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1986 National League Championship Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
18th edition of Major League Baseball's National League Championship Series

Baseball championship series
1986 National League Championship Series
Team (Wins)ManagersSeason
New York Mets (4)Davey Johnson 108–54, .667, GA: 21½
Houston Astros (2)Hal Lanier 96–66, .593, GA: 10
DatesOctober 8–15
MVPMike Scott (Houston)
UmpiresDoug Harvey(crew chief)
Lee Weyer
Frank Pulli
Dutch Rennert
Joe West
Fred Brocklander
Broadcast
TelevisionABC
TV announcersKeith Jackson andTim McCarver
RadioCBS
WHN (NYM)
KTRH (HOU)
Radio announcersCBS:Brent Musburger andJohnny Bench
WHN:Bob Murphy andGary Thorne
KTRH:Gene Elston,Milo Hamilton,Larry Dierker,Bill Worrell,Jerry Trupiano
← 1985NLCS1987 →

The1986 National League Championship Series was a best-of-seven postseason series inMajor League Baseball’s1986 postseason between theNL East championNew York Mets andNL West championHouston Astros. It was the 18thNLCS and the first MLB playoff series in which the opponents were two "expansion" teams that had begun play in the same season (1962). The series was won by the Mets, four games to two, culminating with their 7–6, 16-inning triumph at theAstrodome in Game 6. New York then defeated theBoston Red Sox in the1986 World Series, four games to three.

Background

[edit]

After falling short of the NL East title in1984 and1985, the Mets, managed byDavey Johnson, captured first place in 1986 by posting a 108–54 record,21+12 games ahead of the second-placerivalPhiladelphia Phillies. The title was the third in Mets' history and first since winning the1973 NL pennant.

Meanwhile, Houston recorded a mark of 96–66 to capture the NL West title, clinching the crown when staff aceMike Scott threw a no-hitter against theSan Francisco Giants, marking the first time any team had clinched a division championship with a no-hitter. It was also the first time the Astros had won a division in six seasons. Houston was managed byHal Lanier. Heading the Astros rotation were two former New York Mets, Mike Scott andNolan Ryan; Scott, Ryan, andBob Knepper were utilized by Lanier as his starting pitchers, which meant that late season acquisitionDanny Darwin would be saved up for a World Series start.[1]

The Mets won seven of their 12 regular-season contests against the Astros, taking five of six at home and losing four of six in Houston, including a three-game sweep in July during which New York'sBob Ojeda,Ron Darling,Tim Teufel, andRick Aguilera were arrested for a scuffle with off-duty cops working as bouncers. Home field advantage, from 1969 to 1993, alternated between division winners, regardless of record. The Mets were to have home field advantage for this series, as the Dodgers (the 1985 NL West Champions) had it the previous year, however, aregular season NFL game between theChicago Bears andHouston Oilers made theAstrodome unavailable for October 12. Consequently, Games 1, 2, 6, and 7, were scheduled for the Astrodome to avoid conflicts (Shea Stadium became a baseball-only facility when theNew York Jets left forGiants Stadium inNew Jersey after their1983 season). The East would host the following LCS in 1987.

Both franchises came into the league together in1962. The Astros held an 111–59 lifetime record against the Mets in Houston, which was a topic of debate leading into the NLCS considering the Astros held home-field advantage.

Summary

[edit]

Houston Astros vs. New York Mets

[edit]

New York won the series, 4–2.

GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 8New York Mets – 0,Houston Astros – 1Astrodome2:5644,131[2] 
2October 9New York Mets – 5, Houston Astros – 1Astrodome2:4044,391[3] 
3October 11Houston Astros – 5,New York Mets – 6Shea Stadium2:5555,052[4] 
4October 12Houston Astros – 3, New York Mets – 1Shea Stadium2:2355,038[5] 
5October 14Houston Astros – 1,New York Mets – 2(12)Shea Stadium3:4554,986[6] 
6October 15New York Mets – 7, Houston Astros – 6(16)Astrodome4:4245,718[7]

Game summaries

[edit]

Game 1

[edit]
Wednesday, October 8, 1986 7:25 pm (CT) atAstrodome inHouston,Texas 73 °F (23 °C), dome
Team123456789RHE
New York000000000050
Houston01000000X171
WP:Mike Scott (1–0)  LP:Dwight Gooden (0–1)
Home runs:
NYM: None
HOU:Glenn Davis (1)

Game 1 featured a pitching duel between eventualNLCS Most Valuable PlayerMike Scott and Mets aceDwight Gooden. Scott allowed just five hits and walked one while striking out 14 in a complete-game effort as the host Astros prevailed 1–0. Gooden allowed one run in his seven innings, getting Scott to ground into a double play to end an Astros threat in the bottom of the fourth inning.

Houston first basemanGlenn Davis hit a long home run leading off the second inning, producing the game's lone run. Scott struck outWally Backman andKeith Hernandez to escape a jam in the top of the eighth inning. With one out in the top of the ninth inning,Darryl Strawberry singled, stole second and reached third on aMookie Wilson groundout. However, Scott struck outRay Knight to end the game.[2]

Game 2

[edit]
Thursday, October 9, 1986 7:20 pm (CT) atAstrodome in Houston, Texas 73 °F (23 °C), dome
Team123456789RHE
New York0002300005100
Houston0000001001102
WP:Bob Ojeda (1–0)  LP:Nolan Ryan (0–1)

Game 2 saw the Mets tie the series at one game apiece as New York scored two runs in the fourth inning and then got three more in the fifth innings against Astros' starterNolan Ryan en route to a 5–1 victory.

LeftyBob Ojeda went for a complete game on a ten-hitter for the Mets, who were aided by an RBI double byGary Carter and a sacrifice fly byDarryl Strawberry in the fourth inning.Wally Backman andKeith Hernandez combined for three RBIs in the fifth inning. The only Astros run came on aPhil Garner single in the seventh inning.[3]

Game 3

[edit]
Saturday, October 11, 1986 12:10 pm (ET) atShea Stadium inQueens, New York 55 °F (13 °C), overcast
Team123456789RHE
Houston220000100581
New York0000040026101
WP:Jesse Orosco (1–0)  LP:Dave Smith (0–1)
Home runs:
HOU:Bill Doran (1)
NYM:Darryl Strawberry (1),Lenny Dykstra (1)

Game 3 was a back-and-forth contest won by the Mets whenLenny Dykstra hit a two-run, walk-off homer against Astros' relieverDave Smith in the bottom of the ninth inning, giving New York a 6–5 victory and 2–1 series lead on a Saturday afternoon atShea Stadium.

Houston broke through with four runs in the first two innings against Mets' starterRon Darling, highlighted byBill Doran's two-run home run in the second.

Darling then threw three scoreless innings and the Mets came back by scoring four runs in the bottom of the sixth innings asDarryl Strawberry's three-run homer off Houston starterBob Knepper tied the game 4–4. Years later, Strawberry said that part of the credit for the home run came fromKeith Hernandez, who was on second base during the at-bat, and that Hernandez signaled to Strawberry that Knepper was going to try to pitch him inside and to keep his right shoulder (the shoulder facing the pitcher) down when swinging at the inside pitches, which led to the home run.

However, the Astros struck back against relieverRick Aguilera in the top of the seventh as a throwing error byRay Knight led to an unearned run that came home whenDenny Walling's fielder's choice scored Doran for a 5–4 lead. Knight's gaffe was the only error committed by the Mets in the series.

With the Astros still leading in the bottom of the ninth, closer Smith allowed a lead-off bunt single to Wally Backman. The Astros argued afterward that Backman ran out of the baseline running to first while trying to avoid a tag from Smith. However, the umpire declared that Backman stayed close enough to the basepath while trying to avoid the tag that it was allowed. Backman advanced to second on a passed ball, andDanny Heep then flew out to center field for the inning's first out. The next batter was Dykstra, who won it for New York by lacing a Smith pitch over the right-field fence for a two-run homer. Dykstra's homer was the first come-from-behind, walk-off home run in postseason history.

