1986 World Series, Game 6: Red Sox @ Mets

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @thewalrus5878
    @thewalrus5878 7 лет назад +408

    I was 8 years old, watching this game with my dad in our basement. That final play...we jumped out of our seats in amazement. I remember my dad giving me a high five, which was out of character for him, because he was so excited. I lost my dad this past September. But this memory, the great memory of watching this game with my dad, is why I am a Mets fan today.

    • @teronroldan5012
      @teronroldan5012 6 лет назад +21

      Same here but I was 9 living room in Brooklyn Everybody was jumping and shouting a family friend couldn’t hold the excitement , always been and always will be a Mets fan , Family fried pass away also , and every time I watch this game it take me back to that day. Mets all the way!!

    • @flyguyry1
      @flyguyry1 6 лет назад +13

      Im a sox fan and this ripped my heart out. But great memory with your dad. Sorry for your loss.

    • @BobbyBoca
      @BobbyBoca 5 лет назад +4

      Great story, great memory with your dad R.I.P

    • @scoobycarr5558
      @scoobycarr5558 5 лет назад +6

      May our heavenly Father bless your Dad in His kingdom. 🌈❤

    • @evanjacobs5411
      @evanjacobs5411 4 года назад +3

      The Walrus sry to hear about your dad. Your comment about the memories made me smile, because my father and I have many moments like that.

  • @tvscribe
    @tvscribe 10 лет назад +413

    Vin Scully with the greatest non-call of all time. Shea gave you all the commentary you needed...Goosebumps.

    • @ryanevans8566
      @ryanevans8566 6 лет назад +28

      Watch the Kirk Gibson homer. A similar minute of silence, then he pulls out "in a year that has been so improbable, the impossible has happened".

    • @howie9751
      @howie9751 5 лет назад +10

      @@ryanevans8566 I agree. However Jack Buck's call on the radio "I can't believe what I just saw!" was even better.

    • @dimbulb1178
      @dimbulb1178 5 лет назад

      @@howie9751 That was necessary because no one listening to the game on radio was able to see what he saw.

    • @howie9751
      @howie9751 5 лет назад +2

      @@dimbulb1178 Why must you try to spoil a great moment?

    • @jalvarez8204
      @jalvarez8204 4 года назад +7

      @MANCHESTER UNITED The fuck u come on a classic baseball video and make this comment?TRULY Stupid

  • @MichaelBaquera-es6gl
    @MichaelBaquera-es6gl Год назад +64

    I was in Chino State Prison watching this and what gets me is how fast these years have gone by , I served over 33 years and I watched all them guys come in and I watched them retire.

    • @tonypanzarella9387
      @tonypanzarella9387 10 месяцев назад +15

      Millions of Red Sox fans wanted to put Bill Buckner in the cell next to yours.

    • @dereksavastano
      @dereksavastano 10 месяцев назад +14

      33 Years?? Brother what did you do? Treason?

    • @tonypanzarella9387
      @tonypanzarella9387 10 месяцев назад +31

      @@dereksavastanoMaybe he used a gender-specific pronoun when addressing someone who was gender-fluid.

    • @dereksavastano
      @dereksavastano 10 месяцев назад

      @@tonypanzarella9387 love the irony, I hate my soft ass generation. Everybody is able to be joked about unless you’re: LGBT or Jewish. Then all of a sudden those people are off-limits.

    • @brandonmcduff
      @brandonmcduff 10 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@tonypanzarella9387😂

  • @greg1744
    @greg1744 2 года назад +156

    I was neither a Met nor Red Sox fan but I keep re-watching this game. In the hundreds, if not thousands of games I've watched since the 1950s, it's so rare that one of the greatest games ever, was called by one of the greatest commentator pairings ever. I will never tire of watching this broadcast.

    • @GreatCdn59
      @GreatCdn59 2 года назад +8

      I feel the exact same way! There's just something about this broadcast - fabulous game, two great teams, game hosted in the bright lights of NYC, lots of drama, even little things like the pacing of the broadcast (greatly helped by Vin's excellent pacing), the minimal but tasteful graphics that only pop up when necessary, letting you concentrate on the game, the not-at-all-HD quality of 80s TV - which I actually like, cause it gave it a 'Live, from a far away land' quality to it - almost like you weren't supposed to see it in crisp quality - that was reserved for those that physically went to the ballpark! ....and of course, Vin and Joe in the booth.

    • @johnnolan33177
      @johnnolan33177 2 года назад +7

      Check out the 1980 NLCS 5 games. It was called by Keith Jackson, Howard Cosell and Don Drysdale. And to me maybe the best series I ever seen. It's ranked, but it was before the new era, that was baseball back in these days. This series, the 80 NLCS had Rose, Schmidt, Carlton, Nolan Ryan, Joe Morgan, god, it went to extras every game except game 1. And noone would quit. I'm telling you. If you wanna see great old baseball. Start at game 1. And don't look it up, so you don't know who wins what game. I watch it every once in a while. Among others

    • @holtridge7337
      @holtridge7337 Год назад +2

      Same

    • @noahahlstrom3834
      @noahahlstrom3834 Год назад +4

      I really liked the Mets -- cool unis, good stadium and fans, and the players always hustled. Vin Scully broadcast makes you feel like you are there, like the '88 WS game 1. Baseball is the best sport ever invented.

    • @purwantiallan5089
      @purwantiallan5089 Год назад +2

      ​@@johnnolan33177Keith Jackson? How old he is in 2023.... I wonder if he is somewhere around 50s.

  • @TheGoorru
    @TheGoorru 2 года назад +95

    it's 2022, Rip Vin Scully, You did an amazing job calling this inning. I was a kid when this happened and there are tears in my eyes now as I watch this again.

    • @LOWDOWN.
      @LOWDOWN. Год назад

      I was 16 in 1986,I feel exactly the same way

    • @veritasinvicta8128
      @veritasinvicta8128 Год назад

      I was 14 and a Yankees fan barely remembering 1978. I had to settle for Giants super bowls and Islanders Cups in the 80s. I actually wanted the Sox to win because Mets fans were intolerable back then. Were it today I'd pull for the Mets over Boston.

    • @ENTERTAINMENT35
      @ENTERTAINMENT35 11 месяцев назад

      No its not its 2024 lol. Jk

    • @brutalcritic7899
      @brutalcritic7899 7 месяцев назад

      A real baseball game!

  • @Tuning_Spork
    @Tuning_Spork 11 лет назад +165

    I watch this over and over and over and I still can't believe it.
    The '86 Mets were the definition of "bad-ass".

    • @Tuning_Spork
      @Tuning_Spork 10 лет назад +8

      @103804056292240482420 Agreed. The '88 Mets, after adding Kevin McReynolds, Kevin Elster and Gregg Jeffferies, were an even stronger team than the '86 Mets. 101 wins, and they couldn't bitch-slap the @#$% Dodgers.
      Ivory Soap Hershiser, Jerk Gibson (who stole the MVP from Strawberry, the thief!), Goofy Hatcher and a ragtag assortment of major league misfits beat the '88 Mets? How the @#$% did THAT happen?!

    • @amazinmets8439
      @amazinmets8439 7 лет назад +4

      Ugh. Don't remind me of 1988. The Mets were so much better than that fucking scrub Dodgers team. A total fluke. Fat fuck Lasorda and Gimpy Gibson. So happy the Dodgers CHOKED this year against Houston at home in Game 7! I've rooted against that team ever since 1988 even though my dad was a Brooklyn Dodgers fan.

    • @cmurphy0707
      @cmurphy0707 7 лет назад +1

      cometandcupids Themselves and of course Mike Scott.

    • @amazinmets8439
      @amazinmets8439 7 лет назад +6

      They were lucky in a way, but at the same time, they really were the better team than the Red Sox in 1986 and deserved to win. I'd consider a team like the 1988 Dodgers more "lucky" than the Mets were. They were not nearly as talented as the Mets, yet they won in 7 games. That's why you play the games, I guess.

    • @scottaznavourian7617
      @scottaznavourian7617 6 лет назад +1

      Lucky is rhe word i use

  • @stephend2879
    @stephend2879 10 лет назад +107

    The 1986 Playoffs and World Series were remarkable.

    • @BiBo24-
      @BiBo24- 7 месяцев назад +4

      The way the ALCS and NLCS, then the WS ended??? Absolute craziness!!! Has there ever been a crazier year all around?!?!?

    • @bluebird925
      @bluebird925 Месяц назад

      Funny thing is it could've been an Angels-Astros World Series.

  • @kylewhytonen
    @kylewhytonen 2 года назад +121

    That image of Ray Knight rounding home with his hands on his head, in utter disbelief of how he got there, gives me chills every time!

    • @terrellholmes2726
      @terrellholmes2726 2 года назад +9

      First of all, props for the _Taxi Driver_ reference in your screen name. Second, I read somewhere that when Knight came home he stomped on the plate so hard that he hurt his back. If you watch him during the post game celebration he's grimacing in pain and his teammates are ministering to him on the bench.

    • @nattyps3160
      @nattyps3160 2 года назад +9

      I know it's such a great image & perfectly says it all about this improbable comeback. Carter Mitchell knight & mookie literally were as clutch as it gets.

