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Game 162: Indians Lose, Baseball Wins


This is an Indians blog, and so you're going to get a recap of the Tribe's final game of the season, a 5-4 loss in Detroit. But we're all baseball fans too, so I'd be amiss if I didn't talk about what was the most incredible finish to a season in baseball history. Four games, four teams fighting for two playoff positions, two extra-inning games, two bottom-of-the-ninth two-out game-tying hits, one incredible comeback, two devastating losses, and two walk-off victories. Even if the Indians ended their season by getting swept in Detroit, it was a great night to be a baseball fan and a great night for baseball.

The Indians and Tigers faced off at the same time three other much more important games started. The Red Sox, who had collapse in the month of September, were trying to salvage their season by winning in Baltimore, while the Rays were trying to keep their incredible comeback alive by beating the Yankees at home. Meanwhile, Atlanta was facing the Phillies at home. The four clubs needed a win to guarantee that at least they'd play another day. 

The Tigers also had something to play for, though the stakes were not nearly as high as with the four Wild Card teams. If Detroit won and the Texas Rangers lost in Anaheim, the Tigers would have home-field advantage for the Division Series. So the Detroit regulars were in the lineup, and Zach McAllister had his work cut out for him. The 23-year-old had made 25 starts in Columbus and pitched well, but he hadn't had any success in his short time with the Indians. But against perhaps the best lineup in baseball, he held his own for five innings, not allowing an earned run and striking out four.

The Indians scored the first three runs of the game. Ezequiel Carrera tripled home a run in the third, and the Indians tacked on two more in the fourth. But the Indians could have scored several more runs; after those two runs were in, they still had the bases loaded with one out, but failed to score any more runs. And that came back to bite them.

Manny Acta didn't stick around long, as he was ejected in the first inning after arguing balls and strikes. That meant bench coach Tim Tolman, who was in his last game as Indians bench coach (he is moving into another role with the club due to health reasons), was acting manager for most of the game. Acta denied that he tried to get tossed in order to have Tolman manage:

"I would never make a mockery out of a baseball game," Acta said. "If I wanted Tolman to manage a game, I didn't have to get thrown out of the game. I would've just handed the lineup card to him and let him manage the game. He didn't manage the game. I managed the game from the tunnel.

Tolman (through Acta) would go to the bullpen in the sixth inning, utilizing the relievers that had been successful all season long, but in this game, they let the game slip away. Joe Smith, who had almost always been in the strike zone this season, couldn't get ahead of hitters, and allowed two runs to score in the sixth inning. And Vinnie Pestano, who has been perhaps the best setup man in the majors, allowed the the go-ahead run in the form of LGFT Jhonny Peralta's home run.

It turned out that the Tigers wouldn't get home-field advantage in the ALDS, as the Rangers beat the Angels 3-1 later that evening, so they'll be travelling to New York instead of staying home to face a team that by all probability shouldn't still be playing. Not only were the Rays not even supposed to be in a position to make the playoffs tonight or even this week, but they were down 7-0 to the Yankees in the eighth inning. Coming back from that deficit at any time in a baseball game is considered a huge comeback no matter when that game is played, but to do it in the eighth inning of the 162nd game of the season while at the same time needing to win to force perhaps a play-in game defies the bounds of even fiction. But it happened. The Rays scored six in the eighth inning, three on an Evan Longoria home run, and with two outs in the ninth inning, journeyman Dan Johnson hooked a game-tying home run around the foul pole in right field to square the contest at 7.

Meanwhile it looked like the Red Sox would squeeze out a victory to at worst force a play-in game. Up 3-2 in the seventh, a rain delay forced them to wait around 45 minutes. Their bullpen, already heavily taxed, would need to be perfect, as some golden opportunities to add insurance runs fell by the board, including a first-and-third, nobody out scenario in the top of the ninth. But it looked like they would get away with it, as Jonathan Papelbon would retire the first two batters of the inning. But the Orioles wouldn't die; Chris Davis doubled, and Nolan Reimold lined another double into the gap to tie the contest. Then Robert Andino hit a line drive that Carl Crawford - who had, appropriately enough, jumped from the Rays via free agency last winter - trapped against the ground. He threw home, but it wasn't close. The Red Sox, who had collapsed to even get to this point, collapsed within the final game to set up the Rays to make the playoffs outright.

