The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Tribe slams White Sox, magic number at 3

Ramirez comes through again; magic number is now 3

- By Steve Herrick The Associated Press

Jose Ramirez had a big night as the Indians defeated the White Sox and moved closer to the division title.

The anticipati­on of their first division championsh­ip since 2007 is building for the Indians.

Jose Ramirez hit a two-run homer and drove in four runs and the Indians dropped their magic number for clinching an AL Central title to three games with a 10-4 win over the Chicago White Sox on Sept. 23.

“Now that it’s here, there’s a

lot of excitement that surrounds it,” said winning pitcher Trevor Bauer. “Even though every game is just as important, these feel a little bit more fun. There’s just a different atmosphere around it.”

Bauer (12-8) overcame two-run homers by Melky Cabrera and Avisail Garcia. The right-hander allowed four runs in 7 2/3 innings.

Ramirez, a key contributo­r in his first full season, had another big game. He hit a two-run homer in the fourth and had a two-run double in the sixth when Cleveland scored four times.

Mike Napoli drove in two runs and became the first Cleveland player to reach 100 RBI since Victor Martinez in 2007.

“It’s only human to see what’s in front of you, but we still have to get to that point,” Napoli said. “It’s not a bunch of talk about it.”

White Sox center fielder Adam Eaton left after running into the wall catching Roberto Perez’s long drive in the sixth. He was down for several minutes before being helped to the dugout.

“Adam is pretty banged

up, but he seems fine and is responsive,” Manager Robin Ventura said.

“It was actually his hip that was the issue, and when that happened, his back locked up.”

Coco Crisp was 3 for 4 with three RBI and hit a two-run double in the fifth to lead 6-4. Carlos Santana had three hits and is 10 for 16 in his last four games.

Chicago has lost six in a row and was eliminated from the AL wild-card race.

Chicago went ahead in the first on Cabrera’s home

run. Ramirez’s homer tied the game, but Garcia’s tworun blast put back Chicago on top.

Cleveland took advantage of three hits, a hit batter and an error by third baseman Todd Frazier in the fifth against Miguel Gonzalez (4-8).

Santana led off with a double and Jason Kipnis was hit by a pitch. Following a wild pitch, Francisco Lindor hit a sacrifice fly and Napoli’s single tied the game.

Juan Minaya replaced

Gonzalez, and Frazier booted Ramirez’s ground ball, moving Napoli to second.

Crisp then delivered with two outs.

Napoli, who entered in an 0-for-20 slump, had three hits and added an RBI single in the sixth to reach the century mark.

“It’s something nice but to be able to do it on a winning team is even better,” he said.

Gonzalez allowed five runs — four earned — in 4 1/3 innings.

Opposite field

Bauer was surprised Garcia was able to take his fifth-inning pitch to right field, a towering drive that barely cleared the wall.

“That was ridiculous,” he said. “I jammed the heck out of him. He looked to left field because he thought he pulled it. I have no idea how it’s a homer.”

Trainer’s room

White Sox: 2B Tyler Saladino (back discomfort) was scratched from the lineup and replaced by Carlos Sanchez.

Indians: RHP Danny Salazar (strained forearm) played catch Friday, but it’s unclear when he’ll throw a bullpen session.

Up next

White Sox: LHP Jose Quintana, who starts Saturday, needs four innings to record his fourth straight season of 200 innings pitched. Indians: RHP Cody Anderson, forced into the rotation by injuries, will start.

 ?? PHIL LONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Indians’ Mike Napoli slides safely into home plate as the White Sox’s Omar Narvaez waits for the throw during the sixth inning Sept. 23.
PHIL LONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Indians’ Mike Napoli slides safely into home plate as the White Sox’s Omar Narvaez waits for the throw during the sixth inning Sept. 23.

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