3240
by J.R.
In celebration of Groundhog Day, top 5 Cleveland sports moments I would like to relive
By Glenn Moore, cleveland.com
on February 02, 2013 at 8:00 AM, updated February 02, 2013 at 9:16 AM Print
As Cleveland sports fans, we have all endured some great and not so great moments in the past 30 years.
We have seen sold-out stadiums and arenas. NBA Finals and World Series games. Athletes at the top of their game. And, of course, being so close to winning a championship.
In celebration of Groundhog Day, I'm posting my top 5 Cleveland sports moments that I would like to relive. This list contains moments in my lifetime, which is the past 30 years. Feel free to list your own in the comments section or tweet them to me @GlennMooreCLE.
1. Cleveland Indians win 1995 American League Central Division crown (September 8, 1995)
It had been 41 years since the Indians made the playoffs. Season after season of poor baseball came to an end on a night in September against the Baltimore Orioles at Jacobs Field.
With a 22 1/2-game lead over the Kansas City Royals in the AL Central, the Indians played their 123rd game with a chance to clinch the division.
As Jim Thome caught the final out in foul ground, years of frustration and despair went away as the Tribe and their fans celebrated. Cleveland was finally put back on the baseball map.
I'll never forget watching the Division Championship flag making its way up to the top of the scoreboard as players helped pull the rope.
I'll also always remember Charles Nagy and other players crying as they remembered Steve Olin and Tim Crews, who tragically were killed in 1993 during a boating accident at spring training.
"The Dance" by Garth Brooks played during the celebration. Then Indians manager Mike Hargrove had phoned the scoreboard room before the game, requesting that it be played when they clinched.
This day marked the beginning of what would be a dominant stretch of Indians baseball in the American League.
The Indians would go on to win 100 games in a 144 game season and make it all the way to the World Series.
Though they never won the World Series, this date is forever etched in my mind.
2. Cleveland Cavaliers win NBA Draft Lottery in 2003 to draft LeBron James (May 22, 2003)
LeBron James. Say the name around Cleveland and you most likely will get a certain reaction that forces you not to say it again.
But lets go back. Before "The Decision." Before Miami. Before the empty promises.
May 22, 2003. The day the Cleveland Cavaliers won the NBA Draft Lottery, which paved their way to drafting LeBron.
Cavaliers TV announcer Austin Carr was so excited about having the first selection in the NBA draft, that he started crying.
The city knew their basketball luck was going to change with LeBron coming to the Cavs. And for the next seven years, the Cavaliers were a team to be taken seriously.
"I'm very excited for the fans of Cleveland," said then Cavaliers owner Gordon Gund, who smiled broadly after NBA deputy commissioner Russ Granik announced that the Cavs had won the James sweepstakes.
"This is a great day for them and for all of that market, for Akron, for Cleveland, all of northeastern Ohio. I'm tremendously excited about it. It's a big day in Cleveland sports."
"I'm staying in Cleveland, and I'm real excited," James said at a news conference.
It was the first time since 1990 that the team with the worst record - in this case a tie for the worst record - won the lottery.
And also the first time the Cleveland had the first pick in the draft since 1986, when it took Brad Daugherty.
3. "Run, William, Run" - Cleveland Browns clinch playoff spot with win over Atlanta Falcons (December 29, 2002)
Jim Donovan's voice echoes in my head as Cleveland Browns running back William Green races down the sideline towards the endzone.
The 64-yard touchdown run gave the Browns an eight-point lead with 3:53 left in the ballgame. More importantly, the run helped the Browns make the playoffs for the first and only time since coming back in 1999.
But while the run is remembered most, the goaline stand made by the Browns defense to end the game is what stands out to me.
Linebacker Earl Holmes made a couple key stops on 3rd and 4th down and stop the Falcons from tying to tie the game. Players celebrated after Warrick Dunn was stopped just short of the goal.
Players stormed the field and rejoiced at midfield on the Browns logo and head coach Butch Davis yelled to his players to "thank the fans".
It would be one of the few bright spots in the coming years, but one that will stay with me forever.
4. Sandy Alomar's home run in the 1997 All-Star Game (July 8, 1997)
"Hometown hero. Goodbye!"
Nobody could have written a better script.
The Indians, hosting their first All-Star game since 1981, were at the top of the baseball world.
Best record in baseball in 1995 and a trip to the World Series, the Indians were in the middle of their AL dominance run.
And having Sandy Alomar hit the home run that would give the American League the lead for good was icing on the cake.
But there were a couple other story lines in this game. Kenny Lofton made his return to Jacobs Field as a member of the National League All-Star team in a Atlanta Braves uniform. He received one of the loudest ovations from the Cleveland crowd.
Lofton was injured and did not play in the game.
Also in the pregame ceremonies, Albert Belle, who was representing the Chicago White Sox, was booed for leaving the Indians as a free agent the previous winter.
What made the home run even more special was Sandy's brother, Roberto, was in the dugout as a member of the American League.
The Indians would go on to the World Series in the fall of 1997, losing to the Florida Marlins in seven games.
5. LeBron's performance against Detroit Pistons in Game 5 of 2007 Eastern Conference Finals (May 31, 2007)
LeBron James played one of the best games in NBA history against the Detroit Pistons in May of 2007. All while having 'Cleveland' across his chest.
48 points. Nine rebounds. Seven assists. Scoring the final 25 points and 29 of his team's final 30 in a 109-107 double overtime win in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals.
The win moved the Cavaliers one-game closer to their first NBA Finals berth, which they would get one-game later in Cleveland.
The 22-year-old star was 18-of-33 from the field and was the only Cavs player to make a field goal in the last 17:48 and the only one to score in the final 12:49.
"I was able to will my team to victory," James said. "This is definitely a big win, one of the biggest wins in Cavaliers' franchise history. For me and my teammates, it's definitely the biggest win."
James could not be stopped. He drove to the basket time and time again and the Pistons had no answer.
The Cavaliers would go on to the NBA Finals, only to get swept by the San Antonio Spurs. Cavs fans know the rest of the story.