MILWAUKEE BREWERS

Did you see the insane way the Timber Rattlers won a game over the weekend?

JR Radcliffe
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Fans want a prize from Fang as the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers take on the Burlington Bees Thursday, August 2, 2018, at Neuroscience Group Field at Fox Cities Stadium in Grand Chute, Wis.
Ron Page/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin

The Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, Class A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers, won their game in Appleton on Friday over the Burlington Bees by scoring five runs in the bottom of the ninth.

That doesn't even scratch the surface of explaining the crazy finish.

Kenny Corey's third hit of the night came with two outs in the ninth and plated the second run of the inning, pulling the Timber Rattlers to within 6-4, and when Gabriel Garcia walked one batter later, the bases were loaded.

RELATED:Timber Rattlers score five runs in ninth to beat Bees

Reliever James Ziemba entered the game for the Bees and struck out Nic Pierre on three quick strikes, capping the at-bat with a low-inside pitch that Pierre swung through. Game over, right?

Yes, though not how you'd expect.

The strike-three pitch bounded into foul territory, and Pierre took off for first base. Unable to get back to home plate to tag out Payton Henry streaking from third base, Bees catcher Keinner Pina heaved a ball toward first base that skipped down the line.

Corey scored the tying run, and Garcia raced all the way around to win the game, diving headfirst ahead of the throw for the walk-off madness.

It's one of the craziest walk-offs in baseball this year, though it does call to mind a 2014 play in which the Brewers scored three runs on a wild pitch against the Rockies (one of Jean Segura's multiple basepath adventures in Milwaukee).

Perhaps you're thinking of something more recent involving the Brewers and Rockies. On Aug. 5, Erik Kratz struck out for what would have been the final out of the game in a 4-1 loss, but he reached first base on a wild pitch. Orlando Arcia followed with a two-run double, and Kratz scored on another wild pitch to tie the game and force extras (though the Brewers eventually lost).

RELATED:Rockies 5, Brewers 4 (11 innings): Rally forces extra innings, but effort falls short

But nothing quite matches a three-run wild-pitch walk-off. 

Henry, a catcher, is the No. 12 prospect in the organization according to MLB.com.