Again, Masterson is in a no-win situation
By Kevin Kleps
KKleps@News-Herald.com
@KKlepsFantasy
Justin Masterson smiled.
He didn't seem discouraged in the least bit.
He didn't even seem to mind that the game ended about three hours after he threw the last of his 99 pitches in eight dominant innings Thursday in the Indians' season opener at Progressive Field.
Maybe by now the Tribe's big right-hander is used to it.
Last season, four of Masterson's 10 losses occurred in games in which he allowed two or fewer earned runs. He also gave up two or fewer earned runs in eight of his 11 no-decisions, making his 12-10 record all the more impressive.
The trend continued Thursday in the Tribe's 7-4, 16-inning loss to Toronto, a 5-hour, 14-minute marathon that could have ended after about 150 minutes if closer Chris Perez could have held a three-run lead in the ninth inning.
"It's baseball," Masterson said afterward. "You have some hard times, you have some wins, you have some tough losses. It's part of the game. It's what makes the game so crazy."
That especially seems true when the 28-year-old takes the hill.
Last season, Masterson ranked 12th in the American League in ERA (3.21) and the Indians were 20-13 in his 33 starts, but he was credited with a win in only 12 of them because of a lack of run support.
During an 11-start winless stretch that spanned from May 1 to June 25 of 2011, Masterson posted a 3.34 ERA — and the Tribe scored all of 22 runs in the 11 contests.
His line Thursday: eight innings, two hits allowed, one run, one walk, 10 strikeouts and strikes on 66 of his 99 pitches.
"It was fun," he said of his first career opening-day start. "It's unfortunate a little hanging slider there at the end scored three runs."
The loss, which was cemented by J.P. Arencibia's three-run homer in the 16th, came seven innings after the blown save, but the blame falls on the closer. Perez gave up three runs, three hits, two walks and needed Vinnie Pestano to finish the inning and prevent Perez from having a defeat added to his numbers for the day.
Perez started his postgame gathering with the media by stressing that the abdominal injury that hampered him in spring training "had nothing to do with this outing.
"I'm 100 percent healthy," he said. "I wouldn't pitch if I wasn't. It was just a bad outing. Bad location, bad everything."
His teammate, the affable, low-key Masterson, treated it as nothing more than one defeat in a 162-game season.
The Indians' ace kept repeating how "great" Thursday was, even if he — and his team — had nothing to show for it other than Perez's inflated first-game ERA and a spot in major-league history for the longest opening game.
"I'm sorry. I got you 15 more times," Perez said he told Masterson afterward. "He's really good about that. Some pitchers would be upset, obviously, after throwing a gem like that on opening day and me blowing a three-run lead. That's the easiest save you can get.
"He's fine, though. He's a professional. That's baseball. He knows I didn't try to blow it on purpose. He knows I got his back."
With 36 saves in 40 chances in an All-Star season in 2011, Perez has earned his teammates' faith. But Thursday had to have shaken that bond just a bit.
If any Tribe pitcher has a right to wonder why it happened to him, it's Masterson, whom you might remember went a club-record 17 consecutive starts without a win between 2009 and '10. In that extended span, the Indians scored 39 runs, an average of 2.3 per contest.
"It's what happens. I can't do anything about it," Masterson said when informed of his 12 very effective starts from 2011 that resulted in a loss or no-decision. "That just shows how good you're pitching. That's all I can control. … Everyone's fighting. They make the plays for me on defense to keep the runs from scoring, and they make the plays on offense to score the runs. I'm very dependent on every other skill player on my team."
In close games, he's especially dependent on his closer, who, to his credit, didn't hide and welcomed every question about his erratic outing.
"Obviously, I take the blame for this loss," Perez said. "We shoulda been out of here 2 1/2 hours ago."
And Masterson should have earned a win.
Again.