Cleveland, OH
Jason Kipnis Reminisces on the 2016 World Series and It’s Unforgettable Moments
“I thought it was one of the more likable teams…such a fun team.”
Those were the words of former Jason Kipnis before he and the rest of Cleveland’s 2016 World Series team were honored at Progressive Field on Friday night, nearly a decade removed from one of the most heartbreaking finishes in baseball history.
But for Jason Kipnis, the heartbreak everyone remembers, losing Game 7 in extra innings, feels different. Nearly every time Cleveland’s 2016 season is brought up, the conversation is somber, and rightfully so. To Kipnis, it’s far more personal.
“God, it would mean more to me [to win a World Series],” Kipnis said, following a moment to pause, breathe and think everything through.
He wishes the series had ended differently. Instead of sitting through a rain delay before returning to the field and falling in the final embers of Game 7, he could have been celebrating as a World Series champion.
His Game 7 Moment
It was the kind of game where everything that happened before it, every slump, every hot streak, every triumph and failure, suddenly no longer mattered.
For Kipnis, it birthed one of his favorite memories. One that still brings him goose bumps to speak about.
Late in the game, after reaching base on a bunt single, Kipnis understood the moment immediately. Opportunities like that did not come often, especially against a bullpen as talented as Chicago’s that had been surging the past two games.
When a wild pitch from reliever Jon Lester skipped away from David Ross, who was stationed behind home plate, Kipnis never hesitated. Racing home from second base, he slid across the plate to score alongside Carlos Santana, who was on the base paths ahead of him.
It was just the third time in World Series history that two base runners had scored on the same wild pitch.
For a brief moment, it felt like the championship drought was truly about to end.
“I see it hits the side of his [Ross’s] face and knocks him one way, ball goes back the other,” he said, reminiscing on that specific moment. “Within 0.1 seconds, I was like… ‘it’s happening,’ like I’m screaming, like it’s happening, and I just absolutely rounded it [the bases]. The adrenaline rush, I was like, this is what we needed to get back into this game. It covered the deficit a little bit, and it did. It gave us a momentum boost.
“It kind of brought us back into two-run territory and restarted the game a little bit.”
The Crushing Yet Unforgettable Finish
At the time of Kipnis’ sprint from second, Cleveland was down four runs and seemed to be out of the contest, but from that moment forward, the Indians were able to bring back balance to the contest. They went on to allow just one run, scoring five in the process, down the stretch of regulation.
Kipnis started the comeback, Rajai Davis continued it.
In the eighth inning, with the scoreline sitting 6-4, Davis stepped up to the plate with two outs and a runner on first. Kipnis, who was in the dugout at the time, still watches this moment back to this day.
“‘Ive gone back and watched that one highlight more than anything else,” he said.
Cubs reliever Aroldis Chapman rifled a 98 mph fastball at Davis, who stood in confidently, bashing the ball over the left-field wall at 101.5 mph at a 22-degree launch angle. It barely cleared the towering left field wall, sending Cleveland into screams.
“The noise, the looking around… I have chills right now,” he said, looking down at his right arm. “It was the first time I felt like, oh, that’s what pandemonium is. That’s like this is what the word is.
“Just the noise and everybody going crazy and the momentum shift and just what it meant to us right there. God, you’d run through a wall right then and there.”
Although Cleveland ultimately fell short in extra innings, the emotion from that night has never disappeared. For everyone involved, fans, front office members, players and others, it remains one of the most gut-wrenching losses in the organization’s history.
For players like Kipnis, it also stands as one of the most meaningful experiences of their lives.
Nearly a decade later, moments from that series still live on throughout the city.
Davis’ home run, a moment that likely awoke the entire city, is still recognized to this day. On Saturday, May 16, the first 15,000 fans who enter Progressive Stadium will be given a bobblehead to commemorate such a moment.
But first, a day earlier, the entire squad will be given its flowers before the Guardians’ series-opener against the Cincinnati Reds. And there, on the field, Kipnis can look around at the Cleveland faithful, many of whom had packed Progressive Field nearly 10 years ago, and think back to moments that won’t ever be forgotten.
