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Justice for Justin: Indians’ Masterson finally gets some support, beats Red for first win since April 26

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

CINCINNATI – Three innings, three Cleveland homers. Justin Masterson had waited a long time for something like that to happen.

Savor it? Absolutely.

Grady Sizemore hit the first of Cleveland’s three homers off Bronson Arroyo, and the Indians remained perfect against their intrastate rival, beating the Cincinnati Reds 8-2 on Friday night.

Cleveland is 4-0 against Cincinnati, which has struggled mightily against the American League.

The defending NL Central champs are 5-11 in interleague play and have lost their season series to Cleveland for the first time since 2005.

“We took the series, and hopefully we can take a few more games,” Masterson said.

Masterson (6-6) went eight innings for his first win since April 26. He allowed four hits, including the first of Brandon Phillips’ two solo homers.

The long drought was mainly a function of Cleveland’s offense. The Indians scored only 22 runs in his last 11 starts and were shut out twice.

“He understood,” manager Manny Acta said. “The pitching coach and myself let him know he was pitching great, but it’s a team effort and he can’t control what we did offensively.”

Sizemore hit his first homer since June 8 to start the early rally. Asdrubal Cabrera and Carlos Santana also connected, giving Masterson room to maneuver for a change.

“He’s been great all year,” Sizemore said. “The biggest thing has been the offense scoring runs for him.”

The Indians swept Cincinnati in Cleveland from May 20-22, when they were at the peak of their startlingly strong start. That sweep pushed their AL Central lead to a season-high seven games. It’s been a struggle since.

Following their 30-15 start, the Indians dropped 22 of their next 34, a swoon that knocked them out of first place. With Detroit’s loss Friday to the Giants, the Indians moved back into first by a half game.

The Reds? They have stagnated within a few games of .500 since that sweep in Cleveland, unable to put together a winning streak or measure up against the AL.

They got manhandled again.

Sizemore’s eighth homer got the Indians going in the second inning. He later added an RBI double off Arroyo (7-7), who gave up eight runs in 4 2/3 innings. The right-hander has allowed seven homers in his last two starts and 24 homers overall, most in the NL.

“It’s been a strange year for me as far as feeling up and down on the mound,” Arroyo said.

Arroyo seemed to have an advantage going in: Shin-Soo Choo was out of Cleveland’s lineup with a broken left thumb. Choo hit four homers off Arroyo last season – the most by any batter off the same pitcher in the majors.

And, with no designated hitter available, the Indians’ lineup also was missing Travis Hafner.

No matter. The Indians pounced on his misplaced pitches just the same.

Arroyo gave up four homers – tying his career high – in a 10-5 victory in Baltimore on Saturday. The Indians kept the trend going, giving Masterson a chance to get that long-awaited win.

“The way it’s been going lately on my part, I’m pretty happy with,” Masterson said. “You can’t let the score dictate how you pitch, but it’s nice to see those runs on the board.”

Sizemore hit a down-the-middle, two-strike pitch for a solo homer. Cabrera added a two-run shot in the third, and Santana homered two pitches later for a 4-0 lead.

By contrast, Masterson has been adept at keeping the ball down and in the park. Phillips led off the fourth with only the fourth homer allowed by the right-hander this season – the first by a right-handed batter. It ended his streak of 36 1/3 innings without giving up a homer.

Notable

The Indians put closer Chris Perez on the bereavement list for the start of their series against Cincinnati. Perez went to Florida following the death of his grandmother. He’s 19 of 20 in save opportunities, having converted his last 13. The Indians expect him back for the final game of the series on Sunday. The Indians called up right-hander Josh Judy from Triple-A Columbus. Judy was 2-2 with 12 saves and a 3.30 ERA in 27 appearances for Columbus. He was with the Indians from May 21-25 and made his debut against the Reds, pitching one scoreless inning before being sent back to the minors.

• The Reds had their eighth sellout of the season.

CINCINNATI — Three innings, three Cleveland homers. Justin Masterson had waited a long time for something like that to happen.

Savor it? Absolutely.

Grady Sizemore hit the first of Cleveland’s three homers off Bronson Arroyo, and the Indians remained perfect against their intrastate rival, beating the Cincinnati Reds 8-2 on Friday night.

Cleveland is 4-0 against Cincinnati, which has struggled mightily against the American League.

