former Cleveland ace Corey Kluber in the 15th inning gave the Guardians a 1-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays and a sweep of their American League Wild Card Series, right fielder Oscar Gonzalez brought a bottle of champagne to the interview room. Translator Agustin Rivero did the same, both dragged away from the celebration in the plastic-draped clubhouse.
First base coach Sandy Alomar paused to think about the madness of the four-hour and 57-minute game, the first in major league history to go scoreless through 13 innings.
Third baseman Jose Ramirez’s remarkable play on a ground ball by the Rays’ Manuel Margot and the stunning stretch of Josh Naylor at first to record the last out in the Rays’ 12th. The strange 4-3-6 double play by Andres Gimenez, Naylor and Amed Rosario to end the 14th. And even Gonzalez breaking his belt in the seventh inning trying to steal second on a foul ball by Gimenez.
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“I think like the hole broke when I slid head-first,” Gonzalez said.
Alomar whipped off his belt and gave it to Gonzalez, among the 17 rookies who made their major league debuts for the Guardians this season.
In that piece of leather, Alomar found a coincidence he believes bodes well as the Guardians advance to the American League Division Series that opens Tuesday against the New York Yankees in Yankee Stadium.
“I gave him my belt and the belt’s size 15 and we win the game in the 15th inning. That is the most bizarre thing,” Alomar said. “An omen, right? Now he says he doesn’t want to give it back.
Guardians manager Terry Francona said, drenched from the festivities.
“You’re trying to have fun … but it’s agony at the same time. I wouldn’t change it for the world. I was proud of the effort. [Winning pitcher Sam] Hentges going out there for parts of three innings. Guys dug deep and made pitches, made plays. It ended up being enough. It was tough, but it was enough.”
Rays manager Kevin Cash, a former Cleveland bullpen coach under Francona, wasn’t aware of the history that was being made, but he considered it.
“I was sitting there thinking about it once we got to the 10th, the 11th, the 12th. It was crossing my mind, like how many postseason games have you seen like this before?” Cash said. Francona visited close friend Cash in the visitors’ clubhouse afterward.
“That was a whirlwind. That was crazy,” Hedges said. “You don’t see things like that happen too often with two really good clubs. Obviously, both clubs with outstanding pitching, but both clubs with outstanding hitting, too. To hold them to one run in two games like that, in that many innings, that’s hats off to our pitchers, our starters, our bullpen, Carl [Willis] and the pitching staff. It’s something really special we’re doing.”
Guardians pitching coach Willis said he’d been through something similar. He was a member of the 1991 Minnesota Twins who beat the Atlanta Braves in 10 innings in Game 7 of the World Series.
“Not as long a game, but obviously the stakes were high, as they were today,” Willis said, cigar in hand. “Unless we do it again, nothing will ever equal that. But this was really special.”
Willis wasn’t aware it was the longest scoreless postseason game.
“At the end of the day, all we wanted to do was win. Set records, I couldn’t care less. I just want to win,” he said.
Asked about the wild moments like the Ramirez-to-Naylor putout that Francona said “might be a year-saving play,” Willis said, “It was unbelievable. It’s Major League Baseball, you never know what you might see.”
Unlike Alomar, Willis wasn’t sure if nearly five hours of exhausting, exhilarating craziness was an omen.
“I hope so,” Willis said.
But as the postgame madness wound down on the field, Hedges was enjoying the celebration and thinking about hoisting the most important trophy in baseball.
“If not wearing a shirt means winning the World Series and continuing to have champagne parties, I’ll never wear a shirt again,” Hedges said.