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Tribe notes: Another day, another injury as Jason Donald misses game

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

CLEVELAND – It wouldn’t be a day at the ballpark without an injury for the Indians.

Second baseman Jason Donald was a late scratch from the lineup Monday with a right index finger contusion. He was replaced by Cord Phelps.

The injury is not considered a serious one, but should Donald – .283, three RBIs in 16 games – wind up on the disabled list, he will join seven other players for the Indians, who have used the DL more than any other team in the American League other than the Twins.

With injuries ravaging the Indians all year, only 15 players on their current roster opened the season on the 25-man roster. Cleveland has used 23 position players and 19 pitchers this season after using 24 position players and 22 pitchers in 2010.

• Shin-Soo Choo (left oblique) told reporters that he is still a week away from taking batting practice, which means he is probably two weeks away from game activity.

• Right-hander Josh Tomlin (ligament sprain right elbow) still believes he will pitch again before the end of the regular season, but if the Indians are out of contention, he will most likely be shut down.

He’s the man

Jeanmar Gomez will be recalled from Triple-A Columbus to start tonight against Oakland in place of Tomlin.

Gomez, who is 0-2 with a 5.70 ERA in two spot starts for the Indians this year, was considered the strongest candidate. The right-hander is 10-7 with a 2.55 ERA in 21 starts for the Cilppers.

Barring a disastrous effort, Gomez will likely stay in Tomlin’s spot in the rotation.

Crispy critter

Former Indians outfielder Coco Crisp is having a resurgent season after playing in just 75 games for Oakland last year.

Crisp, who played in Cleveland from 2002-05, entered Monday batting .267 with seven home runs, 44 RBIs and a career-high 37 stolen bases in 115 games. The stolen base count led the AL through Sunday.

Crisp’s high with the Indians was 20 in 2004. Asdrubal Cabrera led the Indians with 16 stolen bases through Sunday.

Minor details

Columbus RHP Paolo Espino was named International League pitcher of the week (Aug. 22-28) after working 11 scoreless innings in two starts, while allowing just three hits and striking out 13. Espino is went 6-0 with a 2.44 ERA in 22 games (five starts) for Double-A Akron before being promoted to Columbus, where he is 2-1 with a 3.45 ERA in 10 games (four starts).

• Akron closer Cory Burns was recently named to the Carolina League postseason All-Star team. Entering Monday, Burns (2-5, 2.28 ERA) had converted a franchise-high 33 saves in 35 opportunities through Sunday. The right-hander is an eighth-round draft pick in 2009.

Roundin’ third

Right-hander Joe Smith’s 1.50 ERA was the second-lowest among AL relievers through Sunday.

• The Indians entered Monday with 32 come-from-behind wins, the second-most in the AL behind Boston’s 34.

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com. Fan him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.

Indians 2, A’s 1: Tribe takes series opener

Monday, August 29th, 2011

CLEVELAND — The Indians didn’t generate a lot of offense — surprise, surprise — but they did do enough to get a much-needed win Monday night at Progressive Field.

Entering a game in third place for the first time all season, the Indians mustered a couple timely hits, then let their pitching do the rest to help them to a 2-1 victory in the opener of a four-game series with Oakland.

Cleveland, which won for just the fourth time in 11 games, remained in third place a half game behind the White Sox. But the Indians did gain ground on the first-place Tigers, who they trail by 5 1/2 games in the Central Division standings.

“It doesn’t matter if it’s the first game (of the series),” right fielder Kosuke Fukudome said through an interpreter. Fukudome delivered the Indians’ first key hit, a two-out RBI double to score the game’s first run in the sixth inning. “I think we just need to win every single game. We can’t worry about what other teams are doing.”

As long as they keep getting pitching performances like they did Monday, the Indians might not have to.

Pitching for the first time in nine days, Indians starter David Huff was a bit rusty, tossing 43 pitches over the first three innings. But the left-hander worked through it to offer up an effective outing, logging six scoreless innings, while allowing just three hits and striking out four.

Huff had runners aboard in each of the first three innings but pitched out of it before finding a groove that saw him retire 10 straight, beginning with the last two outs of the third. He had runners on first and second in the sixth before getting Brandon Allen to ground out to end the inning.

“David started laboring a little bit,” Cleveland manager Manny Acta said. “I didn’t think he was going to go that far. But he righted himself up and he was very aggressive in the zone with his fastball and his cutter.”

Huff, 2-2 with a 2.08 ERA in six games (five starts) admitted to being rusty at the outset, but he continued to show a penchant for working out of jams that hasn’t been on display during the first two years of his career.

“Early, the balls were up and they were fouling them off,” Huff said. “Later on the ball got down and they weren’t fouling it off anymore. They were pounding it into the ground.”

Huff’s effort was backed by another quality performance from Cleveland’s bullpen, which allowed a run in the eighth, but kept the inning from getting any larger after the A’s produced consecutive doubles to start the inning.

