Everything about Kirk Gibson totally explained
Kirk Harold Gibson (born
May 28 1957) is a former
American two-sport athletic star, best known as a
Major League Baseball player noted for his competitiveness and clutch hitting. Currently he serves as the
bench coach for the
Arizona Diamondbacks.
Early life and collegiate career
Gibson was born in
Pontiac, Michigan, grew up in
Waterford, Michigan (attending Waterford Kettering High School), and attended
Michigan State University where he was an
All-American wide receiver/flanker in
football. He played only one year of college baseball. He was drafted by both the
Detroit Tigers baseball team and the
St. Louis Cardinals football team, but chose baseball.
Detroit Tigers
Gibson played as the
right fielder for the Detroit Tigers from to . He helped the Tigers to the
1984 World Series championship. He became a
free agent after the 1985 season, but received no significant offers, due to
collusion among the owners of Major League Baseball teams. He re-signed with the Tigers, and in helped them to win the
American League East by two games over the
Toronto Blue Jays in an enthralling divisional race. However, Detroit lost the
1987 American League Championship Series to the eventual
World Champion Minnesota Twins.
In, an arbitrator,
Thomas Roberts, ruled that the owners
colluded against the players. He ruled that several players, including Gibson, were to be immediate free agents. They were free to sign with any team. The
Los Angeles Dodgers signed him. (
Sporting News Baseball Guide, 1989, p.18)
Gibson was known for hitting clutch home runs. In the eighth inning of Game 5 of the
1984 World Series, he faced
Goose Gossage, one of the game's premier relievers, with Detroit up 5-4 and first base open. An intentional (or at least semi-intentional) walk seemed to be in order, especially since Gibson had already homered earlier in the game. But Gossage told San Diego manager
Dick Williams he thought he could get the Tigers' right fielder out; indeed, he'd struck out Gibson in the latter's very first Major League at-bat in 1979. If the Padres could hold the Tigers and score a couple in the ninth, they'd force the Series back to San Diego, and maybe turn the tide. In the
Sounds of the Game video, Detroit manager
Sparky Anderson was seen in the dugout, yelling at Gibson,
"He don't want to walk you!" and making a bat-swinging motion with his hands, the universal baseball gesture for "swing away." Gibson got the message, and launched Gossage's next pitch deep into
Tiger Stadium's right field upper deck for a three-run homer, icing the game and the Series for the Tigers.
Los Angeles Dodgers
Playing for the Dodgers in the
1988 National League Championship Series against the
New York Mets, Gibson made an improbable catch in left field at a rain-soaked
Shea Stadium. Racing back, he slipped on the wet grass, yet on his way down, with his knees on the ground and the rest of his body suspended, he reached out and made a full extension catch to save a
Mookie Wilson double in Game 3. In Game 4, he hit a solo home run in the top of the 12th that ended up winning the game for the Dodgers. In Game 5, he hit a two-out three-run homer in the fifth; the Dodgers ended up winning the game 7-4. His LCS heroics proved to be a prelude to his single most visible career moment.
The 1988 World Series home run
In the
1988 World Series against the
Oakland Athletics, Gibson -- the 1988 NL MVP -- saw only a single plate appearance, but it was one of the most memorable and oft-replayed in baseball history. Gibson had severely injured both legs during the League Championship Series and had a stomach virus. He wasn't expected to play at all. In Game 1 on
October 15 1988 (at
Dodger Stadium), with the Dodgers trailing by a score of 4-3,
Mike Davis on first, and two out in the ninth inning, manager
Tommy Lasorda inserted Gibson as a pinch hitter. Earlier, the TV camera had scanned the dugout and
Vin Scully (the legendary Dodger announcer, who was calling the game with
Joe Garagiola for
NBC) observed that Gibson was nowhere to be found. According to legend, he was in the clubhouse undergoing physical therapy and saw this on the television, spurring him to get back in the dugout and tell Lasorda he was ready if needed. When Gibson received the news that he'd pinch-hit, he went to the clubhouse batting-cage to warm-up. Suffering through such terrible pain in his knee, it's said he was wincing and nearly collapsing after every practice swing.
