Tribe rallies to sweep Mariners


Associated Press

CLEVELAND

Chris Perez was stunned, surprised and shocked.

And he was hardly alone.

The Cleveland Indians somehow pulled out a game they had no business winning.

“Best game I’ve ever been a part of,” said Perez. “It was the craziest, most fun ... obviously, it stunk to give up a home run, but it was still fun.”

Yan Gomes hit a three-run homer in the 10th inning as the Indians, revived by Seattle fielding errors in the final two innings, beat the Mariners 10-8 on Monday to complete a four-game sweep and continue a season that’s shaping into one to remember in Cleveland.

Gomes, who also homered in the second, drove a 3-2 pitch from Charlie Furbush (0-3) over the wall in left, giving the Indians their fifth straight win, third walk-off over the Mariners in four days, and one of the most improbable victories in memory.

As Gomes reached the plate, he was mobbed by his teammates following the comeback that became necessary after Cleveland’s bullpen gave up homers in the eighth, ninth and 10th innings.

“You don’t look up very often and see your opponent score three straight innings and you win,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “That was interesting.”

Incredible, really.

It was the Indians’ first four-game sweep of Seattle since 1981, and the rally gave Cleveland its 18th win in 22 games.

Joe Smith (2-0) won despite giving up a go-ahead homer to Justin Smoak in the 10th and the Indians improved to a major league-best 21-7 since April 20.

Ryan Raburn hit a three-run homer for Cleveland, which opened a 21/2 game lead over the Detroit Tigers in the AL Central. The teams play a two-game series starting Tuesday.

The Mariners got a tying homer by Kyle Seager in the eighth off Vinnie Pestano and a go-ahead shot by pinch-hitter Endy Chavez in the ninth off Perez, but couldn’t close it out because of their own miscues.

“It was another weird game,” Mariners manager Eric Wedge said. “We’re just on the south side of things right now.”

The Indians were an out away from losing in the ninth when Seattle closer Tom Wilhelmsen dropped an underhanded toss while covering first, allowing the Indians to tie it at 7.

After Smoak homered in the 10th, the Indians were three outs away from losing when the Mariners helped them again.

Michael Brantley singled and Drew Stubbs followed with a bunt that Furbush, seeking his first career save, fielded but bobbled. The left-hander rushed his throw to first and would have had Stubbs — umpire Tim Timmons called him out — but Smoak dropped the ball.

Gomes then delivered his game-winning homer, taking an unexpected trip around the bases after it looked as if the Indians were finished.

“Moments like that, you just want to get back to your teammates,” said Gomes, “just run around and make sure you don’t miss a base. It was exciting. You just don’t know what to do with your hands. I was like, ‘Wow, this game’s done.”’I