Re: GameTime!™

744
Being a lifelong California girl, my wife knows zip about tornadic systems.

I've had frantic phone calls from her in a seamless series over the past hour because of the storms in Alabama where our kid is at Auburn. He texted that he's fine in a storm shelter but she's still freaking.

Today in The South is reminiscent of that break out of tornadoes in April of '74 that clobbered Xenia.

Let's wrap up this win.......
Last edited by Tribe Fan in SC/Cali on Thu Apr 28, 2011 5:00 am, edited 1 time in total.

Re: GameTime!™

746
Tomlin, Indians cruise after big first inning

By Jordan Bastian / MLB.com | 4/27/2011 10:05 PM ET

CLEVELAND -- The Indians used another solid effort from Josh Tomlin and an offensive outburst in the first inning to collect a 7-2 victory over the Royals on Wednesday night at Progressive Field.

With the win, Cleveland upped its home winning streak to nine games, marking the longest such run at Progressive Field since the Tribe rattled off nine in a row in front of the local faithful between April and May in 2005. The American League Central-leading Indians are now 15-8.

Tomlin has played a big role in the Tribe's strong start -- the best run out of the gate for the Indians since opening the '07 tour with a 15-8 record. With his six-inning performance against the Royals (12-12), Tomlin improved to 4-0 with a 2.45 ERA.

Kansas City's lone offensive breakthrough against Tomlin came in the second inning, when Jeff Francoeur and Mike Aviles each launched a solo home run into the left-field stands. By that point, though, the Indians had already provided Tomlin with an ample cushion to use to his advantage.

In the first inning, Cleveland sent 10 batters to the plate against lefty Jeff Francis, who surrendered five runs on seven hits in the fateful frame. Travis Hafner put the Tribe on the board with an RBI single with the bases loaded. Orlando Cabrera then cleared the bags with a three-run double.

When it was all said and done, each player in the Indians' starting lineup notched at least one hit in the win. Along the way, Jack Hannahan contributed an RBI single, Lou Marson added a sacrifice fly and Grady Sizemore scored on a passed ball.

Tomlin worked six innings, scattering five hits and firing 100 pitches for the Tribe. The right-hander extended his club record for consistency as well. Tomlin is the only pitcher in team history to log at least five innings in each of his first 17 career appearances for the 111-year-old franchise.

Re: GameTime!™

750
Anyone who thinks the team can't hit soft tossing lefties was not watching last night.

LOL!!

They don't get any more soft tossing, or lefty, than Jeff Francis. And they crushed him.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain