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Indians lose to Reds, fall 20 games under .500

CINCINNATI – The only thing different about the surging Cincinnati Reds was their headgear.

Drew Stubbs drove in four runs with a homer and a single Friday night, powering the NL’s top-hitting lineup to its fourth straight victory, 10-3 over the Cleveland Indians.

“We’ll ride this out as long as we can,” said Stubbs, who matched his career high for RBIs. “Eight to 10 wins would be great.”

The Reds wore green caps as part of an Irish Heritage Night promotion, bringing a new hue to the intrastate rivalry – one that’s been one-sided lately. Cincinnati is 12-4 in the series over the last three seasons.

Aaron Harang (6-7) gave up eight hits in seven innings, getting his first victory in three starts. Cincinnati had been shut out in his last two starts.

Didn’t take long to end that trend.

Stubbs hit a two-run homer in the second off Aaron Laffey (0-2), and added a two-run single in the fifth that made it 8-2.

“When guys score runs early like that, it makes it easier to pitch,” Harang said. “You don’t have to worry as much about making mistakes.”

Scott Rolen drew a bases-loaded walk and homered for the Reds, who lead the NL in batting average and hits. Jay Bruce doubled twice, scored three times and had a sacrifice fly.

Cincinnati took control with 10 hits in the first five innings.

“The offense came through big-time,” manager Dusty Baker said. “It feels good to get a lot of hits.”

The Indians’ plummet continued unabated. Cleveland fell a season-low 20 games under .500 at 26-46 – the third-worst record in the majors. The Indians have lost 10 of 11 overall.

While the Indians wallow in last place in the AL Central, the Reds remain locked with St. Louis in a two-team race in the NL Central, separated by a half-game.

Cincinnati’s pitching has been exceptional the last week, a trend that Harang struggled to extend on a hot, muggy night. He pitched out of two-on threats in the first, second and third innings, when Cleveland squandered chances to take advantage of his control problems. Harang walked a season-high five batters, but only one of them scored.

Carlos Santana hit a two-run homer in the fifth, then left the game with a sore left thumb. Jhonny Peralta added a solo shot in the sixth.

Santana jammed the thumb when he hit an inside pitch during his first at-bat. It started to swell as the game went along and was bothering him his homer. X-rays were negative.

Laffey moved from the rotation to the bullpen this season, but struggled in May and was sent to Triple-A to get back into a starting mode. He was called up before Friday’s game and made a disappointing return, needing 86 pitches to get through four innings.

Nothing new for the Indians, who are among the AL leaders in walks allowed.

“He needs to throw more strikes,” manager Manny Acta said. “That’s been a problem for a lot of guys here.”

Laffey gave up a couple of hits to open the third, then walked the next two, including Rolen with the bases loaded.

“After the first two batters reached, things kind of fell apart,” Laffey said.

The left-hander has never done well against Cincinnati, going 0-4 in four appearances with an 11.12 ERA. Both losses this season have come against the Reds – he got the other one in relief during a 7-4 defeat on May 21 in Cleveland.

Notable

The Reds pulled ahead in the series 34-33.
• The Indians are 4-12 in interleague play this season. The Reds are 7-6.
• Cleveland has lost 11 of its last 13 games in National League ballparks.
• Baker dropped slumping leadoff hitter Orlando Cabrera to second in the order. Brandon Phillips batted first for the third time this season. Cabrera doubled in his second at-bat, breaking an 0-for-19 slump.

TONIGHT

• WHO: Cleveland at Cincinnati
• TIME: 7:10
• WHERE: Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati
• PITCHERS: Masterson (2-6, 4.87 ERA) vs. LeCure (1-4, 4.50)
• TV/RADIO: WEOL 930-AM, WTAM 1100-AM



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