2000 American League Championship Series

2000 American League Championship Series
Teams
Team (Wins) Manager Season
New York Yankees (4) Joe Torre 87–74, .540, GA: 2½
Seattle Mariners (2) Lou Piniella 91–71, .562, GB: ½
Dates October 10–17
MVP David Justice (New York)
Umpires John Hirschbeck, Angel Hernandez, Wally Bell, Mark Hirschbeck, Gerry Davis, Randy Marsh (Games 1–2), Fieldin Culbreth (Games 3–6)
ALDS
Broadcast
Television NBC
TV announcers Bob Costas and Joe Morgan
Radio ESPN
Radio announcers Dan Shulman and Buck Martinez

The 2000 American League Championship Series (ALCS) was a matchup between the East Division champion New York Yankees and the Wild Card Seattle Mariners. The Yankees had advanced to the Series after beating the West Division champion Oakland Athletics in the ALDS three games to two and the Mariners advanced by beating the Central Division champion Chicago White Sox three games to none. The Yankees won the Series four games to two and went on to defeat the New York Mets in the World Series.

Summary

New York Yankees vs. Seattle Mariners

New York won the series, 4–2.

GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 10Seattle Mariners – 2, New York Yankees – 0Yankee Stadium (I)3:4554,481[1] 
2October 11Seattle Mariners – 1, New York Yankees – 7Yankee Stadium (I)3:3655,317[2] 
3October 13New York Yankees – 8, Seattle Mariners – 2Safeco Field3:3547,827[3] 
4October 14New York Yankees – 5, Seattle Mariners – 0Safeco Field2:5947,803[4] 
5October 15New York Yankees – 2, Seattle Mariners – 6Safeco Field4:1447,802[5] 
6October 17Seattle Mariners – 7, New York Yankees – 9Yankee Stadium (I)4:0356,598[6]

Game summaries

Game 1

Tuesday, October 10, 2000 at Yankee Stadium (I) in Bronx, New York

Team123456789RHE
Seattle000011000250
New York000000000061
WP: Freddy García (1–0)   LP: Denny Neagle (0–1)   Sv: Kazuhiro Sasaki (1)
Home runs:
SEA: Alex Rodriguez (1)
NYY: None

Game 1 at Yankee Stadium started as a pitchers' duel between Mariners' Freddy García and Yankees' Denny Neagle. Neither team would score until the top of the fifth when Mark McLemore hit a two-out ground rule double off Neagle before scoring on a Rickey Henderson single. Alex Rodriguez homered in the sixth to make it 2–0. The Yankees could not score any runs off García or three Mariner relievers and Seattle took a 1–0 series lead.

Game 2

Wednesday, October 11, 2000 at Yankee Stadium (I) in Bronx, New York

Team123456789RHE
Seattle001000000172
New York00000007X7140
WP: Orlando Hernández (1–0)   LP: Arthur Rhodes (0–1)
Home runs:
SEA: None
NYY: Derek Jeter (1)

In Game 2, the Yankees' offense was again dead silent, this time against Mariner starter John Halama and reliever José Paniagua. Yankees starter Orlando Hernández pitched eight innings giving up just one run, a John Olerud single in the third that scored Mike Cameron, who walked and stole second, on six hits, but was set to get the loss until the Yankees' offense exploded in the eighth against Arthur Rhodes and José Mesa. David Justice led off with a double before scoring on a Bernie Williams single to tie the game. Back-to-back singles by Tino Martinez and Jorge Posada then gave the Yankees 2–1 lead. Paul O'Neil then hit a sacrifice fly to make a 3–1 game. Mesa replaced Rhodes pitching and gave up a single to Luis Sojo. After Posada was caught stealing for the second out, José Vizcaíno doubled to score Sojo and make it 4–1 Yankees. Vizcaíno would score on a Chuck Knoblauch single before Derek Jeter homered to make it a 7-1 lead. Mariano Rivera pitched a scoreless ninth and the series was tied 1–1 heading to Seattle.

Game 3

Friday, October 13, 2000 at Safeco Field in Seattle, Washington

Team123456789RHE
New York0210010048130
Seattle1000100002101
WP: Andy Pettitte (1–0)   LP: Aaron Sele (0–1)   Sv: Mariano Rivera (1)
Home runs:
NYY: Bernie Williams (1), Tino Martinez (1)
SEA: None

The Mariners struck first in Game 3 on three consecutive singles in the first, the last of which by Edgar Martínez off Andy Pettitte scored Mike Cameron from third. However, the Yankees responded with back-to-back home runs from Bernie Williams and Tino Martinez to lead off the second off Aaron Sele. The Yankees extended their lead to 3–1 when Derek Jeter, who reached on a forceout, scored on a double from Chuck Knoblauch. The Mariners made it a one-run game when Rickey Henderson doubled, then scored on a single from Cameron in the fifth, but the Yankees got that run back the next inning on a Paul O'Neil single to score Bernie Williams. The Yankees broke the game open in the ninth. With runners on first and third, Chuck Knoblauch hit an RBI single off of Brett Tomko, who then walked Jeter to load the bases. Robert Ramsay relieved Tomko and allowed a two-run single to Justice and sacrifice fly to Williams to make it an 8–2 game while Mariano Rivera retired the Mariners in order in the bottom of the inning as the Yankees went up 2−1 in the series.

