Rodriguez, Lookouts walk off as co-champs
With his team trailing, 2-1, in the sixth inning, Chattanooga's Jonathan Rodriguez struck out swinging against reliever Edwin Fierro. As he walked toward first base to get ready for the top of the seventh, he swears he saw into the future."After that strikeout, as I was getting to first base,
With his team trailing, 2-1, in the sixth inning, Chattanooga's Jonathan Rodriguez struck out swinging against reliever
"After that strikeout, as I was getting to first base, I had a vision," Rodriguez said. "I hit a walk-off and as I was rounding third base coming home, I pointed across my chest to where it says 'Chattanooga' on our jerseys."
With a runner on first and nobody out in the ninth, the dream came true as Rodriguez drilled a two-run homer to left field, giving Chattanooga the Southern League co-championship with a 3-2 win over Montgomery at AT&T Park. The Lookouts took the semifinal series, 3-2, and -- with the Finals canceled due to Hurricane Irma -- shared the title with the Pensacola Blue Wahoos.
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"He's been with us pretty much all year, right in the middle of the lineup," Lookouts manager Jake Mauer said. "He was outstanding the whole year in terms of at-bats, leadership and everything that he brings to the team. For him to come up and deliver in that spot is pretty special."
Four pitches into the game, the Lookouts fell behind as Rays No. 18 prospect
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With their starter lifted, it was up to Chattanooga's bullpen to keep the team within striking distance.
"We matched them zero for zero for pretty much the whole series," Mauer said. "It was a really well-pitched series. It was just nice that we were able to play clean defense to keep us in the game."
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"I knew it was gone right when I touched it," the 2009 17th-round Draft pick said. "It was up in the zone and it got the sweet spot. I knew it was gone right away."
"It was hit pretty good," Mauer added. "It wasn't one of those where you're hoping it would go over the fence, it was a no-doubter and our dugout erupted."
Blue Wahoos win share of Southern League Championship
As he rounded the bases, Rodriguez, a veteran of 913 Minor League games, had another vision -- this one looking back, rather than forward.
"It was surreal. I was thinking about all of my years in the Minor Leagues and what it took to get me to this point," the 28-year-old first baseman said. "I thought about all the grinding and the sacrifices. I thought about my family, my parents back home in Puerto Rico and how lucky we were with the hurricane. And I thought about my wife and how I hoped they were all there with me in that moment."
Michael Leboff is a contributor to MiLB.com.