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Cleveland, OH
Cleveland Browns News and Rumors June 7, 2026: Ohio Against the World
CLEVELAND, Ohio (TheOBR.com) – Good morning, Cleveland Browns fans!
The Cleveland Browns have a young roster, built around two consecutive power draft classes in 2025 and 2026. The young team heads towards a 2027 off-season, which is hoped to push them over the top with the final piece: quarterback. The team is also headed towards the 2029 debut of a magnificent roofed stadium in Brook Park. If everything goes right, the Browns will have a highly competitive club by that date.
After the Browns traded Myles Garrett to the Los Angeles Rams on Monday, every veteran with a pulse and an expensive contract becomes part of the next question. Who is still here? Who wants to be here? Who is quietly wondering whether the moving truck should be backed into the driveway before training camp?
Denzel Ward answered his part of that Saturday down the road from me in Eastlake, at his inaugural celebrity softball game, which is about as pleasant a setting as possible for a sunny day of casual sports.
“I definitely still want to be here,” Ward said, according to ESPN’s Daniel Oyefusi. “Myles is a good friend of mine, a great teammate, but things aren’t lost. It’s Ohio against the world. So people could doubt us, but we’re going out there still trying to play our best ball and bring wins to the city.”
“Ohio against the world”. That is more than a quote. That is a veteran planting his feet.
And, boy, do the Browns need a few of those right now. Or at least one. This one.
Ward is 29 years old, which in normal human society means you are still young enough to make bad decisions and recover by lunch. In NFL roster society, it means you are the guy younger players are watching when things get weird. And they often get weird in this town, with this franchise.
Ward is local. He is from Nordonia. He played at Ohio State. He understands what it means when a player says, “It’s Ohio against the world,” because that line is not just T-shirt copy around here. It is the regional operating system. It is what you say when everybody outside the state is laughing and pointing fingers, and everybody inside it is deciding whether to laugh, swear, or shovel the driveway again.
With Garrett gone, Ward becomes the Browns’ longest-tenured player. ESPN noted he was the No. 4 pick in the 2018 draft, which means he has lived through Hue Jackson, Freddie Kitchens, Kevin Stefanski’s 11-win debut, the pandemic season, playoff heartbreak, quarterback roulette, Deshaun Watson drama, the 2023 Flacco fever dream, the 2025 wreckage, and now the franchise trading away perhaps the best defensive player it has ever had.
Ward has also been excellent through most of it. Five Pro Bowls. A five-year, $100 million extension was signed in April 2022. Two years left on that deal, but — and this is why the trade chatter exists — no guaranteed salary remaining, per ESPN. Plus, ongoing concern about injuries, particularly concussions.
So, yes, people are going to ask whether he is next. That is not paranoia. That is simple pattern recognition.
The Browns, for their part, have pushed back. ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler and others reported after the Garrett deal that the Browns are not making Ward available. Andrew Berry said Tuesday that Ward is “a big part of the team, and we like him a lot,” adding, “He’s still playing at a really high level. That doesn’t change with this transaction.”
Then Berry, wisely, said it was appropriate for Ward to speak for himself.
Ward did.
Let’s be clear about something: a player saying he wants to stay is not a blood oath, a constitutional amendment, or even a guarantee that somebody in an NFL front office won’t get a phone call and start doing math on a legal pad.
Football is football. Contracts are contracts. Cap charts are where romance goes to be placed on injured reserve.
But right now, Ward’s words matter because of the room around him.
This is a young roster, and it is suddenly younger in the emotional sense, too. Jared Verse is talented and may become a monster in Cleveland’s defense, but he has not lived this franchise. The rookie receivers, young defenders, developing linemen, and whichever quarterback survives the summer carnival are walking into a building that just watched its most famous player get shipped west.
Somebody has to tell them what Cleveland is.
Ward can do that.
Have a good one! GO BROWNS!
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THE WATERCOOLER
THE LIFT
Positive news from the world of sports and beyond…
We pause our regularly scheduled football angst for a different sort of elder-statesman tribute: Steve Jobs, fifteen years after his final WWDC appearance.
