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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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300 sLAde goRton: A hALf centuRy in poLitics<br />

<strong>The</strong>n the club dropped a heartbreaker at the polls. On September 19,<br />

the stadium plan fell 1,082 votes short out <strong>of</strong> a half-million cast. <strong>The</strong> owners<br />

said they’d put the team up for sale on Oct. 30 if a suitable fallback<br />

plan couldn’t be developed. “We cannot further jeopardize our investment<br />

by undue delay,” team chairman John Ellis said in a letter to Gary<br />

Locke, King County’s new executive. 2<br />

<strong>The</strong> M’s were playing like there was no tomorrow.<br />

At the Beginning <strong>of</strong> August the home team was 13 games behind the<br />

California Angels. On October 1 they were tied. Seattle’s stunning comeback<br />

<strong>and</strong> California’s humiliating collapse were both sealed the next day.<br />

Gorton was in a front-row seat at the Kingdome as the Mariners reached<br />

the postseason for the first time in their 19–year history by shelling the<br />

Angels, 9–1. <strong>The</strong> team departed for New York that night for a best-<strong>of</strong>-five<br />

series with the Yankees to determine who would play for the American<br />

League pennant. <strong>The</strong> M’s returned home four days later, trailing 2–0,<br />

with every game do or die. Gorton was in Italy with a congressional delegation,<br />

frantically waking himself at 4 a.m. to see if CNN International<br />

would at least come up with a score.<br />

In the 11th inning <strong>of</strong> game five, with Griffey on first <strong>and</strong> Joey Cora on<br />

third, Edgar Martinez ripped a double down the left field line to tie the<br />

game. All 57,000 eyes swiveled to Griffey. Arms pumping as he rounded<br />

third, he sprinted home, crossing the plate in an emphatic slide as the<br />

Kingdome exploded. Junior was instantly at the bottom <strong>of</strong> a delirious<br />

dog pile.<br />

After all that, unfortunately, the Mariners were finally out <strong>of</strong> juice, losing<br />

the American League Championship to a clearly superior Clevel<strong>and</strong><br />

club in six games. Elvis may have left the Dome but the fans remained on<br />

their feet, clapping <strong>and</strong> cheering until the team returned to the field. <strong>The</strong><br />

“refuse to lose” Mariners had saved baseball for Seattle. No one put it better<br />

than the Post-Intelligencer’s Art Thiel: It hadn’t occurred to the lords <strong>of</strong><br />

baseball that Seattle, “rather than a bad baseball town, was merely a town<br />

<strong>of</strong> bad baseball.” 3<br />

in the Midst <strong>of</strong> the M’s amazing run, Governor Lowry—no sports fan<br />

but an astute bunter—called a special session <strong>of</strong> the Legislature to pick<br />

up the pieces from the bond issue. Just before the deadline, the polarized<br />

Legislature—accused by stadium opponents <strong>of</strong> ignoring the public will,<br />

pressured by baseball fans <strong>and</strong> the worried business community—autho-

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