Indians brushed aside by White Sox in home opener
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| Regular Season Series |
| Cleveland leads 11-7 (as of Fri 4/13) |
| Mon 4/2 |
CLE 12, @CWS 5 |
Recap |
| Wed 4/4 |
CLE 8, @CWS 7 |
Recap |
| Thu 4/5 |
@CWS 4, CLE 3 |
Recap |
| >Fri 4/13 |
CWS 6, @CLE 4 |
Box Score |
| Sat 4/14 |
@CLE 4, CWS 0 |
Recap |
| Sun 4/15 |
@CLE 2, CWS 1 |
Recap |
| Mon 7/16 |
CWS 11, @CLE 10 |
Recap |
| Tue 7/17 |
@CLE 6, CWS 5 |
Recap |
| Wed 7/18 |
CWS 5, @CLE 1 |
Recap |
| Tue 8/7 |
CLE 2, @CWS 1 |
Recap |
| Wed 8/8 |
@CWS 6, CLE 4 |
Recap |
| Thu 8/9 |
CLE 7, @CWS 5 |
Recap |
| Fri 8/31 |
@CLE 8, CWS 5 |
Recap |
| Sat 9/1 |
@CLE 7, CWS 0 |
Recap |
| Sun 9/2 |
CWS 8, @CLE 0 |
Recap |
| Mon 9/10 |
CLE 6, @CWS 2 |
Recap |
| Tue 9/11 |
CLE 8, @CWS 3 |
Recap |
| Wed 9/12 |
@CWS 7, CLE 4 |
Recap |
| · Complete Schedule: Indians | White Sox |
| Scoring Summary |
| CHW | CLE |
 | 1st | T Hafner hit sacrifice fly to left, G Sizemore scored. | 0 | 1 |
 | 2nd | J Uribe hit sacrifice fly to left, J Dye scored, J Crede to third. | 1 | 1 |
 | 4th | J Uribe homered to left center, J Crede and T Iguchi scored. | 4 | 1 |
 | 4th | A Marte singled to right, J Peralta scored, J Barfield to third. | 4 | 2 |
 | 5th | J Dye homered to left center, P Konerko scored. | 6 | 2 |
 | 7th | J Peralta singled to center, R Garko scored, D Dellucci to third. | 6 | 3 |
 | 9th | J Barfield grounded into fielder's choice to shortstop, R Garko scored, J Peralta out at second. | 6 | 4 |
| · View complete Play-By-Play |
| Game Information |
| Stadium | Progressive Field, Cleveland, OH |
| Attendance | 16,789 (37.1% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 3:17 |
| Weather | 49 degrees, clear |
| Wind | 9 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Gary Darling, First Base - Larry Poncino, Second Base - Jerry Meals, Third Base - Bruce Dreckman |
| A CLOSER LOOK |
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• Summary: The ChiSox rolled over Cleveland one week after the Indians' home opener at Jacobs Field was postponed due to inclement weather.
 Uribe
• Turning point: Juan Uribe hit a three-run homer to left field in the fourth inning and Jermaine Dye added a two-run shot off Fausto Carmona in the fifth.
• Unsung hero: Javier Vazquez managed to survive 5 1/3 innings. Vazquez struck out Grady Sizemore with two runners on base and two outs in the second and Travis Hafner with the bases loaded to end the fourth.
• Figure this: Since winning his major league debut on April 15 last season, Cleveland's Carmona has lost 11 straight decisions.
• Elias Says: After winning his first career decision Carmona has now lost his next 11. Only one other player who debuted in the major leagues since 1950 won his first decision and then lost his next 11: Matt Beech did it for the Phillies over the 1996-97 seasons.
-- ESPN.com news services
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White Sox 6, Indians 4
CLEVELAND (AP) -- Only the
Cleveland Indians were shoveled to the side on Friday night.
One week after their home opener at Jacobs Field was postponed by blizzard-like snow squalls and a weekend-long storm that wiped out an entire series, the Indians were buried by the
Chicago White Sox 6-4.
