1986 Miracle New York Mets Lithograph Hand-Signed Lithograph
With Certificate Of Authenticity
In Stock |
Lifetime Certificate of Authenticity | ||
Price: | $249.00 |
1986 Miracle New York Mets Limited Edition (Out of 694) Lithograph. Signed And Numbered by the Sports Artist. Great piece for any die hard Mets fan!!! Size is Approximately 21" X 16" Unframed.
Once the darlings of New York City, the Mets had completely collapsed during the late 1970’s. Their home park, Shea Stadium had come to be known as “Grant’s Tomb†which reflected the complete disdain of the man running the team, the quality of the players on the field and the total lack of fan support. However, new ownership took over in 1980, and under the direction of general manager Frank Cashen, the team started to rebuild. Buoyed by back to back Rookie of the Year winners, Dwight Gooden and Darryl Strawberry, the team rose to second in 1984, and then followed that in 1985 with a 98 win season. Unfortunately, that was only good for second place in the NL East. The team was poised to dominate in 1986, and boy did they. They rolled to the NL east pennant, piling up 108 wins and finishing 21 ½ games ahead of second place Philadelphia. In the national league playoffs against Houston, they won two gut-wrenching extra inning games, including a 16 inning marathon in the clinching game six. In the fall classic, against Boston, the team lost the first two games at home, but then staged a miraculous climb to the championship. They took two of the three games at Fenway Park, and then won improbable game six in New York, rallying for three runs with two out in the bottom of the tenth inning to secure a 6-5 victory. In the seventh and decisive game, the Mets rallied from a 3-0 deficit to post an 8-5 victory and win their second world championship.
Once the darlings of New York City, the Mets had completely collapsed during the late 1970’s. Their home park, Shea Stadium had come to be known as “Grant’s Tomb†which reflected the complete disdain of the man running the team, the quality of the players on the field and the total lack of fan support. However, new ownership took over in 1980, and under the direction of general manager Frank Cashen, the team started to rebuild. Buoyed by back to back Rookie of the Year winners, Dwight Gooden and Darryl Strawberry, the team rose to second in 1984, and then followed that in 1985 with a 98 win season. Unfortunately, that was only good for second place in the NL East. The team was poised to dominate in 1986, and boy did they. They rolled to the NL east pennant, piling up 108 wins and finishing 21 ½ games ahead of second place Philadelphia. In the national league playoffs against Houston, they won two gut-wrenching extra inning games, including a 16 inning marathon in the clinching game six. In the fall classic, against Boston, the team lost the first two games at home, but then staged a miraculous climb to the championship. They took two of the three games at Fenway Park, and then won improbable game six in New York, rallying for three runs with two out in the bottom of the tenth inning to secure a 6-5 victory. In the seventh and decisive game, the Mets rallied from a 3-0 deficit to post an 8-5 victory and win their second world championship.
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