"It would've been very easy for this team, for the hitters to just say, 'OK, we'll just go get 'em tomorrow,' " Detwiler said. "But we weathered the storm, we came back out there and fought." Back-to-back walks from Jesus Flores and Detwiler followed (yeah, that's how weird this game was - the pitcher walked to load the bases in the 12th) and "The Kid," Bryce Harper, delivered the walk-off single to left on an 0-2 pitch. It was the first walk-off hit by a teenager since Gary Sheffield's single won it for the Brewers back on Sept. 9, 1988, more than four years before Harper was born. After his game-winner, Harper was mobbed on the field by Zimmerman and the rest of his teammates and got a Gatorade shower from Morse. "Sharing that moment with Zim, I think, it was pretty unbelievable," Harper said. "Zim's an amazing talent. Great player. And he's been there for me since the beginning, any time I need him. I think he's just been incredible for me." If things weren't weird enough as is, Johnson admitted after the game that he was considering pinch-hitting Jhonatan Solano for Detwiler (who was the last reliever out of the 'pen) in the 12th and then having first baseman Adam LaRoche pitch the 13th, if need be. Johnson even told LaRoche of his plan in the dugout, and the veteran left-handed thrower, who pitched in college, was on board. "He said, 'Don't tease me,' " Johnson said. At the end of his four-minute postgame press conference, Johnson cracked a smile. "That game wore me out," he said. Still, he had to appreciate the moxie, or stick-to-itiveness or whatever-you-want-to-call-it of his group. They didn't play a clean game, for sure, but they battled until the end. "It's unbelievable," Johnson said. "We've come back a lot of times, and we've been in close ballgames and seemed to get the big hit, but we never kind of bust it open. I think they like aggravating me. But it's a great group of guys, and they never say die. Never say die." "There's been so many times throughout the year for us to crack and we haven't," Desmond said. "I think everyone in here believes, and we're all in. We're sold into what Davey's saying and how he's managing. There's no second guessing. We all believe in each other."