He lands on every Astros fans list of top historical moments. Game 4 of the 2005 NLDS lasted 18 innings until Chris Burke walked off the Braves with a 338 shot to left field. This is the second installment of our Legends Series.
Q: How often are you asked about that moment?
A: I don’t think a week goes by in my life, where somebody doesn’t bring it up. What I remember most about that at bat was how electric the stadium was prior to my at bat, because Roger Clemens actually hit directly in front of me due to the way he entered the game and the crazy nature of an 18-inning game. He was making only his second ever relief appearance in his career and he struck out in front of me. When I got up next, I was actually going to bunt on the first pitch, but Joey Devine threw a slider for a ball which was way outside. The count went to 1 and 0 and then with the second pitch, he almost hit me, and so I knew up 2-0 in the count, I could start thinking about a pitch middle in that I could drive and he threw me an inside fast ball on the inside corner. I put my best swing on it and the rest is history.
Q: Where is the ball now?
A: I don’t have it. It’s actually in Cooperstown at the Hall of Fame. Lance Berkman hit a grand slam that game in the 8th inning and the same fan who caught his shot, also caught my home run. Each of them is in the Astros display portion of the hall. The fan was gracious enough to give both of the balls to the Astros who sent them there. I still have the actual bat and the batting gloves from that plate appearance.
Q: If that’s your most famous home run, what’s number two on your career list?
A: It would have to be my first ever career home run. I hit it off of Pedro Martinez to break up a no hitter in New York in the 7th inning in his first year with the Mets. It was of course a sell out with Pedro pitching and at that time, the Mets had never had a no hitter as an organization and he hung me a 1-1 curveball, and I hit it into the leftfield bullpen. That was very surreal, being my first homer of vintage Pedro in New York. I still have to pinch myself.
Q: What do you love most about broadcasting now?
A: I love college baseball. I deeply cherished my time as a college baseball player, and I consider it one of the joys of my life. Now I get to cover it as a career, and I just love it at this level. The all-in nature, the way that coaches teach and compete and develop players and the buy-in they get from the players is just incredible. I appreciate the urgency. I love the environment and atmosphere.