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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.

Tribe needs pitching now

The Cleveland Indians need pitching and the organization needs to spend money to get it. I have said from the day one, the Dolans are managing this team as if they are losing money. A new Forbes study shows the Indians have a higher valuation than any team in their division. This is why my frustration is so high when we refuse to pay for pitchers that would add value to this team.

Mark Shapiro has done a remarkable job of putting together an offense that is complete from top to bottom. This offense is on pace to put record numbers up for Cleveland. It would be a mistake to let this offense go to waist this season with the average bunch of arms we have on the mound. The Tribe needs to make a “big move” and run at the pennant this season or by July we will already be saying wait till next season.

The Buckeyes are getting to know each other

The Ohio State football team is finishing spring football and answering questions on who will start at which position. Coach Jim Tressel will enter next year without a “big name” leader on defense. That’s what happens when talented players that start for three and four years leave at the same time.

The Buckeyes have always relied on a conservative offense, solid special teams and superior defense to win football games. This year the offense is loaded with high power players and the defense is trying to find its leader. The Buckeyes defense has a ton of talented players with no game experience.

Ohio State is predicted to make a run at the Championship game this year. This will only happen if the defensive leaders show their presence early in Texas, then lead this team through a tough Big Ten schedule.

Pronk slowly getting national praise

Travis Hafner has arguably the catchiest nickname of any Cleveland athlete. He even has a candy bar named after him. Problem is, it seems that his popularity and appreciation as a baseball talent is limited to the city of Cleveland and it’s fans. He had comparable numbers the last two seasons to his fellow left-handed DH David Ortiz, who garners the majority of the attention.

Hafner was fifth in the A.L. MVP voting last season, but has yet to make an All-Star team. He could walk down the street of virtually any major North American city without getting recognized. His ‘Q’ rating is about what you’d expect of the under-secretary in the Department of the Interior.

However, as baseball writer Ken Rosenthal points out, Pronk is a player to be reckoned with and his time in the spotlight will come soon one day.

Hafner hits everywhere, everything and everyone — except, perhaps, Tigers left-hander Mike Maroth, against whom he is 2-for-18. As Shapiro says, “You can’t typecast him as one type of hitter.” This is Shapiro’s 15th year with the Indians. He has seen Albert Belle, Manny Ramirez and Jim Thome come through the organization. Yet, he says that none of those sluggers matched the combined approach, focus, toughness and intelligence of Hafner.

Cavs close with 50, get Wizards in playoffs

The Cavaliers accomplished something Wednesday night that they haven’t done in thirteen seasons, and that’s win 50 games in a season. With LeBron and Larry Hughes both sitting out, the Cavs got the milestone victory and ended their regular season on a high note, beating the Hawks 100-99 at home on Fan Appreciation Night. Flip Murray led the Cavs with 19 points and Anderson Varejao grabbed 18 rebounds.

We closed out the regular season strong but the real season starts Saturday against the Wizards.

“We had fun tonight,” forward Donyell Marshall said. “We wanted to get to 50, and we had fun. This is our last chance to have fun. Now, it gets serious. It’s the second season. It’s time to go to work again.”

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