17415
by J.R.
In case you didn't see it, here is a recap of the dud I witnessed yesterday:
Cleveland Indians shut down by Carlos Rodon, Chicago White Sox: DMan's Report, Game 155
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Carlos Rodon allowed two singles and struck out 11 in eight innings as the Chicago White Sox defeated the Cleveland Indians, 3-0, Sunday afternoon at Progressive Field.
Here is a capsule look at the game, which was televised by Fox Sports Time Ohio:
No party in Cleveland: The Indians (90-65) remained 7.0 games ahead of the second-place Detroit Tigers (83-72) in the AL Central.
The Indians authored a dud at the most inopportune of times, when they could have clinched the division. Their magic number was reduced to one when the Tigers lost to the Kansas City Royals, 12-9, in Detroit.
The Indians' final two series, comprising seven games, are on the road. They open a four-game set against the Tigers on Monday.
Disappointment: The White Sox have gotten 88 combined starts from talented lefties Chris Sale, Jose Quintana and Rodon -- and still are just 74-81, fourth place in the AL Central.
Fizzle: The Indians won the season series against the White Sox, 11-8. But they lost the final two series, going 2-5.
The Indians lost the final two of this three-game series. They lost to Quintana, 8-1, Saturday night.
In the 8-1 defeat, they had eight hits and committed three errors. On Sunday, they managed just two hits and committed three errors.
Not today: Rodon (8-10, 4.08 ERA) had allowed six earned runs in each of his previous two starts, including Sept. 14 vs. the Tribe.
Rodon and his power repertoire were excellent Sunday. His success was no fluke. Among the evidence: Tribe Nos. 1-2 batters, Rajai Davis and Jason Kipnis, each was 0-for-4 with three strikeouts.
Rodon walked three. He threw 73 of 108 pitches for strikes.
The Tribe's lineup did not include regular shortstop Francisco Lindor, who is leaking oil at the plate. Lindor is hitless since the first inning against Detroit on Sept. 16.
Don't blame J.T.: Tribe righty Josh Tomlin gave up two runs (one earned) on five hits in 6 2/3 innings. He walked none and struck out one.
Tomlin (12-9, 4.48) has allowed three earned runs in four appearances, including three starts, in 19 1/3 innings in September.