When Kirk Gibson hit his iconic walk-off Game 1 winner in 1988, Vin Scully immortalized it with one of the greatest broadcast calls in baseball history.
With the Dodgers down 4-3 in the ninth inning, Mike Davis drew a two-out walk off closer Dennis Eckersley. Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda sent up the injured Gibson to pinch-hit for pitcher Alejandro Peña.
The 1988 NL MVP, Gibson had not even appeared for pre-game introductions. Hobbled by two bad legs, his swing depended on the strength in his arms.
When Gibson was announced, 55,983 fans rose to their feet to cheer their hero. Eckersley quickly got ahead in a no-ball, two-strike count.
Gibson fouled off pitch after pitch, eventually working the count full. On Eckersley’s 3-2 offering, Gibson belted a backdoor slider over the right field wall, securing an unlikely victory.
As Gibson circled the bases, Dodger announcer Vin Scully summed it up: “In a season that has been so improbable, the impossible has happened!”
Fueled by momentum, the Dodgers defeated the A’s 4-1 to win their second title of the decade.
Above are tickets to the game signed by Eckersley. Notice his inscriptions on them, “Gibby got the best of me!”, and “Should’ve have thrown a backdoor slider!”.
The Dodger scout Mel Didier played a key role in helping Gibson. Or so the story goes.
According to Rory Costello’s SABR biography, Didier told Ross Newhan of the LA Times about an important observation he shared in his scouting report about the Oakland pitchers.
“When we got to Eckersley, and it was my turn to speak, I used my best Southern drawl and said, ‘Pardners, you can bank on this as sure as I’m standing here. If you’re a left-handed hitter and you get in a tough, tough situation with Eckersley, he’s going to throw you that back door slider.’
“Well, when the count went full on Kirk, the players tell me that everyone on the bench was whispering, ‘Back door slider,’ and Kirk told me later that he stepped out of the batter’s box and kind of laughed and smiled to himself because he could see me standing there talking about it. He said: ‘Mel, I knew what I was going to get, picked it up as soon as it left his hand and hit it as hard as I could.’”
In 1988 when Didier scouted Eckersley, the right-hander went to a 3-ball, 2-strike count four times in the regular season and the playoffs. It is unknown how many of those Didier saw or how many times the pitcher threw the backdoor slider.
It remains unclear why the Dodger scout felt comfortable enough to draw his conclusion based on a four-pitch sample-size. What is certain is that Eckersley thew exactly the pitch Didier said he would and Gibson hit it out of the park for the game-winner.
Above are tickets to the game signed by Eckersley. Notice his inscriptions on them, “Gibby got the best of me!”, and “Should’ve have thrown a backdoor slider!”.
RIP Vin Scully, You will always be remembered.