Play of the Year
We start the Pitties for 2007 with the award for Play of the Year. This is the single most remarkable, memorable or just plain cool moment of the season, and will be awarded to the nominee which receives the most votes over the next week. There is only one award, and this can be given to either an offensive or defensive play, but an honorary mention will be made of the top-scoring play in the other category. The nominees, four in each category, can be found below, together with a link to the mlb.com report on the game [which opens in a new window]. There, you can read about the context of each play in terms of the game and season, while video of the play can also be found, for your consideration.
- Offensive Play
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Stephen Drew, walk-off homer off Hoffman, Apr 25 vs SDG
It's not often you see a hitting coach jumping up and down when after his batters strike out 18 times in a game, but like a magic elixir, Drew's homer chased away the frustration as well as the D-backs six-game losing streak. "It's a good feeling to lift the team when we're kind of struggling like this," Drew said. "We keep battling. We hit balls hard and it's right at people right now, so sooner or later, it's going to start falling." -
Tony Clark, game-tying grand slam, May 19 vs PIT
Then Clark got a heater that he didn't miss, depositing it into the seats in right-center to cap the five-run inning and tie the game at 7. "It's a situation where guys put together a rally earlier in the inning, and I'm simply trying to put the bat on the ball and keep the line moving," Clark said. "So I wasn't trying to do anything extra special. I was fortunate enough to get into a count where obviously he doesn't want to walk a run in, and I put a good swing on the ball." -
Jeff Salazar, three-run homer, Sep 10 vs SFG
"I was just looking for a good pitch the whole time," Salazar said. "He missed up with a couple of fastballs and then he got into a situation where there were a couple of guys on -- he had to challenge me at some point -- so he threw a fastball. Maybe he thought I was taking, but in that situation, I'm not going to take too often. Luckily, it caught the barrel, and as hard as it is to hit home runs here, I'm still really surprised. I can't believe it got out." -
Chris Young, three-run homer, Oct 4 vs CHC
The big blow was a three-run homer by rookie Chris Young on a 3-2 pitch from Cubs starter Ted Lilly, who was so frustrated by the result that he removed his glove and fired it straight into the ground as the ball cleared the left-field fence. "It's exciting to hit a homer any time, but to do it in the playoffs with 48,000 fans out there yelling, you feel like you're floating on air when you're running the bases," Young said. "You see your teammates in the dugout ready to congratulate you. There's no feeling like it."
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Defensive Play
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Brandon Lyon, covers 3B in the tenth, June 5th vs. SFG
Ray Durham blooped a ball to left that went in and out of left fielder Eric Byrnes' glove in a diving attempt to make the play. Aurilia held up while waiting to see if Byrnes would catch the ball before breaking for third. Lyon noticed there was no one covering third base on the play and sprinted there to receive a throw from Byrnes. Lyon's body reached third before Aurilia, blocking him from reaching the bag and giving him time to tag the runner for the second out of the inning. "I saw the ball loose and nobody at third, I just started running there, and after that it was all reaction." -
Jeff Salazar, leap at the wall, July 13 vs SDG
Salazar, though, ran back to the wall, jumped and planted his left foot halfway up the chain link fence and pushed off to give himself some extra reach as he caught the ball and brought it back over the fence. "A lot of times, you go back there and the ball is 30 rows deep and it's just kind of a courtesy runback. I went back there and you could tell that maybe I had a shot at it. I've tried hundreds of times in my career and came up empty a lot and knocked them over a couple of times. That one hit the mitt and stuck. I had to check to make sure it was in there." -
Chris Young, robs Mike Cameron of a slam, Aug 1 vs SDG
Young called the play one of the top three catches he's ever made, the best when considering the circumstances of it being a two-out catch with the bases loaded. Byrnes said, "Once I saw him jump, it appeared to me he was going to get there, and he got there, and that right there was the game-changer. As great as this game was, that ball goes over the fence right there, we probably do not win that game." -
Augie Ojeda's juggle catch, Oct 14 vs COL

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Chris Young robbing Cammy,
by DbacksSkins on Oct 31, 2007 12:31 PM EDT 0 recs
Robbing Cameron just got a whole lot sweeter.
A few interesting quotes here: '"The one thing I wanted to make sure was explained is, no steroids," Cameron told AM 1090, the Padres' flagship radio station. "I never took nothing like that before in my life. That would be 50 games, and that would affect me a whole lot more."'
Well.... congratulations for not breaking the steroids rule, I guess? Here's a medal. What you took was still banned.