The defending NL Central champs are

5-11 in interleague play and have lost their season series to Cleveland for the first time since 2005.

“We took the series, and hopefully we can take a few more games,” Masterson said.

Masterson (6-6) went eight innings for his first win since April 26. He allowed four hits, including the first of Brandon Phillips’ two solo homers.

The long drought was mainly a function of Cleveland’s offense. The Indians scored only 22 runs in his last 11 starts and were shut out twice.

“He understood,” manager Manny Acta said. “The pitching coach and myself let him know he was pitching great, but it’s a team effort and he can’t control what we did offensively.”

Sizemore hit his first homer since June 8 to start the early rally. Asdrubal Cabrera and Carlos Santana also connected, giving Masterson room to maneuver for a change.

“He’s been great all year,” Sizemore said. “The biggest thing has been the offense scoring runs for him.”

The Indians swept Cincinnati in Cleveland from May 20-22, when they were at the peak of their startlingly strong start. That sweep pushed their AL Central lead to a season-high seven games. It’s been a struggle since.

Following their 30-15 start, the Indians dropped 22 of their next 34, a swoon that knocked them out of first place. With Detroit’s loss Friday to the Giants, the Indians moved back into first by a half game.

The Reds? They have stagnated within a few games of .500 since that sweep in Cleveland, unable to put together a winning streak or measure up against the AL.

They got manhandled again.

Sizemore’s eighth homer got the Indians going in the second inning. He later added an RBI double off Arroyo (7-7), who gave up eight runs in 4 2/3 innings. The right-hander has allowed seven homers in his last two starts and 24 homers overall, most in the NL.

“It’s been a strange year for me as far as feeling up and down on the mound,” Arroyo said.

Arroyo seemed to have an advantage going in: Shin-Soo Choo was out of Cleveland’s lineup with a broken left thumb. Choo hit four homers off Arroyo last season — the most by any batter off the same pitcher in the majors.

And, with no designated hitter available, the Indians’ lineup also was missing Travis Hafner.

No matter. The Indians pounced on his misplaced pitches just the same.

Arroyo gave up four homers — tying his career high — in a 10-5 victory in Baltimore on Saturday. The Indians kept the trend going, giving Masterson a chance to get that long-awaited win.

“The way it’s been going lately on my part, I’m pretty happy with,” Masterson said. “You can’t let the score dictate how you pitch, but it’s nice to see those runs on the board.”

Sizemore hit a down-the-middle, two-strike pitch for a solo homer. Cabrera added a two-run shot in the third, and Santana homered two pitches later for a 4-0 lead.

By contrast, Masterson has been adept at keeping the ball down and in the park. Phillips led off the fourth with only the fourth homer allowed by the right-hander this season — the first by a right-handed batter. It ended his streak of 36 1/3 innings without giving up a homer.

Notable

The Cleveland Indians put closer Chris Perez on the bereavement list for the start of their weekend series against intrastate rival Cincinnati.

Perez went to Florida following the death of his grandmother. He’s 19 of 20 in save opportunities, having converted his last 13. The Indians expect him back for the final game of the series on Sunday.

The Indians called up right-hander Josh Judy from Triple-A Columbus. Judy was 2-2 with 12 saves and a 3.30 ERA in 27 appearances for Columbus.

He was with the Indians from May 21-25 and made his debut against the Reds, pitching one scoreless inning before being sent back to the minors.

• The Reds had their eighth sellout of the season.

• Cleveland leads the intrastate series 38-35.

• The Indians are 10-6 in interleague play.

• Travis Buck left with a tight left hamstring after running out his two-run single in the fifth.

• Masterson singled in his first at-bat, his second career hit.

• It was Phillips’ seventh career multihomer game.

TODAY

• WHO: Cleveland at Cincinnati
• TIME: 4:10
• WHERE: Great American Ball Park
• PITCHERS: Carmona (4-10, 5.89 ERA) vs. Bailey (3-2, 3.86)
• TV/RADIO: Channel 8; WEOL 930-AM, WTAM 1100-AM

Carrasco stays hot, leads Indians past Diamondbacks and back into first place

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

PHOENIX – Chalk up another gem for Cleveland’s young Carlos Carrasco.

