FranciscoLiriano
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W5 | 52 |
| L11 | 53 |
| G31 | 165 |
| IP140.2 | 824.0 |
| BB82 | 351 |
| SO151 | 830 |
SamuelDeduno
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W6 | 6 |
| L3 | 3 |
| G12 | 18 |
| IP71.0 | 76.0 |
| BB43 | 47 |
| SO48 | 55 |
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W5 | 52 |
| L11 | 53 |
| G31 | 165 |
| IP140.2 | 824.0 |
| BB82 | 351 |
| SO151 | 830 |
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W6 | 6 |
| L3 | 3 |
| G12 | 18 |
| IP71.0 | 76.0 |
| BB43 | 47 |
| SO48 | 55 |
A series with the Minnesota Twins came at a good time for the Chicago White Sox, who now have Adam Dunn back in the lineup.
The White Sox look to continue their season-long success against the Twins on Saturday.
After losing 11 of 16, Chicago defeated Minnesota 6-0 Friday in the opener of this three-game set. Chris Sale gave up three hits in six innings for his 17th win and Kevin Youkilis homered for the third time in two games.
The White Sox (77-66) improved to 12-4 against the Twins and bounced back after losing two of three in a rain-shortened, four-game series at home against Detroit. Chicago, which maintained its one-game lead on the Tigers in the AL Central, will make up Thursday's postponed game on Monday.
"As long as we win, what they do doesn't really matter," catcher A.J. Pierzynski said. "We've just got to go out and try to win games, and hopefully we can do that for the next couple of days."The team could receive another lift with the return of Dunn, who leads Chicago with 38 homers and 88 RBIs. He had missed the last seven games with a strained oblique but was in the starting lineup Saturday.
Dunn said Friday he would be ready to go for this game despite not being 100 percent.
"If this is in April, I'm probably going to give it as much time until it feels really good," he told the White Sox's official website. "If I wait till it felt 100 percent, then we'd have to play probably until Thanksgiving."
Dunn has three homers, four doubles and 12 RBIs in 15 games against the Twins in 2012.
After shuffling their rotation to give Jose Quintana and Gavin Floyd extra rest, the White Sox turn to Francisco Liriano (5-11, 5.37 ERA) for his second start against his former team.
Liriano has struggled recently and was moved to the bullpen this week. In a relief appearance against Detroit on Tuesday, he allowed two runs, two hits and hit a batter without recording an out.
The left-hander is 0-1 with a 6.43 ERA in his last three starts, spanning 14 innings.
Liriano returns to Target Field for a second time as a member of the White Sox. He gave up two runs, four hits and struck out eight over six innings of a 4-3 win July 31 while not receiving a decision.
Minnesota (60-85), which has scored two or fewer runs in four of its last five games versus Chicago, was without Joe Mauer (back) for a fourth straight game Friday. The Twins had won four of six coming in.
They'll try to avoid a fourth straight home loss to the White Sox as they hand the ball to Samuel Deduno (6-3, 3.55), who is 4-0 with a 2.51 ERA in five starts at Target Field this year.
The right-hander allowed two runs and three hits over seven innings of a 7-2 victory over Cleveland on Monday.
"Everything was working tonight," Deduno said. "Changeup, curveball, slider. Everything was working."
Deduno pitched well against the White Sox on Sept. 3, allowing two runs on a second-inning homer in six innings of a 4-2 loss.
| HITTERS | AB | AVG | H | HR | RBI | BB | SO | OBP | OPS | SLG |
| Jamey Carroll | 5 | .000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 | .444 | .444 | .000 |
| Josh Willingham | 2 | .500 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | .667 | 2.667 | 2.000 |
Chicago White Sox |
|||
| Date | Player | Status | Injury |
| September 07, 2012 | Adam Dunn | Day-to-Day | Strained right oblique |
| August 27, 2012 | Gavin Floyd | 15-Day DL | Right elbow flexor strain |
| August 27, 2012 | Gavin Floyd | 15-Day DL | Right elbow flexor strain |
| August 25, 2012 | Dayan Viciedo | Day-to-Day | Right shoulder soreness |
| August 19, 2012 | Kevin Youkilis | Day-to-Day | Sore right knee |
| August 18, 2012 | Alejandro De Aza | 15-Day DL | Bruised left ribcage |
Minnesota Twins |
|||
| Date | Player | Status | Injury |
| September 11, 2012 | Joe Mauer | Day-to-Day | Back spasms |
| September 02, 2012 | Josh Willingham | Day-to-Day | Slightly strained left hamstring |
| August 28, 2012 | Denard Span | 15-Day DL | Strained right sternoclavicular joint |
| August 28, 2012 | Denard Span | 15-Day DL | Strained right sternoclavicular joint |
| August 24, 2012 | Josh Willingham | Day-to-Day | Stiff neck |
| August 12, 2012 | Denard Span | Day-to-Day | Left game - right shoulder injury |
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Francisco Liriano is a difficult pitcher to figure out.
