Category: Cleveland Indians (Page 51 of 96)

Offense goes berserk in Baltimore

The Indians have now scored 25 runs in the last two games. The Tribe lit up the Orioles Tuesday night 15-1 behind 20 hits. Victor Martinez and Grady Sizemore each went 3 for 6 with a home run and three RBI apiece. Martinez extended his hitting streak to 13 games. Jason Johnson continued his dominant pitching, allowing only one run in seven innings. His ERA for the season is now at 1.83 through three starts. The news wasn’t all good for the Tribe. Aaron Boone injured his left wrist after being hit by a pitch in the eighth, but X-rays were negative. With the win, the Indians equalled their win total from all of last April.

I’m not sure if Jason Johnson knows he’s the fifth starter, because he sure is pitching like an ace. Every time he has taken the mound he has given the Tribe an outstanding performance. Keep it up Jay.

Indians destroy Detroit

The Indians regrouped from a frustrating offensive performance on Sunday and let loose on the Tigers Monday afternoon. The Tribe blew out Detroit 10-2 with the help of a big third inning. Casey Blake started the explosion with a solo home run as the Indians went on to score six in the inning. Eduardo Perez was perfect on the day, going 3 for 3 with two doubles and two RBI. Paul Byrd rebounded from his first two starts, allowing only two runs in seven innings as the Indians were able to tie the four-game series.

“Byrd threw good today,” said Joel Skinner, who filled in for Eric Wedge because he was in Cleveland for the birth of his daughter. “He had a lot of strikes and his command was better than it had been in his last two starts. With the big lead he was able to be aggressive and throw with confidence.”

Eduardo Perez continues to impress with his ability to pound left-handed pitching. Jose Hernandez, who was brought in last year to do the same thing, didn’t work out too well but hopefully Shapiro got it right this time with Perez.

Tigers win pitcher’s duel

Chris Shelton hit a solo home run in the fourth and as it turns out, that’s all the Tigers needed to beat the Indians Sunday afternoon, 1-0. The Tribe wasted a stellar performance by Cliff Lee, who went 7 1/3 innings. Indians hitters could not solve Tiger starter Mike Maroth and only mustered up four hits the entire ballgame. They got a few chances with runners in scoring position but were unable to take advantage.

“He just kept the ball down, did a good job, made his pitches,” said Cleveland’s Grady Sizemore, who went 0-2 with a walk against Maroth. “We didn’t do a good job making adjustments, so we helped him out a little bit.”

Maroth is in the Kenny Rogers and Mark Buerhle mold. These soft-tossing lefties always seem to give Tribe hitters trouble. Offensively, the Indians like to be aggressive at the plate and adjusting to these types of pitchers has proven challenging for the Tribe.

Fausto fantastic in Tribe win

Newly recalled Fausto Carmona didn’t appear to be a young 22-year-old making his first major league start. He showed tremendous poise and confidence on the mound, giving up only one run and five hits in six innings as the Indians beat the Tigers 7-2 Saturday afternoon. The Tribe jumped on Jeremy Bonderman early with a Travis Hafner home run in the first and scored five more runs in the fourth. The win snapped the Tribe’s three-game losing streak. Manager Eric Wedge was very impressed with Carmona’s performance.

“He was very good,” Wedge said. “He was very good in general but even beyond that, in terms of his first start, he had a power sinker working, did a good job utilizing his breaking ball as well as his changeup.”

Carmona was outstanding today in his Indians debut. He seemed to have good movement on his pitches and kept Tiger hitters off balance. It’s too bad he’ll probably be headed back to Buffalo when C.C returns.

Tigers hand Tribe third straight defeat

After a superb first two outings in which he allowed only three runs combined, Jake Westbrook had an uncharacteristically rough start Friday night, giving up five runs in six innings as the Tribe lost to the Tigers 5-1. Conversely, Tiger starter Kenny Rogers was very sharp, giving up only one run through eight. The lone Indians run came in the sixth when Eduardo Perez grounded into a double play, scoring Hafner.

Being a sinkerball pitcher, it’s unlike Westbrook to give up three home runs in a game. He missed his spots over the plate and Detroit made him and and the Tribe pay.

“I just got carried away with trying to throw the ball too hard,” he said. “You can’t make bad pitches against that team.”

« Older posts Newer posts »