Montreal Spectres Fan Club 1990- Topic

Hey, McGwire told Congress... uh... something... about he didn't... uh... well, hey, that's good enough for me.

And you just don't f*ck with Sheff.

You actually have a dead druggie/roider on your team, that's much more damning.
2/25/2008 8:41 AM
Dead guys are my specialty.
Former (literally) Spectres include Donnie Moore, Steve Crews, Tim Olin.
Other progressive players I have managed in other leagues include Roberto Clemente and Thurman Munson.
2/25/2008 9:21 AM
1994 begins!!!
Game 1: Ken Griffey Jr. hits two home runs to pace a 14-hit Spectre attack as they spoil the Bootleggers' Opening Day, 10-4. Ron Karkovice and rookie Carlos Delgado also go yard, with Delgado hitting a home run as a pinch hitter in his first major league at bat. Scott Erickson scatters 11 hits over seven innings and picks up the victory.
Game 2: Eddie Murray, Greg Gagne, and Jay Buhner all hit their first home runs of the season as the Spectres put up another big number, winning 9-5 and outhitting the Bootleggers 18-8. Ken Griffey Jr. follows up his two-homer opener with two doubles. Alex Fernandez goes six innings for the win; Robb Nen gets the last out for his first major league save.
Game 3: Scott Sanders has a rough outing in his debut as a member of the starting rotation, allowing six runs in only four innings. Chicago's Juan Guzman strikes out 12 Spectres in his eight innings as the Bootleggers avoid a sweep with a 6-2 win. After hitting seven homers in the first two games, Montreal is limited to one extra base hit, a double by Greg Gagne.
Hated San Francisco will provide the opposition in the Spectres' home opener.
3/1/2008 6:26 AM
Game 4: Chuck Finley, hopeful to avoid the bad first half that seems to plague him every season, does little to break the trend in Montreal's home opener, putting the Spectres down 3-1 early and then completely falling apart in the seventh. Frisco explodes for four runs in that frame and rolls to a 9-1 win behind rookie pitcher David Nied.
Game 5: Joe Hesketh's return to the rotation isn't very promising, as he allows five runs in the first three innings before settling down. The Niners' starter, Kirk Rueter, is no more effective, and the game is tied at five after six. Paul Sorrento's two-run triple in the seventh, off Bob Wickman, starts a three-run rally for the Niners. Montreal gets a game-tying three run homer from Eddie Murray in the bottom of the ninth but Rick Aguilera allows a two-out double and an RBI single in the top of the 10th. Montreal goes meekly in the bottom half, not getting the ball out of the infield, and Frisco has another win, 9-8.
Game 6: San Francisco is even more hated after sweeping the Spectres, taking the finale 7-5, scoring five times in the fourth off Scott Erickson. Montreal gets only five hits, including homers from Tony Phillips (his first) and Eddie Murray (his third). With the game already lost, Rick Aguilera throws two scoreless innings. Thanks, Rick!
Montreal gladly leaves town for a trip to Atlanta, who likewise has a 2-4 record.
3/2/2008 6:25 AM
Nied is actually in his 2nd year , 1st with SF

he was with Oakland in '93 , coming out of the pen , he threw 70+IP with a 4+ era


a strong 1st start for him , he was a huge questionmark for us , we love what we see so far
3/2/2008 1:55 PM
GM2 is a wild affair

neither starter brings an A game , Joe Hesketh and Kirk Rueter issue 8 walks 10 runs in 5 innings apiece

the game is 8-5 SF in the 9th when Eddie Murray plays the hero with a 3run bomb!! ...up to that point , we held him to 0-4 6 LOB

but in the 10th , SF pinch hitter Ace Frehley comes thru with the go ahead RBI

the bottom 10th , rookie Jason Jacome gets the Spectres 1-2-3

the 9ers are going for the sweep with Ken Hill on the mound next!


WE-ARE-PUMPED!!!
3/2/2008 2:00 PM
Montreal pitching once again is hammered , we gain the sweep , the oh so schweet schweeet sweep

