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Travis Hafner goes 2-for-4 with double, but Akron Aeros lose: Minor League Report

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Travis Hafner goes 2-for-4 on a rehab assignment in Akron in an Aeros loss. Also, the struggling Lake County Captains lose their eighth game in a row.

travis hafner 2.JPGView full sizeThe Indians' Travis Hafner was 2-for-4 with a double on Thursday for the Akron Aeros.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 8, Yankees 1 Second baseman Jason Kipnis (.304) had three hits, including his eighth homer of the season, two runs and two RBI to lead Columbus to the International League win Thursday in a rain-shortened, 7 1/2-inning game in Scranton, Pa.

CF Ezequiel Carrera (.291) also had three hits for the Clippers.

Righty Zach McAllister (2.96) started and pitched four scoreless innings. He allowed two hits and one walk while striking out three. Righty Joe Martinez (6-2, 4.21) relieved McAllister and threw two scoreless innings to earn the win.

Notes: Left-hander Scott Barnes (5-1, 3.97) is 3-0 with a 1.93 ERA in his past five starts, with 40 strikeouts in 28 innings . . . Kipnis is 14-for-26 (.538) with one double, three triples and three home runs in his past six games.

AA Akron Aeros

Fisher Cats 8, Aeros 5 Akron LF Nick Weglarz (.222) hit two home runs and 1B Beau Mills (.287) hit one, but visiting New Hampshire won the Eastern League game at Canal Park.

Indians DH Travis Hafner, in Akron on a rehab assignment, went 2-for-4 with a double.

Matt Packer (2-7, 5.65) started for Akron and got knocked around. The left-hander gave up seven runs (six earned) on 10 hits in 4 innings. He walked none and struck out five.

Notes: Tim Fedroff is hitting .346 and is 9-for-19 (.474) in his past five games . . . Right-handed reliever Chen Lee is 1-1 with a 2.50 ERA, and has struck out 50 and walked 10 in 36 innings. Over his past six games, spanning 91/3 innings, Lee has an 0.00 ERA, fanning 13 while allowing three hits and four walks. . . . First baseman-outfielder Matt McBride is batting .308 (49-for-159) with 11 homers, 11 doubles, three triples and 36 RBI in 42 games.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians 2, Hillcats 1 (10) Kinston lefty Drew Pomeranz (1.93) threw seven strong innings, and 3B Adam Abraham (.239) scored pinch-runner Delvi Cid in the 10th inning with a sacrifice fly as the K-Tribe won the Carolina League in Lynchburg, Va.

Pomeranz allowed one earned run on seven hits and one walk. He struck out seven.

Notes: Right-hander Clayton Cook (6-4, 3.12) is 5-2 with a 1.82 ERA in his past eight starts. In 49 1/3 innings during the span, he has struck out 45, walked 16 and allowed 36 hits (two homers) . . . Going into Thursday night's game, right-handed reliever Kyle Landis had pitched 10 scoreless innings, giving up one hit and no walks while striking out 14 in six games with Kinston.

A Lake County Captains

Loons 4, Captains 2 Lake County left-handed starter Mike Rayl (4-2, 1.90) allowed one unearned run and struck out eight in just 3 innings, but the Captains lost the Midwest League game to visiting Great Lakes. The Captains have lost a season-high eight games in a row.


Ted Williams gives Naval recruits a memorable sendoff: Cleveland Indians Memories

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After being sworn in to the military at home plate in 1958, Chardon's Frank Vallo and other recruits are congratulated by a well-known veteran.

ted williams.JPGView full sizeTed Williams

This spring, we asked readers to tell us their best memory at an Indians game. More than 600 responded. The five finalists and winner were featured during the week leading up to Opening Day. All season long, The Plain Dealer will publish other fan memories -- one each day the Indians are scheduled to play. Here is today's essay by Frank Vallo of Chardon:

My unforgettable game was in July 1958. The Indians vs. the Boston Red Sox. Myself and a small group of young men were sworn into the U.S. Navy in a ceremony at home plate. After the ceremony, Ted Williams came over to congratulate us, wish us well and shook our hands. Unbelievable! Don't remember who won. After the game, we all got on a bus to the Great Lakes Naval Base.

Offensive Offense: What to do with Carlos Santana

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WFNY discusses Carlos Santana's season-long struggles and wonders what has to happen for the should-be slugger to start swinging.

d34ca826d00e9037fb6c5a72e296684b-getty-109237210ms020_cleveland_in.jpgCan catcher Carlos Santana get his bat back on track?

Manny Acta's words were biting for a guy who is always supportive. The words were also blunt and direct.

"I'm just disappointed because guys don't seem to be making any progress getting out of their slumps. Some of those guys are in a three-month slump. That's not a good sign," a visibly frustrated Manny Acta said.

The Tribe skipper, who has been such a positive and driving force behind the team's early-season success, wasn't done there.

"They're working on whatever they think is failing. We point some things out, but still it's not happening. It's not good. Some of these guys are way too talented to be struggling for two or three months."

Though the entire Indians offense – save for Michael Brantley and Asdrubal Cabrera – continues to struggle, it was pretty obvious who Acta was calling out with his commentary after yesterday's 6-2 loss in Detroit.

Carlos Santana.

Yes, Shin-Soo Choo has been massively under-achieving, but over the last two games he is actually swinging the bat well. In Santana's case, we sadly cannot say the same.

This is a kid who was one of the top prospects in baseball, ranked tenth overall by Baseball America headed into the 2010 season. Some of the names above him include Jason Heyward (#1), Stephen Strasburg (#2), Mike Stanton (#4), Buster Posey (#7), and Neftali Feliz (#9). He has hit at every level of the minors and looked so dominant in AAA last season that he forced his way onto the Indians roster on June 11th. Acta immediately hit him third; high praise for a kid making his Major League debut.

The nasty knee injury Santana suffered when Red Sox Outfielder Ryan Kalish ran him over as he blocked the plate on August 2nd robbed him of two key months of development at the Major League level, but the overriding concern was more with his handling of the pitching staff than his bat.

We all thought - the Indians brass in particular - that no matter what, Santana was going to hit and get on base.

Fast forward to June 17th, 2011, and Santana's bat has officially become a concern. 

Acta has tried everything to get him going: He moved him from the cleanup spot down in the order; he moved him back to the cleanup spot; he moved him to the two-hole because he drew so many walks. None of it has worked.

Acta has protected Santana as long as he could. His go-to move was to talk up his on-base percentage and the amount of walks he draws. That was all well and good, but you need your supposed cleanup hitter to drive in runs, not look at pitches as they go by.

The numbers tell the story for the young catcher. You can tell me all you want that batting average is overrated, but the bottom line is Santana is hitting .216. Worst of all, he is a paltry .161 (9-56) with runners in scoring position. If you compare last season when he came up and played 47 games to the 63 he has played thus far, you will see a regression.

2010: 150 AB/.260 BA/.401 OBP/.868 OPS/6 HR/22 RBI/37 BB/29 K

2011: 218 AB/.216 BA/.345 OBP/.712 OPS/7 HR/26 RBI/44 BB/47 K

This game is all about adjustments. There was no book on Santana when he first came up last year. Nobody knew how he was a fastball-hitting machine. Now, there is an extensive look at him. You bust him inside and he will have trouble.  Off-speed or a cutter? Forget about it. The league has adjusted to Carlos and he hasn't adjusted to the league.

The other worry spot with Santana is his defense. Nobody said Carlos was up here for his glove, but part of the reason he started 2010 in AAA was so he could continue his development behind the plate. Remember, he is a converted third baseman who has only caught for four years. He has a nice arm, but has had more trouble blocking balls in the dirt than he should. In addition, his handling of the staff hasn't been as good as many of us had hoped.

Santana is still clearly a work in progress defensively, but we would all gladly live with it if he was hitting. 

