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Tribe notes: Injuries hurt, Acta says

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

CLEVELAND — The way manager Manny Acta sees it, injuries derailed what could have been a promising season for the Indians.

Cleveland lost Grady Sizemore to a knee injury shortly into the year then endured the same fate with the orga­nization’s top prospect, catcher Carlos Santana, who was shelved for the sea­son just 46 games into his debut year.

“This is a club that just can’t absorb those type of injuries we absorbed this year,” said Acta, whose Indians ended the night in fourth place with a 68-91 record. “When you talk about the Cleveland Indians, I think the whole United States and the world thinks about Grady Sizemore. We’re not the type of team that can just have somebody get hurt and plug in a guy that hit 35 home runs two years ago or go out and get a guy. It really hurt us.

“Just imagine having Grady hitting in front of (Shin-Soo) Choo, and hav­ing a guy like Carlos hitting behind him the whole season.”

Entering the season, offense was expected to be a strong suit for Cleve­land, while pitching was a perceived weakness. It worked out the other way around, thanks to the injuries and some surprising performances from the rotation and bullpen.

“I’m very happy (with our pitching). We have taken huge steps,” Acta said. “Nobody in our rotation took a step back because of an injury. The pitch­ers have made a lot more progress than our position players. It’s not a secret. Guys were pressed into duty. We saw flashes out of a few players but not consistency. The only guy who came up who was ready to make an impact was Carlos.”

Sizemore and Santana are expected to be healed by the start of the 2011 season, while designated hitter Travis Hafner will have another offseason to rest his ailing right shoulder.

It has Acta optimistic that the Indi­ans can turn things around in his sec­ond season as manager next year.

“I am excited about this franchise,” he said. “It’s a fact that we have to do things a certain way. I can’t lie to peo­ple and say we’re going to go out there and sign three free agents that are going to make $15 million a year. That’s not going to happen here.

“Our best chance here is to draft, develop our players and make as few mistakes as we can so we can put a core together like it was done here starting in 2003. That’s a reality. To me, it’s rewarding to see guys making progress. The challenge is to turn it around. It will be very rewarding turn­ing this around. It will be special.”

Surgery scheduled

Reliever Hector Ambriz is scheduled to undergo Tommy John surgery Friday in Anaheim, Calif.

Ambriz went 0-2 with a 5.59 ERA in 34 appearances for Cleveland.

Next up

The Indians are off today, wrapping up the regular season with a three-game series in Chicago that begins Friday at 8:10 p.m.

Fausto Carmona (12-14, 3.79 ERA) opens the set, opposing RHP Tony Pena (5-2, 4.85), while Carlos Carrasco (2-1, 3.26) goes Saturday (7:05 p.m.), the White Sox countering with LHP Mark Buehrle (12-13, 4.32).

Indians reliever Justin Germano (0-2, 2.33) will start the series finale Sunday (2:05 p.m.) against RHP Edwin Jackson (9-12, 4.53).

Roundin’ third

  • Trevor Crowe’s hitting streak came to an end at 13 games with an 0-for-4 performance in Game 1 of the doubleheader. It was the longest current streak in the majors.
  • The shut out in Game 1 was the Indians’ fourth of the season.

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com.

Indians notes from Wednesday: Acta optimistic about 2011

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

CLEVELAND – The way manager Manny Acta sees it, injuries derailed what could have been a promising season for the Indians.

Cleveland lost Grady Sizemore to a knee injury shortly into the year then endured the same fate with the organization’s top prospect, catcher Carlos Santana, who was shelved for the season just 46 games into his debut year.

“This is a club that just can’t absorb those type of injuries we absorbed this year,” said Acta, whose Indians entered the second game of a doubleheader in fourth place with a 67-91 record. “When you talk about the Cleveland Indians, I think the whole United States and the world thinks about Grady Sizemore. We’re not the type of team that can just have somebody get hurt and plug in a guy that hit 35 home runs two years ago or go out and get a guy. It really hurt us.

“Just imagine having Grady hitting in front of (Shin-Soo) Choo, and having a guy like Carlos hitting behind him the whole season.”
Entering the season, offense was expected to be a strong suit for Cleveland, while pitching was a perceived weakness. It worked out the other way around, thanks to the injuries and some surprising performances from the rotation and bullpen. 
“I’m very happy (with our pitching). We have taken huge steps,” Acta said. “Nobody in our rotation took a step back because of an injury. The pitchers have made a lot more progress than our position players. It’s not a secret. Guys were pressed into duty. We saw flashes out of a few players but not consistency. The only guy who came up who was ready to make an impact was Carlos.”
Sizemore and Santana are expected to be healed by the start of the 2011 season, while designated hitter Travis Hafner will have another offseason to rest his ailing right shoulder. 
It has Acta optimistic that the Indians can turn things around in his second season as manager next year.  
“I am excited about this franchise,” he said. “It’s a fact that we have to do things a certain way. I can’t lie to people and say we’re going to go out there and sign three free agents that are going to make $15 million a year. That’s not going to happen here. 
“Our best chance here is to draft, develop our players and make as few mistakes as we can so we can put a core together like it was done here starting in 2003. That’s a reality. To me, it’s rewarding to see guys making progress. The challenge is to turn it around. It will be very rewarding turning this around. It will be special.”

 

Surgery scheduled

Reliever Hector Ambriz is scheduled to undergo Tommy John surgery Friday in Anaheim, Calif.

Ambriz went 0-2 with a 5.59 ERA in 34 appearances for Cleveland.

 

Next up

The Indians are off today, wrapping up the regular season with a three-game series in Chicago that begins Friday at 8:10 p.m.

Fausto Carmona (12-14, 3.79 ERA) opens the set, opposing RHP Tony Pena (5-2, 4.85), while Carlos Carrasco (2-1, 3.26) goes Saturday (7:05 p.m.), the White Sox countering with LHP Mark Buehrle (12-13, 4.32).

Indians reliever Justin Germano (0-2, 2.33) will start the series finale Sunday (2:05 p.m.) against RHP Edwin Jackson (9-12, 4.53).

 

Roundin’ third

Trevor Crowe’s hitting streak came to an at 13 games with an 0-for-4 performance in Game 1 of the doubleheader. It was the longest current streak in the majors. … The shut out in Game 1 was the Indians’ fourth of the season.

 

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com.

Indians 4, Tigers 0: Tribe blanks Tigers in opening game

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

The Indians shut out the Tigers, 4-0, in the first game of a doubleheader Wednesday at Progressive Field.

Mitch Talbot got the win for Cleveland, allowing just five hits over seven innings.

The Indians’ offense was powered by a pair of two-run home runs from Travis Hafner and Shin-Soo Choo.

Former President Carter will spend second night at Cleveland hospital

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

CLEVELAND — Former President Jimmy Carter, his book tour interrupted by an upset stomach, will spend a second night in an Ohio hospital after doctors recommended additional observation, a hospital spokeswoman said Wednesday.
Carter’s medical team continues to observe his progress, said Christina Karas, spokeswoman at MetroHealth Medical Center.
“President Carter is in very good spirits, appreciates […]