HOUSTON -- In what has already become another tough season, the Houston Astros have had little reason to celebrate. That changed on Monday when Brandon Barnes gave the American Leagues worst team plenty to smile about. Barnes hit a last at-bat, two-out RBI ground-rule double in the 12th inning to lift the Astros to a 3-2 win over the Colorado Rockies in interleague play. Matt Dominguez singled off former Astro Wilton Lopez (1-2) to start the inning. He was replaced by pinch-runner Ronny Cedeno and he advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt. The Rockies intentionally walked Jose Altuve with two outs before Barnes connected on a double which sailed into the corner of right field to score Cedeno and give Houston the win. "It was probably the best time Ive had on a baseball field," said Barnes, who entered the game an inning earlier as a pinch-runner. "It was true joy, true emotion. It was awesome. It was a blast." Paul Clemens (2-2) struck out two in a scoreless 12th for the win. It was the first time Houston had won on a last at-bat this season. Manager Bo Porter hopes it will give his team, which was coming off a three-game sweep by the Athletics, something to build on. "I think these kind of wins are definitely something that can catapult you forward from just an energy standpoint," he said. "Finding a way as a team and to come out on top, that momentum can carry over." Carlos Gonzalez drove in a run with a double in the first, and Jonathan Herrera made it 2-0 with a sacrifice bunt in the fourth. Carlos Pena hit a two-run double for Houston to tie it at 2 in the fourth. The Astros loaded the bases with two outs in the 11th, but Jimmy Paredes flew out to end the inning. Wilin Rosario singled to start the 10th, went to second on a sacrifice bunt and third on a fly out. Houston intentionally walked pinch-hitter Michael Cuddyer and Travis Blackley struck out pinch-hitter D.J. LeMahieu to end the threat. The Rockies had several opportunities to put the game away, but came up empty again and again, stranding 15 batters. "Its difficult to win that way, when you leave over 10 runners on base and not being able to get the big hit," Gonzalez said. "Its frustrating." Houston starter Bud Norris yielded eight hits and two runs in seven innings. Jhoulys Chacin pitched seven-plus innings for the Rockies, allowing five hits and two runs with a season-high nine strikeouts. It was the most strikeouts this season by a Colorado pitcher, and came against a team which leads the majors with 494 this season. Eric Young hit a leadoff double, advanced to third on a sacrifice bunt and made it 1-0 on a double by Gonzalez. Colorado loaded the bases with no outs in the third. But Norris was able to escape the jam by retiring Troy Tulowitzki before Rosario grounded into a force out that left Young out at home and he retired Jordan Pacheco. Nolan Arenado doubled in the fourth and reached third on a sacrifice bunt. Colorado pushed the lead to 2-0 when he scored on a sacrifice bunt by Herrera. Chacin sailed through the first three innings and struck out the side in the second. Houston didnt get a hit until Jose Altuve singled with one out in the fourth. Altuve stole second base before Jason Castro walked in the fourth. Chacin struck out J.D. Martinez, but Altuve stole third base on the play. Penas double sent Altuve and Castro home and tied it at 2-all. Norris ran into trouble again in the fifth when he walked Fowler to start the inning. Tulowitzki singled to send Fowler to third before a wild pitch allowed Tulowitzki to advance to second. The Rockies came away empty-handed when Norris struck out Rosario before a groundout by Pacheco ended the inning. Norris allowed the leadoff hitter to get on base for the fifth time in seven innings when he allowed a single to Young to start the seventh. Fowler followed with a walk, but just as he had several time before, he worked out of the jam, this time by sitting down the next three Rockies. "He was absolutely fantastic today," Porter said of Norris. "Early in the game when he got into the bases-loaded jam, I just felt like he really did a great job of understanding who was in the batters box and how he was going to attack them. He kept his composure and just made quality pitch after quality pitch." NOTES: Martinez tied a single-game franchise record by striking out five times. ... Houston optioned OF Robbie Grossman to Triple-A Oklahoma City after the game. The team said they would make a corresponding move on Tuesday. ... This two-game series wraps up on Tuesday when Colorado left-hander Jorge De La Rosa faces Jordan Lyles. De La Rosa is 4-0 with a 2.31 ERA this month. ... Cuddyer was out of the lineup a day after bruising his right forearm after getting hit by a pitch, but pinch-hit in the 10th inning. ... 