Baseball’s Longest Waiting Game
October 3, 2017
Today, October 3, the Major League Baseball (MLB) playoffs begin with the American League (AL) Wild Card game between the Minnesota Twins and the New York Yankees. The first playoff game marks the beginning of a month long Octoberfest of high-stakes baseball, culminating in the crowning of a new World Series champion. Winning the World Series is every team’s goal and every fan’s dream, but for many teams, the lack of a championship creates a haunting waiting game that can last many years, many decades, even more than century.
In 2016, the Chicago Cubs famously ended the longest waiting game of all, a championship drought that stretched back 108 years to 1908. For the Cubs’ 2016 World Series opponent, however—the Cleveland Indians—the painful wait continued. The Indians have gone longer than any other MLB team without a title. They last won the World Series 69 years ago in 1948, a win over the Boston Braves that drew an average of 80,000 fans to Cleveland’s series home games at Municipal Stadium.
The Indians—whose only other title came in 1920—returned to the World Series in 1995, 1997, and again in 2016, but fell short each time, losing to the Atlanta Braves, Florida Marlins, and the Cubs. The losses to the Marlins and Cubs were especially painful. Those World Series each went the seven-game distance, and each time the seventh game was decided in extra innings. For Indians players and fans, the losses were excruciating, and the only tonic to heal the wounds will come in the form of that long-awaited world title.
The Indians will get their chance again this year, and a good chance it is. The Indians won the most games in the American League (102), ensuring home field advantage throughout the AL playoffs. And if any team but the Los Angeles Dodgers wins the National League, the Indians—should they reach the World Series—will begin that series at home, too. (The Dodgers won an MLB-best 104 games, earning home field advantage throughout the postseason.) The Indians set an AL record during the regular season by winning a remarkable 22 games in a row from August 24 through September 14. And the team’s two biggest stars—pitcher Corey Kluber and shortstop Francisco Lindor—had terrific seasons, both while carrying the painful reminder of last year’s agonizing loss to the Cubs. (Besides losing in extra innings in game seven, the Indians blew a three-games-to-one lead in the series.)
So it is “go time” for the Indians, and anything less than a World Series championship will be a major disappointment, prolonging what is already baseball’s longest waiting game.
For curious baseball fans, the next-two longest championship droughts belong to the Texas Rangers and the Houston Astros. Neither team has ever won a World Series. The Rangers entered MLB in 1961 as the Washington Senators, and the Astros began MLB life in 1962 as the Houston Colt .45′s. The Rangers, who lost the 2010 World Series to the San Francisco Giants and the 2011 series to the St. Louis Cardinals, missed out on the playoffs in 2017. But the Astros, who lost the 2005 World Series to the Chicago White Sox, won 101 games en route to an AL West division championship in 2017. The Astros, featuring such stars as José Altuve, Carlos Correa, and Justin Verlander, have an excellent chance of winning the World Series and ending one-half of the long waiting game in the state of Texas. The Astros begin a playoff series against the Boston Red Sox on Thursday, October 5.