Games

Recap
 
Lee again masterful as Indians blank Yankees
CLEVELAND 3, NY YANKEES 0
 

By Larry Fleisher
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- When spring training began, Cliff Lee
was not even assured of a spot in the Cleveland Indians'
rotation. Based on his first six outings this season, the
lefthander has become a front-line starter again.

Lee remained unbeaten by tossing seven sharp innings as the
Indians recorded a 3-0 victory over the New York Yankees on
Wednesday night.

Victor Martinez lifted a sacrifice fly in the first inning and
Casey Blake lined an RBI single in the fourth for the Indians,
who have won four of six meetings with the Yankees this season.
David Dellucci, who homered as a pinch hitter off rookie Joba
Chamberlain in the series opener Tuesday, added a run-scoring
single in the fifth.

That was enough support for Lee (6-0), who allowed six hits. The
29-year-old, who went 5-8 with a 6.29 ERA in 20 games in 2007,
struck out seven, did not a walk a batter for the fourth time
this season and threw 76 of his 103 pitches for strikes while
lowering his major league-leading ERA to 0.81.

Lee has allowed an earned run in just two of his six starts this
year - both at home.

Besides remaining unbeaten, Lee also continued to find the
strike zone. He has issued just two walks this season and none
in his last 28 innings, a span of 101 batters.

"When I do get behind in the count, I'll step off the rubber and
take a deep breath, take my time and make sure I make a quality
pitch," Lee said. "I just make sure I stay out of those 2-0,
3-2 counts. I'm just trying to work ahead and get the hitters
out with the least pitches possible."

Lee did that virtually the entire night. He threw first-pitch
strikes to 16 of the 27 hitters he faced and did not encounter a
3-0 count until hit penultimate batter in the seventh, which
resulted in Morgan Ensberg's infield single.

Lee completed his effort by fanning Jose Molina for his seventh
swinging strikeout.

Rafael Perez pitched the eighth and Rafael Betancourt worked a
perfect ninth for his fourth save in five opportunities as
Cleveland posted its third shutout of the season.

Lee's tremendous start to the campaign has come at a perfect
time for Cleveland. Reigning American League Cy Young Award
winner C.C. Sabathia has struggled and Fausto Carmona has been
inconsistent despite owning a 3-1 record.

"If you would have showed me at the start of the season, I'd
probably have had a hard time believing you that that would come
true," Lee said. "But that's why you play the game."

It also is occurring after he had to win a spot in the rotation
with a solid spring.

Following his injury-filled and inconsistent 2007, Lee won the
job by beating out Aaron Laffey and Jeremy Sowers. An 18-game
winner in 2005, Lee missed all of spring training and the first
month of last season with a strained right abdominal muscle,
which led to a brief demotion to the minors.

"He had something to go back to," Cleveland manager Eric Wedge
said. "You don't have the years that he's had in the past
without understanding what it takes to be successful and having
an understanding of what he needs to do to be personally
successful."

Fully healthy, Lee has allowed just four earned runs and 25 hits
in 44 2/3 innings.

"He's having an outstanding year," New York captain Derek Jeter
said. "Probably the biggest thing for him is his control. He's
not falling behind anyone and he's not walking anyone."

On Wednesday, Lee surrendered just one hit through the first
four frames and three through five. He gave up a two-out double
to Shelley Duncan in the sixth that put runners on second and
third but struck out Hideki Matsui on a 76 mile-per-hour
curveball to escape unscathed.

"I threw him a couple of fastballs, fastballs away," Lee said
regarding Matsui's at-bat. "I felt like he wasn't getting
around on it. I didn't want to throw it earlier in the count
because I didn't want to speed his bat. It's not a pitch I
really want to throw for a strike to him, but if I keep it down
like that, it's an effective pitch."

Chien-Ming Wang (6-1) - who lost for the first time at home
since July 19 - yielded three runs, five hits and three walks
with four strikeouts in seven innings. The Taiwanese
righthander pitched seven scoreless frames in a 1-0 triumph at
Cleveland on April 27.

Wang lost just the third battle in 20 years between starting
pitchers who entered with a 5-0 record or better.

On May 3, 1988, Detroit's Frank Tanana - who was 5-0 - faced
Oakland's Dave Stewart, who had six wins without a loss. Five
days later, Stewart carried his 7-0 mark into a matchup with
Cleveland's Greg Swindell, who was 6-0 at the time.

"That was a really a battle," Molina said of Wednesday's game.
"We give up runs and we didn't score runs. That's why we didn't
win the game."

The Yankees (17-18), who fell back under .500, were shut out for
the third time this season.


 
Free Sports Scores and Odds by Phone - All New Numbers!
AKRON
800-682-6222
ALBANY
800-355-0004
ALEXANDRIA
703-660-8700
ATLANTA
404-842-1313
BALTIMORE
410-484-1818
BIRMINGHAM
205-945-5544
BOSTON
617-723-1818
BUFFALO
716-824-2525
CAMDEN
800-878-8736
CHARLOTTE
704-342-1313
CHARLESTON, SC
843-769-7200
CHICAGO
312-609-1313
CINCINNATI
800-682-6222
CLEVELAND
216-623-1313
COLUMBIA, SC
803-765-1313
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DALLAS
972-423-3111
DAYTON
800-682-6222
DOTHAN, AL
800-524-4116
EVANSVILLE
800-711-0002
FORT LAUDERDALE
800-524-4116
GREENVILLE, SC
864-370-2828
HARRISBURG, PA
800-711-0002
HARTFORD
800-828-4455
HOUSTON
713-774-1200
HUNTSVILLE, AL
800-524-4116
INDIANAPOLIS
800-711-0002
KNOXVILLE
800-524-4116
LAS VEGAS
702-979-1844
LEXINGTON, KY
800-711-0002
LITTLE ROCK
800-682-6222
LOS ANGELES
800-711-0002
LONG ISLAND
800-355-0004
LOUISVILLE
800-711-0002
MEMPHIS
800-524-4116
MIAMI
305-669-5433
MILWAUKEE
800-682-6222
MOBILE
251-666-5400
MONTGOMERY
800-524-4116
NASHVILLE
615-244-8888
NEW HAVEN, CT
800-828-4455
NEW YORK CITY
800-355-0004
NEWARK
800-878-8736
NORFOLK
757-461-1818
PHILADELPHIA
215-471-3000
PHOENIX
800-878-8736
PITTSBURGH
412-645-9800
PROVIDENCE
800-828-4455
RICHMOND
804-359-9400
ROCHESTER
585-454-1616
SAN FRANCISCO
800-711-0002
SCRANTON, PA
570-342-6500
SOUTH JERSEY
800-878-8736
SPRINGFIELD, MA
800-828-4455
SYRACUSE
315-437-1313
TAMPA
800-524-4116
TRENTON
609-528-2500
TULSA
800-682-6222
TUSCALOOSA
800-524-4116
WASHINGTON, DC
202-898-1818
WORCESTER, MA
800-828-4455
YOUNGSTOWN
800-682-6222
OTHER - NATIONWIDE
412-645-9800

Disclaimer