Author: John Blake (Page 58 of 68)

Indians lose roadtrip finale

What once was a hot start for the Indians is starting to cool off. The Tribe lost their second straight to the Royals by a score of 5-1 Sunday afternoon. The Indians have now dropped four of five and eight of their last twelve. Jeremy Affeldt became the first Royals starter to get a win this season as he allowed only one run in 5 1/3 innings. Ronnie Belliard accounted for the only Indians run when he hit a home run in the second. Jason Johnson took the loss for the Tribe, surrendering four runs in 6 innings.

“I didn’t feel real good pretty much the whole game,” Johnson said. “All my pitches were up. A sinker doesn’t do much when it is up. I just tried to battle through it. If I’m not in there in the seventh inning, I didn’t do my job.”

With all the young, inexperienced arms we now have in the bullpen because of injuries to Miller, Betancourt, and Cabrera, it is critical for our starters to pitch well and take us deep into games. For the last several games that hasn’t been the case and is really becoming a problem for the Tribe. Perhaps some home cooking will do us good.

Indians fall behind early, lose to Royals

Paul Byrd got off to a rocky start and it didn’t get much better as the Indians lost to the Royals 11-5 Saturday night. A four-run first inning set the tone for Kansas City, which ended its 11-game losing streak. Byrd gave up seven runs in three innings, raising his ERA to 9.15 on the season. Things got a little heated in the sixth as reliever Jeremy Guthrie was ejected for hitting a batter. Eric Wedge was also ousted when he came out to argue.

“This shows a complete lack of feel for the ballgame,” Wedge said of the umpires. “They were saying we were trying to hit the guy on purpose because he stole a base with a seven-run lead. That’s ridiculous. I don’t know how you can umpire that long and have such a lack of understanding for the game.”

Overall not a very good night for the Tribe. Byrd continues to struggle with his command and is having a rough start to the season.

LeBron gives Cavs Game 1 victory

In his first career playoff game, LeBron delivered a performance to remember, scoring 32 points while becoming the third player in NBA history to get a triple-double in his playoff debut. The Cavaliers returned to the postseason in style, beating the Wizards 97-86 in Game 1. They got some strong contributions from Eric Snow and Donyell Marshall. Snow finished with 14 points, matching a season high and Marshall dropped 19. The Cavs played some stellar half-court defense as the Wizards shot only 3 of 22 from three-point range.

“I had no idea that (James) had a triple-double,” Cleveland coach Mike Brown said. “He never ceases to amaze me. The things that he does offensively just blow you away.”

The city had been without a playoff appearance by the Cavs for eight years and the fans displayed their excitement. The atmosphere at the Q was electric as the sellout crowd waved white rally towels throughout the game and several times breaking out the M-V-P chant. LeBron’s first postseason game was one for the ages as Cavs fans were witnesses to something special Saturday afternoon.

Royals cure Tribe losing ways

The Indians got back on the winning track, edging the Kansas City Royals 6-5 Friday night. Jhonny Peralta delivered the big hit in the seventh when he doubled home three Indians to make it 6-3. Bob Wickman entered in the ninth and got his fourth save of the season. Victor Martinez’s 15-game hitting streak ended as he went 0 for4. Cliff Lee went 5 2/3 innings and gave up three runs, while Danny Graves got the win for the Tribe. Eric Wedge didn’t downplay Peralta’s clutch performance.

“Peralta stepped up big time,” Indians manager Eric Wedge said. “He’s comfortable in those situations. He likes being up in those situations. He’s had a great deal of success with runners in scoring position, as well as late in the game.”

When you need a win who better to face than the hapless Royals. Peralta came through with the huge hit and the pen finally was able to hold a lead.

Inept pitching hands Tribe second straight loss

His debut was superb. His second major league start wasn’t as sharp. Fausto Carmona gave up eight runs in 5 1/3 innings as the Tribe lost to Baltimore Thursday afternoon 9-4. Carmona ran into trouble in the sixth, surrendering six runs in the inning. On the positive side, Victor Martinez hit a home run in his third straight game, extending his hitting streak to a current major league best 15 games. Starter Eric Bedard got the win for the Orioles, becoming the third pitcher in the majors to reach the four-win mark this season. Left-hander Rafael Perez was recalled from Akron to take the place of Matt Miller, who was placed on the 15-day DL with a strained elbow.

“We didn’t do a particularly good job of executing from a pitching standpoint, and that obviously played into it,” Indians manager Eric Wedge said.

The big inning continues to plague the Indians. Most of their losses this season have resulted when Tribe pitchers have given up three or more runs in a single inning.

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