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Local News

Two teens allegedly sell ecstasy to drug agents

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

MEDINA — Two 19-year-old men remained in the Medina County Jail on Tuesday for allegedly selling ecstasy to an undercover agent.

Michael Hixson, of 223 E. Friendship St., and Erik Sullen, of 1717 Station Road, Liverpool Township, are charged with one count each of trafficking in drugs, a second-degree felony, according to the Medina County Drug Task Force.

On Friday night, Drug Task Force agents and Medina police officers arrested the pair after they allegedly sold ecstasy to an agent in the parking lot of Hawkins Market, 233 Lafayette Road. Hixson was arrested in the parking lot and Sullen was arrested a short distance away after he fled on foot, according to the Drug Task Force.

Hixson is being held on $30,000 bond and Sullen $35,000, a jail spokesman said.

Crushers win slugfest against CornBelters

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

AVON — Rookie second baseman Zac Messer was the only Crusher without an RBI heading into Tuesday night’s game with Normal.

So, naturally, with two men on in the bottom of the eighth in a tie game, Messer lined a single to left, driving in one and setting the table for a huge four-run inning that gave Lake Erie the edge in a 12-8 slugfest over the CornBelters in front of 1,206 fans at All Pro Freight Stadium.

Messer’s single started it, but there were a ton of big boppers on this night for the Crushers (5-5), who had season high in runs, home runs (three) and hits (14). Five of their 14 hits were for extra bases, and all nine hitters in the lineup had at least one hit.

“I’ve been struggling at the plate lately,” said Messer, a Massillon native who was 1-for-4 with  run and two RBIs. “I’ve been seeing it well, but I just haven’t been coming through when I started to swing the bat. I just went up there relaxed, knowing that everything in the past is the past, and just looked for something I could handle and put a pretty good swing on it. That was my goal.

“I noticed that the infield was in, so I just wanted to put it in play. To see it go through and get at least one run in was the bonus part of that situation.”

It was also only fitting that the Crushers’ offensive explosion occurred with hitting coach Dave Schaub serving as the acting manager because John Massarelli was at the high school graduation of his only daughter, Noel.

But, according to Schaub, he was getting constant text messages from his boss all night.

“I was not surprised (by our output),” Schaub said. “I think we have the lineup to do that consistently. To me, it was just a matter of time. The more games these guys get in, the more comfortable they’re feeling. Obviously, they have the experience and the potential to hit the ball like they did tonight.

“And it was big because they put it on when we needed it in a game like tonight’s, when you knew it was going to be a shootout from the get-go.”

Shortstop Andrew Davis, also overdue for a big game, finally got one, going 3-for-5 with his first home run, a double, a run and four RBIs. His two-run double in the eighth scored the final runs in that four-run inning.

“The whole game, every time we kept scoring, they kept battling back and tying it,” Davis said. “To bust out in the eighth inning with four runs was big.

“It’s kind of like everything’s contagious. When someone has a big game, someone else has a good game the next day. It just kind of builds off of each other. When everybody starts playing the same way the whole year, it’s kind of tough to beat someone when you have five or six guys all having big games at once.”

Kellen Kulbacki continued his recent torrid streak at home, going 3-for-4 with a double and two runs. Rookie Kyle Shaffer blasted his team-leading second home run of the season — and his second in as many games — while Scott Houin also blasted his first home run since 2009.

“That’s what we’ve come to expect out of Davis,” Schaub said. “He’s a big-game player who’s come through in the clutch for us more than anyone in the league in my opinion. That doesn’t surprise me at all.

“With Zac, his average doesn’t indicate the quality at-bats he’s been having. He works his butt off, and we’re happy to see him come through.”

Messer’s hit came after the Crushers greeted Jeremy Brewer (0-2) with a leadoff walk to Nick Mahin, a sacrifice bunt by Joel Collins and a two-base error when Shaffer’s fly ball down the right-field line was dropped by Asif Shah. Shaffer was thrown out at the plate on Messer’s hit.