Just minutes after the final score was posted on the Tampa Bay scoreboard, Evan Longoria ended the game in dramatic fashion, lining a walk-off home run just over the left field wall. The ball flew over a section that's lower than the rest of the wall, called the - wait for it - Crawford corner. In the span of minutes, Boston's hopes went from almost realized to dashed.

The Braves would lose in extra innings after blowing a ninth inning lead, and with the Cardinals' blowout of Houston, that meant there would be no 163rd game. But the excitement and drama that those four games had was enough for the whole month of October.

 

20110928_indians_tigers_0_20110928210401_lbig__medium

via www.fangraphs.com


 

 

Highest WPA Lowest WPA
McAllister .193 Smith -.242
Hannahan .169 Pestano -.228
Hafner .113 Putnam -.189

Comment 62 comments  |  1 recs  | 

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This wasn’t the best way to end the season, but…

Baltimore, I love you! I’ve always loved you!

Matt LaPorta is the bane of my existence.

by USSChoo on Sep 29, 2011 12:04 AM EDT reply actions  

That was an absolutely nuts night of baseball.

by DisplacedBuckeye on Sep 29, 2011 12:10 AM EDT up reply actions  

most nuts nite of the past 25 years .. at least.

by talonk on Sep 29, 2011 12:52 AM EDT up reply actions  

Considering it was set up to be the most boring set of September pennant races ever, it produced the best final night of the season in my lifetime.

by APV on Sep 29, 2011 10:23 AM EDT up reply actions  

I went to bed during the rain delay in Ballmer. Story of my life.

by ken from alexandria on Sep 29, 2011 2:58 PM EDT up reply actions  

Might have been the most exciting day of baseball in a long time.

Not one, but two epic collapses. Wow.

by emd2k3 on Sep 29, 2011 12:38 AM EDT reply actions  

Yep. All in the space of about an hour.

LG2012T!!!

"Lotta heart in Cleveland." - Ian Hunter

by Denver Tribe Fan on Sep 29, 2011 12:48 AM EDT up reply actions  

Crazy finish … in the span of 3 minutes I saw Papelbon blow the save and Longoria hit a game winning home run. Wild wild nite.

by talonk on Sep 29, 2011 12:54 AM EDT up reply actions  

Yea, the most incredible part is as Papelbon was sitting in the dugout with his head in his hands, Longoria actually hit the bomb.

by johnf34 on Sep 29, 2011 10:50 AM EDT up reply actions  

That TrippingOlney tweet is killing me.

"An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools" -Hemingway

by notthatnoise on Sep 29, 2011 1:15 AM EDT reply actions  

That may be the greatest tweet ever. Of all time.
Mainly because I get the mental picture of Papelbon being batted into the seats.

What if...

by Danieldelamaiz on Sep 29, 2011 1:31 AM EDT up reply actions  

By Aaron Boone no less!

"An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools" -Hemingway

by notthatnoise on Sep 29, 2011 11:21 AM EDT up reply actions  

Yup, this pretty much nails it on the head.

by hans on Sep 29, 2011 1:18 PM EDT up reply actions  

This takes a little off the sting of how our season ended up. Not a lot, but at least a little. At least I won’t have to hear it from those (usually) smug Braves and Red Sox fans all winter long.

To celebrate, I think I’ll go out and punch the first guy I see in a Yankees hat right in the kisser. Sadly, it probably won’t take too long to find one.

Here’s to 2012 – The Year Of The Tribe!!!

by profdlp on Sep 29, 2011 2:08 AM EDT reply actions  

Our season best summed up: What might have been if the Dolans werent the owners.

"There's a gleam men, there's a gleam!" Marty

by Red-Right-88 on Sep 29, 2011 5:54 AM EDT reply actions  

Interesting take on Crawford Corner here.

by stuart dean on Sep 29, 2011 7:35 AM EDT reply actions  

legit lol

I like ex-Phillies prospects.

by Gradyforpresident on Sep 29, 2011 7:58 AM EDT reply actions  

Here’s a great animated gif

by Toxicadam on Sep 29, 2011 8:32 AM EDT reply actions   1 recs

The greatest night in regular season Baseball history. LG2012T!!!!!!!!!!!! Magical season at the start but hell, well get those F***ing Detroit tiggers next year and the cant win twins and the white sux and the rest of baseball too!!!!!!!!!!!!

by UnSafe 70 on Sep 29, 2011 8:42 AM EDT reply actions  

Thanks to Ryan and everyone at LGT! And may next year be our year.

by DPS on Sep 29, 2011 9:06 AM EDT reply actions  

That goes double.

by MTF on Sep 29, 2011 1:00 PM EDT up reply actions  

Thank you very much.

