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Streaking Twins use big inning to down Indians
MINNESOTA 9, CLEVELAND 6
 


By Anthony Maggio
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

MINNEAPOLIS (Ticker) -- It takes a lot to rattle the Minnesota
Twins these days.

Winners of 12 of 14 entering Saturday's game against the
Cleveland Indians, the Twins shrugged off a five-run Cleveland
second inning, chipped away at starter Aaron Laffey, and used a
five-run sixth frame against the Indians' bullpen to come away
with a 9-6 victory at the Metrodome.

Alexi Casilla, Brendan Harris and Craig Monroe each drove in a
pair of runs and Kevin Slowey won for the fourth time in five
starts to give Minnesota its fourth consecutive victory.

"It seemed like the mood in the dugout, everyone was still calm,
no one was hanging their heads," outfielder Denard Span said.
"For some reason, everybody knew. We've been playing good.
Everyone knew that something good was going to happen."

All it took was a minor mechanical adjustment from Slowey (6-6),
who entered the contest 3-0 with an 0.93 ERA in his last four
outings but gave up five runs - including Grady Sizemore's
three-run homer - in the second inning.

"I think that really for me is one of the problems when I'm
throwing is I try to overthrow it a little bit and kind of jump
toward the plate," Slowey said. "So I looked at the video and
sure enough I was kind of flying open toward the plate, the
stuff that (pitching coach Rick Anderson) and Joe (Mauer) notice
very quickly and try to make that adjustment the next time out."

Slowey retired the next 13 batters he faced following Sizemore's
100th career home run, opening the door for Minnesota's offense.

"He's a smart kid," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said of Slowey.
"He went in and looked at video too, and knows where he's at.

"He made the adjustment and gave us really good innings after
that. We needed those innings. He gave us a chance."

Span built off Monroe's two-out, two-RBI first-inning double
with an RBI single in the fourth inning, and Mauer cut the
deficit to one with a fifth-inning leadoff homer off of Laffey.
The lefthander didn't come back out of the dugout after allowing
four runs on five hits with four walks in five innings.

"I've seen it the last two times out, my command's been
terrible," Laffey said. "Walking guys, hitting a batter, That's
just not going to get it done. I didn't deserve to win that game
tonight."

Tom Mastny (0-2) certainly deserved the loss. The righthander
replaced Laffey in the sixth but retired only the first batter
he faced - ultimately allowing four runs on two hits with two
walks before Rafael Perez was summoned from the bullpen.

Perez didn't fare much better, giving up a run on a hit and two
walks before escaping the sixth frame.

"The walks," Indians manager Eric Wedge said. "The walks are
what's killing us right now."

Casilla's hit off Mastny was the big blow - a two-RBI double
that scored Span and Gomez following a walk from the former and
a bunt single from the latter. After two more walks and a run
scored off a wild pitch, Harris drilled a two-out, two-RBI
single.

Casilla returned to the lineup after a one-game absence due to a
sore finger to make a highlight-reel defensive play in the
second inning that saved a run and also came up with another big
hit.

"Our trainers got the game ball tonight for getting Lexi back on
the field tonight," Gardenhire said. "That's how happy we are."

Jamey Carroll hit an RBI double off Boof Bonser in the seventh
inning, but Matt Guerrier pitched a perfect eighth inning and
Joe Nathan pitched around a two-out double for his 24th save in
26 chances in the ninth.

David Dellucci and Andy Marte both drove in runs in the second
inning for the Indians - Marte's first RBI of the season.
Cleveland has lost six consecutive road games and a season-high
tying seven overall.

"We gotta keep trying to break through," Wedge said. "Like we
talked about the last couple days, we're going to have young
pitchers who are going to get opportunities like we've seen the
last couple days. I'm just hopeful that they'll get more
comfortable in those situations with those opportunities and
they settle down and pitch."

Mauer scored three runs, Casilla extended his hitting streak to
12 games and Span set a career high with a seven-game hitting
streak for Minnesota.

 
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