Top 25 moments in Progressive Field’s 25-year history
By Zack Meisel Apr 4, 2019 44
CLEVELAND — It’s a moment few could forget.
Ezequiel Carrera dropped down the bunt in the proper spot and dashed to first base for a go-ahead RBI single, a squeeze play performed to perfection. The Indians hung on for a 5-4 victory against the Reds, another win in their improbable 30-15 start to the 2011 season.
OK, so there have been a few moments more memorable than that in the 25-year history of Progressive Field. For this exercise, we’ll highlight certain games, comebacks and performances since the ballpark opened on this date in 1994.
We’ll limit the options to those registered by the home team. Mark McGwire’s homer off the scoreboard was cool, the Cubs breaking their World Series curse was historic and Ervin Santana’s no-hitter — witnessed by about 47 fans on a sleepy summer afternoon — was notable, but those don’t fit the criteria. We’ll stick with the snapshots in time that sent the ballpark into a frenzy, those occasions that still have people, years later, saying, “Remember when … ?”
This is far from an exact science, so feel free to offer your own opinion or ranking below.
Also see — 25 years later: How Jacobs Field saved baseball in Cleveland
25. Snow-pening Day
April 6, 2007
No, we won’t mention Snow Days, the winter wonderland that once occupied the ballpark during the offseason. But we will mention the time Progressive Field morphed into a snow globe, halting Paul Byrd’s no-hit bid in the fifth inning. Bob Feller might as well have been doing snow angels, as he maintained his status as the only hurler to toss an Opening Day no-hitter. The game — and the entire series — was postponed, and the Indians had to escape the shores of Lake Erie and play their ensuing series in Milwaukee, as the home team hosting the Angels. John Adams, the drummer, made the trip to give Miller Park a bit of Cleveland flair.
24. Manny’s last hurrah
Oct. 1, 2000
In his final trip to the plate as a member of the Indians, Manny Ramirez launched a home run to dead center. The poor, helpless baseball clanged off the backdrop behind the picnic area for his 38th homer of the season to cap Game 162. Slider, standing atop the dugout, bowed down to Ramirez as he returned from his trot around the bases. One fan in the crowd flashed a sign that read “Manny please stay! Dolan please pay!” Ramirez, though, signed an eight-year, $160 million deal with the Red Sox that winter.
23. Flock of seagulls
June 11, 2009
Opponents have to brave all of the elements when playing in Cleveland: rain, snow, wind, bugs, birds. Shin-Soo Choo broke a 10th-inning tie with a single into a center-field cluster of gulls. The baseball squirted past Coco Crisp, permitting Mark DeRosa to score the winning run from second.
22. Thomecoming
Aug. 26, 2011
Jim Thome was nervous to return to Cleveland as a member of the home team. He wasn’t sure how he’d be received. In his second game with the Tribe in 2011 following a late-summer trade from the Twins, with his teammates sporting his patented high socks, Thome clubbed his 602nd home run. In his final home game in Cleveland, he played third base for a pitch, a nod to his early-career defensive positioning. It was his first action at the hot corner in 15 years. He used Jack Hannahan’s glove. “I thought it was important that he end where he started,” manager Manny Acta said.
21. Belle off Benitez
Oct. 4, 1996
The Indians were on the verge of being swept by Baltimore in the 1996 ALDS, but Albert Belle greeted Armando Benitez with a towering, tie-breaking grand slam to left-center in the seventh inning. The Indians forced a Game 4, but fell short against the Orioles. It was Belle’s final home run as a member of the Indians. The next time he homered at Jacobs Field, fans showered him with Monopoly money.
20. Thome’s 511-footer
July 3, 1999
The baseball bounced onto Eagle Avenue, the street that runs behind the outfield. It was the first of eight runs scored against Kansas City’s Don Wengert in the second inning of the nightcap of a Tribe double header sweep.
19. Nifty No. 50
Sept. 30, 1995
Sandy Alomar Jr. wonders whether Belle could’ve hit 60 homers in 1995 if not for the 19-foot-high wall in left field. Belle settled for 50, the franchise record, to go along with 50 doubles, the only player in league history to notch a 50-50 season. (Don’t ask Belle why his 1995 AL MVP trophy is on Mo Vaughn’s shelf, though…)
18. An eight-run deficit? Child, please.
June 4, 1995
The Blue Jays scored seven runs in the first inning off Jason Grimsley, and they grabbed an 8-0 lead in the third. They carried an 8-6 advantage into the ninth, but Paul Sorrento socked a walk-off homer. The league took notice: No lead was safe against Cleveland’s potent lineup. Eight days later, the Indians’ record-setting sellout streak began, and the club rolled to a 54-18 record at its home park.
17. KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKluber
May 13, 2015
We considered Kenny Lofton’s stat sheet-stuffing afternoon against the Orioles from 2000 (four hits, four runs, five steals and a walk-off hit), but he’ll earn the spotlight in a bit. Instead, we turned to the only two-time Cy Young Award winner in team history.
A former longtime scout observed from the press box that night and said early on that the reigning Cy Young winner just didn’t look the same that year. (He did enter the outing with a 5.04 ERA in seven starts.) Well, so much for that notion.
Kluber tallied 18 strikeouts against the Cardinals, matching Feller’s franchise record — and Feller’s widow, Anne, was in attendance. He allowed only one harmless hit (to former Tribe shortstop Jhonny Peralta) in eight scoreless innings. He didn’t walk anyone. All but one Cardinals starter struck out at least twice. His next time out, Kluber tossed a complete game, striking out 12 while surrendering only one run.
16. Lofton’s Spider-Man impersonation
Aug. 4, 1996
It was a catch so impressive it earned its own bobblehead design years later. Alomar was warming up Eric Plunk in the bullpen. He spotted Lofton running toward the fence, chasing B.J. Surhoff’s fly ball. Then, he lost sight of the center fielder. A few seconds later, he peered up and saw Lofton’s armpit hanging on the top of the wall. The mesmerizing catch protected Cleveland’s 3-2 lead in the eighth inning, though the Indians would tack on 11 runs in the ensuing frame. Lofton captured his fourth and final Gold Glove Award that season.
“I always ran hard and went after balls at the wall,” Lofton said, “because you never know. You can’t catch it if you’re not up there.”
15. ‘Wow’
July 16, 1995
One word from Dennis Eckersley, as the Hall of Famer walked off the mound, said it all. Jason Giambi, a rookie on that Oakland team, once said opposing clubs prayed they could steal just one game anytime they traveled to Cleveland for a series in the ’90s. Well, Ramirez’s two-run blast to the left-field bleachers sent the Indians to a walk-off win and a four-game sweep of the Athletics, leaving Eckersley to utter, “Wow,” as he retreated to the dugout.
14. Naquin’s mad dash
Aug. 19, 2016
José Ramírez tied the game with a solo homer over the fence. Tyler Naquin thought that approach was too conventional. B.J. Upton slipped while attempting to corral the baseball after Naquin launched it off the right-field fence. Naquin plunged head-first into home plate, popped up and created a signature pose, which he described as “just rockin’ out.” In the weeks after, teammates posted photos of Naquin outrunning Usain Bolt and out-swimming the Olympic team. It had been 100 years since a Tribe player (Braggo Roth) hit an inside-the-park walk-off homer.
Said Francisco Lindor: “I couldn’t go to bed until, like, 3 a.m. because I had so much adrenaline going. I kept talking about the game the entire time.”
13. Selby’s slam
July 14, 2002
In a classic David vs. Goliath bout, utilityman Bill Selby smacked a walk-off grand slam off Mariano Rivera. It marked the first grand slam Rivera had allowed in seven years and would be the last for another eight years. The Sunday afternoon slam capped a crazy comeback in which the Indians erased a 7-0 deficit.
Bill Selby (Getty Images)
12. Grissom races home
Oct. 11, 1997
In perhaps the quirkiest playoff series in Indians history, Cleveland took command of the ALCS when Marquis Grissom dashed home from third base as Omar Vizquel attempted a squeeze bunt. Vizquel missed the baseball — though the Orioles would argue otherwise — and Grissom scored standing up, giving the Indians a 2-1 win in 12 innings. It’s not every day you see a steal of home end a playoff game.
11. A bug’s life
Oct. 5, 2007
They didn’t seem to bother Roberto Hernandez (nee Fausto Carmona), but swarms of midges pestered Joba Chamberlain during Game 2 of the 2007 ALDS, and the Indians capitalized. In the eighth inning, Chamberlain issued two walks, plunked a batter and threw two wild pitches. The Indians tied the game without a hit and Travis Hafner’s 11th-inning single drove in Kenny Lofton and sent Cleveland to a 2-0 series lead.
During Derek Jeter’s final visit to Progressive Field in 2014, he reflected on that game.
“I’ve never seen anything like that before,” Jeter said. “It was like that for both teams. It wasn’t like they just came out when we decided to go on defense. That was by far the oddest conditions I’ve played in. I didn’t enjoy it. It wasn’t fun. What made it difficult is — what do you call those things? Midges. They were all over the place. You really couldn’t shake them. That’s what made it difficult.”
10. Big G’s blast
Sept. 24, 2013
The Indians rattled off 10 consecutive wins to close the 2013 regular season and secure a spot in the AL Wild Card Game. Jason Giambi made it all possible, with his two-out, two-run, walk-off homer to vault the Indians to a 5-4 win against the White Sox, helping the Tribe keep pace with the Rangers and Rays in the standings.
