Indians defeat White Sox for record 15th straight win
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[September 08, 2017]
CHICAGO -- As dominant of a
pitcher as Corey Kluber may be, when the Cleveland Indians ace is
provided with an early dose of offense, he becomes even more
dangerous.
And at a time when the Indians already seem untouchable, lights-out
pitching and timely hitting are proving to be a winning combination.
Kluber struck out 13, and Erik Gonzalez hit two of Cleveland's five
homers as the Indians won a franchise-record 15th straight game,
beating the Chicago White Sox 11-2 on Thursday night.
The Indians won 14 straight last season, and they became the first
team since the 1935-36 Chicago Cubs to win 14 or more consecutive
games in back-to-back seasons.
Edwin Encarnacion, Francisco Lindor and Greg Allen also went deep
for the Indians.
Kluber (15-4) cruised after the Indians jumped out to an early 4-0
lead and kept adding to it with the collection of home runs.
"When you've got a guy like Kluber on the mound and you score early,
man, it sure makes you feel good," Indians manager Terry Francona
said.
As good as Francona may have felt about Thursday's team
record-setting result that comes a season after the Indians won an
American League pennant, he and his team aren't getting too wrapped
up with such things.
"One game at a time," Kluber said of the Indians' approach. "It
sounds boring, but that's what we're doing -- coming to the field
every day prepared to win that day's ballgame."
Kluber, who struck out at least 10 for the 14th time this season,
allowed three hits and two runs while walking one over seven
innings. He retired 20 of the final 22 hitters he faced.
Gonzalez, who homered in the third and ninth innings, drove in four
runs. Allen hit his first career home run as part of a three-run
seventh inning. Lindor went 3-for-6 with three runs and finished a
double shy of hitting for the cycle.
It was more than enough for Kluber, who recovered after giving up a
pair of solo home runs in the first inning.
"(It was just about) adjusting to what their approach was," Kluber
said. "I just kind of felt like they were swinging at every pitch
hoping it was going to be a fastball, but when we went to more
off-speed, it took them awhile to make the adjustment."
The Indians jumped on White Sox emergency starter Mike Pelfrey
(3-11) for four first-inning runs. After Lindor's leadoff triple,
Austin Jackson followed with an RBI double. Pelfrey then walked
Yandy Diaz before Encarnacion hit a three-run home run to stake
Cleveland to a 4-0 lead.
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White Sox starting pitcher Mike Pelfrey (50) delivers against the
Cleveland Indians during the first inning at Guaranteed Rate Field.
Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports
Lindor led off the second inning with a solo home run
before Gonzalez drilled a two-run homer off Pelfrey in the third
inning to extend the lead to 7-2.
Pelfrey, who started after left-hander Carlos Rodon was forced to
miss his scheduled start with shoulder stiffness, gave up seven runs
and eight hits over four innings. Pelfrey struck out four and walked
three.
Rodon said after the game that his shoulder didn't feel right while
he was warming up. He felt tightness and knew he couldn't go.
That forced manager Rick Renteria's hand.
"You hate to use a guy and wear him out, but (Pelfrey) was going to
eat up as many pitches as he could, hold as many innings as he could
get through," Renteria said.
The White Sox got on the board in the first inning when Yolmer
Sanchez and Jose Abreu each both hit solo home runs. But it was far
from being enough to slow down the Indians, who will look to extend
their winning streak on Friday at home against the Baltimore Orioles
after going 11-0 on the road trip that concluded Thursday night.
"It's lots of fun," Lindor said. "We've won lots of game because
everybody is contributing and everybody is doing what they're
supposed to do. The whole team is having fun -- it's not just one
player."
NOTES: Indians 3B Yandy Diaz left the game due to a left elbow
contusion after being hit by a pitch. ... Cleveland 3B Jose Ramirez
missed the game with a sore right wrist. Manager Terry Francona said
Ramirez could miss a couple of games. ... RHP Jake Petricka was
placed on the 10-day disabled list with a right elbow strain.
Manager Rick Renteria said he was uncertain whether Petricka, who is
1-1 with a 7.01 ERA in 27 appearances, would return this season. ...
White Sox OF Willy Garcia was sent on a rehabilitation assignment to
Class A Kannapolis. Garcia has been on the DL since Aug. 1 after
sustaining a concussion following a collision with teammate Yoan
Moncada. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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