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BALTIMORE(AP)
Aubrey Huff
remembers
Edwin Jackson
in 2006 when both played for Tampa Bay.
After Jackson pitched eight innings of two-hit ball to lead the
Detroit Tigers
over the
Baltimore Orioles
3-0 Sunday, Huff determined the right-hander bears very little resemblance to his teammate of two years ago.
''He wasn't even close to that. He definitely has developed probably some of the nastiest stuff in the big leagues this year,''
said Huff, who went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts. ''When he was in Tampa, he wasn't going over 94 (mph). Now he has got 98
with a hard slider and a changeup. I don't know where that came from.''
Jackson (5-3) permitted only three baserunners and faced only two batters over the minimum.
Nick Markakis
hit a fourth-inning single;
Robert Andino
walked in the sixth and was caught stealing; and
Ty Wigginton
hit a leadoff double in the eighth.
Jackson, who struck out seven, came within an inning of his second career complete game. He was pulled by manager Jim Leyland
after throwing 101 pitches.
''A little bit of a tough spot in the eighth inning, he had to work a little harder,'' Leyland said. ''That's why I took him
out.''
While he was in there, however, Jackson was overwhelming.
''I was just trying to come out and be aggressive and mix my pitches up,'' he said. ''I've seen them in the past and I know
what they can do. You have to mix it up to keep them honest.''
After facing Detroit ace
Justin Verlander
on Saturday, the Orioles were forced to go up against the new and improved Jackson.
''Honestly, the last two guys are probably the best back-to-back I have seen in my nine years,'' Huff declared.
Fernando Rodney
allowed a walk but got three outs to complete the two-hitter and earn his 10th save in 10 tries. It was Detroit's major-league
high seventh shutout of the season.
Making his second big-league start, Baltimore rookie
Jason Berken
(1-1) gave up one run, four hits and two walks in seven innings. The only glaring flaw in his outing was a fourth-inning solo
shot by
Curtis Granderson
.
Berken was pleased with his performance, but conceded that he wasn't quite as good as Jackson.
''Yeah, I mean he threw the ball outstanding, obviously,'' Berken said. ''Especially against the lineup we have. It's one
of the better lineups, and he threw the ball extremely well.''
Starting in the cleanup spot for the first time in his career, Granderson hit his team-high 13th homer to provide Jackson
with all the offense he needed.
''I made one mistake and left the ball up, and Granderson hit it out,'' Berken said.
Jeff Larish
doubled in a run off
Danys Baez
in the eighth, and
Clete Thomas
hit an RBI double against Mark Henderickson in the ninth.
Baltimore's
Luke Scott
went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts, ending a streak in which he hit six homers in four games. During that span he was 8 for
15 with 14 RBIs.
Playing as a designated hitter after catching his first two big league games Friday and Saturday, Orioles newcomer
Matt Wieters
was hitless in three at-bats.
''I've told all the guys, I've told
Matt Wieters
, 'Look man, it's going to get easier. You aren't going to get back-to-back starts like that. This isn't what the big leagues
is all about,''' Huff said.
Although Detroit's
Magglio Ordonez
drew a walk and scored in the eighth, he went 0 for 3 to end his 16-game hitting streak.
Notes: Jackson (4),
Rick Porcello
(5) and
Justin Verlander
(5) combined for 14 wins in May, most by a Detroit trio in one month since 1993, when
Bill Gullickson
,
Tom Bolton
and
Mike Moore
totaled 14. ... Baltimore is 1-9 when scoring fewer than three runs. ... Detroit improved to 14-2 in games on Saturdays and
Sundays. ... Rodney has not allowed a run in his last nine outings.
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