FORT MYERS, Fla. — Isiah Kiner-Falefa saw the ball come off Daulton Varsho's bat and thought he would cross the plate from third base and get the Toronto Blue Jays their title.
''I had all the emotions of like winning the World Series,'' he said. ''And the moment the ball hit the dirt, I was just already: head down, break up the double play.''
After finalizing a $6 million, one-year contract with the Boston Red Sox on Tuesday, Kiner-Falefa spoke about the play that's been rehashed for much of the offseason.
''If I could do it over, I definitely would have got a couple of steps out,'' he said. ''But you've got to do what the organization wants and that's kind of been the thing there. With runners in that situation, they'd always keep the runner close'' to protect against getting picked off.
After Miguel Rojas hit a tying homer for the Los Angeles Dodgers in the top of the ninth inning that tied Game 7 at 4, Toronto loaded the bases with one out in the bottom half.
Kiner-Falefa took an unusually short 7.8-foot lead at the behest of third base coach Carlos Febles, the fourth-shortest primary lead by a runner off third during the World Series, according to MLB Statcast. Kiner-Falefa's 8.9-foot secondary lead when the pitcher released the ball was the eighth-shortest at third during the Series.
With the Dodgers playing the infield in, Varsho hit a 76.9 mph two-hopper to Rojas. The second baseman gloved the ball, stumbled a bit and regained his balance, then threw to catcher Will Smith, who lifted his right foot off the plate as he caught the ball and then pushed his spike back down for a forceout.
''Didn't realize that it was actually going to be that close of a play,'' Kiner-Falefa said. "If I was a step further, yeah, I would have been safe — but I wasn't."