Acta losing patience with struggling bats


Associated Press

detroit

Cleveland Indians manager Manny Acta is losing patience with slumping hitters such as Grady Sizemore, Carlos Santana, Shin-Soo Choo and Matt LaPorta.

Those four were among the top five in Cleveland’s lineup and combined for only one hit in a 6-2 loss to the Detroit Tigers.

“I’m disappointed because some of these guys don’t seem to be making much progress getting out of these slumps,” Acta said. “Some of them have been going for three months, and they are way too talented to be struggling for this long.

“It’s not good.”

With Sizemore and Co. struggling and slugger Travis Hafner on the disabled list, the Indians have scored two or fewer runs in 10 of their last 13 games and have been shut out four times during the woeful stretch.

The lack of offense has led to Cleveland collapsing with 16 losses in its last 22 games since sitting on a seven-game lead in the AL Central on May 23.

The Indians will make the short trip home to play Pittsburgh and Colorado, two teams hovering around the .500 mark, and Acta is hoping for a turnaround.

“We must have a good homestand,” Acta said. “If we want to snap out of this, we must play well at home.”

Detroit left the Motor City on a roll, winning two of three against Cleveland and 13 of their last 18 games overall to move atop the division standings.

“We’ve got a little something going,” manager Jim Leyland said. “But it’s such a long grind. I don’t get carried away.”

Jhonny Peralta and Ryan Raburn hit back-to-back, solo homers in the fourth inning off Mitch Talbot.

Max Scherzer (9-3) gave up two runs — both in the first — and four hits over 5 2/3 innings.

“That first inning, he made some mistakes and they hit the ball hard,” Avila said. “After that, he settled in. A lot of guys like with him with overpowering stuff, you either get them early or they shut you down.”

Talbot (2-4) allowed six runs on nine hits and two walks over four innings.