9. World Series walk-off
Oct. 24, 1995
Indians fans waited 41 years to witness a World Series game in Cleveland, and 47 years to witness a World Series victory. Eddie Murray sent them home with a walk-off single, as the Indians trimmed the Braves’ series lead to 2-1.
8. Alomar off Mo
Oct. 5, 1997
With two outs in the eighth and the Indians’ season on the brink, Alomar poked a Mariano Rivera pitch into the right-field stands for a game-tying homer. Vizquel registered a walk-off single an inning later and the Indians continued their improbable postseason march.
Jay Bruce (Alex Trautwig / Getty Images)
7. Lucky No. 22
Sept. 14, 2017
Following their American League record (and major-league record, depending on whom you ask) 22-game winning streak in 2017, the Indians shipped three items to the Baseball Hall of Fame:
• A baseball thrown by Corey Kluber during his complete-game shutout for win No. 20
• Mike Clevinger’s jersey worn in win No. 21
• Second base from win No. 22
The team saved the last-out ball from wins 15 through 22, the lineup cards from wins 20 through 22, a Roberto Pérez bat and Jay Bruce’s torn navy uniform from the final victory. His teammates clawed at the jersey after he delivered a walk-off double in the 10th inning. The Indians had tied the game an inning earlier when Francisco Lindor, down to his last strike, socked a two-out RBI double.
An oral history of the 22-game winning streak
6. Comeback for the ages
Aug. 5, 2001
It was Nico Vizquel’s first day as Indians bat boy, and once the team fell behind by 12 runs, Omar Vizquel was worried his teammates would declare his son a bad-luck charm. Instead, the Indians charged back, despite replacing half their starters. They erased a 14-2 deficit with three runs in the seventh, four in the eighth and five in the ninth. With the Indians down to their last strike, Vizquel tied the score with a bases-clearing triple down the right-field line. The Indians emerged victorious in 11 innings, 15-14, the third team to ever win a game in which it trailed by 12 runs, and the first to do so in 76 years.
5. Something good happened after 2 a.m.
Oct. 3, 1995
By the time Tony Peña stepped to the plate in the 13th inning, after the rain delay, after the Belle biceps flex, after the clock ticked past 2 a.m. — the conversation between broadcasters Bob Costas and Bob Uecker had strayed from the on-field (in)action. But the veteran catcher smacked a 3-0 offering into the left-field bleachers to send the Indians to a walk-off win in their first postseason game in 41 years.
4. Hometown hero
July 8, 1997
The league was concerned with the weather forecast, especially as the late innings arrived with the AL and NL tied at 1-1. Jim Folk, the Indians’ vice president of ballpark operations, recalls Fox 8 weatherman Dick Goddard claiming it would require “divine intervention” to get the entire game in before the sky opened. But Alomar clubbed a two-run shot into the left-field bleachers off San Francisco southpaw Shawn Estes to propel the AL to victory, secure himself the MVP trophy and send the Cleveland fans home happy. A few minutes after Alomar hoisted the trophy during a postgame interview on the field, the rain began.
3. The first Opening Day
April 4, 1994
The day started with the president tossing out the ceremonial first pitch. Wayne Kirby slapped the final pitch of the afternoon to left field for a walk-off single, making Randy Johnson’s near-no-hitter a mere footnote and starting a new era of Indians baseball with a perfect opening chapter.
(Elsa / Getty Images)
2. Rajai’s blast
Nov. 2, 2016
Had the Indians scratched out a Game 7 victory, Rajai Davis, a part-time outfielder in the twilight of his career, would have had a statue at Progressive Field. Hall of Famers Bob Feller, Frank Robinson, Jim Thome… and the journeyman speedster who provided an unforgettable moment in the highest-leverage situation imaginable, the sort of implausible, hero-making scenario that gets re-enacted in backyards across the country.
It caused a deafening roar. It vaulted the game into baseball lore and forced a rain delay into the night’s tale. But it still wasn’t quite enough to prevent the Cubs from snapping their championship drought an hour later, so it settled for the runner-up position on this list.
1. The first clinch
Sept. 8, 1995
It didn’t trigger some raucous reaction. It wasn’t some unexpected event. There were no heroics or legendary performances. But the moment Thome squeezed the foul pop-up in his glove, it signified the Indians had finally made it, finally turned a corner and buried a 40-year stretch of abysmal baseball. They clinched the AL Central with three weeks remaining in the regular season. They were headed for their first postseason since 1954. As they celebrated on the field, the ballpark blared Garth Brooks’ “The Dance,” in memory of Steve Olin and Tim Crews, who had died in a boating accident two years earlie
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