12 The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 12, 1999 Mets just love their ghost of a chance Pedro, Red Sox storm past ribe Los Angeles Times NEW YORK - Held triumphantly overhead by a young lady in the twi- light at Shea Stadium Saturday, the sign read: "Yo. Chipper, Get Ready to Get Chopped." She could easily have been speak- ing for her favorite team. Make no mistake, this is what the New York Mets wanted. They wanted another crack at the Team of the Decade. They wanted the Atlanta Braves as much as they want the New York Yankees in a Subway World Series, although that may be an embellish- ment. "This is special," relief pitcher Turk Wendell said amid the cham- pagne showers in the Mets' club- house after they had eliminated the Arizona Diamondbacks in four games of the division series, "but it will be that much more special once we beat the Braves." Fighting words? Well, the Mets get a chance to make it happen starting tonight in the National League Championship Series at Turner Field. And if the Braves are now saying they expected the Mets to be here all along, well, that's not what the Mets thought they heard from the Braves when they last played. They thought they heard adrena- line-stoked John Rocker saying how much he hated the Mets. They thought they heard Rocker and others saying the Mets were dead. Of course, at that point in the last week of the regular season, the Mets did appear dead - eliminated from Ihe Eastern Division race and virtu- ally out of wild-card hope. They had been swept by the Braves in a three-game series in Atlanta as Chipper Jones all but sewed up the FreUrps And Cash!!! Spring Break 2000 StudentCit.com is look- n for Highly Motivated tudents to promote Spring Break 2000! Organize a small g roup and travel FREE!!! Top campus reps can earn Free Trip & over $10,000! Choose: Cancun, Jamaica or Nassau!. Book Trips On-Line Log-In and Win Free Stuff. www.StudentCity.com 1-800-293-1443 National League's award for most valuable player. They had lost seven in a row before winning the middle game of another three-game series with the Braves, who won two of those three games in the next-to-last series of the regular season. Now? Well, as Met Manager Bobby Valentine said Saturday after the riv- eting victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks: "The next team we play is going to be playing against ghosts because they said we were dead. I don't know if they ever played against people coming back from the grave." The Mets came back by sweeping the Pittsburgh Pirates on the final weekend of the regular season, rout- ing the Cincinnati Reds in the wild- card playoff and ousting Arizona by first beating Randy Johnson and then winning two in a row at Shea Stadium without an injured Mike Piazza. "Our heart's still pumping," the catalytic Rickey Henderson said amid Saturday's celebration. "The Braves left the last time and felt we were no match for them. They felt we were dead and wouldn't get the opportunity to see them again. I'm real happy to see them again. We're coming back alive." They are coming back with seven wins in their last eight games. They are coming back with people named Todd Pratt and Melvin Mora and Benny Agbayani helping to sustain the momentum. "You couldn't write a better script," said Piazza, whose swollen thumb prevented him from gripping a bat Saturday but didn't stop him from handling a bottle of cham- pagne. "We're not about one person. We're getting contributions from everybody, and that's what it takes to win in the postseason. "Everyone in the National League knows that to reach the World Series you have to go through Atlanta. It's the one hurdle people will be looking at us to get over and wondering if we can, but I think we can. We've become a different team than the one that last played Atlanta. Maybe the best thing that happened to us was that we got all of that negative ener- gy out of here. We hit bottom and bounced back. Now we're relaxed and riding a wave." Of course, dude, it's a long way between rhetoric and reality, and the Braves know all about riding a wave. They've won eight straight divisioi titles. They won nine of 12 from the Mets during the regular season and AP Photo Shortstop sensation Rey Ordonez is hoisted by a teammate after the Mets' 4-3 extra-inning victory Saturday, capping off the National League Division Series. three in a row from the Houston Astros after losing the opener of their division series. They have Greg Maddux, Kevin Millwood, Tom Glavine and John Smoltz set to throw their Cy Young awards at the Mets. (OK, Millwood hasn't won one yet, but give him time.) The smart thing might be for the Mets to temper their cockiness and leave the "Yo, Chipper" signs at home, but who wouldn't be a little giddy at having produced a second life? Valentine hugged dapper co- owner Fred Wilpon Saturday and said, "Ain't it great? And we're just getting started." Perhaps. The Mets did get team- wide contributions against Arizona, and starters Al Leiter, Rick Reed, Kenny Rogers and Masato Yoshii, who is expected to start Tuesday, have probably never been in better form during a season that has now produced 100 wins. Then there's Valentine, of whom a top Atlanta scout said Sunday, "You can say anything you want about his ego and his mouth, and it would probably be accurate, but he knows. how to run a game. He