I think the Metrodome largely was viewed as a suitable venue for football, a place where the football team and fans could escape the winter weather outside.
The consensus for baseball, though, is that it was a disaster, featuring poor sight lines; strange, bouncy turf; an odd arrangement in right field (home to the "baggie"); and a dome ceiling that just happened to be the same color as a baseball, which became a nightmare for any visiting team hoping to turn routine pop-ups into quick outs. That didn't always happen.
Baseballs also sometimes hit the dome ceiling or a dangling speaker, causing even more problems.
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A ball hit off the "baggie" was an extra-base hit; over it a home run. |
And that strange, bouncy turf meant players usually had to run and jump to snare one-bounce singles hit to the outfield, or the Twins occasionally used it to their advantage, with batters driving balls into the turf in front of home plate so that the batter could get to first while the infielder waited for the ball to fall to earth.
But as strange as it was for baseball, the Metrodome, or Homer Dome, or House of Horrors, still was the setting for some incredible baseball games.
One of the last games played there happened to be a one-game playoff -- game No. 163 of the 2009 season -- between the Twins and Detroit Tigers to determine who would win the division and advance to the real playoffs. Sports Illustrated voted it the
best regular-season game of the decade.
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Carlos Gomez scored the winning run against the Tigers in 2009. |
The Twins eventually would prevail in 12 innings, beating the Tigers 6-5. The Tigers, meanwhile, would become the first team in Major League Baseball history to lose the division with a three-game lead with four games to play. Both teams finished the year tied at 86-76.
The dome also hosted game six and game seven of the 1991 World Series between the Twins and Atlanta Braves, a series that has been called one of the best in the history of baseball, if not the best.
ESPN selected it as the greatest of all time.
Game six will forever be remembered as the one that ended in extra-innings after
Kirby Puckett homered off Charlie Leibrandt to force game seven.
And game seven will go down in the history books as one of the best game sevens in World Series history, if not -- once again -- the best game seven.
That game featured a herculean effort from Twins pitcher
Jack Morris, who threw 126 pitches over 10 innings to shutout the Braves and win the game, 1-0, and the series, 4-3.
And they say Morris doesn't belong in the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Please.
Here's how it all went down:
--Rolf Boone
Photo credit: Metrodome, via Wikipedia
Photo credit: Baggie, via Wikipedia
Photo credit: Carlos Gomez, via Wikipedia