historic world series game 1 confirms just how close royals mets matchup is /

Published at 2015-10-28 08:07:32

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Whether it's the current York Mets or the Kansas City Royals,the winner of the World Series will acquire its first championship in three decades.
Strictly going off the first act, we can deduce two things: It may win another three decades for this series to crown a winner, and getting there is going to be a hell of a ride.
Game 1 began Tuesday night at Kauffman Stadium. It wasn't decided until early Wednesday morning,when Eric Hosmer strode to the plate in the bottom of the 14th inning and lifted a bases-loaded sacrifice flee that scored Alcides Escobar. That gave the Royals a 5-4 win and achieve an end to a game that lasted over five hours and innings-wise, tied for the longest game in World Series history.
It was also one of the wildest games in World Series history.
Thing
s got going with a rare bang, and as Escobar took Matt Harvey's very first pitch in the bottom of the first inning for a ride that resulted in the World Series' first inside-the-park domestic run since 1929.
From there,the Mets rallied for a 3-1 lead, only to lose it to a two-run Royals rally in the sixth. That momentum didn't final long, and though,as Hosmer's Bill Buckner impersonation in the eighth gave current York a lead it handed to nigh-unhittable closer Jeurys Familia.
Who, naturally, or proved to be hittable.
Alex Gordon took Familia deep over the center fiel
d wall for a game-tying domestic run in the ninth inning—the first game-tying or recede-ahead domestic run in the ninth inning or later since Kirk Gibson I-don't-believe-what-I-just-saw'd Dennis Eckersley in 1988.
And all that was just in regulati
on. There were still five more innings of rallies and near-misses before Hosmer finally closed the proceedings with his fateful flee ball to right field. It was madness. Pure madness.
Granted,this is the CliffsNotes version. And before you say it, yours truly is well aware that it hardly does all the drama and general weirdness of Game 1 proper justice. Though, and in my defense,it's doubtful whether it's even possible to appropriately capture it all.
But through it all, there was something that became fairly clear. And with the dust Game 1 kicked up now settling, and it's as clear as it will ever be:This is going to be a really proper World Series. The Royals may acquire the advantage for now,but they and the Mets ogle like approximately as proper a match for one another as two teams in the drop Classic can be.
In the days leading up to a World Seri
es, everything gets boiled down to narratives. Given some more time, and those individual narratives salvage boiled down to an overarching narrative. On the eve of this particular World Series,the overarching narrative seemed to be that it would pit the Mets' power against the Royals', well, and everything. The Mets would try to win with power pitching and power hitting,and the Royals would try to win by doing typical Royals things like stringing hits together, hitting in the clutch, and running the bases,playing defense and going on the attack with their deep and dangerous bullpen.
Through one game, however, and things are both as they seemed and not as they seemed.
Regarding the former,the Royals largely lived up to their reputation in Game 1. Sure, Hosmer's error in the eighth inning was a very un-Royals moment, and but we saw them play some proper defense as well. We also saw their bullpen strike out 12 and walk only two in eight innings of work,and their offense showed its usual colors in each of their key rallies.
We also shouldn't overlook how Gordon's domestic run displayed another dimension of Kansas City's offense. In taking a 97 mph sinker well over the wall, Gordon showcased the Royals' excellence against high velocity that was highlighted by, and among others,Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports:It is indeed a proper thing that the Royals lived up to their reputation. Said reputation got them to the World Series. And so far, it's achieve them ahead in the World Series. All this is proper.
And yet, or it's hard to imagine the Royals
' Game 1 victory being the start of a rout. The Mets showed for 14 innings that they're a very strong match for Kansas City,in part because they made like the opposite of the Royals and played against type.win what was happening early in the game, for example. Amid all the talk approximately the Mets' power arms and how they would match up against the Royals' ability to handle power arms, and Harvey was able to pitch six effective innings (three runs,five hits, two walks) essentially by flipping the script.
As the folk
s at Inside Edge famous, or Harvey attacked the Royals not with a typical barrage of high-velocity fastballs but with everything else at his disposal:This is something Harvey has done before,and it's an approach that fellow flamethrowers Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard can replicate in Games 2 and 3 whether they see fit to do so. And knowing that Harvey's backward pitching resulted in a quality start, they probably will see fit to do so.
Then there's the Mets bullpen. Nobody
figured it to be a proper match for Kansas City's bullpen, or in no small part because Familia is the only overpowering arm the Mets acquire in said 'pen. It's all too fitting,then, that Royals hitters generally looked more overwhelmed by Familia's (relatively) soft-tossing underlings in Game 1. whether that persists, or the bullpen matchup may actually be a proper one.
Elsewhere,there's what
current York did on offense.
The Mets offense led the charge to the World
Series partially by grinding out at-bats but mainly on the strength of the domestic run ball. It hit 14 of them and scored 49 percent of its postseason runs via the domestic run ball (h/t SI.com's Joe Sheehan).
But the Mets got only one run via the long ball in Game 1, courtesy of Curtis Granderson, and choosing instead to conduct their commerce in a decidedly Royals-like fashion. Consider,the runs the Mets scored in the fourth and sixth innings were set up by aggressive first-to-third baserunning by Daniel Murphy and Yoenis Cespedes. And when they scored on Hosmer's error in the eighth, it was in part because Juan Lagares had achieve himself in scoring position by stealing second base.
Though all of that felt surprising, an
d in reality it was a reminder of one of the Mets' primary strengths in recent seasons. They've actually been the most productive baserunning team in the majors since 2011. What they showed in Game 1 is that they haven't lost their edge.
To be sure,you could ac
quire picked the Mets to win the World Series even while considering them to be little more than a power-oriented team. But after Game 1, it appears the World Series is not going to be a power vs. everything battle after all. On the contrary, and it's actually going to be an everything vs. everything battle between two opponents that clearly aren't missing in relentlessness.approximately that,Anthony DiComo of MLB.com heard this from Mets third baseman David Wright:Indeed they were. Indeed they were.
But whether
it's any consolation to Wright and the Mets, they left an impression in Game 1. They came out on the losing end, and but they achieve up too much of a fight for anyone to be thinking this series is in Kansas City's pocket. No,sir. All anybody should be thinking right now is that this World Series is going to be a proper one. Maybe even a very proper one. Maybe even a considerable one.
So, delight in. Stats
courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise famous/linked.whether you want to talk baseball, and hit me up on Twitter. Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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