Jesse Orosco won the game in relief for New York by working two scoreless innings.[4]

Game 4

[edit]
Sunday, October 12, 1986 8:20 pm (ET) atShea Stadium in Queens, New York 57 °F (14 °C), overcast
Team123456789RHE
Houston020010000341
New York000000010130
WP:Mike Scott (2–0)  LP:Sid Fernandez (0–1)
Home runs:
HOU:Alan Ashby (1),Dickie Thon (1)
NYM: None

Astros' aceMike Scott, pitching on three days rest, was dominant once again in Game 4. The right-hander again pitched a complete game on a three-hitter to earn his second victory of the series in Houston's 3–1 triumph.

Mets' starterSid Fernandez allowed just three runs in six innings, but surrendered a two-run home run toAlan Ashby and a laser-beam home run toDickie Thon to account for all the offense the Astros needed.

Danny Heep drove inMookie Wilson with a sacrifice fly in the eighth to account for the Mets' only run. Gary Carter came to bat as the tying run in the bottom of the ninth, but flied out to center as the Astros tied the series 2–2.[5]

Game 5

[edit]
Tuesday, October 14, 1986 1:05 pm (ET) atShea Stadium in Queens, New York 64 °F (18 °C), drizzle
Team123456789101112RHE
Houston000010000000191
New York000010000001240
WP:Jesse Orosco (2–0)  LP:Charlie Kerfeld (0–1)
Home runs:
HOU: None
NYM:Darryl Strawberry (2)

After rain postponed Game 5 to a noon start on October 14, the Mets took a 3–2 series lead as Gary Carter's single offCharlie Kerfeld in the bottom of the 12th inning scored Wally Backman with the winning run for a 2–1 victory.

Game 5 was a pitchers' duel between Dwight Gooden andNolan Ryan as Gooden allowed just one run in 10 innings with Ryan also surrendering a single run on two hits while striking out 12 in nine innings.

With no score in the top of the second, Gooden surrendered consecutive singles toKevin Bass andJosé Cruz, putting runners on the corners with nobody out. He then struck out Alan Ashby on a full count, and inducedCraig Reynolds to ground into a double play to escape the jam. Replays showed that Reynolds appeared to beat out the play at first base, but he was called out by umpireFred Brocklander, negating a potential run from Kevin Bass that would have given the Astros a 1–0 lead.

The Astros eventually did take a 1–0 lead in the fifth when Ashby doubled, took third on a single by Reynolds, and then scored onBill Doran's ground-out. However, the Mets came right back and tied it in the bottom half whenDarryl Strawberry smashed a homer for the Mets' first hit of the game and his second bomb of the series.

The Astros had a runner reach second base in the eighth and tenth innings. However, in the eighth, with one out, Gooden gotDenny Walling to fly out toMookie Wilson in left field, where Wilson doubled off Doran from second base to end the inning. In the 10th inning, with two out, Gooden gave up a single to pinch hitterTerry Puhl, who then stole second base, and walked Doran. He gotBilly Hatcher to fly out to right field to end the inning with no damage done.

The game stayed tied until the 12th when with one out Backman got an infield single off Kerfeld. Backman then took second on Kerfeld's errant throw on a pick-off attempt. Houston manager Lanier opted to intentionally walk Hernandez and pitch to Carter, who had been just 1-for-21 in the series, but the catcher came through, lashing a single to center to give the Mets the win and a one-game lead as the series shifted back to Houston.

Jesse Orosco again earned the win for New York by hurling two perfect innings.[6]

Game 6

[edit]
Wednesday, October 15, 1986 2:05 pm (CT) atAstrodome in Houston, Texas 73 °F (23 °C), dome
Team12345678910111213141516RHE
New York00000000300001037110
Houston30000000000001026111
WP:Jesse Orosco (3–0)  LP:Aurelio López (0–1)
Home runs:
NYM: None
HOU:Billy Hatcher (1)

In one of the most famous games in baseball history, the Mets defeated Houston at theAstrodome 7–6 in 16 innings asJesse Orosco struck outKevin Bass on a slider for the final out with runners at first and second, and New York advanced to its third World Series in franchise history.

