ASE , The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 2, 1995 - 9B (ockies snatch wild :ard with comeback sociated Press The upstart Colorado Rockies won NL wild card spot in dramatic fash- n Sunday, rallying from a six-run ficit as Larry Walker and Eric Young t two-run homers to lead a 10-9 vic- ry. Colorado will meetthe Atlanta Braves the first round of divisional play esday night at Coors Field. Trailing 8-2 in the third after another or starting performance from Bret berhagen, the Rockies came back for ur runs in their half to make it 8-6, en added four more in the fifth to take 10-8 lead. San Francisco got a run in the sev- th to cut its deficit to 10-9, but the iants put only one runner on base in e final two innings. Curtis Leskanic pitched the ninth for s 10th save, striking out two. Lance Painter (3-0) got the victory, ing one-third ofan inning in the fifth. The Rockies sent nine men to the ate in the fifth, starting the inning ith four straight hits off reliever Mark eiter (10-12). eds 5, Expos 1 Tim Pugh pitched one-hit ball over ve innings and Bret Boone hit a three- n homer Sunday to lead the Cincin- ti Reds over the Montreal Expos 5-1. The Central Division champion Reds ay at Los Angeles tomorrow in their rst playoff series since they won the orld Series in 1990. Montreal (66-78) had its first losing ason since 1991, when the Expos also nished last in the NL East. Pugh (6-5) allowed a third-inning ingle and faced one batter over the mit in his five innings of work. The ght-hander struck out three and walked one. Pugh, who was recalled from riple-A Indianapolis Sept. 2, won't be ligible for the postseason unless he eplaces Johnny Ruffin or Frank Viola, oth of whom are disabled. Boone's 15th home run came in the ourth inning off Jeff Fassero (13-14). t was his first in 194 at-bats after he hit 0 in July. Fassero walked Benito ndians 17, Royals 7 The Cleveland Indians closed their est season in 41 years with a resound- ng 17-7 victory over the Kansas City oyals Sunday, reaching 100 victories or only the second time in franchise istory. The Indians ended the suspense luicklyby scoring 11 runs on 10 singles n the first two innings. They sent 12 batters to the plate in the first inning and the first six of them scored. Five of the first six batters in the second inning scored. Eddie Murray drove in two runs with a bases-loaded single in the first, and Sandy Alomar singled home two more in the second. Billy Ripken homered, his second, to start a six-run fifth that included a three- run home run by Paul Sorrento, his 25th. Charles Nagy (16-6) allowed four runs and nine hits in five innings, win- ning for the sixth time in seven deci- sions. Tom Gordon (12-12) faced 16 bat- ters in the first two innings and allowed 10 runs on nine hits and four walks, leaving before he could retire a batter in the second. Brewers 8, Red Sox 1 Rookie left-hander Scott Karl threw a five-hitter despite a sore finger, and John Jaha and Dave Nilsson each homered and drove in three runs as Milwaukee beat the playoff-bound Bos- ton Red Sox, 8-1, Sunday. The Brewers finished 65-79, win- ning just seven of their last 32 games after pulling within a half-game of the wild-card lead Aug. 27. Karl (6-7), who was smacked on the tip of his left index finger when the barrel of Troy O'Leary's bat twirled into the Milwaukee dugout Saturday, stopped his five-game losing streak. Brewers pitcher Bill Wegman played right field in the ninth. Milwaukee went ahead, 3-0, in the first on three unearned runs. Mark Loretta scored from second on third baseman Tim Naehring's fielding error with two outs and Nilsson followed with his 12th homer, a 418-foot drive to right-center. Consecutive doubles by John Jaha and Nilsson in the sixth made it 4-0. Tim Wakefield (16-8), thethirdstarter in Boston's playoff rotation, allowed five hits and hit a batter, walked none and struck out three in six innings. Orioles 4, Tigers 0 Mike Mussina pitched Baltimore's fifth straight shutout, matching an American League record, and the Ori- oles ruined Sparky Anderson's final game as Detroit manager with a 4-0 victory Sunday. Anderson will announce his resigna- tion in a news conference Monday. The game also almost certainly marked the end of the combination of Seattle can't grab berth Playoff for division championship is today ssoiated Press straight years The Seattle Mariners blew their sec- Thomas opened the 11 th by di ond chance to win the AL West, losing a walk and advanced to second w 9-3, Sunday to the Texas Rangers, forc- beat the pitcher's throw on ing them into a one-game playoff with Cameron's sacrifice. Chris Snope the Angels, to be played tonight in Se- bunted into a force play at thi attle. The winners, who will bethe divi- Cameron scored on Ventura's; sion champion, face New York Tues- off Dave Stevens (5-4). day. Roberto Hernandez (3-7) pit The Angels defeated the Rangers, scoreless 11th for the victory. 