It should have been a 1-2-3 double play. That's what a 27-foot dribbler in front of home plate with the bases loaded is supposed to turn into.
In the 11th inning Saturday, it was the defining moment of the Twins' wacky 2-1 walk-off victory over the Yankees.
Trevor Plouffe took a mighty swing at Matt Thornton's fastball but connected only enough to send it meekly toward the mound. Thornton gathered the ball and flipped to Francisco Cervelli at home to force Chris Colabello. Cervelli then turned to throw to first to get Plouffe. That should have ended the inning.
Instead, Cervelli fired the ball high and well wide of first base and down the foul line. Josh Willingham came around to score the winning run as the Twins spilled out of the dugout to celebrate their fifth walk-off victory of the season. It was also their second walk-off victory on an opposing pitcher's error; they beat Texas 4-3 on May 27 when Joakim Soria couldn't cleanly field Danny Santana's two-out, bases-loaded dribbler.
"I've seen crazy plays to end games," Colabello said. "Not exactly that one. That's why you play the game hard, run balls out. You never know what happens."
Colabello batted for Chris Parmelee to start the 11th. He is not one of those players who goes into the cages during games and takes swings to try to stay sharp. He likes to stay loose and relaxed because, "If you're needed to pinch hit late it's usually in a big situation," he said.
Colabello looked comfortable as he stroked an opposite-field double that might have been 6 inches from clearing the right field wall. He advanced to third on Kendrys Morales' grounder, forcing the Yankees to intentionally walk Willingham, who hit a tying homer in the seventh. That set up a lefty-vs.-lefty matchup of Thornton and Oswaldo Arcia, but the first pitch nailed Arcia in the back, loading the bases.
Then came Plouffe's hack against Thornton's 94-miles-per-hour fastball.