The 24-year-old right-hander gave up solo homers to Justin Upton and Stephen Drew, but otherwise stifled Arizona through seven innings in the Indians’ 6-2 win Wednesday as Cleveland took two of three in the interleague series.

The win, coupled with Detroit’s 16-9 loss to the Mets, put the Indians back in first place in the AL Central Division by a percentage point.

“Unbelievable,” Indians teammate Orlando Cabrera said. “Carlos, he’s been incredible the last five, six starts. When we need him, he’s just been incredible for us.”

Carrasco (8-4) gave up four hits, striking out seven with no walks, though he did hit two batters. He has allowed a combined four earned runs while going 4-1 in his last five starts, a span of 362⁄3 innings.

Manager Manny Acta said that since Carrasco came off the disabled list (right elbow inflammation) May 11, he’s been more willing to use all four of his pitches rather than just his fastball and changeup.

The young Venezuelan agreed.

“I mix up everything,” he said.

Cabrera, who delivered the deciding home run in the series opener, had a season-high four hits. He doubled, scored twice and drove in a run as the Indians won for just the third time in nine games.

Asdrubal Cabrera added three hits, including a double and an RBI single. The Indians could have made it much worse – they outhit the Diamondbacks 15-4 but stranded a season-high 15 runners.

The series victory came after the Indians scored just four runs while being swept in three games in San Francisco.

“I thought it was a very good bounce-back after yesterday (a 6-4 loss) and after the series in San Francisco,” Acta said. “Our pitching continues to be good. Carrasco was outstanding.”

The Diamondbacks play their next 10 on the road leading up to the All-Star game, to be played in Phoenix on July 12.

Carrasco held the Diamondbacks hitless until Upton’s 13th home run of the season, with one out in the fourth, cut the lead to 4-1. Drew’s homer, leading off the sixth, landed in the Cleveland bullpen down the right-field line to make it 4-2.

The Indians scored four times on eight hits off Zach Duke (1-3) in the first three innings. Asdrubal Cabrera, Carlos Santana and Michael Brantley each had RBI singles in the early flurry.

The fourth run scored on Jack Hannahan’s groundout when first baseman Juan Miranda’s throw to second for what could have been a double play hit the runner.

Consecutive singles by the Cabreras and Santana made it 1-0 in the first, then two-out RBI singles by Brantley and Asdrubal Cabrera put Cleveland up 3-0 in the second.

The Indians scored off newly arrived reliever Yhency Brazoban in the eighth when Orlando Cabrera doubled and Travis Buck singled with two outs.

Cleveland made it 6-2 in the ninth off David Hernandez when Orlando Cabrera singled home Lou Marson from second, the runner barely avoiding Miguel Montero’s tag on the throw from strong-armed Gerardo Parra in left.

“I don’t think we played very good today,” Arizona manager Kirk Gibson said. “Yeah, he (Duke) gave up nine hits in five innings but we all feel like we could have played better today. Their guy threw the ball very well. They had 15 hits and left 15 on base. They pressured us very well, they outplayed us and they beat us.”

Duke has allowed 20 runs in his last four starts, none of them longer than five innings.

“You want to see better results and for him you worry about his confidence,” Gibson said. “I talked to him a little after he came out of the game. I thought he actually threw the ball better. I didn’t feel like we were particularly sharp.”

Notable

Gibson said after the game that the team would release third baseman Melvin Mora today. The corresponding move would be made Friday, he said.

• Struggling Arizona closer J.J. Putz is expected to get some time off with what general manager Kevin Towers believes is a “dead arm.”

• Entering the game, right-handers were hitting .393 against Duke this season, lefties .115.

• Carrasco had given up four homers all season entering the game.

• This marked the eighth time Upton and brother B.J., who plays for Tampa Bay, homered on the same day.

• Arizona topped 1 million for home attendance this season.

• Miranda is hitless in his last 30 at-bats at Chase Field.

• Cleveland plays a three-game series weekend in Cincinnati to end a nine-game road trip.

NEXT UP

• WHO: Cleveland at Cincinnati
• WHEN: Friday, 7:10 p.m.
• WHERE: Great American Ball Park
• PITCHERS: Masterson (5-6, 2.98 ERA) vs. Arroyo (7-6, 5.01)
• TV/RADIO: SportsTime Ohio; WEOL 930-AM, WTAM 1100-AM

Sheen says he was ‘Major League’ juicer

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

NEW YORK – Turns out Wild Thing’s fastball had a little extra juice.