    • @purwantiallan5089
      @purwantiallan5089 Год назад +1

      ​@@nattyps3160Carter Mitchell Knight maybe approved this one.

    • @terrellholmes2726
      @terrellholmes2726 Год назад +2

      @Jason.Takes.Manhattan Absolutely! That good fortune is an example of the way things went for the '86 Mets!

  • @alvalankerofficial
    @alvalankerofficial 5 лет назад +143

    Beautifully called game by the announcers. Top quality baseball commentary.

    • @jamesmatthew3681
      @jamesmatthew3681 5 лет назад +14

      Vin Scully and Joe Garagiola Sr. > Joe Buck and John Smoltz

    • @nicholasfox966
      @nicholasfox966 3 года назад +16

      Indeed. Scully is the greatest announcer in the history of sports, by far.

    • @spy1965
      @spy1965 2 года назад +2

      Eh, I mute the tv anywho

    • @terrellholmes2726
      @terrellholmes2726 Год назад

      And, after the bizarre ending, a beautifully non-called game.

  • @alexcastro7339
    @alexcastro7339 5 лет назад +34

    I was 26 years old and that afternoon was my sister's wedding. After the wedding the party spilled over to my house with a crowd of people screaming and yelling watching the game on TV. And what a game... One of the best days of my life that I'll never forget.

  • @epicgamesforyou3615
    @epicgamesforyou3615 6 лет назад +85

    Before cellphones were everywhere, before all the wacky graphics. Before the strike of ‘94, 9/11, and the steroid epidemic. Before the expansion teams and inter league play. I was 14 years old, and didn’t realize I was watching great history. I loved that team. Thanks for the post, and rip - all the greats who aren’t around any longer.

    • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
      @user-jv9qz2bu1r 6 лет назад +9

      Before the insane salaries !!! hard to relate to these new players

    • @orbonds3603
      @orbonds3603 5 лет назад +12

      Before somebody had the ability to leave the tired old everything was better before comment

    • @bmasters1981
      @bmasters1981 3 года назад +5

      Before COVID-19 (coronavirus) too!

    • @brentcline2109
      @brentcline2109 3 года назад +1

      Well said!

    • @brianleetch7415
      @brianleetch7415 2 года назад +1

      @@orbonds3603 It was better before, doofus. You think the world today is better than the 1980s? You think people are happier? Pull your head out of your ass and understand YOU are the idiot here.

  • @ukkfayooyay
    @ukkfayooyay 8 лет назад +158

    Best game i ever saw in my 60 years.

    • @ngc6603
      @ngc6603 5 лет назад +7

      THE 107TH WORLD SERIES, GAME 6 - October 27, 2011
      is also great.

    • @minnowpd
      @minnowpd 5 лет назад +7

      My future wife and i were on our first date, we arrived in time to see the rally. my family came tumbling down the stairs and went berserk. my date tried to tell my mother how I'd ignored her all evening. Ma said "shut up broad , I'm watching the game". They got along, eventually..

    • @joeambrose3260
      @joeambrose3260 4 года назад

      Baloney

    • @albundy6008
      @albundy6008 4 года назад +1

      Being that boston lost the way they did made it Oh, SO SWEET!!!!!

    • @stephenbender7593
      @stephenbender7593 4 года назад +4

      Happened to be the same year that Penn State won the national championship. I was a fan of both the Mets and Penn State. In 2020...I can't stand sports and the politics, cry baby thing it has become. For me, it is a thing of the past but I reminisce...

  • @CJfromPhilly
    @CJfromPhilly 10 лет назад +316

    Can you imagine today's announcers keeping quiet for a full 3 minutes at the end of a dramatic game like this? You gotta love old school broadcasters like Vin Scully and Joe Garagiola who know when to shut up and let the pictures tell the story.

    • @ReflectionOfPerfection
      @ReflectionOfPerfection 10 лет назад +26

      Buck lets the crowd noise tell the story but then they go to the sideline bimbo to push a microphone into the star's face while he's trying to celebrate.

    • @OscarBravoUSA
      @OscarBravoUSA 4 года назад +5

      I sense some irony. I think, after the error committed and winning run scored, they were at a loss for words. They were in disbelief, like everybody else.

    • @manuginobilisbaldspot424
      @manuginobilisbaldspot424 4 года назад +11

      LOL...2001, they literally said nothing for 3 1/2 minutes. It's NOT something relegated to the past. It depends on the gravity of the moment.

    • @TMC1982Part2
      @TMC1982Part2 4 года назад +8

      I think that what set Vin Scully apart from other broadcasters and why he's the greatest baseball announcer of all time is that he just had this classy, dignified "air" about him. Vin kind of struck me as like your elegant, worldly grandfather. He always spoke very eloquently and he had that smooth, dulcet speaking voice. I heard this story that Ray Charles told Bob Costas that the person that he would most like to meet in the world was Vin Scully. Ray, being of course, blind said that Vin Scully's play-by-play style was lyrical.
      Plus, you of course, have to take for account the man's longevity. Going back to Bob Costas, he said that with all due respect to Harry Caray and Jack Buck, they weren't calling St. Louis Cardinals games when Dizzy Dean and the Gashouse Gang were there. Meanwhile, Ernie Harwell wasn't with the Tigers yet when Hank Greenberg was their star player. And Mel Allen wasn't calling Yankees games when Babe Ruth was with the team. Vin Scully pretty much through 2016, witnessed and
      encapsulated the entire history of the Los Angeles Dodgers franchise as well as at least a portion, of Jackie Robinson's stint in Brooklyn.

    • @DrLuke49
      @DrLuke49 4 года назад +7

      @@manuginobilisbaldspot424 I look forward to covid being permanently relegated to the past.

  • @jrod5858
    @jrod5858 Год назад +8

    I was 11years old. In my 2nd year of being a Mets fan, but already a die-hard. My dad sent me to bed because it was late..(it was a Sat night!) watching on a black and white tv, I’ll never forget. I MISSED that magical Mookie/Buckner moment! The next morning my father, who stayed up watching tells me “the Mets won the game!” Suffice it to say Monday night i was able to watch the whole game, my father picking me up in his arms as Orosco struck out Barrett. What a season, what a team!

  • @leroyapplegate5049
    @leroyapplegate5049 8 месяцев назад +10

    This is what RUclips was created for. This is classic stuff right here

    • @kiloWrldisYourz
      @kiloWrldisYourz 6 месяцев назад

      Dam the years goes by I am a Astros fan and saw in Houston Mets beating Astros even dow I was cheering for Mets I was Eleven years old seeing this game on TV with my father love u father

  • @JayScottSmith
    @JayScottSmith 8 лет назад +98

    In a career of incredible calls and moments, Vin Scully's "BEHIND THE BAG..." still stands as one of the greatest ever. He was genuinely shocked.

    • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
      @user-jv9qz2bu1r 6 лет назад +11

      correct - awesome call by VS

    • @jamesvazquez2491
      @jamesvazquez2491 2 года назад +20

      What made it even more special is that after the error was made and Knight scores all you heard for over 2 minutes was the crazed Shea crowd.
      Today it would be Joe Buck rambling on and then a commercial break.
      There will NEVER be another Vin Scully!

    • @manuginobilisbaldspot424
      @manuginobilisbaldspot424 Год назад +1

      @@jamesvazquez2491 Once again, that is horseshit. After Luis Gonzalez singled to beat the Yankees in Game 7 in 2001, Buck let the scene tell the story for over THREE MINUTES. Didn't say anything. Y'all just say anything to be saying it. ruclips.net/video/Z-hbjI81M8I/видео.html

    • @jamesvazquez2491
      @jamesvazquez2491 Год назад

      @@manuginobilisbaldspot424 I would have to go back and watch but I’ll take your word for it. Either way Joe Buck still sucked at calling baseball. He’s better off on football, that’s all I will say about that

  • @manuginobilisbaldspot424
    @manuginobilisbaldspot424 9 лет назад +101

    RIP Dave Henderson. If Boston had won this game, he would've been immortal in New England. Saved their lives in the epic ALCS Gm 5 and would have won it all in this game. Oh well, he won his title with my beloved A's in 1989. So long Hendu.

    • @ExclusiveLM
      @ExclusiveLM 9 лет назад +4

      +Manu Ginobilis Bald Spot ........At 3:34:03 at the lower right corner, the guy that killed John Lennon (Mark David Chapman). LOL !!

    • @scoobycarr5558
      @scoobycarr5558 5 лет назад +8

      Also we can pay tribute to Gary Carter, longtime former Expo who was eager to win a title for the Mets.

    • @djtoman6875
      @djtoman6875 4 года назад +2

      Let's go, Oakland!

    • @DrLuke49
      @DrLuke49 4 года назад

      @@ExclusiveLM that was pretty eerie

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 года назад +5

      and the sox have been back in the world series 4 times after this and have not lost.

  • @stevedrums1675
    @stevedrums1675 9 лет назад +703

    I am a Mets fan. I was at this game when I was 16. You can even see me briefly. However, to this day, I feel for Bill Buckner and the abuse he took from Boston "fans". He was a border-line hall of Famer and this one play defines him. He wasn't teh only one who blew this game for the Sox. He deserved better than what the Boston "fans" gave him.

