Point: Theres no reason we should ever see a walk-off triple.If the batter can reach third safely, it means the runner ahead of him -- the one representing the game-ending run -- already has left third base, presumably scored and ended the game. The batters run is meaningless. There is no reward for stretching a double into a triple when the game is over.Meanwhile, the risk is minimal but existent: The batter might be thrown out at third base before the winning run scores. He might stumble, trip or get lost. Or the lead runner, the one who represents the game-ending run ahead of him, might be forced to retreat to third base, either by stumbling, tripping, getting lost or simply reassessing his plan. In that event, the batter now will have prohibited him from returning to safety.In stretching a double into a pointless triple, the batter has simultaneously opened up a second front by which his team can be attacked and removed the lead runners lone option for retreat. It is like trying to block a buzzer-beating 3-pointer when youre up by four. It is like a victorious quarterback trying to get yardage when taking a knee will expire the clock. It is an absurd act to go to third base in a walk-off situation.Counterpoint: But they happen anyway. What gives?There were four walk-off triples in 2016. One of the four was a clear exception to our point: Josh Harrison hit a triple and advanced home with the winning run on a throwing error. This wasnt a walk-off triple, but a walk-off triple plus a one-base error. It is exempt. As to why the other three happened, we are prepared to deliver answers. Two answers apiece, in fact.1. Jay Bruce hits a walk-off triple for the Reds, April 10.0:06: The ball lands down the right-field line. The Pirates right fielder, Gregory Polanco, is roughly 1 million miles from it.0:08: [Brandon] Phillips on his way to third! Bruce, rounding first, glances over to see Phillips progress, about 120 feet ahead of Bruce. Bruce then looks back to right field, sees the location of the ball and Polanco, and keeps running. As Phillips gets to within 30 or so feet of scoring, Bruce rounds second and heads to third.0:14: Phillips touches home plate with the winning run. The throw home is about 40 feet away and bounces in mockingly. Catcher Chris Stewart?flips the incoming ball away in disgust.0:16 or so: Bruce touches third base, then he starts running back toward second to be swallowed up by teammates.Explanation 1: One of my favorite things about old-timey baseball -- real old-timey, back in the 1800s -- is that they played the bottom of the ninth inning no matter what. It wasnt how it is now, where the home team only bats if it needs to. What were those unnecessary bottom halves like, I often wonder. Was everybody still trying? Did the fans stick around to see it? Did the coachs son get to pitch? We never play that superfluous half-inning anymore because we all pretty much consider the point of baseball to be winning the game. Baseball exists to deliver a definitive victory or defeat.It is a reflection of a winner-take-all culture: Once youve won, youve already taken all, and once youve lost, there is nothing left to take, so we all go home. But when you play out the bottom of the ninth after the game has been decided, youre saying something matters about baseball even when a win is not on the line. Youre saying there is beauty and meaning inherent in baseball play, and that it means more than an opportunity to declare somebody the winner. You play, and you play hard, because baseball played hard, by its very nature, no matter the stakes, adds to the gross product of the sport.Jay Bruce went to third because a baseball player playing hard goes to third. Not all artists paint for fame and commissions. Some paint to make something beautiful.Explanation 2: Phillips was safe by plenty, but there was, at least, a nominal play at the plate. There was only one out. If Phillips had been thrown out, Bruce would have represented the winning run, and there would have been only two men out. By going to third, Bruce increased his teams chances of winning from 61 percent to 68 percent in the rare case where Phillips gets thrown out. Bruce determined this conditional advantage to be greater than the likelihood of his disrupting Phillips attempts at scoring on his own. He was still playing to win.2. Stephen Drew hits a walk-off triple for the Nationals, July 23.0:08: The ball lands at the wall in right-center field. There is one out.0:10: Padres center fielder Travis Jankowski picks it up and fires it toward his cutoff man, Ryan Schimpf.0:11: You check: Jankowski and Schimpf are definitely