Saturday, April 13, 2019

John bracket: 1961 Braves defeat 1924 Pirates in seven games

Game 1: Braves 9, Pirates 7
WP: Spahn (5-1)
LP: Cooper (1-3)
Save: McMahon (4)
HR: Mathews (4)

Game 2: Braves 5, Pirates 3
WP: Burdette (3-0)
LP: Meadows (1-2)
Save: McMahon (5)
HR: Maye (4), Cuyler (5), Adcock (7)

Game 3: Pirates 2, Braves 1
WP: Kremer (5-0)
LP: Buhl (2-2)
Save: Morrison (1)

Game 4: Pirates 5, Braves 4
WP: Yde (3-1)
LP: Nottebart (0-1)

Game 5: Braves 2, Pirates 1
WP: Spahn (6-1)
LP: Cooper (1-4)
HR: Torre (4), Carey (4)

Game 6: Pirates 10, Braves 2
WP: Meadows (2-2)
LP: Burdette (3-1)
HR: Cuyler (6)

Game 7: Braves 4, Pirates 3
WP: Hendley (1-0)
LP: Kremer (5-1)
Save: McMahon (6)
HR: Adcock (8), Traynor (2), Bolling (2)

The Braves won three road games to advance to the final four despite being outscored for the series.

Milwaukee scored an unearned run in the second inning of the opener in Forbes Field to take the lead and opened it up in the third as the first six hitters that inning got hits or walks. Warren Spahn allowed two runs in seven innings. The Pirates scored five runs in the final two innings off Claude Raymond and Moe Drabowsky to make the final score close.

Lee Maye hit a two-run homer in the third inning of Game Two to stake Lew Burdette to the early lead and singled home another run in the fifth. Kiki Cuyler hit a three-run homer in the seventh to cut the margin to 4-3, but Joe Adcock homered in the eighth off reliever Johnny Morrison to give Don McMahon some breathing room in the ninth.

The series moved to 1961 and County Stadium. The Braves struck quickly off Ray Kremer, with leadoff man Maye getting a single and scoring from first on Henry Aaron's double. But Aaron was thrown out at home on Adcock's grounder, and Kremer and Morrison allowed no runs the rest of the way. The Pirates turned two walks and two singles into two runs in the fourth, and that was enough for the win.

 Emil Yde went the distance in Game Four as the Pirates evened the series. The southpaw scattered seven hits, including RBI triples by Adcock and Roy McMillan. Pittsburgh took the lead in the seventh with a three-run rally off Don Nottebart without an extra-base hit.

Warren Spahn dominated Game 5. allowing three hits and no walks. The sole Pittsburgh run came on Max Carey's homer in the ninth. Wilbur Cooper pitched well in the loss; Joe Torre homered in the second, and the other Milwaukee run came courtesy of Pie Traynor's two-base error in the seventh.

The series reverted to Pittsburgh 1924 for Game Six, and it was the series' only blow out. The Pirates scored six runs off Burdette in the first four innings, with triples from Charlie Grimm, Rabbit Maranville and starter Lee Meadows. Cuyler put an exclaimation mark on the score with a three-run homer off Tony Cloninger in the sixth. Meadows allowed one earned run in eight innings on seven hits.

That sent the series to a Game Seven. Traynor touched Milwaukee starter Bob Buhl for a two-run homer in the second, and Kremer held the 2-0 lead until Adcock hit his own two-run shot in the sixth. Carey gunned down McMillan at the plate on Del Crandall's pinch-hit double to end the seventh, and reliever Bob Hendley held the Pirates scoreless for two innings. Frank Thomas doubled home Maye in the eighth and Frank Bolling homered in the top of the ninth for a 4-2 lead. McMahon allowed a run in the bottom of the inning, but struck out pinch-hitter Earl Smith with two on to end the game and series.

Player of the Series: Warren Spahn

Pitcher use restrictions: Milwaukee's bullpen will be fully rested for the next round. Spahn and Burdette may now pitch on short rest without penalty, the only pitchers to qualify for that status remaining.

Projected rotation: Spahn-Burdette-Buhl-Spahn-(Burdette)-(Willey)-(Spahn)



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