Re: Articles
Posted: Thu Jun 09, 2011 11:55 am
Ocker on Thursday
CLEVELAND: The first thing manager Manny Acta said after the Indians' 3-2, 10-inning loss to the Minnesota Twins on Wednesday showed the depth of his team's fall from grace.
''It was a very poor homestand,'' said Acta, who was not emulating a teacher giving a grade to an underachieving student.
Acta, like many managers, believes a team can become a significant player in the race for the posteason if it kills at home and plays .500 on the road. Until recently, that's what the Tribe had done.
Coming into the latest homestand, the club was 19-6 at Progressive Field and 14-14 on the road, but the 1-6 record on its own turf against the Texas Rangers and the Twins put the strategy in temporary jeopardy, at least.
Again it was a debilitating inability to score that sabotaged the chance to win two in a row. And for the 13th time in the past
21 games, the Tribe scored two or fewer runs. Its record during this span is 8-13.
Despite being 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position, solo homers by Grady Sizemore, leading off the sixth, and by Jack Hannahan in the ninth, when the Indians were down to their last two strikes, preserved a chance to win.
But Acta didn't take much consolation in the two home runs. His emphasis was on hitters who were not taking the correct approach, trying to bring the entire team out of its slump with one giant swing of the bat.
''We can't seem to get a run unless we hit a home run,'' Acta said. ''We didn't have enough quality at-bats today. We have to go back to doing that, to letting the next guy take care of business.''
In other words, it's futile for every batter in the lineup to try to win the game by himself by going deep. It doesn't take long to notice that too many at-bats are made up of hitters reaching for outside pitches and yanking the ball to the pull field rather than taking it the other way.
Justin Masterson started and aside from grabbing a bat himself, he did what he had to do to keep the game close. In eight innings, Masterson gave up two runs and nine hits, walking none. Despite the quality outing, he was lucky to avoid a loss.
''I'm very disappointed that we couldn't get a win for Justin,'' Acta said.
Masterson insisted that he isn't paying attention to his (and others') lack of run support, that he can only keep the opposing team from scoring.
''You get frustrated for the team,'' he said. ''You want the team to win. I would have been happy if we'd won the game today and it didn't go on my record. To me, [the team loss] is the frustrating part.''
If Masterson can be faulted, it would be for failing to close out the third and sixth innings, when the Twins scored after two were out.
Ben Revere's single with a runner on second in the third produced the Twins' first run, and Justin Morneau's double with Revere on second accounted for the second.
Asked if he would like to have any pitches back, Masterson said: ''Not really. I attacked guys and pounded the zone and didn't walk anyone.''
Even the winning run came after Chris Perez had retired the first two batters in the 10th. Drew Butera, batting .150 coming into the game, doubled with a full count and scored on Revere's single to left.
''That's what we were doing early in the year,'' Acta said. ''That's how we built our lead. They're doing it now. What goes around comes around.''
After Hannahan's two-out home run with a 2-and-1 count in the ninth tied the score, the team felt energized.
''Yeah, I felt like we've done it [come from behind] so many times at home,'' Acta said.
But the best the Tribe could do in the 10th was a two-out double by Carlos Santana, followed by Shin-Soo Choo's hard one-hopper to the pitcher for the third out.
''We were batting over .300 with runners in scoring position [earlier in the season], but I know that's impossible to keep up,'' Acta said. ''What we have now is guys expanding the strike zone [swinging at bad pitches].
''We felt when Travis Hafner got hurt and some others were struggling, a couple of guys would come alive and keep us above water. But it didn't happen that way.''
CLEVELAND: The first thing manager Manny Acta said after the Indians' 3-2, 10-inning loss to the Minnesota Twins on Wednesday showed the depth of his team's fall from grace.
''It was a very poor homestand,'' said Acta, who was not emulating a teacher giving a grade to an underachieving student.
Acta, like many managers, believes a team can become a significant player in the race for the posteason if it kills at home and plays .500 on the road. Until recently, that's what the Tribe had done.
Coming into the latest homestand, the club was 19-6 at Progressive Field and 14-14 on the road, but the 1-6 record on its own turf against the Texas Rangers and the Twins put the strategy in temporary jeopardy, at least.
Again it was a debilitating inability to score that sabotaged the chance to win two in a row. And for the 13th time in the past
21 games, the Tribe scored two or fewer runs. Its record during this span is 8-13.
Despite being 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position, solo homers by Grady Sizemore, leading off the sixth, and by Jack Hannahan in the ninth, when the Indians were down to their last two strikes, preserved a chance to win.
But Acta didn't take much consolation in the two home runs. His emphasis was on hitters who were not taking the correct approach, trying to bring the entire team out of its slump with one giant swing of the bat.
''We can't seem to get a run unless we hit a home run,'' Acta said. ''We didn't have enough quality at-bats today. We have to go back to doing that, to letting the next guy take care of business.''
In other words, it's futile for every batter in the lineup to try to win the game by himself by going deep. It doesn't take long to notice that too many at-bats are made up of hitters reaching for outside pitches and yanking the ball to the pull field rather than taking it the other way.
Justin Masterson started and aside from grabbing a bat himself, he did what he had to do to keep the game close. In eight innings, Masterson gave up two runs and nine hits, walking none. Despite the quality outing, he was lucky to avoid a loss.
''I'm very disappointed that we couldn't get a win for Justin,'' Acta said.
Masterson insisted that he isn't paying attention to his (and others') lack of run support, that he can only keep the opposing team from scoring.
''You get frustrated for the team,'' he said. ''You want the team to win. I would have been happy if we'd won the game today and it didn't go on my record. To me, [the team loss] is the frustrating part.''
If Masterson can be faulted, it would be for failing to close out the third and sixth innings, when the Twins scored after two were out.
Ben Revere's single with a runner on second in the third produced the Twins' first run, and Justin Morneau's double with Revere on second accounted for the second.
Asked if he would like to have any pitches back, Masterson said: ''Not really. I attacked guys and pounded the zone and didn't walk anyone.''
Even the winning run came after Chris Perez had retired the first two batters in the 10th. Drew Butera, batting .150 coming into the game, doubled with a full count and scored on Revere's single to left.
''That's what we were doing early in the year,'' Acta said. ''That's how we built our lead. They're doing it now. What goes around comes around.''
After Hannahan's two-out home run with a 2-and-1 count in the ninth tied the score, the team felt energized.
''Yeah, I felt like we've done it [come from behind] so many times at home,'' Acta said.
But the best the Tribe could do in the 10th was a two-out double by Carlos Santana, followed by Shin-Soo Choo's hard one-hopper to the pitcher for the third out.
''We were batting over .300 with runners in scoring position [earlier in the season], but I know that's impossible to keep up,'' Acta said. ''What we have now is guys expanding the strike zone [swinging at bad pitches].
''We felt when Travis Hafner got hurt and some others were struggling, a couple of guys would come alive and keep us above water. But it didn't happen that way.''