Where's the 'O' in Minnesota?



The Indians were held to two runs or fewer for the third straight game.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Carlos Silva and Rondell White were two of Minnesota's worst performers before the All-Star break.
With a better second half, the Twins will find it easier to stay in postseason contention.
Silva threw six smooth innings, White hit his first home run of the season in his first game back from the disabled list, and Minnesota beat the Cleveland Indians 5-2 on Sunday.
"If it's not right now, it's never," said Silva, whose team is 11 games behind the Tigers in the AL Central standings and 61/2 games back of the White Sox in the wild-card race.
Luis Castillo and Michael Cuddyer also homered and Jason Tyner drove in two runs for the Twins, who won the last three of this four-game series.
Another struggle
Grady Sizemore's leadoff home run wasn't nearly enough for the Indians, who were hoping to emerge from the break in far better fashion.
They turned four double plays behind rookie Jeremy Sowers, but couldn't solve the struggling Silva.
Cleveland was held to two runs or fewer for the third straight game -- its first such streak this season.
"It seemed like all series long we couldn't get any mojo at the plate, any momentum," said Todd Hollandsworth, who went 0-for-4.
Joe Nathan pitched the ninth for his 16th save for Minnesota, which placed three outfielders on the disabled list over the past four days.
The biggest blow came during this game, when the team learned standout center fielder Torii Hunter has a stress fracture in his left foot.
White, who signed for $2.5 million this season, never found his stroke and has been bothered by tightness in his surgically repaired left shoulder that sent him to the disabled list and on a rehabilitation assignment with Triple-A Rochester.
Batting .190 with 16 RBIs in 184 at-bats, White will be a regular for at least the rest of the month while Hunter recovers. Shannon Stewart and Lew Ford are also out, and Jason Kubel is playing through soreness in both of his knees.
The sight of White driving his first homer into the left-field seats leading off the seventh was an encouraging one for the Twins. For White, though, the emphasis will be on staying relaxed and avoiding pressure to replace Hunter's production.
"Ever since I've been up here I was trying to do too much," he said. "That was the problem before I left, trying to hit the ball 600 feet. When you don't try to hit it is when you hit home runs."
Trying to turn it around
After two solid seasons as a stabilizer in the middle of the rotation, Silva (5-9) had an awful first half.
Three consecutive strong starts in late June were followed by two rough outings in July, and he left in the second inning of the last one with soreness in his right knee. Silva, who had surgery to repair a torn meniscus in the knee last September, was checked out by two doctors over the break.
He began the second half with a big boost for his beat-up team. He held Cleveland to five hits and two runs while striking out four without a walk, throwing changeups 25 times out of 89.
"That's more than I threw all last season," he said.
All Silva gave up was Sizemore's 16th homer, an upper-deck shot, and a two-out RBI single by Casey Blake in the third inning.
"I didn't even think about my knee today," Silva said. "I just took the ball and tried to do my job."
So-so-start
Sowers (1-3) gave up 11 hits and five runs without a walk in seven innings while striking out one in his fourth career start. Despite the three homers, including Castillo's to begin the bottom of the first, the Indians were pleased.
"He definitely gave us a chance to win the ballgame," manager Eric Wedge said. "For a young guy, he's able to control damage. Every time he goes out there, he leaves something."
Joe Mauer, the leading hitter in the majors, grounded into two of the Twins' double plays. One wiped out a leadoff single by Nick Punto in the fourth.
But Cuddyer came next with his home run, and then Justin Morneau singled. White hit a shallow fly to left that Hollandsworth lost in the Metrodome's tricky, graying ceiling for a fluke double.
Tyner, who has five RBIs and six hits in 12 at-bats since being called up this weekend, smacked a single to left that scored two and gave Minnesota a 4-2 lead -- making the miscue hurt even more.
"I never saw the ball until it hit the turf," Hollandsworth said, summing up a disappointing series for his team that's stuck in fourth place in this division -- 201/2 games out.
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