Be careful what you wish for.
For many long years, baseball fans in the bay area wanted there to be a world series between the San Francisco Giants and the Oakland Athletics. Finally in 1989, God granted our wish, and in his great mercy saved the lives of possibly tens of thousands of baseball fans in the process. On October 17, 1989, at 5:00 p.m. Candlestick Park was filled with baseball fans waiting for the start of game three. The freeways were comparably empty as only the apostates uninterested in baseball were on the road.
At 5:04 p.m. the Good Lord proved he has both a sense of humor and a sense of timing.
On a normal weekday, at 5:04 p.m.that section of freeway, The Clovis superstructure, would have been crawling in both directions with more than a thousand cars potentially on the several levels that collapsed and fell.
Only one person died on the Bay Bridge, and that was because the poor lady panicked and tried to jump her car across the gap, after the shaking stopped.
Normally the marina would have been packed with people, the apartment house behind it was almost empty.
Examples go on and on about how peoples lives were spared because of the World Series taking over the normal schedule of life in the Bay Area. Around 80 people died all told, most of them on the collapsed superstructure. I have several friends with great stories about where were you when the earthquake hit. Many are convinced that baseball saved their lives that day.
Sure, if it weren't the Bay Bridge series, a lot of the fans would still have taken time off to see the game and gone to a sports bar or gone home early or gone to a friends house, but that day the streets of San Francisco were nearly deserted around 5:00 in the afternoon.
The Athletics won the series, 4-0