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Familiar foes

Tribe playing BoSox in playoffs for third time in five years

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Posted: Monday October 04, 1999 08:05 PM

  In his last start at Cleveland, Pedro Martinez struck out 14 in seven innings but got a no-decision. Otto Greule Jr./Allsport

CLEVELAND (AP) -- They brawled earlier this season, and recently, one accused the other of cheating.

The Indians and Red Sox don't particularly like each other, and this week they'll renew their sometimes testy rivalry in the postseason.

For the third time in five years, Boston and Cleveland are playing in the best-of-5 AL division series. The first-round playoffs start Wednesday night at Jacobs Field.

The Red Sox will start Pedro Martinez (23-4), baseball's most dominant player this year, in Game 1 against the Indians, who are expected to counter with their ace, Bartolo Colon (18-5). Game 2 is Thursday afternoon.

The series seems too close to call. As Cleveland coasted into October, Boston was driving hard to secure the wild-card berth and make a run at AL East champ New York.

Perhaps an impartial outsider would be best to make a prediction.

"I like Boston as a sleeper," said Toronto's David Wells, who beat the Indians on Sunday. "They got Pedro. Pedro's the man this year. It's just something I feel. That's my pick. Boston. They've had all those years without winning it. Maybe this is their year."

Maybe it's Cleveland's year, too. Even the prospect of facing Pedro Martinez twice in five games doesn't seem to concern the Indians, who have had to overcome injuries all year.

"If we could win three straight that would be great, but that's going to be real hard," Indians catcher Sandy Alomar said. "Game One is always important. If you can knock out their pitcher right away, that's good. Every game counts, though. We need to win three. Whatever three, I don't care."

Winning the first one has been Cleveland's biggest problem the past few Octobers.

The Indians have lost eight straight playoff openers, last winning a Game 1 in 1995 when they beat the Red Sox in 13 innings. Last year, Martinez and the Red Sox got off to a great start, winning the opener 11-3 before the Indians won three straight to advance to the ALCS.

Martinez went 2-0 against the Indians during the '99 regular season, twice beating Colon in tight games. In his last start at Cleveland, Martinez struck out 14 in seven innings but got a no-decision.

"We have to beat Pedro, man," said Indians shortstop Omar Vizquel. "We have to show we can beat him. We beat him before and we have to do that again. The No. 1 game is always important to win. It doesn't mean anything if we go the full five games or seven games. It is just the first step. You want the first step, but it is more important to take the last step."

The Game 1 pitching matchup is but one of a number of interesting subplots in this series.

When the teams played at Fenway Park in April, a series of brushback pitches, the first by Cleveland's Jaret Wright, led to two bench-clearing incidents.

Then, during Boston's most recent visit to Cleveland last month, Red Sox manager Jimy Williams requested that a center-field camera at Jacobs Field be covered up.

Williams and several of Boston's players accused the Indians of using the camera to steal signs. The Indians found the charge amusing but the AL took it seriously enough to ask Cleveland to keep the camera covered and to remove a video monitor behind their dugout.

Alomar, for one, says what has happened between the teams before October is already ancient history.

"All that stuff with Jaret and them earlier this season is over," Alomar said. "It was over back then. Now it is time to play postseason baseball. The bottom line is we have to eliminate mistakes and win games."

The Red Sox got a scare last week when shortstop Nomar Garciaparra, the AL's leading hitter and an Indians killer this season, returned to Boston to have his injured right wrist examined.

Garciaparra, hit by a pitch Sept. 25, sat out the Red Sox final two regular-season games, but said he was set for Wednesday's opener.

"Oh yeah," he said. "I'll be ready."

Garciaparra led the AL with a .357 average, but he was even tougher on the Indians, batting .451 with five homers and 17 RBIs in 12 games to help the Red Sox win the season series 8-4.

But Garciaparra knows regular-season records mean nothing now, and especially against a team with as much postseason experience as the Indians.

"We've been in the postseason, and we know what they can do," he said. "They definitely have a lot of veterans, and they've been in the postseason before. They know how to win. We played them last year and they knocked us out. Hopefully, we can turn it around this year. We know we've got a good series on our hands."


 
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