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| Duchscherer dazzles as A's edge Red Sox OAKLAND 3, BOSTON 0 |
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By Al Barba PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer OAKLAND, California (Ticker) - Justin Duchscherer's flirtation with history turned into a career outing Saturday night. Duchscherer was perfect through five innings and held the Boston Red Sox hitless through 6 1/3 innings to lead the Oakland Athletics to a 3-0 victory. In a career-high eight-inning performance, Duchscherer allowed just one hit before turning the game over to closer Houston Street, who pitched a perfect ninth to record his 10th save. "I'm a command guy so I have to throw all my pitches for strikes," Duchscherer said. "After the first hitter - I got 3-0 on him - and after that I felt like I could throw my cutter and curveball whenever I wanted and on any count and kept them off-balance." The win marked the first combined one-hitter by Oakland since Chad Gaudin and Rich Harden teamed for one against the New York Yankees on June 30, 2007, at Yankee Stadium. Only Boston slugger David Ortiz's one-out single in the seventh kept Duchscherer (4-3) from having a chance to become the first Oakland pitcher to toss a no-hitter since Dave Stewart did it against the Toronto Blue Jays on June 29, 1990. A converted reliever, Duchscherer allowed just the one hit, struck out four and faced just two batters over the minimum, as 17 of his 24 outs were recorded through the air. "I don't think it hurt that I every time that Zuke (catcher Kurt Suzuki) wanted to throw a pitch, I wanted to throw the same pitch," Duchscherer said. "We were on the same page all night." Duchscherer outdueled Boston ace Josh Beckett (5-4), who picked up the loss after allowing two runs and seven hits with nine strikeouts in seven innings. Beckett extended his streak of games with at least five strikeouts to 15. "I think every pitch he threw ... the cutter, he threw a curveball. I don't remember him throwing one pitch that it didn't look like it had a purpose," Red Sox manager Terry Francona said of Duchscherer. "He may not have thrown a strike on every pitch but he just commanded everything." One night after using the long ball to jump out to a lead against the Red Sox, the Athletics played small ball to score their first run. Mike Sweeney opened the second with a bloop double inside the right field line, advanced to third on a sacrifice by Ryan Sweeney and scored after beating shortstop Alex Cora's throw home on Emil Brown's groundout. After that, the story was Duchscherer, who kept the Red Sox off-balance throughout the night. Duchscherer took a perfect game into the sixth before hitting Jason Varitek on an 0-1 pitch. Through the first five innings, 13 of the 15 outs were on fly balls. Duchscherer was able to keep the no-hit bid intact by striking out Coco Crisp, getting Alex Cora on an infield pop-up and retiring Jacoby Ellsbury on a ground ball. It was at that point that the thought of a no-hitter entered Duchscherer's mind. "After five I was thinking about it and then after six I was like, Wow, I have a no-hitter going," Duchscherer said. "But sometimes it works out and sometimes it doesn't." Duchscherer opened the seventh by getting Dustin Pedroia on a fly ball to right field. For one of the few times on the night, Duchscherer fell behind in the count to Ortiz, who lined a 2-0 pitch into center field for Boston's lone hit of the game. After pitching a perfect eighth, Duchscherer wanted to come out for the ninth, but Oakland manager Bob Geren decided that 101 pitches was enough. "You always hope to finish it out. Every time I go out there I want to go nine," Duchscherer said. "After I came in from the eighth, Bob came over and said that's it. I fought with him a little bit. (Bob) said I was over 100 pitches (101). "That's Bob's decision. I'm not going to second-guess him. I've had some injury problems over the last couple of years so I think he thought it was the best thing and I got to go with him." Oakland added to its lead on Ryan Sweeney's seventh-inning homer off Beckett. Mike Sweeney tacked on some insurance in the eighth with an RBI single. |
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