The Oakland Athletics knew what they were doing all along. By letting an 11-run lead slip away, they merely set themselves up for their most improbable ending yet. <br>
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The Athletics won their AL-record 20th straight game Wednesday night, blowing that huge edge and then beating Kansas City 12-11 on pinch-hitter Scott Hatteberg's home run in the bottom of the ninth inning. <br>
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``We really got lucky to come out of this one on top, but we've been getting a lot of luck. We don't question it,'' Hatteberg said. <br>
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The AL West leaders broke a three-way tie for the longest winning streak in AL history with the 1906 Chicago White Sox and the 1947 New York Yankees. <br>
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The major league record of 26 consecutive victories was set by the New York Giants in 1916. <br>
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A crowd of 55,528, the largest ever for a regular-season game at the Coliseum, saw the A's take an 11-0 lead after three innings. Even after the Royals rallied, Oakland found a way to win. <br>
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``I know it was a record-breaker, but I don't want to watch this one on film too much,'' A's manager Art Howe said. <br>
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As the Athletics' celebration moved from the field to the clubhouse, groundskeepers yanked the bases from the dirt, got Hatteberg to sign them and sent them off to the Hall of Fame. <br>
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A young fan who caught the winning home-run ball traded the souvenir to Hatteberg for a bat and a handshake. <br>
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``It's some kind of magic right now,'' Hatteberg said. <br>
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After a day off Thursday, the A's will try to extend baseball's longest winning streak in 67 years when they play the AL Central-leading Minnesota Twins at the Metrodome. The Chicago Cubs won 21 straight in 1935. <br>
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The Athletics won in the bottom of the ninth for the third straight game. <br>
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``Something like that sends chills up your back, but I don't want four games like this,'' starting pitcher Tim Hudson said. ``With the attention that we've got, and the way we've been playing, this is obviously playoff-type baseball.'' <br>
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Down 11-5, the Royals scored five times in the eighth, capped by Mike Sweeney's three-run homer. Luis Alicea's two-out single in the ninth tied it. <br>
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Hatteberg hit his solo homer with one out in the bottom half. He leaped and jogged around the bases as the A's rolled out a big banner high above center field that read ``20.''
http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/9/190493
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