- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Coaching Changes
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message

How incredible were the events surrounding the ‘89 Earthquake Series?
Posted on 10/21/24 at 9:25 am
Posted on 10/21/24 at 9:25 am
First off, how often do sizable earthquakes happen in the US? They are few and far between. How often do they happen in a place like Alaska versus a place with high population. The fact that the Loma Prieta quake happened in a densely populated area is notable, but to happen during a World Series played by two teams from that area is incredible. Factor in that it was on a gameday, close to start time, and essentially captured on live TV…wow.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 9:29 am to TexasTiger08
I remember every boy in my 2nd grade class talking about it in wonder. Everyone was watching the World Series and saw all the footage. Growing up in Louisiana we barely had a clue about what an earthquake even was
Probably one of the events on TV I remember most vividly from childhood.
Probably one of the events on TV I remember most vividly from childhood.
This post was edited on 10/21/24 at 9:30 am
Posted on 10/21/24 at 9:41 am to St Augustine
I was living in Oakland at the time and when the quake hit I thought the apartment building was going to collapse. Pretty scary.
Afterwards, there was a run on all the liquor stores. Since the Bay Bridge was disabled for about five weeks, I wound-up taking the ferry to my job at the Treasure Island Naval Station.
Afterwards, there was a run on all the liquor stores. Since the Bay Bridge was disabled for about five weeks, I wound-up taking the ferry to my job at the Treasure Island Naval Station.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 9:51 am to West Seattle Dude
didn't ESPN do a 30/30 on this
Posted on 10/21/24 at 9:59 am to TexasTiger08
I was cooking Calzones, listening to the tv. Big ole Curtis Mathes console.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 10:14 am to RogerTheShrubber
I was only 3 years old, but my mom said she was making us dinner, came into the living room, and saw chaos on the screen.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 11:51 am to TexasTiger08
I had a friend in kindergarten in SF at the time.
She said the floor where she was standing all of the sudden rose 3 feet and became a platform.
She said the floor where she was standing all of the sudden rose 3 feet and became a platform.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 1:09 pm to Deuces
Had a co-worker years ago that grew up around Santa Cruz. Said he got home from school and took a nap. Said the quake woke him up, throwing him out of his bed and into the floor.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 1:34 pm to TexasTiger08
quote:
I was only 3 years old, but my mom said she was making us dinner, came into the living room, and saw chaos on the screen.
I heard the announcers say something about a quake, then the screen went blank. Came back on a few minutes later and the stadium looked fine.
The news outside the stadium looked very different.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 2:01 pm to RogerTheShrubber
Yeah, Al Michaels chuckles a couple of times when they came back on, presumably because of the scare. Little did they know there was a freeway collapse.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 2:33 pm to RogerTheShrubber
I was at work in Foster City, about 10 miles south of SF.
Since I grew up here, we had earthquake drills at school when I was a kid. When there's an earthquake you're supposed to get under a desk or a sturdy table to protect yourself from falling objects. Well, all of that training went out the door. The earthquake started and I ignored it as usual. But it lasted way longer than usual, and got stronger. It never occured to me to get under anything. I was concerned that this tilt-up building would collapse so I walked to the door of the room I was in to leave and noticed that the door frame was being distorted from the forces and the closed door was actually keeping the frame from distorting more than a little bit. I felt like the closed door was helping to maintain the integrity of the wall, so I didn't want to open it. I just stood next to it for a while. When the shaking eased up a bit I opened the door and went into the long hall to make my way out and I remember a co-worker leaning her back against the wall in the hallway and not moving. She got knocked against the wall while trying to leave, and she froze there. Eventually everyone got out. I had commuted to work with a coworker, so we drove back and encountered power out everywhere along the 25 miles between the office and the area where we lived. We decided to avoid the freeway (that was a mistake) and took surface streets only to discover that all of the traffic lights were out. It was chaos.
It took 3 hours to get home, where it normally would take maybe 45 minutes taking surface streets.
Also, it seemed like most of the radio stations got knocked off air. We did find the station broadcasting from the World Series game. They were providing updates where they could, as well as speading rumors. They said they heard that the Bay Bridge had "collapsed," so we envisioned that the whole deck had fallen into the bay and hundreds of people had died. Turns out it was just that short upper deck segment that you've all probably seen.
Since I grew up here, we had earthquake drills at school when I was a kid. When there's an earthquake you're supposed to get under a desk or a sturdy table to protect yourself from falling objects. Well, all of that training went out the door. The earthquake started and I ignored it as usual. But it lasted way longer than usual, and got stronger. It never occured to me to get under anything. I was concerned that this tilt-up building would collapse so I walked to the door of the room I was in to leave and noticed that the door frame was being distorted from the forces and the closed door was actually keeping the frame from distorting more than a little bit. I felt like the closed door was helping to maintain the integrity of the wall, so I didn't want to open it. I just stood next to it for a while. When the shaking eased up a bit I opened the door and went into the long hall to make my way out and I remember a co-worker leaning her back against the wall in the hallway and not moving. She got knocked against the wall while trying to leave, and she froze there. Eventually everyone got out. I had commuted to work with a coworker, so we drove back and encountered power out everywhere along the 25 miles between the office and the area where we lived. We decided to avoid the freeway (that was a mistake) and took surface streets only to discover that all of the traffic lights were out. It was chaos.
Also, it seemed like most of the radio stations got knocked off air. We did find the station broadcasting from the World Series game. They were providing updates where they could, as well as speading rumors. They said they heard that the Bay Bridge had "collapsed," so we envisioned that the whole deck had fallen into the bay and hundreds of people had died. Turns out it was just that short upper deck segment that you've all probably seen.
Posted on 10/21/24 at 2:39 pm to TexasTiger08
The great Al Michaels handled it beautifully as always
This post was edited on 10/21/24 at 2:40 pm
Posted on 10/21/24 at 4:17 pm to VABuckeye
quote:
Kirk Gibson. Epic.
What is 1988?
Posted on 10/21/24 at 6:57 pm to TexasTiger08
Loved the comment by Jack Buck about Johnny Bench’s actions during the earthquake:
The broadcasting team in the CBS Radio booth consisting of Jack Buck, Johnny Bench, and John Rooney, was off the air when the earthquake started because their show was in a pretaped segment being played from New York. Bench ran to a spot underneath a steel grate, to which Buck later quipped, "If he moved that fast when he played, he'd never hit into a double play. I never saw anyone move that fast in my life."
The broadcasting team in the CBS Radio booth consisting of Jack Buck, Johnny Bench, and John Rooney, was off the air when the earthquake started because their show was in a pretaped segment being played from New York. Bench ran to a spot underneath a steel grate, to which Buck later quipped, "If he moved that fast when he played, he'd never hit into a double play. I never saw anyone move that fast in my life."
Posted on 10/21/24 at 7:18 pm to TexasTiger08
It was wild. I don’t remember how it actually might have affected the baseball on the field—did it screw up rotations and bullpens (extra rest) and give the A’s an ever bigger advantage (I think they were clearly the better team). Series was a sweep, but lasted 2 weeks.
Crazy that’s the only WS that A’s group won. They were one of the best teams in MLB history over a 3-year stretch.
Crazy that’s the only WS that A’s group won. They were one of the best teams in MLB history over a 3-year stretch.
Posted on 10/22/24 at 1:05 am to Hot Carl
quote:
I don’t remember how it actually might have affected the baseball on the field—did it screw up rotations and bullpens
Huge advantage for Oakland. They were already up 2-0 after pitching Dave Stewart and Mike Moore pitched games 1 and 2. They were able to throw them in games 3 and 4 after the series resumed and sweep. Stewart and Moore finished 2nd and 3rd for the AL Cy Young that year and won 40 games between them. I want to say the two of them pitched 30 of the 36 innings.
Posted on 10/22/24 at 1:10 am to Basura Blanco
quote:
Huge advantage for Oakland. They were already up 2-0 after pitching Dave Stewart and Mike Moore pitched games 1 and 2. They were able to throw them in games 3 and 4 after the series resumed and sweep. Stewart and Moore finished 2nd and 3rd for the AL Cy Young that year and won 40 games between them. I want to say the two of them pitched 30 of the 36 innings.
Well, there ya go.
Posted on 10/22/24 at 1:38 am to Hot Carl
quote:
They were so damn good in ‘88 and ‘90 too.
I will never understand how that same team with the same staff was swept in 1990 by the Reds.
Popular
Back to top

10






