Indians catch break from rain to beat Astros


Associated Press

CLEVELAND

Ugly, sloppy or abbreviated, the Cleveland Indians will take wins any way they can get them right now.

This is no time to be picky. This is playoff time.

Zach McAllister lasted five innings and the Indians got two unearned gift runs from Houston in a 2-1, rain-shortened victory over the Astros on Friday night and moved into one of the two AL wild-card spots.

The game was delayed for 1 hour, 9 minutes before the umpires decided to call it after 61/2 innings. Shortly after Cleveland’s win, Texas lost to Kansas City, allowing the Indians to jump the Rangers in the wild-card standings. It’s the first time the Indians have been atop the ever-changing board since Aug. 4.

“For us to be able to get this win, regardless of how we got it, it’s all about the ‘Ws’ at this point,” first baseman Nick Swisher said. “And if we keep winning, the season keeps going, and hopefully everyone here in Cleveland gets real happy.”

The Indians, who entered the night trailing both Tampa Bay and Texas by one-half game for a wild-card spot, scored an unearned run in the second and fourth innings off Brett Oberholtzer (4-4).

McAllister (9-9) allowed just one run and got a key double play in the fifth as well as a diving catch by center fielder Michael Bourn in the first inning, a defensive gem that set the tone.

Cleveland also got two innings of hitless relief from Marc Rzepczynski and Bryan Shaw, who struck out three of four batters he faced for his first save.

Brandon Laird homered for the inept Astros, who committed three errors, lost their seventh straight and fell to 51-103 — four losses shy of matching the club record set last season.

“Errors are a part of the game,” Astros manager Bo Porter said. “We all know that, but at the same time you expect those plays to be made in a major league baseball game.”

The win improved Cleveland’s record to 48-18 against teams currently below .500 — the majors’ best mark — and perhaps the biggest reason the Indians have a chance to make the playoffs for the first time since 2007.

With a very favorable schedule ahead, the Indians were hoping to capitalize on a four-game series against baseball’s worst team to stay in the wild-card fray.

As they waited out the delay, Indians fans kept tabs on the Tampa Bay-Baltimore and Texas-Kansas City games on Progressive Field’s giant scoreboard. It was a similar scene in Cleveland’s clubhouse as players stayed tuned to the action elsewhere.

“There’s 18 TVs in here, there’s games all over the place,” Swisher said. “There’s games you might not even want to be watching that are on.”