Perez’s clutch infield hit lifts Tribe


Indians snap season-high four-game losing streak

Associated Press

CLEVELAND

Roberto Perez’s crawling infield single scored Francisco Lindor with the go-ahead run with two outs in the eighth inning as the Cleveland Indians snapped a season-high, four-game losing streak with a 3-1 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday night.

With the bases loaded, Perez, who returned to the lineup after missing two games with a concussion, hit a slow roller off Jose Alvarado (0-4) that third baseman Daniel Robertson charged but couldn’t field with his bare hand.

Alvarado then walked Jake Bauers to force in Carlos Santana, giving the Indians a 3-1 lead. Alvarado, who replaced Cy Young winner Blake Snell in the seventh, walked three in the eighth.

A.J. Cole (2-1) struck out the side in the eighth and Brad Hand worked the ninth for his 13th save in 13 tries.

Cleveland starter Shane Bieber matched Snell for five innings with his second straight dominant outing by striking out 10 in five innings.

Jordan Luplow homered in the fourth off Snell for the Indians, who have been in an offensive funk for months and have been searching for something to get them going.

Other than allowing Luplow’s homer, Snell had little trouble with the punchless Indians, who came in batting .222 and have been struggling to score.

The left-hander gave up just four hits in 62/3 innings. Snell had issues with his command while walking three, striking out seven and throwing a season-high 104 pitches before manager Kevin Cash gave the ball to Alvarado with two outs in the seventh.

Bieber, who fanned 15 in a complete-game shutout against Baltimore on Sunday, worked his way out of one-out, two-on jams in three innings. But he threw too many pitches — 111 — and manager Terry Francona was forced to lift him despite allowing just one run and four hits.

The Indians only had one hit before Luplow, who singled in the second, drove a high fastball out of the strike zone over the wall in right-center for his sixth homer — all against left-handers.

Before the game, Francona said he’s been impressed with Luplow, in his second stint with Cleveland.

“He’s been dangerous against left-handed pitching, which we really need, that presence,” Francona said.

Bieber’s bid for a second straight shutout was over in the first when Austin Meadows doubled, moved up on a fly out and scored on Avisail Garcia’s single.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Rays: 3B Robertson (allergic reaction) didn’t start after exiting Thursday in the fifth inning. He has a nut allergy and ate sweet potatoes, which contained pecan crumbles. “By the second inning, his color and skin tone changed,” Cash said. “We’ve seen it before, but not like this. He was literally rubbing his spikes on the ground, trying to itch his feet.”

Indians: RHP Mike Clevinger threw a 35-pitch bullpen session and will now head to the team’s year-round training complex in Arizona to continue to rehab from an upper back strain. Clevinger’s quick recovery has been a huge plus for the Indians, who feared he might be out several more months.