The Korea Herald

지나쌤

Choo homers as Tribe win 8-3

By 로컬편집기사

Published : April 17, 2011 - 18:26

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CLEVELAND (AP) ― Orlando Cabrera senses something special happening to the Cleveland Indians. In 13 major league seasons, he’s seen this before.

With each quality start, clutch hit and win, the Indians’ confidence grows. Cabrera sees a young team blossoming into a quality one.

“I think we have what it takes,” he said.

To do what?

“To win,” he said. “I don’t like to compete. I like to win.”

That’s exactly what the Indians are doing.

Josh Tomlin delivered yet another quality start for Cleveland, Cabrera drove in four runs and the first-place Indians won their sixth straight at home, 8-3 on Saturday over the Baltimore Orioles, who have lost six in a row and are having trouble scoring.

Tomlin (3-0) gave up two runs ― solo homers to Jake Fox and Luke Scott ― and six hits in six innings. His outing continued a dominant run by Cleveland’s starters, who are making it look easy. In the last 12 games, they’re 8-1 with a 1.91 ERA, not bad for a five-man rotation of virtual unknowns.

After dropping their first two games, the Indians have won 10 of 12. Cabrera, signed as a free agent to fill the Indians’ hole at second base and bring leadership to their clubhouse, has been impressed by the strong start but wants to see more.

“We haven’t had to fight back yet,” he said. “I want to see us fight back late in the game.”

The Indians haven’t had to. They’ve been jumping out to early leads, scoring 42 of their 75 runs in the first four innings. The nice starts have allowed their pitchers to relax and not have to worry about being perfect. So far, it’s been a nearly foolproof formula as Cleveland is 8-1 when scoring first. “It means the world,” manager Manny Acta said of the early runs. “Everybody wants to pitch with a lead. It really gives guys more confidence to throw the ball over the plate and challenge guys. It’s been huge.”

Choo Shin-soo homered off Jeremy Guthrie (1-2) and Matt LaPorta had two RBIs for the Indians, who are 10-4 and off to their best start in nine years. Travis Hafner and Travis Buck had three hits each for Cleveland.
Cleveland Indians right fielder Choo Shin-soo hits a solo home run in the third inning. (AP-Yonhap News) Cleveland Indians right fielder Choo Shin-soo hits a solo home run in the third inning. (AP-Yonhap News)

It’s been a great start for the Indians and it could soon get better as the club is expected to activate center fielder Grady Sizemore from the disabled list in the next two days. The three-time All-Star has been out nearly a year following a knee injury.

Since opening 4-0, the Orioles have lost seven of nine and their six-game slide is the club’s longest since Buck Showalter took over as manager on Aug. 3. Baltimore has scored just 15 runs in the skid, and once again didn’t take advantage of some scoring chances.

“It’s not the gloom and doom everybody makes it out to be,” Showalter said. “We had opportunities we didn’t take advantage of. It’s been a challenge for us. We’ll get better at that.”

Tomlin won the only open spot in Cleveland’s rotation during spring training, and the right-hander’s shown no signs he’ll give it up. He coasted through the first few innings, allowing only the two homers before working in and out of a tricky situation in the fifth.

Red Sox 4, Blue Jays 1

Royals 7, Mariners 0

Yankees 5, Rangers 2

Rays 4, Twins 3

Angels 7, White Sox 2

Reds 11, Pirates 2

Braves 4, Mets 2 Gm. 1

Braves 4, Mets 0 Gm. 2

Astros 5, Padres 3

Giants 5, D-backs 3

Cubs 8, Rockies 3

A’s 6, Tigers 2

Cardinals 9, Dodgers 2

Brewers, Nationals ppd.

Marlins, Phillies ppd.