The
2006 World Series, the 102nd edition of
Major League Baseball's
championship series, began on October
21 and ended on October 27, and matched the
American League champion
Detroit Tigers against the
National League champion,
St. Louis Cardinals. The
Cardinals won the Series in five games, taking Games 1, 3, 4 and 5.
This was the third Series meeting between the Tigers and the
Cardinals. St. Louis won the first in
1934, and Detroit won the second in
1968; each went the full seven
games. The 1968 Series was the last before divisional play and an
extra round of playoffs began.
It was only the fifth time in 40 years that the Series featured two
teams that had both remained in the same city since the formation
of the
American League in 1901, the
last time being the
2004 World
Series between St. Louis and the
Boston Red Sox. The last three prior to 2004
were in
1975 (
Boston–
Cincinnati), 1968 (
Detroit–
St. Louis) and
1967 (
Boston–
St. Louis).
The
Cardinals, who moved into Busch Stadium
in April, became the fourth team to win the Series
in their home stadium's debut season, joining the 1909 Pittsburgh Pirates (Forbes Field
), 1912 Boston Red Sox (Fenway Park
) and 1923 New York Yankees (Yankee
Stadium
), and the 2009
New York Yankees
(Yankee
Stadium
). St. Louis also won their tenth Fall
Classic, second to only the Yankees' 27 titles. Cardinals
manager Tony La
Russa, who won the
1989 World
Series title with the
Athletics, became the second
manager in history to lead teams in both leagues to championships,
joining
Sparky Anderson.
The Cardinals finished the regular season 83–78. This is the
second-worst record ever for a league champion (the
1973 New York Mets finished 82–79)
and the worst record ever for a World Series champion. Previously
the
1987 Minnesota Twins
(85–77) held this dubious honor after defeating the
Cardinals in the
1987 World Series.
Ceremonial First Pitches: Game 1:
Al Kaline and
Willie Horton; Game 2:
Sparky Anderson and
Alan Trammell; Game 3:
Ozzie Smith; Game 4:
Lou
Brock; Game 5:
Stan Musial
Background
A pair of battered ballclubs
Neither team was given much chance to advance far into October by
many baseball pundits. Both teams stumbled through the second
halves of their seasons. The Tigers, enjoying their first
successful season after twelve years of futility, surprised the
baseball world by building a ten-game lead in the
American League Central, but
eventually the lead evaporated in the final months and they lost
the division to the
Minnesota Twins on the last day
of the season after being swept by the last-place
Kansas City Royals at home,
settling for a playoff berth as the AL Wild Card. The Cardinals
held a seven-game advantage in the
National League Central over the
Cincinnati Reds and an
-game lead over the
Houston
Astros with just two weeks to play. However, the combination of
a seven-game losing streak by St. Louis and an eight-game winning
streak by the Astros (highlighted by a four-game sweep of the
Cardinals in Houston) caused the Cardinals' lead to shrink to -game
with only a few games left. However, the Cardinals held on to
clinch the division after an Astros' loss to the
Atlanta Braves on the last day of
the season.
Thus, both the Tigers and Cardinals were clear underdogs in their
matches, against
New York
Yankees and
San Diego
Padres, respectively. The Tigers' pitching took care of the
vaunted Yankees lineup, and won
their series 3–1. The
Cardinals also won
their series 3–1,
including the first two games in San Diego. The Tigers then swept
the
Oakland Athletics
in the
ALCS, winning game
four on a three-run
walk-off home
run by
Magglio Ordóñez
in the bottom of the ninth. The Cardinals won
their series
against the
New York Mets
with the help of a ninth-inning home run by
Yadier Molina in a tense Game 7.
The Tigers
had home-field advantage in the
Series, due to the AL's 3–2 win over the NL in the 77th Major League
Baseball All-Star Game on July 11 at PNC Park
in Pittsburgh
. These two teams had already played against
each other in June 2006. The Tigers swept the Cardinals 3–0 in
Detroit, part of an eight-game Cardinals losing streak. This was
the first time since 2000 that teams meeting during the regular
season met again in the World Series.
