Published May 15, 2008 02:48 am - CLEVELAND — OK, this is getting ridiculous. Not that Indians fans mind it one bit.
C.C. keeps the shutout streak alive
Sabathia slams door on A’s; Tribe starters haven’t given up a run in 431⁄3 innings
STEVE GOLDMAN
Star Beacon
CLEVELAND — OK, this is getting ridiculous. Not that Indians fans mind it one bit.
Behind C.C. Sabathia’s five-hit complete-game shutout, Tribe starters extended their scoreless streak to 431⁄3 innings on Wednesday, as Cleveland blanked visiting Oakland, 2-0.
The shutout was the fourth in five games for the Indians as a team, fifth in eight and a major-league leading seventh overall. They have won seven of their last nine contests, and stand at 21-19. They won their second game in two nights against the Athletics (23-18), and are 5-1 on their homestand.
The Tribe win, coupled with the Twins’ 6-4 loss to visiting Toronto, puts the Indians alone in first place atop the Central Division standings.
The scoreless string is the longest by Tribe starters since they posted 47 consecutive zeroes in August, 1948.
“It’s pretty special stuff, what they’re putting together right now,” manager Eric Wedge said.
“It feels real good,” Sabathia said. “Everybody’s working hard, just trying to keep up. Everybody’s pitching pretty well, so I think nobody wants to be that guy (who breaks the streak).”
The five starters who have constructed the streak, Sabathia (11 total scoreless innings), Aaron Laffey (7), Fausto Carmona (9), Cliff Lee (9) and Paul Byrd (71⁄3) have not been scored upon since the fifth inning of Friday’s 6-1 win over Toronto, when the Blue Jays nicked Sabathia for a run. Since then, they have combined for five full starts without a run allowed.
The only runs allowed by the team in the interim were the three Toronto tallied against reliever Rafael Betancourt in the 10th inning of the nightcap of Sunday’s doubleheader.
This time, Sabathia (3-5, 5.47 earned run average), who usually struggles against the Athletics, gave up just four singles, a double and two walks while striking out 11 men to tie his season high. Only two men reached as far as second base against him. He threw 117 pitches, 77 for strikes.
The defense, which has been so critical during the streak, once again played a big role, as it committed no errors and turned two double plays.
The left-hander is now 3-2, 1.49 in his last five starts after going 0-3, 13.50 in his first four, including two losses to Oakland.
“He was outstanding again tonight,” Wedge said. “His rhythm was dead on. He did a good job moving his fastball, and working his fastball and changeup off each other. His breaking ball -- I thought he used it effectively against both right-handers and left-handers. And defensively, the guys did a good job again, so it was a solid win.”
When asked what the key was to turning his season around, and to faring better against the Athletics, Sabathia’s answer was the same: throwing strikes.
“They’re a patient team, so they make you throw strikes,” he said. “I just wanted to go out and establish that I can throw strikes over both halves of the plate, and make them swing.”