Games

Recap
 
White Sox beat Twins on homers by Dye, Uribe
CHI WHITE SOX 6, MINNESOTA 2
 

By Gene Chamberlain
PA Sports Ticker contributing writer

CHICAGO (Ticker) - During a six-game road trip to Minnesota and
Toronto last week, Juan Uribe's struggles with the bat led to
rumors in the Chicago media that the veteran infielder could be
traded or waived.

On Thursday, Uribe had teammates standing and applauding in the
dugout as he helped the White Sox post a 6-2 victory over the
Minnesota Twins at U.S. Cellular Field.

Uribe's two-run home run in the fifth inning gave the White Sox
a 3-2 lead and his hard slide into second enabled another run to
score in the eighth.

"Uribe, you have to take advantage of him when he's hot," White
Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. "Because this kid will take the
ugliest swings and ugliest at-bats he can, and we've seen that
for four years or five years.

"You know what you're going to get. Sometimes you get upset and
you scratch your head and you're asking how this kid plays at
the big-league level - and a couple days later, he's
unbelievable."

Uribe's shot came during a three-run fifth and ended Chicago's
string of 11 straight homers with the bases empty.

His slide hard into second baseman Brendan Harris prevented an
inning-ending double play and allowed Jermaine Dye to score
Chicago's fifth run.

Guillen was more impressed by Uribe's aggressive baserunning
than his home run.

"The best thing he did today was break up the double play,"
Guillen said. "We've been missing that in the game - going hard
into second base and stealing bases. I was the first one
jumping up and running out of my seat. It's something we're
missing - not just the White Sox, but baseball.

"That gets you pumped up. It was the way I grew up watching
baseball. Don Baylor and all those guys sliding into second
base tried to get you. Now you slide into second base and you
get dirty and you're a bad guy."

Through four innings, Twins starter Kevin Slowey (0-2) held the
White Sox to one hit in his first start since coming off the
disabled list.

The Twins grabbed a 2-0 lead in the top of the fifth on RBI
singles by Matt Tolbert and Joe Mauer off John Danks (3-3).

But the White Sox began their comeback on Dye's leadoff shot in
the bottom of the fifth, his third homer in as many games. After
Nick Swisher struck out, Joe Crede doubled and scored on
Uribe's homer that gave the White Sox a 3-2 lead.

On Wednesday, Chicago pitcher Mark Buehrle grabbed Uribe's bat
and used it to hit things in the dugout. Buehrle was frustrated
after getting shelled.

But Uribe, who came into Thursday's game batting .187, suggested
Buehrle took a jinx off the bat.

"Today, I'm a hero and yesterday an (expletive)," Buehrle said,
laughing.

The White Sox tacked on a run in the seventh on Carlos Quentin's
two-out RBI single, then added two more in the eighth. One run
scored on Tolbert's throwing error and Dye scored on Toby
Hall's grounder when Uribe made the hard slide.

"Every day I go to the ballpark, I try to help the team however
I can," Uribe said. "I think it's good to be sliding. I don't
want no one to call me (out). That's the best way I can help my
team."

Danks departed after five innings, but picked up his first win
since April 20. He allowed six hits with two walks and five
strikeouts.

"I was giving up a lot of hits and a lot of deep counts in the
fifth," Danks said. "I totally understood our reasoning there."

The game marked both the return and then departure of Twins
manager Ron Gardenhire, who had been away for almost a week due
to the death of his brother.

Gardenhire was ejected in the sixth inning for arguing that
timeout should have been called on a double steal by the White
Sox.

"We made some mistakes late in the game and gave them a couple
runs," Gardenhire said. "The bottom line was their pitching was
better than ours today. We made mistakes and those will cost us
all the time. We let them back in and just fell behind."


 
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