The Series marked the third time in a row that both teams sought to
win a championship after at least a twenty-year drought. In
2004, the
Boston Red Sox ended
their 86-year hiatus by defeating the
Cardinals; in
2005 the
Chicago White Sox ended an
88-year drought by defeating the
Houston Astros, who were
competing in their first World Series after 43 seasons. The Tigers
had not appeared in the World Series since winning it in
1984. The Cardinals last won in
1982, losing three times since then, in
1985,
1987 and 2004.
The Tigers were the eighth
wild
card team to compete in the World Series since MLB introduced
the wild card in
1994. A wild-card
team participated in the Series from 2002 to 2007.
Riding the momentum they built up during their surprisingly easy
ALDS and ALCS victories, Detroit entered the Series as a
prohibitive favorite. Bob Nightengale of USAToday expressed popular
sentiment when he said "Tigers in
three".
Two veteran managers return to postseason play
St. Louis'
manager Tony La Russa joined his mentor,
Sparky Anderson, as only the second manager
to win the World Series with teams in both leagues. La Russa won in
1989 with the
Athletics. Coincidentally,
Anderson first accomplished the feat by managing Detroit to their
previous championship in 1984. He was chosen to throw out the
ceremonial first pitch before Game 2. Interestingly, if the Tigers
had defeated the Cardinals, Jim Leyland would have joined Anderson
for this feat instead of LaRussa as he had already won the
1997 World Series with the
Florida Marlins.
Jim Leyland is the seventh manager to win pennants in both leagues.
The previous six are
Joe
McCarthy (
1929 Cubs and
the Yankees of
1932,
1936–
39 and
1941–
43),
Yogi
Berra (
1964
Yankees,
1973 Mets),
Alvin Dark (
1962 Giants,
1974 A's),
Sparky Anderson (
1970,
1972,
1975–
76 Reds,
1984 Tigers),
Dick Williams (
1967 Red Sox,
1972–
73 A's,
1984 Padres), and Tony La Russa
(
1988–
90 A's,
2004,
2006 Cardinals).
Additionally, the opposing managers are close friends. Leyland was
La Russa's third base coach for the
Chicago White Sox in the early 1980s.
Leyland also served as a Pittsburgh-based advance scout for the
Cardinals before he was hired by the Tigers.
This was the first World Series in 22 years to have two previous
World Series-winning managers facing each other, but at the helms
of new teams. As previously mentioned, Leyland previously won the
1997 World Series with the
Florida Marlins, and La
Russa won the
1989 World Series
with the
Oakland
Athletics. Overall, it was the first World Series since
1999 to have two previous
Series-winning managers facing each other.
Summary
†: Game 4 was postponed due to rain on October 25.
Game 5 was subsequently pushed back a day as
well.
Matchups
Game 1
Saturday,
October 21, 2006 at Comerica
Park
in Detroit, Michigan
Two rookies faced off in Game 1 for the first time in history:
Anthony Reyes for St. Louis and
Justin Verlander for Detroit. It
looked like the Tigers were going to get to Reyes early in the
bottom of the first, when
Craig Monroe
doubled and
Magglio
Ordóñez walked.
Carlos
Guillén singled Monroe in, giving the Tigers a 1–0 lead.
However in the top of the second,
Scott
Rolen hit a long home run to left field, tying the score at
1–1. Rolen was 0-for-15 in his career in the World Series before
hitting the home run. The previous mark had been 0-for-13, set by
Benny Kauff of the
New York Giants in the
1917 World Series. In the third inning the
Cards broke through, first when
Chris
Duncan's RBI double scored
Yadier
Molina to give the Cardinals the lead. On Verlander's next
pitch, 2005 National League MVP
Albert
Pujols banged a two-run home run, punishing the rookie who
elected to pitch to the dangerous Pujols, rather than walk him with
first base open and two outs and pitch to
Jim Edmonds.
