The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Tribe tops Angels 11th time in a row

- By Steve Dilbeck

It’s time for the 2017 Indians to be introduced to the one and only 1884 Providence Grays.

They share some unlikely history, the two teams, which played a mere 141 years apart, are the only two clubs to have ever won 27 out of 28 games.

The Indians joined the Grays on Thursday when Francisco Lindor’s three-run homer led Cleveland to a 4-1 victory and threegame sweep of the Los Angeles Angels.

The Grays ended up winning 28 of 29, leaving the Indians one game shy of matching the record.

“We want to keep it going,” Cleveland reliever Dan Otero said. “I mean, it’s crazy. That stuff doesn’t happen in baseball.”

It may have looked a little too familiar to the Angels, who lost to the Indians for the 11th consecutiv­e time.

“They’re good, but any team can be beaten if you’re doing the

things you need to do,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “We didn’t do it consistent­ly enough.”

It was a damaging series for the Angels, who have lost four of their last five overall in a struggling effort to overtake the Minnesota Twins for the final AL wild-card berth.

After hitting a two-run homer Wednesday night, Lindor came back with a game-winning, three-run homer in the fifth Thursday off Parker Bridwell (83) to break up a 1-1 game. It was his 32nd home run.

The Indians started right-hander Danny Salazar, largely in an effort to see if he can be a viable postseason reliever. He went 2 2/3 innings, allowing the one run, two hits and three walks.

Five Cleveland relievers did not allow a run. The victory went to Zach McAllister (2-2) who threw 1 1/3 innings. Tyler Olson worked a scoreless ninth for his first career save.

“That’s what we’re built around — the pitching staff,” Lindor said. “They’ve been carrying us the whole year. It’s fun whenever they all get a chance in the game. I’m glad I’m on this team.”

The Angels took their only lead against the Indians this season in the first when Mike Trout walked and scored on a double by Albert Pujols.

Edwin Encarnacio­n hit his 37th home run to lead off the second and tie it.

Best record

The victory left the Indians 96-57, still one game behind the Dodgers for the best overall record and home field advantage throughout the playoffs.

“We just focus on what we have in front of our feet,” Lindor said. “We really don’t pay attention to any other teams.”

Tough hits

Lindor’s home run was drilled into the trees beyond the center field wall, but the two hits that preceded it barely fell.

Yan Gomes led off the fifth with a high pop-up that fell between three defenders and nicked off the glove of right fielder Kole Calhoun.

“There were a lot of things involved,” Scioscia said. “There was wind, there was sun. It was kind of in the Bermuda Triangle.”

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Indians first baseman Carlos Santana fields a ball hit down the first base line by the Angels’ Kole Calhoun during the fourth inning.
CHRIS CARLSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Indians first baseman Carlos Santana fields a ball hit down the first base line by the Angels’ Kole Calhoun during the fourth inning.

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