Orthodox Jew throws first pitch at World Series Game 7
Daniel Eleff, fifth-generation Clevelander and self-described ‘die-hard’ Indians fan, buys honor at auction; Cubs defeat Indians 8-7 in thriller

An Orthodox Jew from Cleveland threw the ceremonial first pitch of Game 7 of the 2016 World Series, in which the Chicago Cubs defeated the Cleveland Indians 8 to 7.
Daniel Eleff, proprietor of the website Dan’s Deals, obtained the honor of throwing out the first pitch of Game 7 after winning an auction, according to a blog post on his company’s website.
Eleff, a lifelong Indians fan, is a fifth generation Clevelander and self-described “die-hard Cleveland sports fan.”
Unfortunately for Eleff, his Cleveland Indians lost the game, but the experience of throwing the first pitch was nevertheless “a lifelong dream come true.”
Ending America’s longest sports title drought in dramatic fashion, the Chicago Cubs captured their first World Series since 1908 by defeating the Cleveland Indians 8-7 in a 10-inning thriller that concluded Thursday morning.
The Cubs won Major League Baseball’s best-of-seven final series 4-3, ending what had been an iconic 107-year run of failure, frustration and futility.
“We got it done. That’s all that matters. It doesn’t matter how,” Cubs pitcher Jon Lester said. “It’s all surreal. I don’t have the words to describe how I feel right now.”
After more than a century — 39,466 days — and a final game of gut-wrenching tension, the Cubs were once again World Series champions. Thousands stayed after the game to cheer and sing “Let’s Go Cubbies,” even after heavy rains returned to soak them.

“This is best feeling in the world,” Cubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo said. “Lot of people had written us off this series and last series. For us to come back from 3-1 and finish this off in extra innings (was amazing). We are world champions for the rest of our lives.”
The Cubs, who had not been to the World Series since 1945, claimed their third crown overall after 1907 and 1908. They had dropped seven consecutive World Series appearances from 1910 to 1945.
Heartache grew for supporters of the Indians, who last won the World Series in 1948. Their wait now becomes baseball’s longest title drought.
“That was an incredible game to be a part of,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “It’s going to hurt. It hurts because we care. But they need to walk with their head held high because they tried until there was nothing left.”
The Cubs led 6-3 and were four outs from victory when ace closing reliever Aroldis Chapman surrendered a run-scoring double to Brandon Guyer and a two-run homer to Rajai Davis that equalized at 6-6.
“We never quit,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “Everything was going perfectly until Davis hit that home run. Then we had to go to plan B, C, D.”
Cleveland’s Corey Kluber, who won the opener and game four, lacked the mystifying array of throws he dazzled Cubs batters with before and paid the price quickly.

A “Let’s Go Cubs” chant from thousands of Chicago fans among 38,104 spectators barely died down when Dexter Fowler, hitting only .160 over six Series games, blasted a leadoff home run over the center field wall, becoming the first leadoff batter to homer in a World Series seventh game.
Cleveland equalized in the third on a run-scoring single by Rizzo, but the Cubs answered in the fourth on Addison Russell’s sacrifice fly and Willson Contreras added a run-scoring double. Javier Baez added a homer and Rizzo a run-scoring single for a 5-1 Cubs lead.
A wild pitch by Lester in the fifth allowed two Cleveland runs to score but David Ross added a solo homer, setting up Cleveland’s rally in the eighth.