| And now still more of the Strange but True Feats of the Year:
After they ran out of pitchers in a 16-inning game with Houston on May 16, 
the Brewers actually had their bullpen coach (Bill Castro) start warming up 
in the bullpen, in the subterfugian act of the year.
The Twins staged the rundown of the year April 19 -- a three-chase-scene 
extravaganza that was scored 2-6-5-2-5-3-7 -- and ended with the left fielder 
(Jacques Jones) diving to tag out Carlos Beltran between third base and home 
plate. In a span of four days in June, the A's were in first, second, third and 
fourth place.
Through the miracle of modern scheduling, the Giants played more games 
between opening day and April 28 in Florida (six) than in San Francisco 
(five).
Oakland did something on opening day that no team was able to pull off on 
any day in the '90s. They got only four hits against the Tigers -- but all 
four were home runs.
On June 3, in the first pitching matchup in history between pitchers who 
had won nine Cy Young awards, Roger Clemens (five) and Greg Maddux (four) 
combined to give up 19 hits and 13 runs. Of course.
In their 19-inning marathon in Seattle on Aug. 1, the Red Sox and Mariners 
bullpens combined to throw 20 shutout innings. So of course, after all that, 
the winning pitcher -- Kazuhiro Sasaki -- was the pitcher who threw the fewest 
pitches (five). And the losing pitcher -- Jeff Fassero -- faced exactly one 
batter.
The Red Sox opened the season by going 14 straight games without a stolen 
base -- the second-longest swipless streak to start a season in history.
Three times in five days (May 6-10), a team took a lead of four runs or 
more into the ninth inning at Wrigley Field -- and blew it.
The Rockies scored 18 runs in one game July 18, then got one hit the next 
day (off Kevin Brown). Of course, the first game was at Coors Field, the 
other on planet earth.
The Pirates turned a June 1 double play without a ball being put in play 
(thanks to a botched double steal by the Rockies).
On July 29, the Brewers drew 23,000 fans for Bob Wickman Poster Night -- an 
event not attended by Bob Wickman, because he'd been traded to Cleveland the 
day before.
In an Aug. 27 game in which his team scored no other runs, Phillies 
outfielder Bobby Abreu hit an outside-the-park homer and a game-ending 
inside-the-park homer.
On the same road trip in September, the Tigers had two games in which they 
finished with more ejections (one) than runs (none).
On the same homestand in April, the Blue Jays managed to give up 10 runs or 
more in three straight games for the first time in franchise history and also 
score 10-plus in three straight games for the first time in franchise history.
In a span of just 10 days in August, Mets pitcher Pat Mahomes gave up the 
40th homer of the season to two different hitters (Gary Sheffield's on Aug. 
19, Jeff Bagwell's 10 days later).
Steve Trachsel somehow made seven straight starts on the road in April and 
May.
In a May 26 game at Coors Field, the pitchers drove in more runs (two) than 
the hitters (one). Francisco Cordova had an RBI single for the Pirates. 
Masato Yoshii hit a solo homer for the Rockies. And all the non-pitchers 
combined to go 12 for 60 (.200), with one RBI (by John Vander Wal).
On May 24, Giants pitcher Shawn Estes became the first National League 
pitcher in a half-century to hit a grand slam and throw a shutout in the same 
game.
All you need to know about modern baseball is that Texas' Matt Perisho 
gave up 10 runs in relief May 5 -- in a game his team won (17-16).
After giving up no grand slams in the first five seasons of his big-league 
career, Toronto reliever Pedro Borbon then gave up two in one series in April 
(to Edgar Martinez and Alex Rodriguez).
In the fourth inning of their game April 21 in Tampa Bay, Anaheim's Mo 
Vaughn, Tim Salmon and Troy Glaus all hit home runs. Then, in the ninth 
inning, they all hit home runs in the same inning again.
Red Sox flutterballer Tim Wakefield pitched in relief May 10, then started 
May 11.
Greg Maddux went 348 consecutive starts over 10 years without giving up 
five runs in the first inning. Then he somehow did it two starts in a row 
(Aug. 28, Sept. 2).
And from Sept. 7-12, those hackamatic Devil Rays went five days -- and 41 
straight innings -- without drawing a walk.
Jayson Stark is a Senior Writer at ESPN.com.|  |  |  | Bobby Abreu is congratulated after completing quite a day (see below) at the Vet in Philly. | 
 |  | 
 
 
 
 ALSO SEE
 Stark: Strange but true
 Jayson Stark archive
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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