Game 4

Saturday, October 14, 2000 at Safeco Field in Seattle, Washington

Team123456789RHE
New York000030020550
Seattle000000000010
WP: Roger Clemens (1–0)   LP: Paul Abbott (0–1)
Home runs:
NYY: Derek Jeter (2), David Justice (1)
SEA: None

In one of the most dominant pitching performances in postseason history, Yankees starter Roger Clemens struck out an ALCS-record fifteen batters in a complete game one-hit shutout of the Mariners. He carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning when Al Martin lined a leadoff double off first baseman Tino Martinez's glove for the Mariners' only hit of the game. Clemens got offensive support when Derek Jeter hit a three-run home run off Paul Abbott in the fifth and David Justice hit a two-run home run off José Mesa in the eighth after a leadoff walk to Jeter. The Yankees won 5–0 and were just one win away from the World Series.

Game 5

Sunday, October 15, 2000 at Safeco Field in Seattle, Washington

Team123456789RHE
New York000200000280
Seattle10005000X680
WP: Freddy García (2–0)   LP: Denny Neagle (0–2)
Home runs:
NYY: None
SEA: Edgar Martínez (1), John Olerud (1)

The Mariners struck first in Game 5 when Denny Neagle walked three to load the bases in the first before Mike Cameron scored on a sacrifice fly from John Olerud. The Yankees responded in the fourth when Luis Sojo hit a two-run double off Freddy García that scored Tino Martinez and Jorge Posada with the bases loaded. Their 2–1 lead stayed until the fifth when the Mariners put runners on second and third with one out. Neagle was replaced with Jeff Nelson, who gave up a single to Alex Rodriguez that scored both runners on base, Mark McLemore and Rickey Henderson, giving the Mariners a 3–2 lead. Nelson then gave up back-to-back home runs to Edgar Martínez and John Olerud to make it 6–2 Mariners. Neither team scored afterwards, forcing a Game 6 at Yankee Stadium. Neagle accounted for the loss in the two games of the series that Seattle won and García beat him each time. The Yankees left 15 runners on base and were 2 for 15 with them in scoring position.

Game 6

Tuesday, October 17, 2000 at Yankee Stadium (I) in Bronx, New York

Team123456789RHE
Seattle2002000307100
New York00030060X9110
WP: Orlando Hernández (2–0)   LP: José Paniagua (0–1)
Home runs:
SEA: Carlos Guillen (1), Alex Rodriguez (2)
NYY: David Justice (2)

The Mariners again struck first in Game 6, taking a 2–0 lead in the first when Yankees starter Orlando Hernández walked Al Martin, then gave up back-to-back doubles to Alex Rodriguez and Edgar Martínez. Seattle made it 4–0 when Carlos Guillen hit a two-run home run in the fourth. The Yankees responded in the bottom of the inning when they loaded the bases before Jorge Posada hit a double off John Halama that scored David Justice and Bernie Williams. Posada then scored on a Paul O'Neil single to make it a 4–3 game. The score stayed that way until the bottom of the seventh when the Yankees put runners on first and third with one out off José Paniagua, who was replaced with Arthur Rhodes. Rhodes gave up a three-run home run to David Justice to give the Yankees a 6–4 lead. The Yankees then loaded the bases on a single, double and intentional walk before O'Neill's single scored two. José Mesa relieved Rhodes and walked Luis Sojo to reload the bases before Jose Vizcaino's sacrifice fly made it 9–4 Yankees. Alex Rodriguez led off the top of the eighth with a home run off Hernández. After walking Edgar Martínez, Hernández was replaced with Mariano Rivera, who gave up a double to John Olerud, then two outs later, another double to Mark McLemore that scored both Martinez and Olerud before striking out Jay Buhner to end the inning. Rivera then pitched a scoreless ninth as the Yankees won 9–7 and advance to the World Series.

Composite box

2000 ALCS (4–2): New York Yankees over Seattle Mariners

Team123456789RHE
New York Yankees02153169431571
Seattle Mariners40127103018413
Total attendance: 309,828   Average attendance: 51,638

Television coverage

On September 26, 2000, NBC declined to renew its broadcast agreement with Major League Baseball. After fifty seasons — 1947–1989 and 1994–2000 — Game 6 is the last Major League Baseball game that NBC has televised to date. In Houston, due to the coverage of the 2000 Presidential Debate, KPRC-TV elected to carry NBC News' coverage of the debate while KNWS-TV carried NBC's final baseball game.

Aftermath

Alex Rodriguez would leave the Mariners for the Texas Rangers after this series for a ten-year, $250 million deal. Three seasons later, Rodriguez was traded to the Yankees, where he remained until 2016.

The Yankees would go on to beat the New York Mets in the first Subway Series since 1956, four games to one.

The Mariners returned to the ALCS the following season, after they broke the Yankees' American League record and tied the Major League record for regular season wins with 116. However, they fared worse in a rematch with the Yankees and were dispatched in five games.

References

  1. "2000 ALCS Game 1 - Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees". Retrosheet. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  2. "2000 ALCS Game 2 - Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees". Retrosheet. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  3. "2000 ALCS Game 3 - New York Yankees vs. Seattle Mariners". Retrosheet. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  4. "2000 ALCS Game 4 - New York Yankees vs. Seattle Mariners". Retrosheet. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  5. "2000 ALCS Game 5 - New York Yankees vs. Seattle Mariners". Retrosheet. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  6. "2000 ALCS Game 6 - Seattle Mariners vs. New York Yankees". Retrosheet. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
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