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Archive for the ‘Grady Sizemore’


Go West My Friend

With the Indians’ recent success at home, they now travel to the once dreaded West Coast. The Tribe is headed to Colorado for 3 games and San Diego for an additional 3 game set. This very well could be a blessing in disguise. The Indians currently sit in 3rd place in the American League Central well with in reach of the Chicago White Sox, and coupled with Grady Sizemore welcoming the summer breezes by tearing the cover off the ball.

All the while the Indians are beginning to score more and more runs a game. Now they meet two teams who have been less proficient than the Tribe at scoring runs. The Colorado Rockies average only 4.17 runs per game, and the San Diego Padres average a dismal 3.79 runs per game. In comparison, the Indians currently average 4.57 runs per game this season. The Indians need to embrace this west coast trip and take advantage of this disparity. If the Indians are going to make a run at the White Sox, there is no better time than the present.

Some Signs of Hope After the Recent Homestand

Grady carried this team the last week

You can take the Indians recent 4-2 homestand vs the Twins and Padres one of two ways - you can look as it as a step in the right direction that the team won two straight series’ and the offense is coming around, or you can simply look at it like they are just staying enough above water for Mark Shapiro and company not to pull the plug on the season and start looking to shop around players like C.C. Sabathia.

On a positive note, after being at and watching the last six games, if you don’t agree that Grady Sizemore is not one the five most exciting players in the game, then you don’t watch a lot of baseball. Sizemore almost lifted this team on his shoulders from an offensive standpoint over the last week, hitting .310 with 5 homers and 9 RBI. Sizemore simply took the offense to another level this week, and picked up the slack when the team needs it with Victor Martinez and Travis Hafner on the bench.

I enjoyed watching the youth of this team get going as well this past homestand, with players like Shin-Soo Choo, Ben Francisco, Franklin Gutierrez and Kelly Shoppach all having a part in winning games at the plate. The team scored 48 runs this past week, an average of 6.8 runs per game. That has got to be an encouraging sign to management and manager Eric Wedge.

Yes, there were moments of frustration, such as Paul Byrd having a poor outing on Wednesday night in the teams 8-5 loss to the Twins. Byrd is one player that has never got on track this season, and in his last five starts is 1-3 and has allowed 21 runs as well as 7 homers. One has to wonder if his time as a quality starter in the Majors is over. Byrd is a class act and has always spoken out when he has had poor outings, but if this team is going to make a run, his pitching simply has to improve, and he’ll be the first to admit that.

The bullpen continues to be the great unknown, as pitchers like Rafael Betancourt, Rafael Perez, and Masa Kobayashi have to be on the verge of giving Wedge an ulcer. You never know how these players will respond in tough situations. In the Saturday night loss, the team got into the 8th with a 3-2 lead, and Perez gave up a homer on the second pitch after a good outing by Betancourt. Then in the 10th, Edward Mujica walked in what was the game-winning run, and then made matters worse by allowing a grand slam.

One beat reporter commented to me that he has no idea what the team sees in Mujica, as he has been terrible this season, allowing three homers in 6 games he’s pitched in, and has an ERA of 9.00. Add to that the 8.31 ERA in 13 innings pitched in 2007, and the reporter who made that comment to me has a valid point, and one that the team should look at.

Overall though, I’d have to say the week had more positives than negatives, and the team did gain a game on the Sox to move within 5.5 of first. With the Rockies, Dodgers, Giants and Reds up next, all teams under .500, this team seems poised to finally tell us once and for all if 2008 is going to be a season of hope, or a season of despair.

Offense and Sabathia Combine for Solid 7-3 Win over Padres

Francisco congrats after a homer

It’s been talked about enough among the media that if the Indians are going to put the tough start to 2008 behind them and make a run at the White Sox in the AL Central, they are going to have to do it now.  So far, so good.  With the next five series’ all against teams that are under .500, the Indians won their second straight series on Sunday, topping the San Diego Padres at Progressive Field 7-3.

The win wraps up the homestand at 4-2, and puts the team back to 4 games under .500 at 33-37.  Maybe the most promising sign is the fact that the offense is finally starting to come around, and this without Travis Hafner and Victor Martinez.  The players now picking up the slack are Grady Sizemore, who hit another homer Sunday, Ben Francisco, Shin Soo-Choo, and Jamey Carroll.

It could be a season where if the Tribe is going to make a run, they are going to make it with lesser known players like Choo and Carroll having career years.  The starting pitching staff continues to have their moments, as Sunday C.C. Sabathia notched his 5th win against 8 losses.  He went 8 innings, allowing three runs on six hits.  He also had his fastball in high range, striking out 10 Paders.  He drops his ERA to 4.30.