Don't get me wrong, I certainly am not falling off the Santana bandwagon, but I think Acta is right to call him out and be concerned. So far the tactics that he and his staff have used with him this season haven't worked.

So what more can they do?

I think it is a telling sign that backup catcher Lou Marson caught two of the three games in Detroit this week. Marson is a rock behind the plate and has a cannon for an arm. Meanwhile, Santana and Mitch Talbot had issues during the first two innings yesterday that caused three visits to the mound and several shake-offs. One thing you will never hear me say is that Marson's bat needs to be in the lineup, but Acta clearly sees something he likes.

Marson caught just seven games in May. He has already caught seven games halfway through the month of June and has six hits in his last 13 trips to the plate. (In addition, two of those starts were the 1-0 wins pitched by Carlos Carrasco. Until things change, I would expect to see Marson as Carrasco's personal catcher.)

With Matt LaPorta mired in a 17-81 (.209) skid, Santana has played more first base, giving Marson extra at-bats as well. Acta has shown he is willing to try anything to get his offense in gear.

All of this said, if the Indians have any chance of staying in this race the rest of the way, Santana has got to find his groove at the play. If he doesn't, the Indians could be sunk.  Travis Hafner's bat is not the only thing that can save the Tribe's currently-frozen offense.


NFL lockout nearing an end, with full 16-game season to follow? 'Chumminess' seems to indicate it, says Mary Kay Cabot (SBTV)

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Signs point to an end of the lockout and a full 16-game NFL season, Browns beat reporter says. Watch video


Welcome to today's edition of Starting Blocks TV, hosted by Chuck Yarborough and Bill Lubinger, carrying on without the vacationing Branson Wright.


Former Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor has declared himself eligible for this summer's supplemental NFL draft. Probably a good idea, since the constant spate of new allegations easily could have led the NCAA to turn his suspension from a five-game one to a yearlong one.

Today's Starting Blocks poll asks whether fans think the Cleveland Browns should take a chance on the controversial Pryor, either as a quarterback or a receiver. Today's guest, Browns beat writer Mary Kay Cabot, offers a resounding no. Partly because she feels the team has the quarterbacks it needs in Colt McCoy and Seneca Wallace, but largely because in her opinion, the last thing a team with a new coach installing a new offense needs is the distraction that's going to come from having such a controversial player on your squad.

Oh, and speaking of Wallace, Mary Kay noted that he's not yet ceding the No. 1 job to McCoy.

But will it matter? Will there even BE an NFL season. Mary Kay said the recent "chumminess" of the two sides in the NFL labor dispute means an end to the lockout could be coming, and that football fans are likely to see a full 16-game season. That's even if the training camp needs to be abbreviated.

That could work against the Browns, Mary Kay said, noting that the terminology for the West Coast offense the Browns are instituting is long and complex. Learning it is likely to be the biggest hurdle the team will face in a shortened camp.

Mary Kay is on today's show in place of her fellow Browns writer, Tony Grossi, who usually fills Fridays with answers to fans' "Hey Tony!" questions. Tony is taking a little well-deserved time off and will return in a couple of weeks.

SBTV will be back on the air on Monday with Plain Dealer writer Dennis Manoloff, who'll talk Tribe, Gladiators, Browns, Ohio State, Cavs, the U.S. Open and maybe even the Lingerie Football League (it's easy to get Dman started on just about any sport).


Bedford defensive end Myles Hilliard orally commits to Pittsburgh

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Bedford, Ohio - Myles Hilliard decided Pittsburgh was the place to play. The Bedford incoming senior defensive end made an oral commitment Friday to play for the Panthers in the fall of 2012. The 6-6, 245-pounder said his decision was locked in after visiting the Pittsburgh campus three weeks ago.

Bedford defensive end Myles Hilliard decided to play for Pittsburgh beginning in the fall of 2012. He tallied 59 tackles for the Bearcats last season.

Bedford, Ohio - Myles Hilliard decided Pittsburgh was the place to play.

The Bedford incoming senior defensive end made an oral commitment Friday to play for the Panthers in the fall of 2012. The 6-6, 245-pounder said his decision was locked in after visiting the Pittsburgh campus three weeks ago.

"It wasn't difficult at all," said Hilliard, who was credited with 59 tackles, including five sacks, for the Bearcats last season. "I had a good relationship with the coaches and the atmosphere on the campus and in the city was great.

"Once I visited, I came home and slept on it. But I knew it would be Pittsburgh."

Hilliard, 17 next month, said he had been considering West Virginia, Syracuse, Cincinnati and Michigan State. Ohio State was in the mix for a time.

"They were," said Hilliard, regarding OSU. "But they have five and six players at my position. At Pittsburgh, I will have the ability to come in as a freshman and start."

Hilliard, who also played basketball and threw the discus and shot put in track, said he may be moved to an outside linebacker position in college. He said finalizing his college choice has relieved some of the pressure.

"Definitely because people were calling me every day asking where I was going," said Hilliard, who plans to major in physical therapy. "It's a great feeling to know where I am going and now they know where I'm going to be."

P.M. Cleveland Indians links: DH should be in both leagues ... or not at all

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Ted Williams was the last .400 hitter, a .406 average in 1941. So much for baseball's plan to use the DH to bolster offense.

travis-hafner-ap.JPGView full sizeSorry, Travis Hafner, but it's time to shelve the plan to use a designated hitter to produce more offense in baseball.

It's tough to side with a guy whose team just walloped the Indians, but that's exactly what we're gonna do here at Starting Blocks.

Tigers manager Jim Leyland is right: Major League Baseball should decide on whether to use the designated hitter in both the National and American Leagues.

Here's Leyland's quote, via AP:

 “The AFC and NFC don’t play with different rules. The NBA doesn’t change things between the East and the West. They added the DH a long time ago to boost offense, and now they should go one way or the other with it.”

That was 1973. The Yankees' Ron Blomberg was the first, according to the Baseball Almanac. The plan to get more O worked ... sort of. Blomberg went 1-for-3 with an RBI. His counterpart on the Red Sox, Orlando Cepeda, went 0-for-6 the Red Sox in Fenway Park, but Boston won, 15-5.

A day later, John Ellis of the Indians and Gates Brown of the Tigers put up a big-fat goose egg as DH for their respective teams. And offense? Well, the Tribe won, 2-1.

Now as purists, we'd just as soon see the designated hitter outlawed. Yeah, yeah, we've heard all about not wanting to watch some pitcher get up there every third inning or so to flail away and kill a rally.

But think back: If the DH had been around in the '20s, would baseball have Babe Ruth as one of its most memorable characters? After all, he started as a pitcher, but the Red Sox had to find a place on the everyday lineup for him after he just killed opposing pitching. George Sisler hit .402 in 1920 and .427 in 1922. 

And we've used this argument before but heck, let's throw it out again: Growing up wasn't the best player on your Little League team the pitcher ... who probably played shortstop when he wasn't pitching?

If, in fact, the goal is to get more offense, think about it this way: When was the last time baseball had a .400 hitter? That would be Ted Williams, in 1941, when he hit .406. That was 70 years ago, just to help with the math a little.

Back then, pitchers knew that hitting someone on purpose meant there was a good chance the first pitch he'd see at the plate would be at his ear. Didn't stop 'em completely from hitting people, or from owning the inside of the plate. But you had to be willing to do the time if you did the crime, so to speak.

So more often than not, pitchers threw strikes. Which meant fewer pitches in the long run. Which meant more complete games. Which meant 20-, 25- and 30-win seasons AND more offense.

Of course, we can all cuss and dis-cuss this till the cows come home, as baseball fans have since at least 1973. We'd be curious to see, though, if we get any AL converts to our side if the Pirates start teeing off on Tribe pitching via the designated hitter.

