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ANAHEIM, Calif.(AP)
Scott Podsednik
completed one of the most exhilarating plays in baseball in the third inning: the inside-the-park-home run.
It was a 90-foot dash in the 10th that gave the
White Sox
a win.
Podsednik circled the bases on a drive he hit off the right-field wall, then scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch, leading
Chicago to a 4-3 victory over the
Los Angeles Angels
on Saturday.
''Most fans get excited about the ball leaving the ballpark, but I don't hit a lot of home runs,'' said Podsednik, who has
34 homers in 3,106 big league at-bats. ''What I bring to the table is my ability to run, so it's always nice to round the
bases like that.''
The
White Sox
increased their lead to 3-0 in the third with a pair of runs that were the direct result of two misplays by right fielder
Bobby Abreu
, a Gold Glove winner in 2005 with Philadelphia.
Podsednik led off the inning with a drive that was catchable, but Abreu turned the wrong way going back on the ball and was
forced to make an awkward leaping attempt against the 18-foot wall. By the time he retrieved the carom, the speedy Podsednik
was well on his way to the
White Sox
's first inside-the-park homer since Sept. 9, 2002, when
Joe Borchard
hit one in Chicago's 10-6 win at Kansas City.
''When I saw the ball kick off the wall, it kicked pretty half into right-center. So right there I figured I had a shot,''
Podsednik said. ''There was a pretty good amount of distance between him and the baseball, so I just kept running. It's fun.
It's exciting.''
John Danks
scattered six hits over six scoreless innings, but the
White Sox
bullpen couldn't protect the 3-0 lead.
Matt Thornton
gave up four consecutive one-out hits in the eighth, including RBI singles to
Vladimir Guerrero
and
Torii Hunter
to make it 3-2, and closer
Bobby Jenks
retired
Juan Rivera
on a first-pitch double-play grounder to end the inning.
''We pushed it today. We showed that we never give up and we always stay in the game,'' said Abreu, who reached base all five
times up with two singles and three walks. ''We didn't score many runs today, but we're always there.''
In the ninth, Jenks gave up a leadoff walk to pinch-hitter Gary Matthews Jr. and a single to
Kendry Morales
.
Maicer Izturis
followed with a tying sacrifice fly to left, resulting in Jenks' fifth blown save in 33 chances.
''Things didn't come apart. I made good pitches and they got hit,'' Jenks said. ''I don't know the percentage on leadoff walks
that come around to score, but obviously it's very high. I still limited the damage to just one run, though.''
In the 10th, Podsednik greeted Angels closer
Brian Fuentes
(1-4) with a leadoff double and was held up at third on
Gordon Beckham
's single. A.J. Pierzynski then hit a flyball to center that was too shallow for Podsednik to score, but eventually made it
home when rookie
Kevin Jepsen
came in and threw a wild pitch to the backstop on a 1-2 count.
Jenks (3-4) got credit for the victory, and
Tony Pena
got two outs for his first major league save after relieving
Randy Williams
with a runner at second, helped by shortstop
Alexei Ramirez
's game-saving play.
Ramirez smothered Rivera's infield single up the middle to keep Abreu from scoring. He was stranded when Pena got
Mike Napoli
to ground into a forceout.
''That was one big play right there by Alexei,'' Konerko said. ''It wasn't a terribly hard-hit ball, but it was placed right.
That's what you're taught to do as an infielder. With a guy at second, if you can knock it down - even if you don't have a
play - it saves a run. It's a play that won't show up in the box score, but everybody in the ballpark knows it saved a run.''
Angels starter
Ervin Santana
gave up three runs - two earned - and seven hits over seven innings and struck out four.
Beckham followed Podsednik's inside-the-park homer with a single and scored from second when Abreu tried to backhand
Mark Kotsay
's flyball to right-center and dropped it for his eighth error of the season.
Abreu made amends for his earlier defensive woes, throwing out Ramirez at the plate in the sixth to complete an inning-ending
double play.
Beckham, who returned to the lineup Friday night after missing four games because of a strained oblique muscle on his right
side, opened the scoring in the first with his 11th homer.
NOTES: Pierzynski threw out two of three runners trying to steal. He has erased nine of his last 23 would-be base stealers,
but is only 18 for 106 overall this season. ... The Angels, whose 85-56 record is second-best in the majors behind the Yankees
(91-52), will be in New York on Monday to make up a game that was rained out on May 3. ... Pierzynski has no RBIs in his last
52 at-bats against the Halos going back to last season.
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