Meanwhile, Anthony Reyes was the story. The pitcher who had the
fewest
regular season
wins of a Game 1 World Series starter (5) at one point retired
seventeen in a row from the first inning to the sixth inning, a
World Series record for a rookie. The previous record was thirteen
(
John Stuper, STL,
1982, and
Dickie
Kerr,
CHW,
1919). Reyes' final line was eight-plus
innings, four hits, two runs, and four strikeouts. The Cards took
advantage of Detroit's mistakes again in the sixth, when
Brandon Inge made two errors in one play. With
runners on second and third, Inge threw to home wild to score a run
and then
obstructed Scott
Rolen, who was running home, to score another run.
Craig Monroe hit a solo home run off Reyes in
the bottom of the ninth, which led to Reyes being
pulled from the game, as
Braden Looper came in to finish the
game. The final score was 7–2 Cardinals, marking the first time
since 2003 that the National League has won a World Series game,
and the first World Series game won by St. Louis since Game 5 of
the
1987 World Series.
Game 2
Sunday,
October 22, 2006 at Comerica
Park
in Detroit, Michigan
With a starting temperature of , controversy surrounded the start
of Game 2 when Tigers starting pitcher
Kenny Rogers was found to have a
substance on a patch of the palm of his pitching hand during the
first inning. Although Cardinals hitters claimed that the ball was
doing "weird things" in the first inning, Cardinals manager Tony
LaRussa did not request an inspection of Rogers' hand to determine
what the substance was. Rogers said it was dirt, and complied with
a request from the umpires to wash his hands before the second
inning.
Rogers would go on to pitch eight shutout innings, running his
postseason streak to 23 straight shutout innings, giving up only
two hits. Craig Monroe hit his second home run in the series, and
Carlos Guillén, who was a home run away from the
cycle, and
Sean Casey each drove in runs to give the Tigers a 3–0 lead going
into the ninth.
Todd Jones
then came into the game to close it out but got into a heavy jam,
with Scott Rolen being driven in by
Jim
Edmonds before a force-out at second with the bases loaded won
the game for the Tigers.
Craig Monroe
became the fifth player to hit a home run in each of his first two
World Series games. The others were
Barry
Bonds for the Giants in
2002,
Ted Simmons for the Brewers in
1982,
Dusty Rhodes for the New York
Giants in
1954, and
Jimmie Foxx for the Philadelphia Athletics in
1929.
Game 3
Tuesday,
October 24, 2006 at Busch
Stadium
in St. Louis,
Missouri
After the Cardinals were shut out by Detroit pitcher Kenny Rogers
for eight innings in Game 2, St. Louis starter
Chris Carpenter answered with eight shutout
innings of his own in a 5–0 Cardinals victory in Game 3. Carpenter,
making his World Series debut (he missed the entire
2004 World Series due to injury) gave up
only three hits, struck out six and did not issue a
walk, while throwing only 82 pitches. Only one
Tiger reached second base.
St. Louis began the scoring in the fourth inning on a bases-loaded
two-run double by center fielder
Jim
Edmonds off of Nate Robertson. Two more runs would score in the
bottom of the seventh on an error by Detroit pitcher
Joel Zumaya, who overthrew a routine ground ball
to third baseman
Brandon Inge. St.
Louis would add another run in the eighth on a wild pitch.
Reliever
Braden Looper would pitch a
perfect ninth to close out the game and give St. Louis a
two-games-to-one advantage in the Series.
The
Cardinals became the first team since the Cincinnati Reds in 1970 to host a World Series game in their
first season in a new ballpark
.
Game 4
Thursday,
October 26, 2006 at Busch
Stadium
in St. Louis,
Missouri

Rainout of Game 4, October 25th.
Game 4 was pushed back a day because of rain, the first time a
rainout had occurred since Game 1 in
1996. The fans from the game were to
attend Game 5 (Which also happened to be the clinching game for the
Cardinals). (Thus, fans who had tickets for Game 5 went to Game 4
instead.) The Cardinals won, taking a 3–1 series lead. The Tigers
took a 3–0 lead into the top of the third, after
Sean Casey had two
RBI, including a home run. The other RBI came
from Detroit's
Iván
Rodríguez, who singled in
Carlos
Guillén. Rodriguez, who had been hitless in the previous three
games, also went 3-for-4. In the bottom of the third, the Cardinals
struck back with a run-scoring double by
David Eckstein, scoring
Aaron Miles who had the first stolen base of the
series by either team.
