2008 NFL Week 14 Picks and Podcast: Live Thurs at 8PM ET | Week 13

Arizona Diamondbacks

Nov 1 in Sports History: Groundhog Day for Byung-Hyun Kim

Posted on Wed Nov 01, 2006 at 10:24:34 AM EST in MLB
More on: World Series, sports history, Yankees, Diamondbacks, Canadiens (all tags)


Bad case of deja-vu

In 2001: How would you feel if you gave up an improbable, game-tying, eventual series-tying, heart-wrenching, expletive-inducing homerun in the bottom of the ninth inning of a World Series game with millions watching? How would you feel if it happened again almost 24 hours to the minute? Ask Byung-Hyun Kim, who fell victim to the Yankees again in the bottom of the ninth of Game 5 in New York in almost exactly the same fashion as the night before. This time, third baseman Scott Brosius did the honors with the Yankees trailing 2-0 in their last at-bat. Kim’s blank stare was replayed just as much as Brosius’ amazed, arms-in-the-air celebration. Once again, the game went into extra innings and well past midnight (don’t they all nowadays?); and once again the Yankees won it, taking a 3-2 Series lead back to the desert.

In 1959: Jacques Plante of the Montreal Canadiens became the first full-blown sissy-girl in the NHL. Ah, we kid, we kid here. Plante was actually the first smart goaltender in the NHL to regularly don a facemask for protection. After he was nearly decapitated by a shot from New York Rangers’ hall of famer Andy Bathgate, Plante returned to the Madison Square Garden ice with the plastic headgear amid taunts, jeers and the objections of his coach Toe Blake, who felt the mask impaired his vision. The Canadiens won that game 3-1 and 10 of their next 11, so the mask stayed. The Canadiens also later captured their fifth consecutive Stanley cup behind the girly goalie (we kid again...sort of). (espn.com/classic)

Permalink | Post A Comment | Read Comments

Sphere: Related Content and links to this story

< We should be so lucky as to work for the Knicks | Crashing the Zamboni: Feeling at Home on the Road >
Display: Sort:
Nov 1 in Sports History: Groundhog Day for Byung-Hyun Kim | 0 comments (0 topical, 0 hidden)
Display: Sort:

SC Blog RSS Feed