Posted on 09/12/2005 5:23:08 AM PDT by Molly Pitcher
Indians hit for cycle in first inning to win 7th straight
Game Information Stadium: Jacobs Field, Cleveland, OH Attendance: 38,564 (88.9% full) Game Time: 2:59 Temperature: 75 degrees, clear Wind: 7 mph
Umpires: Home - Paul Schrieber, First Base - Mike Reilly, Second Base - Andy Fletcher, Third Base - Jeff Kellogg
Fri 9/9 @CLE 4, MIN 2 Recap Sat 9/10 @CLE 7, MIN 5 Recap Sun 9/11 @CLE 12, MIN 4 Box Score
· Complete Schedule: Indians | Twins CLEVELAND (AP) -- Hitting for the cycle on the first nine pitches they saw, the Cleveland Indians finished an emphatic three-game sweep of the rival Minnesota Twins.
Cliff Lee won his seventh straight decision and the Indians had 17 hits in a 12-4 rout of the reeling Twins on Sunday night, stretching their winning streak to seven games.
Cleveland maintained its 1½-game lead over the New York Yankees in the AL wild-card race by winning for the 18th time in 23 games. The Indians also pulled within 5½ games of first-place Chicago in the Central.
"We don't worry about catching (Chicago), we just go out to win our game," said Coco Crisp, who tied a career high with four hits. "We respect other teams, but we're only concerned with what we do."
Cleveland is the closest it has been to the White Sox since April 20. The Indians have gained 9½ games on the leaders since being 15 back on July 25, going 31-12 during that stretch.
Ronnie Belliard hit a three-run homer, Victor Martinez added a two-run shot, and Grady Sizemore had a solo homer among his three hits, three runs and three RBI.
The game was moved from the afternoon to an 8:05 p.m. to accommodate ESPN.
"Whether or not we were on national TV made no difference," said Sizemore, who was a double short of the cycle. "We go out and play hard every game."
Lee (16-4), unbeaten in his last 11 starts, allowed two runs and four hits over six innings. He is 10-1 in 18 starts since June 6 and his .800 overall winning percentage trails only St. Louis' Chris Carpenter (21-4, .840) in the majors.
"I'm just part of a very good team," said Lee. "I think we've got what it takes to make the playoffs. Once we get there, we can be a force.
"The fans tonight were great. They're starting to realize what's going on here."
Sizemore brought the crowd of 38,564 to its feet, chanting "Grady, Grady," with a leaping catch against the wall in center to rob pinch-hitter Luis Rodriguez of extra bases in the eighth.
"Grady's a fantastic young player," manager Eric Wedge said.
Sizemore held his left shoulder after crashing into the wall, but waved off assistance.
"It's a little sore, but we won and that's all that matters," Sizemore said.
Carlos Silva (9-8) left after one inning with a sore right knee, a condition he has battled all season and put him on the disabled list in April. He made only 18 pitches, yielding four hits and four runs in the shortest of his 61 career starts for Minnesota.
Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire said Silva's season could be over.
"We're looking at the possibility of getting this thing cleaned up," he said. "He's pitched on it long enough."
Sizemore tripled to center on Silva's second pitch and Crisp lined the next one into the right-field corner for an RBI double. Crisp took third on a second-pitch single by Jhonny Peralta and scored on a sacrifice fly by Travis Hafner.
Martinez then lined a 1-1 pitch from Silva over the wall in center for his 19th homer and 4-0 lead.
"It just happened," Crisp said of the outburst. "We didn't collectively sit down and say we were going to hit the first pitch we saw or anything."
Joe Mays fared worse in one inning of relief, giving up six runs in the second as the Indians took a 10- lead. Sizemore hit a two-run homer, his 19th, Hafner had an RBI single and Belliard capped the rally with a three-run shot, his 13th.
"They came out and smoked the baseball," Gardenhire said. "Every pitch we threw that was up, they whacked it."
Peralta's RBI single off Matt Guerrier made it 11-0 in the third.
Jacque Jones' two-run homer in the fourth, his 20th, got the Twins within 11-2.
Sizemore singled home a run in the sixth and the Twins got two unearned runs in the seventh off Fernando Cabrera.
The three-game sweep sent the reeling Twins to their fifth loss in six games and dropped the three-time defending AL Central champions 15 games behind Chicago.
Game notes Indians starters are 7-1 with a 1.81 ERA over the last 11 games. ... Cleveland won the season series, 10-9, including a 5-4 mark in one-run games. ... Crisp's four-hit game was his third this season and sixth of his career. ... Twins C Chris Heintz made his first career start and got his first hit, a fifth-inning single. ... A $5 ticket promotion swelled the crowd to more than 10,000 above average for the Indians, who rank 28th of 30 in major-league attendance.
We have an amazing team here!
The Cleveland Bucks ? WTF
Yes, it would be good if people started showing up at the Jake in numbers again.
It helps that the other remaining games are against KC and Tampa.
-Eric
Yes, turnout has been not the greatest, but it's changing...
I love leading the Yankees.
I always thought that hitting for the cycle was an individual accomplishment, when a single player gets a single, double, triple and HR in the same game.
I saw Bernie William do it for the Yanks back in '96 or '97. I haven't seen in since, but I don't watch a lot of baseball unless one of the teams is wearing pinstripes. Who was the last player to hit for the cycle?
Yeah, those cleveland bucks held up well for a quarter or two against those austin longorns. ROFL. Oddly, the akron zips held up against #13 purdue for a few quarters, but once the bottom dropped out, it was over.
The Indians could be an exciting team if they make the playoffs, but even if they don't, they probably have a more well rounded (all aspects of the game) core of young players in MLB. So, even if we don't get a mini-dynasty like Cleveland had in the late '90's, you will have competative baseball back for quite some time.
You'll love leading the White Sux even more.
Hi dubya! I went to the Sat night game. It was wonderful, but last night...!!!
Me too, but the radio guys used the term last night also, so ...???
And the Sox are swooning...
Some aspects of it, however, could be quite rare -- such as a "natural cycle" in which a player hits a single, double, triple, and home run in that specific order (this has only happened about a dozen times in history). Even more rare is a player hitting a grand slam in a game in which he hits for the cycle . . . this has happened fewer than ten times in history, and Miguel Tejada accomplished this rarity back in 2001.
Sorry for my thickness, I have never been an OSU fan. Especially since I am an Oxford Red Hawk.
Roethlisberger look damn good yesterday, BTW.
-Eric
This is the first time I've heard it applied to a team's accomplishment instead of an individual's. How often has a team hit for the cycle in one inning? Someone must know.
I believe that it happens often enough for it not to be officially recorded as a 'record'.
One of those odd baseball co-inkydinks: A few seasons back, the number of games where players hit for the cycle was equal to the number of no-hitters pitched. I forget which is in the lead now, but it's close.
Not as fun or amazingly clever to say as "White Sux," but note-worthy in the trivial babseball way.
Indians? I thought maybe this was a cricket thread.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.