I’m an unabashed fan of Apple products (when I can afford them), in no small part due to Jobs’ vision for the company: polished software and hardware, developed in tandem, designed to simply fit into the hectic lives of their users.
AppleInsider’s William Gallagher looks back at June 6, 2011, when Jobs — visibly diminished by illness, but still very much Jobs — walked onstage and helped introduce iCloud. The line that sticks with me is the old one: “If the hardware is the brain and the sinew of our products, the software in them is their soul.”
That was Jobs. Even when his body was failing him, he was still talking about the soul of the thing.
We toss around “visionary” too much, usually for people who invented a new way to put ads in your face while you are trying to read about the Browns. Jobs earned the word. The iMac, iPod, iPhone, iPad, and iCloud did not just make Apple richer than Croesus with better packaging. They changed the way normal people interact with technology every hour of every day.
Years after his death, Jobs is still bending the shape of our daily lives — including mine, as I sit here typing this morning’s football gibberish on a machine descended from a philosophy he helped force into the world: make powerful things feel human.
That is a heck of a legacy. He and I are/were very different people, in many ways, but he remains an inspiration, even as he pondered his own mortality.
WRAPPING UP
When not wondering whether his laptop has a soul or just a lot of browser tabs begging for mercy, Barry McBride is the Publisher and Founder of the OBR and bloviates this nonsense every morning. You can follow him on Twitter @barrymcbride or write him at barry@theobr.com if you are so compelled.
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Copyright 2026 WOIO via TheOBR.com. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
19 First Alert Weather Day: Severe storms ongoing
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – As a cold front sweeps through the area, severe thunderstorm chances will continue to be in place.
Our 19 First Alert Weather Day will continue because of this through the evening this evening.
Things will begin to clear out during the overnight, thanks to the cold front passing through this evening.
Northerly winds behind this front will drive in dry conditions, as well as pleasant conditions for the day on Sunday.
Ample sunshine and highs in the middle and upper 70s are to be expected over the area.
Southerly winds will return to the area on Monday, bringing back heat and humidity to the area.
Highs should reach into the middle and upper 80s on Monday.
Eventually, upper 80s and lower 90s will return to the region by the middle of the week.
Daily shower and thunderstorm chances will return to the area by the middle of the week as well, thanks to the heat and humidity returning.
A cold front should slide through the area Friday.
After this, 80s will return on Saturday, though more scattered showers and storms are to be expected (thanks to another system working through).
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
1 dead, 1 injured after crash involving work truck on I-71
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – One woman is dead after a crash on I-71 South in Middleburg Heights late Thursday night.
EN ESPAÑOL: Un muerto y un herido tras choque con un camión de trabajo de servicio en la I-71
According to a release from the Ohio State Highway Patrol, the crash occurred around 11:27 p.m. on I-71 South near Bagley Road.
Troopers said that a black 2019 Mercedes-Benz GLS-Class SUV driving southbound on Interstate 71 struck a 2017 International MA025 work vehicle that was blocking traffic for crews working in the road.
The driver of the Mercedes-Benz was taken to Southwest General Hospital, where she later died.
Trooper identified her as Christina M. Rivera, 31, of Cleveland.
The driver of the work truck was also taken to Southwest General Hospital for minor injuries.
The truck belonged to Oglesby Construction. 19 News reached out to them and were told safety is a big priority for them.
A preliminary investigation showed that the work truck, with flashing yellow warning lights, was blocking the far-right lane on I-71 to protect a paint crew working in the road.
According to the release, the roadway leading up to the crash was flat and straight.
There were no injuries reported to any other road workers.
Traffic on I-71 was closed for about two hours while the crash was investigated.
The crash remains under investigation.
“The Patrol would like to remind motorists when approaching any vehicle with flashing or rotating lights to move over or slow down and proceed with caution,” the release said.
ODOT has also been putting out warnings all summer as their crews work around the clock.
So far this year their crews have been involved in 58 crashes. That includes people, equipment, and vehicles.
This is a developing story. Return to 19 News for updates.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
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