Jim Northrup triple – Game 7 1968 World Series – Tigers vs. Cardinals

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25 Responses to “Jim Northrup triple – Game 7 1968 World Series – Tigers vs. Cardinals”

  1. PRican522 says:

    harry caray

  2. BilliusEllison says:

    I watched every game, I was 9 and lived along 8 mile 

  3. PeterMayer says:

    I lived in Detroit in 68. What a classic!

  4. PeterMayer says:

    I lived in Detroit in 68. What a classic!

  5. joefax530 says:

    It was a fantastic series, and I was a Cardinals fan, too….never expected Lolich to outduel Gibson.

  6. coolsouthernrain75 says:

    I’ve always wondered why this World Series hasn’t received the acclaim that some of the other have. I was pulling for the Cardinals but regardless, it was a great Series.

  7. GregDad100 says:

    A painful moment in Cardinals’ history, but it was slightly made up for in 2006. By the way, congratulations, Redbirds!

  8. mikeytoospikeyishot says:

    bob is a legend

  9. asarge61 says:

    Anybody notice the announcer with Kurt Gowdy is Harry Caray.

  10. graciemaemarie11 says:

    @1400deadwood so right, now days, 3,4 hour games, multi-commercials berween innings, and your so right, those were great series, even 65, 64,56,57, 58,70…

  11. graciemaemarie11 says:

    @mindspring57 i agree with you, i guess ‘history’ is written as it goes along, but there is way more to baseball then yankees, boston, blacks,etc,etc, you said it best

  12. graciemaemarie11 says:

    how about that crazy 10 run inning in game six? i come home from school in bottom of third inning, and my mother says detroit is ahead,12-0 !

  13. bluestingray67 says:

    Maybe this is why McCarver is so biased against the Tigers, he’s still pissed about getting his ass kicked in ’68 !

  14. bezzarguy says:

    @loyaldude10 Just for the record, that ball was 40 feet over Flood’s head, with a perfect jump, he still would have had absolutely no chance to make that catch.

  15. bezzarguy says:

    I always felt this was one of the greatest World Series ever. To this day folks talk about the ’69 Mets series, and this one is barely mentioned.On the road facing the fearsome Gibson, Mickey Lolich on 2 days rest, out-pitched him. I might add they were down 3 games to 1, winning the last 2 at Busch stadium. The ’11 Tigers just beat Texas to bring the series to 3 to 2. If the Tigers can win these last 2 games in Texas, perhaps more people will remember the ’68 Tigers, and their great season.

  16. huskyjerk says:

    Gibson relied too much on his curve ball and Detroit was sitting on it. It appears that Gibson was tiring and didn’t have his usual fastball, so he went breaking stuff. He really labored in that inning. Very unusual to see Gibson not being the fireballer. He should have thrown Freehan another fastball, for Freehan looked bad on those previous fastballs. Instead, he hung him a curve and another hit ensued.

  17. 1400deadwood says:

    BIG time old schooler here ~ many say we needed a DH & smaller strike zone because baseball was too slow, boring, & unexciting. Anyone who feels that way needs to watch the 67, 68, 69 world Series. Baseball was FAR better then than today – each game was roughly 2 hours long with all that excitement packed into a shorter game. How I long for baseball to be that way again.

  18. bobtnner says:

    One of the truly great World Series you never hear about. Everybody talks about the 75 and 86 series but this one had more excitement and drama. 2 brilliant aces in Gibson and 31 game winner Denny McClain, Mayo Smith moving gold glove center fielder Mickey Stanley to shortstop, unbelievable. Lou Brock’s failue to slide in game 5 likely costing the Cards the series, Mickey Lolich’s brilliant performances both pitching and hitting and beating Gibson in game 7 on 2 rest…I could go on and on.

  19. mindspring57 says:

    The 1968 World Series was one of the greatest ever played. Detroit recovered from a 3-1 deficit, winning three consecutive games, in order to win the World Championship. Tiger Mickey Lolich pitched and won three games, the third on only two days’ rest. Yet, this Series barely gets mentioned in Ken Burns’ video, “Baseball,” except to point out that Gibson struck out 17 in the first game.

  20. mindspring57 says:

    @HowBrownPhiladelphia A person from Mars watching Ken Burns’ “Baseball” would think that baseball was played only in New York and Boston, that the only thing anyone worried about was whether blacks could play baseball, and that in 1958, the Dodgers and the Giants moved to some place called “California” and were never heard from again. If New York was in a World Series, we got a play-by-play account. The 1968 series not mentioned except to point out the Gibson struck out 17 in the first game.

  21. loyaldude10 says:

    this was one of the best world series ever. Gibson was absolutely brilliant and overpowering (never saw such a dominant performance as him in game 1, w/ 17 K’s). Must have tired when Tigers started gettign all of those hits, although Northrop’s hit should have been caught by Flood.

  22. 1776freedom says:

    Stormin Norman Cash. No Helmet. A good ballplayer, fun guy and great teammate.

  23. curt8789 says:

    @generalbullmoose I agree with you. Had he played in NY, he would already be in. Lets hope that a future Old-Timers selection process will finally give him his due.

  24. generalbullmoose says:

    Freehan would be in the HOF if he had played in any other era.  He was great defensively, a leader on & off the field, and was good offensively. But in any era but this one he would have put up HOF worthy offensive numbers.

  25. GGE47 says:

    I was so glad Al Kaline finally got to play in a World Series and played a great series.

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