Baseball's Longest Game



Baseball's longest game, 30 years later

By Steve Hartman .
CBS Video

Reliving baseball's longest game

Thirty years ago, baseball history was made in Rhode Island in front of a crowd of almost nobody when the Pawtucket Red Sox took on the Rochester Red Wings in a game that lasted 33 innings. Steve Hartman reports on the longest baseball game in history.

(See the video at http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7363159n&tag=related;photovideo

(CBS News) PAWTUCKET, R.I. - Thirty years ago tonight, baseball history was made in Pawtucket, R.I., in front of a crowd of almost nobody.


Bob Brek recalls being "the only fan on the first base side, at the end of the game."


By comparison, the third base side was packed, according to Gary Levin. "There were about 5 to 8 actual fans here."


Of course, it didn't start out that way. CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman reports earlier that evening, 1,740 people had shown up to watch a minor league game between the Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings. Most of the fans, we can only assume, had every intention of staying until the end of the game.


Baseball Hall of Fame remembers the game


But several events conspired against the fans. The first was the weather, as it was cold and windy that night. And yet, it wasn't the cold that drove away the bulk of them - it was the clock. The game started just after 8 p.m. and continued until just before sunrise. It was the longest game in baseball history. They played 32 innings that night, spent 8 hours in the frigid cold, and still nobody won.


Around 4 a.m. the league president ordered the teams to finish it another day - which they did - in just one inning. Pawtucket finally took it in the 33rd inning by a score of 3 to 2.


Today, folks in Pawtucket continue to celebrate every 5th anniversary of the game. The tradition is not only meant to relive the memories, but, according to then-equipment manager Michael Kinch, to be re-inspired by them as well.


Dan Barry's book "Bottom of the 33rd"


"I think I got a good life lesson right there," Kinch says. Back then his nickname was "Hood," which he got for stealing hubcaps. He says he was never a bad kid, but seeing those guys fight so hard, for so long in such cold, definitely made him a better adult.


"I found out what a professional was after that game and I carry it through in my professional life." says Kinch, who's now a deputy police chief. His words help explain why people in Pawtucket still cling to that game all these years year later. But it still doesn't explain why anyone, who's not getting paid, would spend 8 hours at a meaningless minor league baseball game.


Both Brek and Kinch say they'd never leave a sporting event early - for fear of missing a comeback.


So let that be a warning to parents you might find your children frozen to death in their seats.

2 comments:

  1. Dave Huppert, who caught 30 innings in that game, now manages the Lakeland Flying Tigers.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Cal Ripken Jr. and Wade Boggs also played in that game!

    ReplyDelete