Last night the Phillies lost the 10,000 game in their history. They have lost more games than any professional sports team, ever. Now, part of this is because the Phillies are one of the oldest teams in a sport that plays more games per season than any other sport, but still . . . that is a ton of losses.

I grew up in the Phillies’ golden era, when they were consistent winners, with many playoff appearances, so many of the losses don’t mean anything to me. However, ESPN.com recently took a look at the top 10 most painful moments in Philadelphia sports history. I was a young kid in attendance for number 7 on the list - what is now known in Philadelphia lore as "Black Friday," Game 3 of the 1977 National League Championship Series. Parts of that game are indelibly etched on my brain. That game started so promising. I remember as a 9-year-old kid being shell-shocked by the increasingly deafening noise as the Dodgers’ Burt Hooten threw ball after ball, and walked batter after batter, until he literally got yelled/booed off the mound by the crowd in the second inning. I think he walked 4 straight, and the Vet just got louder and louder with each pitch. It was like a feeding frenzy, with the crowd sensing his unraveling. I can still picture it and hear it in my head, 30 years later. I’ve since found some quotes by Burt Hooten. "A few fans started yelling, then more picked it up and it just started to go around. It got noisier than those jets at Shea Stadium except it went on and on with every pitch. I lost my cool." He also said "I lost my composure and never got it back. The noise from those fans was unbelievable." (From Nash & Zullo’s Baseball Edition Believe It or Else). Back then, playoff series were best out of five, and the Phillies went into the ninth inning of that game poised to go up 2 games to 1, leading the game 5-3 with 2 outs and no runners on base. Steve Carlton, a Hall of Famer, was set to pitch the next game if I remember correctly, so all the Phillies needed was one more out, and it looked like a good chance they’d make it to the World Series. But then all hell broke loose. A Dodger reached base, and then Greg Luzinski misplayed a fly ball in deep left field. Luzinski is normally replaced in late innings for defensive purposes, but for some reason Danny Ozark, Phillies’ manager, left him in the game. From my seat in the upper deck in left field, I actually couldn’t see the play against the wall directly below me, but the crowd reaction said everything.The next batter, Davey Lopes (now a Phillies’ coach, ironically) hit a ground ball to Mike Schmidt at third. The ball took a bad hop on the turf, and careened off of Schmidt. Shortstop Larry Bowa made a miraculous play, barehanding the errant ball in midair and throwing in time to beat Lopes at first - except the umpire called the runner safe. Even from the upper deck in left field I could tell that the call was wrong, and replays (played again and again over the years) confirmed it.
The booing at the Vet was deafening, and to this day, that blown call is legend in Philadelphia. The Phillies ended up losing that game, 6-5, and then a lifeless team lost a rainy Game 4. Sure, it would have been nice to win that game. But if the Phillies had won, and not won a World Series title that year, would I still remember the game? I attended playoff games in 1977, 1978, 1980, and 1993, and World Series games in 1980 and 1993, and the three games I remember most are the Black Friday game, games 1 and 6 of the NLCS, and game 1 of the 1980 World Series. Aside from the Black Friday game, the most memorable games were Phillies’ wins. So, the game caused heartache, but also made some memories.

July 16th, 2007 at 3:08 pm
Oh yeah, I remember that game! Think I was 9 or something…my dad about had a heart attack when Davey Lopes “beat” out that grounder - worst call ever in Phillies history, in my opinion. And we had Lefty on the mound for game 4, should have been a lock. Unreal. And why was Luzinski still in the game to misplay that fly ball?
Gotta love being a Phils fan!!!
July 16th, 2007 at 4:38 pm
I read an article earlier that talked about the next game, where the Dodgers clinched the series. It was such a deluge that the airport was closed, but Chub Feeney and Bowie Kuhn forced them to play on.