Chattanooga Times Free Press

Cleveland Indians to 20 in chasing a streak with a tie

- BY TOM WITHERS

CLEVELAND — As they climb toward baseball history with every win, the streaking Cleveland Indians are chasing a hallowed, 101-year-old record that includes an asterisk. A major league asterisk. The 26-game winning string by the 1916 New York Giants includes a tie. Or at least it was interrupte­d by a tie.

“I think I knew that,” Indians closer Cody Allen said.

Not everyone is aware of the peculiarit­y. And as the Indians, who Tuesday night extended the longest winning streak in 15 years to 20 straight, have moved into position to threaten New York’s revered mark, questions have arisen as to why a team that won 12 consecutiv­e games, played a tie and then ripped off 14 more wins in a row would have the record.

It’s simple. It’s complicate­d. It’s baseball.

“A tie was never an acceptable result of a baseball game,” explained Steve Hirdt, executive vice president at the Elias Sports Bureau, major league baseball’s official record keeper. “If one happened because of darkness or rain or some certain circumstan­ce, the game was played over.

“Sports fans are used to the nuance in hockey and football of the difference between a winning streak and an unbeaten streak or consecutiv­e games streak without a loss. Baseball has never had those two different records. They would replay the game until a legitimate won or lost result was achieved.”

Only four teams — the 1916 Giants, the 1935 Chicago Cubs (21), the 2002 Oakland Athletics (20) and now the 2017 Indiansn — have won 20 in a row. Cleveland joined the group Tuesday night with a 2-0 win over Detroit on a complete-game five-hitter by Cy Young Award contender Corey Kluber.

Francisco Lindor hit his 30th home run of the season in the first inning, and the Indians doubled their margin on a wild pitch in the sixth.

They have five more consecutiv­e home games to inch closer to a record — with its slight abnormalit­y — that has endured.

Perhaps because of confusion over the tie, New York’s 26-game streak has been absent from lists on some baseball websites and elsewhere. The omission could be because some databases recognize only wins and losses, and when the Giants’ season is calculated there is an interrupti­on in a streak that is widely known to hardcore baseball fans as the one to beat.

“The Giants’ 26-game winning streak has existed since the beginning of time,” Hirdt said. “I do not know why certain people are looking at the 21 now and holding that up as the record or alternatel­y trying to parse language so that they can somehow exclude the 26.

“It’s the longest winning streak, it’s the record for most consecutiv­e wins, etc., because a tie game breaks neither a winning streak or losing streak for a team because it always gets replayed unless the season ends first.”

Those streaky New York Giants, guided by irascible manager John McGraw, were in the midst of a 31-game homestand at the Polo Grounds when they won 12 straight before a Sept. 18 game against Pittsburgh — 42-year-old Honus Wagner drove in the Pirates’ run with a sacrifice fly — was called by rain after nine innings and the score tied 1-1.

The Giants came back the following day and, playing their third doublehead­er in four days, swept the Pirates. They didn’t lose again until Sept. 30, falling 8-3 to the Boston Braves.

Earlier that season, the Giants won 17 straight games — all on the road — to offset a 2-13 start. Despite its tendency to take off on a tear, New York finished 86-66 and in fourth place in an eight-team league won by the Brooklyn Robins.

“Incredible,” Hirdt said of the Giants’ streakines­s. “I guess if they weren’t streaking, they weren’t interested.”

Today, games that are tied when called are suspended and resume at that point. There are instances in which games end in ties, as happened to the Cubs last season when a late-September game with Pittsburgh ended 1-1 because the teams were not scheduled to meet again.

During their streak, the Indians have been bulldozing teams, outscoring opponents 132-32 during a remarkable run that began on Aug. 24 with a 13-6 win at Boston followed by three straight shutouts at home over Kansas City.

Since then, there’s been nothing but W’s, let alone a tie.

But tied games were fairly common a century ago, when doublehead­ers often were played in the late afternoon and there were no stadium lights.

While the Indians insist they’re not chasing history, often repeating the one-dayat-a-time cliche athletes typically fall back on to explain success, Hirdt, like many baseball fans, is eager to see if Cleveland can topple the Giants’ gigantic mark.

“This is the record that I always wanted to see challenged,” he said. “People always ask me, ‘What record would you like to see broken?’ I’ve always been a team-oriented guy ,and I tell them I would like to see a consecutiv­e winning streak.

“And here it is.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Cleveland Indians’ Francisco Lindor, left, and Austin Jackson celebrate a 2-0 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday in Cleveland. That stretched the Indians’ win streak to 20 games
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Cleveland Indians’ Francisco Lindor, left, and Austin Jackson celebrate a 2-0 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday in Cleveland. That stretched the Indians’ win streak to 20 games

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