The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Kluber has a supporting cast in win over Yanks

- By Mike Fitzpatric­k The Associated Press

NEWYORK» With a pair of All-Stars pitching on the Yankee Stadium stage, it was the establishe­d ace who topped an emerging one Aug. 28.

Corey Kluber beat Luis Severino in a matchup worthy of October, and slumping Jose Ramirez homered twice to power the Indians past the Yankees, 6-2, for their fifth straight victory.

“You can’t help but be aware of who’s pitching for the other team and when it’s a guy like Severino, obviously, most likely they’re not going to give up a lot of runs,” the soft-spoken Kluber said.

Carlos Santana hit a tiebreakin­g homer off Severino in the seventh inning and Austin Jackson also went deep for the AL Central leaders, who increased their cushion to seven games over idle Minnesota.

It was an inauspicio­us start to a benchmark week for the Yankees, who fell 3½ games behind firstplace Boston in the AL East. Following two more meetings with Cleveland, the rival Red Sox arrive for a four-game series.

“You look at this as a very tough week, but the thing is, you can’t look past these three games because of the four that are looming,” manager Joe Girardi said before the game. “You’ve got to go one day at a time here.”

Coming off three consecutiv­e shutouts in a sweep of Kansas City, the defending AL champions ran their scoreless streak to 30 in- nings before Chase Headley homered against Kluber (13-4) leading off the third. But the 2014 AL Cy Young Award winner went eight innings and allowed only three hits, rebounding from a loss to Boston last week that ended a fivegame winning streak and marked his first defeat since July 4.

“He pounded the strike zone,” Cleveland manager Terry Francona said. “It was two really good pitchers going at it. Fortunatel­y, Kluber stayed the course, did what he usually does.”

Kluber struck out seven and walked one as the surging Indians (74-56) won for the 14th time in 18 games. The league leader in ERA gave up a go-ahead single to No. 9 batter Todd Frazier with two outs in the fifth, but Ramirez quickly tied it again in the sixth when he sent a 99 mph fastball from the 23-year-old Severino (11-6) into the second deck in right field for his fourth career multihomer game — all this season.

Ramirez came in bat- ting .169 in his previous 20 games and had only one home run since the All-Star break. He also made two excellent defensive plays at second base.

“You wouldn’t even notice that he was in a slump, honestly. He’s the same guy every day,” rookie teammate Bradley Zimmer said. “He did his thing tonight.”

The speedy Zimmer created a seventh-inning run with his legs and added an RBI double in the ninth for Cleveland.

Cody Allen finished up with a perfect inning.

Severino gave up four hits — three homers — in 6 2/3 innings and lost for only the second time in 10 starts. He struck out nine but dropped to 6-2 with a 2.38 ERA since the All-Star break.

“I thought I pitched well, but I made some mistakes,” Severino said.

New York’s top six batters went 0-for-22 with a walk.

Got your number

Kluber is making a strong bid for another Cy Young Award, going 10-2 with a 1.90 ERA in 17 starts since June 1. He is 5-1 with a 1.80 ERA in seven career games against the Yankees, including a three-hitter with 11 strikeouts for a 5-1 victory at Cleveland on Aug. 3.

“He moves the ball around like crazy. He’s throwing four-seamers, he’s throwing cutters, he’s throwing t wo-seamers. They all come out and look just the same. They’re moving in different directions, and his curveball is one of the best in the game,” Headley said. “Even when he does make mistakes, his pitches are moving enough that a lot of times he gets away with it. That’s why he’s really been the best pitcher in the game the last two months.”

Stingy staff

C levela nd’s shutout streak was the longest in the majors this season and the club’s best since a string of 31 innings in May 2008.

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 ?? BILL KOSTROUN — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Indians’ Carlos Santana reacts as he crosses the plate after hitting a home run against the Yankees during the seventh inning Aug. 28 in New York.
BILL KOSTROUN — ASSOCIATED PRESS The Indians’ Carlos Santana reacts as he crosses the plate after hitting a home run against the Yankees during the seventh inning Aug. 28 in New York.

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