Even though the season didn’t turn out how I’d like it to, the journey was a blast, thanks in no small part to all the great readers and commenters who have made this site their baseball home. Here’s hoping next year for the same start, a better finish, and a very low draft pick in 2013.

by Ryan on Sep 29, 2011 6:48 PM EDT up reply actions  

Somewhat regrettably, I’ve read only a couple of the recap threads over the past ~10 days. Rec.

"I want to be playing at the end of October or the end of September -- not just at the beginning of April." —Grady

by westbrook on Sep 30, 2011 12:56 PM EDT up reply actions  

No idea why I submitted that without elaborating// but you guys get the idea.

"I want to be playing at the end of October or the end of September -- not just at the beginning of April." —Grady

by westbrook on Sep 30, 2011 12:58 PM EDT up reply actions  

Last week, a baseball movie comes out of Hollywood to somewhat mixed reviews in the baseball world.

Last night, you could not have written a better movie script than what unfolded in the course of one… freaking… night.

You are reading my signature.

by rolub on Sep 29, 2011 9:22 AM EDT reply actions  

What a picture perfect end.
Now let us all pause to remember that Tribe sweep of Boston in May.
(snicker)

Rather scared. Inquiring about dog.

by T.O. Tribe on Sep 29, 2011 9:29 AM EDT reply actions   1 recs

In that 1-0 Tribe win, Adam Everett both scored the winning run and got the final out as Boston’s runner overshot second. Also, Fausto threw a shutout before handing it over to the bullpen. Amazing everything that went right that day.

What if...

by Danieldelamaiz on Sep 29, 2011 2:19 PM EDT up reply actions  

http://www.letsgotribe.com/2011/4/7/2097624/file-upload#comments

"I want to be playing at the end of October or the end of September -- not just at the beginning of April." —Grady

by westbrook on Sep 30, 2011 1:00 PM EDT up reply actions  

I really wanted Thome to put it out on the showboating Valverde last night, but, oh, well.

What a way to end the season, though. I stopped counting the number of extreme closeups on Papelbon’s face in the ninth inning after I realized they were just going to do it before every single pitch.

by painaxl on Sep 29, 2011 9:45 AM EDT reply actions  

It’s really a shame that science has not yet found a way to harness angst and schadenfreude as alternative energy sources. We could power the country for a long time based solely on the Red Sox epic collapse.

@grantgw - sports and Cleveland and Columbus stuff

by woodsmeister on Sep 29, 2011 10:03 AM EDT reply actions  

Get ready for next year!

by danmang on Sep 29, 2011 10:22 AM EDT reply actions  

I’m kind of excited to take a week or so off of caring about baseball and begin picking up the pieces of the Tribe’s 2011 season. My sense is that the Indians plans for this offseason are far less clear, with many potential paths, than offseasons of recent memory. Could be interesting…

by APV on Sep 29, 2011 10:25 AM EDT reply actions  

Right now, Detroit and Tampa are as hot as a Cleveland Indian’s team in the middle of April. I hope we get to see a Tigers-Rays series.

by playdoh on Sep 29, 2011 10:41 AM EDT reply actions  

Also nice to see a good outing from McAllister to close out his season. He, Gomez and Huff all showed a little life down the stretch.

by APV on Sep 29, 2011 10:59 AM EDT reply actions  

Spring training is going to be interesting.

"An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools" -Hemingway

by notthatnoise on Sep 29, 2011 11:24 AM EDT up reply actions  

as is the 2012 season.

by MTF on Sep 29, 2011 1:01 PM EDT up reply actions  

Great headline and recap. Well done, Ryan.

