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Cleveland Guardians have given themselves a legit chance to end 76-year World Series title drought

It's been 76 years since Cleveland has won a World Series championship. The Guards weren't supposed to be here, but now they have a legitimate shot to win it all.
Credit: Nick Cammett/AP
The Guardians, including Austin Hedges, center, celebrate after their 10-inning win over the Twins to clinch a playoff berth on Sept. 19, 2024.

CLEVELAND — Soaked to the skin from being sprayed with champagne and beer, manager Stephen Vogt stood in the middle of the clubhouse and triumphantly lifted a fake jeweled championship belt over his head like a conquering boxer.

Cleveland will fight for a real one in October.

Led by their 39-year-old rookie manager, who has pushed all the right buttons for months, and a devastating bullpen, the Guardians clinched one of the AL's six playoff spots on Thursday with a 3-2 win over the Minnesota Twins — Cleveland's major league-leading 42nd comeback.

A most unexpected season will include a postseason.

One of baseball's youngest teams can end decades of playoff heartbreak for a franchise enduring baseball's longest active World Series title drought.

"This is really special," said Vogt, a former All-Star catcher who had zero managing experience when the Guardians surprisingly hired him in November. "The goal is to get in and then from here we keep pushing. You get in, you have a chance."

The Guardians are the second AL team to qualify for the 2024 postseason, following only the New York Yankees, who clinched a spot on Wednesday and will return to the playoffs after a one-year absence — an eternity for their spoiled fanbase.

New York was slated to contend. Cleveland, not so much.

But in their first season under Vogt, who was on his farm in Washington shoveling cow manure when the team's front office called to offer him the job, the Guardians have been one of baseball's best stories and biggest surprises.

They weren't expected to do much coming off a disappointing 76-win season, which ended with beloved manager Terry Francona's retirement. The feeling heading into this year was the road back to title contention could be a long one.

But the Guardians have been atop the no-longer-laughable AL Central since mid-April, and in a season in which there doesn't appear to be any clear-cut powerhouse favorite, they'll enter the playoffs with a legitimate shot to win their first title since 1948 — when they were known as the Indians.

Vogt wasn't really sure what kind of team he had during spring training in Arizona. But a 7-2 trip through Oakland, Seattle and Minnesota to open the season convinced him his young group could mature into something more.

"I didn't know what guys were capable of what," he said. "And until you see them play, you really don't know. But if you come to spring training and you're not expecting to win the World Series, don't come.

"Right away on that first road trip, we saw something special that this team might be able to get it done. Now we're in it. We have an opportunity."

Lacking big names and big bats in the lineup, Cleveland has found success by playing with an aggressive attitude. They call it "Guards ball," and it places a premium on patient at-bats, knocking the opponent's starter out as early as possible, taking the extra base and playing solid defense.

Everyone contributes, and Vogt has taken pride in using his entire roster.

It doesn't hurt that he's been able to lean on baseball's nastiest bullpen, anchored by All-Star closer Emmanuel Clase, who hasn't blown a save since May and could become the league's first reliever to win the Cy Young in 32 years.

The Guardians don't quit.

Down two runs in the 10th on Wednesday night, they stormed back with three to shock the Twins. And after the bullpen held Minnesota hitless for 5 2/3 innings Thursday, they walked off their rivals again to improve to 48-28 at home.

"That's us," said Andrés Giménez, who drove in José Ramírez from second base in the 10th. "That's the Cleveland Guardians."

A comeback earlier this week left Vogt in tears during his postgame news conference.

"I love these guys," he said.

The feeling is mutual.

Backup catcher and de facto team spokesman Austin Hedges, who won a World Series title with Texas last year, re-signed as a free agent with Cleveland before this season. He credits Vogt with bringing the Guardians closer and getting the most from them.

"One of the most special humans I've ever met," Hedges said. "Not just as a manager, as a man. That guy, he's a leader of men. We had one of the greatest managers in the history of baseball for a long time, and I loved Terry Francona with all my heart.

"This is probably the best year of managing I've ever seen in my life."

Vogt will enter uncharted waters in a few weeks, leading the Guardians into the month when every pitch, every swing, every moment is amplified.

Hedges has been there before. Before winning it all with the Rangers, he was released by the Guardians following the 2022 season, which ended with them blowing a 2-1 lead in the Division Series against the Yankees.

He came back to Cleveland for another crack.

"I feel like we had unfinished business in '22," he said. "We feel like we really had a really good shot to go all the way. It's tough to lose a heartbreaker in the postseason and being away last year, all I could think about was coming back with my guys here.

"We all want the exact same thing."

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