George Scott ties the game in the 10th and
Dalton Jones slams a walk-off homer in the 11th

June 6, 1969 ... It was raining heavily, and in the 10th inning the fans started to head for the exits because it looked like the Red Sox had lost to the Kansas City Royals. And then, all of a sudden the fans stopped in their tracks as a wicked explosion occurred at home plate with two men out. George Scott, with all his 220 pounds behind his swing, sent a wicked liner toward the bleachers in center field. The ball struck halfway up the wall behind the seats and the fans turned around and went back to their seats, cheering.

An inning later, Dalton Jones, the smooth swinging firstbaseman, slammed his second home run of the year, with Dick Schofield on base, and the Red Sox were winners, 4 to 2. In the rain as the fans were singing, the game belonged with some of the best seen at Fenway Park in years.

The expansion team from Kansas City had trotted out a 22-year-old southpaw named Billy Butler, who threw some of the hardest stuff a pitcher could throw. He had given up a run in the first inning on a double by Carl Yastrzemski and a single by Reggie Smith. From that point to the moment George Scott's hit took off, the youngster had pitched some great ball. He retired eighth-inning row at one stage and 14 at another. He was firing just as hard in the 10th inning as he was in the 1st.

And then there was Ray Culp, with his 9-2 record, battling the youngster all the way, having just missed a shutout in regulation.

In the fourth inning, Mike Fiore hit a long fly ball towards his Kansas City bullpen. Reggie Smith one back and back, and the ball was tumbling over the fence, he leapt and reached back. He made contact with the ball and had it in his glove. But when he crashed into the barrier, the ball came loose and bounced over for a home run to tie the game at 1-1.

Culp was the victim of his own tough luck in the top of the 10th, when he tripped slightly trying to get to a bunt with the bases were loaded with nobody out, allowing the Royals to score the go-ahead run. Fiore had hit a soft single to center, to open the inning and Joe Foy grounded one into left field. A bunt was anticipated and Ed Kirkpatrick dropped it down nicely. It was closer to Culp than it was to Scott at third-base, so the pitcher made a move after it. But he tripped slightly and the ball got past him for a single, to load the bases.

This brought out pitching coach Darrell Johnson and he waved for Vicente Romo to pitch to Lou Pinella. Lou ended up hitting a soft fly to right-field and there was no attempt the score. Johnson came out again and this time brought in Sparky Lyle. The Royals brought up Bob Taylor, a right-handed hitter, and he sent a soft little grounder down to Jones, who threw to the plate and forced Fiore. The next batter was Jerry Adair and on the first pitch he swung for the fences and missed. On the next pitch, he took the ball to right-field for a base hit that scored the go-ahead run, 2-1.

In the bottom of the 10th, Butler got Rico Petrocelli to pop up and Tony Conigliaro on a soft ground ball. By this time it was really messy with the rain, but nothing could stop the drive hit by Scott. The bleachers in center field were empty the and kids came flying over, jockeying for the ball as it bounced off the seats. And so the crowd was back, sitting in the rain and no one cared.

Lyle retired the Royals in order in the 11th. Dick Schofield, the tough battler, in the bottom of the inning, doubled with one out. His long fly just got past Bob Oliver's grasp in the right-field corner. It was touched by a fan and ruled a ground rule double. When Jones came to the plate, he knew that Carl Yastrzemski was behind him and he would get a good pitch, because Moe Drabowsky did not want to walk him and face Yaz. He got two sliders for strikes and the count was 3-2. Jones got the next pitch nicely and the ball sailed out of the park for the walk-off.

 

 

 

F   E   N   W   A   Y     P   A   R   K

 

 

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

 

R

H

E

 
 

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

 

2

8

0

 
 

BOSTON RED SOX

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

2

 

4

7

0

 

 

W-Sparky Lyle (5-0)
L-Moe Drabowsky (4-5)
Attendance - 29,438

 2B-Yastrzemski (Bost), Schofield (2)(Bost),
 Piniella (KC)

 3B-Smith (Bost)

 HR-Scott (Bost), Jones (Bost), Fiore (KC)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AB

R

H

AVG

 

 

Dick Schofield 2b 5 1 2 .360  

 

Dalton Jones 1b 5 1 1 .280  

 

Carl Yastrzemski lf 4 1 1 .270  

 

Reggie Smith cf 4 0 2 .307  

 

Rico Petrocelli ss 4 0 0 .331  

 

Tony Conigliaro rf 4 0 0 .267  

 

George Scott 3b 4 1 1 .197  

 

Russ Gibson c 4 0 0 .224  

 

Ray Culp p 3 0 0 .171  

 

Vicente Romo p 0 0 0 .167  

 

Sparky Lyle p 0 0 0 .333  

 

Joe Lahoud ph 1 0 0 .077  
               
    IP H ER BB SO  

 

Ray Culp 9 7 2 1 6  

 

Vicente Romo 0.1 0 0 0 0  

 

Sparky Lyle 1.2 1 0 0 1  

 

 

         

 

 

 

1969 A.L. EAST STANDINGS

 

 

Baltimore Orioles 38 15 -

 

 

BOSTON RED SOX

32 18 4 1/2

 

 

Detroit Tigers 26 22 9 1/2

 

 

Washington Senators 28 28 11 1/2

 

 

New York Yankees 25 28 13

 

 

Cleveland Indians 15 31 19 1/2