we scored 25 runs in the series with only 2 homers hit ...kermit , we're a light hitting bunch , wait till you play vs. the bashing squads that are out there , you could be in for a long year
3/2/2008 7:44 PM
Game 7: Montreal breaks their four game skid, pounding 14 hits (12 of them singles) off Tomahawk starter Mark Gubicza and a quartet of relievers to win the opener 12-5. Greg Gagne hits his second home run; Eddie Murray hits a double and drives home three, giving him 11 RBI on the season. Alex Fernandez pitches into the eighth for his second win.
Game 8: Scott Sanders looks poor again, allowing four runs in the first inning. He recovers somewhat afterwards, striking out eight for the game, but the Spectres can do nothing against Ramon Martinez, who throws a complete game 7-1 victory.
Game 9: The Spectres draw 11 walks and finally make Atlanta pay for them in the sixth, seventh and eighth innings, rallying from an early deficit for a 5-3 win over the Tomahawks. Bob Wickman tosses 2.2 scoreless innings in relief of Chuck Finley for the victory. Tony Phillips hits his second home run of the season.
Montreal returns home to face Houston (4-5) before beginning divisional play.
3/3/2008 5:33 AM
what was wrong with my game 2 recap , why not copy/paste it instead of your long winded recap?
3/3/2008 8:46 AM
Oh, did you post a recap?
3/3/2008 9:03 AM
who the hell is running this thread?
3/3/2008 9:10 AM
king kermit and me
3/3/2008 9:22 AM
Game 10: An error by Dave Winfield leads to two Montreal runs in the fifth, allowing the Spectres to erase a 4-2 deficit resulting from Kevin Appier's two-run single. The bullpens are stellar after that, and the game goes to extras still tied at four. Bernard Gilkey homers off Robb Nen in the top of the 10th to give Houston a lead. John Wetteland retires the three Spectres he faces in the bottom half and Montreal falls to 0-4 at home.
Game 11: Houston outhits the Spectres 10-6, but Scott Erickson scatters those hits effectively, pitching into the ninth and allowing only one run. Montreal gets home runs from Jay Buhner and Ken Caminiti and evens the series with a 5-1 win.
Game 12: Alex Fernandez improves to 3-0 with eight strong innings and the Spectres win, 5-1. Eddie Murray hits his fourth home run and has 15 RBI on the season.
Montreal, happy to have won a couple of games at home, heads to New York to face the first place Cosmos (8-4) as divisional play begins.
3/4/2008 5:26 AM
Game 13: Scott Sanders turns in his first decent performance of the season, striking out eight Cosmos in seven innings, and the Spectres hit three home runs to defeat New York 9-2 at Shea. Bret Boone hits his first home run of the season.
Game 14: Montreal gets two-run home runs from Eddie Taubensee in the eighth, and Ken Griffey Jr. in the ninth to break a 3-3 tie. Dave Burba allows all three batters he faces in the bottom of the ninth to reach base, but Robb Nen comes in to (eventually) save the day as the Spectres hold on for a 7-5 win.
Game 15: After Brady Anderson leads off the game with a home run (off y Steve Avery, no less), there is no more scoring through seven innings. Joe Hesketh throws seven shutout frames for the Spectres while Avery strikes out 13 batters. Then the fireworks start. Bob Patterson pitches the eighth for New York. He walks Tom Edens and then allows a two-run homer to Tony Phillips. Edens allows a double and a walk in the bottom half, and a sac fly off Robb Nen makes it 3-1. Nen allows a double and an RBI single in the bottom of the ninth to make it 3-2, then Rick Aguilera allows consecutive hits to tie the score and send things to extras. Neither team scores in the tenth; Phillips takes the extra base in the 11th on a single and scores the lead run, but Dave Nilsson homers off Tony Fossas in the bottom half, tying the score once again. Running short of pitchers, New York brings in Bobby Witt for the 12th. Randy Velarde singles and scores on a pinch hit homer by Carlos Delgado, his second of the season. A single, walk and grounder lead to another run, and an exhausted Dave Burba gets through a scoreless bottom half to preserve a 7-4 win for Montreal.
Game 16: Neither the offense nor the pitching is quite "on" in the finale. Montreal strands five baserunners through the first three innings, and New York scores three times in the third as Scott Erickson's usual penchant for scattering the hits he allows abandons him. New York adds two more in the fourth and another in the fifth and goes on to a 7-3 win. Montreal collects 10 hits, none of the extra base variety.
Montreal now travels to Philadelphia to face the defending division champs (8-8).
3/5/2008 5:29 AM
Game 17: Alex Fernandez is brilliant, pitching Montreal's first complete game of the season, as the Spectres squeak out a 3-1 win at Philly. Ken Caminiti's two-run double in the sixth is the key blow, but Montreal struggles at the plate, collecting only six hits.
Game 18: Two good pitching performances in Game 2; budding Philly star Mike Mussina matches Scott Sanders through six with goose eggs down the line, but Montreal gets to him in the seventh, scoring twice on Bret Boone's bases-loaded single. Bob Wickman and Dave Burba complete the shutout for Montreal while Eddie Taubensee adds a two-run homer in the eighth and the Spectres escape with a 4-0 win.
Game 19: Chuck Finley has a rough first inning, allowing three Philadelphia runs, but the Spectres battle back and tie the game at four with sixth-inning home runs from Bret Boone and Ken Griffey Jr. Rick Aguilera, pitching the eighth, shows why he has been removed from the closer role, allowing four runs (the big blow a three-run homer by Frank Thomas). Philly wins, 8-4.
Game 20: Ben McDonald dominates the Spectres, throwing a complete game two-hit shutout and striking out 10. Joe Hesketh pitches respectably but takes the loss in a 3-0 decision.
Disappointing to end the series with consecutive losses but managing a split with Philly is all we were hoping for when the series began.
Interleague play begins with two-game sets against the top two teams in the PL West Division: Oakland (16-4) and Milwaukee (12-8).
3/6/2008 12:58 PM
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Montreal Spectres Fan Club 1990- Topic

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