Around the horn
* -- Travis Hafner, the Indians designated hitter, has been activated off the disabled list and will bat fourth tonight against the Pirates at Progressive Field, MLB.com says.

* -- Some of the Indians' struggling hitters are too good to mired in three-month slumps, says a frustrated Tribe manager Manny Acta, talking to the Sports Exchange.

* -- Defense has fed the Pirates' resurgence, sbnation.com columnizes.

* -- Samaritan saves the day for the wife of injured Pirates catcher, according to Pennsylvania TV station.

From The Plain Dealer
Look out, NL Central. There's a new team in town, one that believes it can win ... and is doing so. Unfortunately for the slumping Indians, that team is the Pirates, and they come to town tonight for a three-game set. Reporter Bill Lubinger chronicles the reasons for the Bucs' return to respectability.

In his story on the Indians' 6-2 loss to the Tigers last night, which left the sourest of tastes in an already bitter road trip, beat writer Paul Hoynes pointed out the obvious:

Throw a dart at the Tribe's position player roster and you will likely hit the name of a player who isn't hitting. For instance: Travis Buck, 0-for-20; Cord Phelps, 1-for-16; Grady Sizemore, 13-for-67; Orlando Cabrera, 15-for-80; Carlos Santana, 10-for-55; Shin-Soo Choo, 10-for-52, Matt LaPorta, 17-for-81; and Adam Everett, 1-for-13.

Hoynsie's Indians Insider notes that even a healthy Hafner won't help much when the Tribe makes its run through National League parks for interleague play.
 






 



Rory McIlroy sets U.S. Open record at 13-under before finishing at minus-11

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The 22-year-old from Northern Ireland made double bogey to finish the day but by then, the damage had been done. He shot 5-under-par 66 to head into the weekend at 11-under 131, setting the record for the best 36-hole score in the 111-year history of the tournament.

 

Rory McIlroy

Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, hits his drive from the 13th tee during the second round of the U.S. Open Championship golf tournament in Bethesda, Md., Friday, June 17, 2011. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Updated at 7:15 p.m.

BETHESDA, Md. -- 

In one of those can't-miss moments in sports, thousands of fans covered every inch of space on the hill behind the 10th green at Congressional. They spilled onto the clubhouse veranda, pressed their faces against the windows and lined up against the balcony railing to watch Rory McIlroy deliver a performance never before seen in the U.S. Open.

"It was Tiger Woods of 11 years ago," Ian Poulter said.

In some respects, it was even better.

McIlroy, the sympathetic figure at the Masters, was as close to perfect as golf allows Friday during a stunning assault on the record book. The 22-year-old from Northern Ireland became the first player in the 111-year history of the U.S. Open to reach 13-under par, and despite a double bogey into the water on the final hole, his 5-under 66 was enough set the 36-hole scoring record at 131.

He went 17 holes without missing a green. He went 35 holes without making a bogey.

"It's very near the best I can play," McIlroy said.

Not since Woods destroyed his competition at Pebble Beach in 2000 for a record 15-shot victory has anyone made golf look this easy, at least for two rounds.

As if playing under complete control were not enough, McIlroy hit a wedge from 114 yards some 15 feet behind the flag on No. 8, then watched it roll down a slope and into the cup for eagle. The only time he came close to making bogey was on the par-4 11th, when he blasted out of a bunker to 8 feet and made the putt.

He tied the U.S. Open record of 12 under -- previously held by Woods in 2000 and Gil Morgan in 1992, both at Pebble Beach -- on the par-5 16th with a 4-iron from 223 yards that settled 8 feet from the cup.

"I told him, 'I don't think you'll see a better golf shot,'" his caddie, J.P. Fitzgerald, said.

Then came the 17th, when McIlroy hit 7-iron from 175 yards that covered the flag, barely cleared the bunker and left him 15 feet below the hole for yet another birdie to go to 13 under.

That number just isn't seen on leaderboards at the U.S. Open.

"It's crazy, isn't it?" Steve Stricker. "Pretty incredible what he's done so far."

McIlroy knows better than to start the celebration before Sunday. He was buoyed by support coming into the U.S. Open because of the calamity at Augusta National from two months ago, when he led by four shots going into the final round of the Masters and shot 80, the kind of collapse that isn't easily forgotten.

"It's been two very, very good days of golf," McIlroy said. "I put myself in a great position going into the weekend. But I know more than probably anyone else what can happen. So I've got to stay really focused and try and finish this thing off."

Woods holds the record for largest 36-hole lead at the U.S. Open, six shots at Pebble Beach in 2000. That record also was likely to fall since Y.E. Yang was six shots behind going into the meat of Congressional's back nine on Friday afternoon.

Sergio Garcia had a 71 and joined Snedeker at 2-under 140 among those who finished the second round. Just his luck -- and Garcia doesn't have much of that in the majors -- he is playing solid golf at a major where someone else is playing out of this world. Also at 140 were Robert Garrigus and former Masters champion Zach Johnson.

"It's only two days," Johnson said. "I'm not going to give it to him yet."

It was hard to ignore what felt like a coronation for McIlroy as he eased his way around the golf course. Toward the end of his round, the gallery in the grandstand gave him a standing ovation as the freckle-faced wonder boy with the bounce in his step simply walked onto the green.

McIlroy played with four-time major winner Phil Mickelson, one of the biggest crowd-pleasers in golf who simply was along for the ride. Mickelson, who also made double bogey on the 18th, shot a 69 to finish at 1-over 143.

"He's striking it flawlessly and putted great on the greens," Mickelson said. "His first two rounds were very impressive."

During one stretch on the front nine, Mickelson made three birdies in four holes and didn't make up any ground. McIlroy laid up from the rough on the par-5 sixth and hit wedge to 5 feet for birdie, then holed out for his eagle on the eighth.

The burst of cheers when the ball dropped for eagle was enough to make the group ahead take notice as they stood on the ninth tee. There was Retief Goosen, hands on hips, looking over at the green. Stricker took one last look as he walked off the tee to confirm his suspicions on who hit the shot.

Deep down, he knew it all along.

"We figured it was probably him just the way he was going," Stricker said.

McIlroy wasn't finished. From 190 yards, he hit a 6-iron to about 5 feet behind the hole at No. 14 for birdie, then finished with his back-to-back birdies on the 16th and 17th to reach 13 under.

Only four other players have reached 10 under or better at any point in a U.S. Open -- Morgan, Woods, Jim Furyk at Olympia Fields in 2003 and Ricky Barnes at rain-soaked Bethpage Black in 2009. None of them got there after only two rounds, much less the 26 holes it took McIlroy. As for 13 under?

"I didn't see 13 under on this golf course after any day," Snedeker said.

McIlroy's only mistake came on the last hole. From the left rough, McIlroy was aiming for the front right portion of the green away from the water. He turned it over just enough for the ball to bounce off the bank and into the water, and he failed to get up-and-down.

He lost two shots, but not his perspective.

This was golf at its absolute best, and the scoreboard showed it. Congressional was softened by overnight rain, which was obvious with the "splat" from balls landing on the green, instead of bouncing hard and into the rough as they so often do in this major.

But the measure of great golf not always comes from the leader, but those chasing him. What made Woods' record win at Pebble Beach so impressive is that he finished at 12-under 272, and no one else was better than 3-over par. Such was the case at Congressional. Among those who had finished 36 holes, only seven other players had managed to break par, and no one was within nine shots of McIlroy.

"It's been coming," Poulter said. "It's not a surprise to me, and I don't think it's a surprise to you. He's that good."

In the last 14 rounds at the majors, McIlroy has been atop the leaderboard six times.

He has been in the lead after every round except the one that matters.

"I've played two really good rounds of golf, but I know I have to play another two really good rounds of golf if I want to win this tournament," McIlroy said. "So that's all I can really think about."

For more Cinesport video on cleveland.com, go here.

