Cleveland, OH
Was LeBron James’ 2014 Return Cavaliers A Top 5 Cleveland Sports Moment?
This week marked an important anniversary for Cavaliers fans, as the city of Cleveland reminisced about LeBron James‘ famous Sports Illustrated announcement that he was returning to Northeast Ohio to fulfill his promise of winning a championship.
The date was July 11, 2014 and the collective celebrating that took place around the city that day, from honking horns to teary eyes hugs are well documented. It was a celebratory day, particularly given how James had spurned the city with his infamous TV special to announce “the decisions” to join the Miami Heat four years prior.
July 11, 2014: LeBron James announces, via Sports Illustrated article, that he is “coming home” to Cleveland.
(🎥 via @SportsCenter) pic.twitter.com/68Oyzs6TWC
— This Day In Sports Clips (@TDISportsClips) July 11, 2020
That was easily one of the worst days in Cleveland sports history, as videos of fans burning LeBron jerseys went viral before going viral was even a thing. His return, on the other hand was one of the best days in Cleveland sports history, so much so that it may just be a top five such moment of the last quarter century.
Why stop at 25 years? 1999 marks the year of the Cleveland Browns return to the city, which I think easily makes this list. That moment feels like a natural starting point for what we’ll call “modern Cleveland sports history.”
So does the day LeBron James returned to Cleveland qualify? Let’s find out.
The City’s first championship in 52 years has to top the list of course. It also directly correlates with LeBron’s return as this was the pay off of the dramatic saga. A destiny fulfilled, if you will. Gave 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals against Golden State will be a moment Clevelanders will never forget. Tears were shed. Hugs were shared. Everyone who watched that game live remembers where they were when the final buzzer sounded. Probably reasonable to include parade day and the party with 1.3 million of your closest friends as part of this moment as well. The entire sequence of events tops the list.
The Cavs title may be the No. 1, but the Browns are still considered the most popular team in town. Cleveland loves its football team, so much so that they approved Art Modell’s referendum in 1995 that would have funded a renovation to the old lakefront stadium, even after he announced he was moving the team to Baltimore. Hence why he’s the most hated man in Cleveland sports history. When the team returned in 1999 though breathed life back into the city’s sports life and fans showed up in droves to support their beloved Browns.
The Browns theme continues with what is the only playoff of some Browns fans lives in 2020. It was made that much sweeter that it came at the expense of the team’s most hated rivals, the Pittsburgh Steelers. 2020 also marked the first year the Browns made a postseason appearance in 18 years, so it was a season filled with firsts for plenty of supporters.
There are a few directions you could go when it comes to the Indians Obviously the 2016 run to the World Series was memorable, but the brutally heartbreaking ending to that championship quest perhaps makes that one a little too painful to make the top five. The 22-game win streak – which was the second longest in the history of baseball – one season later became the defining moment of two memorable seasons. By the time in ended in mid-September people assumed Cleveland was going to keep the momentum going on a return trip to the Fall Classic. Unfortunately it fell short in the ALDS. Just remember the good times, like Jay Bruce walking it off in the 10th against the Royals for win No. 22.
LeBron makes a return appearance with the moment we centered this whole piece around. His return on July 11, 2014 turned into an unexpected holiday that summer. More importantly it was a day of healing after he spurned the Cavaliers for the Heat on national TV four years earlier. There are certainly other sports moments that stand out in Cleveland over the last 25 years but I think this one edges the others out. Looking back on that day this past week was fun.
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
U.S. Navy warship to be commissioned in Ohio
CLEVELAND — For the first time in U.S. history, a Navy warship will be commissioned in Ohio.
Commissioning a ship is a time-honored naval tradition that formally places a ship into active duty.
The USS Cleveland arrived in its namesake city on Saturday, coasting into Cleveland’s North Coast Yard. It’s the fourth ship in U.S. Navy history to bear the name Cleveland.
“It’s a little bit bigger than a flight deck. About 25% bigger,” said Commanding Officer Bruce Hallett. “And it’s higher up, the water makes it a little easier for pilots to be able to land on it. So they like it.”
Hallett has served with the Navy for more than 20 years.
“There are up and overs. So these flags are actually single flags. So we have quartermasters on board,” Hallett said of the colorful flags seen across the ship. “So they can use these to send signals to other ships. But in this capacity right here, they’re just purely for decoration.”
Inside the ship, the decorations pay homage to Cleveland, with two murals in the waterborne mission zone depicting key landmarks and Cleveland Browns signs in the gym.
“It’s all swagged out with all kinds of Cleveland Browns stuff new,” said Hallett. “We got the colors down there, the flags, the towels. It looks phenomenal. And the crew loves it.”
Sailors have been touring the city throughout the week, and Executive Officer Adam Cline has been coordinating community relations events with the crew. He sent two specific sailors to City Hall.
“We have two members of our crew that are from Cleveland,” Hall said. “That’s where they grew up. So it was real nice to incorporate them into that and to get a great memento from the city, a nice flag for us.”
The USS Cleveland will be commissioned Saturday and then head to its home port of Florida. When the ship eventually retires, the USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation hopes to bring it back to become a museum.
Cleveland, OH
Navy warship to be commissioned in Ohio for first time in 250 years
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – A U.S. Navy warship will be commissioned in Ohio on Saturday for the first time in 250 years.
The USS Cleveland is docked on Lake Erie ahead of the 10 a.m. ceremony.
Commander Bruce Hallett has commanded the USS Cleveland for more than two years.
“It is extremely exciting to be able to bring the USS Cleveland here to Cleveland and to be able to commission this ship here — obviously to introduce it to the city so that they can see the ship that bears their name,” Hallett said. “This has been a long time coming.”
The ship’s hallways are named after Cleveland streets, including East 9th and St. Clair Avenue.
A mural honoring the city of Cleveland is displayed on board. The Navy says it is rare to see something like this on a warship.
“Amazing mural, right? We’re so proud to have that on board,” Hallett said. “We’re just pretty much in awe when we saw all the stuff that we have in the city, and now we have it as part of the Cleveland. We love it as a crew.”
The ship’s weight room was outfitted by the Cleveland Browns with flags, towels, and mats.
“The Browns came and added their own touches to that weight room,” Hallett said. “So it’s all swagged out with all kinds of Cleveland Browns stuff now.”
The ship carries a crew of about 90, including two sailors who grew up in Cleveland.
The USS Cleveland is the final Freedom-variant littoral combat ship to be commissioned in the U.S. Navy.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
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