When the Chicago White Sox pitcher is throwing strikes, his changeup-slider combination makes him a lefty who can dominate lineups. But when he is can't find the plate, it is often only a matter of time until the opposition scores runs in bunches.
That inconsistency was part of the reason Liriano was traded from Minnesota to the White Sox at the end of July. But in Saturday's 5-3 victory over the Twins, Liriano (6-11) was tremendous against his former team. Instead of being wild and getting frustrated, Liriano took a no-hitter into the seventh inning and helped the White Sox stay on top of the AL Central.
Considering Liriano had recently been demoted to the bullpen - making him a rare pitcher who made the rotation-to-reliever move for two teams in the same season - this performance came as a huge surprise.
"He just looked like he had a lot of confidence out there, just throwing strikes," White Sox manager Robin Ventura said. "His stuff moves all over the place. When he has that confidence and pounds the strike zone, he's tough."
Liriano allowed only a two-out homer in the seventh to Trevor Plouffe . He walked two, hit a batter and struck out nine in seven innings.
"He seemed like he was more under control, he wasn't as jumpy, he wasn't as quick," Chicago catcher A.J. Pierzynski said. "It looked like he slowed it down a little bit. He pitched really well. I was happy for him to come back here and do that. He had a great slider and a great changeup."
Liriano, who threw a no-hitter against the White Sox last season, was simply relieved to help Chicago win and stay ahead of Detroit in the AL Central race.
"My last three starts, I didn't feel like I did my job, but you've got to keep fighting," said Liriano, who picked up his third win since the July 28 trade. "Today I felt like I did my job."
Ventura would not commit to having Liriano rejoin the White Sox rotation for the final 17 games of the regular season and starting Thursday at Kansas City, but said that the performance was "a great step for him."
Liriano didn't appear too concerned about what his role is down the stretch.
"It's not a big deal," he said. "We're in a pennant race now, we've got to stay focused and do whatever's best for the team, whether bullpen or starting."
Liriano never got in serious trouble against the Twins. He allowed only two runners through the first six innings. He walked Josh Willingham with two outs in the first inning, but quickly got the next batter, Justin Morneau , to ground out. Liriano walked Drew Butera to lead off the bottom of the sixth and then got Pedro Florimon to ground into a double play.
Liriano's bid for the no-hitter ended with two outs in the seventh. After hitting Morneau with a pitch, Plouffe blasted a high changeup over the wall in left-center on Liriano's 96th pitch of the game.
"I had better location with pitches and I was getting ahead in the count early and they were swinging early," said Liriano who opened this season by losing seven of his first nine starts. "Pitching's all about location, if you get better location, you'll get better results."
The Twins had seen enough flashes of brilliance from Liriano since 2006 that they weren't shocked.
"We've all seen him dominate teams, just dominate them," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said. "But we've also seen where has a hard time finding the strike zone. Anything Frankie does we've seen it one way or another."
Jesse Crain , another former Twins player, pitched a perfect eighth inning for the White Sox.
Closer Addison Reed faced three batters to start the bottom of the ninth, but didn't record an out. With the bases loaded, White Sox manager Robin Ventura then turned to Matt Thornton to finish the game.
Thornton got Morneau to ground into a run-scoring double play and Plouffe to ground out to pick up his third save in seven chances.
Paul Konerko homered in the third inning and drove in the first three runs of the game as the White Sox jumped ahead 4-0. Slugger Adam Dunn returned to the White Sox lineup for the first time since straining a muscle on his right side more than a week ago. Dunn, who missed seven games, went 2 for 3 with a walk and scored a run before being lifted for a pinch-runner in the top of the eighth.
"It felt fine," Dunn said. "I didn't try to swing as hard as I could, it felt good."
Minnesota starter Samuel Deduno (6-4) struggled with his control from the start, throwing only 40 of his 86 pitches for strikes. Deduno, who had been undefeated at Target Field, lasted just four innings, giving up four runs on three hits with five walks and six strikeouts.
NOTES: RHP Jake Peavy (10-11, 3.27 ERA) will try to even his record Sunday in his 29th start of the season for the White Sox. The Twins will counter with Scott Diamond (11-7, 3.46 ERA), who has lost two of his last three starts. ... Minnesota catcher Joe Mauer missed his fifth straight game due to back spasms. ... Minnesota's Ryan Doumit wasn't in the lineup, but was available to pinch hit if needed. ... The seven innings pitched was Liriano's longest since the trade to Chicago and matched his second longest of the season.