Indians DH Travis Hafner activated; Travis Buck optioned to Class AAA Columbus

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The Indians activated designated hitter Travis Hafner from the disabled list today and optioned Travis Buck to Class AAA Colummbus.

travis hafner.JPGThe Indians have struggled at DH since Travis Hafner went on the DL.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Pronk is back -- and not a moment too soon.

The Indians activated designated hitter Travis Hafner from the disabled list this afternoon. Travis Buck was optioned to Class AAA Columbus.

Hafner is in the lineup and batting cleanup tonight as the Tribe opens a three-game series against the surprising Pirates at Progressive Field.

Hafner suffered a strained right oblique May 18 in Chicago. He felt pain during a batting practice swing as the Tribe prepared to play the White Sox. He was placed on the 15-day DL on May 20 (retroactive to May 18).

Hafner is hitting .345 (39-for-113) with eight doubles, five homers and 22 RBI in 32 games for the Indians.

Hafner's rehabilitation assignment consisted of games for Class AA Akron on Tuesday and Thursday. He took batting practice each afternoon and went a combined 3-for-6. He swung free and easy.

 The original plan had been for Hafner to play one more game in Akron tonight and, if all went well, be activated Sunday.

 "I wanted to be in Cleveland as soon as possible and was pushing for that,'' he said. "I woke up this morning and felt pretty good. I'm ready to go.''

The major-league club desperately needs him. Its offense largely has been brutal the past several weeks. In the 28 games Hafner has missed because of the oblique, the Indians are 10-18 and their DHs are hitting .183 with three homers and 12 RBI.

 "You never want to miss games, and I know the guys are battling,'' Hafner said. "We were one of the best offenses in the league to start the year and, hopefully, we can get back to that.''

On the afternoon of May 20, Tribe manager Manny Acta said of Hafner's absence: "What makes it easier for us is, we have a little cushion. It's easier to absorb the blow than if we had been playing way below .500 and were chasing three, four teams."

The Indians were 26-15 at the time, five games in front in the AL Central. Entering tonight, they are 36-31, one game behind in the division.

By not waiting any longer with Hafner, the Indians can squeeze up to six games out of him -- realistically, four or five -- during a homestand against Pittsburgh and Colorado. The Indians then have a nine-game trip in three National League ballparks, at which point Pronk becomes a very expensive pinch-hitter.

Hafner said he likely will be off Saturday and play Sunday.

"From there, I should be pretty much good to go,'' he said.

Buck has hit .226 (21-for-93) in two stints with Cleveland this season.

Here are the lineups for tonight's game:

Indians -- 1. Grady Sizemore cf; 2. Michael Brantley lf; 3. Asdrubal Cabrera ss; 4. Travis Hafner dh; 5. Shin-Soo Choo rf; 6. Carlos Santana c; 7. Matt LaPorta 1b; 8. Orlando Cabrera 2b; 9. Jack Hannahan 3b; and Josh Tomlin rhp.

Pirates -- 1. Jose Tabata lf; 2. Xavier Paul rf; 3. Andrew McCutchen cf; 4. Neil Walker 2b; 5. Garrett Jones dh; 6. Lyle Overbay 1b; 7. Josh Harrison 3b; 8. Michael McKenry c; 9. Ronny Cedeno ss; and Kevin Correia rhp.

Umpires: P -- John Tumpane; 1b -- Derryl Cousins; 2b -- Ron Kulpa; 3b -- Jim Wolf.

 


Coming Tuesday: Live online coverage of Plain Dealer's Summer Solstice Golf Challenge

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Follow all the adventures Tuesday as four Plain Dealer staffers and four readers who won a contest attempt to play golf from sunup to sundown on the longest day of the year. That's more than 16 hours, and you can follow every bad shot along the way at cleveland.com/golf online.

solstice.jpgView full sizeFollow the adventures of The Plain Dealer's Summer Solstice Golf Challenge all day Tuesday, as early as 3 a.m. as the eight participants get ready for their first tee time just before 5 a.m. at Bob-O-Link Golf Course in Avon.

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Get live online coverage all day Tuesday from The Plain Dealer's Summer Solstice Golf Challenge as four Plain Dealer staffers and four readers who won a contest attempt to play golf from sunup to sundown on the longest day of the year.

That's more than 16 hours, and you can follow every bad shot along the way at cleveland.com/golf online.

The participants -- The Plain Dealer's Kristen Davis, Tim Rogers, Bud Shaw and Chuck Yarborough, and contest winners Tom Cull of Wickliffe, Maureen Fallon Adler of Fairview Park, Mark Nekic of Willoughby and Bryan Starosto of Avon -- will be teeing off around 5 a.m. at Bob-O-Link in Avon. After 36 holes they'll head to Sweetbriar in Avon Lake for another 36 holes.

Follow all of the adventures along the way with:

• Twitter updates starting with wake-up calls around 3 a.m. and continuing all day long until they reach the 19th hole -- or will it be the 73rd hole? -- around 9:30 p.m. The group also will be tweeting pictures and short videos throughout the day. Look for #solsticegolf tweets. 

• Starting Blocks TV -- cleveland.com's five-minute video show -- will check in with the Summer Solstice Golf Challenge participants Tuesday morning.

• A video from the first round by The Plain Dealer's Branson Wright will be posted Tuesday afternoon.

And be sure to check out the Summer Solstice Golf Challenge feature story in The Plain Dealer on June 26.

LeBron James will face an even more difficult road after NBA finals failure: Bill Livingston

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Whether he choked or quit, the pressure will only grow LeBron James, self-styled King, after his ineffective clutch play in the NBA finals.

bige.jpgElvin Hayes

"Elvin chokes. Everybody knows that," a rival player told me in the 1970s.

My mind reeled. He was talking about Elvin Hayes of the Washington Bullets. The Big E. The top of the eye chart when it came to players known by a single initial.

Hayes had played poorly in a stunning loss in a four-game sweep by Golden State in the 1975 Finals. The "other" Bullets forward, Bobby Dandridge, after outplaying Philadelphia's Dr. J, was mostly responsible for the Bullets' Eastern Conference championship in 1978.

Before the 1978 Finals began, Alex Hannum, who had coached Hayes early in his career, eviscerated him as a choker in a Sports Illustrated article. On the morning of the seventh game, a Seattle newspaper ran a story that was devoted to how often Hayes had failed in critical games. Bullets officials scurried around their hotel in Washington state, buying or confiscating every copy, lest Hayes see it.

That night, the Bullets won the championship. The big play, a retrieve of a loose ball for a layup, was made, not by Hayes, but by a reserve, Mitch Kupchak, who is now the Lakers' general manager.

Hayes fouled out in the seventh game after scoring only 12 points, but at least he had the ring, even if it was won almost in spite of him, to rebuke the "Elvin chokes" theory to some observers.

LeBron James now has two Finals failures on his record. The second will stick. He was the series goat this year.

He will be criticized like Hayes, who could also be boastful and immature. Like Hayes, James loves his statistics. He used a triple-double in Game 5, which was empty of clutch plays, as a numerical shield.

James played poorly in the Cavaliers' expected loss of the 2007 Finals to San Antonio in a four-game sweep. But his performance had been so epic in just getting the team there that he received a pass. Same with the loss the next season in seven games to eventual champion Boston.

After the seventh game, in which James scored 45 points, he demanded more help. He was consulted on every acquisition the Cavs made in the next two desperate years. He liked them all. Then he bolted, having contributed little to the team's last stand except a white flag.

You always hear that the 24/7 news cycle is based on snap judgments and the flavor of the moment. It is not true with James. He got away with passive, timid play against the Celtics in 2010. When Dallas wouldn't go away in the Finals vs. Miami this season, James disappeared again.

James had been a tiger when behind 0-2 against Detroit in 2006 and again in the Finals season of 2007. Same with the Celtics series in 2008. That resolve is lacking now.

