This game was scoreless after six, but in very different fashions. The Indians had managed just one hit and two walks off Jimmy Gobble, while the Royals had stranded two runners in the second, two in the third, two in the fourth, three in the fifth, and three in the sixth against Jason Stanford and Jack Cressand. Gobble departed after six and while Cleveland got two hits off Jason Grimsley, a double play short-circuited any rally. The dam finally broke for Kansas City in the bottom of the inning as two quick outs were followed by four straight hits, scoring three runs. The Indians would get three straight one out singles of Curt Leskanic in the ninth, but Matt Lawton flied out and Victor Martinez grounded to first.
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
#498---CLE @ BAL, 3/31/2003
Opening Day in Baltimore included a twelve minute snow delay in the top of the third inning. When play resumed, Karim Garcia’s sac fly gave the Indians a 3-1 lead off Rodrigo Lopez. The teams would each score a single run in the sixth, with Garcia (homer) and Jay Gibbons (single) driving in the runs. CC Sabathia departed after seven, and in the bottom of the eighth David Riske got two quick outs before Tony Batista doubled and Marty Cordova homered to knot it 4-4. In the bottom of the ninth, Jerry Hairston bunted for a hit and took second on pitcher Jose Santiago’s throwing error, but was gunned out at third when Gary Matthews sac bunt attempt failed.
Neither team got a runner into scoring position in the tenth or eleventh, but in the twelfth Milton Bradley doubled and Omar Vizquel singled off Kerry Ligtenberg to give Cleveland the lead back. In the bottom of the frame, Gary Matthews led off with a single off Danys Baez, took second on BJ Surhoff’s sac bunt, third on Jeff Conine’s ground out, and scored on Josh Bard’s passed ball. Karim Garcia led off the top of the thirteenth with a single and was bunted to second, but BJ Ryan retired the next two Indians without incident. Jake Westbrook came on for the bottom of the inning, and two infield hits and a hit batter loaded the bases with two outs for Matthews, who lined a walkoff single to center to win it for Baltimore. The thirteen innings were played in 3:58 without subtracting the twelve minute delay.
Friday, February 13, 2026
#497---MIN @ CLE, 4/10/2002
The Indians took command of this game with a six-run second inning, capped by Jim Thome’s grand slam off Rick Reed. Thome had driven in five runs in his first two plate appearances, but struck out in his final three. Despite getting battered for eight runs, Rick Reed stayed in to complete five innings. Note David Ortiz batting cleanup in his last season with Minnesota, and Charlie Nagy mopping up in the ninth inning for Cleveland.
Monday, February 9, 2026
#496---CLE @ DET, 4/12/2001
Jolbert Carbera scored three runs and Roberto Alomar tripled in all three runs of a two-out, fourth inning rally to provide the offense for Cleveland. Bartolo Colon started, going 6 2/3, allowing three runs (two coming in the seventh) on seven hits, three walks, and eight strikeouts while making 115 pitches. Detroit’s seventh inning tightened the score to 4-3, but Cabrera’s third hit was a leadoff double in the ninth, and Alomar bunted him to third and Juan Gonzalez hit a sac fly to give the Indians an insurance run. Bob Wickman walked two in the ninth but got Shane Halter to bounce into an Alomar-Vizquel-Thome double play to get the save.
Thursday, February 5, 2026
#495---CLE @ TB, 4/7/2000
Sunday, February 1, 2026
#494---CLE @ MIN, 4/10/1999
The Indians got three-run homers from Manny Ramirez and Richie Sexson in the first to lead Benj Sampson 6-0, but Dwight Gooden coughed most of it right back up, getting just two outs to Sampson’s three. Both teams got good long relief outings; Minnesota’s Mike Lincoln gave up one run in five innings and Cleveland’s Steve Karsay one run in 5 1/3, making it 7-6 Cleveland before a five-run outburst in the eighth powered by four doubles (Travis Fryman, Sandy Alomar, Omar Vizquel, Roberto Alomar) put the Tribe back in control. Minnesota got a run off Jerry Spradlin in the ninth to make the final score 12-7.






