What a finish! Rays, Cards clinch playoff spots: Fans excited about the rattling stops around the majors Wednesday night with a demonstration by striking Tampa Bay Rays with the collapse of the Boston Red Sox Rays for their place in the American League wild card. Throw in a great victory by Chris Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League, where the near absence of Chipper Jones and the Atlanta Braves, and was more than any fan could ask for. It is not even October yet. Minute by minute, inning by inning, the races took shape, only to then suddenly fall apart. But when Tampa Bay's Evan Longoria hit his second home run of the game in the 12th inning to lift the Rays over the Yankees 8-7, everything was all set. "One of the greatest days in baseball history," the Yankees' Mark Teixeira said. And imagine this: Teixeira's team lost. The final day of the regular season had already shaped up as a wild one, with the playoff picture still a blur. Boston and Tampa Bay tied for the AL wild-card spot, Atlanta and St. Louis even for the NL wild-card slot, not a single postseason pairing set. Turned out, it took at least three TVs to watch what followed. "I think it's really good for baseball," Red Sox manager Terry Francona said, much earlier. "Not so good for my stomach." Tampa Bay at Texas on Friday in Game 1, Detroit visiting the Yankees that night in the opener of their AL playoff series, "I can barely breathe, to be honest with you, it doesn't seem real," Longoria said. St. Louis begins it best-of-five matchup at Philadelphia on Saturday, with Arizona at Milwaukee opening the same day. "Even though we were in the playoffs, it's been exciting still just knowing you're making it and you still had to play for home field," Brewers ace Zack Greinke said. "It was good." So, no one-game tiebreakers needed. Pretty nifty way to wrap up things, too, under the current postseason format, Next year, it's expected that each league will produce a pair of wild-card teams. The Red Sox will have all winter to lament how they lost. Boston held a nine-game lead over Tampa Bay on the morning of Sept. 4, but finished 7-20. The Red Sox became the first team to miss the postseason after holding that large of a lead entering September. Closer Jonathan Papelbon took a 3-2 lead into the ninth at Camden Yards and struck out the first two batters and was later one strike away for ending it. But Chris Davis and Nolan Reimold followed doubles that tied it and Robert Andino hit a single that sliding left fielder Carl Crawford couldn't quite glove to win it for the Orioles 4-3. The ball that escaped Crawford was much harder to field than the one that rolled under Bill Buckner's glove so many years earlier, but no doubt Red Sox fans will cringe at the memory of both. The Rays, meanwhile, rallied from a 7-0 deficit, tying the Yankees on pinch-hitter Dan Johnson's solo homer with two outs in the ninth inning. A roar erupted at Tropicana Field when the Boston loss was posted on the scoreboard. Four minutes later, Longoria homered barely inside the left-field foul pole. The Cardinals, who trailed the Braves by 10 1 / 2 games before play on Aug. 26, it was easy for him to beat Carpenter to win 8-0 in Houston. An hour later became St. Louis in the playoffs when the Braves blew it. Philadelphia chopped Craig Kimbrell closer to a tying run in the ninth and won 4-3 in 13th at Turner Field. "It's hard," Braves catcher Brian McCann said. "This is one of the worst feelings I ever had, coming out of a baseball field,What a finish! Rays, Cards clinch playoff spots:
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