In this year's Finals, I dispute that James choked. A choker misses shots he normally makes. James shot 9-for-15 in Game 6, but he was only really active in the first quarter. A choker gets nervous in big moments, he presses, and, to borrow a phrase from James himself, uttered while demeaning his former Cavaliers teammates, he "dies down in the moment."

I think, having quit once, that James quit again.

duo.jpgThe questions will only get harder for LeBron James after the loss to Dallas in the NBA Finals, even if he defers the tough queries to teammate Dwyane Wade, right.

But maybe quitting for James is indistinguishable from the psychological state known as fear of failure. Miami lost games by three points and by two. With anything from James in the clutch, Miami wins.

Instead he passed the ball as quickly as it came to him. In Game 6, he was on the bench at the start of the fourth quarter. Once on the floor, he amazingly threw the ball to a shocked, 38-year-old Juwan Howard, he of the 2.4-point average, rather than shoot.

Whatever name you want to use for James' vulnerability, it was closer to quitting than choking.

Dirk Nowitzki -- Dallas' lone star, a man surrounded by role players, just as James was in Cleveland-- won the great accolades and redeemed himself for an earlier Finals loss, not James. A German became America's MVP while the would-be King's coronation became his uncrowning moment.

Two straight such meek exits change the debate whose terms James set when he adopted the "King James" persona with such fervor. He wanted to be compared to the best who ever played the game. Instead he might be the next Elvin Hayes, a man who put up elite stats that beguiled everyone but the rivals who knew when he got them and when he did not.

Tribe activates DH Travis Hafner from disabled list: Cleveland Indians Insider

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Hafner batted cleanup Friday night as the Tribe opened a three-game series against the surprising Pirates at Progressive Field. He was 1-for-3 with an RBI double and a walk. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Pronk is back.

The offensively challenged Indians activated designated hitter Travis Hafner from the disabled Friday afternoon and optioned Travis Buck to Class AAA Columbus.

Hafner batted cleanup Friday night as the Tribe opened a three-game series against the surprising Pirates at Progressive Field. He was 1-for-3 with an RBI double and a walk.

Hafner suffered a strained right oblique May 18 in Chicago. He felt pain during a batting practice swing as the Tribe prepared to play the White Sox. He was placed on the 15-day DL on May 20 (retroactive to May 18).

At the time of the injury, Hafner was hitting .345 (39-for-113) with eight doubles, five homers and 22 RBI in 32 games.

Hafner's rehabilitation assignment consisted of games for Class AA Akron on Tuesday and Thursday, in which he went a combined 3-for-6. He took batting practice each afternoon and swung free and easy.

The original plan had been for Hafner to play one more game in Akron on Friday and, if all went well, be activated Sunday.

"I wanted to be in Cleveland as soon as possible, and I was pushing for that," he said. "I woke up (Friday) and felt pretty good. I'm ready to go."

Indians manager Manny Acta said: "We always put it in his hands. He felt he saw enough pitches, and we could use him, so what's one more game?"

In the 28 games Hafner missed because of the oblique, the Indians went 10-18 and scored three or fewer runs 19 times. Their DHs hit .183 with three homers and 12 RBI.

"You never want to miss games, and I know the guys are battling," Hafner said. "We were one of the best offenses in the league to start the year and, hopefully, we can get back to that."

Hafner was 6-for-15 during a four-game hitting streak before the injury.

travis hafner.JPGView full sizeTravis Hafner connects for a double in the eighth inning, scoring Michael Brantley to put the Indians up over the Pirates, 3-1.

"People underestimate how much one hitter changes your lineup, especially if it's a guy in the middle," Acta said. "It helps lengthen your lineup and puts people in spots where they probably can relax more."

Here is the difference between lineups Thursday at Detroit (6-2 loss) and Friday:

Thursday -- 1. Grady Sizemore dh; 2. Carlos Santana c; 3. Michael Brantley cf; 4. Asdrubal Cabrera ss; 5. Shin-Soo Choo rf; 6. Matt LaPorta 1b; 7. Travis Buck lf; 8. Cord Phelps 2b; 9. Adam Everett 3b.

Friday -- 1. Sizemore cf; 2. Brantley lf; 3. A. Cabrera ss; 4. Hafner dh; 5. Choo rf; 6. Santana c; 7. LaPorta 1b; 8. O. Cabrera 2b; 9. Jack Hannahan 3b.

Acta said some of Hafner's teammates have been pressing in an attempt to fill the void.

"It gets to a point where guys are trying to pick up the slack instead of just doing their thing and doing it as a team," he said. "It shouldn't be that way, but it is. Guys try to hit five-run homers. It's human nature."

On the afternoon of May 20, Acta said of Hafner's impending absence: "What makes it easier for us is, we have a little cushion. It's easier to absorb the blow than if we had been playing way below .500 and were chasing three, four teams."

The Indians were 26-15 at the time, five games in front in the AL Central. Entering Friday, they were 36-31, one game behind in the division.

"We made it clear from the beginning of the season: We can't afford to lose guys like him, or Grady Sizemore or Shin-Soo Choo or Asdrubal Cabrera, for extended periods," Acta said. "We knew that, in order to win, we'd need to keep those guys healthy and have them play to their capabilities. It showed when Travis went down."

By Hafner not waiting any longer, the Indians can squeeze up to six games out of him -- realistically, four or five -- during a homestand against Pittsburgh and Colorado. The Indians then have a nine-game trip to three National League ballparks, at which point Pronk becomes a very expensive pinch-hitter.

Acta said Hafner will be off Saturday and play Sunday.

"From there," Hafner said, "I should be pretty much good to go."

Buck has hit .226 (21-for-93) in two stints with Cleveland this season.

To make room for Buck in Columbus, third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall was placed on the disabled list because of concussion symptoms. Chisenhall, considered by many to be the Indians' top position-player prospect entering the season, was injured during a slide last Saturday.

Finally: Acta gave props to Pirates manager Clint Hurdle for his role in one of baseball's feel-good stories. The Pirates, who have not posted a winning season since 1992, entered Friday at 35-33. They were 57-105 last season under John Russell.

Hurdle, a former manager of the Colorado Rockies (2002-2009), is in his first season with the Pirates. He was the Texas Rangers' hitting coach last year.

"Clint is a big part of what they're doing," Acta said. "He's a very energetic type of guy. He brings experience from the Rockies and expects a lot out of his players."

Pittsburgh's general manager is Neal Huntington, once a special assistant in Cleveland to General Manager Mark Shapiro.

"They're putting together a good nucleus of young guys," Acta said. "Their draft picks from the past few years are showing up in the big leagues. I can see how they're on the verge of playing better than in the past 18 years."

Tribe has signed nine draft picks: Cleveland Indians Chatter

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As of Friday, the Indians have signed nine of their selections in the amateur draft.

lowery.jpgJames Madison catcher Jake Lowery has signed a contract with the Indians, who picked him the fourth round of this month's draft.
Clubhouse confidential: As of late Friday afternoon, the Indians had signed nine draft picks, including third-rounder Jake Sisco, a right-handed pitcher from Merced (Calif.) College. The Indians also signed fourth-rounder Jake Lowery, a catcher from James Madison.

The Indians signed non-drafted free agents Jerrud Sabourin (infielder, Indiana University) and Drew Rucinski (righty, Ohio State).

Father's Day fun: Fans will have the opportunity to play catch with their family/friends for 15 minutes on the outfield grass Sunday after the Indians-Pirates game at Progressive Field. First pitch is 1:05 p.m.

