Rome News-Tribune

Detroit routs slumping Twins

- By Jon Krawczynsk­i Associated Press Sports Writer

MINNEAPOLI­S — The Detroit Tigers have devised quite a system for getting production out of their emergency callups: get them to the ballpark as late as possible before throwing them into the lineup.

“Sometimes that’s the best way to do it,” manager Brad Ausmus said. “Doesn’t give you time to think about anything.”

John Hicks had three hits, including his first career homer, and drove in five runs to lead Michael Fulmer and the Detroit Tigers to a 13-4 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Sunday.

One day after the benches cleared when Tigers starter Matthew Boyd threw behind slugger Miguel Sano in retaliatio­n for teammate JaCoby Jones being hit in the face, there was no sign of lingering hard feelings.

Fulmer (2-1) allowed two runs on four hits in seven innings, striking out seven. Jim Adduci had three hits and two RBIs on the day he arrived from Triple-A Toledo and Alex Avila hit a two-run homer for the Tigers. Victor Martinez added three hits and two RBIs.

Hicks came up from Toledo on Saturday after Miguel Cabrera was put on the disabled list and has gone 5 for 10 with a double, a homer and six RBIs in two Tigers wins.

Adduci had not played in the big leagues since 2014 with Texas. He woke up at 4:15 on Sunday morning, had his connecting flight in Chicago delayed, and arrived at Target Field about 90 minutes before the first pitch to learn that he was in the lineup and hitting seventh.

“It took a lot of nerves away,” Adduci said. “I was kind of tired, relaxed and it worked out great.”

Kyle Gibson (0-3) gave up seven runs — six earned — on eight hits in just 2 2/3 innings for the Twins, who went 2-7 on the home stand against AL Central opponents. Max Kepler and Eddie Rosario homered for the Twins, but Minnesota lost for the sixth time in seven games.

“It was not a good ending to not a very good home stand,” Twins manager Paul Molitor said. “Some of the games were good, but we had a couple of games that get your attention.”

Hicks hit a three-run homer in the ninth inning, prompting Molitor to go to backup catcher Chris Gimenez as his seventh relief pitcher. Gimenez got Andrew Romine to fly out to end the inning.

Twins miscues

Left fielder Danny Santana threw out Ian Kinsler at home in the first inning, but was charged with an error after he couldn’t hold on to a liner from Justin Upton in the second inning. Avila followed with his home run for a 2-0 lead.

In the sixth inning, Michael Tonkin got Nicholas Castellano­s swinging to end the inning, but Jason Castro let the ball get by him for a passed ball. He scrambled to throw Castellano­s at first base, but the ball sailed past Joe Mauer into right field, allowing Hicks and Romine to score for a 10-2 lead.

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