Lee Lights Out Again as Indians Break Losing Streak 8-3

If you would have taken bets on what Indians pitcher one month into the season would be in the running for this years CY Young, likely Cliff Lee would have been 4th or 5th on that list. Lee though, is right there as one of the best pitchers in the game right now, and Wednesday night he was just the medicine the Indians needed to break their three-game losing streak in beating the Mariners 8-3 at Progressive Field.
To put in perspective how good Lee has been this season, consider that until Waldimir Balentien hit a three-run homer off of Lee in the 7th, he had gone 27 innings without allowing a run. That streak is the longest by an Indians pitcher since John Denny went 34.2 innings without allowing a run in 1981. Lee was great most of the night, which has been the story all year. He went six plus innings, allowing three runs on eight hits. He didn’t walk a batter, struck out three, and his season ERA actually did go up to 0.96.
For the first time since putting up six runs Friday, the team finally showed signs of life on offense, as they jumped on M’s starter Jarrod Washburn for two runs in the first, one in the foruth, and then put the game away with five runs in the fifth to go up 8-0. The hero’s on offense included Grady Sizemore who went 2-3 with a homer to leadoff the game for the Indians, two walks, and two runs scored. Victor Martinez went 2-5, and Franklin Gutierrez finally showed something at the plate, going 2-for-4 with three RBI, the big blow being a two-run single to center in the 5th.
Martinez, Casey Blake, Gutierrez and Jason Michaels all had RBI in that fifth inning that put the game away. Washburn went 4.1 innings, allowing six runs, five earned, on six hits. He walked two and struck out seven. The team put up double digit hits in 11 and on the night showed much more at the plate then they have since their big games last week in KC.
The series comes to a close on Thursday night, as Paul Byrd (1-2, 4.85) goes for the Indians at 7:05pm vs Miguel Batista (2-3, 5.26).





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.