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Shaquille ONeal Celtics Jersey . -- Whether Jeremy Hill deserves a prominent role in LSUs offence this early in the season is a matter for debate. John Havlicek Celtics Jersey .ca look back at each of the Top 10 stories of 2013. Today, we look back at Boston Strong - a citys recovery from tragedy. Nearly 19,000 men have played baseball in the major leagues. Ive decided that their careers all had one thing in common: Not one of them had a final season as spectacular as the grand finale currently being crafted by a man named David Americo Ortiz Arias.Willie Mays hit .211 the year he said goodbye. Hank Aaron batted .229. Harmon Killebrew hit .199. Goose Gossage had a 4.18 ERA. Robin Roberts went 5-8, 4.82. John Smoltz and Phil Niekro both had ERAs north of 6.00. And thats normal.So keep that in mind as you watch Big Papi heading for the finish line. He leads the whole sport in slugging. He leads the whole sport in doubles (tied with Daniel Murphy). He leads the whole sport in OPS. And hes 40 years old. Seriously?Which means its time to begin actively debating a question I dont ask lightly: Is this the greatest retirement season in baseball history -- or even sports history? It just might be.The answer is coming right up. But first -- while you, Sandy Koufax and John Elway think about that question -- I have another. Its a question Ive been asking players over the last couple of months. Its one every great athlete in history has had to contemplate. And I asked it because it helps wrap some perspective around Ortizs incredible season. It goes like this:If you had the choice, which script would you write for yourself? Would you like to play as long as you could? Or would you like to go out like David Ortiz -- waving adios when you were still one of the best players alive?I chuckle to myself every time I ask this question and players say, Both. Because in real life, that aint happening. They just dont know it yet.I also smile when players say they want to be like Big Papi and exit when theyre still great. Because they havent grasped the truth: Almost nobody ever winds up doing that, either.But there are some people in the game who get it. Like Josh Donaldson, for instance.Obviously, the whole movie script is to be able to go out on top, right? the Blue Jays third baseman said earlier this summer. I think thats the way wed all like to do it. But ... I think its probably one of the hardest things to do, because when youve been doing something as long as Big Papi has done it -- for him, Elway, Peyton [Manning], Tim Duncan -- the hardest thing to do is to let it go, because youve been so successful at it and its what youve done for so long.But Father Time is undefeated, Donaldson said with a laugh. And all of us, one day, are going to have to walk away.Uh, I hate to break it to him, but thats not exactly how it usually works, either. Not for most people. Almost no athletes in any sport reach the point where they get to decide when to walk away. The game decides for them.So as we contemplate the list of contenders for Greatest Final Season Ever, we need to remember that, OK? Hardly anyone on that list said, Goodnight, everybody, voluntarily. Either their body wouldnt let them, or there was, well, some other reason. Heres my all-time ranking of baseballs top five finales. Youll see what I mean:1. David Ortiz, 20162. Ted Williams, 19603. Sandy Koufax, 19664. Barry Bonds, 20075. Shoeless Joe Jackson, 1920Koufaxs throbbing elbow wouldnt let him pitch anymore, and medical science hadnt invented Sandy Koufax Surgery yet. Shoeless Joe got suspended for life in the Black Sox scandal. And you can decide for yourself what happened to Bonds, but for whatever reason, he went looking for a team that winter and couldnt find one.So only Williams, at age 41, realized his body had reached the point where it was more suited for the aches-and-pains business than the hit-.400 business and retired of his own volition. Too bad he and Big Papi never got to swap retirement stories. Would have made for an awesome 30 for 30.But how did we sift through those names (and others) and decide that David Ortiz deserved to be No. 1? Lets run through his credentials, which were gathered with the brilliant assistance of ESPN Stats & Infos Paul Hembekides and the Elias Sports Bureau:? No player in history has led the major leagues in slugging or OPS in his final season (min. 400 PA). With less than three weeks to go, Ortiz leads in both.? No player has ever led the entire sport in extra-base hits in his final season, either. Ortiz ranks first in that department, too (tied with Brian Dozier).? No one since 1920 has even hit 40 doubles in his final season. Ortiz is on pace to hit 50.? Only one player in history (Dave Kingman) has ever hit 30 home runs or more in his final season. Ortiz is on pace to hit 37. (Editors note: Kingman hit 35 homers in 1986, but did it in a season in which he contributed so little else that his slash line was an ugly .210/.255/.431/.686. Ortiz is at .316/.403/.624/1.0284.)