Surprising everyone, Gibson hobbled up to the plate with Scully commenting,
"Look who's coming up!" He was facing future
Hall-of-Famer Dennis Eckersley, the best relief pitcher in baseball at the time. Gibson quickly got behind in the count, 0-2, but received a few outside pitches from Eckersley to work to a 3-2 count. On the sixth pitch of his at bat, a ball, Davis stole second. The A's could have walked Gibson to face
Steve Sax, but chose to pitch to him, just as Gossage had done four years earlier. With an awkward, almost casual swing, Gibson used pure upper-body strength to smack a 3-2
backdoor slider over the right-field fence. He hobbled around the bases and pumped his fist as his jubilant teammates stormed the field. The Dodgers won the game, 5-4. The telecast of the home run is also notable because the shot of the ball flying over the wall also captures the taillights of the cars leaving the lot, presumably filled with fans who had given up hope and were leaving early to avoid the traffic.
Gibson later said that prior to the Series, Dodger scout Mel Didier had provided a report on Eckersley that claimed with a 3-2 count against a left-handed power hitter, one could be absolutely certain that Eckersley would throw a backdoor slider. Gibson said that when the count reached 3-2, he stepped out of the batter's box and, in his mind, could hear Didier's voice, with its distinctive
Southern drawl, reiterating that same piece of advice. With that thought in mind, Gibson stepped back into the batter's box; and thus when Eckersley did in fact throw a backdoor slider, it was, thanks to Didier, exactly the pitch for which Gibson was looking.
The home run was so memorable that it was included as a finalist in a Major League Baseball contest to determine the sport's "Greatest Moment of All-Time." For years after the fact, it was regularly used in
This Week in Baseball's closing montage sequence. An edited audio of Scully's 1988 call has been used in post-season action, in a TV ad featuring a recreational softball game, with a portly player essentially re-enacting that entire moment as he hits the softball over the right field fence to win the game. It was in competition on
ESPN's
SportsCenter for the Greatest Sports Highlight of All-Time.
Don Drysdale's Call
Vin Scully's call
Scully began,
Scully, calling the play-by-play for the
NBC-TV broadcast aside
color commentator Joe Garagiola, made repeated references to Gibson's legs, noting at one point that the batter was Gibson worked the count to 3-2 as Mike Davis stole second base; the camera turned at that point to
Steve Sax getting ready for his turn at the plate, and Scully reminded the viewers that
After allowing the crowd a few seconds to cheer, Scully said, Returning to the subject of Gibson's banged-up legs, Scully joked,
Jack Buck's call
CBS handled the national radio broadcast of the 1988 World Series, with
Jack Buck providing play-by-play and
Bill White as the analyst. This was Buck's call. It begins here with Buck speculating on what might happen if Gibson manages to reach base:
Buck concluded this amazing feat with this thought:
Later career
In, Gibson signed as a free agent with the
Kansas City Royals, and then in signed as a free agent with the
Pittsburgh Pirates. He retired from baseball temporarily, after being released by the Pirates. The following spring Sparky Anderson convinced him to return to baseball. He spent the final three years of his career (-) back with the Detroit Tigers, including a renaissance season in when he slugged 23 homers.
He was named the
National League MVP in . He is the only MVP winner to never to appear on an
All-Star roster. He was named to the team twice, in and, but declined the invitation both times. He announced his retirement from baseball in August .
Broadcasting
He was a
Detroit Tigers television analyst on
FSN Detroit for five seasons, from -.
Coaching
In, he was named the Tigers'
bench coach, and served in that position until the midway point of the season when he was moved from bench coach to hitting coach, swapping positions with Bruce Fields. As of the start of the
2007 Major League Baseball season, Gibson is the new
Arizona Diamondbacks bench coach.
Gibson had worn #23 as a player. However, while coaching for the Tigers, he wore #22 after #23 was retired for
Willie Horton. Gibson currently wears #23 as a coach for the Diamondbacks.
Personal life
He married JoAnn Sklarski on
December 22 1985 in a double ceremony where Tiger pitcher
Dave Rozema married JoAnn's sister Sandy. They were married at Grosse Pointe Memorial Church in
Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan.
He set a flying record in 1987. He flew a
Cessna 206 to a height of 25,200 feet in
Lakeland, Florida. The record was certified by the
National Aeronautic Association.
Kirk is a nominee for the 2007 Class for the
College Football Hall of Fame.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Kirk Gibson'.
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