On This Date in Sports July 24, 1983: The Pinetar Incident
Kansas City Royals All-Star George Brett Launches into a tantrum for the ages; after the home run he hit in the ninth inning off, Goose Gossage is disallowed for using too much pine tar in his bat. The Royals would successfully appeal the ruling and win 25 days later 5-4. Instead of giving the Royals a 5-4 lead, Brett makes the last out as the New York Yankees win 4-3.
With Billy Martin in this third tenure as manager, the Yankees were in the thick of a tight race in the American League East. Meanwhile, the Royals, managed by Dick Howser, who had been the Yankees manager in 1980, were scuffling as they dealt with the cloud of drugs after four players, Willie Wilson, Vida Blue, Jerry Martin, and Willie Aikens, were arrested for attempting to buy cocaine.
The Yankees held a record of 52-40 entering the game with Shane Rawley on the mound, while the Royals were stuck at 44-45 with Bud Black getting the start. The Royals scored first, as they scratched out a run in the second inning on a grounder by Frank White. The Yankees answered with a home run by Dave Winfield in the bottom of the inning. Frank White got a second RBI scoring John Wathan again with an RBI single in the fourth inning. Kansas City made it 3-1 on back-to-back triples by White and Don Slaught in the sixth inning. The Yankees rallied to tie the game in the sixth, as Bert Campaneris and Lou Piniella scored on a triple off the bat of Don Baylor. Winfield followed with a single to drive home Baylor with the go-ahead run. Dale Murray, who relieved Rawley in the sixth, had kept the Royals at bay, allowing just one hit as he started the ninth, with the Yankees in front 4-3. The first two batters, Don Slaught, and Pat Sheridan, went down quickly, but after a single by U.L. Washington, Billy Martin called upon closer Goose Gossage to get the last out.
The Royals played the game under protest and appealed to the American League. President Lee MacPhail ultimately reversed the decision of Tim McClelland. Yankees Owner George Steinbrenner proclaimed that MacPhail had a grudge against the Yankees after being fired as General Manager a decade earlier when Steinbrenner took over the team. With the ruling, the game was to resume, with the Royals leading 5-4 with two outs in the ninth on August 18th. In the interim, the Yankees explored every legal argument to prevent that game from being completed. The Yankees even hired Roy Cohen, the attorney who served as Senator Joe McCarthy’s right-hand man in the hunt for communists in the 1950s and defended Studio 54 in the 1970s. The Yankees used a variety of arguments, even claiming that they could not guarantee fan safety in the resumed game.
With no more battles to fight, Billy Martin pulled a quiet protest, refusing to sit in the dugout for the end of the game as he sat back in the clubhouse watching reruns of Barney Miller. George Frazier, meanwhile, came on to pitch and struck out Hal McRae. The Royals called upon closer Dan Quisenberry to finish the game; Don Mattingly and Roy Smalley Jr. made the first two outs with fly balls. Oscar Gamble was the Yankees' last hope, pinch-hitting for Guidry. He would do no better grounding to second to end the game, with the Royals winning 5-4, as it took under ten minutes to complete the game.
The game proved to be a turning point for the Yankees, as they struggled the rest of the season, finishing third in the East with a record of 91-71, which led to Billy Martin being dismissed at the end of the season. The Royals meanwhile finished a distant second in the Western Division with a record of 79-83.