November 5, 2024

A Fond Look Back At Lenny Barkers Perfect Game

Facing Barker to lead off the top of the second was cleanup hitter and the person responsible for the first inning error, John Mayberry.  His fly ball to center field started the inning off for the Indian’s right hander.  After Upshaw grounded out to second base, Garcia flew out to center field, which ended the second inning the same as the first, perfect for Barker.

After a bottom of the second that saw the Indians fail to add to their lead, Barker took the mound to face the bottom of the Blue Jay’s order.  Back-to-back groundouts by Bosettie and Ainge set the table for a fly out by Martinez that ended the inning.  Barker had made it through the Blue Jays lineup once without allowing a single hit or base runner.

At the top of the fourth after the Indians failed to score again, Barker began his warm up tosses to prepare to face the top of the Blue Jay’s order for a second time.  Griffin managed to hit the ball out of the infield this time, but right into the glove of left fielder, Joe Charboneau.  Barker recorded his first strikeout of the game by getting Moseby to swing and miss.  It was quickly followed by another strikeout by Bell.  Twelve Toronto batters had come to the plate and each failed to reach base.

A quick bottom of the fourth didn’t give Barker too much time to rest between innings, but it also kept him from getting cold.  Leading off the top of the fifth was cleanup hitter, John Mayberry.  He became yet another strikeout victim, the third in a row and all swinging.  After an Upshaw foul ball fly- out to third base, and another strikeout this time by Garcia to close out the top half of the inning, Barker was more than half way through the perfecto.

During the bottom  of the fifth, Orta hit a two out single, only to get thrown out at second trying to steal with Hargrove at bat.  Bosetti led off the top of the sixth by grounding out to second baseman, Duane Kuiper.  Danny Ainge and Buck Martinez followed with back-to-back strike outs.  They both went down swinging; Barker had earned every one of his strikeouts that same way.  His pitching arsenal was appearing to be more unhittable by the inning.

The Indians continued to make things interesting by trying to add to their lead in the bottom of the sixth.  They had hits by both Hargrove and Harrah.  Leal managed to strand both runners on base by forcing fly-outs from Thornton and Hassey.  He followed that with a groundout from Charboneau that closed out the inning and kept Cleveland still ahead 2-0.

With 18 outs down and only 9 to go, the chance of a perfect game arrived in everyone’s minds, even Barker’s. He discloses when he felt that he could be pitching a perfect game, “After the seventh inning, and then truly in the ninth inning.  When I went out there in the ninth I knew my pitches were working, I still had great command of them and they couldn’t hit them.”   The once unlikely feat was now suddenly possible, even close enough to hope for.  Barker wasted no time in getting Griffin to ground out to start the seventh inning.  Barker then took matters into his own hands by getting both Moseby and Bell to strike out swinging.

Barker was red hot as he now set down 21 batters in order.  All of his strikeouts resulted from Toronto batters swinging.  Barker was in full command of all of his pitches, which was leading him towards a perfect game.  Barker didn’t have time to think about a perfect game too much because again the Indians went down in order to close out the seventh.  With the top of the eighth inning on tap, the Cleveland Indians were beating the Toronto Blue Jays 2-0.  However, the real story was that starting pitcher, Lenny Barker, was now just a mere six outs away from tossing a perfect game.

For the third time that evening, Mayberry went down swinging .  With only five outs to go, the 7,200 fans at Cleveland Municipal Stadium started to roar like ten times that amount at every pitch.  The atmosphere became intense and exciting as Barker closed in on what a few hours earlier seemed impossible to imagine.  After an Upshaw ground out to second baseman, Kuiper, the crowd began to sense magic in the air.   When Garcia struck out swinging to close out the top of the eighth inning, the small Indians crowd roared again with excitement as they were just three outs away from seeing baseball history.

Orta, perhaps filled with adrenaline from a possible perfect game, started off the bottom of the eighth with a solo homerun off of relief pitcher, Leal.  It was an insurance run that brought the score to 3-0.  Barker had a chance to breathe a sigh of relief before taking the mound at the top of the ninth.  When Barker walked to the mound in the top of the ninth inning, he was no longer just another major league player; he was a man just moments away from achieving baseball immortality.  He was on the verge of pitching only the tenth perfect game in major league baseball history.

He was no longer the hard throwing righty that the Texas Rangers had sent away after early control problems.  Barker was a man on a mission and no one was going to stop him from achieving it.  Len was so focused that he didn’t thing of the possibility of Toronto laying down a bunt in the ninth inning, “It didn’t cross my mind.  I had a no hitter going against the White Sox once when their leadoff hitter bunted to reach base to start the seventh inning.  The next time he came to bat I drilled him; that is part of baseball.” 

Bosetti completed his 0-3 night with a foul ball pop out to the left side of the infield to start the ninth.  Desperate to try anything to break up the no hitter, the Blue Jays manager, Bobby Mattick, chose pinch hitter, Al Woods, to bat for Danny Ainge.  The move proved futile as Woods also struck out swinging giving Barker his eleventh strikeout of the game.  When manager, Bobby Mattick, substituted Buck Martinez for Ernie Whitt, it was his last move.

The tension in the crowd and the fans watching at home was thick. Barker had come so far and everyone knew they were just seconds away from witnessing history.  Barker forced Whitt to fly out to center fielder and current Indians television broadcaster, Rick Manning. The perfect game was complete and the city of Cleveland erupted in joy and pride for their beloved starter.

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Vince McKee

Vince is the Owner of KEE On Sports Media Group. A company built on the very best in sports coverage and broadcasts of High School Sports, Boxing, NPSL Soccer, and everything the sports fans of Northeast Ohio want to know about. He is the play by play man for Ohio Boxing, as well as Cleveland SC of the NPSL. Vince is also a 12x published author who has interviewed everyone from Jim Thome & Austin Carr to Bill Belichick and Frankie Edgar.

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