    • @rafterscott
      @rafterscott 9 лет назад +76

      stevedrums Agree 100%. Put the blame on Schiraldi or Stanley.

    • @TheCancerkilla
      @TheCancerkilla 9 лет назад +51

      +rafterscott Exactly, somehow, Schiraldi, Stanley, and McNamara escape the scorn...

    • @49RonGuidry
      @49RonGuidry 9 лет назад +52

      +stevedrums Agreed on all fronts. Shame Buckner got so beaten down and forced to move to keep his family safe. Obviously as stated here there are many that should have been as accountable for this loss as he was. And the fact there was a game 7 to play yet, if you didn't know better you'd think this was game 7 and they won the series here. He was a great player really tragic he is now known for this one blooper off a bad hop. Look at his career numbers folks.

    • @ogrebattle22763
      @ogrebattle22763 9 лет назад +15

      +stevedrums Good comment & I agree with you.... Bill Buckner was a good player & it's a shame what the Red Sox fans put him & his family through.... He definitely deserved a lot better then what he got.... Sox fans should be ashamed of themselves for what they did to him... Later on they tried to make amends with him but the damage had been done... When I watched the interview with Buckner talking about & describing what he & his family went through the abuse & mental toll that it took on him & his family is just gut wrenching & really sad... I'm a Mets fan too... My dad grew up a Brooklyn Dodger fan & he always told me that Buckner's flub reminded him of the "shot heard round the world" when Ralph Branca gave up that big home run to Bobby Thompson & something similar happened to Branca where he went through a lot of abuse & stress over that incident only not as bad as Buckner did...

    • @shockey098
      @shockey098 9 лет назад +8

      +stevedrums yeah, totally a borderline hall of famer. with his 18.8 career war.
      the nostalgia is strong.
      but you are right that he definitely did not deserve all the abuse he got

  • @petermainwald6413
    @petermainwald6413 5 лет назад +21

    I was 20 years old.. this was the greatest moment of my life and I will always be grateful for this. I love the HUGE uniform numbers, the large stripes.and the amazing pitching and managing.. I have lifetime goosebumps because of this..

    • @danacoleman4007
      @danacoleman4007 Год назад +1

      that's one of the saddest things I've ever heard

  • @improvmaniac
    @improvmaniac 3 года назад +26

    It's 2021 and I'm still watching this game. Great memories. Love MOOkie Wilson and that entire staff of Mets.

  • @Xelanderthomas
    @Xelanderthomas 9 лет назад +61

    I'll never forget this game. I jumped so high my head banged on my apt. ceiling.

    • @ssgking1
      @ssgking1 6 лет назад +5

      i jump up and broke my coffee table and crack the ceiling below that was amazing LETS GO METS,

    • @MrAquinas1
      @MrAquinas1 6 лет назад +6

      Xelanderthomas: Are you kidding? I just watched the replay and started jumping up and down like I didn't know what was coming. I was even nervous watching Mookie's at bat.

  • @mr198221
    @mr198221 8 лет назад +181

    Every time I watch the end, I cry my eyes out.
    I was working at Burger King, scared in the grill area with my little radio.
    The restaurant was packed.
    When the Mets won it, I ran out SCREAMING onto Times Square yelling Mets win.
    I'll never forget all the tourists with NO clue as to why this dude with a BK uniform was going ballistic!

    • @stevebully
      @stevebully 8 лет назад +8

      Let's Go Mets!

    • @tony195869
      @tony195869 8 лет назад +2

      BURGER KING WAS PACKED IN GAME 6 OF A WORLD SERIES ? GEE SOUNDS LIKE LIBERAL SAN FRANCISCOWHERE THEY DONT GIVE A SHIT

    • @mr198221
      @mr198221 8 лет назад +1

      +tony195869 it was packed. true, no real baseball fans that gave a shit. I was young, and noticed that, sadly

    • @tony195869
      @tony195869 8 лет назад +6

      san Francisco does not deserve any championships most people that live in sf are so political and very very odd ? know nothing about sports they see people happy so they jump on the bandwagon

    • @lennyshelton2036
      @lennyshelton2036 8 лет назад +5

      If it was at Times Square, then it was all tourists from countries that don't care about American baseball. Or they were depressed Yankees fans.

  • @TonyMontana-qv8cx
    @TonyMontana-qv8cx 8 лет назад +57

    Greatest game of my lifetime. Second is game six of the 1986 NLCS, Mets & Astros.

    • @brucesmith1754
      @brucesmith1754 Год назад +2

      I stayed up for that one too. Mike Scott was a beast. 16 innings of grueling torture.

  • @timothyshannon7490
    @timothyshannon7490 2 года назад +14

    RIP Vin Scully. Thank you for calling this amazing World Series and this amazing game.

  • @thomasarquina1667
    @thomasarquina1667 9 месяцев назад +16

    I'm a huge Met fan, but I always felt bad for Bill Buckner. He was playing with two bad ankles. He was an excellent player. R.I.P. MR. Buckner.

    • @jmccracken1963
      @jmccracken1963 Месяц назад +1

      AND he had just been hit by a pitch - HARD - in the top of the 10th.

  • @johnfedor6235
    @johnfedor6235 11 лет назад +53

    I watched this game in a neighborhood bar in Queens. Place was packed. With two outs, I thought we were toast. Then 3 straight hits, We are screaming like crazy. Then the key play of the game-the wild pitch by Stanley. Everybody forgets that play. Then the roller to Buckner, and when the ball rolled past him, shock, followed by more screaming. Total strangers hugging each other. Never forget it is a long as I live. Next day, I had absolutely no voice, I had screamed myself hoarse. Good thing the next day was a Sunday. The Mets have not won since, this '86 team was loaded with cokeheads as it turned out. Sad to see Gary Carter on this tape. RIP, Kid. Hard to believe its' been 27 years. Life just sails along, doesn't it?

    • @KevinHeaven9
      @KevinHeaven9 11 лет назад +5

      great story. thanks for sharing

    • @Jusbklyn79
      @Jusbklyn79 10 лет назад

      Long time should. Rest well "Kid"

    • @Jusbklyn79
      @Jusbklyn79 10 лет назад +2

      Jusbklyn79 I meant wow what a long time ago the years fly by.

    • @amazinmets8439
      @amazinmets8439 6 лет назад +9

      Ironic that the one guy who was NOT a cokehead, Gary Carter, was the first team member to die. Funny how life works sometimes.

    • @flyguyry1
      @flyguyry1 6 лет назад +2

      Great memory

  • @johnthomas6361
    @johnthomas6361 8 лет назад +42

    Greatest year of my life. Thank you, New York Mets.

    • @michaelruscoe5901
      @michaelruscoe5901 5 лет назад +5

      Mine too. We may see another Mets championship, but there will never be another 1986.

    • @jameshughes6049
      @jameshughes6049 5 лет назад

      Well said!!

    • @johnnyg2049
      @johnnyg2049 2 года назад +1

      Yep Mets win, Reagan was president, and none of this technology. Certainly much better times.

    • @JackDeSilver
      @JackDeSilver Год назад

      @@johnnyg2049 Yeah but people were racist as hell in the 80’s so maybe not

  • @amydarnell-fuchs4311
    @amydarnell-fuchs4311 11 лет назад +16

    These were the happiest days of my life

  • @anonsidious358
    @anonsidious358 2 года назад +10

    Mookie Wilsons at bat is a clinic of fighting off a pitcher in a intense situation. Excellent at bat.

    • @kramalerav
      @kramalerav 10 месяцев назад +2

      That whole Mets lineup was a very scrappy and very motley bunch. Roger Clemens held them hitless for, what, five plus innings? Yet they made him work very hard for it by protecting the plate and fouling off as many pitches as possible thereby making him throw as many pitches as possible. He was in there for so long that it seems John McNamara forgot that he had finally replaced him when he had Shiraldi take an at bat.

  • @sotolover7923
    @sotolover7923 3 года назад +24

    Still remember watching this game with my dad and when Carter singled...."I love that guy. He never gives up." And we all know what happened next. Good life lesson for me as a 10 year old.

    • @alysqza2365
      @alysqza2365 2 года назад +2

      i'm 14 right now, of course a mets fan. i've always wondered what it's like to experience this. i'm getting chills reading all the comments because i think it's so amazing just watching this in 2022 when people watched it live, and have memories of it . Let's go mets !!

  • @leftys408
    @leftys408 8 лет назад +76

    Early that season, Bob Stanley was in a slump and being booed by the fans. A local reporter asked him if it bothered him and he said that he'll get the last laugh when he gets the last out in the world series. When he trotted in from the bullpen I jumped off my sofa and said Holy **** he's going to do it!!! He didn't.....

    • @qwertymanor
      @qwertymanor 8 лет назад +4

      wow

    • @ChrisBakerauthor
      @ChrisBakerauthor 8 лет назад +17

      The Red Sox relievers were absolutely horrible. Calvin Schiraldi and Bob Stanley blew this game.

    • @ph0gwalkrzero
      @ph0gwalkrzero 8 лет назад +17

      Exactly. People villify Buckner but the Red Sox bullpen were the real ones to blame for shitting the bed.

    • @AlonsoRules
      @AlonsoRules 5 лет назад +13

      The Red Sox were one strike away before that wild pitch. Many Red Sox fans forget this. The game was already tied when Buckner made that error.