Actor Charlie Sheen tells Sports Illustrated in its latest issue that he took steroids “for like six or eight weeks” while filming the 1989 movie “Major League.” He adds that the performance-enhancing drugs helped his fastball go from 79 mph to 85 mph.

Sheen played fireballing relief pitcher Ricky “Wild Thing” Vaughn, whose wayward pitches were often “jussst a bit outside,” as Bob Uecker’s character, radio broadcaster Harry Doyle, sarcastically announced during the hit comedy.

Sheen, who has made recent headlines for erratic behavior and his firing from the show “Two and a Half Men,” says it was the only time he took steroids and they made him a bit more irritable than normal.

Diamondbacks 6, Indians 4: Santana ties it with huge blast, but Sipp gives up walk-off to Pena

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

PHOENIX — Pinch-hitter Wily Mo Pena hit a two-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning and the Arizona Diamondbacks recovered after J.J. Putz’s second straight blown save to beat the Cleveland Indians 6-4 Tuesday night.

AP Indians center fielder Grady Sizemore slams into the wall while trying to haul in a fly ball off the bat  of Arizona’s Gerardo Parra in the fifth inning Tuesday night in Phoenix. The hit went for a triple. (AP photo.)

AP Indians center fielder Grady Sizemore slams into the wall while trying to haul in a fly ball off the bat of Arizona’s Gerardo Parra in the fifth inning Tuesday night in Phoenix. The hit went for a triple. (AP photo.)

Arizona appeared to be in control after Daniel Hudson’s eight strong innings and two big hits by Kelly Johnson, only to see a late rally go to waste on a blown save by Putz (1-3).

The Diamondbacks rallied again in the bottom of the ninth against Tony Sipp (3-1), getting a walk and two stolen bases by Ryan Roberts to set up Pena’s line-drive homer over the wall in left and a wild celebration at the plate.

Alberto Castillo (1-0) got one out for the win after being called up from the minors earlier in the day.

Johnson put the Diamondbacks in line for a win for the second straight night, hitting a solo homer off Indians starter Josh Tomlin in the sixth inning, then lining a tiebreaking single off Rafael Perez after driving in the go-ahead run the night before. Johnson later scored on Justin Upton’s run-scoring single off Joe Smith, putting Arizona up 4-2 heading into the final inning.

Putz couldn’t hold it.

The right-hander allowed a two-out homer to Orlando Cabrera in a 5-4 loss to the Indians on Monday night and was in trouble right off the bat Tuesday, walking Cabrera on four pitches to open the ninth. An out later, Carlos Santana tied the game with a towering, two-run homer that curled just inside the foul pole in right.

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Putz left to a chorus of boos after giving up a two-out double to Travis Buck.

It was relatively quiet before that, thanks to Hudson and Tomlin.

Hudson was solid for the ninth straight start, allowing two runs on six hits with five strikeouts.

Tomlin was just as good, allowing two runs on five hits in seven innings. The right-hander lasted five innings for the 28th straight game, matching the major league record to start a career, set by Boston’s Daisuke Matsuzaka in 2007.

But this wasn’t just a battle of arms. The pitchers were wielding their bats, too.

Tomlin had his first career hit in the third inning, dropping down a sacrifice bunt that slipped past Hudson to the third base side. That set up Cleveland’s first run, on a double-play grounder by Michael Brantley.

Tomlin went a more conventional route for his second career hit in the fifth inning, ripping a single up the middle for his first career RBI to put the Indians up 2-0. It also was the first RBI by an Indians pitcher since CC Sabathia against the Dodgers on June 21, 2008.

Hudson proved to be capable with the bat in the bottom half, fighting off a couple of pitches with two strikes, then lining a run-scoring double down the line in right to make it 2-1.

Johnson finally scored a run a pitcher had nothing to do with, lifting his 13th homer to left to tie it at 2 in the sixth.

Putz blew the win again, but Pena snatched it back with a homer that just cleared the wall.

Notable

  • Diamondbacks hitting coach Don Baylor turned 62 on Tuesday.
  • Indians CF Grady Sizemore was looked at by team trainers after slamming into the wall on Gerardo Parra’s triple in the fifth inning, but remained in the game.
  • Hudson is 3-0 in six career June starts.