Table of Content
- Donnie Moore accepted the blame and took a lot of heat
- Dave Henderson, who hit famous playoff homer against Angels, dies at 57
- Dave Henderson, ’86 Red Sox Hero With a Fateful Home Run, Dies at 57
- Dave Henderson World Series Stats
- October 12, 1986: Dave Henderson’s homer keeps Red Sox hopes alive in Game Five How did die
In the 1988 ALCS, the Athletics faced the Red Sox and swept them in four games. Henderson batted 6-for-16 (.375) with one home run and four RBIs during the ALCS. The Athletics advanced to the 1988 World Series where they lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games, including their Game 1 loss on Kirk Gibson's famous home run. Overall in the 1988 postseason he batted 12-for-36 (.333) with one home run and five RBIs, and he played center field for all of Oakland's games.
Taking advantage of all this time, I decided to do something a little crazy and revisit one of my favorite teams of all time, the 1986 Red Sox. Since Major League Baseball has suspended the 2020 season, let’s take a trip back in time and revisit the Red Sox thrilling victory in the 1986 ALCS. All images are property the copyright holder and are displayed here for informational purposes only. Baseball-Reference Bullpen 100,000+ pages of baseball information, How to Contribute, ...
Donnie Moore accepted the blame and took a lot of heat
Boston had men on base in the sixth, seventh, and eighth innings, but could not get anyone past first base. Boston drew first blood in the second inning, when Jim Rice led off with a single and Rich Gedman lined a two-run homer into the right-field seats. Henderson began his career in Seattle as the first draft pick of the new Mariners franchise.
Dave Henderson came to spring training in 1988 as a non-roster invitee. He won the center field job and quickly made himself valuable in ways that went beyond box scores. In Henderson’s first five years, the A entered the playoffs four times and made it to the World Series for three consecutive seasons in 1988–90, winning the 1989 title. He got a second straight fastball with a 1-0 count, took it to the center and extended his left arm in the direction of the Dodgers dugout in anticipation of a celebration. Steven Duggar raced toward the warning track, momentarily losing his footing as he suddenly began to overtake, then securing the catch on the edge of the dirt. It was his twenty-sixth season as a manager and he came one agonizing strike away from the World Series.
Dave Henderson, who hit famous playoff homer against Angels, dies at 57
With the football team, which won championships in 1975 and 1976, he played tight end, running back, and strong safety. One of his baseball teammates was future College World Series MVP Stan Holmes. Henderson's uniform numbers—42 in football, 22 in baseball—were both retired by the Dos Palos Broncos, which inducted him into the school's Hall of Fame in 2012 and named their baseball field in his honor.

Henderson was best known for his home run for the Boston Red Sox in the 1986 American League Championship Series in Anaheim, Calif. We have box scores from every World Series game in history, line scores, Series rosters, composite team stats, trivia, a sample program, and a detailed written account of the actual Fall Classic. Starters routinely went seven or more innings, even when they were losing , and managers didn’t worry about pitch counts but rather kept an eye on how effective the pitchers were as the game went on. Most games either had a pitcher going the distance or pitching seven or eight innings before a reliever was brought in. Boyd was calmer and more collected than he had been but he struggled in the first inning, giving up back-to-back doubles off the Green Monster and throwing 44 pitches as the Angels scored two runs.
Dave Henderson, ’86 Red Sox Hero With a Fateful Home Run, Dies at 57
His time with Oakland included the only All-Star Game and the only World Series championship of his career. Lucas threw only one pitch — and it sailed up and in and hit Gedman on the right hand. As the Boston catcher trotted to first base, Mauch made another change, bringing in closer Donnie Moore to face Dave Henderson. When he swung and missed on a pitch low and away, Moore and the Angels were one strike away.
The Red Sox suffered a crushing loss in Game Four and were down to their very last strike in Game Five and yet somehow they came back to win the series. Clemens looked like the pitcher who cruised in Game Four and not the one who was overexcited and overthrew in Game One. He handled the Angels with ease whereas the Red Sox hitters could smell blood when it came to Angels starter John Candelaria. After the Red Sox dominated in Game Six, the final game of the series featured two teams heading in opposite directions. Even though Gene Mauch spoke with confidence in the pregame interview, his Angels team looked like dead men walking when the game started. They’d also been playing without rookie sensation Wally Joyner since Game Three which couldn’t have made them feel better.
Mike Witt, the Angels ace, went out for the ninth inning and gave up a single to Bill Buckner before retiring Jim Rice for the first out. Don Baylor homered to cut the Angels lead to 5-4 and Witt then got Dwight Evans to pop out for the second out. Dave Henderson celebrates after hitting a two-out, two-strike, go-ahead home run in the ninth inning against the Angels in Game 5 of the 1986 American League Championship Series. As for the announcers, the legendary Al MIchaels called the games alongside the then-recently retired future Hall of Famer Jim Palmer. Michaels was as great as he’s always been and it was comforting to hear him sound pretty much exactly the same in 1986 as he does now calling Sunday Night Football games. Palmer was more of a mixed bag; he clearly knows the game but he tended to ramble and say many nonsensical things .
Dave Henderson, who had taken over for Tony Armas in center field in the previous inning, raced toward the wall. Henderson timed his leap perfectly and the ball landed squarely in his glove. But his momentum carried him into the wall and his wrist struck the top of the fence. By the way, Wally Joyner missed this game with a staph infection on his leg; had he played, the Angels might have had an easier time winning the way Joyner had been hitting in the series. The final three innings of this game had so many parallels with Game Six of the subsequent World Series that it was spooky, even down to Schiraldi blowing a game that Clemens left late with the lead. Dave Henderson, a former major league outfielder who played for five teams and hit one of the most memorable home runs in postseason history, died on Sunday in a Seattle hospital.
I always thought he was just trying to fire himself up more than anything else. The Red Sox struck first when Rich Gedman drove in a run in the second inning, but the Sox could’ve had more if they had paid attention to details a bit more. Overall, it was pretty sloppy in the field , exacerbated by the setting afternoon sun, but Hurst pitched great and the Red Sox evened up the series at a game apiece. Apart from Rice and Evans, none of the other Red Sox were on the team in 1978 and most had never been in the postseason before.

In early September, he was recalled, with his first appearance back with the Mariners coming on September 3, in a 20-inning game against the Red Sox—one of the longest MLB games ever played. Henderson is best remembered for the two-out, two-strike home run he hit in the top of the ninth inning in Game 5 of the 1986 American League Championship Series. He helped his teams reach the World Series four times during his career—Boston in 1986 and Oakland from 1988 to 1990, with Oakland winning the championship in 1989. His uncle Joe Henderson appeared in 16 MLB games as a pitcher during the mid-1970s. Henderson is best remembered for a two-out, two-strike home run at the top of the ninth inning in Game 5 of the 1986 American League Championship Series.
There were police officers filling both dugouts and walking out to ring the field. He gave up a solo home run to Bob Boone in the second and then a hit to Reggie Jackson, but then picked him off to end the inning. Doug DeCinces hit a double in the sixth with two outs and was followed by Bobby Grich. Even though the Red Sox had Bruce Hurst on the mound, they were up against Angels ace Mike Witt which looked to be a daunting task indeed.
Hitters stayed in the box, pitchers stayed on the mound, and both teams just got on with the game. Because of that, the five nine-inning games in this series took an average of around two and a half hours. Even the two extra inning games in this series barely surpassed the three hour mark. It was also nice to see several nearly extinct baseball things like contact hitters, bunting to move runners over, hit and runs, and other elements of the game that are sorely missing in 2020.
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