    • @briang3563
      @briang3563 5 лет назад

      We shut game off when he'd come in he blew it so often. 40 saves some years but he blew alot

  • @MichaelClifford14lza14acdc
    @MichaelClifford14lza14acdc 11 лет назад +16

    "Little roller up along first, BEHIND THE BAG! It gets through Buckner, here comes Knight and the Mets win it!"
    As I a Mets fan, that classic call never gets old. Makes me realize we used to have a team.

    • @redsox1935
      @redsox1935 4 года назад +2

      @Michael Clifford That’s ok the Red Sox won 4 World Series titles since this game. How many have the Mets won since this game that is 34 years old?

    • @USMC1997
      @USMC1997 2 года назад +1

      @@redsox1935 Lol. No one gives a shit. None of those other series involved the Mets, so 🤷🏽‍♂️😂🤡

    • @stillnessspeaks4080
      @stillnessspeaks4080 2 года назад

      @@redsox1935 four?

    • @JonesDylan874
      @JonesDylan874 6 месяцев назад

      @@redsox1935 Sigh, none...

    • @jmccracken1963
      @jmccracken1963 Месяц назад

      @@stillnessspeaks4080 2004: 4-game sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals. 2007: 4-game sweep of the Colorado Rockies. 2013: Beat the St. Louis Cardinals, 4 games to 2. 2018: Beat the Los Angeles Dodgers, 4 games to 1.

  • @tomy.1846
    @tomy.1846 5 лет назад +11

    They did NOT play the Red Sox "tomorrow." It rained, and my uncle had to fly back to Chicago. Allowing me to go to game 7 the following night with my older brother! Still have my stub and the most incredible memories! LGFM! :)

    • @omt4293
      @omt4293 3 месяца назад +1

      Yeah I remember, and McNamara made one right decision, by going to Bruce Hurst on 3 days rest instead of oil can Boyd who ended up unavailable….most likely went drunk when he was removed as the game 7 starter.

  • @lucasmann2308
    @lucasmann2308 3 года назад +37

    this game still gets to me 35 years later

  • @jimboslice1231
    @jimboslice1231 5 лет назад +13

    Vin’s opening dialogue is probably the greatest opening to a World Series game I’ve ever seen. Left me speechless

    • @steverapposelli6104
      @steverapposelli6104 5 лет назад +1

      Except... Johnny didn't come home!

    • @jimboslice1231
      @jimboslice1231 5 лет назад

      Steve Rapposelli oh Johnny came home alright but a piece of him didn’t

    • @ousamaabdu794
      @ousamaabdu794 9 месяцев назад

      Vin is hands down not only the best baseball broadcaster, but the best sportscaster PEROID.

  • @runawayuniverse
    @runawayuniverse 11 лет назад +20

    The emotion Vin Scully put into that call damn near brings me to tears every time I hear it.

  • @WHALEDOGS9111
    @WHALEDOGS9111 8 лет назад +32

    Greatest Mets game ever.

  • @sdelmonte
    @sdelmonte 11 лет назад +123

    Scully was silent for how long after that ending?
    The best announcers know when to shut up. And Scully is the best.

    • @edmondwynn174
      @edmondwynn174 4 года назад +4

      What did Vin say " The Mets are not only alive but well for Game # 7 tomorrow " before he said " You have watched the absolutely BIZZARE ending to GAME # 6 of the 1986 World Series!!!! Though now retired he Still is one of the best REAL talk !!!!!!!!

    • @tishtashtishtash
      @tishtashtishtash 4 года назад +3

      Three-and-a-half full minutes

    • @edmondwynn174
      @edmondwynn174 4 года назад +4

      tishtashtishtash just played the replay on WFAN Radio here in New York City just went off the air as we speak!!!!! Bob Murphy : “Around comes Knight The Mets win the ballgame they win The Mets win !!!!!! Gary Thorne: “ UNBELIEVABLE The Red Sox in STUNNED disbelief!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @jamesvazquez2491
      @jamesvazquez2491 4 года назад +3

      It was absolutely brilliant. He didn’t need to say a word and yet it spoke a thousand words. There will never be another one greater than him

    • @jamesarmstrong1811
      @jamesarmstrong1811 3 года назад +3

      Scully did that when Gibson homered off Gossage in game 5 in 1984 after it was said to Gibson by Sparky Anderson" He doesn't want to walk you",2 pitches later,3 run homer to right by Gibson and Vin let the moment sink in without a word,, priceless!

  • @mattduhaime5076
    @mattduhaime5076 Год назад +5

    I was in the 3rd row of the upper deck looking down on 1st Base w/ my future wife on her 27th Birthday .. I look to my right, and saw the parachute coming over the right field scoreboard and alerted everyone in my section! Lol … My brother was there with his future wife smuggled in a birthday cake for my wife, and we celebrated with the entire section after the game…! I thought that it was an earthquake, and we were going to collapse with the way the stadium was rocking and violently fluctuating up and down . Go to euphoria… we all sang Happy birthday to my wife🎉 total Euphoria

  • @terrellholmes2726
    @terrellholmes2726 Год назад +5

    One of my proudest possessions is a 1986 World Series baseball signed by Mookie Wilson and Bill Buckner.

  • @raymondhoagland8602
    @raymondhoagland8602 5 лет назад +11

    I've been following this team for over 50 years, Tom Seaver was my guy to watch. Loved to see him pitch, he was incredible !! 86 Was an unbelievable year !

  • @long-time-first-time
    @long-time-first-time 2 года назад +14

    This classic never gets old!

  • @tiffanycarter5432
    @tiffanycarter5432 4 года назад +17

    Every time I see this game, I'm reminded of a story Bob Costas told on the 'Baseball' series by Ken Burns. He was in the Red Sox clubhouse and everything was ready for the big celebration that everyone was SURE was coming.And he asked the guys in the truck about what happens if the Mets tied it up and he said he was told 'You get the hell out of there as fast as you can.'

    • @danielevans8728
      @danielevans8728 2 года назад +3

      Good story.. right before Vin Scully broke the 3 min silence with his "pictures and words" analogy, you can hear Costas say he doesn't think "he's gonna get anybody" for post game interview

  • @joenania
    @joenania 10 месяцев назад +2

    The 1969 MIRACLE METS were great in that World Series - - BUT these 1986 World Series MIRACLES METS were just as good !

  • @beani24329
    @beani24329 2 года назад +17

    RIP Vin Scully. How nice to see a team win and have excitement by the announcer and then stay quiet while the team celebrates. Buck would talk in his monotone voice over the whole thing.

    • @peterjohnson617
      @peterjohnson617 Год назад +4

      I was watching the Mets game just last night on espn...I had to turn the sound off because the announcers were so bad.

  • @BPCADownStateChapter
    @BPCADownStateChapter 6 лет назад +12

    Thanks for posting the full game. I was blessed to have been at both Game 6 and Game 7 that year and I still get Goosebumps watching the bottom of the 10th. This is why sports fans, "Ya Gotta Believe" ! Tug McGraw RIP. - PS - love the vintage commercials at 3:35 and 3:36

  • @amazinmets8439
    @amazinmets8439 10 лет назад +30

    There will never be a crazier ending to a game of such importance ever again in my lifetime. I could live 500 years, and never see a more insane finish than what happened in this game. It will never be duplicated!

    • @ReflectionOfPerfection
      @ReflectionOfPerfection 10 лет назад +5

      2011 rangers/cards?

    • @mdmcdd1117
      @mdmcdd1117 10 лет назад +1

      Amen! I am a Red Sox fan and was talking shit and celebrating prematurely. What a rally by the Mets. I don't blame Buckner. I blame the Red Sox relievers. Great game!!

    • @EricLimasTPLEra77
      @EricLimasTPLEra77 10 лет назад

      Chris D I also blame the Red Sox manager for not replacing Buckner with Dave Stapleton,who was a better 1st baseman defensively.

    • @amazinmets8439
      @amazinmets8439 10 лет назад

      Chris D Absolutely! Even though the Mets won I always felt bad for Buckner. I'm happy the Red Sox have won 3 titles since this happened. I'm also a NY Rangers fan in hockey so I know what it's like to be a fan of a team with a long championship drought! And also what it's like when that drought ends, as the NY Rangers drought ended in 1994! A great feeling! :)

    • @amazinmets8439
      @amazinmets8439 10 лет назад +4

      @104951922088287637626 2011 rangers/cards was an awesome finish but not as good as this for a couple of reasons. Number 1 the Cards were down to their last out, but they had guys in scoring position so you still felt like they could pull it out with a big hit. The Mets had NOBODY on base with 2 outs, down 2 runs. They were dead. DEAD! Number 2 the Mets comeback was the result of crazy shit happening. A wild pitch to tie, and the ball going between Buckner's legs to win it...just INSANE! And finally the Mets comeback all happened in the same inning, making it more epic. Plus, the Mets were down to their last STRIKE twice (edited)! INSANE! :)

  • @KF-ee6et
    @KF-ee6et 2 года назад +17

    Earlier this year, the Mets won on a walk off error at first in the bottom of the tenth inning, the first time that had happened for the Mets since this game in ‘86. Gary Cohen’s call of the play: ‘Here comes Nido and the Mets win it’.

