|
RECAP
|
BOX SCORE
CLEVELAND (AP) -- There was no excessive celebrating in Kansas
City's clubhouse. No hugs or high-fives. Just some
handshakes and pats on the back.
But for Royals manager Tony Muser, Sunday's 5-4 victory over the
Cleveland Indians was pretty special.
"It feels like we won the World Series, just winning one out of
four," Muser said.
Mac Suzuki pitched a career-high 8 1/3 innings and Mike Sweeney
went 4-for-5 with two RBI Sunday as the Royals hung on to avoid a
four-game sweep.
"When you come into the Indians' house, and with them playing
like they are, it's tough to win a ballgame," Sweeney said. "It's
nice to get one today."
Suzuki (1-0), making his fourth start of the season, recorded
his first win as a starter since last Sept. 2. He matched a
career-high with eight strikeouts.
Claimed off waivers from the Mets last season, Suzuki is the
first Japanese-born player to pitch in the majors without starting
his career in the Japanese pro leagues.
He speaks English fluently, and on Sunday he relied on the
pitcher's universal language for success.
"I tried to keep the ball down," he said, "get ahead in the
count, throw strikes and use my best pitch -- the splitter."
Suzuki, who because of injuries has bounced back and forth
between the starting rotation and bullpen, had been battling
control problems all year, but walked just one. He had never
pitched more than 6 1/3 innings in 52 major league games.
Suzuki took a 5-2 lead into the ninth and struck out Manny
Ramirez for the third time. But Jim Thome followed with a single
off the right-field wall and David Justice homered into the
right-field seats.
That was Suzuki's 129th and final pitch.
"I was going to leave him out there as long as I could," said
Muser, whose bullpen blew a 5-2 lead Saturday. "I wasn't worried
about a pitch count."
Jerry Spradlin, traded by the Indians last season, came on and
struck out Travis Fryman and Richie Sexson for his first save since
May 25, 1998, with Philadelphia.
"I'm kind of savoring it," said Spradlin. "It was kind of
hard the way everything happened here last year. I'm just glad I
was able to get the job done."
Chuck Finley (3-3) lost his third straight start, allowing three
runs and six hits in seven innings. He never got in a groove, and
finished with five walks and six strikeouts.
"I used my curveball more, but it wasn't good," Finley said.
"I tried to feel my way through it, but walked too many. I had
(Johnny) Damon, the leadoff guy, 0-2 and walked him. Walked him
twice. That's not good."
Joe Randa homered in the eighth off Scott Kamieniecki to give
the Royals a 4-1 lead.
Mark Quinn's RBI groundout in the sixth put Kansas City ahead
2-1, and Sweeney hit an RBI double off the wall in left in the
seventh.
Randa opened the eighth with his sixth homer and first in the
series by the Royals, who came in riding a five-game winning
streak.
"We felt like we should have won yesterday's game," Randa
said. "We wanted to come out here today and make a statement. We
know Cleveland is the team to beat."
Finley, who was nearly unhittable in his last start at Minnesota
before a one-inning meltdown, gave up back-to-back doubles to
Carlos Febles and Sweeney in the first as the Royals went up 1-0.
"Sweeney has always been tough on me," Finley said. "In
spring training or during the season. Today I tried some off-speed
stuff on him, but got it up in the zone and he got me again."
A poorly executed rundown by the Royals allowed the Indians to
tie it in the bottom of the inning.
Kenny Lofton singled, stole second and stopped at third when
Roberto Alomar singled to left. However, Alomar took a big turn at
first and found himself trapped off the bag.
Alomar managed to stay alive long enough for Lofton to break for
the plate and he scored on a wild throw home by Sweeney from first
base.
Game notes
Kansas City's Carlos Beltran, the AL Rookie of the Year
last season, went 0-for-14 in the series and is hitless in his last
22 at-bats. ... Diaz's homer was his first since last Aug. 22. ...
Thome's steal of second in the fourth inning was the 17th of his
career and the first for the Indians' first baseman since 1998. ...
The Royals got one steal, but missed a chance to increase their
league-leading total in the second. Quinn walked and stole second,
but was ruled out when Beltran was called for batter's
interference. Kansas City is 42-for-45 in steal attempts. ...
Justice has five homers in his last eight games.
|