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Before the game, the Indians said an emotional goodbye to the great Bob Feller, the Hall of Famer who died on Dec. 15. This is the first time since 1936 that Feller isn't part of the Indians, who are honoring his legacy throughout the season.
All of the Indians players wore Feller's No. 19 during introductions, and in a touching moment, his widow, Anne, was escorted to the mound and gently placed a baseball on the rubber, a silent ceremonial first pitch and salute to the greatest Indian of them all.
On the ball, she wrote: "Bobby, Keep Pitching, Anne."
The White Sox took a 2-0 lead in the first off Carmona, who needed 36 pitches to record three outs and faced a tight strike zone.
Juan Pierre singled and Beckham doubled into the left-field corner. Carmona struck out Dunn and appeared to get Konerko, too, but plate umpire Mike Winters ruled a 2-2 pitch was a little high and Konerko dropped an RBI single into right.
Carmona fanned Alex Rios, but Quentin's RBI single made it 2-0 and the White Sox were on their way.
NOTES: Pronkville has vanished. The section of seats in the second deck in right field that the Indians dedicated a few years ago to Travis Hafner is no longer. The team has removed the "Pronkville" sign. Hafner's power numbers have dropped steadily since hitting a career-high 42 homers in 2005. ... Buehrle's nine straight opening-day starts is the AL's longest current streak. Hall of Famers Walter Johnson and Steve Carlton share the record with 14. ... Konerko has been a beast on opening day, hitting .426 (20 of 47) with 15 RBIs.
[Associated Press;
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