  • @super22ll
    @super22ll 5 лет назад +12

    October 1986, I was 15 years old. I was watching this game live in the home of my high school sweat heart. Her mother was from Boston and a die hard Red Sox fan. I hated that woman, and she hated me in return. We both deserved it. When Mookie hit that dribbler between Buckners legs I rose to my feet and screamed. Future not mother in law left the room. My best friend had taken a Mets hat from another friend, and I had taken it from him for that game. Fast forward to 2019 and that hat is sitting on my mantle today. Since that day I am a true Mets fan. In 2017 I was there to watch Thor bust 101 on the Marlins celebrating my 46th birthday. I had tickets to the last game at Shea. I wear a Mets hat each and every day. I am a south Louisiana boy and I live and die with this New York team every season. Because of what they did in 1986.
    Today I still love the Mets. I still love my high school sweetheart. I still have that hat. And I still hate her mother lol. But no matter whether they win or lose, I saw a group of men do something that should have been impossible, and I will always be on their side. God bless baseball and God bless sports for all it can teach us.

  • @maddogmike5178
    @maddogmike5178 5 лет назад +4

    I was stationed at Hill Air Force Base Utah. What made this series so great for me was not only was I a Mets fan but Mr. Vin Scully and Joe Garagiola Sr. doing the announcing. Between an iconic series and two of the greatest announcers baseball has ever seen it was just crazy. Thank you for posting this.

  • @ckaz007
    @ckaz007 6 лет назад +11

    One of the greatest moments for a team I supported in my life. I thought the Mets were done and watched just to see them lose, but then three hits a row, a wild pitch and Buckner allows the ball through his legs. What a classic. This was game 6, which tied up the series. The Mets still had to win another game to seal the deal.

  • @letfreedomring6906
    @letfreedomring6906 5 лет назад +7

    RIP Gary Carter, Dave Henderson, Don Baylor, Bill Buckner, and Joe Garagiola. You’re all deeply missed. God bless your souls.

  • @patrickwalsh279
    @patrickwalsh279 4 года назад +28

    Greatest World Series game ever played, bar none. Even more improbable and dramatic than that wonderful Game 6 in Fenway in 1975.

    • @OldBenKenobi2318
      @OldBenKenobi2318 2 года назад +1

      Nah 2011 Game 6 was better

    • @Dom213
      @Dom213 2 года назад

      Even as a Dodgers fan, the 2017 World Series had way better games than this. I mean at 2:30:20 that shit was pathetic. Guys then would be in AA nowadays.

    • @dukedematteo1995
      @dukedematteo1995 2 года назад +2

      Game 7 2001.
      Game 6 2011
      Game 6 1991

    • @StageRight123
      @StageRight123 Год назад +1

      Game 1 1988 Kirk Gibson.

    • @patrickwalsh279
      @patrickwalsh279 Год назад +1

      Oh yes, I remember that game and that series very well: one of the very best ever played! And game 7 in Minnesota began with a wonderful gesture: just before Jack threw the first pitch, leadoff batter Lonnie Smith of the Braves shook hands with the catcher, Brian Harper (who was also a former teammate). That's when baseball players were tough AND had class. 🙂 @@deanladue5367

  • @danielrivera2365
    @danielrivera2365 6 месяцев назад +4

    That Mookie Wilson at bat was unreal. Consistently fouling off 2-strike pitches to stay alive. What an at-bat!

  • @scoobycarr5558
    @scoobycarr5558 5 лет назад +4

    Saw this on my TV in my bedroom - the TV was a present on my high school graduation in 1984.

  • @delawareweatherguy8893
    @delawareweatherguy8893 8 лет назад +8

    I had just gotten home from a jog. I wanted to see history for the Red Sox. I saw history alright. The flip side. It was the most amazing ending to a game and I've watched Baseball for 40 years.

  • @greggyd27
    @greggyd27 2 года назад +11

    The 86 Playoffs were legendary.

    • @hmhm856
      @hmhm856 9 месяцев назад

      MLB had amazing postseasons on 1985-1986

  • @TigerLikesTail
    @TigerLikesTail 11 лет назад +362

    If this game was played in this ridiculous era, the media would have completely ruined the moment. There is no way on earth that they would have allowed the brilliant 2.5 minutes of mic silence. There would have been some idiotic dingbat on the field asking ridiculous questions within seconds of Mookie getting the hit.
    They actually understood the concept of space back then. That the sports moment was a whole lot more important than silly interviews to build twitter hits and create money from BS.

    • @hadmiar8
      @hadmiar8 11 лет назад +10

      Reporter: "How do you feel that you have won the game?"
      Mets: "Oh yeah, just shitty."

    • @astralplainer
      @astralplainer 11 лет назад +30

      Our concentration spans were longer back then. Today we have become sheep that require the media to continually remind us to focus and refocus where and when they deem it necessary.

    • @runawayuniverse
      @runawayuniverse 11 лет назад +9

      You should have just said it. That idiotic dingbat would have been Erin Andrews

    • @billny33
      @billny33 10 лет назад +10

      After reading your comment, Tiger, I checked, out of curiosity, some silent pauses after other epic World Series walkoffs that were more recent. Luis Gonzalez single off Rivera in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series actually elicited 3 mins 30 seconds of mic silence. For what that's worth.
      However when I checked this for David Freese walk off homer against the Texas Rangers in game 6 of the 2011 World Series, only 1:11 of mic silence.

    • @ReflectionOfPerfection
      @ReflectionOfPerfection 7 лет назад +4

      No shit, I hate it. Remember when Jeanie Zelasko got absolutely drenched in champaigne by one of the White Sox in 2005? The look on her face was priceless.

  • @PenguinPacksVA
    @PenguinPacksVA 11 месяцев назад +1

    Pulled this game on at random … saw strawberry come up and realized I just got his autograph last week ⚡️

  • @barrywainwright3391
    @barrywainwright3391 2 года назад +3

    I've been a met fan since 1969 and I was 27 years old when I watched the Mets win the WS again in 1986. It was the best season and WS ever. They had an awesome and amazing team.

  • @alikay1989
    @alikay1989 8 лет назад +81

    Greatest moment in the history of baseball.

    • @goback3spaces
      @goback3spaces 8 лет назад

      You mean Santana striking out in the 3rd?

    • @jordanbarry3848
      @jordanbarry3848 8 лет назад +18

      You spelled "history of sports" wrong.

    • @joejohnson6722
      @joejohnson6722 8 лет назад +6

      the greatest moment was when the red sox came back against those yankee cunts in the alcs

    • @AlonsoRules
      @AlonsoRules 8 лет назад +1

      how about the final out in Game 7 of this year's WS?

    • @rendor21
      @rendor21 8 лет назад +2

      I quit watching baseball after 1994. While most fans eventually came back after the strike I just couldn't do it. Too much greed, too much money. Then that whole money ball thing and the steroids with Conseco and McGuire with the Oakland Athletics. Then it just got worse with Barry Bonds. Baseball is so corrupt.

  • @Mattblaze1477
    @Mattblaze1477 Год назад +3

    Even as a heartbroken redsox fan I can now recognize that this baseball game is literal art.

  • @Whatt787
    @Whatt787 5 месяцев назад +4

    Greatest single game comeback in World Series History!!

  • @lefty2149
    @lefty2149 Год назад +6

    Every Mets batter in that inning REFUSED to be the last out. One of the most amazing feats ever.

  • @Masterdebater1313
    @Masterdebater1313 2 года назад +4

    I was three, so, I missed this one. I've seen the infamous Buckner clip more times than I can count, but my one takeaway from watching this whole game is the dude parachuting onto the field. Look at the reactions, how happy and how much everyone was enjoying themselves. Remember fun? Remember joy? Pepperidge Farm remembers.

  • @billkarim9715
    @billkarim9715 10 лет назад +57

    This is so much more than the most memorable game in Mets history, or the most heartbreaking moment in Red Sox history. From a purely numerical standpoint, this is the wildest, most dramatic game in all of baseball history.
    After Schiraldi got the second out in the 10th, the Mets had less than a 1% chance of winning the ballgame: the Red Sox HAD this one sealed and wrapped, and were just tucking it into their back pocket.
    It doesn't end there. By the time Mookie Wilson got to the plate, the Mets now had a 19% chance of winning. Obviously, by the end of his at-bat, they had a 100% chance of winning. Yeap, that one single at-bat made 81% of the difference in this high-stakes game.
    A further breakdown of this 81% at-bat is very enlightening: Buckner's error alone represents a 40% change in win probability. That is obviously very significant, but it also means that by the time Mookie put the dribbler in play, the Mets already had a 60% chance of winning.
    Let's go back to earlier in the at-bat, back when the Mets had still been at a 19% win probability. Bob Stanley's wild pitch-which of course plated the tying run-this represents a 41% change in win probability. So it's basically picking hairs to decide who the bigger goat is here between Stanley and Buckner. But Stanley's WP stands out to me because it swings the percentages from 19%..."Okay, maybe the Mets have a chance"... to 60%... "Wow, the Mets are in the drivers seat now!". Buckner's error takes us from that 60% to the 100%..."Here comes Knight and the Mets win!". It really speaks to how sad it is that Buckner became Boston's scapegoat, when a)there are bigger scapegoats in this game alone, and b)the Red Sox were already in serious trouble when the error happened.
    If you ever see the post-game interviews, it gets worse. Bob Stanley, when asked about his wild pitch, just sat there stewing, muttering about "a ground ball that just got by (Buckner). That was only thing he was willing to talk about during that interview...NOT about his even larger role in the Red Sox' downfall. In conclusion, f*ck Bob Stanley. Seriously, f*ck this guy.

