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  Sunday, Oct. 1 1:05pm ET
Indians' season ends at 7:18 p.m.
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

CLEVELAND (AP) -- When the Indians' season officially ended at 7:18 p.m., sprinklers were soaking the grass in an empty Jacobs Field and most of Cleveland's players were already home.

Steve Reed
Cleveland pitcher Steve Reed shakes hands with Manny Ramirez after Sunday's victory.
And for the first time since 1994, that's how things will stay in Cleveland for the rest of October.

The Indians' slim playoff chances, kept alive by an afternoon 11-4 win over David Wells and Toronto, vanished early Sunday evening when both Oakland and Seattle won their games.

"I got a real empty feeling inside," said Indians manager Charlie Manuel, who watched the West Coast games in his office. "I don't even feel like I'm going home. It will probably hit me later tonight."

Cleveland is in a state of disbelief.

Not only did the Indians lose the AL Central this season for the first time, but they're not going to the playoffs despite being the AL's best team after the All-Star break and finishing with 90 wins -- three more than the stumbling World Series champion New York Yankees.

In a season where everything seemed to go against the Indians, the end was especially tough.

"It hurts a little more because how well we've been playing," Manuel said. "I think we're a playoff-caliber team. But we had our chances. We had 162 games. But it seemed like we could never get over the hump. We got ourselves in a hole and we just couldn't get out."

The Indians temporarily extended their season by at least a few hours when they pounded Wells (20-8), who lasted just 2 1/3 innings.

But they still needed either the Mariners or the Athletics to lose on Sunday, and for a while it looked like both might go down.

"I was pulling awfully hard," Manuel said. "But pulling awfully hard doesn't get it done."

Manny Ramirez homered in perhaps his final at-bat for the Indians and Jim Thome, Sandy Alomar and Kenny Lofton added homers for Cleveland, which went 46-30 after the break.

A few of the Indians players stayed around to watch the late games, cheering anything positive done by the Texas Rangers or Anaheim Angels.

When the Angels took an early 2-0 lead, some of the Indians seated in front of the big-screen TV cheered. Others couldn't bear to watch.

"This is nerve-wracking," Omar Vizquel said. "It's probably tougher to watch this game on TV than to be in any game I've ever played."

The Indians had made travel arrangements for four cities, and a charter plane, tentatively headed to Seattle at 10 p.m. EDT, was waiting for them had the Mariners lost and forced a playoff.

But just like their season, the Indians never got off the ground.

"Either way, I'm still proud of this team," Travis Fryman said. "You can use any adjective you want to describe character and they would apply to this team. We beat the best teams and the best pitchers we had to, and as a team, that's all you can do."

And now that the offseason has started, the Indians have some thought decisions to make.

Ramirez is eligible to become a free agent, and David Segui, Sandy Alomar and Kenny Lofton are all in the final year of their contracts.

Ramirez's situation is the most troublesome. He and his agent have already turned down a $75 million, five-year deal from the club. Indians owner Larry Dolan has promised he'll make a final offer to Ramirez, who seems to drive up his price with every at-bat.

In the seventh, with one fan holding a sign saying, "Uncanny Manny" and more than 42,000 chanting "Man-ny, Man-ny", Ramirez connected for his 38th homer -- a 452-foot shot that rattled through the trees in a picnic area beyond center field.

"I was just lucky," said Ramirez as he left Jacobs Field for maybe the last time on a golf cart. "So long."

As Ramirez came out for a curtain call, Dolan smiled and leaned back in the chair in his luxury suite.

"That was great theater," Dolan said.

Alex Gonzalez and Tony Batista homered for the Blue Jays (83-79), who dropped their final four games.

Thome's three-run homer, his 37th, chased Wells in the third inning. The line drive into Toronto's right-field bullpen gave the Indians a 7-2 lead and gave Cleveland fans reason to believe that there might be some healing at the end of this injury-marred season after all.

But even the final out of the season had fans worried when Fryman collided with reliever Ricardo Rincon. Fryman remained on the ground for several moments after getting his wind knocked out.

"I was thinking, 'Oh, God, I thought I was going to make it through the season without getting hurt,"' Fryman said.

Wells came in with a 17-3 career mark against Cleveland, going 4-0 against them in the postseason and beating them twice this year. But the left-hander lost to Cleveland for the first time since June 22, 1997, and probably lost any chance of overtaking Boston's Pedro Martinez in the Cy Young balloting.

"He wasn't really feeling good, he wasn't on top of his game," said manager Jim Fregosi. "But he went out and gave it all he had. He's got a cold and a little bit of the gout."

Steve Woodard (3-3), who beat Martinez on Sept. 20 in one of many must-win games the Indians played down the stretch, gave up a two-run homer to Gonzalez in the first before retiring 17 in a row.

Woodard's performance -- four hits in 5 2/3 innings -- allowed Manuel to save ace Bartolo Colon and Dave Burba for a possible playoff game.

In the final 13 days of the season, the Indians beat Wells, Martinez and Roger Clemens -- three pitchers who have dominated them.

"We did everything we could, beat the best teams and beat the best pitchers," Fryman. "It's not in our hands any longer."

Game notes
There were signs all over the ballpark addressed toward Dolan on Ramirez's future. Among them: "My Granny Said Pay Manny" and "Manny Please Stay, Dolan Please Pay." ... Cleveland was an AL-best 46-30 in the second half. ... Roberto Alomar's first-inning single extended his hitting streak to 18 games. ... Wells missed a chance to tie the Blue Jays' club record for wins in a season. Jack Morris and Roger Clemens each won 21 games for Toronto. ... Cleveland led the majors in attendance for the first time since 1948. And their 3,456,278 led the AL for the second straight year.

 


ALSO SEE
Baseball Scoreboard

Toronto Clubhouse

Cleveland Clubhouse


Stark: One game short

Parting shot? Indians hope Ramirez homer isn't


RECAPS
Cleveland 11
Toronto 4

Detroit 12
Minnesota 11

Tampa Bay 3
Boston 2

Baltimore 7
NY Yankees 3

Kansas City 6
Chi. White Sox 2

Seattle 5
Anaheim 2

Oakland 3
Texas 0

Colorado 10
Atlanta 5

NY Mets 3
Montreal 2

St. Louis 6
Cincinnati 2

Florida 7
Philadelphia 5

Chicago Cubs 10
Pittsburgh 9

San Diego 4
Los Angeles 0

San Francisco 11
Arizona 4

Houston 6
Milwaukee 1

AUDIO/VIDEO
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 Charlie Manuel felt empty after learning the Indians were eliminated from the playoffs.
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 Steve Woodard pitched well in a must win game for the Indians.
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 Bob Wickman talks about the fate of Indians in the post-season.
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 Sandy Alomar Jr has his bags packed and ready for the post-season.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6

 Jim Thome hopes that the Indians have a chance be in the playoffs this season.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6