He had one bad inning in which he allowed three runs on four hits, but otherwise was very good.  He got out of a jam with a Jody Gerut on third with no outs, and struck out the side, setting the tone for the rest of the day.  He struck out two in the 2nd, got a double play in the 3rd, struck out two more in the 5th, and got a K and double play in the 6th.

The offense was paced by Francisco, who hit a three-run homer in the third off of Greg Maddux to put the Tribe up 3-0.  After San Diego rallied to tie the game in the 4th, the Indians got single runs in the 4th and 6th innings.  Casey Blake hit a dribbler to Maddux to score Choo who had doubled to lead off the 4th, and then they made it 5-3 when Franklin Gutierrez singled to center.

Sizemore continued his torrid hitting when he homered to lead off the 7th vs Cla Meredith to make it 6-3.  After Carroll singled and stole second Jhonny Peralta four batters later doubled him in to give the team a 7-3 advantage.

The Indians are off Monday, as they continue their interleague play on Tuesday night with a trip to Colorado to take on the NL Champion Rockies.  Paul Byrd (3-6, 4.89) will go Tuesday for the team vs Greg Reynolds (1-4, 6.69) with a start time of 9:05pm Eastern.

Extra Innings Equals Defeat for Indians in 8-3 Setback

San Diego scores to make it 3-2

On a night when the offense got off to a great start then hit the snooze button the rest of the evening, the Tribe dropped a tough decision to the San Diego Padres 8-3 in 10 innings at Progressive Field. Maybe the team was tired after playing till after 1am on Friday night. Whatever the case was, Padres pitcher Cha Seung Baek gave up early runs, but was in complete control from there out.

On the offensive side for the Padres, it took them awhile to get going, but once they hit extra innings, they made the Indians pay for throwing out Edward Mujica (0-1), who first walked in a run then gave up a grand slam to former Indian Kevin Kouzmanoff for what was the difference. It was the third homer that Mujica has allowed in just six appearances in 2008.

The Indians jumped on Baek in the first inning, as they scored three runs on two hits. Ryan Garko hit a single to bring in Grady Sizemore to make it 1-0, then Shin-Soo Choo stayed hot with a double to drive in Ben Francisco to make it 2-0 with one out. Jhonny Peralta then hit a ground out to short that scored Garko to make it 3-0. Little did the Indians know that Baek would settle into a groove from there.

The Padres pitcher after that first inning was unhittable, putting down the last 16 batters he faced. The only baserunner he allowed was Sizemore, who walked in the second but was stranded when Jamey Carroll lined out to short to end the inning. Baek struck out only four batters, but the Tribe offense seemed never to be able to do much of anything against him.

San Diego rallied for single runs in the 3rd, 5th and 8th to end up tying the game. The 3rd inning run came on a solo homer by left fielder Justin Huber, who had just one dinger on the season entering the game. Former Indian Jody Gerut singled in a run in the 5th, and then spoiled Cliff Lee’s effort for his 11th win when he hit a homer in the 8th off of Rafael Perez.

With the loss the Indians fall to 32-37 on the season, 19-18 at Progressive Field. The homestand and the three-game set wraps up on Sunday at 1:05pm with what should be a great pitching matchup. C.C. Sabathia (4-8, 4.34) coming off the shutout of the Twins on Tuesday night, takes on Greg Maddux (3-4, 3.33).

Worth the Wait; 10pm Start Doesn’t Stop Tribe in 9-5 Win over Padres

Sizmore with two homers

In a game that felt more like a double feature at the local drive-in, the Indians used two big Grady Sizemore homers and some clutch pitching from the bullpen to win their fourth game in five days, topping the Padres from San Diego 7-5.  The game got off to an interesting start, as after Jeremy Sowers got out of the first with a 1-2-3 inning, the Indians jumped up 1-0 on a Sizemore homer to start off the game.  Then the heavens opened.

The delay seemed to last forever, starting at 7:17 and going all the way till 10pm, two hours and 43 minutes in total.  It probably made it seem just like home to the Padres, playing a west coast game on the East, starting at 10pm eastern, 7pm San Diego time.  For the fans that braved out the delay, they were treated to a rather entertaining back and forth game.

The Indians went up 3-0 vs Padres pitcher Josh Banks with a two-run homer from Kelly Shoppach in the third inning.  San Diego clawed their way back vs Sowers starting in the fourth with a two runs, then taking the lead in the 5th 4-3 when Adrian Gonzalez slammed his 19th homer of the year to give them their first lead on the night.  Sowers went 4.1 innings, allowing four runs on 9 hits, walking none and striking out one.

