The Brooklyn Dodgers led the New York Giants by 13 games on the morning of Aug. 12, 1951. The Giants won 37 of their 44 remaining games to tie the Dodgers at 96-58.
The teams then played a best-of-three series for the National League pennant. In the decisive Game 3, the Giants trailed 4-1 entering the bottom of the ninth, scored once, and then Bobby Thomson hit a three-run home run for a 5-4 Giants victory in the first nationally televised major league game in history.
The greatest sports writer of all, Red Smith, wrote an epic account of the scene, under the headline "Miracle at Coogan's Bluff'' in the New York Herald Tribune — a collection of sentences on a sports event that only can be enjoyed, never equaled.
There's a strong hunch the miraculous aura of that Giants comeback would have been lost a bit if the prize for the winners was bypassing a wild-card game.
The Giants and the Dodgers took their rivalry to California in 1958. And seven decades after Thomson's home run, the fight being shown by the Giants in attempting to overcome the Dodgers can't be much different than the borough battle ... except what's at stake is avoiding a chance to be one-and-done.
The popular numbers in the sportsbooks before the start of the season for bets on games won were these: Dodgers, 103.5 wins (highest number ever); Giants, 73.5 wins (22nd in MLB, 12th in the National League).
They have the two best records in MLB at the top of the NL West: Giants, 81-44 (.648), and Dodgers, 79-47 (.627), 2 ½ games behind.
"The overall thing about the Giants is simple: They have been good,'' said Jon Miller, the Hall of Fame broadcaster. "The starting pitching has been in the top two or three, and the bullpen has been outstanding in recent weeks. They average five runs a game and are leading the league in home runs.