'"After all of the analysis and testing, I can only conclude that a nutritional supplement I was taking was tainted," he said. "Unfortunately, the actual supplement is gone, and therefore cannot be tested. Without the actual supplement in hand, the rules are clear, and I must accept the suspension."'
Hmm... wonder why it was taken off the market? Did it come under the Balco label of supplements? And yeah, you're right. You MUST accept the suspension. You don't have a choice.
' Cameron is best-known for hitting four home runs in a game in 2002 and for a frightening collision in Petco Park's outfield three seasons later.
On May 2, 2002, while with Seattle, Cameron became the 13th player in big league history to hit four home runs in a game. On Aug. 11, 2005, he was seriously injured when he collided face-to-face with Mets teammate Carlos Beltran in a game against the Padres. The Padres obtained Cameron in a trade with the Mets that offseason.'
Come to think of it, when the media sums up your entire career as 1 lucky game and 1 crash in the outfield, maybe taking stimulants wasn't a bad idea.
by DbacksSkins on
Oct 31, 2007 12:48 PM EDT
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Oh, absolutely
by kishi on
Oct 31, 2007 3:41 PM EDT
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gosh..
by Muu on
Nov 6, 2007 2:02 PM EST
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Not surprising.
by DbacksSkins on
Nov 6, 2007 4:44 PM EST
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OT
by DbacksSkins on Oct 31, 2007 1:22 PM EDT 0 recs
Sore losers
"Winning doesn't really make a team memorable. Nobody can name the 2001 winner.
by jbox on Wed Oct 31, 2007 at 02:26:53 PM EDT
[ Parent ]"
Yeah, right. I bet more people remember that the AZ won the World Series because it was in 2001, less than 2 months after 9/11 (and because they beat the mystique and aura NY Yankees)!
by TwinnerA on
Oct 31, 2007 5:32 PM EDT
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It's okay
"[new] I'd rather WIN the World Series and be forgotten..
...than LOSE it and be forgotten.
DbacksSkins
by YoungAndDumb on Wed Oct 31, 2007 at 06:47:33 PM EDT
[ Parent | Reply to This ]"
by DbacksSkins on
Oct 31, 2007 6:49 PM EDT
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On the other hand
"Considering the above two points, the Giants are about an average offense and a little luck away from contention.
Stop laughing. It's a known fact th...please, stop laughing. It's just rude. Let me explain myself.
I know the Giants are as close to an average offense as a complimentary bag of honey-roasted peanuts is to a 747. That minor detail has not gone unnoticed."
by DbacksSkins on
Oct 31, 2007 7:07 PM EDT
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The Mighty Roar
That's not necessarily saying much, but it was still THE BEST PLAY I EVER SAW. (Until I saw David Wright catch that bunt and throw out the guy on first. That was amazing.)
And I'm pretty sure something better will come along next year. But until then, it is the BEST PLAY I EVER SAW!
by dbacksfan on Oct 31, 2007 11:10 PM EDT 0 recs
I love the Lyon play too
by shoewizard on
Nov 1, 2007 12:33 AM EDT
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Anyone not voting for Lyon
by nihil67 on
Nov 1, 2007 10:10 AM EDT
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I saw the Lyon play,
by DbacksSkins on
Nov 1, 2007 12:04 PM EDT
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The importance of the Lyon play
How many games did they win the division by again? :-)
I agree the emotional impact of robbing a Grand Slam vs. a team you are fighting for first place is tough if not impossible to top. But from a degree of difficulty, and "Wow" factor at the play itself, I really think Lyon's was the better play.
by shoewizard on
Nov 1, 2007 3:43 PM EDT
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I suppose this is as good a time as any...
by Azreous on Nov 1, 2007 2:15 PM EDT 0 recs
Not view them?
by Jim McLennan on
Nov 1, 2007 4:39 PM EDT
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Well...
by Azreous on
Nov 2, 2007 1:42 AM EDT
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Do you have cookies enabled?
by DbacksSkins on
Nov 2, 2007 1:46 AM EDT
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At first I thought Lyon's tag was kind of a
And that may reflect the 2007 Dbacks more than we know. Who among us can truly understand Lyon's methods and who can fathom how the lads won 90 games? I cant.
It's also conveniently bookended by two of MLB's most recurring, representative images - Eric flopping around like a snared haddock and Aurilia fuming over a correct call - just in case Lyon's mystical heroism, in and of itself, didnt connect with the casual fan ;-)
by Diamondhacks on Nov 1, 2007 9:12 PM EDT 0 recs















