Longest professional baseball game

The Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings, two teams from the Triple-A International League, played the longest game in professional baseball history. It lasted 33 innings, with 8 hours and 25 minutes of playing time. 32 innings were played April 18/19, 1981, at McCoy Stadium in Pawtucket, Rhode Island and the final 33rd inning was played June 23, 1981. Pawtucket won the game, 3–2.

Line score exhibit

The game

The game began on Saturday, April 18, 1981 at 8:25 p.m.,[1] after a delay of about 30 minutes due to problems with stadium lights, with 1,740 in attendance. It continued through the night and into Easter morning. Although most leagues have a curfew rule that would have suspended the gamethe International League's activates at 12:50 a.m.[2]the rule book of home plate umpire Dennis Cregg[1] did not contain one.[3] After Pawtucket's Russ Laribee's sacrifice fly drove in Chico Walker in the bottom of the ninth inning and tied the game at one run each,[4] the teams continued playing.[3]

Several times, one side neared victory before circumstances changed. When Wade Boggs drove in the tying run in the bottom of the 21st inning after a Rochester run, even the Pawtucket players groaned.[3] He recalled, "I didn't know if the guys on the team wanted to hug me or slug me."[5] The weather was so cold that players burned broken bats and the stadium's wooden benches to warm themselves, and the clubhouses ran out of food. The wind blew into the infield, making hits difficult;[3] Pawtucket's Dave Koza later said that otherwise his team would have won in nine innings, with "four or five shots that would have been out of the park".[6] For example, Sam Bowen hit a fly ball to center that reportedly left the field before the wind blew it back to Rochester outfielder Dallas Williams. Williams went 0–for–13 in 15 plate appearances, one of many records achieved during the game.[3]

After Pawtucket's Luis Aponte pitched the seventh to tenth innings in relief, manager Joe Morganwho himself would be ejected in the 22nd inning by Cregg[2]let him leave before the game ended. Aponte's wife did not believe his explanation for coming home at 3 a.m. Sunday.[6] He promised that the Sunday newspaper would prove his story, but since the game's postponement occurred too late to appear in it, Aponte had to wait until the Monday edition.[3] Cregg had brought his nephew David to the game; David's father became concerned for his family and called the police, who told him that the game had not ended.[1]

By 4 a.m. the players were "delirious" from exhaustion; Rochester's Dave Huppert had caught the first 31 innings before being replaced, and Jim Umbarger pitched 10 scoreless innings from the 23rd inning, striking out nine and giving up four hits. The president of the league, Harold Cooper, was finally reached on the phone by Pawtucket publicity manager Mike Tamburro sometime after 3:00 a.m.; the horrified Cooper ordered that play stop at the end of the current inning.[7] Finally at 4:07 a.m., at the end of the 32nd inning and more than eight hours after it began, the game was stopped.[3] There were 19 fans left in the seatsnot including David Cregg, who had fallen asleep[1]all of whom received season[2][3] or lifetime[1] passes to McCoy Stadium. As the players went home to rest before returning at 11 a.m. for an afternoon game that Sunday,[1] they saw people going to Easter sunrise service.[3] When Boggs' father complimented him for getting four hits in the game, the player admitted that he had had 12 at bats.[5]

Both teams signed a baseball on Sunday for display at the Baseball Hall of Fame. Cooper had suggested that the game resume that day, but Rochester manager Doc Edwards requested a delay because of the risk of injury.[6] Instead, it resumed on the evening of Tuesday, June 23, the next time the Red Wings were in town. A sellout crowd of 5,746 and 140 reporters from around the world were present, partly because the major leagues were on strike at the time; the players voted against an offer to resume the game at Fenway Park to avoid crossing the picket line. On that evening, it took just one inning and 18 minutes to finish the game, with Koza driving in the winning run in the bottom of the 33rd. The losing pitcher was Steve Grilli, who had joined Rochester in the interim since the game's suspension.[3]

The Pawtucket Red Sox celebrated the 25th anniversary of the game on June 23, 2006. Many members of both teams attended a luncheon and round table discussion in Providence, Rhode Island, and a ceremony was held before the game against the Columbus Clippers that night.[5] Dennis Cregg thinks that David Cregg has never attended another baseball game.[1]

Records set in the game

  • Most innings: 33
  • Total time for one game: 8 hours, 25 minutes
  • Most putouts by one team in one game: 99 (PAW)
  • Most total putouts in one game: 195
  • Most at-bats for one team in one game: 114 (PAW)
  • Most total at-bats in one game: 219
  • Most strikeouts (batting) by one team in one game: 34 (ROC)
  • Most total strikeouts in one game: 60
  • Most total assists in one game: 88
  • Most at-bats by one player in one game: 14, Dave Koza, Lee Graham, Chico Walker (all PAW)
  • Most plate appearances by one player in one game: 15, Tom Eaton, Cal Ripken, Jr., Dallas Williams (all ROC)
  • Most strikeouts (batting) by one player in a game: 7, Russ Laribee (PAW)

