OSUBasketballJunkie
Never Forget 31-0
wow...another blown save....
ABJ
8/3/06
ABJ
8/3/06
Another lost save burns Indians
Young Fausto Carmona melts down as Tribe loses at Fenway 6-5
By Sheldon Ocker
Beacon Journal sportswriter
<!-- begin body-content -->BOSTON - If this keeps up, a certain type of blown save will become known as a demolished save or a pulverized save.
The question is: Even at this early juncture in the career of Fausto Carmona, how long can Indians' officials allow this to go on?
Carmona blew his second save in as many tries Wednesday night, as the Indians lost 6-5 to the Red Sox at Fenway Park in a flurry of hit batters and nearly hit batters.
If anything, Carmona's most recent meltdown was even more spectacular than Monday night's, when he gave up a three-run walk-off homer to David Ortiz in a 9-8 Tribe defeat.
This time, Carmona struck out Wily Mo Pena and Coco Crisp to start the ninth inning. So how could things go so wrong so quickly?
``Fausto began overthrowing and then things got away from him,'' manager Eric Wedge said. ``He looked like he was in a hurry to get that third out.''
Pitching coach Carl Willis went to the mound to express the same thoughts to Carmona during the final inning.
``I told him to slow things down, that he didn't have to overthrow,'' Willis said. ``A lot of young pitchers will get the first two outs in an inning and struggle to get the third. So I tried to get him to slow down and get his composure.''
Hitting Doug Mirabelli with a 3-and-2 pitch started Carmona down the path to oblivion. From there on out, he seemed destined to fail.
Alex Gonzalez followed Mirabelli to the plate, and Carmona hit him with the first pitch, then walked Kevin Youkilis to load the bases.
The rest was anticlimactic and inevitable. Carmona almost nailed Mark Loretta with a fastball. Two pitches later, Loretta smacked a double off the wall to score two runs and win the game.
This is not the end of the Great Carmona Experiment, but at this point there is reason to believe he will not be the closer for 2007.
Not only has Carmona blown two saves, but last Sunday against Seattle, he failed to hold a 3-3 tie in the ninth, allowing four runs to ensure the loss.
`We'll keep sending Fausto back out there,'' Wedge said. ``He's a young pitcher that's developing as a closer and learning from his experiences.''
Jeremy Sowers came into the game having thrown consecutive shutouts, and his consecutive scoreless inning streak reached 22 before he gave up four hard-hit balls to finally end it in the fifth inning.
The first laser shot, a line drive by Doug Mirabelli, landed in the glove of shortstop Jhonny Peralta for the second out of the inning, but nobody came close to catching the next three.
Alex Gonzalez began the rally with a ringing double to right and scored on Kevin Youkilis' double to left. Mark Loretta completed the scoring with an RBI single.
Thankfully for Sowers, the next batter was David Ortiz, arguably the most dangerous hitter in the big leagues. Sowers struck him out.
``These guys are a little different kind of hitters,'' Sowers said. ``They know how to work the count. They forced me to get my pitch count up. They were able to get me up to 90 pitches (actually, 88) in five innings.''
Asked about the difficulty of pitching at Fenway with its packed grandstand of avid fans, Sowers said, ``There's something to it. But if you keep the ball down, it's not going to go over the Green Monster.
``The way I pitch, it shouldn't make any difference, because I'm trying to keep the ball on the ground.''
The Indians' advantage vanished on the third pitch by Brian Sikorsky, who took over for Sowers to start the sixth. Manny Ramirez locked onto a high fastball and drove a ball over the Green Monster in left to tie the score.
It was Ramirez's 465th career homer, tying him with Dave Winfield for 26th on the all-time list. It also marked the 11th season the former Cleveland outfield had gone deep at least 30 times.
One out later, Pena put the Red Sox in front with a drive that reached the seats above the left field wall at warp speed.
After that, Sikorski settled down and finished the inning. It was too little, too late and the first time Sikorski has made a negative impact in a game.
The five-year veteran of the Japanese major leagues has pitched only six times for the Tribe, a total of 7 1/3 innings. Coincidentally, but maybe not, all the runs he has allowed have come on home runs, four in all.
Before Wednesday night, he allowed solo homers to Juan Rivera of the Angels and Ben Broussard of the Mariners. Except for Pena's long ball, all the home runs have led off an inning.
What this means for Sikorski and his future will be left for others to decide, particularly if his disturbing tendency continues.
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