real people.0:12: Schimpf turns around and readies to throw. Drew is just circling second base; hell be out by forever if Schimpf throws to third, though Anthony Rendon would score the winning run. Wil Myers, the second cutoff man, stationed between Schimpf and home plate, points toward third.0:13: Schimpf throws toward home instead. On-deck hitter Ben Revere, anticipating the winning run scoring, is already in the field of play, ready to mob Stephen Drew.0:14: Rendon scores, ending the game. Drew, roughly 35 feet from third base, still is pumping his arms and running hard.Explanation 3: It is, basically, irrational to go to third base if youre Drew. What Drew is banking on, though, is that the other team is as capable of acting irrationally as he might be, and that potential consequences of his irrational choice are far less costly than the potential consequences of the Padres irrational choice would be gainsome.Here, we see it almost happen: Myers, taking the role of field captain, points to third base and directs Schimpf to throw it there. This would be hilarious, of course. Drew as a runner doesnt matter (the premise of this inquiry!), and there is almost no chance that theyll tag him out before Rendon crosses home plate and ends the game. And yet: Theres Myers, worried about the meaningless trail runner, instead of the winning run, and trying to make his teammate do something ridiculous.Players know that they are fallible and they make mental errors. They know, just as confidently, that their opponents are fallible and will make mental errors. Drew, in this instance, gives the Padres the opportunity to make a mental error. He was doing game theory.Explanation 4: A few years ago, I wrote about Roy Halladays failure to complete a single game in 2012. Before that, Halladays complete games were a singular achievement: He had more complete games over the course of a decade than entire franchises. He had led the league in complete games in each of the previous five seasons, and he had bold ink in that category in seven of the previous nine seasons. He had eight complete games the season before. Then, suddenly, he had none. I argued at the time that Halladays lack of complete games was more than an odd blip, or even a typical decline, but rather the canary in the coal mine of his career. It represented a cliff that he had fallen off; he was a man suddenly old. The next year, Halladay had a 6.82 ERA and never pitched again.Stephen Drew was very good at many things in his long career, but he was especially notable for hitting triples. He wasnt that fast, but he had a knack for finding gaps, corners and 12-plus seconds for uninterrupted running. From 2008 to 2010, he led all major leaguers with 35 triples, hitting 11 or more in each of the three seasons. Drew is old now, and hes not very good at many things. This is apparent in all of his stats, and in the contracts he gets, and in the role he plays (he was pinch-hitting in this game), but perhaps nothing conveys his age and his decline like his triples totals:2013: 8 2014: 1 2015: 1Before this swing in this game, he had no triples in 2016. When the day comes that Stephen Drew cant hit even one triple, he might cease to be Stephen Drew. He is an exposed popsicle that, in the five minutes you ignore it, has turned into a stick. That triple wasnt just a triple but an entire career fighting for one more spring training invite. So he went for it. He just ... ran.And he made it. Notably, if you search for walk-off triples on MLB.coms highlights, this play is not returned.But thankfully -- for Drew -- baseballs official records are not kept in highlight-video metadata. Baseballs Rule 9.06 (f) guarantees his extra base went into the record books:The official scorer shall credit the batter with a base touched in the natural course of play, even if the winning run has scored moments before on the same play. For example, the score is tied in the bottom of the ninth inning with a runner on second base and the batter hits a ball to the outfield that falls for a base hit. The runner scores after the batter has touched first base and continued on to second base but shortly before the batter-runner reaches second base. If the batter-runner reaches second base, the official scorer shall credit the batter with a two-base hit.If he had been even one step past second base when Rendon crossed home plate and ended the game, he would have been allowed to complete the play, and the triple would have counted. He rounded second and saw nothing in his way. In a sense, Drew found the worlds emptiest highway, and he rode it. All night long.3. Derek Dietrich hits