rogers.
Coming off his first victory in a previously awful playoff
career, Rogers reprised his role as an October ace. He blanked the
Yankees for 7 2-3 innings in the first round and the A's never did
much against him, either.
Rogers was not nearly as animated as he was in the win over the
Yankees. He saved his emotion for the end, thanking the 41,669 fans
with a wave of the cap, making sure to salute every corner of the
park.
Fernando Rodney got the last two outs in the eighth and Jones
pitched a perfect ninth to complete the combined two-hitter.
Rogers' lone jam came in the first after Jason Kendall led off
with a single and Thomas was hit by a pitch with two outs. But
Rogers retired Jay Payton on a grounder, and went on to strike out
six.
After that, it was all Detroit.
Harden grew up playing baseball in sleet and freezing rain, and
was the only Oakland player wearing short sleeves. No telling
whether the cold bothered him _ his control sure did, though.
Harden started off by throwing seven straight balls, and Monroe's
perfect hit-and-run single put runners at the corners with no outs.
Polanco followed with an RBI single, sending Monroe scampering to
third and pitching coach Curt Young to the mound. Magglio Ordonez
drove in another run with a force-play grounder for a 2-0 lead.
Harden walked the bases loaded in the second, escaping when he
struck out Monroe. Polanco doubled his next time up, making him
6-for-6 lifetime against Harden.
A's centre-fielder Mark Kotsay saved Harden in the fourth with
two outstanding catches, rushing in for Ramon Santiago's liner and
sprinting to right-centre for Curtis Granderson's shot about 420
feet from home plate.
Granderson also turned in a nice play, tracking down Eric
Chavez's deep drive to right-centre. The long outs by Chavez and
Granderson showed why former Tigers outfielder Bobby Higginson
christened the stadium ``Comerica National Park.''
Monroe hit a solo home run leading off the fifth for a 3-0. With
Rogers on the mound, that was plenty.
Rogers was 10-1 against the A's since 2002, and had beaten them
more in that span than any active pitcher.
He added another victory with a win that he would certainly rank
right up there with the perfect game he once pitched for Texas.
Notes: Oakland 2B Mark Kiger entered in the eighth, becoming the
first player in modern day major league history to make his big
league debut in the playoffs. He touched the ball once, catching an
inning-ending force. The A's added him as a backup infielder for the
ALCS after 2B Mark Ellis broke his right index finger in the first
round of the playoffs. ... Granderson, who struck out 174 times in
the regular season, drew three four-pitch walks.
© The Canadian Press, 2007