Lethbridge Herald

Turning twenty

CLEVELAND EQUALS AMERICAN LEAGUE RECORD WITH 20 CONSECUTIV­E WINS

- Tom Withers THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — CLEVELAND

The Cleveland Indians share a record with a team celebrated by Hollywood. “Moneyball” has its sequel. Following a familiar script of scoring first, playing strong defence and riding dominant pitching, the Indians extended their winning streak to 20 games and matched the AL mark held by the 2002 Oakland Athletics, beating the Detroit Tigers 2-0 on Tuesday night.

Cleveland’s streak, which began on Aug. 24 in Boston, is tied for the majors’ second-longest in 82 years — and the Indians show no signs of stopping.

Corey Kluber (16-4) strengthen­ed his Cy Young Award case with a four-hitter as Cleveland joined the 2002 A’s, 1935 Chicago Cubs (21) and 1916 New York Giants (26) as the only teams to win at least 20 in a row.

Francisco Lindor homered leading off the first inning against Matthew Boyd (510), and the crowd of 24,654 stood and roared when Kluber sprinted to the mound for the ninth.

Second baseman Jose Ramirez made a sensationa­l diving stop in short right field to throw out Ian Kinsler for the second out, and after allowing a double to Alex Presley, Kluber sealed win No. 20 — and Cleveland’s seventh shutout during the streak — by getting Miguel Cabrera on an easy grounder to third.

Fireworks exploded overhead and the Indians lined up to celebrate yet another win in this unthinkabl­e streak.

The Giants’ revered 101-year-old streak includes a tie that interrupte­d 12- and 14-game unbeaten runs. However, the Elias Sports Bureau, the official statistica­l custodian for Major League Baseball, has always regarded the Giants’ stretch as the top mark because tie games were replayed from the start back then. Cleveland can equal the Cubs’ 21-game run Wednesday afternoon, and the Indians are within striking distance of the illustriou­s-butimperfe­ct mark of those’'16 Giants.

The Indians and A’s, whose unexpected run to the post-season 15 years ago was re-told in the film starring Brad Pitt, don’t have much in common besides their 20-game streaks.

Oakland was an overachiev­ing squad loaded with pitching and a roster comprised of low-salaried players assembled by a front office that forced baseball to rethink how it evaluated talent. The Indians, on the other hand, have spent millions to get better, and have been expected to win — big.

Maybe not at this amazing rate, but after getting to Game 7 in 2016, Cleveland was a favourite to return to the World Series.

Closing in on their second consecutiv­e AL Central title, the Indians figured to keep things going with Kluber on the mound, and the right-hander continued his own superb stretch.

Kluber improved to 8-1 in his last nine starts and lowered his ERA to an AL-best 2.45 with his third shutout of the season and fifth complete game. He allowed a leadoff double in the first to Kinsler, but stranded him at third by striking out Cabrera and Nicholas Castellano­s to end the inning.

Cabrera came in batting .434 against Kluber but went 0 for 4 with two strikeouts.

While understand­ing the fascinatio­n with his team’s roll, Indians manager Terry Francona has been downplayin­g the streak so as not to make it a distractio­n.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Cleveland Indians’ Francisco Lindor celebrates his solo home run off Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Matthew Boyd during the first inning in a baseball game, Tuesday.
Associated Press photo Cleveland Indians’ Francisco Lindor celebrates his solo home run off Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Matthew Boyd during the first inning in a baseball game, Tuesday.

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