Tuesday, May 31, 2022

#249---SF @ CLE, 2/25/2009


 As the note says, this was the first game played at the Indians’ new spring training facility in Goodyear, AZ, which would later become home to the Reds as well. Each team hit three homers, but the pair of two-run shots launched off Edward Mujica by the Giants in the sixth were decisive. 

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

#248---TEX @ CLE, 5/23/2008


This four hour, eight minute slugfest saw both Eric Wedge and Milton Bradley ejected, which somehow seems appropriate. Wedge was tossed arguing that Ben Francisco’s seventh inning double off the big left field wall in the Jake was actually a homer which would have drawn Cleveland to within 12-9. Bradley was run in the ninth after Dan Iassogna punched him out.

Surprisingly, there were only two homers in the game, both in the third. Jarrod Saltalamacchia’s grand slam trumped Grady Sizemore’s three-run homer.

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

#247---LA @ CLE, 3/18/2007

 

I loved Herb Score as a broadcaster, but his scorecard is another story. “Herb Score Scorebooks” were sold during his last season behind the microphone (1997), and this is an example I used to score a spring training game a decade later (with some edits I made to remove superfluous lines like a place to write in the standings). I understand why broadcasters would want a scorecard with the field diagram, and I myself find them very helpful for spring training games when substitutes enter en masse and you need to write them somewhere before sorting out where they fall in the batting order. I’m a big fan of having both teams on the same side of a scoresheet, but forcing them to be side-by-side results in boxes that are taller than they are wide, which I find make it very difficult to record anywhere near the amount of information I want. 

Last year I was at a Tribe game and a 90+ year old woman was featured on the scoreboard for her birthday. She was keeping score, as we were told she always does - in her Herb Score Scorebook.

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

#246---CIN @ CLE, 6/23/2006


Cleveland simply could not retire the late Ryan Freel, who singled three times, doubled twice, stole two bases, coaxed a balk and a throwing error, and scored two runs. This might be a quintessential distillation of his career and why Reds fans loved him. Freel actually was retired once, but on the bases,  trying to advance to second on a would-be wild pitch in the third.

This wasn’t a masterpiece by Aaron Harang; he allowed seven hits and two walks, striking out six, but he got the shutout. I’d like to know why Aaron Boone decided it was a good idea to make the last out bunting. Of course getting on base is paramount in that situation, but post-knee injury Aaron Boone trying it doesn’t exactly fit my definition of “savage”.

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

#245---CLE @ NYA, 7/8/2005

This is one of those games where you just look at the names in the Yankee lineup and appreciate it: Derek Jeter, Robinson Cano, Gary Sheffield, Alex Rodriguez, Hideki Matsui, Jason Giambi, Jorge Posada, Bernie Williams, Melky Cabrera. The Indians had a nice collection of talent too, and this was an entertaining game between two of the best teams in the AL. Grady Sizemore pulled the first pitch of the game for a homer, but the Yankees four-run fourth allowed them to carry a 5-3 lead into the ninth.

Enter Sandman, but the Indians put the tying runs on base. In an 0-2 hole, down to the Tribe’s last strike, erstwhile Yankee hero Aaron Boone dumped a single into right to put the tying run at third. Grady Sizemore rolled the next pitch to Tino Martinez who recorded New York’s twenty-seventh putout.