Shattered Cleveland Indians’ dream season ends in game seven as they take over mantle of longest World Series drought
‘Believeland’ crumbles as the Indians become USA’s longest-lasting sports losers
They conquered injuries, adversity and doubts all season. The little team that could.
The Indians were models of resiliency, the comeback kids. Knock ’em down, they bounced right back and they did it again in game seven on the brink of heartbreak.
But they couldn’t contain the curse-busting Cubs.
The Indians just didn’t have enough as ace Corey Kluber couldn’t win for a third time in the Series, Andrew Miller looked mortal in relief and an overtaxed bullpen finally crumbled in extra innings.
Rajai Davis’ two-run homer in the eighth briefly saved the season, but this year belongs to the Cubs, who scored twice in the 10th off Bryan Shaw following a 17-minute rain delay.
Cleveland tried to rally yet again in the bottom half, when Davis’ two-out RBI single made it 8-7. But then Michael Martinez grounded out against Mike Montgomery, and it was over.
Forced to take on America’s new favourite postseason pastime, these talented Cubbies, without two starters, Cleveland came up just a bit short.
After the final out, most Cleveland players quickly left the dugout. Not Jason Kipnis.
The second baseman, who grew up in suburban Chicago rooting for the Cubs, leaned on the railing and briefly watched a celebration that remains only a dream.
This one hurts for Cleveland fans, but not as much as 1997, when the Indians blew a late lead in game seven on a humid night in Florida and lost in extra innings to the Marlins.
The 2016 Indians weren’t expected to win the AL Central or beat Boston in the Division Series or take out Toronto in the AL Championship Series or push Chicago up against the wall. And yet, that’s what the Indians did, which is why it will sting all winter.
It was right there for them. After winning two of three at Wrigley Field, the Indians came home to Progressive Field with two chances to close out the Cubs, but couldn’t get it done. Cleveland is first Series team since the 1979 Baltimore Orioles to lose games six and seven in their own ballpark.
Kluber, magnificent throughout Cleveland’s dash through October, ran out of gas on a warm November night.
And while Kluber wasn’t as sharp in game seven as he had been, neither was Miller.
The lights-out left-hander, whose acquisition at the trade deadline vaulted the Indians from competitive to contenders, allowed two runs – one a homer to 39-year-old Cubs catcher David Ross – and didn’t dominate. Entering game seven, he had allowed just one run in 17 innings over nine appearances in this postseason.
As it turned out, a second title for a Cleveland team in four months was too much to ask.
When LeBron James and the Cavaliers ended the city’s 52-year championship drought in June, the Indians went along for the ride as Cleveland morphed into “Believeland” and there was a feeling anything was possible.
The Indians moved into first place in the AL Central on June 4 and never moved out. They won 14 straight games from June 17 to July 1 – a run that coincided with the Cavs winning their title – and then held off the Kansas City Royals and Detroit Tigers despite losing starters Carlos Carrasco and Danny Salazar to injuries in September.
Cleveland played all but 11 games without All-Star left fielder Michael Brantley, who tried but couldn’t make it back following offseason shoulder surgery. The Indians also shook off PED suspensions of outfielders Marlon Byrd and Abraham Almonte by acquiring Coco Crisp and Brandon Guyer, two veterans who not only plugged holes in the lineup but provided veteran leadership for Cleveland’s youngsters.
But Francona was the real difference maker.
The 57-year-old manager, who guided Boston to two Series titles, somehow steered the Indians around danger for months. He got the most out of this team, mostly unknowns to the rest of the country, but now a team worth watching for years to come.