NEW YORK -- Bobby J. Jones made a name for himself and carved out a
place in postseason lore.
Known as much for being one of two Bobby Joneses on the Mets as for his own
pitching, Jones threw the sixth complete game one-hitter in postseason history
as the Mets eliminated the Giants with a 4-0 win in Game 4 of their NL division
series Sunday.
Left off last year's playoff roster and sent to the minors in June, Jones
pitched the first one-hit shutout in the postseason since Boston's Jim Lonborg
in the 1967 World Series against St. Louis.
"At that time I was not helping the ballclub," Jones said of his two-week
trip to Triple-A Norfolk. "After experiencing the playoffs last year and not
being a part of it, I wanted to come back in the best shape and have a great
year. The way I pitched was obviously not the way I was capable of throwing."
 | |
| The New York Mets' party begins on the mound as they celebrate advancing to the NLCS.(AP) | |
Jones limited the Giants to a clean, fifth-inning double by Jeff Kent as the
wild card Mets won the final three games of the series to avoid a cross-country
trip and a decisive Game 5 in San Francisco.
New York earned themselves two days off before opening the NLCS in St. Louis
on Wednesday. The Mets were 6-3 against the Cardinals this season.
"It's not going to be easy," Jones said. "They're a great team and play
great baseball. We just have to go out and play the best we can."
The Giants (97-65), who finished with the best record in the majors, had
their magical season end with a whimper, in part because Barry Bonds was a
postseason bust again.
Bonds dropped to 0-5 in playoff series -- three with Pittsburgh, two with the
Giants -- with a .196 batting average overall. Fittingly, the three-time MVP
made the final out of the series, hitting a fly ball to center field that left
him 3-for-17 against the Mets.
Fireworks shot out from behind the center-field fence and the Mets shot out
of their dugout to mob Jones on the infield. The Baha Men's Who Let The Dogs
Out -- the song that blared throughout Pacific Bell Park when San Francisco
clinched the NL West -- played as the Bonds and the Giants glumly walked to the
clubhouse.
"I'll keep trying," Bonds said.
After a few minutes, a leaping Lenny Harris led the Mets to a celebration in
the clubhouse. Jones' teammates chanted his name as they doused each other with
champagne.
"I'm so happy for Bobby Jones," Al Leiter said. "I'm so proud of him. To
go out and pitch the best game of his life and dismiss all the critics who
thought this was a bad decision ... He went out and nailed it."
Shea Stadium was still filled with electricity from Saturday night's 3-2
Mets win in 13 innings. Fans chanted Benny Agbayani's name as he stretched
before the game, about 18 hours after his homer had brought the Mets one win
away from the NLCS.
That was New York's fifth straight postseason win in the last at-bat,
including a 5-4, 10-inning victory in Game 2 at San Francisco.
Mets fans didn't need to wait nearly as long this game. Jones struck out
Bonds on a high fastball to end the first, drawing an ovation from a crowd
ready for another celebration.
Robin Ventura gave them much more to cheer about in the bottom half. After
Mark Gardner walked Mike Piazza with two outs, Ventura turned on a first-pitch
fastball and hit it off the scoreboard in right field for just his second hit
in the series.
"He's an aggressive pitcher and tries to jump ahead," Ventura said. "I
was a little lucky."
That would be all Jones needed, pitching his first shutout since 1997. After
struggling to a 1-3 record with a 10.19 ERA after eight starts, the
right-hander was banished to the minors and bashed in the newspapers. He
returned two weeks later and won 10 of his final 13 decisions.
Jones wasn't even certain to start in this series. Manager Bobby Valentine
toyed with the idea of starting Mike Hampton on three days' rest or using
left-hander Glendon Rusch in Game 4, but stuck with Jones.
"If he needed vindication, I'm glad he got it," Valentine said. "People
like to look at the speed gun and say he's not an upper-echelon pitcher. But
it's what he does with that 84 mph fastball that torments people."
Jones made the decision pay off. He baffled the Giants with big breaking
curveballs that didn't even reach 70 mph. He struck out Bonds twice -- both to
big ovations -- and retired the first 12 batters before Kent's double over
Ventura's head down the left-field line.
"I figured we would pop one," Giants manager Dusty Baker said. "It wasn't
a one-hitter where he was completely dominating. We hit some balls hard. He
pitched a great game and pitched to his defense."
One of the biggest decisions in the game came in the fifth inning. San
Francisco loaded the bases with two outs and Gardner coming up. With a weary
bullpen, Baker chose to let his pitcher hit, and Gardner popped out to second
base.
"I figured we'd get some runs," Baker said. "I don't regret it. If you
don't have a full bullpen, you don't have a full bullpen."
Making the move even worse, the Mets knocked Gardner out with two runs in
the bottom of the fifth. With one out, Jones swung and missed at strike three
in the dirt, but reached first on a wild pitch.
Late-season callup Timo Perez followed with a double to the right-field
corner, his fifth hit of the series. Edgardo Alfonzo hit a two-run double to
center to make it 4-0.
Jones then retired the final 13 batters, making him perfect in every inning
but the fifth.
"Just textbook pitching. He really knew how to work the hitters," Piazza
said. "As the game wore on he just got tougher and tougher."
Notes
- Ventura has two homers in 71-plus postseason at-bats. Of course, he
also hit his famous grand slam single to win the fifth game of last year's NLCS
against Atlanta.
- Atlanta's Kevin Millwood pitched the last postseason
one-hitter in Game 2 of the Braves' division series against Houston last year.
- San Francisco hadn't lost three straight games since dropping three to the
Mets at Shea Stadium Aug. 8-11.
- Gardner allowed four runs, four hits and
two walks in 4 1/3 innings.
AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service
Copyright 2000, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved