Terry rebounded the subsequent yr, going 16-3 regardless of lacking six weeks with a sore shoulder. However his postseason woes continued: Cincinnati’s solely win towards the Yankees within the 1961 World Collection got here off him.
For the pennant-winning Yankees of 1962, Terry went 23-12, essentially the most wins for a Yankee right-hander since Waite Hoyt in 1928. However Jack Sanford of the Giants bested him with a three-hit shutout within the second sport of that yr’s Collection, bringing Terry’s postseason report to 0-4. Solely within the fifth sport did he break his streak, beating the Giants and Sanford 5-3. And after a few rainouts, he was properly rested for one more Sport 7, on Oct. 16, 1962.
Candlestick Park’s well-known winds had been blowing in; for Terry, who’d given up 40 house runs that yr — nonetheless a workforce report — it was a blessing. As Don Larsen, who’d pitched the one excellent sport in World Collection historical past six years earlier, watched from the Giants bullpen, Terry mowed down the primary 17 Giants he confronted till Sanford collected a single. However the Yankees led 1-0 because the Giants batted within the backside of the ninth.
Matty Alou led off with a bunt single. Terry struck out each Alou’s brother Felipe and Chuck Hiller, however then confronted three future Corridor of Famers. The primary, Willie Mays, doubled to proper; solely Roger Maris’s fast relay saved Alou at third. Then got here McCovey. And out got here the Yankees supervisor, Ralph Houk.
A number of pitchers, together with Whitey Ford, had been warming up, however Houk caught along with his starter — and left it to him whether or not to stroll the left-handed McCovey, who’d already homered off him within the Collection and tripled earlier within the sport, and, taking part in the chances, pitch to the right-handed Orlando Cepeda.
Terry opted to pitch to McCovey. He’d discovered his quantity, he thought — excessive and tight — and would work his spots. With a Nationwide League umpire behind the plate in a Nationwide League park, he knew he’d get no shut calls, however he’d at the least have a shot at getting him out. And he felt that Cepeda, hitless that day, was due. Terry feared that his second baseman, Richardson, was shading McCovey too near first, however he stated nothing.