    • @anonymousguy2568
      @anonymousguy2568 10 лет назад +2

      And then they choked. I wish I could have been alive to see this great game be played, as a New York sports fan.

    • @pnkflyd66
      @pnkflyd66 10 лет назад +2

      You did.. The 2004 Yankees

    • @joesakic91
      @joesakic91 9 лет назад +2

      pnkflyd66 Nah, the 2011 Rangers took that title now. The Yankees overcame their 3-0 collapse with a title five-years later.

    • @LEETCH_2
      @LEETCH_2 7 лет назад +6

      The 2011 Rangers did not choke as bad as the 1986 Red Sox. The Cardinals had 1st and 2nd with 1 out, and when they tied the game it was off a double. Not a wild pitch and a routine ground ball that went between the infielders legs. The Mets had 2 outs and NOBODY on base and they came back in crazy fashion. 2011 was a great comeback too, but not as good as 1986. Nothing will ever top 1986.

    • @ReflectionOfPerfection
      @ReflectionOfPerfection 7 лет назад +1

      I was only 4 months old when this game happened. In my lifetime Aaron Boone's homer was more heartbreaking for 3 reasons. Number 1, Buckner's error only forced a Game 7 that the Sox were capable of winning whereas Boone ended the series right then and there. 2. Even if Buckner touches the bag, all it does is send it to the 11th and there's no guarantee the Sox win it. If Wakefield got through the bottom of the 11th, Jeff Weaver was coming in to pitch for the Yankees and the 03 Sox owned him. Had the Sox taken the lead, Scott Williamson comes in for the bottom of the 12th and its game over. 3. Its the Yankees, who in Boston hates the Mets more than the Yankees?

  • @goback3spaces
    @goback3spaces 8 лет назад +319

    Yeah, sure, the Mets won, but we must never forget that Marty Barrett was the Miller Lite Player of the Game.

    • @WHALEDOGS9111
      @WHALEDOGS9111 8 лет назад +20

      Who cares who was the player of the game. All that matters is who won the game.

    • @goodtwogo
      @goodtwogo 7 лет назад +26

      He still had a hooker and blow waiting for him

    • @jasonjohnson8886
      @jasonjohnson8886 6 лет назад +2

      Lmao

    • @jorgejohnson451
      @jorgejohnson451 6 лет назад +4

      goback3spaces THAT is hilarious!

    • @scottaznavourian7617
      @scottaznavourian7617 6 лет назад +3

      Bobby richardson actually won ws mvp in 1960 even thpugh his team lost.
      Barret is also the first postseason mvp in redsox history (14 hits in the 86 alcs)

  • @sanitary103
    @sanitary103 9 лет назад +34

    first time seeing the full last inning. what a finish!

  • @jayclark1551
    @jayclark1551 Год назад +2

    I’m 45 years old now and this is my first real sports memory. I remember watching it at my Grandparents house and my Grandma had a betting pool at her work. If the Mets won she was going to get the whole pot. She never watched any kind of sports but was glued to the tv cuz of the gambling😂 Bill Buckner’s error got me a new pair of Converse sneakers!

  • @nate_kang
    @nate_kang Год назад +1

    One of the greatest individual games of baseball ever played. And it isn’t Buckner’s fault, it’s McNamara’s.

  • @darwinblinks
    @darwinblinks 8 лет назад +8

    30 years ago tonight. I was in my apartment in Carbondale and stalked the streets after the game in glorious shock. LGM!

  • @mortimerzilch2608
    @mortimerzilch2608 5 лет назад +33

    R.I.P. Bill Buckner 05/2019

    • @toyman81
      @toyman81 4 года назад +6

      Bill Buckner was a Great Ball Player and deserved much better then what he got from Boston, ONLY AFTER they won a world series did they want to forgive him, FORGIVE HIM, He is the one who forgave them.

    • @agoodpitch9
      @agoodpitch9 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@toyman81 three hits and a wild pitch preceded his error. it was a team meltdown.

    • @juice-k
      @juice-k 8 месяцев назад

      @@agoodpitch9 Ball also took a pretty brutal hop. It was a one bounce chop, and usually it would either hit grass to reduce steam or hit dirt and take another easy hop. Instead it hit the seam between the grass and dirt and played like a much harder hit ball.

    • @agoodpitch9
      @agoodpitch9 8 месяцев назад

      @@juice-k one thing i don't get though is after the ball passed him, why didn't he run to get it?

    • @juice-k
      @juice-k 8 месяцев назад

      @@agoodpitch9 guessing he didn't because the runner was almost at 3rd and the runner would nearly have been home by the time he got to the ball

  • @Kobeee24BRyant
    @Kobeee24BRyant 7 лет назад +19

    Ray Knight is a really nice guy. You can hear that in his interview at the end. Talking about the good lord and being thankful.

    • @JWC-AirWalker
      @JWC-AirWalker 4 года назад

      @Buckeye4life 440 Actually he is.

  • @johnieharle2639
    @johnieharle2639 2 года назад +2

    RIP Vin Scully, imo the GOAT of baseball announcers. This was one of his most famous calls

  • @BeeBee-kt4qn
    @BeeBee-kt4qn 5 лет назад +6

    Onr of the best moment in sports hands down. I was 16 and still get those goosebumps seeing this today. LETS GO METS !!!!!!!

  • @emmanuelenyinwa1443
    @emmanuelenyinwa1443 8 лет назад +10

    One of Vin Scully's greatest calls.

  • @1962drob
    @1962drob 9 лет назад +12

    I'll never forget this game. It was 29 years ago, October 25, 1986. I remember Vin Scully saying "And the Mets are down to their last out". I had thought the Mets would lose for sure.
    But when I saw 3 straight singles, a wild pitch and the Bill Buckner error, I was like "WAY TO GO METS!!! HELL YEAH!!!"
    My old man yelled at me for being so loud at that time.
    This year, the Mets are in the World Series for the 5th time.
    Hope they can win their 3rd.
    GO METS!!!!!

  • @mrvantagepro
    @mrvantagepro 4 года назад +24

    When Dave Henderson hit that home run in the 10th and Barrett singled home Boggs to give the Red Sox a 2 run cushion my heart sunk. Then when Backman and Hernandez flied out, I was like, how can this great 1986, 108 win Mets team lose like this. Anything short of the Mets winning the whole thing in 1986 would have been a bust.
    Some will say that the Mets won game 6 because of Buckner's error, but it took 3 legitimate base hits and a wild pitch to get them into a position to win the game. And some people tend to forget that before Buckner committed the error, the game had already been tied.
    The 86' Mets had an intense passion and fierce determination to win the World Series that year, and no opponent, obstacle, or challenge was going to stop them. Including an 0 - 2 start in the WS or being down to their last out and last strike in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series. And don't forget they were down 3 - 0 in the 5th inning of Game 7.
    I will never, ever forget watching this game with my wife and my parents. It was a great time to be a Mets fan.... Just wish we had more.

    • @christopherstarr8050
      @christopherstarr8050 2 года назад +1

      I remember that great summer , it seemed like they won every game . It was unbelievable

    • @bigdrew565
      @bigdrew565 2 года назад +2

      I couldn't have said this better myself. Let's not forget that they won 98 games the year before with pretty much the same team and missed the playoffs. Davey and the team had the perfect attitude coming into the season. Fuck em. We're going to dominate the NL. 108 games, which I believe was the NL record for most wins in a season. 21 games in front of 2nd place, which probably was close to some sort of record.

    • @jmccracken1963
      @jmccracken1963 Месяц назад

      Actually, the National League record for most regular-season wins is 116 wins - accomplished in 1906 by the Chicago Cubs. (Their regular-season record was 116-36 that year.)
      And then the 1906 Cubs lost the World Series to the "Hitless Wonders" Chicago White Sox, 4 games to 2.

  • @danclemente485
    @danclemente485 3 года назад +2

    In 2016 there was a black out in my old lady's building. It was a hot day in July and her and another friend of ours had nothing to watch so i showed them the bottom of the 10th. Looking back i should've played the entire 10th. She really liked the Miller Lite Commercial. Anyways they couldn't believe what they saw. I remember as a kid watching it there was no way the Mets were gonna win. I was already in tears before game's end. What do you know? They won. As Gary Thorne said on radio, "Unbelievable.....and The Red Sox Are in Stunned Disbelief!" I still play it whenever i'm down. It reminds me that life ain't that deep

  • @motownphill10
    @motownphill10 Год назад +1

    I was in the U.S. Army hanging out at the NCO club at Peterson AFB watching the game with a ton of Mets fans. That was the loudest explosion of cheers i ever heard when that ball went through Buckner's legs. Mind you, the DJ was playing music at the time. Unbeliveable!!!!!!