9-3. Astros 8, Cubs 7 Things started poorly for the Mari- The Houston Astros ralliedf ners Sunday as starterTim Belcher(10- six-run deficit and beat the C 12) allowed a three-run home run by Cubs 8-7 Sunday but were elim Mickey Tettleton in the first inning. from playoff contention when Seattle cut it to 3-1 in its next at-bat rado beat San Francisco. on a solo homer by Jay Buhner. It was Houston, which went ahead on his 40th of the season, making him the Eusebio's eighth-inning sacrifi only Mariner other than Ken Griffey Jr. entered the last day of the se to reach that plateau in club history. game behind the Rockies in t Griffey has done it twice. wild-card race. The Mariners got within 7-3 on a Derrick May homered, tripl two-run homer by Mike Blowers in the singled twice for the Astros, w sixth. His 23rd homer gave him 96 reached the NL playoffs in 198 RBIs, leaving him just short of giving In the eighth, Terry Adams Seattle four 100 RBI hitters. walked Jeff Bagwell with o Kenny Rogers(17-7) startedonthree Larry Casian relieved and gotA days' rest and allowed three runs on pop up, but the ball fell in f five hits, two walks and three strikeouts diving left fielder Luis Gonzale in six innings. Matt Whiteside worked single and Bagwell took third. the final three innings. Foster came in and got Euseb White Sox 2, Twins 1 fly to medium-deep right fie Frank Thomasbecame the onlyplayer Bagwell tagged up and beat S in major league history to bat .300 with Sosa's throw home. 20 homers, 100 RB1s, 100 walks and Dave Veres (5-1) pitched t 100 runs over five straight seasons Sun- nings of shutout relief. Todd Jo day when he homered in Chicago's2-1, three outs for his 15th save. 11-inning victory over Minnesota. Robin Ventura hit a game-winning Marlins 8, Phillies 2 single in the bottom of the 11Ith. Ryan Bowen won for the thir The WhiteSox finished third in the in two years and the Florida N AL Central at 68-76. The Twins fin- concluded the season with a club ished 56-88, tying them with Toronto 67th victory Sunday, beating th for the worst record in baseball. delphia Phillies, 8-2. Thomas hit his 40th homer leading Philadelphia fell into a secon off the bottom of the ninth to tie the tie with the New York Mets in t game 1-1. Lou Gehrig and Ted Will- NL East standings. The Phillie iams batted .300 with 20 homers, 100 were 19 games above .500 Ju RBIs, 100 walks and 100 runs over four finished 69-75. hawing hen he Mike ek then rd, but single ched a from a hicago ninated Colo- n Tony ce fly, ason a he NL ed and ho last 6. s (1-1) ne out. May to ront of ez for a Kevin io on a ld, but Sammy wo in- nes got ird time Miarlins -record e Phila- d-place he final es, who une 25, Colorado pitcher Curtis Leskanic rejoices after his team secured a playoff berth. Detroit second baseman Lou Whitaker and shortstop Alan Trammell, who played a record 1,918 games as team- mates. They both started the game and left, appropriately, together before the bottom of the second. Before that, they were given a stand- ing ovation in the bottom of the first and presented second base from their final game with the Tigers. Mussina (19-9) pitched a two-hitter, striking out seven and walking two in his fourth shutout of the season. The Orioles' fifth straight victory gave them their longest winning streak since Aug. 29-Sept. 6, 1993. Baltimore won 11 of its last 13 games. The Orioles got all the runs they needed in a four-run second inning against Clint Sodowsky (2-2). Mets 1, Braves 0 Brad Woodall walked Tim Bogar with the bases loaded in the 11th inning as the New York Mets beat the Atlanta Braves 1-0 Sunday and completed a season-ending sweep of the NL East champions. New York stretched its winning streak to six and tied a club record by winning its 11th consecutive home game. The Mets also swept two otherplayoff teams coming down the stretch, Los Angeles and Cincinnati. Dodgers 4, Padres 1 Tony Gwynn finished off his sixth NL batting title in style and Randy Smith saw what was likely his last game as San Diego general manager, but former replacement player Mike Busch had the last word Sunday. Busch, ostracized when called up by Los Angeles earlier this year, hit a tiebreaking three-run homer as the NL West champion Dodgers beat the Pa- dres 4-1. Pirates 10, Cardinals 4 Midre Cummings drove in four runs as the Pittsburgh Pirates wound up a season-ending series between the NL's worst teams with an 10-4 vic- tory over the St. Louis Cardinals Sun- day. i Yankee win secures first postseason berth since 1981 Associated Press Don Mattingly made sure he'd finally make it to the playoffs, hitting a home run Sunday that helped the New York Yankees clinch the AL wild-card spot and their first postseason appearance since 1981 with a 6-1 win over Toronto. Mattingly's solo homer in the fifth was the highlight of New York's fifth straight win and its 11th victory in 12 games. He added a single in the ninth. Sterling Hitchcock (11-10) rewarded manager Buck Showalter's confidence by pitching the Yankees to their 12th straight win over the Blue Jays this season. Ruben Sierra hit a two-run double in the first inning, and an error by third baseman Ed Sprague and RBI single by Pat Kelly made it 4-0 in the second. Randy Velarde had a solo homer in the eighth for a 6-1 lead. Pat Hentgen (10-14) took the loss, Toronto's fifth straight defeat. W -. _ __ U I i Road Kill Cafe Moosehead Lake, Maine " '"Never Assume It's a Raisin White shirt w/ red & black Ic stop sign/raccoon. Bar nan (You Wear It!) T-shirts and Hats From Today's Hottest Bars Around the Country ogo of me/ n front n with ccoon Wild Life n front New York C "Dare to S White or bb and tribaV/ Black cott coyote onf lettering on $17 One Size Fits All n' to m WIIFE location in black lettering or Baseball cap is white cotton embroidered stop sign & ra and name of bar/location on $1! (100% Cotton) M,L, XL city ._y LI-0 ;ay No" lack with reverse lettering of bar name animal icons on top on baseball cap with red/yellow stitch of front and bar name with white stitch n back K /000" 00"o, I U W ' pr M ll' mw/ Wa9=32 V I