Yadier Molina
doubled in
Scott Rolen in the fourth to
cut the Tiger lead to 3–2.
The score remained that way, until the bottom
of the seventh, when Eckstein led off with a double over the head
of Curtis Granderson, who had
slipped on the wet Busch
Stadium
outfield. Eckstein then scored on a
sacrifice bunt by
So Taguchi that was
thrown over the head of
Plácido
Polanco covering first by
Fernando
Rodney, and that tied the score at three. Later that same
inning,
Preston Wilson hit a single
to left with two outs that scored Taguchi from third. The Tigers
tied the game in the top of the eighth on a
Brandon Inge double that scored
Iván Rodríguez. In the bottom of
the eighth inning, the Cardinals would regain and keep the lead
when Miles scored on a double by Eckstein just off the glove of
outfielder
Craig Monroe, who had been
playing shallow and dove for a ball just out of his reach.
Game 5
Friday,
October 27, 2006 at Busch
Stadium
in St. Louis,
Missouri
On a day in which it rained much of the day but stopped early
enough to not delay the game, the Cardinals won to clinch the
championship four games to one, making this the first five-game
series since the Yankees–Mets Series in
2000.
Justin Verlander pitched a sloppy
first inning for Detroit, walking three and tying a World Series
record for a single inning by throwing two wild pitches. He avoided
allowing any runs, however, thanks to a good play by shortstop
Carlos Guillén to get the third
out on what was almost an infield hit.
The Cardinals took the lead in the second inning on a lead-off
single by
Yadier Molina followed by
two advancing groundouts, and then an infield single by
David Eckstein. Detroit third baseman
Brandon Inge made a good play to stop
the ball off Eckstein's bat, but then made a poor throw to first
which got by the first baseman and allowed Eckstein to advance to
second. The throwing error was the seventh error of the series by
the Tigers, also giving them at least one error in every game to
that point.
Cardinals pitcher
Jeff Weaver (an
ex-Tiger) was cruising into the fourth inning, and he appeared to
be nowhere near trouble with a lead-off groundout, followed by a
routine popup by
Magglio
Ordóñez. This popup turned out to be much more troublesome than
it first appeared: right fielder
Chris
Duncan dropped the ball, apparently distracted by center
fielder Jim Edmonds who was also going after the ball. With Ordóñez
on via the error, the very next pitch of the game was hit by
Sean Casey into the
right-field seats just inside the foul pole for a two-run homer
that gave Detroit the lead, 2–1. The Cardinals would threaten
immediately in the bottom of the inning, however, with Yadier
Molina and
So Taguchi each singling to
put runners at first and second with one out. Pitcher Jeff Weaver
then came up and attempted to bunt the runners over to second and
third. The bunt was fielded cleanly by the pitcher Justin
Verlander, but he attempted to force out the lead runner at third
and threw the ball into the left-field foul area. This allowed
Molina to score to tie it up, with Taguchi and Weaver arriving
safely at third and second. Later, Verlander said "I picked it up
and said, Don't throw it away, instead of just throwing it. I got
tentative." The throwing error by Verlander was the fifth error by
Detroit pitchers in the World Series, having committed one per
game, setting a new World Series record. (A placard held by a
Cardinals fan in the stands read "HIT IT TO THE PITCHER"). The next
batter, David Eckstein, grounded out to score the runner from
third, and St. Louis secured their lead, 3–2.
Chris Duncan misplayed another ball in the top of the sixth for a
Sean Casey two-out double, but this time the runner would be
stranded as Iván Rodríguez then struck out to end the inning. A
David Eckstein single followed by a Preston Wilson walk in the
bottom of the seventh put runners at first and second with none out
for the heart of the Cardinals order: Pujols, Edmonds, and Rolen.