Individual tickets for "Play Catch" -- $15 per person --are available in three sessions: 20, 45 and 70 minutes after the game. A maximum of 300 tickets will be available for each session. Tickets will be sold by session until each is at capacity before opening the next one for sale; fans cannot choose their session. Tickets can be purchased at the Progressive Field box office, any Indians Team Shop or by logging on to indians.com/playcatch

One pitch at a time: Golden Globe-winning actress Valerie Bertinelli, one of the stars of "Hot In Cleveland," threw out a ceremonial first pitch. Actually, she ran it to first base coach Sandy Alomar Jr.

1990s feel: Former Indians Kenny Lofton and Carlos Baerga took part in meet-and-greets with fans in the Club Lounge, Terrace Club, Heritage Park and select suites.

Stat of the day: The Indians are the only team in the majors not to have a lefty start a game.

Cleveland Indians defeat Pittsburgh Pirates, 5-1; Tribe first baseman Matt LaPorta injures right ankle

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The Indians defeat the Pirates, 5-1, but first baseman Matt LaPorta injures his right ankle and is helped off the field in the third inning.

Gallery preview

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Indians right-hander Josh Tomlin, typically ultracalm, had a bit of an edge to him in the clubhouse Friday afternoon.

"I haven't pitched well lately," he said, to no one in particular, as he fidgeted near his locker. "I've got to get it going again."

Tomlin answered his challenge by allowing one run in 6 innings Friday night as the Tribe defeated the Pirates, 5-1, at Progressive Field.

Tomlin (8-4, 3.93 ERA) had given up 22 runs in 23 innings of his previous four starts, going 1-3.

The Indians (37-31) have won three of five and improved to 5-11 in June. They are 4-0 in interleague, having swept the Reds in Cleveland in May.

The scrappy Pirates (35-34) had a four-game winning streak snapped. They entered tied for fourth in the majors with 20 road victories.

As important as any victory is during a difficult stretch, the Indians were not in an especially celebratory mood given that their first baseman, Matt LaPorta, injured his right ankle.

LaPorta led off the third inning of a scoreless game with a liner toward shortstop.

The ball caromed off Ronny Cedeno's glove to second baseman Neil Walker, who grabbed it seamlessly but threw wildly to first. LaPorta checked in at second.

When Orlando Cabrera grounded to Cedeno, LaPorta took off for third. While attempting to avoid a tag during a rundown, LaPorta ducked and his right ankle buckled. He eventually was helped off the field, putting no pressure on the leg.

Indians manager Manny Acta said after the game that LaPorta has a sprained ankle and that X-rays showed no fracture. LaPorta will undergo an MRI scan this morning to check for structural damage.

"We'll have a better assessment probably around 2-3 p.m.," Acta said.

LaPorta is hitting .242 with eight homers and 31 RBI.

Cabrera scooted to third on Jack Hannahan's single. Grady Sizemore walked to load the bases. Michael Brantley lined to third, Josh Harrison diving to his left to snare it. Brantley continues to swing into tough luck.

Pirates righty Kevin Correia worked from the windup against Asdrubal Cabrera. With his feet on the rubber, Correia took his hands out of his glove without intending to follow through on a pitch -- a no-no spotted immediately by the umpires. Orlando Cabrera trotted home on the balk to give the Tribe a 1-0 lead.

Hannahan shifted from third base to first base to begin the fourth. Adam Everett came off the bench and took over at third.

Carlos Santana made it 2-0 in the Tribe fourth with a homer to right, his eighth. He finished 3-for-4 with two RBI, his average rising from .216 to .225.

"We've been seeing some signs of him coming alive," Acta said. "We want him to use the whole field."

Tomlin carried a two-hitter into the sixth. Cedeno led off with a double and scored on Xavier Paul's one-out single to right. Hannahan cut off Shin-Soo Choo's off-line throw and fired to Asdrubal Cabrera to erase Paul at second.

In the top of the seventh, Vinnie Pestano relieved Tomlin with runners on first and second and two outs. Pestano caught light-hitting Michael McKenry looking at a 1-2 heater on the outside corner to preserve the 2-1 advantage.

Tomlin gave up six hits, walked none and struck out five. He has pitched at least five innings in 26 starts to begin his career, the second-longest such streak in history (Boston righty Daisuke Matsuzaka, 28, 2007).

"I located pitches better than I have been," Tomlin said. "I wasn't throwing as many 0-2, 1-2 strikes. I was making better 0-2, 1-2 pitches."

Tomlin threw 63 of 85 pitches for strikes.

"Good job by Tomlin," Acta said. "He threw 20 of 25 first-pitch strikes. That's who he is. That's how he's able to get deep into games with a nice pitch count."

Pestano worked the eighth and Tony Sipp the ninth.

"Pestano was huge," Acta said.

Tribe designated hitter Travis Hafner, appearing in his first major-league game since May 17, hit an RBI double to trigger a three-run eighth. Hafner's shot struck the yellow line on the right-field wall, meaning he missed a three-run homer by inches. The umpires checked video to confirm the call.

Later in the inning, Santana had an RBI single and Orlando Cabrera hit a sacrifice fly to left.

Hafner was activated from the disabled list earlier in the day. He strained his right oblique during batting practice May 18 in Chicago.

Hafner finished 1-for-3 with a walk. "I just tried to be a presence in the middle of the order," he said. "It was a fun night."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: dmanoloff@plaind.com, 216-999-4664

Twitter: dmansworldpd

Cinesport video: Indians 5, Pirates 1


For more Cinesport video on cleveland.com, go here.

2011 Ladies Cleveland Open: Clay courts being used to mold players of the future

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The Ladies Cleveland Open is in its third year as a USTA event, and as one of just 10 women’s clay court tournaments in the country, important in developing U.S. players.

lauren davis.JPGView full sizeLauren Davis will compete in the Ladies Cleveland Open.

CHAGRIN FALLS, Ohio — According to the organizer of the Ladies Cleveland Open, the road to the U.S. Open travels straight through Cleveland.

And Patrick McEnroe, general manager of USTA Player Development, agrees.

That's because the USTA Pro Circuit tournament, which begins main draw play Tuesday, is one of 10 USTA Pro Circuit women's events at the $10,000/$25,000 level played on a clay court. And clay courts, most agree, are the future of developmental tennis.

"The reality is, the way the game is played now is it's played at the back of the court," McEnroe said in a recent phone interview. "It's not a serve-and-volley game, it's a baseline game. Clay slows things down in ways that are crucial to learning how to play that way."

Since McEnroe assumed his USTA position in 2008, he has focused on increasing the number of clay court tournaments at youth levels in the United States, citing how dominating players such as Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal learned the game on that surface. At the time McEnroe took office, there were 10 clay court tournaments at the Futures level.

Now, there are 25, with Cleveland's 3-year-old tournament at Chagrin Valley Athletic Club as one of the recent additions.

Standout local players such as Lauren Davis and Kyle McPhillips again will participate in this year's tournament, though the benefit of playing on the clay is felt by any of the 32 singles and 16 doubles in the main draw.

"It slows the ball down so that it provides a little more time at a crucial age," said Sebastien Glinzer, the tournament director. "It provides an extra bit of time to develop strokes and allow them to have better strokes, in general."

In addition, clay is a softer surface than the prevalent U.S. hardcourt surface, allowing for less wear and tear on developing bodies.

And most importantly, perhaps, clay slows down the game to an extent that longer rallies dominate play and players must focus on strategy and angles in their games rather than relying on scorching winners to blast by opponents.

"We think it's important at a lot of levels, but at the Futures level, it will create better tennis players," McEnroe said.

Finding clay in the United States is not that easy, however. The estimated 400,000 hardcourt surfaces in the country is more than 13 times the number of clay courts (30,000), which are concentrated in Florida and the Northeast. Clay is expensive to maintain, with the surface needing constant leveling. So most U.S. players become big-hitting, hardcourt specialists.

Which is why Glinzer is happy for Cleveland and its clay court to play a part in the development of future tennis stars in this country.

