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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, October 24, 2005

Chicago's Konerko caps big week with big blast

 •  White Sox go deep to take 2-0 Series lead

By rick gano
Associated Press

"I had a baby born Tuesday night," Paul Konerko said. "That's first for the week. That one (grand slam) is second."

M. SPENCER GREEN | Associated Press

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CHICAGO — What a week for Paul Konerko.

He was the MVP of the AL Championship Series, became a father for the first time, and yesterday delivered a grand slam that sent U.S. Cellular Field into delirium.

Now he's two wins away from celebrating a World Series title with the Chicago White Sox.

"Not too many times are you going to hit a grand slam in the World Series and that would be the second-best thing that happened all week," Konerko said.

"I had a baby born Tuesday night. That's first for the week. That one (grand slam) is second."

His seventh-inning bases-loaded shot gave Chicago a 6-4 lead yesterday. Rookie closer Bobby Jenks couldn't hold it in the ninth, but Scott Podsednik sent the White Sox to Texas with a 2-0 lead with a ninth-inning homer for a 7-6 win over the Houston Astros.

"He went all season, six months without hitting a home run. Now he's got two in the postseason, a huge one right there," Konerko said. "That's as big a home run as you can ever hit."

Konerko's was a big one, too. It was the 18th grand slam in World Series history, the first for a White Sox player.

With the mist falling and their offense misfiring, the White Sox appeared headed to Texas all tied up, trailing by two runs.

Then came the seventh and it all changed. First, a disputed call. Then Konerko's grand slam.

Jermaine Dye got hit with a pitch — or did he? That was the ruling, one disputed by Houston manager Phil Garner, that loaded the bases and set the stage for Konerko.

Konerko said even he couldn't tell.

"Not from my angle, as I was on deck," he said. "They argued that a little bit. It's such a tough call for the umpire because if you don't hear the wood sound, it sounds like hand. We'll take it, it was a heck of an at-bat by him."

Trailing 4-2, Juan Uribe's second double, this one with one out, got it started. With two out, Tadahito Iguchi worked Dan Wheeler for a walk and the fans at U.S. Cellular Field, many wearing rain slickers on a night more suited for football, began to sense a rally.

It got even louder as No. 3 hitter Dye, who'd homered in Game 1 and singled in the first inning yesterday, came to the plate. Wheeler's pitch came inside and the ruling was that Dye was hit with the pitch. Garner thought otherwise, insisting it hit his bat.

Astros catcher Brad Ausmus said he thought the ball hit Dye based on Dye's reaction.

"The ump sees what, 225, 250 pitches a night and get the great majority of them right," Ausmus said. "But it's not like his call scored any runs. They did that on their own."

With the bases loaded, Garner came to the mound and sent Wheeler to the dugout. In came reliever Chad Qualls and up came Konerko.

One pitch was all it took.

Konerko's drive to left was his fifth homer of the postseason and he pumped his fists as he rounded the bases, later stepping up in the dugout for a curtain call.

Konerko had trouble containing his emotions as he rounded the bases, saying it was "kind of an out-of-body thing."

"Usually I try not to show that kind of stuff, but it just kind of comes on you. I don't know what I did or what I looked like. It's one of those things that you never experience anything like it," he said.

After winning the MVP of the ALCS against the Angels last Sunday, Konerko returned to his Arizona home where his wife gave birth to their first child, Nicholas.

Konerko will be a free agent once this remarkable season is over, and who knows in the crazy world of baseball? It might have been his final game at U.S. Cellular Field.

That's not on his mind now.

"You lose a lead in the ninth and still come back and win that game in a World Series," he said. "You feel good, you kind of feel like you got away with one. At the same time if we can get away with two more. ... But the job is not done yet."