The score was 215-198, and Anders Daniel was trying to steal second base.
A pitcher and a teammate ran to stop him, the three meeting in a collision of long limbs, baseball caps and athletic shoes.
"My foot blocked it," pitcher Dominic Reed, 14, said good-naturedly as he picked himself up from the ground.
The call was close, but Daniel was safe.
As the game continued in the back yard of the Prior Lake home of the Sticha family Sunday afternoon, it was difficult to tell just from watching that the group of boys and close friends had kept this single game of Wiffle ball going for 24 hours straight.
And by 9 p.m., the boys had played for 30 hours, their goal to get into the Guinness World Records for the longest Wiffle ball game.
"We wanted to show that we liked Wiffle ball," said Chris Sticha, 14, one of the masterminds behind the event. "We've always wanted to have a record in the Guinness book, so we thought it was the perfect idea."
Chris, his brother, Tommy, 13, and about 70 friends started playing at 3 p.m. Saturday. The group, mostly made up of 13- and 14-year old boys, played in two-hour shifts.