a walk-off triple for the Marlins, July 31.0:09: The ball lands in or around the glove of Cardinals center fielder Tommy Pham.0:10: Now its loose, rolling all the way to the left-field wall. Nobody is close to the ball. This play is over the second it gets past Pham.0:14: Adeiny Hechavarria, representing the winning run, lopes casually down the third-base line. He will score easily. Its not clear a Cardinal will ever even pick up the ball.0:19: Dietrich is mobbed by his teammates in foul territory past the third-base bag. They punch him, douse him with water and strip his jersey off.0:45: You notice, for the first time, what amazing shape Dietrich is in. Wow, you say, without any particular intent.Explanation 5: Two important things to know about on-field celebrations. The first is that the mob is going after the batter who drives in the winning run, not the runner who scores, in pretty much all cases. The second is that these celebrations are performative. There was a long period of baseball history in which even teams winning the World Series didnt celebrate on the field. They just jogged into the dugout and shook hands with one another. But once television became the sports primary broadcast medium, players began to celebrate in ways that fans expected them to: glove-throwing, teammate-assaulting, dogpiles, etc. They began to perform.So in one sense, the game-winning batters role ends the moment he reaches first base safely. In another, though, his role goes on long after the run scores. A camera will be isolated on him to capture his raised arms, his fist pumps, and, eventually, his disappearance under a flood of teammates. So what we see from Dietrich is pointless to the game but very important to the show. He keeps running partly because a triple is more exciting than a double, and partly because, with his team in the third-base dugout, he is really running to join them in merriment as they run to join him in merriment. For this latter detail, the existence of third base is irrelevant, a vestigial prop that he happens to pass on his way to the party. Third base is just a step on the way to showing off his torso, which, wow, check out that torso.Explanation 6: But third base is not totally perfunctory, either. Dietrich gives away his motives at 0:34 in that clip, when he takes a split-second glance at the bag before he reaches it. Hes going to make sure he touches it. He doesnt need to, but hes going to make sure he does. Thats because Dietrich cares about his slugging percentage. Ultimately, this is the explanation that probably holds the truest in all of these cases: Baseball players care about their slugging percentage. Maybe that extra base wont get him any more money in arbitration, and maybe that extra base wont be the one that makes him the Marlins all-time leader in slugging percentage. But your vote probably wont swing the presidential election, and you still vote, right? Derek Dietrich is voting for Derek Dietrichs slugging percentage. There are worse crimes.Thanks to Darin Padur, who has served as an official scorekeeper for major league and Triple-A games since 1992, for help with the scoring details. Aaron Brooks Jersey . Fellow centre Pavel Datsyuk remains out because of a concussion. Zetterberg has 11 goals and 19 assists for a team-high 30 points, and Datsyuk has a team-high 12 goals and 11 assists. Wholesale Custom Saints Shirts . Note: The Calgary Flames announced Tuesday that Sean Monahan would not be made available to Canadas World Junior team. http://www.customsaintsjersey.com/custom-vonn-bell-jersey-large-2632e.html . LOUIS -- The New Orleans Saints looked like a team playing out the string. Zach Wood Jersey . PETERSBURG, Fla. Cheap Saints Jerseys . 24 Baylor in a Big 12 clash between teams trending in opposite directions. Andrew Wiggins made 10-of-12 from the foul line and scored 17 for Kansas (14-4, 5-0 Big 12), which capped a stretch of four straight games against ranked opponents unscathed. LAS VEGAS -- Hall of Fame pitcher Greg Maddux will join UNLVs baseball team as a volunteer assistant next season.Madduxs son, Chase, is a sophomore pitcher for the Rebels.Maddux won four Cy Young Awards and 18 Gold Gloves during a 23-year career that included stops with the Atlanta Braves, Chicago Cubs, Los Angeles Dodgers and?San Diego Padres.He played at?Valley High School in Las Vegas bbefore being drafted in the second round of the 1984 baseball draft by the Cubs.ddddddddddddMaddux, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2014, has worked in various front offices since retiring in 2008, most recently as a special assistant with the Dodgers. ' ' '