  • @DerangedLeftWingers
    @DerangedLeftWingers 5 лет назад +110

    boston needed 1 strike to win world series..i always wondered by bill buckner was blamed... he didn't cause the mets to tie it up and then win game 6...remember the mets were 1 strike from losing and boston 1 strike from winning their first world series since 1918..i always blamed the pitcher bob stanley and his wild pitches and the manager

    • @shermanngjazz
      @shermanngjazz 4 года назад +11

      Calvin was terrible on the mound too.

    • @Mrd9960
      @Mrd9960 4 года назад +9

      @@shermanngjazz Yeah I think the biggest screw up, was when he had Ray Knight at 0-2, he throws it right down the middle, like an idiot! He should have made him chase atleast 1 pitch maybe 2, but he throws it right at him, so friggin stupid!

    • @williamkelly26
      @williamkelly26 4 года назад +4

      yeah Buckner was injured

    • @jimbo78able
      @jimbo78able 4 года назад +3

      @@Mrd9960 you’re right! Ray Knight was not a good hitter at this point in his career! He absolutely would have chased!

    • @Mrd9960
      @Mrd9960 4 года назад +4

      @@jimbo78able Yeah they showed a close up of Shiraldi's face as he was getting ready for the next pitch, after Knight hit that ball that went Foul, to Wade Boggs, I could see the look in his eyes like he was scared.

  • @amazinmets8439
    @amazinmets8439 10 лет назад +15

    Darryl Strawberry played for both the 1986 Mets and 1998 Yankees. 2 teams considered to be the greatest in NY baseball history. When asked which team he thought was better, Darryl didn't hesitate. "The 1986 Mets" he said. I'd have to agree with him. They won 108 games while getting drunk every night and getting high on cocaine...just imagine how good they'd have been if they were the choir boys the 1998 Yankees were. LOL! They'd probably have won 130 games haha. 1986 Mets = LEGENDARY TEAM.

    • @BBQFanNo1
      @BBQFanNo1 10 лет назад +8

      He also played for the 1996 Yankees

    • @VancouverChokers
      @VancouverChokers 10 лет назад +3

      They almost lost to Houston before they even got to the 86 Series. The Mets themselves even said there was no way they beat Mike Scott if that series goes to 7. It's a shame that Game 6 of the 86 NLCS is not on YT. An all time classic.
      The way I see it is, the Yankees steamrolled everyone on the way to the 98 title, but the 86 Mets played better teams.

    • @BBQFanNo1
      @BBQFanNo1 10 лет назад

      RE: John Reynolds...That is because the FIRST TITLE won is always the best & most Players FAVORITE in every Sport. Most Players in every sport will usually say their favorite Titles they won with any Team is their FIRST ONE.

    • @jameswall3909
      @jameswall3909 10 лет назад

      hahhahaha

    • @amazinmets8439
      @amazinmets8439 9 лет назад +3

      ***** RE: Bill Bass...He wasn't asked what his "favorite" title was. He was asked "Which team was better?" and he said the 1986 Mets. If anything, Daryl should be biased for the Yankees because he won TWO titles there. Yet he still thinks the 1986 Mets were the better team, and the best team he has ever played for. Thanks.

  • @mightybedbugs
    @mightybedbugs 9 лет назад +65

    3:26:20 You can add up to 12 million bytes of memory too!

    • @OscarBravoUSA
      @OscarBravoUSA 4 года назад +4

      Those were the days, in more ways than one. Now even Radio Shack is gone.

  • @thescatman5029
    @thescatman5029 3 года назад +1

    I'm a freshman, at Syracuse, attending a campus party. Despite the DJ rocking the one and twos, the game was on a big screen, and, therefore, no one was dancing. Much of the entire campus were either from New York or Boston! To watch the ending of that game, at that party, was an experience I'll never forget! And I don't think I'll ever see a bullpen unravel like I saw Boston's.....!

  • @markh.
    @markh. 3 месяца назад

    I was sitting in my dorm room NYU 20 years old watching my rabbit ear antenna TV, ready to go to bed to watch the last out of the night and Boston win. When the Mets won I actually shed a tear, the first and last time that ever happened to me watching a sports game.

  • @ReflectionOfPerfection
    @ReflectionOfPerfection 10 лет назад +62

    Born and raised in Boston and 3rd generation media member, to this day I still don't know why everyone blamed Buckner. NOBODY blamed Tim Wakefield for Aaron Boone's home run and nobody blamed Rodney Harrison for the David Tyree catch. Scapegoats and losing go hand in hand and I've seen my fair share, but Schiraldi stops pitching, Gedman misses the wild pitch and McNamara leaves in Buckner who gives up the critical error...then lost game 7 ....and everyone blames Buckner? I son't get it

    • @drpawnkwp
      @drpawnkwp 10 лет назад +2

      You ought to know about losing. Boston sucks Donkey DICK. For all the money Boston spends look at how FEW World series they have won. Hell the Cardinals have won more titles since 2000 then the Red Suxs have won in over a century. BOSTON SUCKS and so do their loser fans. And BTW Buckner lost it.....

    • @ReflectionOfPerfection
      @ReflectionOfPerfection 10 лет назад +5

      Bill Clinton Cardinals won 2 since 2000, Sox have won 6 since 1915....nice try there chump stain.

    • @joesakic91
      @joesakic91 9 лет назад +2

      Bill Clinton Whoa, whoa, whoa. The Cardinals won two World Series since 2000, tying with the Yankees since the 21st century started while the Red Sox won 3 tying with another Cardinals' playoff rival the Giants for the most in the 21st century up to this point.

    • @drpawnkwp
      @drpawnkwp 9 лет назад +1

      The only thing the Sox are good at is choking on the NY yanks meat. The Cardinals have won more world series then anyone in the NL so we dont need to hear how the SOx won a WS in 1912. Oh BTW nice W/L record this year LOSERS. God the Sox suck....

    • @drpawnkwp
      @drpawnkwp 9 лет назад

      ***** The only thing the Sox are good at is choking on the NY yanks meat. The Cardinals have won more world series then anyone in the NL so we dont need to hear how the SOx won a WS in 1912. Oh BTW nice W/L record this year LOSERS...

  • @reethkitchards
    @reethkitchards 3 года назад +7

    So help me God if anyone on the face of this Earth says this wasn't the greatest World Series and Game played in the entirety of baseball history, I'd say you're nuts!
    I watched it and it was like a Slow Moving Miracle.
    There will never be a Mets Team like this one ever. They were like the Beatles of Baseball.
    There will be a good team but nothing like these guys, what timing...So perfect for this moment.

    • @pronkb000
      @pronkb000 2 года назад

      '75 and '91 were better than this. Sorry. 1986 had very memorable Games 6 and 7 but I defy anyone but a die-hard Mets fan to tell me a single thing that happened in Games 1-5. And '86 was memorable but also sloppy and mistake-filled right down to the end. Of course errors and mistakes are going to come into play in any WS, but 1975 and '91 were better played overall and with 5 (in 1975) or 6 (in 1991) truly great games out of 7.

    • @reethkitchards
      @reethkitchards 2 года назад

      @@pronkb000 I was lucky enough to watch all three...The two you mentioned were your Classic Baseball Lovers Series...Evenly matched, hard nosed baseball...But you there was no mystique to the '91 Series and that '75 Series was the best one, until the '86 Series.
      The behind the scenes of that game six was worthy of an 8 page Breakdown in SI the following Spring...
      NBC had the Champagne ready to go in the Sox locker room and then the weirdness of the Universe took over...
      Who cares what the Baseball Pundits say, they're always going to land on the Classic American/No Cheating side...
      Which is why Pete Rose will never be in the Hall of Fame...
      But that is Baseball keeping up its image for the young folks out there and the American Pastime.
      The Sox were ornery, the Mets were down right disgusting...
      Both were Underdogs in one form or another.
      And if anything, that Series made a lot of people believe not in just miracles, but that there is something bigger out there than all of us and baseball.
      Plus as a bonus, Mookie was my neighbor when he hit that ball through Buckner's legs...It stands as arguably the Greatest At Bats in Baseball history.
      “When I’m in a slump, I comfort myself by saying if I believe in dinosaurs, then somewhere, they must be believing in me. And if they believe in me, then I can believe in me. Then I bust out.” - Mookie Wilson quote during the '86 season.
      Believe in Dinosaurs.

  • @TMC1982Part2
    @TMC1982Part2 5 лет назад +31

    Is it wrong to admit that I immediately came here upon hearing the news that Bill Buckner had passed away? I always thought that Buckner got too much grief for what happened in Game 6 of the '86 World Series. Should he have caught the ball, of course. But we can't overlook the fact or notion that the Red Sox's bullpen melted down, the game was already tied, and in all likelihood, Mookie Wilson (who was one of the fastest guys in baseball at the time) would've beaten it out. Buckner had no business being out there in the first place given that he had bad ankles and was barely mobile.

    • @DrLuke49
      @DrLuke49 4 года назад +3

      If Bob Stanley does not throw that wild pitch under Mookie Wilson then Mookie's grounder would have tied the game.
      Buckner should not have been left in the game.
      It was not on Buckner, Stanley or both.
      It was squarely upon the shoulders of John McNamara.

