The longest game in Organized Baseball history occurred in 1981 between the Pawtucket Red Sox and Rochester Red Wings of the International League at Pawtucket's McCoy Stadium and lasted 33 innings. The game began on April 18 and lasted 32 innings before being stopped, with play to resume later in the season. On June 23, the game resumed with it only taking one additional inning to settle the game as Pawtucket won it by a score of 3 - 2 in the bottom of the 33rd inning. The game included future Hall of Famers Wade Boggs and Cal Ripken Jr. as the two third basemen. Bob Ojeda and Marty Barrett also went on to notable careers in the major leagues.

The Game [ edit ]

A Pitcher's Duel [ edit ]

The game started late on a cold and windy Saturday, after the game's first pitch was delayed for thirty minutes as a bank of lights needed to be fixed. The first six innings were a pitchers duel as starters Larry Jones of the Red Wings and Danny Parks of the Red Sox pitched shutouts. In the top of the seventh, Rochester's Chris Bourjos singled home Mark Corey, but then Luis Aponte came in to relieve Parks and shut down the Red Wings. In the bottom of the ninth the score was still 1 - 0 visitors. After a Chico Walker double off the center field wall, a Larry Jones wild pitch, and a Russ Laribee sacrifice fly, the tying run scored and the game went to extra innings.

The game would remain knotted for 11 innings, due to the lights-out performances by both bullpens. Aponte would strike out 9 Red Wings through the tenth, and would be followed by Manny Sarmiento (4 IP), Mike Smithson (3.1 IP), and Win Remmerswaal (3.2 IP). On the other side, Rochester reliever Schneider would nearly match Aponte striking out 8 in 5.1 innings after coming on in the ninth. Steve Luebber would come on in the fifteenth for the Red Wings and pitch 8 innings.

In the top of the eleventh it appeared that the Red Wings would plate a run on a line drive destined for the left field corner but third baseman Wade Boggs saved the game for the Red Sox by stopping it.

The Neverending Game [ edit ]

Later in the game, in either the fifth or sixth hour, Sam Bowen, the Pawtucket right fielder, hammered a towering fly ball to center that looked like it would end the game. According to Rochester center fielder Dallas Williams:

"It was gone...But it came back in [due to a stiff wind], and I caught it."

In the top of the 21st, Red Wings catcher Dave Huppert hit a double, driving in a run giving Rochester a 2-1 lead. Then in the last of the inning, the Red Sox's Wade Boggs hit a double to score Dave Koza to even the score. In the 22nd inning, Pawtucket manager Joe Morgan was ejected from the game by Dennis Cregg for arguing on a bunt call. [1]

By now the game had entered its second day, and according to the International League's rule book a curfew would be enforced that would have suspended the game around 1:00 AM. However, the rule book of home-plate umpire Dennis Cregg was not the updated version and it was missing the provision. Thus the game continued on for 11 more scoreless innings. The final 10 innings for Rochester were pitched by Jim Umbarger, who gave up only four hits and struck out nine. Finch and Bruce Hurst pitched Pawtucket's last ten innings, giving up six hits and striking out six combined.

At 2:00 AM Pawtucket reliever Luis Aponte, who had pitched the seventh through tenth innings, received permission to go home from his manager. However, his wife did not greet him with open arms. Upon his arrival, Xiomara Aponte asked angrily, "Where have you been?" to which the pitcher responded "At the ballpark," to which his wife snapped "Like hell you have." [2] Aponte reasoned that the news of the game would be in the Sunday papers, but its length meant that the game was still ongoing at press time and news of the game was not published until Monday. Aponte reportedly spent both nights on the couch.

At the start of the 30th, the game broke the minor league longest game record which had been set on June 14, 1966 in the Florida State League. In that game at Al Lang Field, the Miami Marlins defeated the St. Petersburg Cardinals 4 - 3, in 29 innings and 6 hours and 59 minutes. As the game wore on into the morning, players began to do anything to keep warm including burning the benches in the bullpens and broken bats in the dugouts. [3]

Meanwhile, Pawtucket general manager Mike Tamburro was attempting to reach International League President Harold Cooper to get a ruling on what to do. Finally, around 3:00 AM, Cooper was reached and ordered the game to be suspended after completion of the current inning. At 4:09 AM on April 19, at the end of the 32nd inning, the game was stopped and would be resumed at a later date. At this point, there were 19 fans left in the seats, all of whom were given lifetime passes to McCoy Stadium by the team's owner, Ben Mondor.

The Final Inning [ edit ]

Play resumed on June 23 when the Red Wings returned to Pawtucket. On hand for the resumed game was a sellout crowd of 5,746, as well as 140 members of the press from around the world, and four television networks. In addition to the historic nature of the game, the game attracted attention as the second part was played during the 1981 Major League Baseball player's strike, and the media were eager to cover any baseball. The game required just one inning and eighteen minutes to finish.

