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1998 Playoffs

Soloists

Four lonely HRs carry Cleveland to 2-1 series lead

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Posted: Friday October 02, 1998 11:41 PM

  Jim Thome's solo home run in the 5th tied the game 1-1 AP

BOSTON (CNN/SI) -- The Indians' offense was at its best when it was in no position to score.

With four solo home runs -- two by Manny Ramirez -- Cleveland beat the Boston Red Sox 4-3 on Friday. The Tribe can clinch the best-of-5 division series with one more win Saturday afternoon at Fenway Park.

Red Sox-killer Charles Nagy again turned a Game 3 into a lost cause for Boston and a big step toward the ALCS for Cleveland. Nagy, the winner in the clincher of a three-game division series sweep over the Red Sox in 1995, pitched eight strong innings.

Jim Thome and Kenny Lofton also connected with solo shots for Cleveland. The Indians got only one other hit, but still spoiled the latest stage in Bret Saberhagen's long comeback.

Nagy got the win for Cleveland, giving up four hits and one run in eight innings AP 

Nomar Garciaparra hit a two-run homer in the ninth off Indians reliever Mike Jackson. But Jackson retired the next two batters for his second save.

"We're still in Boston and we still have to win," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said. "That's a tough proposition."

Bartolo Colon (14-9) can clinch the series on Saturday against Pete Schourek (1-3). Red Sox manager Jimy Williams admitted he was tempted to use his ace, Pedro Martinez, who won Game 1 on Tuesday but would pitch on three days of rest for the first time this year.

"Temptation? Yeah. Come to my senses? No," Williams said. "That's my opinion. I'll live with it, regardless of what other people believe. That's the right decision."

  Saberhagen lasted seven innings and gave up the first three solo homers AP

Martinez said he asked pitching coach Joe Kerrigan to talk with Williams about starting on Saturday, but Williams denied the request.

"I really believe I'll be pitching on Sunday" when a fifth game would be played, Martinez said.

The teams split the first two games at Jacobs Field, but Nagy, a Connecticut native, may have had the home field advantage in Fenway Park. He's never been beaten there -- winning five games -- and is 8-1 in his career against the Red Sox.

"It doesn't matter what ballpark you're in, you just have to trust your stuff and go with it," Nagy said. "I was able to get some groundballs and, in a game like this, every run counts."

Vaughn was held in check by Nagy, going 2-for-4 and scoring a run AP 

His 1997 postseason ended in disappointment as he allowed the winning hit in Florida's Game 7 victory in the World Series. And he was mediocre in the first half of this season. He was 5-1 in his last seven starts after going 8-6 as he struggled to keep his pitches from rising.

He had no such troubles Friday, getting the Red Sox to pound the ball into the ground all afternoon.

He faced just four hitters over the minimum and gave up four hits -- singles by Darren Lewis and Mo Vaughn in the fourth, John Valentin in the sixth and Trot Nixon in the eighth.

He retired the first nine batters -- six on grounders, two on strikeouts and one on a fly ball. He finally allowed a single leading off the fourth to Lewis, who scored Boston's first run.

  Lofton added to the Indians' home run derby with a solo shot in the sixth inning AP

Even that came in on a groundball, as third baseman Travis Fryman forced Vaughn at second but Garciaparra beat Joey Cora's relay to avoid the double play. Nagy ended that inning by striking out Mike Stanley. In all, he struck out three, walked none and retired 15 batters on grounders.

The Red Sox had turned to Saberhagen, who was 11-3 after losses this season, to bring them back after Wednesday's 9-5 setback in Cleveland that followed an 11-3 win.

Finally, the former Cy Young Award winner who rebuilt his career as he rebuilt his shoulder following surgery in May 1996 was in the game he had worked so hard to reach. The former World Series MVP was happy with his 15-8 record, his most wins since 1989, but said contributing in the playoffs was his goal.

He did that for four innings as he kept the Indians hitless and allowed just one runner on a leadoff walk in the fourth to Ramirez.

Ramriez put the game out of reach with his second solo home run in the ninth AP 

He gave up his first hit -- and run -- when Thome, who missed Thursday's off-day workout with flu-like symptoms, led off the fifth with his eighth homer in 33 postseason games to tie it 1-1.

"When the Red Sox pushed theirs across, it didn't take the wind out of us, but it made you realize you got put behind the eight ball," Hargrove said, "and when Jimmy got that home run, it picked everybody up. It was the first sign that we had that we might be able to get to Saberhagen."

Saberhagen settled down, retiring the next four batters, before Lofton gave Cleveland the lead for good with his second homer of the series with one out in the sixth.

"I felt very good going into the game, probably the best I've felt all year," Saberhagen said. "Knowing Nagy has pitched well against us, I knew I couldn't give up a lot of runs."

Ramirez started the seventh with a long shot over the Green Monster in left field. He added another in the ninth off Dennis Eckersley, his club-record 11th postseason homer, that was the margin of victory when Boston scored twice in the ninth.

Jackson relieved to start the inning, and Vaughn singled off the Green Monster with one out. Garciaparra followed with his second homer of the series, giving him 10 RBIs in three games.

Notes: Saberhagen's wife, Lynn, sang the national anthem. She also did it on April 10 at the Red Sox home opener in which Vaughn's grand slam capped a seven-run ninth in Boston's 9-7 win over Seattle. ... The game was played on the 20th anniversary of Boston's 5-4 loss to the New York Yankees in a one-game playoff for the AL East pennant at Fenway Park. Bucky Dent's three-run homer in the seventh erased a 2-0 Red Sox lead. ... As planned before the series started, a different umpiring crew handled the game than the one used in Game 2. In that second game, Joe Brinkman ejected Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove and pitcher Dwight Gooden in the first inning. ... The Indians have lost the openers of their last seven playoff series but can win their fourth series in that stretch on Saturday.  

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Multimedia
frame In the ninth, Mike Jackson came on to shut the door, but Garciaparra and the Red Sox tried to keep it open
  • Start(1.05 M .MOV)
Early in the game, it was a pitchers' duel between Nagy and Saberhagen (1.02 M)
The game remained tied until the Indians' bats woke up (1.18 M)
Kenny Lofton takls about Nagy's pitching peformance (245 K)
Charles Nagy talks about his Game 3 outing (128 K)
Bret Saberhagen explains why he was disappointed with his Game 3 performance (373 K)
Mo Vaughn explains what suprised him the most about the Red Sox loss (297 K)
Travis Fryman talks about Saberhagen's pitching performance (199 K)
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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