Indians sweep doubleheader from Tigers, 4-0 and 4-3, extend winning streak to 6
By APWednesday, September 29, 2010
Rookies Talbot and Tomlin win as Indians sweep
CLEVELAND — Mitch Talbot and Josh Tomlin both finished their rookie seasons with wins as the Cleveland Indians swept a doubleheader from the Detroit Tigers, 4-0 and 4-3, Wednesday night.
Tomlin (6-4) went five innings to beat Tigers ace Justin Verlander (18-9) after Talbot (10-13) pitched seven innings for only his third win in his last 13 starts to beat Max Scherzer (12-11) in the opener.
Cleveland tied its season-high six-game winning streak and beat the Tigers for the eighth straight time at home.
A suicide squeeze bunt by Trevor Crowe gave Cleveland a 4-3 lead in the fifth inning against Verlander.
Lou Marson walked and Michael Brantley followed with a game-tying RBI triple. Brantley took off for home and Crowe somehow made contact on a high-and-away 99 mph fastball to put the ball in play for the RBI.
Verlander threw 121 pitches in an effort to match his career high in wins set a year ago. He got out of a bases-loaded jam in the seventh by fanning both Crowe and Shin-Soo Choo on fastballs registering 101 mph.
The Tigers could not rally against Cleveland’s bullpen. Chris Perez got the final four outs for his 23rd save in 27 chances and 10th in a row.
Ryan Raburn had a two-run homer and Johnny Damon a bloop RBI single as Detroit led 3-0 in the second.
Cleveland scored on a wild pitch by Verlander in the second and Jayson Nix added an RBI single in the Indians’ fourth.
Brantley went 2 for 3 and is hitting .538 (7 for 13) in his career against the Tigers’ right-hander.
Tomlin gave up three runs and nine hits over five innings to win for the third time in his final four starts.
It is the second straight year the Indians finished the home schedule with a makeup doubleheader. They split two games with the Chicago White Sox in 2009 in the final home games managed by Eric Wedge, who was fired with his staff after a 65-97 finish.
Cleveland’s 2010 home attendance of 1,391,644 was its lowest since 1,224,274 went to old Cleveland Stadium in 1992.
Afterward, every Indians player and coach tossed a dozen baseballs into the crowd. Each ball had been personally autographed.
Travis Hafner and Choo hit two-run homers to help Talbot win the opener.
“It is one that you can think about during the winter when you are sitting on the couch,” Talbot said. “To finish off on a good note was great.”
The right-hander gave up five hits and struck out five without a walk.
Talbot spent two weeks on the disabled list with a strained back in August, and also missed one turn in the rotation earlier this month with an inflamed right shoulder.
“I felt OK both times I came back, but I just didn’t know where the ball was going,” Talbot said. “Today, I was locating my fastball and my secondary pitches were sharp.”
Jensen Lewis and rookie Vinnie Pestano each pitched a scoreless inning to complete Cleveland’s fourth shutout — the 10th time the Tigers have been shut out and first since the Indians’ Justin Masterson did it to them on Aug. 20.
“We didn’t do anything offensively,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. “Pretty anemic. We played like it was a spring training ‘B’ game. We played like it was still raining.”
Scherzer came in 5-2 with a 1.93 ERA in 11 previous starts, but walked three and gave up four runs and eight hits over five innings.
“His control wasn’t sharp,” said Leyland, noting that the extra day of rest because of Tuesday’s rainout may have been a factor. “That’s so unlike him. He couldn’t throw the ball over the plate.”
In the opener, Damon became the fifth player in history to play in 140 games in 15 consecutive seasons. Willie Mays also did it 15 times; Hank Aaron, Brooks Robinson and Pete Rose 16 times. Cal Ripken Jr., played in a record 2,632 straight games over 17 years for Baltimore, but was in only 112 games in 1994, when a players strike stopped the season in August.
The Tigers were without MVP candidate Miguel Cabrera. The slugging first baseman is out for the season with a sprained right ankle, sustained Monday night. He leads the majors with 126 RBIs, is tied for second in the AL with 38 homers and is third in league batting at .328.
Notes: Detroit went 1-8 at Progressive Field and 8-1 against the Indians at home. … Indians RHP Hector Ambriz will have elbow surgery Friday. … Choo went 3 for 3 off Scherzer to put his career average at .555 (5 for 9) against the right-hander. Hafner went 2 for 3 to go to .600 (6 for 10) against Scherzer. … Tigers OF Austin Jackson became the fourth rookie since 1901 with 100 runs, 180 hits, 30 doubles, 10 triples and 25 stolen bases. Joe Jackson (1911), Juan Samuel (1984) and Hanley Ramirez (2006) also did it. … In the opener, Choo got his 14th outfield assist, which leads the majors. … Cleveland OF Shelley Duncan got his first career steal in the eighth inning of the nightcap.
Tags: Athlete Health, Athlete Injuries, Cleveland, North America, Ohio, Professional Baseball, United States