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Cleveland Guardians-Detroit Tigers Face Off In Critical Game 3
Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Here we go again. One game to decide it all. The Detroit Tigers are staring down the barrel of a winner-take-all Game 3 against the Cleveland Guardians, and it feels like we’ve seen this movie before. After a masterful performance by Tarik Skubal in Game 1, the Tigers’ bats decided to take a nap in Game 2, leaving a comical 15 runners stranded on base. Fifteen! You could start a conga line with that many runners.

The Tigers went an ice-cold 1-for-15 with runners in scoring position. Let that sink in. One hit. Javier Báez, of all people, was the lone hero. It’s a miracle the game was even tied 1-1 heading into the eighth. But then, as it often does when you play with fire, the Tigers got torched. The Guardians erupted for five runs, and just like that, the series was tied.

After the game, Manager A.J. Hinch didn’t exactly need a detective to solve the mystery of the loss. “We left 15 guys on base,” he said. Who wins Game 3?

Can the Guardians Capitalize On Tigers’ Woes?

Now, all eyes turn to Thursday. The season hangs in the balance, and Detroit is handing the ball to its most seasoned October warrior, Jack Flaherty. This will be his 10th career playoff start, his third in a do-or-die game. The man has seen it all. He even has a World Series ring from his brief fling with the Dodgers last year, though he claims it’s just collecting dust in a drawer. Cute.

Flaherty’s focus is squarely on the present, on trying to drag this offensively challenged team into the ALDS against the Seattle Mariners. “We may not have gotten here the way we wanted,” he said, “but…it doesn’t matter once we get here.” Spoken like a true veteran who knows October baseball is a different beast.

Flaherty vs. The Guardians: A Season On the Line

Cleveland is countering with Slade Cecconi, who’s had a respectable season. But the real matchup isn’t just pitcher vs. pitcher; it’s Flaherty’s experience against the Tigers’ collective anxiety at the plate. Can Detroit finally get a clutch hit? Or will they leave another small village on the basepaths and head into a long, cold winter, wondering what could have been?

One thing is certain: if Detroit does not figure out how to hit with runners on base, all the postseason experience in the world won’t save them. Cleveland smelled blood in the water in Game 2. On Thursday, they will be looking to finish the job. For Detroit, it’s simple: hit, or go home. No pressure, guys.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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