Hobbling Indians fall short of sweep
Associated Press
CLEVELAND
Manny Acta has seen the injuries for his team mount on a daily basis.
The Cleveland Indians manager also realizes there isn’t anything he can do about it.
“We can’t call the commissioner and ask for a month off,” Acta said after watching his team drop a 2-1 decision to Kansas City on Sunday.
After rallying to win the first two games of the series, the Indians’ revamped lineup, which was without five regulars, was no match for Bruce Chen, who overcame a shaky first inning to win his career-high fifth straight start.
Chen (10-5) allowed the first four batters of the game to reach base and walked Carlos Santana with the bases loaded to force in Cleveland’s only run.
The left-hander, who allowed five hits in 71/3 innings, is 4-0 in his last five starts against the Indians.
Justin Masterson (10-8) allowed two runs in six innings and lost for the first time since July 24.
The Indians announced before the game that outfielder Michael Brantley will have surgery to remove a portion of the hamate bone in his right hand this week and will miss the rest of the season.
Cleveland also played without outfielder Shin-Soo Choo, who will miss at least the next few days with soreness in his left side. Designated hitter Jim Thome, acquired from Minnesota on Friday, wasn’t in the starting lineup. The addition of Thome paid off immediately for the Indians. Not only did he hit his 602nd career home run Saturday, his return sparked an increase in ticket sales. The three-game series drew 104,615 fans.
Thome, who was cheered by Cleveland fans all weekend, received another standing ovation when he pinch-hit with a man on first in the eighth. He struck out on four pitches by Greg Holland.
Grady Sizemore, Travis Hafner and Jason Kipnis are three more Cleveland regulars who are on the DL.
The Indians lost the tussle with Chen after the first inning. Singles by Ezequiel Carrera, Jason Donald and Asdrubal Cabrera loaded the bases before Santana walked on four pitches to force in a run. Shelley Duncan, swinging at the first pitch, fouled out and Kosuke Fukudome tapped into a pitcher-to-home-to-first double play.
“The first inning killed us,” Acta said. “We let him off the hook right there. That’s on us.”
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