Sources:[8][9]

  • Longest plate appearance by a single umpire: Dennis Cregg (882 pitches over 8 hours and 25 minutes)

Line score

McCoy Stadium, Pawtucket, Rhode Island

Team123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233RHE
Rochester Red Wings0000001000000000000010000000000002183
Pawtucket Red Sox0000000010000000000010000000000013211

No outs when winning run scored.

Box scores

Batting

Rochester
Player Pos. AB Runs Hits RBI
Eaton 2B10030
Williams CF13000
Ripken 3B13020
Corey DH5110
Chism PH1000
Rayford C5000
Logan 1B12040
Valle 1B1000
Bourjos LF4021
Hale LF7010
Smith LF0000
Hazewood RF4000
Hart RF6110
Bonner SS12030
Huppert C11001
Putman PH1000
Totals 1052182
Pawtucket
Player Pos. AB Run Hits RBI
Graham CF14010
Barrett 2B12120
Walker LF14120
Laribee DH11001
Koza 1B14151
Boggs 3B12041
Bowen RF12020
Gedman C3010
Ongarato PH1000
LaFrancois C8020
Valdez SS13020
Totals 1143213

Pitching

Rochester
Player IP H R ER BB K
Jones 8.271125
Schneider 5.120008
Luebber 861124
Umbarger 1040009
Grilli (L) 001110
Speck 010000
Totals 322133526

Grilli pitched to 3 batters in the 33rd
Speck pitched to 1 batter in the 33rd
WP - Jones

Pawtucket
Player IP H R ER BB K
Parks 631143
Aponte 400029
Sarmiento 430023
Smithson 3.220035
Remmerswaal 4.141133
Finch 530013
Hurst 530013
Ojeda (W) 110001
Totals 3318221834
Parks pitched to 3 batters in the 7th

WP - Smithson, Hurst.

Game notes and statistics

  • Russ Laribee of the PawSox went 0–for–11 with a sacrifice fly, striking out seven times, becoming the first player in history to surpass the titanium sombrero (six strikeout) level. Based on a nine-inning game, Laribee would only have struck out three times per nine innings.
  • Between the two teams, pitchers faced a total of 246 batters (219 AB, 23 BB, 4 HBP).
  • A total of 882 pitches were thrown.
  • Pawtucket's Dave Koza had the most hits of any player in the game: five, including the game-winner.
  • 53 runners were left on base (30 by Rochester and 23 by Pawtucket).
  • The only player on either team who did not play in the game was future MLB manager Kevin Kennedy of Pawtucket.[10]

Players involved

Two future Hall of Famers were part of the historic game. Cal Ripken, Jr., who was inducted in 2007, went 2–for–13 on the night playing third base for Rochester. Ripken was the American League's Rookie of the Year the following year. Wade Boggs, who was inducted in 2005, played third base for Pawtucket and went 4–for–12 with a double and an RBI. The Baseball Hall of Fame possesses other artifacts of the game, including the official scorecard.[3]

Twenty-three other future and former major leaguers played in the game.[3]

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See also

References

  1. Patenaude, Ed (2010-03-26). "Dedicated umpire stayed at the plate for 32 innings". Telegram & Gazette. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
  2. "A Look Back at Professional Baseball's Longest Game". International League. Archived from the original on 2005-02-08. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  3. Sheinin, Dave (2006-04-18). "Long Memories From a Baseball Classic". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  4. Barry, Dan (2012). Bottom of the 33rd: Hope, Redemption, and Baseball's Longest Game. Harper Perennial. p. 74. ISBN 0062014498.
  5. Martone, Art (2006-06-23). "Morgan, Boggs and others commemorate baseball's longest game". The Providence Journal. Retrieved March 6, 2011.
  6. "32 Innings And Nobody Won". Toledo Blade. Associated Press. 1981-04-20. Retrieved April 18, 2011.
  7. Anderson, Dave (21 April 1981). "By Sports of The Times; Pawtucket's 32-Inning Game". The New York Times. The New York Times. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  8. "The Longest Game in History". milb.com.
  9. Favat, B. (June 28, 2010). "Longest Games In Boston Sports History". sbnation.com. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
  10. "Longest game in Organized Baseball history". Baseball-Reference.com. November 30, 2015. Retrieved December 21, 2017.

Further reading

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