21 innings
Longest extra inning game without a run was 23-1/2 innings when the New York Mets and the Houston Astros met on April 15, 1968. Mets-Astros, April 15, 1968. 0-0 through 23 innings, the Astros won 1-0 bottom of 24th with 1 out.
The longest Opening Day game in major league history was a 15-inning affair played at Cleveland Stadium on April 19, 1960. The Detroit Tigers defeated the Cleveland Indians 4-2.
The Oakland A's have won 15 American League Pennants in their history.
Joe Dimaggio 1941 56 straight games
Bill Singer on April 7, 1969. The Dodger had pitched three scoreless innings to protect a 3-2 Los Angeles victory over the Reds on Opening Day. Don Drysdale was the starter.
Raul is leading scorer in champions league
Everton
Longest extra inning game without a run was 23-1/2 innings when the New York Mets and the Houston Astros met on April 15, 1968. Mets-Astros, April 15, 1968. 0-0 through 23 innings, the Astros won 1-0 bottom of 24th with 1 out.
The longest Opening Day game in major league history was a 15-inning affair played at Cleveland Stadium on April 19, 1960. The Detroit Tigers defeated the Cleveland Indians 4-2.
The Oakland A's have won 15 American League Pennants in their history.
Joe Dimaggio 1941 56 straight games
Louisville beat Ft Worth. 2 to 1 in 11 innings
The Cleveland Indians last won the world series in 1948
Of the original 8 teams in the National League when the League was founded in 1876, only two remain. They are the Chicago White Stockings, who are now the Chicago Cubs, and the Boston Red Caps, who are now the Atlanta Braves. So the longest rivalry in MLB history is the Cubs vs. the Braves.
It is unlikely.
Bill Singer on April 7, 1969. The Dodger had pitched three scoreless innings to protect a 3-2 Los Angeles victory over the Reds on Opening Day. Don Drysdale was the starter.
On Sunday, October 10, 1920, in the first year of the league's existence, and on the third week of play, two games ended in a scoreless tie: the Chicago (Racine) Cardinals and the Chicago Tigers, and the Cleveland Tigers and Dayton Triangles. These games appear to be the first tied games in the NFL (although at that time it was known as the American Professional Football Association; two years later they would change their name to the National Football League).