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Maybe the natural chaos embedded in baseball springs from the soul Javy BáezGeneral Chat Chat Lounge Last May, as a member of the Cubsthe tricky shortstop was at the center of the season’s most inexplicable chain events when it somehow confused. Pirates Reaching the law and refusing to retire him by simply stepping on first base.
He wasn’t quite as involved in the most chaotic play MLB has seen since then, which unfolded during Baez’s contest between Tuesday night. Tigers and the TwinsGeneral Chat Chat Lounge But he was certainly on the field once again when featuring some of the most talented baseball players on the planet in what turned out to be a Little League matchup on its nonsensical, awkward, exhilarating final play. And this time, through no fault of his own, Báez ended up on the wrong side of the action.
In less than 30 seconds, the Tigers went from being this close to a critical victory being completely lost. The A’s would have put them in a half-game out of first place in the AL Central. The loss left them tied for last.
After the dust had settled, Twins manager Rocco Baldelli could hardly believe his team’s luck. Because while his team eventually triumphed, they were far from faultless as to what unfolded on the final play, which featured three baffling blunders from each team.
Baldelli said, “I think this is one of those days where it probably isn’t worth breaking it all down.”
I beg to differ.
1. Robbie Grossman’s poor read

Grossman was so close to preventing all this from happening. Thank goodness he didn’t.
MLB / Bally Sports
Over the last several months, I have come to appreciate the difficulties of playing in an outfield position. That’s because after playing in the infield for the entirety of my (extremely inconsequential) baseball career, I recently set up shop in the grass for my co-ed softball team. And let me tell you, judging by the landing spot’s screaming line drives you hundreds of feet away, as if one of the Twins slugger Miguel Sanó The whole catastrophe is ripped to start, it’s even harder than it looks.
Just last week, I made a similar misjudgment to the one made by the Tigers right fielder Robbie Grossman on Tuesday. I felt quite foolish when a ball I was sure I was positioned deep enough to catch instead of just grazed my outstretched glove, landed behind me and kept rolling on the fence.
I’m sure Grossman felt similarly. Because while Sanó’s base hit was a well-struck ball, it is also a ball that major-league right fielders are expected to catch. This was not officially an error, but it was most certainly a miscalculation.
2. Miguel Sanó’s decision to keep running
For all Sanó’s talents as a baseball player, running the bases is not near the top of the list. By the metric’s baserunning runs above average, he’s been worth negative runs on the basepaths in six of his seven previous MLB seasons, and this year is ranked 167th out of 184 qualified players in that statistic.
So maybe it shouldn’t come as a surprise that when caught between two bases during an irregular play, Sanó made the wrong choice here. Lead runner Trevor Larnach, who had to wait at second base until the ball landed in the outfield, was held at third once the Tigers relayed it in rather quickly. That left Minnesota’s Gio Urshela, who started the play on first, parked at second base. Once Sanó saw the ball was thrown home, though, he sprinted for second base, incorrectly assuming Larnach had the green light to score and Urshela was on his way to third. That left Sanó in no man’s land.
3. Gio Urshela’s decision to resume running
If Urshela had his ground a second longer, he would have seen Sanó retreating back to first base, where no one was there to tag him. Even if Sanó didn’t go back and sacrificed on the base paths as a TOOTBLAN victim, that would’ve been a preferable scenario to Urshela or lead runner Trevor Larnach getting tagged out. They’re both faster runners than Sanó and are already in scoring position.
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Still, it’s hard to fault Urshela too much here for taking off for the third. When you see someone running at you, the natural human instinct is to run away. And his decision to push onward eventually led to the next mistake, which was the most costly of them all.
4. Eric Haase’s loft in the left field
Tigers catcher Eric Haase Really made two mistakes in one: a physical error and a mental one. The physical one was quite clear for anyone to see, and in fact the only action in this comical sequence was to actually go down in the scorebook as an error. He should not have chucked the ball high over the head of his intended target into the outfield, allowing both the tying and winning runs to score. He also, however, should never have been throwing the ball to Detroit’s third baseman.
When Haase caught the ball at home plate, he was confronted with Urshela stuck between second and third while Sanó was caught between first and second. He should have thrown the ball to Báez, who was covering second base and waving for the ball. Or, he could have just held the ball. That would’ve been the safest way to preserve the lead.
Instead, he threw up a bag where a runner was already safely at the base and from which Urshela was already retreating. Well, he tried to throw it to third base, anyway. It ended up in the left field.
5. Austin Meadows lurking away from left field
I’m not sure how much fault can be laid at Meadows’ feet. When the ball flew off Sanó’s bat in the right field, he figured the ball probably wouldn’t end up in the left field. Then again, he has a job on this play, and that is a potential errant throw to third base. Indeed, after Haase’s hideous toss, Meadows was nowhere near the scene.
Because of how far he’d been strayed from his home, it fell to Báez to sprint from second base into the left field to retrieve the ball. By the time Báez got there, it was too late to nab Urshela at home and prevent the game-winning run from crossing the plate.
But Báez, being the clever fielder he is, did the best thing he could and saved enough from Detroit’s bacon to take advantage of yet another Twins baserunning blunder.
6. Miguel Sanó’s decision to keep running (again!)
When the ball flew out of Haase’s hand into the left field, all Sanó needed to do was stay at second and let the winning run score. Instead, he broke for a third. Báez, seeing this, hurled the ball to third baseman Jeimer Candelario, who is very nearly tagged out before Urshela scored and ended the game. It would’ve been perfect bookend for this calamity of errors, leaving both teams tied and one away from extra innings.
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Alas, it was not to be. Urshela slid head-first into home just before Sanó could be tagged, Minnesota left its home stadium with a 5–4 victory and the Twins could breathe a sigh of relief that their three mistakes on the final play of the game didn’t turn out to be. as costly as Detroit’s.
“We made some boo-boos on the bases and we somehow made our way out of it and smelled like roses. And sometimes that’s the way it happens, “Baldelli said, before admitting:” I don’t even know what I’m talking about right now. But I think that sums up the last play of the game and the result.
“I think once in a while you walk away and you just kind of throw your hands in the air, and you smile, and you take the win, and you go to bed at night.”
If the Twins end up winning the division or making the playoffs by one game, they’ll probably look back at this night while laying in bed and laughing. If the Tigers end up missing out by the same margin, they might think of this moment and cry themselves to sleep.
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