"This year's players coming to the tournament won't be at Wimbledon," said Glinzer, referring to the grass-court Grand Slam event that also will be played this week. "But they'll be Wimbledon stars next year or in years to come."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: jvalade@plaind.com, 216-999-4654

Shelley Duncan has 3 RBI in Columbus Clippers victory: Minor League Report

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The Aeros lose to Portland at Akron; the Kinston Indians lose at Lynchburg, Va.; the Captains lose at West Michigan; and the Scrappers lose to Jamestown.

shelley duncan.JPGView full sizeShelley Duncan.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 6, Yankees 5 1B Shelley Duncan drove in three runs with a pair of singles and scored a run while Corey Kluber (4-4) pitched seven innings to lead Columbus to the International League win Friday over Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Josh Judy (3.81 ERA) got his ninth save for Columbus.

AA Akron Aeros

Sea Dogs 4, Aeros 3, Jorge Padron's double in the seventh inning drove in the winning run as Portland (Maine) won the Eastern League game at Canal Park. Tim Fedroff's RBI double and Jordan Henry's RBI single led Akron.

Notes: The Aeros are 25-9 when they score first this season. They are just 7-26 when the opponent scores first.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Hillcats 8, Indians 0 Chase Burnette's ground-ball single to center field broke up a no-hitter for Zeke Spruill (5-7) in the fifth inning but the Indians could muster little offense as the Hillcats won the Carolina League game in Lynchburg, Va. The loss wiped out Kinston's first-half playoff hopes. DH Adam Milligan hit a solo home run and 2B Philip Gosselin slammed a two-run shot to highlight Lynchburg's scoring.

A Lake County Captains

Whitecaps 2, Captains 0 Captains pitcher Cole Cook pitched well but his throwing error on a pickoff attempt advanced Dixon Machado to second and he eventually scored on a single by Nick Castellanos as West Michigan won the Midwest League game in Comstock Park, Mich. Cook (2-8) pitched one of his best games of the season, with seven strong innings, allowing a run on five hits, walking one and striking out four.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Jammers 9, Scrappers 3 A four-run third inning was the end for Scrappers starter Joseph Colon as Jamestown (N.Y.) won the New York-Penn League game at Eastwood Field in Niles, Ohio. Kevin Fontanez's sacrifice fly and Jerrud Sabourin's RBI double led the Scrappers.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

RiverHawks 3, Crushers 2 Luis Parache hit a walk-off triple in the 10th inning as Rockford won the Frontier League game in Loves Park, Ill. The Crushers lost for the eighth time in their past nine games.


Bathroom has to wait for 5-year-old at first baseball game in 1938: Cleveland Indians Memories

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John Tuttle can still recall many of the details of his first Indians game at Cleveland Municipal Stadium ... and how not even the call of nature could drag him from his seat.

bob feller.JPGView full sizeBob Feller and his classic high kick.
This spring, we asked readers to tell us their best memory at an Indians game. More than 600 responded. The five finalists and winner were featured during the week leading up to Opening Day. All season long, The Plain Dealer will publish other fan memories -- one each day the Indians are scheduled to play. Here is today's essay by John Tuttle of Vermilion:

It was a warm and bright sunny day in early June of 1938. It was my birthday, and I was 5 years old that day and really looking forward to my first Cleveland Indians baseball game. You have to remember that year was long before television, and I really had no idea of what a stadium was. Going to Cleveland from Vermilion with mom and dad to see Bob Feller pitch? How much better can it get on your birthday? I was excited!

Mom and dad were both big sports fans, especially of Notre Dame and the Cleveland Indians. (Mom, especially, which was very unusual back in those days.)

Mom had me all dressed up in my best clothes right from Halle Bros. on Euclid Avenue. I even remember Miss Senore, the lady there that I got my clothes from, and Mr. Powder, the barber in Halle's barber shop.

I wore a little sports coat with a tie, and my favorite shorts that I dearly loved. I still love to wear shorts, usually with better results.

But, back to Bob Feller, ace pitcher, and Cleveland Municipal Stadium. The ride in seemed to take forever in my parents' Chevrolet sedan. When I remember that car, all I can think of is how itchy the upholstery was -- especially wearing shorts.

We finally arrived, and that stadium was much bigger than I ever dreamed, with people running all over. When we climbed up the long ramp to where you could see the grass, I was in awe. That field had grass so green I asked dad if it was real. Everything was perfect and really, really big.

Bob Feller was great even though he threw with the wrong arm. Dad and I were both left-handed, and dad explained that some people used their right arm, so that was fine with me.

Feller sure put his leg way up when he threw and I never imagined seeing such fast pitches. But faster still, the innings flew by. Dad got us a hot dog from some nice guy with a whole box of them on his shoulder. He must have brought more than he needed; he had so many, and he even had mustard if you wanted it.

This was a really exciting day at Cleveland Stadium almost 73 years ago. This was the very best birthday. Cleveland Stadium, green grass, the Indians, Bob Feller and hot dogs. It didn't get much better on your birthday and I didn't want to miss a minute of it.

About the seventh inning, everyone stood up and sang. I was a little disappointed it wasn't "Happy Birthday," but the game started again and I was happy.

It was about that time that my mom noticed the puddle under my seat. A big puddle -- not a little puddle, thank you very much. I didn't want to miss a second of my first game, and I didn't. And for all the years following, at Indians and Browns games, I never had such a warm and fuzzy feeling going home.

Thanks for the memories!

Cleveland Gladiators receiver Dominick Goodman shows signs of dominance

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Goodman is one of the Arena Football League's hottest receivers, having caught 10-plus passes in each of the past three games.

Dominick Goodman.JPGView full sizeGladiators receiver Dominick Goodman ranks second on the team in receptions (66) and third in yards (720) despite having missed three games.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — As he waited for his chance, Gladiators receiver Dominick Goodman did not sulk. He watched and learned.

When his time came, Goodman was ready.

Goodman is one of the Arena Football League's hottest receivers, having caught 10-plus passes in each of the past three games. He will try to extend the streak Sunday afternoon when the Gladiators (7-5) visit the Kansas City Command (4-9).

Last Saturday against Georgia, Goodman had 10 receptions for 122 yards and one touchdown in the Gladiators' 62-48 victory. He ranks second on the Gladiators in receptions (66) and third in yards (720) despite having missed three games.

Goodman, a rookie from the University of Cincinnati, opened the season on injured reserve. It enabled Gladiators coach Steve Thonn to buy time because his team was stacked at receiver. Of the three starters at the position, Victor Williams held the spot Goodman played.

Williams, who showed flashes with the Gladiators last season, struggled at the outset this year. Goodman came off the bench in the Gladiators' fourth game, catching one pass against New Orleans on April 16. The next week, Goodman replaced Williams and caught 11 passes for 90 yards in a loss at Jacksonville.

"We were going to try to get Victor in at some point, no matter what, when he came off [injured reserve]," Thonn said. "As it turned out, an opening happened to be there. Dominick hasn't let anybody take it back from him."

Last fall, Thonn liked what he saw from Goodman on film and invited him to a tryout. Goodman signed soon thereafter.

"I'm not surprised by what Dominick's doing, because I thought he would be good," Thonn said. "Having said that, I didn't necessarily expect this much, especially given that he was on IR at the beginning of the season."

At 6-1, 210 pounds, Goodman complements the 5-10, 195-pound Robert Redd in the Cleveland passing attack. The other regular, speedy Troy Bergeron, has missed the past three games because of a shoulder problem.

"When I was on IR, I studied Robert and Troy," Goodman said. "I took notes. I got mentored by them. It helped prepare me for when I got a shot."

Redd and Bergeron each had been productive in the AFL. Redd and Goodman were teammates last year with the Cincinnati Commandos of the Continental Indoor Football League.

Goodman's ability to get open and catch almost everything thrown to him makes him dangerous, as does his knack for piling up yards after the catch.

