Westbrook lifts Indians



CLEVELAND (AP) -- Jake Westbrook made sure the Cleveland Indians bounced right back from a tough loss.
Westbrook pitched eight impressive innings and Casey Blake homered to help Cleveland finally defeat the Florida Marlins 8-1 Wednesday night.
The Indians got past Florida for the first time since winning Game 6 of the 1997 World Series. The Marlins won Game 7 in 11 innings, swept a three-game series at home in 2002 and took the opener of this three-game set on two ninth-inning homers off the foul pole at Jacobs Field.
"The resolve of these guys is impressive," Indians manager Eric Wedge said. "They have proven it all season."
So has Westbrook (5-2), who began the year as the long man in Cleveland's bullpen but is now 4-0 with a 2.85 ERA in seven outings, including five starts, at home.
"He was very tough, very impressive," Marlins manager Jack McKeon said.
Groundouts galore
Westbrook got 16 groundouts. The right-hander allowed one run and six hits in his first appearance against the Marlins. He struck out four without a walk.
"I felt good, strong," Westbrook said. "All my pitches were working and I threw strikes."
Miguel Cabrera ruined Westbrook's bid for his first career shutout by hitting a 446-foot homer, his 15th, to left-center leading off the seventh.
"To go eight and only make one mistake, that's pretty good," Westbrook said.
Wedge is pleased that Westbrook is finally pitching with consistency after three seasons of bouncing between the bullpen and starting rotation.
"Jake has pitched well in short stretches like this, but he's learned a lot the last couple of years," Wedge said. "We liked him in the bullpen, too, but as fate would have it, he's done the job as a starter."
Westbrook has worked at least six innings in seven of his eight starts.
Lou Pote pitched a perfect ninth for Cleveland.
Jody Gerut had three of Cleveland's 13 hits off three Marlins pitchers, but was more impressed by Westbrook.
"He's a pleasure to watch -- poetry in motion," Gerut said. "He works fast and makes it fun to play defense behind him. He was pretty nasty tonight."
Took 5-0 lead
The Indians took a 5-0 lead in the third inning against A.J. Burnett (0-2). Gerut had an RBI single, Travis Hafner a two-run double and Blake a two-run homer, his eighth. The Indians went 5-for-5 with runners in scoring position in the inning.
Ben Broussard hit a two-run double and Ronnie Belliard drove in another run with a sacrifice fly in a three-run fifth for an 8-0 lead.
Burnett gave up eight runs and 12 hits in 4 1-3 innings, losing for the first time in 10 inter-league starts. He is 6-1 against AL teams, including six shutout innings against Cleveland in 2002 in his only previous appearance against the Indians.
"Those guys came out swinging," Burnett said. "I went after them and they went after me."
Most in career
It was the most hits and runs allowed in a game by Burnett in his career. The right-hander also walked two and struck out three in just his second start since he had elbow ligament replacement surgery in April 2003.
"I'm healthy," he said. "My arm feels good, but it is time to start putting up numbers."
McKeon said that should come with more work.
"Stuff-wise, he's fine," McKeon said. "Velocity-wise, he's there. It's just his command. This is like spring training for him."