Four Errors and a Lack of Clutch Hitting Dooms Indians 4-3

Sometimes the difference between good and bad teams comes down simply to clutch hitting and defense. That was evident at Progressive Field on Saturday afternoon, as the Los Angeles Angels took advantage of four Indians errors and the fact the Indians couldn’t get a big hit when they needed it in their 4-3 win.
With the game tied at one in the third, the Indians put on one of the more uglier defensive displays you’ll ever see. From Ben Francisco throwing a ball 15 feet short to the cut-off at third that allowed a run to score, to an Andy Marte short hop throw to first, to a wild pitch that allowed Vlad Guerrero to go from second to home, the Indians looked more like the Bad News Bears than a team trying to stay competitive.
Fausto Carmona threw that wild pitch, it was one of two for him on the day, but overall can’t be blamed for this setback. He lasted seven innings, allowing two earned runs, four overall, on six hits. He walked three and didn’t record a strikeout while falling to 5-5 on the season. He was able to limit any damage the Angels did throughout, and deserved a better fate.
As for the offense, they were led by the long ball, as David Dellucci hit a solo homer in the first to tie the game at one, and then Ryan Garko hit a two-run shot in the fourth to make it 4-3. It was the last run of the game. The Tribe loaded the bases in the 7th off relief pitcher Darren Oliver, but a strikeout, a senstional play by short stop Erick Aybar, and then a ground out ended the frame. Aybar was running at the popout in short left and made a diving play on a ball by Garko to save one or possibly two runs.
Francisco Rodriguez allowed a single to Jhonny Peralta (2-for-4) to start the ninth, but then the team was unable to get that clutch hit and it ended with the team dropping another one-run game. The loss drops them to 55-67 on the season, the Angels improve to 76-45.
The series wraps up on Sunday with Jeremy Sowers (1-6, 5.70) vs Joe Saunders (14-5, 3.07) at 1:05pm.





Matt has covered Major League Baseball and the "other two" Pro teams in Cleveland since 1994. He has been on the beat of the Indians in full-time mode since 1996, working for various raido and print networks around the country.