"He's so reliable," Thonn said. "He's always in the right spot."

If the Gladiators win Sunday, they will surpass the total wins in last season's 7-9 record. The 2011 schedule features 18 regular-season games.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: dmanoloff@plaind.com, 216-999-4664

Quarterback trio passes West to victory in High School All-Star Scholarship Football Game

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BEREA, Ohio — Friday evening's 39th High School All-Star Scholarship Football Game was no passing fancy, just some fancy passes thrown by the West quarterbacks. The trio of St. Edward/Mount Union recruit Kevin Burke, Rocky River/Miami (Ohio) recruit Robbie Plagens and Independence/Baldwin-Wallace recruit Sam Stretar combined to complete 24 passes out of 34 attempts, good enough for 315 yards...

Rayshawn Clements of Warrensville eludes the tackle of Brecksville's Adam Best during the East-West All-Star Football Game on Friday. - (Gus Chan, PD)

BEREA, Ohio — Friday evening's 39th High School All-Star Scholarship Football Game was no passing fancy, just some fancy passes thrown by the West quarterbacks.

The trio of St. Edward/Mount Union recruit Kevin Burke, Rocky River/Miami (Ohio) recruit Robbie Plagens and Independence/Baldwin-Wallace recruit Sam Stretar combined to complete 24 passes out of 34 attempts, good enough for 315 yards and four touchdowns during a 32-22 victory over the East.

The victory in front of 2,178 fans at B-W's George Finnie Stadium puts the series in a 19-19-1 stalemate.

"[West] Coach [Pete Rahas] told us we were going to pass the whole game and that's what we did," said Padua receiver Niko Sidari.

Sidari, a Morehead State recruit, garnered Most Valuable Player honors for the winners after grabbing a game-high seven passes for 83 yards and a touchdown.

"The coaches did a good job in designing a lot of great plays," Sidari said. "The fly patterns seemed to be working and it didn't matter who was throwing the ball.

"All our quarterbacks had strong arms and we trusted every single one of them."

The East wasn't shy putting the ball in the air as two Lake Erie recruits, Orange quarterback Ryan Bitzer and Warrensville Heights' Rayshawn Clements, completed 20-of-33 passes for 320 yards and three touchdowns

East MVP Bitzer completed 13 of 21 for 176 yards and two touchdowns, but even quarterbacks who didn't attempt a pass found the end zone.

Case in point: John Marshall quarterback/Fort Scott (Kan.) Community College recruit Tamaine Chappell. The 6-3, 180-pounder collected three receptions for 57 yards, including a 29-yard strike from Burke for the game's first touchdown.

"I was a receiver my freshman year at Marshall and it was fun, so I figured I'd try something new," Chappell said. "There's about a 50-50 chance I'll be a receiver in college but I'm also looking forward to being a quarterback."

Normandy safety/John Carroll recruit Shane Zerucha and North Royalton safety/Marist recruit John Holodnak each made seven tackles, while Olmsted Falls linebacker/Mount Union recruit Connor Cantrell had two tackles for minus-12 yards in leading the West's defense.

Solon safety/Robert Morris recruit D.J. Jackson, along with Trinity safety/John Carroll recruit Kyle Companey teamed up for 14 tackles, but Orange tackle/Kent State recruit Nate Terhune was outstanding with two tackles for minus-20 yards.

"We had to keep our eyes open and try to read but it was hard defending them with the run and pass," said Brush safety/Mercyhurst recruit Denzel Harris, who finished with five tackles. "Their height wasn't a problem, we just didn't have our heads in the game early."

There we no interceptions by either team.

Cleveland Indians place Matt LaPorta on disabled list; recall Travis Buck from Class AAA Columbus

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Manager Manny Acta and infield coach Steve Smith were working with Buck and Carlos Santana at first base Saturday afternoon.

laporta-hurt-2011-vert-cc.jpgView full sizeWith Matt LaPorta on the disabled list following Friday's injury, the Indians recalled Travis Buck to the big-league roster.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians placed first baseman Matt LaPorta on the disabled list Saturday with a right ankle injury and recalled Travis Buck from Class AAA Columbus.

LaPorta was injured in the third inning Friday night during a rundown between second and third base. He was helped off the field and taken for an x-ray. LaPorta is hitting .242 (48-for-198) with 24 runs, 10 doubles, one triple, eight homers and 31 RBI.

Buck was optioned to Columbus on Friday when when Travis Hafner was activated. This is Buck's third tour with the Tribe this year. He's hitting  .226 (21-93) with 16 runs, five doubles, two homers and eight RBI.

Manager Manny Acta and infield coach Steve Smith were working with Buck and Carlos Santana at first base Saturday afternoon after early batting practice. Buck was in an 0-for-20 slump when he was sent down.

P.M. Cleveland Indians links: With recent hitting almost historically bad, Travis Hafner's presence is a necessity

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Indians were 10-18 and scored 3.1 runs per game during the time Hafner -- who delivered a key hit in Friday night's win -- was sidelined with a right oblique strain.

travis-hafner.jpgTravis Hafner adds punch and a respected veteran presence to an Indians' lineup that struggled without him.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Cleveland Indians designated hitter Travis Hafner struggled from 2008-10, in large part due to a shoulder injury that limited his playing time and robbed him of power.

Hafner may never again make the impact that he did for the Indians from 2004-07, but he began this season with a hot bat and the respect that pitchers still have for him made for a positive ripple effect throughout the Indians' lineup.

Hafner returned from a stay on the disabled list to the Indians' lineup on Friday night, and delivered a key double during the Tribe's 5-1 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Plain Dealer reporter Dennis Manoloff wrote the Pirates-Indians game story, and numerous other stories are included in Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Indians coverage, such as PD Indians' beat writer Paul Hoynes' report that first baseman Matt LaPorta has been put on the disabled list with an ankle injury, and that outfielder Travis Buck has been recalled from Columbus.

Cleveland went 10-18 in the games that Hafner missed with a strained right oblique. The Indians hit a paltry .225 during the stretch and averaged just 3.1 runs per game.

Jim Ingraham of the News-Herald and Lorain Morning Journal details the Indians' hitting struggles, writing:  

If the season had ended Thursday, Carlos Santana's .216 batting average would be the fourth-lowest by any catcher in Indians history. Since July 1 of last year, Santana has the same batting average as his backup, Lou Marson — .213.

If the season had ended Thursday, Jack Hannahan's .231 batting average would be the fifth-lowest by any third baseman in Indians history.

Shin-Soo Choo's .237 batting average would be the seventh-lowest by any right fielder in Indians history.

Matt LaPorta's .244 batting average would be the eighth-lowest by any first baseman in Indians history.

If each of the above had been scattered throughout the various teams the Indians had fielded over their 111 years in the American League, it wouldn't be such a big deal.

But that's not the case.

On most days, the above players are four of the nine hitters in the Indians' lineup this year every day.

Talkin' Tribe

On MLB.com, a preview of tonight's Pirates-Indians game, with the Pirates starting left-handed pitcher Paul Maholm (3-7, 3.12) and the Indians going with righty Carlos Carrasco (6-3, 4.09) who has pitched the Tribe to 1-0 wins in his last two starts.

ESPN Baseball Tonight video, highlighting the returns of Hafner and Joe Mauer (Minnesota Twins) to their teams' lineups.

The Mahoning Valley Scrappers, the Indians' Class A short-season New York-Penn League affiliate, have begun their season. A Scrappers season preview by Andrew Zajac for the Indians Prospect Insider.

Pirates-Indians game story by Rob Biertempfel of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

Pirates-Indians game story by Paul Zeise of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Indians' hitting woes maybe accelerated the return of Travis Hafner to the lineup. By Sheldon Ocker of the Akron Beacon Journal.

Pirates-Indians game story by Chris Assenheimer for the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram and Medina County Gazette.

  

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