Not to be denied, the Indians rallied for two runs in the 6th to make it 5-4, as Shin-Soo Choo came through with a clutch two-out single past first to put the Tribe ahead for good.  Sizemore wrapped up his big night with his second homer of the game in the 7th to make it 7-4.  Former Indians now Padre Kevin Kouzmanoff hit a solo shot in the 8th to make it 7-5.

The Indians wrapped up the scoring with Jamey Carroll’s RBI single to make it 8-5 in the 8th, then Ben Francisco hit a sac fly to give them even more breathing room at 9-5.  The bullpen accounted for 4.2 innings, allowing just one run on five hits.  Rafael Betancourt went 1.2 allowing just one hit, he gets the win to move to 2-3 on the season.  Masa Kobayashi worked the final 1.1 innings, allowing two hits and a walk and earned his 3rd save.

The win moves the Indians to 32-36 on the season, winners in 6 of their last 10 games.  They are now 3-1 on this homestand with two more vs San Diego.  They are still 6.5 back of the White Sox who won on Friday night, and one game back of second of the Twins.

With a short turnaround, the team will throw 10-1 Cliff Lee Saturday night at 7:05pm vs Cha Seung Baek (1-1, 3.97) for San Diego.

Bats on Fire as Indians Pound Twins 12-2

Choo homers

On a day that had its share of downs with Victor Martinez and Josh Barfield finding themselves on the DL, the Indians put all that behind them and put on an offensive explosion in pounding the Twins 12-2 at Progressive Field. They put up a season-high in hits with 18, hit two homers, and everyone in the starting lineup minus Ryan Garko had a hit and scored at least one run.

Aaron Laffey made it a laugher as well, going six solid innings to improve to 4-3 on the season. He allowed just one run on five hits, walking one and striking out four. He also dropped his ERA to 2.83 on the year. Laffey is a player that will have to pitch great the rest of the season if the Indians want to contend the AL Central.

As for the offense, they hit early and often. They pounded Twins starter Livan Hernandez, hitting him up for 7 runs on 12 hits in just three innings. He also allowed two homers, one to Grady Sizemore in the 4th with no one on, and a three-run blast to Shin Soo-Choo in the 3rd and put the Indians up 6-0.
The Tribe scored a single run in the 2nd when Kelly Shoppach punched in an RBI single. They put up five in the third, with Choo’s blow being the biggest of the inning. Jhonny Peralta also had a big hit, a two-run RBI single that scored Jamey Carroll and Ben Francisco.

Carroll was impressive at the plate, going 4-for-4 and raising his average to .273. Francisco went 4-for-5 with three RBI, he’s hitting .309. Choo went 2-for-3 with three RBI and is hitting .333. Poor Ryan Garko could not share in the fun, as he went 0-for-4 with six men left on base. I’m sure he’s not all that upset about it.

The win wins the series for the Indians, as they get set for interleague play with the Padres coming to town for a three-game set over the weekend. Cleveland is now 31-36 on the year, closing in on the Twins for second, who fall to 32-35.

Byrd Beat Up Early as Indians Fall to Twins 8-5

Gutierrez out at home

With the pitching staff banged up with two starters on the DL, the Indians could ill afford to have starters they are counting on come up short.  Wednesday night at Progressive Field, that is exactly what happened as Paul Byrd was once again ineffective as the Indians dropped a winnable game to the Twins 8-5.  Byrd was slammed for a big third inning in which he allowed five runs on four hits, the big blow a three-run homer by DH Jason Kubel.

The Indians offense actually climbed back in the game and made it 5-4 in the 7th after Grady Sizemore hit a three-run homer for his team-leading 13th of the season.  They had runners on in the bottom of the 8th, but Jhonny Peralta and David Dellucci each struck out to end the threat.  Joe Borowski then imploded in an inning where Eric Wedge was simply trying to give him work.

The “closer” came in and closed out any chance the Indians had, giving up three runs on three hits, and also failed at all to keep runners on at first, basically allowing two stolen bases.  It was that type of night for the Tribe, who fall to 30-36 with the loss. Back to Byrd, he allowed five earned runs on six hits in three innings, walking one and allowing the homer to Kubel.  He falls to 3-6 on the season, and his ERA jumps to 4.89.

Sizemore had two hits and three RBI on the night, while the bottom of the order actually put up decent numbers, with Casey Blake going 3-for-4 and Jamey Carroll going 3-4.  The rest of the lineup did little against five Twins pitchers, led by Nick Blackburn, who went six innings, allowing two runs on seven hits, walking one and striking out five.

Thursday night the series vs the divisional foes wrap up at 7:05pm as AL Rookie of the Month Aaron Laffey (3-3, 2.98) goes for the Indians vs Livan Hernandez (6-3, 5.32).


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