Game:
May 9, 1980 at Wrigley Field
Box Score Line
San Fran Giants IP H R ER BB SO HR BFP Blue W(3-2) 9 11 3 3 2 4 0 40
Final Score 6-3 Giants
San Fran Giants IP H R ER BB SO HR BFP Blue W(3-2) 9 11 3 3 2 4 0 40
Final Score 6-3 Giants
Seattle Mariners IP H R ER BB SO HR BFP Dave Roberts 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 9
Montreal Expos IP H R ER BB SO HR BFP David Palmer 6.1 7 2 2 2 5 0 29
Elias Sosa 1.1 2 1 1 1 0 0 7
Here is some amazing information about that game from bleedcubbieblue.com
Lightning knocked out the public address system, and darkness wiped out the Cubs and Montreal Expos Wednesday afternoon in Wrigley Field after a 1O-inning, 3-3 tie. At 4:47 p.m., after Jerry Martin had lined a vicious shot that Montreal relief pitcher Stan Bahnsen luckily took in his glove rather than on the nose for the last out in the 1Oth, umpire Harry Wendelstedt peered up at the darkened press box and gave a hand signal that meant the game was suspended. "The P.A. system was out, and there was no other way to announce it, " Wendelstedt said. "The hitters were complaining they couldn't see. I could see it wasn't going to get any lighter. Somebody might have gotten hurt." Only minutes before Wendelstedt called Wednesday's game, with Martin pinch-hitting for Bruce Sutter, lightning hit a transformer and knocked out the power in many of the Cubs' offices, the press box and other areas of the park. WGN's telecast and radio broadcast were not affected.By the suspended-game rules in effect in pre-lights Wrigley Field, the game was set to resume before the next scheduled Expos/Cubs game at Wrigley, August 8. Here's what happened then, according to the Tribune's Mike Kiley:Bruce Froemming. We know him as an umpire who used to rule against the Cubs whenever he could, but on this occasion, he gave the Cubs one. The Cubs tied the game in the bottom of the 12th, and won it in unusual fashion.Montreal had broken a 3-3 tie with a run in the 12th. With two outs and runners on first and second, it looked like the Expos would get more when Warren Cromartie hit a shot to the wall. [Scot] Thompson leaped against the vines for it, and the ball appeared to hit his glove, but he fell down without it. Television replays clearly showed the ball floating toward a seated Thompson and rolling down his arm. The ball landed near his reach, almost in his lap, and he deftly placed it in his glove. [Umpire Bruce] Froemming ruled that Thompson caught the falling ball. "He was in a bad position to call the play," Cromartie complained. "He wasn't close enough at all. The ball hit the wall and the ground."