Not even Major League Baseball is safe from the perils of a power failure during a big game.

In the bottom of the second inning of Tuesday’s scoreless American League Championship Series Game 3 between the Boston Red Sox and Detroit Tigers, the lights at Comerica Park shut off and delayed the start of the bottom half of the inning. Tyler Kepner of the New York Times was in the press box and sent out this tweet at about 4:42 p.m. ET:

The Red Sox’s official Twitter account also sent out a picture of the situation, showing dusk descending upon Detroit’s gray skies:

At long last, 17 minutes after the lights went out, play resumed as Red Sox pitcher John Lackey returned to the mound to face Jhonny Peralta:

Pitchers are creatures of habit, and an extended layoff like this one can alter the course of a game. Luckily, the outage came early enough in the game that Lackey and his counterpart, Justin Verlander, still had plenty left in the tank.

Had it come later in the evening, managers Jim Leyland and John Farrell could have been forced to warm up their bullpens earlier than they would have liked.   

In the innings immediately after the outage, it didn’t appear to affect Lackey, though, according to the Red Sox:

Once the lights turned back on and play resumed, MLive.com’s Chris Iott shared an update from MLB:

This is hardly the first time the lights have gone out in an American sporting event on a big stage. MLB’s official Twitter account had a good sense of humor about the situation in Detroit, alluding to the infamous power outage during Super Bowl XLVII in February:

As the San Francisco 49ers tried to come back from a second-half deficit against the Baltimore Ravens in New Orleans’ Mercedes-Benz Superdome, about half the lights at the stadium went out and delayed play for 34 minutes.

The 49ers were also involved in another power outage gaffe in 2011 during a Monday Night Football contest when a transformer blew up next to Candlestick Park and delayed their contest against the Pittsburgh Steelers two different times.

After those power outages in the NFL made headlines, MLB has now joined the unique club.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com