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Mark's avatar

John, my brother Steve and I attended that doubleheader and I still have the Program for Game One that I scored and my Sunpapers scorebook that I used for Game 2. We lost Game Two, 6-4. Steve and I took a Baltimore transit bus from Carney to Erdman Ave/Belair Road and then a transfer to the Stadium. A bright sunny day and beautiful weather. Barber was one of my favorites so it was sad to see him not be able to pitch much in the second half of the '66 season and suffer from arm miseries again in '67. It was torture to watch Steve walk all those Tiger batters and hit a couple batsmen, too, but we were still rooting for him to pitch a complete game no hitter. Earl Wilson pitched that game for the Tigers and was usually tough for the Orioles to beat.

After the first game, Tiger relievers were crossing the infield from their bullpen to their dugout/locker room and chuckling about their Game One win.

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Mark Harper's avatar

Great article, thanks so much. When I got the teaser about a unique game I initially thought about the August of ‘86 game against the Rangers that was the precursor to the 14-42 finish……

This game was definitely bizarre as well.

Barber really pitched quite well in ‘67. Between the pitching issues because of injury and F Robby getting hurt when he was potentially on his way towards a second triple crown, 1967 just didn’t go the Birds way.

If might be interesting to do a deep dive on that season from the optimism of spring training to the despair of injury, mixed with malaise from a winter of too many banquets. Dalton sent Russo on the road late in the year and he thought the team was completely out of shape…… hence the short leash of ‘68.

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