With two outs, Patrick Norris followed Messer with an infield single, and Houin drove in Messer from second with an RBI single to make it 11-8. Then Davis came through with a two-run double to left-center to make it 12-8.

It could have been worse. Kulbacki followed Davis with a single up the middle. Davis, however, was caught too far off third base and was thrown out at the plate to mercifully end it for the Belters.

The rally made a winner of closer Ruben Flores (2-0). Despite allowing the game-tying double in the top of the eighth, Flores tossed 1 1/3 scoreless innings with one hit, one walk and two strikeouts.

Flores’ outing was the lone bright spot in a rough pitching day for the Crushers. Starter Andrew Weeks, who came into the game 2-0, and relievers Andrew Berger, Jeff Cinadr and Kelyn Schellenberg all struggled  against a Belters team that also pounded the ball all game long.

Nine of Normal’s 14 hits went for extra bases — seven doubles and two home runs.

“I had a feeling early in the game that it was going to be that kind of game,” Schaub said. “At the end of the day, we got the job done. That’s all I really care about.”

Contact Dan Gilles at 329-7135 or dangilles73@gmail.com.

Bats stay silent: Rays blank Indians for second time in three days

Monday, May 30th, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – Justin Masterson struggled from the start and things never really got better.

Jeremy Hellickson pitched seven impressive innings, John Jaso homered and the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Cleveland Indians 7-0 on Sunday.

Masterson (5-3) allowed seven runs, eight hits and five walks in five innings. He entered winless in his five previous starts – including two losses – despite a 2.80 ERA over the stretch.

“He’s only got one shaky outing and it’s today,” Indians manager Manny Acta said. “Obviously didn’t have a good outing, but he’s been money for us so far.”

Masterson is 1-6 in 11 career games against Tampa Bay, and the only two times the right-hander has given up more three runs in a start this season has come against the Rays.

“We just may work well against him,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon said. “Maybe we’ve played well against him in the past and he thinks about it. I have no specific reasons.”

Masterson did not record a strikeout for the second time this season, and it was the first time he failed to pitch into the sixth.

“Just had a tough time controlling the strike zone and it got me in bad counts,” Masterson said. “They took advantage of it, which is good by them.”

Hellickson (6-3) scattered three hits, walked two and had six strikeouts. The right-hander has won five of his last six starts.

Jaso hit a two-run homer off Masterson as Tampa Bay went ahead 4-0 in the fourth. Ben Zobrist had an RBI grounder and Sam Fuld hit a run-scoring infield single in a three-run fifth that extended the Rays’ lead to 7-0.

The AL Central-leading Indians are 11-11 since May 4. Cleveland was also blanked 5-0 in the series’ opener Friday.

“Certainly not the way you want to start a road trip, especially being shut out two of three games here,” Acta said.

Johnny Damon had an RBI single during a two-run third that put the Rays up 2-0. The other run scored when catcher Lou Marson was charged with a passed ball that allowed Evan Longoria to score from third.

Hellickson worked out of a two-on, one-out jam in the first by getting a double-play grounder from Travis Buck.

“Just getting out of the first inning was huge,” Maddon said. “I think that might have been the tipping point.”

Hellickson struck out Grady Sizemore with two runners on to end the fourth.

“We just couldn’t make the adjustments offensively against Hellickson,” Acta said. “He had a very good changeup as usual. Mixed his pitches very well.”

Sizemore was the designated hitter for the third straight game and struck out in all four plate appearances. He is hitless in 12 at-bats, including seven strikeouts, since returning from a bruised right kneecap on Friday.

The Indians are still planning to have Sizemore possibly play the field once during a three-game series that starts Monday night at Toronto.