Pujols popped out and Edmonds flied out, so it appeared Detroit
might hold the Cardinals to a one-run lead. Instead, Scott Rolen
singled and scored Eckstein, doubling the Cardinals lead to
4–2.
Jeff Weaver retired the side in order, and the Cardinals went to
the ninth, three outs away from their first World Series title in
24 years. The man called on to get those three outs would be
Adam Wainwright, who had won the job
of closer after the star free agent brought to St. Louis in 2002,
Jason Isringhausen, had
season-ending surgery. Detroit's clean-up hitter,
Magglio Ordóñez, led off the
inning. He proceeded to work a full count but then grounded out.
The second batter, Sean Casey, worked a full count and then doubled
to bring the tying run to the plate. The third batter,
Iván Rodríguez, got ahead in the
count 2–0 but grounded back to Wainwright on the next pitch,
putting the Cardinals one out away. The fourth batter,
Plácido Polanco, fell behind 1–2, but
then worked a walk to put the tying run on. The fifth batter,
Brandon Inge, fell behind 0–2, again
putting the Cardinals one strike from a World Series championship.
He did not extend the drama any longer, as he swung and missed at
the next pitch (making it the first World Series to end on a
strikeout since the
1988 World
Series), giving the World Series title to the Cardinals. The
final play of the 2006 season was made at 10:26pm Central Standard
time. After the game, Wainwright, who threw a curveball for strike
three to win the pennant and a slider to Inge to win the Series,
said "I'll probably never throw another curve or slider again
without thinking of those two pitches."
In calling the win,
Fox
commentator
Joe Buck said: "For the first
time since 1982, St. Louis has a World Series winner!," echoing his
late father's call of the Cardinals win of
1982: "
And that's a winner! That's a winner!
A World Series winner for the Cardinals!"
Composite box
2006 World Series
(4–1): St.
Louis Cardinals (N.L.) over
Detroit Tigers (A.L.)
Broadcasting
The World
Series was televised in the United States
by Fox,
with Joe Buck and Tim McCarver as booth announcers. The
starting time for each television broadcast was 8:00 pm EDT/6:00 pm
MDT.
On radio, the Series was broadcast nationally by
ESPN Radio, with
Jon Miller and
Joe
Morgan announcing.
Locally, Dan
Dickerson and Jim Price called the
Series for the Tigers on WXYT-AM
in Detroit (with retired, longtime Tiger announcer
Ernie Harwell calling an inning of
Game 1), while Mike Shannon and
John Rooney called it for the Cardinals
on KTRS-AM in St. Louis. Per
contractual obligation, the non-flagship stations on the teams'
radio networks carried the ESPN Radio broadcasts.
John Rooney had broadcast the
2005
Series for the
Chicago White
Sox, and thus became the first announcer to call back-to-back
World Series championships as an employee of different teams.
Games 1, 3 and 4 set all-time lows for television ratings, with
Game 4 falling 20% from the previous year's Game 4. The Series as a
whole was also the lowest-rated ever, with the four games averaging
a
Nielsen rating of only 10.0 and a
share of 17. By contrast, the six games of the
1980 Series—in the pre-cable television
era—garnered a record-high rating of 32.8 and a share of 56.
Series quotes
See also
Notes
- ESPN - ESPN experts: Who's going to win? -
MLB
- "Cards a nice story, but will be overmatched by
Tigers", SI.com
- World Series scouting report: Detroit Tigers -
USATODAY.com
- World Series ratings set another low - Baseball -
MSNBC.com
External links
- "Fan Appreciation", by Thomas Boswell, Washington Post, 28
October 2006
- "Redbirds were better than their numbers and
"Last chance at the bandwagon", SI.com
- "Cardinals are improbable champions",
ESPN.com
- "This win is for all Cardinals and their fans",
Bernie Miklasz, and "It's OK to say it out loud now, Cardinals
fans", Bryan Burwell, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- "Parity argument has two sides" and "Good-when-it-counted Cardinals capture biggest
prize", USAToday
- "We Have Sought Bliss, And We Have Found It",
Deadspin.com
- "They're the Best (So Deal With It), Tom
Verducci, Sports Illustrated