Kawhi Leonard's Game 7 buzzer-beater captured the exact magic of an MLB walk-off
This is a baseball website, but some sports moments are universally appealing by their nature. The essence of the sports "walk-off" is applicable across all major sports, and Sunday night brought with it the latest example in Game 7 of the 76ers-Raptors Eastern Conference Semifinals.
The Raptors won on a last-second shot from Kawhi Leonard, and it was one of the most unbelievable sequences you will ever see on a basketball court:
The emotion. The stress. The release. The nearly four seconds the basketball bounces perilously on the rim, thousands at the arena (and countless others watching at home) waiting, anticipating, hoping.
I watched the replay over and over after the initial shock wore off. Did that happen? Is this reality? This sort of reaction applies to baseball, naturally, all the time. If a guy throws an unexpected no-hitter, for example. Or, in keeping the theme with this piece, a player hits a walk-off homer under incredible circumstances.
The seconds that felt like minutes that Leonard's shot sat in limbo isn't unlike the span of time after a hitter makes contact on what could be a walk-off homer. Is it gone? Will it be caught at the warning track? It's an anxious feeling that either leads to euphoria or heartbreak.
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Nothing packs in the drama quite like the playoffs, which was what elevated Leonard's shot to the upper echelon of sports drama, earning energized reactions from Blue Jays right-hander Marcus Stroman and longtime Blue Jay Kevin Pillar.
The walk-off moment is among the most exciting in baseball -- perhaps the most exciting, objectively, which was provided to us in the most stressful circumstances imaginable two Octobers ago:
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As fans, we root for our favorite team to persevere, to dispatch the opponent handily and without too much drama -- or, if the situation requires it, to pull off the incredible, as the Astros did in Game 5 of the 2017 World Series, as seen above.
On the flip side, there's nothing worse as a fan (or player, I imagine) than being on the wrong end of a walk-off. All the effort, all the sweat, all the mental fortitude, just taken away in an instant, the game relegated to what if? status.
It's a wistful feeling, for sure, but it's at the heart of the competitive nature of sport to begin with. Most of us who have come to make these athletic contests a part of our lives know what we're getting into ... and those who don't surely will, once their fandom increases and the obsession grows.
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For those on the right side of Leonard's shot on Sunday night, or any of the countless amazing baseball moments of a similar nature and with similarly high stakes, it was an unforgettable moment.
For those on the wrong side, it was also an unforgettable moment -- in a way that will inspire nightmares and sore memories for years to come.
But objectively, it was about as unforgettable a sports moment as they come, and that's precisely why the buzzer-beater/walk-off is such a great moment, whenever it happens.
It's why we watch, after all. Maybe next time it'll be my team's favorite player crushing a walk-off homer ...