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One of the most memorable moments of Griffey's career with the Mariners came during the 1995 American League Division Series ( ALDS ) against the New York Yankees.
After losing the first two games, the Mariners and Griffey were on the verge of elimination, but came back to win the next two games, setting up a decisive fifth game.
In the bottom of the 11th inning of Game 5, with Griffey on first base, teammate Edgar Martínez hit a double.
Griffey raced around the bases, slid into home with the winning run, and popped up into the waiting arms of the entire team.
The 1995 AL Division Series would kick off a brief rivalry between the Yankees and the Mariners.
Griffey may have escalated it by saying that he would never play for the Yankees, because the Yankees allegedly treated his father, Ken Griffey Sr. badly.
Also, when Griffey was a kid visiting his dad in the Yankee clubhouse, Yankee manager Billy Martin would chase him out, believing that children did not belong in the clubhouse.
Although the Mariners subsequently lost the ALCS to the Cleveland Indians ( managed by later Mariners manager Mike Hargrove ), that moment remains one of the most memorable in Mariners history, capping a season that " saved baseball in Seattle ", Seattle's improbable late season playoff run that year, spurred by the return of Griffey from injury, led to the construction of Safeco Field and the future security of a franchise rumored for years to be on the move.
The play also inspired the title of the video game Ken Griffey, Jr .' s Winning Run for the Super Nintendo.

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