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Thome's blast sparks White Sox
CHI WHITE SOX 9, TAMPA BAY 2
 

ST. PETERSBURG, Florida (Ticker) -- Ozzie Guillen has witnessed
quite a few home runs in his major league career as a player and
a manager. He's not sure he's seen any longer than Jim Thome's
shot Friday night.

Thome's towering three-run homer off a Tropicana Field catwalk
and Javier Vazquez's pitching lifted the Chicago White Sox to a
9-2 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays.

In the third inning, Thome crushed a 3-2 pitch off rookie Jeff
Niemann that hit the "C ring" catwalk in right field. It was
the 511th of his career, tying him with Hall of Famer Mel Ott
for 21st place on the all-time list.

"That's the longest ball I've ever seen," Guillen said. "I
don't know if they have enough (to measure the distance).

"It was the first home run that kid (Niemann) gave up and it was
to a future Hall of Famer. It's something he can talk about."

Thome has reached base in all 26 games he's played at Tropicana
Field.

"That (homer) is right up there," Thome said. "It felt pretty
good.

"It's very humbling when you hear your name with those greats
(such as Ott). It's really a cool thing."

Konerko homered on the next pitch after Thome's blast, making it
4-0. It was more than enough for Vazquez, who won his third
consecutive start.

Vazquez (3-1) escaped a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the second
and coasted until the sixth inning, when the Rays scored their
only two runs. By then, the White Sox had built a 9-0 cushion
for Vazquez, who has won six of his last seven dating to last
season.

"It was huge to get out of the second, it was 0-0 then," Vazquez
said. "If I give up a run, it might have been a different
ballgame. You never know."

Vazquez scattered six hits in 6 1/3 innings, allowing two runs,
one walk and striking out four. Vazquez's leadoff walk to
Nathan Haynes in the seventh ended a streak of 75 consecutive
batters without a walk.

"I had no problem with the effort," Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon
said. "Vazquez was good."

Thome and Konerko's home runs gave the White Sox a 4-0 lead. In
the fourth, the White Sox added four more on Pablo Ozuna's
sacrifice fly, Juan Uribe's RBI double and Orlando Cabrera's RBI
single. Konerko drove in the final run when he was hit by a
pitch with the bases loaded.

The White Sox won for the 10th time in their last 14 games and
rebounded from Thursday's 6-5, 10-inning loss in Baltimore where
they blew a 5-2 eighth-inning lead.

"It seems like momentum wise, we came back and that's big,"
Thome said. "You'll always have losses, but you have to
eliminate the long losing streaks."

Niemann (1-1), who won his major league debut by allowing one
run in six innings against Baltimore on Wednesday, only lasted 3
1/3 innings against the White Sox.

"That home run Thome hit might have been the longest one I've
seen at this ballpark," Maddon said. "Neimann was a little bit
off and he tried to be careful when they started scoring runs.
They're a good veteran ballclub and they know what to do when
they smell blood."

Niemann allowed five hits, eight runs (five earned), walked four
and struck out one.

"The walks definitely played a large part and just not making
pitches I had to make," Niemann said. "I was pretty erratic and
I couldn't really get back in the zone. You learn the hard
way."

Rays rookie third baseman Evan Longoria, who agreed to a $17.5
million, six-year contract Friday, went 1-for-3 with an RBI. But
his throwing error led to two unearned runs in the fourth.

Thome (three RBI), Konerko (two RBI) and Uribe (2-for-5, two
RBI) knocked in seven of the White Sox's nine runs.

With the win, the White Sox remained atop the American League
Central, while the Rays stayed in the AL East cellar.

"The way we lost (Thursday) and then to travel here and win is a
good sign, a great sign," Guillen said. "We don't carry the
loss over to (Friday's) game."


 
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