Left-hander Tony Sipp, who allowed the RBI double to Jemile Weeks, got the first out on Coco Crisp’s ill-fated sacrifice bunt attempt that did not advance Weeks to third, then got the second out on a drive to warning track in right field.

Sipp was replaced by Vinnie Pestano, who struck out Oakland cleanup hitter Josh Willingham with Weeks on third.

Closer Chris Perez retired the side in order to get his 30th save of the season in 34 chances. The right-hander struck out the first two batters, ending the game by getting Kurt Suzuki to pop up.

The Indians matched the A’s with five hits on the night, but they got the biggest one when Carlos Santana clouted a solo home run with one out in the seventh off Oakland starter Brandon McCarthy.

McCarthy probably deserved a better fate, outlasting Huff to pitch eight innings and allow just two runs on five hits while striking out 10.

“We couldn’t do much against McCarthy,” Acta said. “But we got some clutch hits.”

Despite owning just a .242 batting average, Santana has been one of Cleveland’s more productive hitters all year. He is second on the team to All-Star shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera with 20 homers and 64 RBIs, while leading the club in walks (77) and on-base percentage (.350).

Santana has been hot as of late, hitting .304 (28-for-92) with five homers and 16 RBIs over his last 23 games.

“In a way he hasn’t met people’s expectations,” Acta said of Santana, a highly-touted offensive weapon when his first full season in the majors began this year. “But if you’re a person that’s not always looking at batting average, he’s had an impressive year.”

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com. Fan him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.


Indians 2, A’s 1: Tribe takes first

Monday, August 29th, 2011

The Indians opened a four-game series against Oakland with a 2-1 victory at Progressive Field on Monday night.

David Huff got the win, working six scoreless innings and allowing just three hits.

A solo shot from Carlos Santana — his 20th home run of the year — put the Indians up 2-0 in the seventh.

Indians notes: Another injury for Tribe

Monday, August 29th, 2011

CLEVELAND — It wouldn’t be a day at the ballpark without an injury for the Indians.

Second baseman Jason Donald was a late scratch from the lineup Monday with a right index finger contusion. He was replaced by Cord Phelps.

The injury is not considered a serious one, but should Donald — .283, three RBIs in 16 games — wind up on the disabled list, he will join seven other players for the Indians, who have used the DL more than any other team in the American League other than the Twins.

With injuries ravaging the Indians all year, only 15 players on their current roster opened the season on the 25-man roster. Cleveland has used 23 position players and 19 pitchers this season after using 24 position players and 22 pitchers in 2010.

** Shin-Soo Choo (left oblique) told reporters that he is still a week away from taking batting practice, which means he is probably two weeks away from game activity.

** Right-hander Josh Tomlin (ligament sprain right elbow) still believes he will pitch again before the end of the regular season, but if the Indians are out of contention, he will most likely be shut down.

He’s the man

Jeanmar Gomez will be recalled from Triple-A Columbus to start tonight against Oakland in place of Tomlin.

Gomez, who is 0-2 with a 5.70 ERA in two spot starts for the Indians this year, was considered the strongest candidate. The right-hander is 10-7 with a 2.55 ERA in 21 starts for the Cilppers.

Barring a disastrous effort, Gomez will likely stay in Tomlin’s spot in the rotation.

Crispy critter

Former Indians outfielder Coco Crisp is having a resurgent season after playing in just 75 games for Oakland last year.

Crisp, who played in Cleveland from 2002-05, entered Monday batting .267 with seven home runs, 44 RBIs and a career-high 37 stolen bases in 115 games. The stolen base count led the AL through Sunday.

Crisp’s high with the Indians was 20 in 2004. Asdrubal Cabrera led the Indians with 16 stolen bases through Sunday.

Minor details

Columbus RHP Paolo Espino was named International League pitcher of the week (Aug. 22-28) after working 11 scoreless innings in two starts, while allowing just three hits and striking out 13. Espino is went 6-0 with a 2.44 ERA in 22 games (five starts) for Double-A Akron before being promoted to Columbus, where he is 2-1 with a 3.45 ERA in 10 games (four starts). … Akron closer Cory Burns was recently named to the Carolina League postseason All-Star team. Entering Monday, Burns (2-5, 2.28 ERA) had converted a franchise-high 33 saves in 35 opportunities through Sunday. The right-hander is an eighth-round draft pick in 2009.

Roundin’ third

Right-hander Joe Smith’s 1.50 ERA was the second-lowest among AL relievers through Sunday. … The Indians entered Monday with 32 come-from-behind wins, the second-most in the AL behind Boston’s 34. … Tonight, 7:05, STO/WTAM 1100-AM/WEOL 930-AM. Gomez (0-2, 5.70) vs. Cahill (9-12, 4.13).

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com. Fan him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.