TONIGHT

• WHO: Cleveland at Toronto
• TIME: 7:07
• WHERE: Rogers Centre
• PITCHERS: Carmona (3-5, 4.73 ERA) vs. Reyes (0-4, 4.70)
• TV/RADIO: SportsTime Ohio; WEOL 930-AM, WTAM 1100-AM

Indians survive sloppy outing, down Rays to snap three-game skid

Sunday, May 29th, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – Carlos Carrasco put together a quality start and the Cleveland Indians’ offense did its part, too.

Shelley Duncan and Orlando Cabrera each had two RBIs, Carrasco pitched six solid innings and the Indians beat the Tampa Bay Rays 7-3 on Saturday.

“Carrasco gave us a chance,” Cleveland manager Manny Acta said. “He threw the ball well, and was aggressive with his fastball.”

Duncan, who was pinch-hitting, and Cabrera both had two-run singles during the eighth to put Cleveland ahead 7-2. Duncan had a bases-loaded drive off J.P. Howell that hit high off the left-field wall, but he was held to a single because it looked like outfielder Sam Fuld might be able to catch the ball.

“Huge hit by Shelley Duncan. Huge hit by Orlando Cabrera, who always seems to be in the middle of those big rallies,” Acta said.

Carrasco (4-2) gave up two runs and seven hits, helping the AL Central-leading Indians end a three-game losing streak. Cleveland had been outscored 23-4 during the short skid.

“I put in my mind I have to win this game and that’s what I did,” Carrasco said.

Slumping Rays All-Star third baseman Evan Longoria, moved from the middle of the lineup to leadoff, had two hits in four at-bats, including a homer. Manager Joe Maddon has taken that approach with struggling power hitters in the past and told Longoria to start having fun again.

Maddon said Longoria “analyzed the pitches better today” and did not rule out keeping him in the same leadoff role today.

Longoria drew a two-out walk off Rafael Perez to load the bases in the ninth. The Rays scored a run when first baseman Matt LaPorta was charged with an error after misplaying Johnny Damon’s grounder, but closer Chris Perez got his 14th save when Sean Rodriguez was tagged out during a rundown between third and home on the play.

Perez said he was mad at himself for being slow covering first base and was heading toward the mound when he heard his teammates start yelling.

“I look up and there’s guys running everywhere,” Perez said. “I ran right at Rodriguez and he had to make a decision.”

Longoria took most of the blame for the final out because he rounded second and was running toward third, where Rodriguez had stopped.

The Indians went up 2-0 during a strange first inning that sawjust five hitters bat even though the first four all got hits.

Michael Brantley had a leadoff single and scored on a triple by Asdrubal Cabrera, who then was picked off third by James Shields (5-3). After Shin-Soo Choo and Travis Buck singled, Carlos Santana hit what turned out to be an inning-ending sacrifice fly. Choo crossed the plate on Santana’s liner to right before Buck, who was running on the pitch, was doubled off first base.

LaPorta extended the Indians’ advantage to 3-0 on a second-inning homer. He had struck out in all four at-bats in Friday night’s 5-0 loss to the Rays.

Shields allowed three runs and seven hits over seven innings. The right-hander has gone seven or more innings – including a 4-0 complete-game win over Florida last Sunday – in nine consecutive starts.

Longoria cut the deficit to 3-1 on his third-inning solo shot. It was his first homer and RBI this season at home, coming in his 12th game.

Longoria, who had just six hits in 45 at-bats over his previous 12 games, also had a first-inning single.

“Joe’s usually right,” Longoria said of his manager.

Rodriguez’s RBI bunt single in the fourth made it 3-2.

Tampa Bay’s Matt Joyce, who entered hitting a major league-best .377, went 1-for-4. His average dropped three points.

Notable

Longoria is the first Rays player to homer in first at-bat leading off a game.
• Cleveland DH Grady Sizemore went 0-for-4 and is hitless in eight at-bats since returning from a bruised right kneecap.
• Tampa Bay CF B.J. Upton struck out in his first six plate appearances of the series, including twice Saturday, before grounding out in in the sixth.