Houston took a 3–0 lead in the first inning againstBob Ojeda with an RBI double byPhil Garner, plus RBI singles fromGlenn Davis andJose Cruz, giving Astros' starterBob Knepper an early advantage. They were unable to add more runs as Bass was thrown out at third base followingAlan Ashby's botched attempt to lay down a suicide-squeeze bunt and then Ashby lined out to shortstop to end the inning.

That lead held up for most of the game as Knepper was dominant, allowing no runs through the first eight innings. Meanwhile, Ojeda allowed nothing more through his next four frames, after whichRick Aguilera tossed three scoreless innings.

This set the stage for a Mets' comeback in the top of the ninth that started whenLenny Dykstra tripled against Knepper to lead off.Mookie Wilson singled in Dykstra to cut it to 3–1 and then with one out,Keith Hernandez doubled to score Wilson and end Knepper's night as the left-hander was replaced byDave Smith, who walkedGary Carter andDarryl Strawberry.Ray Knight then hit a sacrifice fly to right to score Hernandez and tie the game beforeDanny Heep struck out swinging with the bases loaded to end the inning.

Mets managerDavey Johnson used his bullpen aggressively, as Mike Scott, eventual series MVP, was scheduled to start in Game 7 and nobody on the Mets wanted to face him again. They had scored one run off of Scott in eighteen innings in his previous two outings, and several Mets players have since openly acknowledged that they considered this game a deciding game, playing it more like a Game 7 than a Game 6 because they were playing (despite the cockiness and arrogance that had characterized the team for most of the season) with the barely concealed belief that they would lose to Scott again if it got to Game 7.Roger McDowell came in to pitch for New York and allowed just one hit through five scoreless innings. Meanwhile, Houston pitchers Smith andLarry Andersen held the Mets hitless until the top of the 14th inning when Carter singled, Strawberry walked, and with one outWally Backman singled offAurelio López to plate Strawberry with the go-ahead run as Bass' throw home sailed high. The Mets still had the bases loaded before Wilson struck out to end the threat.

The Mets were now three outs away from going to the World Series, but with one out in the bottom of the 14th inningBilly Hatcher homered off the left-field foul pole against Orosco to tie the game 4–4.

However, in the top of the 16th inning Strawberry doubled to lead off against López, followed by Knight's single that scored Strawberry to put the Mets ahead again.Jeff Calhoun then replaced López and threw two wild pitches, the second scoring Knight to put New York up by two. Dykstra then singled in Backman, who had walked, for a 7–4 Mets' advantage.

The Mets needed each of those three runs as Houston rallied once again when with one out,Davey Lopes drew a pinch-hit walk, followed byBill Doran's single. Hatcher then singled in Lopes to make it 7–5, after whichDenny Walling hit into a fielder's choice for the second out. Davis followed with a single to centerfield that landed in front of a charging Dykstra, that brought home Doran to cut it to 7–6 and moved Walling into scoring position. Now the tying run was in scoring position and the winning run was at first base, and would-be Game 7 starterMike Scott was waiting in the wings. Orosco, opposite Kevin Bass, eventually found himself at a full count. A strike away from a pennant, and simultaneously a misplaced pitch away from loading the bases, Orosco struck out Bass to end the threat, the game and the series and sent the Mets to a World Series duel with the Boston Red Sox, winning them their first pennant in13 years. According to Orosco, prior to the at-bat against Bass, Keith Hernandez ordered him to throw nothing but breaking balls to Bass, telling Orosco, "If you throw another fastball, we're gonna fight."

