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SAN FRANCISCO(AP)
Cliff Lee
had no-hit stuff. He wasn't exactly rooting for a no-no, however. Not just yet.
''I'm kind of glad I didn't throw a no-hitter,'' Lee said following a fabulous debut for the
Philadelphia Phillies
. ''If I did that the first time, I'd have to live up to some high expectations.''
He spotted his fastball with precision, and his curveball, too. What a way for the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner to start
his days in the National League.
Lee pitched a four-hitter, carrying a no-hit bid into the sixth inning and even adding two hits with the bat, and the Phillies
felt an immediate impact two days after acquiring the left-hander from Cleveland, beating the
San Francisco Giants
5-1 on Friday night.
''That was a good one, huh?'' Phillies reliever
Tyler Walker
said, chuckling at Lee's dominance. ''Good trade.''
Jayson Werth
homered to put Philadelphia ahead early and added a two-run single in the seventh,
Raul Ibanez
drew a bases-loaded walk in the seventh for an insurance run and Lee did the rest.
He dazzled from the start for the World Series champions, tossing his 11th career complete game, fourth this season and third
in four starts. Lee's line: one run, six strikeouts, two walks, 109 pitches and 78 strikes. He was done in 2 hours, 39 minutes,
getting a hug from catcher
Paul Bako
afterward and tucking the game ball in his back pocket as a keepsake.
''Pitched pretty good, didn't he? Very good,'' Phillies manager
Charlie Manuel
said. ''In his first time out with us he gives us nine innings and that's real good.''
Lee didn't allow a hit until
Juan Uribe
doubled to the deep corner in right with one out in the sixth. His defense also was spot on, with Lee hustling forward on
Edgar Renteria
's eighth-inning sacrifice bunt and quickly firing to first.
Lee doubled in the eighth for his first career extra-base hit and that gave him his first multihit game - and doubled his
previous career hit total.
''I got the first hit and I was pretty pumped about that but you get a double off the wall in the opposite-field gap, I totally
never expected that,'' Lee said.
Fittingly, it was
Ben Francisco
- who also came to the Phillies from the Indians on Wednesday - whose sacrifice fly helped Lee score his first career run.
Lee faced only two three-ball counts until the seventh on a cool night at the Giants' waterfront ballpark, where an eerie
mist hovered over the field for much of the game. He had thrown only 13 balls among his first 54 pitches.
Lee, who went 7-9 with a 3.14 ERA in 22 starts for the Indians this season, won his fourth straight start dating to a loss
at Detroit on July 10.
He struck out
Randy Winn
looking on a 93 mph fastball on his third pitch of the game and was through that inning on all of nine pitches.
''I felt comfortable. It's a loose clubhouse, everybody's nice. It was an easy transition for me,'' Lee said. ''When I get
on the field, I can just throw to the mitt and everything else is kind of irrelevant. I wasn't ever nervous or anything. I
felt good about getting that first inning out of the way, getting that first guy out and putting up a zero.''
Ryan Garko
, Lee's teammate with Cleveland until getting dealt to the Giants on Monday, drew a 12-pitch walk in the second for San Francisco's
first baserunner. Garko offered some insight on Lee to his new teammates during a hitter's meeting Thursday, telling them
that Lee has been pretty much unbeatable of late.
After Garko's walk, Lee got
Aaron Rowand
to ground into an inning-ending double play. That was the first of 11 straight batters retired before Uribe's hit.
''This guy won a
Cy Young
last year,'' San Francisco skipper
Bruce Bochy
said. ''He was on top of his game, and when he is you have your work cut out for you.''
The way Lee was going in San Francisco's pitcher-friendly ballpark, it was clear this could be a special outing.
Kevin Millwood
threw the Phillies' last no-hitter on April 27, 2003, against the Giants.
''He was obviously phenomenal,'' Bako said of Lee. ''Just catching him you get a better sense of how good Cliff really is.
You can't get that sense on TV.''
Werth homered just over a leaping Rowand in left-center leading off the second to give the Phillies a 1-0 lead - and it held
up this time. Philadelphia also took an early lead Thursday night but lost the series opener 7-2.
Giants rookie
Ryan Sadowski
(2-4) lost his fourth straight start after beginning his career 2-0 with 16 scoreless innings. He was done after four innings
and 82 pitches after feeling some tightness in his shoulder and arm. He hasn't gone longer than five during his losing streak.
Rowand returned to San Francisco's lineup after missing four straight games with a torn tendon in his right forearm, which
he hurt when hit with a pitch by Atlanta's
Tommy Hanson
on July 20. Rowand hadn't started the previous 10 games.
Newly acquired Giants second baseman
Freddy Sanchez
, traded by Pittsburgh on Wednesday, is expected to be added to the roster Saturday and perhaps be available to pinch-hit.
He's been nursing an inflamed left knee.
NOTES: Lee, who is 3-0 lifetime vs. San Francisco, was 2 for 32 at the plate before Friday. For the Indians, Lee had won his
last three starts with two complete games and a 1.44 ERA. ... Philadelphia All-Star CF
Shane Victorino
was held out of the lineup for the second straight game with a bruised left knee. The injury forced him to leave Wednesday's
4-0 loss at Arizona in the seventh inning.
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