has the right. people in the right place at the right time, and he has the Mets at the top of their game despite everything they went through earlier. Sparky Anderso, would say a lot of things, and you knew he was trving to take the pressure off his phayrs and put it on himself. Maybe that's Bobby's motivation, although Spark never went as far with the things he said as. Bobby does." The latest "ill-timed fire," as General Manager Steve Phillips put it, involved a Sports Illustrated pro- file that was released before Game 3 of the di vision series with the Diamondbacks. Valentine was quoted as saying that he had five losers in the club- house and not a lot of intelligent players. He held a clubhouse meeting before that game and ;aid he was sorry if he offended none but "if the shoe fits, wear i." "We're obv iously. going to keep hearing a lot about that in the next week," Met center fielder Darryl Hamilton said in the clubhouse Saturday, "but we've come too far to worry about it, talk about it, or lose sleep over what he says or what he thinks. We're still playing and the. guys are still believing." A special group of guys, the victo- rious Valentine said Saturday of the same group he had described as lack- ing, intelligence and being losers. Whichever and whatever, the Mets head to Atlanta as division series winners. They are alive, well and playing the team they wanted to be playing CLEVELAND (AP) - The Boston Red Sox encircled Pedro Martinez in their clubhouse, pouring champagne on their star pitcher as the walls shook to a salsa beat. If Martinez didn't completely exor- cise Boston's curse, he certainly found a temporary cure. Just three days after he and his team were both counted out, Martinez brought the Red Sox all the way back. After dropping the first two games and losing Martinez and Nomar Garciaparra to injuries, the Red Sox out- slugged the Cleveland Indians 12-8 last night to win Game 5 of their first-round playoff series and advance to an AL championship series matchup with the New York Yankees. "You might say we're celebrating a lit- tle too hard," pitcher Bret Saberhagen said in the middle of the Red Sox party. "But after a series like this, you have to kick off your shoes a little bit." Making a surprise relief appearance, Martinez pitched six hitless innings and struck out eight. "I wouldn't come out," Martinez said. "As long as I was able to throw the ball over the plate, I was going to stay in there." Troy O'Leary supplied the offense, twice thwarting the Indians' strategy of intentionally walking Garciaparra by driving in seven runs with a pair of homers - including the first postseason grand slam in Red Sox history. With the shocking win, the wild-card Red Sox will play their hated rival in the postseason for the first time, starting Wednesday night at Yankee Stadium. It was too early for manager Jimy Williams to begin worrying about pitch- ing matchups against the defending World Series champions. "Who we going to pitch?" he said. "What day is it?" The five games were a blur of come- backs, injuries, pitching changes and runs, runs and runs - 79 in all, three short of the record for postseason series. O'Leary, who went 0-for-6 in Game 4, hit his slam in the third and snapped an 8-8 tie in the seventh with a three-run homer as the Red Sox, trying for their first World Series title since 1918, became the fifth major league team to rally from an 0-2 deficit in a best-of-5 playoff series. Martinez pulled himself from his start DiamondWJA on National League Championship Series Atlanta vs. N.Y. Mets Game 1: Tonight, 8:12, Atlanta Game 2: Tomorrow, 4:09, Atlanta Game 3: Friday, 8:12, New York Game 4: Saturday, 7:42, New York Game 5: Sunday, 4:09, New York* Game 6: Tuesday, 8:12, Atlanta* Game 7: Wednesday, 8:12, Atlanta* American League Championship Series Boston vs. N.Y. Yankees Game 1: Tomorrow 8:15, New York Game 2. Thursday, 8:15, New York Game 3: Saturday, 4:19, Boston Game 4: Sunday, 4:50, Boston Game 5: Monday, 8:15, Boston* Game 6: Wednesday 4:19, New York* Game 7: Thursday, 8:15, New York* * if necessary in the opener after four innings with a strained muscle in his back. And it got@ worse for the Red Sox when Garciaparra was unable to go in Game 3 because of an injured wrist. But Boston pounced on Cleveland's shaky pitching staff, scoring nine runs in Game 3 before shattering records with their 23-7 rout in Game 4. But Martinez brought some sanity to a series of atrocious pitching, putting an exclamation point on his dominating 1999 season. The right-hander, who went 23-4 during the regular season, will now get a chance to pitch the Red Sox back to the World Series for the first time since 1986, "He couldn't even pick up the ball two days' ago," Saberhagen said, ."and was almost in tears. He's just the most unbe- lievable pitcher I've ever seen in my life." Meanwhile, the Indians, who have been waiting since 1948 to win a Series, were denied a third straight trip to the* ALCS when their pitching staff col- lapsed. AP Photo Cleveland's hopes died once Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez entered the game In the fourth inning yesterday. Martinez didn't allow a hit and struck out eight in six innings. DAILY SPORTS. There are London...........$472 Paris ..............$496 New York.......$270 Amsterdam.....$583 Thera are, creative ways to sad .nennse I