Orosco pitched three innings for his third win of the series, marking the first time a reliever had won three games in a postseason series. The time of the game was 4 hours and 42 minutes and the 16 innings was the most that had been played in a postseason contest at that time.[8][9] The Mets and Astros had also played a 15-inning contest that lasted 5 hours and 29 minutes during the regular season, which Houston won 9–8.[7]

In 2011,MLB Network ranked this as the fifth greatest game of the preceding 50 years.[10]

This was the last game in which the Astros wore their "tequila sunrise" (or "rainbow guts") uniform top, which the franchise introduced in 1975 and became one of the most iconic, if infamous, uniforms in MLB history. The Astros demoted the tequila sunrise top to alternate status in 1987, and instead designated a white version of their restrained cream-colored road top as the official home top.

Composite box

[edit]

1986 NLCS(4–2):New York Mets overHouston Astros

Team12345678910111213141516RHE
New York Mets000244015001010321431
Houston Astros550020200000010217497
Total attendance: 299,316   Average attendance: 49,886

Series statistics

[edit]

Astros' pitcherMike Scott was named the series' Most Valuable Player after going 2–0 with a 0.50 earned-run average, allowing one earned run on eight hits and one walk in 18 innings. Also for Houston,Nolan Ryan went 0–1 with a 3.86 ERA, striking out 17 through 14 innings, andBob Knepper posted an ERA of 3.52 with no decisions in his two starts. The Astros' bullpen allowed seven runs and took three of the losses in the series asDave Smith (9.00 ERA),Charlie Kerfeld (8.10), andAurelio López (2.25) dropped decisions.

For the Mets' pitching staff, lefty relieverJesse Orosco went 3–0 with an ERA of 3.38 in the series, allowing three earned runs on five hits and two walks in eight innings. He was the first reliever ever to win 3 games in a playoff series, setting a record. Ojeda notched New York's other victory and was 1–0 with a 2.57 ERA in his 14 innings of work.Dwight Gooden went 0–1 with an ERA of 1.06 in 17 innings andRon Darling had no decisions with a 7.20 ERA withSid Fernandez going 0–1 with a 4.50 ERA as they each made one start. Right-handerRoger McDowell allowed no earned runs and one hit in seven innings of relief work.

The Astros' offense sawBilly Hatcher bat .280 with three walks, a home run, and two RBI and three stolen bases for the series.Glenn Davis hit .269 with a home run and three RBI,Kevin Bass batted .292 with two doubles and four walks, andBill Doran had a homer with three RBI. Houston hit .218 with five home runs in the six games.

For New York,Lenny Dykstra batted .304 with a double, triple, home run, and three RBI.Keith Hernandez hit .269 with three RBI and Strawberry homered twice with five RBI to go with 12 strikeouts. The Mets batted .189 with three homers for the series.[11][12][13]

Despite losing, the Astros outplayed the Mets for most of the series. The Astros were tied or leading in 55 of the 64 innings played in the six-game series. Houston's pitching also dominated. The Mets struck out 57 times and had the lowest team batting average, .189, of any National League Championship Series winner.[14]

Aftermath

[edit]

Like1980, the Astros came up once again on the wrong end of a classic series. In all, four of the games in the NLCS came down to one run, and two runs decided a fifth game. The series featured a pair of extra-inning games that combined for a postseason record 10 innings of extra play. Despite only going six games,Fangraphs, via a mathematical formula, named it the 6th best playoff series in MLB history in 2011.[15] The Mets would win another instant-classic series a week and a half later when they beat the Boston Red Sox in seven games to win their secondWorld Series in franchise history.