"Lotta heart in Cleveland." - Ian Hunter

by Denver Tribe Fan on Sep 29, 2011 11:24 AM EDT reply actions  

This injustice to the Red Sox will be rectified under the new Bud Selig playoff system.

by Roger Dorn on Sep 29, 2011 11:26 AM EDT reply actions  

There’s always a silver lining.

by johnf34 on Sep 29, 2011 11:56 AM EDT up reply actions  

Right. All that drama could have been over the battle for home-field in the one-game wild card.

by CBusSteve on Sep 29, 2011 12:24 PM EDT up reply actions  

Sucks that we ended the season on a poor note, but 80 wins isn’t bad. Too bad we couldn’t get to .500 though.

Last night sounds crazy. I was watching Boston, but then the rain delay came and I had work to do.

by emily522 on Sep 29, 2011 11:35 AM EDT reply actions  

Also, good for the Rays. Much rather see them in the playoffs than the Red Sox.

by emily522 on Sep 29, 2011 12:21 PM EDT up reply actions  

I haven’t looked but there are probably two Red Sox players (and one might just be Carl Crawford!) whose aggregate salaries exceed the entire Tampa payroll.

by MTF on Sep 29, 2011 1:02 PM EDT up reply actions  

As a whole, 120 million dollar difference. You need 2 players making $41 million+ to top Tampa’s payroll.

What if...

by Danieldelamaiz on Sep 29, 2011 2:22 PM EDT up reply actions  

Tip o’ Jimmy Hatlo’s hat to the Washington Whatevers—oh, Nationals—whose 15-5 final push, which included 4-game road sweeps of the Mets (…) and Phillies (!!!), overcame the Indians 5-game deficit for the 15th and final protected draft spot.

In case that matters.

by YoDaddyWags on Sep 29, 2011 12:06 PM EDT reply actions  

It matters. We’ll have to wait and see if this team can use it to their advantage now.

by 7foot3 on Sep 29, 2011 12:16 PM EDT up reply actions  

Whoa. Hadn’t thought about Jimmy Hatlo for, oh, fifty years. And maybe it’s grasping at straws, but I’m inclined to think that it does matter.

by ken from alexandria on Sep 29, 2011 3:06 PM EDT up reply actions  

Belcher leaving pitching coach role.

by palcal on Sep 29, 2011 12:08 PM EDT reply actions  

His choice? I thought he was great, especially with the pen, in an extremely challenging year for starting rotation injuries.

by MTF on Sep 29, 2011 1:04 PM EDT up reply actions  

This is just amazing.

by jhon on Sep 29, 2011 12:54 PM EDT reply actions  

All this talk of collapses piqued my interest into revisiting the 2005 season. (game logs, stats, etc etc)

Shouldn’t have done that. :(

by Toxicadam on Sep 29, 2011 2:29 PM EDT reply actions  

I’d like to thank everybody for a good season. It was my first season as a member of LGT, and I really enjoyed the game threads when I was able to be a part of them. Here’s to another good season next year.

Cleveland Indians, 2012 AL Central Champs

by tr1betime on Sep 29, 2011 4:59 PM EDT reply actions  

Oh, we’re not done here.

by emd2k3 on Sep 29, 2011 4:59 PM EDT up reply actions  

That might the best headline I’ve seen on the site.

by emd2k3 on Sep 29, 2011 4:59 PM EDT reply actions  

Last night was the craziest night of sports i’d ever seen. I kind of stopped paying attention and decided to go to bed, but as I was checking something online before going upstairs, I saw that the Rays were in the bottom of the 9th, down 1, so I turned the live look-in on just before the home run. I jumped out of my chair with my arms in the air, and I’m not even a Rays fan. After game-casting 40 min of no runs, I decided to go to bed or I’d pay for it the next morning. So I went to bed and the first thing I saw when I woke up was 4 texts all from my Rays-fan friend that went in this order:

“the Red Sox blew it!”
“OH MY GODDDD!!! EVAN LONGORIA!”
“YEEEESSSSS!!!!”
“are you even awake?”

I should’ve stayed up. Story of my life, I guess.

by tr1betime on Sep 29, 2011 5:23 PM EDT up reply actions  

I got to watch, with my dad, the Red Sox get knocked out of the playoffs by another team beating the Yankees. That’s just about perfect.

Formerly fwembt, now co-moderator of Banners on the Parkway

by Brad D on Sep 30, 2011 1:39 AM EDT reply actions  

Perfect is the Tribe winning the world series. We just finished below .500 again. Time to look inside.

by joeee on Sep 30, 2011 6:42 PM EDT up reply actions  

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