? If Big Papi keeps mashing at his current rate and finishes with those 37 homers and 50 doubles, he would be the 12th player in history to reach both of those plateaus in a season. Hes 40. All of the other 11 did it before they even turned 30.? Add up all those extra-base hits and youll find a man who is on pace to finish with 88 of them. Since 1921, know what the current record is for a player in his final season? Would you believe 62, by Kirby Puckett?? And we havent even gotteen into all the stuff Ortiz has done at age 40 that no 40-year-old had ever done.ddddddddddddBut lets just hit you with this: No one else in history had ever had a 30-homer, 100-RBI season at age 40 or older. Ortiz reached those milestones back on Aug. 24 -- with nearly six weeks to go in the season.So what we have here is a Thanks for the Memories season thats downright astonishing. Now how does it compare with the other four on our list? Thanks for asking. Here is why we rank it No. 1:TED WILLIAMS, 1960: The argument for Williams at No. 1 is that he owns the greatest OPS (1.096) in a final season of any player who ever lived, and he probably deserves bonus points for lofting that poetic Fenway home run in the last at-bat of his career. But the argument against him is that he only got to the plate 390 times. Ortiz is on pace to pile up twice as many extra-base hits as Teds 44.SANDY KOUFAX, 1966: Want to contend that Koufax ought to rank above both Ortiz and Williams? You might be right. He is the only pitcher in history to win a Cy Young in his final season. He led both leagues in ERA (1.73), strikeouts (317), wins (27) and innings (323). And his 10.3 wins above replacement blows away Ortiz (currently at 4.4). What makes this tricky is trying to compare a 40-year-old position player -- and one doing things no 40-year-old has ever done -- with a 30-year-old pitcher whose accomplishments were not unprecedented for a 30-year-old pitcher. Should we give Ortiz extra credit for making an impact on close to 150 games (as opposed to the 41 Koufax pitched)? Should we deduct points from Koufax for being forced to retire when he was still in his prime, when Ortiz piled on another decade worth of production? Im voting yes and yes. But if you think otherwise, I wont say youre wrong.BARRY BONDS, 2007: Its still kind of fascinating that Bonds basically got run out of baseball after a season in which he led the major leagues in OBP (.480) and walks (132), and he was still so feared he drew 43 intentional walks in just 126 games. Thats the greatest on-base percentage any player has ever had in his final season (min. 400 PA). And his 1.045 OPS ranks first among all final seasons if you lower the eligibility bar to the 477 plate appearances he got that year. But you would have to be the president of the I Love Walks Fan Club to argue that Bonds was more productive that season (at age 42) than Ortiz has been this year. Lets go back to the extra-base-hit competition. Bonds that year: 42 extra-base hits. Ortiz already this season: 79. So sorry, Barry. You had a great year. But not this great.JOE JACKSON, 1920: Boy, this man could hit. He led the American League in triples (20) in his final season. He fired out a cool .382/.444/.589/1.033 slash line. He ranks No. 1 among all position players in wins above replacement in a final season (7.6). But ... once again, Im forced to subtract points here -- in this case for why this turned into his final season at age 32. Suspended for life. He might have been innocent. He might not have been so innocent. But Im not Kevin Costner. So I dont have to go down that road.OTHER CONTENDERS: We had a great group. Roberto Clemente. Jackie Robinson. Kirby Puckett. Mariano Rivera. Mike Mussina. Just to spin through the highlights. Excellent candidates. Just couldnt crack the top five.OTHER SPORTS: There was the great Jim Brown in 1965. He led the NFL in rushing -- but then quit. At age 29. ... There was John Elway. The oldest Super Bowl MVP in history. Then he walked away at 38. ... There was Wilt Chamberlain. He led the league in rebounding and field-goal percentage and got his team to the NBA finals -- at age 36. ... There was Bill Russell. He is the only man ever to average more than 19 rebounds per game in his final season. And he did it for the NBA champs. But he retired after his age-34 season. ... Feel free to add the legendary names of your choice, from Tim Duncan to Patrick Roy to Peyton Manning. Well always accept nominations. Just dont think we can rank them above David Ortizs fond farewell. Our apologies to all those who think weve lost our minds.It isnt merely his numbers, though, that Ortiz has going for him. Its that he knew his time had come, at age 40. And then put up those numbers, without ever wavering on his decision to stroll off into legendhood.Wed all love to do what hes doing, to call it on your own terms, said Carlos Beltran, one of just five active players besides Ortiz who reached the big leagues in the late, great 1990s. But youve got to be realistic with yourself. Youve got to know your body and what you think you have inside. And he felt like what he had inside was one more year.This is Beltrans 18th full season in the major leagues. So as he mulls when to turn out the lights on his own career, he admires a man who had such a perfect feel for making the right decision at the right moment in time.At the end of the day, you want to leave the game in a way where you were still productive, Beltran said. Hes leaving the game on a super, super high note. And thats amazing. ' ' '