    • @Mrd9960
      @Mrd9960 2 года назад

      @@DrLuke49 Well it's hard to say if Mookie still would have hit that grounder, because the situation would have been different, Bucker would have been playing closer to first, holding Knight on 1st base.

  • @HectorGarcia-qq3yj
    @HectorGarcia-qq3yj Год назад +1

    Me as a Mets fan... And only being 8 years at the time, This is the greatest Mets game i ever watched, As a 8 year old kid , i was crying once the red sox took the lead in the 10th inning, And when the mets made to quick outs in the 10th .. I was even crying more, i Went to go to sleep crying, My father called me, telling me the Mets are threatening. I still didn't want to watch it, And I didn't believe him, When they tied the game that's when I finally went back to the living room, And the rest is history, Is mookie Wilson's famous ground ball...

  • @Fran11686
    @Fran11686 3 года назад +50

    It’s incredible how much more intelligent older generations sound. They took pride in articulation.

    • @anthonymaslow798
      @anthonymaslow798 2 года назад

      What in the fuck are you talking about, gramps? The announcers? Ofc they sound articulate, it's literally their job. Ol "back in the day" ass mfer.

    • @nothanksnottodayg
      @nothanksnottodayg Год назад +9

      Bro hears vin scully and immediately assumes that our forefathers were intellectual titans

    • @psyduckismlg9977
      @psyduckismlg9977 Год назад +11

      There is a reason Vin Scully is so loved, he is not the norm.

    • @tvscribe
      @tvscribe Год назад +5

      It's true. Take pride in your language and speak it will.

    • @joshx2117
      @joshx2117 Год назад +2

      It’s evolution tho. We’re becoming like robots and that won’t ever stop.

  • @brotheldan2009
    @brotheldan2009 9 лет назад +143

    Everyone blames Buckner...the Mets had already tied it before the play happened, they were not losing this game

    • @stevescheiber5979
      @stevescheiber5979 9 лет назад +11

      +daniel james
      I agree with you. I've been trying to say that for years. But his was the last play, so he's the one people remember. As for the fans' treatment of him, that was a disgrace.

    • @jackrockwell6698
      @jackrockwell6698 9 лет назад +26

      Bob Stanley threw a wild pitch which tied the game. To this day he refuses to accept any blame. In every interview I've ever seen he blames someone else for the collapse. He seems like a total jerk.

    • @TheCancerkilla
      @TheCancerkilla 8 лет назад +8

      +daniel james Fans and media need to assign blame. And poor Buckner took every bullet until 2004.

    • @geddoe316
      @geddoe316 8 лет назад +11

      +daniel james this happened with the cubs and that fan bartman. no one mentioned the error my the shortshop, or the fact dusty baker didn't pull mark prior when he clearly needed to. the cubs lost that game, and the entire city blamed it on a dude in the stands. pathetic

    • @brotheldan2009
      @brotheldan2009 8 лет назад +4

      +geddoe316 yeah true but if bartman dont make that catch they dont score a run and the walk never happens , the error by shortstop he doesnt have to try to rush to get a double play he can casually get the out to end the inning, he shouldnt have gotten all the blame yes, but him making that catch fucked everything up there woulda been 2 outs and they woulda been out the inning on that grounder he would not have made the error with 2 outs come on dude wake up

  • @PhilAndersonOutside
    @PhilAndersonOutside 10 лет назад +21

    As I see it, the biggest goat is John McNamera. He pulled Clemons too early, left Shiraldi in too long, left Buckner in the field with the lead late.
    Still, most emotional game I have ever seen. I could live to be over 100, and I'm sure I'll never see anything like this again.

    • @joeomalley2835
      @joeomalley2835 6 лет назад +2

      Umm... Buckner was a beast. That play was a fluke dude. People who say that they shouldn't have left Buckner in are pure ignorant and not real baseball fans.

    • @Mrd9960
      @Mrd9960 6 лет назад +1

      @@joeomalley2835 Well he has a good point because up until that game McNamara always replaced Buckner in the late innings with Dave Stapleton, but he wanted him to celebrate on the field if they won, he should have just stuck with what he was doing and not changed anything, although that play from Buckner happened when the game was tied at 5-5, so it only would have gone to extra innings, they wouldn't have won the game on that one play.

    • @hardoab4080
      @hardoab4080 6 лет назад

      @@joeomalley2835 Um, Stapleton replaced Buckner late in the game all the time w/ the lead in the playoffs (because Buckner could barely move). And as Donny said, the only reason McNamara froze about that this time is cause he wanted Buckner to "be on the field when they won it" (which was an idiotic decision).
      The only ignorance here is yours

    • @TMC1982Part2
      @TMC1982Part2 6 лет назад

      It's astonishing how Bill Buckner was singled out but not Calvin Shiraldi. Shiraldi was somebody who simply put didn't have that killer instinct during a big pressure moment like the World Series. And it showed in his performance in Game 7.

    • @RichardUpton
      @RichardUpton 4 года назад

      Terrence Clay he pitched 2 2/3 innings - his arm had nothing left to give this evening

  • @briansmith3737
    @briansmith3737 11 лет назад +32

    Vin Scully will not live forever. Someone should get on the technology to have a Vin Scully robot do all the big games from now on. Scully is perfect doing ballgames.

    • @phillysean2288
      @phillysean2288 11 лет назад +5

      sabreyow
      Amen to that.....

    • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
      @user-jv9qz2bu1r 6 лет назад +1

      A.I.

    • @DKTCHIKC
      @DKTCHIKC 5 лет назад

      Great idea. Unfortunately he may look and sound like Scully but he would never be him. Vin Scully is one of a kind 👍👍

  • @jordanbarry9463
    @jordanbarry9463 3 года назад +1

    I wish I had been born 15 years earlier specifically so I could have watched this live. Why isn't even *more* famous than it already is? This is way, *way* bigger than Buckner. This is like watching a miracle on film.

  • @4444pro
    @4444pro 3 года назад +2

    Im in my car by Resorts world casino in Queens and im watching this over and over. I like how Ray Knight celebrates with hands on head in disbelief . Also in Game 7 Jesse Oroscos unique celebration also fun to watch

  • @jamesdrake142
    @jamesdrake142 Год назад +3

    Remarkable how quickly the pitchers work, how much thinner the players are, how much taller that makes the pitchers appear, and how much the batters swings are jerkier, with more holes. I hate all the new rules to speed up the game. Also, I hate all the stupid wild card rounds we have now. Chance is way too big a factor now in which teams make it to the end.

  • @jrjcarl
    @jrjcarl 3 года назад +138

    If you watch this entire 10th inning and you still blame Bill Buckner for this loss you have a problem. The Red Sox were a strike way for winning this game and their pitching blew it.

    • @johnnyg2049
      @johnnyg2049 2 года назад +18

      McNamara is the one to blame. After Mitchell's hit he should've came out and instructed Schiraldi to throw Knight breaking balls as he was vulnerable to them, but he threw him 3 fastballs. Then if necessary he should've brought in Sambito to turn Wilson around, but his biggest mistake was not putting Stapleton on first for defense as he did all year long.

    • @DontDrinkthatstuff
      @DontDrinkthatstuff 2 года назад +13

      Not only were they one strike away but they were one strike away in TWO different at bats. Crazy they didn't close it out. The 86 Mets just had that magic ontop of being a great team.

    • @pgangsta357
      @pgangsta357 Год назад +14

      Facts! That wild pitch undid them.

    • @el_dank_sinatra
      @el_dank_sinatra Год назад +2

      @@pgangsta357 word on the street was that Buckner was an old fuck and his legs were shot, but they wanted him to stay on for the final out so they didn’t bench him for a younger, more athletic 1st baseman.

    • @holtridge7337
      @holtridge7337 Год назад +9

      Bob Stanley cost them this game.

  • @sheehan35
    @sheehan35 9 лет назад +102

    A little roller up along first, beHIND THE BAG, IT GETS THROUGH BUCKNER, HERE COMES KNIGHT AND THE METS WIN IT

    • @WhiteDudeWithAnAfro
      @WhiteDudeWithAnAfro 9 лет назад +19

      +sheehan35 Vin Scully is an absolute treasure. Probably the best ever.

    • @29Frizz
      @29Frizz 9 лет назад +9

      "The Mets are not only alive, they are well!"

    • @danalong1237
      @danalong1237 8 лет назад +12

      "And they WILL play the Red Sox in Game 7 tomorrow!"

    • @dominickclaflin5295
      @dominickclaflin5295 6 лет назад +7

      And it goes to the backstop here comes Mitchell to score the tying run and Ray knight is at second base

    • @hudsonval1333
      @hudsonval1333 5 лет назад

      The commentary was almost as bad as letting the ball roll slowly between his legs. What the hell does, "behind the bag" mean?

  • @nancywhitaker5096
    @nancywhitaker5096 Год назад +1

    This was a great game. I remember watching it and was thrilled that they won. I was a New Yorker living in Michigan and they sure made me so proud so many years ago. Lets Go Mets!

  • @travis94303
    @travis94303 Год назад

    The 1986 baseball playoffs is the most memorable in my entire life. I was 11-years old at the time and will never forget the memorable moments. I can watch this game over and over and it still gives me chills. The 1986 ALCS between the Angels and Red Sox was also remarkable. Game 5 of that series is right on par with the drama of Game 6 of the World Series.