The veteran Chicago Cubs left-hander will try
to solve that issue when he starts the finale of a three-game
series in Detroit on Wednesday.
Lester surrendered four homers in 3 2/3 innings against the
Chicago White Sox on Friday and was tagged with his first loss
in five starts.
"They have, obviously, some damaging power," Lester said
afterward. "They're confident against lefties. They're swinging
the bat well against them. And if you're not executing, if
you're in there for 100 pitches and you're not executing 99 of
them, they're going to make you pay."
The White Sox rank third in the major leagues in home runs. The
Tigers don't possess as much power as their American League
Central rival, but they're no slouches. After hitting the fewest
homers in the majors last season, Detroit is tied for 12th in
homers this year.
Lester (2-1, 5.06 ERA) gave up two homers to Milwaukee in his
previous start, which resulted in a no-decision. He only allowed
a total of two runs in his first three starts.
In 12 career starts against the Tigers, he is 3-6 with a 5.67
ERA. Half of those starts came at Detroit's Comerica Park, where
he is 2-2 with a 5.56 ERA.
Detroit starter Michael Fulmer is also coming off a poor outing
in which he allowed five runs on five hits in three innings at
Cleveland on Friday.
Coming off Tommy John surgery, Fulmer is on a three-inning
limit. He had a scoreless outing against the White Sox on Aug.
10 but has given up three or more runs in his other four starts.
"I've got no excuses at this point," Fulmer said after his last
start. "It's tough and frustrating for me. Kind of an awful
feeling. I feel like I'm trying something new each time out. I
just have to find something that works."
Fulmer (0-0, 9.53 ERA) has started against the Cubs only once in
his career, a no-decision during the 2018 season in which he
gave up three runs in six innings.
The innings limit has magnified every mistake Fulmer has made.
"It kills me to try and go out there every fifth day and try to
be perfect," he said, "but I'm not giving up. I've been working
hard. I truly believe the best is yet to come. Last year was
such a long road, such a long year for me -- it's going to pay
off. It's just going to take some time for me."
The teams split the first two games of the series. The Cubs
pounded their way to a 9-3 victory on Monday, and the Tigers
responded with a 7-1 romp on Tuesday.
Spotty offense has been a problem for the Cubs lately despite
leading the National League Central. They have scored two or
fewer runs in three of their past five games.
Key players Javier Baez (.220), Kyle Schwarber (.221), Anthony
Rizzo (.214) and Willson Contreras (.216) are hitting well below
their career averages.
"We're going to live and die with our core guys," manager David
Ross said Monday at the start of the series. "We're going to be
as good as those guys are. That's going to be our strength.
Those are the guys who are going to carry the day for us. Those
are the guys, if we want to go to the place that we expect to go
to, those guys have to be good."
--Field Level Media
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