Pawtucket's eighth pitcher Bob Ojeda, was the team's "starting reliever." On the April 18, Ojeda had been unavailable to pitch as he had pitched the night before, on the April 17. Ojeda retired Dallas Williams and then gave up a single to Cal Ripken, Jr. before striking out Floyd Rayford and getting John Valle to hit on a soft fly to left. [4]

Steve Grilli, who had started the season in the Toronto Blue Jays system and was a 70-game veteran of the majors, got the call for Rochester. Grilli preceded to hit Marty Barrett with his first pitch, and then gave up a single to Chico Walker which advanced the runner to third. Russ Laribee was then intentionally walked and another Red Wing entered the game, Cliff Speck, to face the game's leading hitter Dave Koza. After 8 hours and 25 minutes and 33 innings, Koza hit a 2-2 curve ball off Speck into left for a single and drove in Barrett to win the game.

Epilogue [ edit ]

The AAA featured many future big league players. Of the forty-one players who got into the game, 25 went on to play in the major leagues, and among them were two Hall of Famers; Cal Ripken Jr. and Wade Boggs.

The game's fourteen pitchers went through 160 baseballs and threw over 800 pitches. They held batters to 39 hits in 219 at-bats for an abysmal .178 average. [4]

Dallas Williams' 0-for-13 line is the all-time single-game record for most at-bats without a hit. The Rochester center fielder also had two sacrifice bunts, to bring his plate appearance count to 15.

Line and Box Score [ edit ]

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 R H E Rochester 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 18 3 Pawtucket 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 21 1

No out when run scored

Errors - Eaton, Logan, Bonner, Valdez. Double Plays - Rochester 4, Pawtucket 3. Left-on-Base - Rochester 30, Pawtucket 23. Doubles - Koza (2), Walker, Boggs, Huppert Stolen Bases - Eaton. Sacrifice Hits - Williams (2), Logan, Hart, Huppert (2). Sacrifice Flies - Laribee.

Hit-by-Pitch - Schneider (Laribee), Parks (Eaton), Aponte (Bonner), Grilli (Barrett). Wild Pitch - Jones, Smithson, Hurst.

Umpires: HP-Denny Cregg; 1B-Tony Maners; 3B-Jack Lietz (crew chief) Official Scorer: Bill George

Professional Single-Game Records Set [ edit ]

Most putouts, one team: 99 (Pawtucket)

Most total putouts: 195

Most at-bats for one team : 114 (Pawtucket)

Most total at-bats: 219

Most strikeouts by one team: 34 (Rochester)

Most total strikeouts: 60

Most total assists: 88

Most innings: 33

Most total pitches thrown: 882; Rochester 423, Pawtucket 459

Most total chances: 283

Most total chances, one team: 142 (Rochester)

Most at-bats by a player: 14; Dave Koza, Lee Graham, Chico Walker (all Pawtucket)

Most plate appearances by a player: 15; Tom Eaton, Cal Ripken, Dallas Williams (all Rochester)

Total time for one game: 8 hours, 25 minutes

Notable Players [ edit ]

Pawtucket Red Sox [ edit ]

Rochester Red Wings [ edit ]

Quotes [ edit ]

"A lot of people were saying , 'Yeah, yeah, we tied it, we tied it!' And then they said, 'Oh, no, what did you do? We could have gone home!'" - Pawtucket's Wade Boggs on his game-tying hit in the 21st inning

"I've been watching for the bunt for 23 innings now." - Rochester third baseman Cal Ripken Jr., wearily replying to relief pitcher Jim Umbarger's instruction

"I remember striking out Cal Ripken on a 3-and-2 breaking ball at 4 o'clock in the morning, and I don't think he ever forgave me." - Bruce Hurst, who pitched the 27th through 32nd innings for Pawtucket

"There were several of us who had bad weeks that game. Think about it, that game was like an entire series in itself. I was so happy when I got a single in the top of the 33rd because I knew all those stats were going to count after that game ended, and my average was going to take a big hit." - Cal Ripken, Jr. who went 2-for-13

"It [Batting Average] went down about 15 points. I consider that day the worst day of my baseball life." - Rochester's Dallas Williams on his 0/13 day

"...we had this guy, Mark Corey, who had gotten taken out of the game in about the 13th inning. And when we got back to the clubhouse, all the beer was gone and [Corey] was hammered. I mean, hammered." - Dallas Williams, who was looking for a beer after his 0-13 game

"It's the only time I ever remember our postgame meal, being breakfast." - Cal Ripken Jr.

"When we walked off the field at 4 o'clock in the morning, it was like, 'You mean we're not done with the game yet?'" - Rich Gedman, Pawtucket catcher

"I wanted 40 innings so nobody could ever tie our beautiful record." - Joe Morgan, Pawtucket manager

"I may have been the only one disappointed to see them suspend play. We should have at least played until sunrise. - Jim Umbarger

"It sank in the next day. Man, we just played 32 innings of baseball. We joked about it. We had smiles on our faces. I was thankful I was a baseball player and on the field that night. As time went by, I appreciated it more." - Dallas Williams

"Not since the time they had to shoot the drunken camel at the city zoo has there been this much excitement in Pawtucket." - Bob Minzesheimer of the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle on June 23, 1981

on June 23, 1981 "Everyone associated with that game is in Cooperstown...and that's the destination of everyone who ever plays this game." - Rochester's Dave Huppert

Sources [ edit ]

Further Reading [ edit ]