During and years after the '86 NLCS, Mets players expressed belief that Astros' ace pitcherMike Scott was illegallyscuffing the ball during his Cy Young award winning season.[16][17][18] In spring training of 1987,Gary Carter even stated the defending champion Mets had "unfinished business" when discussing Scott's performance against them in the NLCS.[19] Scott performed well in 1987, posting 3.23 earned run average against a 16-13 record, but his strikeout rate fell from 10strikeouts per 9 to 8.5. Scott posted a loss to the Mets twice in 1987, losing a pitcher's duel in April at New York and getting roughed up in a start in Houston in July. Overall, the Mets were still one of the best teams in baseball in 1987, but finished three games behind theSt. Louis Cardinals in theNL East, thus not qualifying for the postseason. In anMLB Network’s documentary about the 1986 season in 2011, Mike Scott finally admitted to "doctoring" the baseball during that season for the first time publicly.[20]

The Astros chances at a pennant and World Series slipped away in the subsequent seasons after 1986. Mike Scott continued to perform as one of the best pitchers in baseball until an arm injury in 1991 forced him to retire.Nolan Ryan left Houston after a contract dispute following the 1988 season and signed with theTexas Rangers, where he stayed until his retirement at the age of 46. Ryan returned to the Astros in 2014 as an executive adviser under ownerJim Crane, a position he held until 2019. The Astros did not make the postseason again until 1997.

Game 6 would end up being the final MLB game that Keith Jackson would do play by play for ABC Sports. Jackson would continue to call various other sports for the network (most notably their college football telecasts) until his retirement after the2006 Rose Bowl.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"NOW IN HIS 20TH SEASON IN THE MAJOR LEAGUES, DANNY DARWIN KEEPS PLUGGING AWAY IN QUEST OF a WORLD SERIES RING. – Chicago Tribune".Chicago Tribune.
  2. ^ab"1986 NLCS Game 1 - New York Mets vs. Houston Astros". Retrosheet. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2009.
  3. ^ab"1986 NLCS Game 2 - New York Mets vs. Houston Astros". Retrosheet. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2009.
  4. ^ab"1986 NLCS Game 3 - Houston Astros vs. New York Mets". Retrosheet. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2009.
  5. ^ab"1986 NLCS Game 4 - Houston Astros vs. New York Mets". Retrosheet. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2009.
  6. ^ab"1986 NLCS Game 5 - Houston Astros vs. New York Mets". Retrosheet. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2009.
  7. ^ab"1986 NLCS Game 6 - New York Mets vs. Houston Astros". Retrosheet. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2009.
  8. ^"1986 NLCS recap".MLB.com. September 14, 2022. RetrievedOctober 13, 2025.
  9. ^Adler, David (October 10, 2025)."Longest Playoff Games in MLB History".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 13, 2025.
  10. ^"MLB's 20 Greatest Games". MLB. RetrievedNovember 26, 2011.
  11. ^"1986 NLCS Stats - Houston Astros vs. New York Mets". Retrosheet. RetrievedNovember 10, 2009.
  12. ^"1986 NLCS Stats - Houston Astros vs. New York Mets". Retrosheet. RetrievedNovember 10, 2009.
  13. ^"1986 NLCS Stats - Houston Astros vs. New York Mets". Baseball Reference.Archived from the original on May 14, 2011. RetrievedApril 28, 2011.
  14. ^Briley, Ron."The Greatest Game Ever Played? October 15, 1986 – Society for American Baseball Research". RetrievedMay 7, 2022.
  15. ^"The top ten postseason series of all-time".The Hardball Times. RetrievedDecember 13, 2020.
  16. ^88K views · 1.1K reactions | Gary Carter asked the umpire to check the ball because Mike Scott’s splitter was absolutely filthy. Then Scott proceeded to strike him out with another splitter on the next pitch 😂 | Baseballer. RetrievedNovember 14, 2025 – via www.facebook.com.
  17. ^"SPORTS OF THE TIMES; 'SCUFFED IN THE SAME SPOT' (Published 1986)". October 14, 1986. RetrievedNovember 14, 2025.
  18. ^"ESPN.com - Page2 - Great Scott's power burned brightest in '86".www.espn.com. RetrievedNovember 14, 2025.
  19. ^"METS PREOCCUPIED WITH SCOTT (Published 1987)". March 5, 1987. RetrievedNovember 14, 2025.
  20. ^Calcaterra, Craig (November 4, 2011)."Knock me over with a feather: Mike Scott admits to scuffing baseballs".MLB NBC Sports. RetrievedMay 6, 2022.

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