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Congrats!72 years on 9th February.

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Down three games to one in the Series, Lolich pitched another complete game, helping the Tigers in a come-from-behind 5-3 win at Tiger Stadium.View attachment 177071
Mickey Lolich, Detroit Tigers 1968 World Series hero, dies at 85
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Mickey Lolich, Detroit Tigers 1968 World Series hero, dies at 85
Legendary Detroit Tigers pitcher Mickey Lolich, who had three complete game victories in the 1968 World Series to earn MVP honors, has died at age 85.www.freep.com
In Game 2, Lolich pitched a six-hit, complete-game victory to tie the series at a game apiece. He helped his own cause by hitting the only home run of his career in the 8-1 win.
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BrilliantDown three games to one in the Series, Lolich pitched another complete game, helping the Tigers in a come-from-behind 5-3 win at Tiger Stadium.
During Game 6, when the Tigers pulled away for a 13-1 victory, manager Mayo Smith had begun to seriously think about who was to pitch the deciding seventh game.
“I was at the far end of the bench when Mayo came up to me and asked if I could pitch the next day,” Lolich said. “I knew it was (loser of Game 3) Earl Wilson’s turn to start and I told him that if he needed me for a couple of innings out of the bullpen, I could do that. He said, ‘No, I want you to start, can you give me five?’ I did the math and knew I averaged about 15 pitches an inning and realized I could probably give him that.”
Smith then ordered Lolich to go back to the hotel to rest and avoid reporters.
When Lolich entered the dugout after setting down the side in the bottom of the fifth inning of a scoreless tie in Game 7 on just two days' rest, he assumed his day was done, but Smith asked him if he could give him one more inning. The man with the rubber arm agreed.
In the bottom of the sixth, Lolich’s heroics continued when he ended a potential Cardinals rally by deftly pulling off the improbable — picking off speedsters Brock and Flood at first base.
After the Tigers took a 3-0 lead in the top of the seventh, highlighted by Jim Northrup’s two-run triple over Flood’s head, Lolich delivered a message to Smith.
“I tapped him on the shoulder and said, ‘Now I’ll finish it for you.’ Mayo said, ‘That’s exactly what I wanted to hear.’ ”
Relying largely on his sinking fastball as he had done all day, Lolich completed his trifecta when Tim McCarver popped out to Bill Freehan, who immediately lifted his batterymate off the ground in a celebratory embrace that was captured in what became one of the most famous images in Tigers history.
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