1980 Phillies unsung heroes: Marty Bystrom capped dream rookie season by starting most important game in team history
First in an occasional series.
The Phillies had just completed a come-from-behind 5-3 victory in 10 innings over the
If springing the news on the 22-year-old that he'd be going up against
"I didn't sleep much that night," Bystrom said by phone earlier this month.
But Bystrom handled everything else that was thrown at him that year. Called up on
On a roster teeming with unsung heroes -- veteran pinch-hitters
"It all happened so fast and I was so young," Bystrom said. "I really didn't have any fear."
That didn't mean he was immune to anxiety before Game 5.
To a man, the Phillies realized the stakes. They had gone to the World Series twice in 97 years and not at all since 1950. And after falling in the
"Plus, somebody also said [
Not that you could tell with the fright-wig hairdo poking out the sides of Bystrom's cap. Besides, he oozed calm. Never mind that the
It was a classic bend-but-don't-break performance. Bystrom got help from his defense, with
"I remember I had a couple guys on and [shortstop
"A lot of that came from the eight guys behind me. Just make 'em hit the ball on the ground. You don't have to strike everybody out and make perfect pitches. Just hold 'em close. Man, what an intense game that was."
Bystrom had either iced his arm already or chosen to forgo the process entirely when the Phillies staged a comeback for the ages in the eighth inning. Trailing 5-2 against Ryan, they scored five runs to grab a 7-5 lead.
But the
"It's got to rank as the best series that I ever participated in," Bystrom said, noting that four of the five games went into extra innings. "I can't imagine what it was like for the fans in
Bystrom's start in the World Series -- a no-decision in Game 5 in
Two days later, on
"A lot of guys weren't going to go to the parade," said Bystrom, who was out late partying the night before. "We were like, 'What's the big deal? It's just a parade.' Boy, did we underestimate that. The jubilation you saw on everybody's faces, and then we got to JFK [Stadium] and, what, 100,000 people?
For Bystrom, it never got better. He injured his shoulder in 1981, struggled in '82 and '83, and got traded to the Yankees for
Bystrom sold swimming pools in the early 1990s and tried to make a comeback as a replacement player with the Phillies in spring training of 1995. He spent 25 years working for a health insurance provider in
And if Bystrom didn't already realize the good fortune of winning a championship as a baby-faced rookie, it dawned on him when he joined the Yankees and teamed with
"I'm 26 and he's 46, and he'd never won a World Series," Bystrom said. "I don't know how many years he played in the major leagues, but it was a lot. I'm looking at him and I'm going, 'How lucky am I? Forty-five days [in the big leagues], something like that, and I've got a ring.' It's crazy."
It doesn't happen for the Phillies without Bystrom, either.
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