Juan Uribe hit a three-run homer and
Jermaine Dye added a two-run shot off
Fausto Carmona (0-1) to help the White Sox spoil Cleveland's 107th home opener, which took seven days to get completed.
Javier Vazquez (2-0) struck out
Travis Hafner with the bases loaded to end the fourth.
Bobby Jenks worked the ninth for his third save.
Just getting the game in was a victory of sorts for the Indians, who haven't been able to stay dry or warm for much of the early season. They had a four-game series against Seattle postponed by the nasty weather. On top of that, the Indians were forced to move a three-game series against the
Los Angeles Angels to Milwaukee earlier this week.
On Friday, they were just happy to be playing at home.
"It was pretty nice out there," Indians catcher
Ryan Garko said. "It was brisk but it felt like September and not January. Hopefully, we can get into our normal routine. We've been all over the place."
As he headed toward the Jake during the afternoon, Indians pitcher
C.C. Sabathia noticed something new above Cleveland's downtown skyline -- the sun.
"I was surprised, man," Sabathia said. "I forgot that it shined. I forgot that it came out here."
It was a balmy 49 degrees when musician Billy Joel, performing across the plaza at Quicken Loans Arena, threw out the ceremonial first pitch. The sky stayed clear throughout the game, but the White Sox needed a portable propane heater to stay warm in the dugout.
"It wasn't too bad," Chicago manager Ozzie Guillen said. "I've seen it a lot worse here."
Sounds like worse is on the way.
There's a 10 percent chance of rain for Saturday's game, which was moved up six hours in case the weather worsens. But Sunday's outlook isn't so promising with temperatures in the 30s and a 60 percent chance of precipitation.
A week ago, Cleveland's first attempt at playing its opener was postponed in the fifth inning following several lengthy delays. Doubleheaders that were rescheduled for Saturday, Sunday and Monday were all whitewashed because of a freakish spring storm that dumped nearly two feet of snow in the region.
The missed games prompted Major League Baseball to move Cleveland's series against Los Angeles to Miller Park in Milwaukee, now famous for its beer, bratwurst and baseball played under a retractable roof.
"It was great to get some games in," Indians outfielder
Grady Sizemore said, "and it's going to be even better to get some in at home."
Four hours before Friday's scheduled first pitch, members of Cleveland's grounds crew worked in cloudless conditions as they watered down the infield dirt in preparation for the oft-delayed opener.
The scene was a very different a week ago, when the maintenance unit -- and a few volunteers -- armed with leaf blowers, shovels and brooms, tried in vain to combat lake effect snows that turned the Jake into a winter wonderland.
Head groundskeeper Brandon Koehnke said the field was cleared off eight different times from last Thursday through Monday, and he estimated more than 33 inches of snow accumulated on the infield tarp, outfield grass and track.
"The tarp is like Swiss cheese right now," said Koehnke, adding the warning track was the most damaged area and needed repair.
The 40-to-50 person grounds crew was saluted during Friday's pregame ceremonies. Each member is being presented with a personalized Indians game jersey. On the back will their last name and the No. 10, representing their status as the club's 10th man.
No strangers to cold weather, the White Sox arrived in Cleveland on Wednesday night after playing that day in California, where it was sunny and in the 60s. But before batting practice on Friday, Chicago's players bundled up in hooded sweat shirts and stocking caps to fight the bitter chill off Lake Erie.
"What's it like outside?" Guillen asked while sitting in his office.
"It's nice," he was told.
"What is it, 32 degrees?" he said. "I've been in my hotel room since we got here. Usually I like to walk around the city and see what's going on but I wasn't doing that here. I just stayed in my room."
Game notes The Indians went 3-for-20 with runners in scoring position and stranded 13. "I don't know how many we left on, but it was ridiculous," Indians manager Eric Wedge said. "We're too good to be doing that." ... Since winning his major league debut on April 15 last season, Carmona has lost 11 straight decisions. ... White Sox C
A.J. Pierzynski is in a 2-for-22 slump. ... Larry Doby Jr., the son of Larry Doby, the AL's first black player, visited both clubhouses before the game. Doby Jr. works security for Billy Joel. ... Garko had a career-high four hits.