The Green Monster has been known to keep well-hit line drives in-play for 111 years, but it doesn't usually swallow them up.
With two down in the top of the second in the Boston Red Sox's game against the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday, center fielder Kyle Isbel sent a 94-mile-per-hour fastball to the opposite field. Left fielder Masataka Yoshida leapt at the warning track to try and secure the out, but the ball sailed right past his glove.
Yoshida, assuming it had careened off the 37-foot wall, spun around looking for the ball. It was not in the field of play, though.
Instead, the ball had gone directly into the first 'Out' light bulb towards the bottom of the historic wall, immediately going viral.
Yoshida had to fish around inside the light bulb once the play had been called dead, resulting in a ground-rule double for Isbel. Third baseman Matt Duffy had come around to score on the play, but the umpires ultimately sent him back to third.
Pitcher Nick Pivetta forced a fly out the very next batter, preventing Duffy and Isbel from crossing home plate. As a result, the light breaking may have saved the Red Sox at least one run.
Boston still ended the frame down 1-0, but first baseman Triston Casas knotted up the score with a solo home run in the bottom of the second.
The Red Sox currently lead the Royals 4-2 midway though the sixth inning. The teams split the first two games of the series on Monday and Tuesday.
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