Indians Win 10th Straight to Gain Top Wild Card Spot

Terry Francona wanted to soak it all in for a moment. The Indians’ manager waited in the dugout on Sunday afternoon as his players sprinted up the steps, hopped over the rail and stormed the infield at Target Field with arms raised and screams unleashed.

Nick Swisher dropped to his knees near first base. Jason Kipnis pumped his fist and ran toward his teammates to begin forming the celebratory mob. They played as one all season long, pulling off an improbable run to the American League’s top Wild Card spot, and now they bounced as one after a 5-1 victory over the Twins in the final game of the regular season.

Francona watched the scene come together.

“It’s like the culmination of everything that you’ve gone through, all the ups and downs,” said Francona, as champagne dripped from his clothes. “You see guys from different countries, different upbringings, and they’re jumping on the pile and it’s just pure joy.”

Go crazy, Cleveland.

October baseball is making a return trip to the corner of Carnegie and Ontario.

Summer has turned to fall and the Tribe will play on. Francona has stressed the importance of each game, and Cleveland needed every last one on the schedule to complete this miracle September finish and franchise turnaround. In Sunday’s clincher, Ubaldo Jimenez overpowered the Twins with 13 strikeouts and led the way to the win column once again.

The Indians’ final act of the regular season was a 10-game winning streak, chasing down the Rays and Rangers, and soaring up the standings to earn a Wild Card Game on Wednesday. Cleveland became only the sixth team since 1900, and the first since the 1971 Orioles, to end a campaign with at least 10 wins in a row. The Tribe also finished September with 21 wins for the first time since the 1948 season.

With a four-game brooming of the Twins, the Indians also became the first team in the Major Leagues to complete seven series sweeps of at least four games since the Cardinals accomplished the feat in 1943.

“I almost become speechless in times like this,” Swisher said. “Nobody on the planet thought we’d be standing right now.”

The clubhouse celebration was wild and lengthy, with the smell of champagne reaching far down the tunnel outside the clubhouse. Francona embraced Paul Dolan, Cleveland’s chairman and chief executive officer. General manager Chris Antonetti and team president Mark Shapiro were also in the room as the players partied and corks popped.

“A season like this is a testament to the resilience and the leadership,” Shapiro said. “Our team demonstrated character all year long. That started with [Francona] and ran through the veteran players that we brought in here. And then I think over time our younger payers took ownership of it.”

Now, the Indians get to go home.

The Indians’ next game will be back at Progressive Field, where they will host the AL Wild Card Game at 8:07 p.m. ET on Wednesday. Cleveland will face either the Rays or Rangers, who will square off in a tiebreaker game on Monday in Texas after finishing the 162-game slate in a deadlock for the second Wild Card spot.

The winner of Wednesday’s Wild Card Game will face the AL East champion Red Sox in a best-of-five AL Division Series, beginning on Friday at Fenway Park.

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