Tuesday, November 28, 2023

#327---DET @ CLE, 6/1/2007

 


Through five innings, this was a normal game, with Detroit holding a 3-1 lead. In the sixth, Craig Monroe hit a two-run homer to make it 5-1, but the Tribe tied it in the bottom of the inning with a pair of two-run homers from Jhonny Peralta and Jason Michaels. Detroit struck right back with a four-spot of their own, fueled by three singles and three walks. Down 9-5, four straight Cleveland hits made it 9-7, with Tiger closer Todd Jones summoned to get the last out of the inning, but allowing two hits and making twelve pitches in the process.

But Fernando Cabrera was wild in the top of the ninth, walking three and allowing two singles to give the Tigers the two runs right back. They now led 11-7 with their closer on the mount. Grady Sizemore grounded out, but after Casey Blake and Travis Hafner reached, Victor Martinez launched his second homer of the game and it was 11-10. Johnny Peralta doubled, but Jones fanned Ryan Garko and was one out away. An intentional walk to Jason Michaels put the winning run aboard but gave Jones a right-on-right matchup with light-hitting Josh Barfield. Barfield singled to right to tie the game, took second on indifference, and scored the winning run when David Dellucci singled. Jones’ disastrous outing: 1 IP, 5 R, 7 H, 2 W, 1 K, and a whopping 46 pitches (34 in the ninth, albeit with four on the intentional walk).

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

#326---CLE @ NYA, 6/14/2006

 


This was a pitching matchup between Johnsons, with Jason for Cleveland and Randy for New York. The Yankees led 3-1 going into the bottom of the sixth and their three runs essentially put the game away but also provided the spark for fireworks to come when Jason Johnson plunked Jorge Posada. With one out in the seventh, Randy Johnson apparently retaliated by hitting Eduardo Perez, resulting in the ejection of both him and Joe Torre. This ended a strong start for the Big Unit: 6 1/3 IP, 1 R, 4 H, 0 W, 6 K, and just 77 pitches. Scott Proctor and Ron Villone closed it out with just a Grady Sizemore double.

Tuesday, November 14, 2023

#325---CIN @ CLE, 6/24/2005

 


There’s a lot going on in this one. The game was a back-and-forth, homer driven affair. The Indians jumped Eric Milton for two in the first, but the inning ended with Victor Martinez out trying to score from first on a double. Scott Elarton promptly yielded back-to-back homers to Ken Griffey (the 515th of his career) and Joe Randa to leadoff the second, but Jose Hernandez put Cleveland back on top with a leadoff homer in the bottom of the frame. The Reds came right back with a tally in the third, but Hernandez’ second leadoff homer in the fourth put the Tribe back in front.

From there, each team managed only a couple of baserunners until Griffey hit his second homer to tie it in the eighth of Scott Sauerbeck. Interestingly, fellow lefty Arthur Rhodes relieved Sauberbeck after the homer. In the ninth, Felipe Lopez drove home the winning run for Cincinnati with a double off Bob Howry. Edwin Encarnacion was 0-4 making his major league debut.

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

#324---CLE @ NYN, 6/17/2004

 


Jae Seo and Scott Elarton each pitched four shutout innings, but a nearly two-hour rain delay knocked them out with very similar lines:

Seo: 4 IP, 2 H, 0 W, 6 K, 52 pitches

Elarton: 4 IP, 1 H, 1 W, 4 K, 53 pitches

The Mets bullpen outpitched the Indians bullpen, with the Tribe’s allowing at least one run in each inning and the Mets tossing zeroes until the ninth.

A couple substitutes to note: Gonzalez pinch-hit for the pitcher’s spot leading off the Cleveland sixth. My first thought was that this was Andy Gonzalez, but I knew he had come along much later, so I had to look up that it was Raul Gonzalez, who appeared in seven games for the ‘04 Indians and had slipped my memory. It was his final big league stint; his most extended playing time had come with the ‘03 Mets. And the recently deceased Gerald Williams, serving as a defensive replacement for Cliff Floyd in the top of the ninth.