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In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
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Padres 9, Indians 4
Thursday June 12, 2003
By TOM WITHERS AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) Ryan Klesko already had fond memories of past
nights playing at Jacobs Field, and Thursday he helped give Jake
Peavy one to cherish.
Klesko and Rondell White homered and Peavy got his first win
since April 25 as the San Diego Padres rallied for a 9-4 win over
the Cleveland Indians.
Trailing 3-0 after four innings, the Padres scored four runs in
the fifth and five in the sixth to help Peavy (5-5) get his first
win in nine starts and avoid being swept in their first ever series
against the Indians.
``That was a big win for us,'' said Klesko, back at the Jake for
the first time since the 1995 World Series when he hit three homers
in Cleveland while playing for Atlanta. ``I have great feelings
about this place especially since that was the only year we (the
Braves) won it.''
Mark Loretta had three RBIs for the Padres, who finally got
their 20th win.
Jody Gerut and Ben Broussard homered for the Indians.
Peavy had lost four times and had four no-decisions in the eight
starts since his last victory. The right-hander allowed three runs
and six hits in 5 2-3 innings.
The Padres were 0-8 in Peavy's previous eight starts.
``I've been battling,'' he said. ``It's all about winning or
losing. It doesn't matter how many quality starts you have, the
bottom line is if you win or lose.''
Indians rookie starter Jason Davis (5-5) dominated the Padres
for the first four innings, but was tagged for four runs three
earned in the fifth and two in the sixth for his first loss since
May 8 a span of six starts.
Davis knows what he did wrong.
``I went out with my 'A' game, but made some rookie mistakes,''
Davis said. ``I got caught up in the moment, couldn't stay within
myself and it was costly.''
Klesko came up during San Diego's four-run fifth but didn't get
to swing his bat as Gary Matthews Jr. got picked off first base for
the final out.
Klesko made the most of his at-bat in the sixth by belting a
449-foot homer, his 12th, to the seats in right-center as the
Padres opened a 5-3 lead.
After putting two on, Davis was replaced by Dan Miceli, who gave
up a single to Gary Bennett to load the bases.
Donaldo Mendez followed with a potential double-play grounder to
short, but rookie second baseman Brandon Phillips dropped shortstop
John McDonald's throw as a run scored and another run came in when
the ball was kicked into shallow left by a sliding Bennett.
``It was nice to get a break there,'' Padres manager Bruce Bochy
said. ``We haven't had a lot.''
Indians manager Eric Wedge said Phillips' drop hurt.
``That was a big play for us,'' he said. ``We make it, it's 5-3
and we're still in the game.''
Mark Loretta capped San Diego's inning with a two-run single to
make it 9-3.
White's 11th homer ignited San Diego's four-run fifth that put
the Padres up 4-3.
The Padres then loaded the bases off Davis on a walk, and two
singles before Matthews' two-run single tied it 3-all. Loretta's
sacrifice fly made it 4-3.
Broussard's fourth homer, a 418-foot shot to center, helped the
Indians open a 3-0 lead in the fourth.
Gerut gave the Indians a 1-0 lead in the first, connecting on
Peavy's first pitch for his seventh homer and second in two days.
It was the first homer given up by Peavy in 22 innings.<
^Notes:@ Indians SS McDonald went 2-for-4 in his first game
replacing Omar Vizquel, who underwent knee surgery Thursday and
will be out at least three weeks. ... The start of the game was
delayed 46 minutes by rain. ... Gerut has hit safely in 13 straight
games and is batting .383 (18-for-47) with four homers and 11 RBIs
during the streak. ... Peavy had a problem with the long ball
earlier this season, allowing 13 homers in his first 10 starts. ...
Indians INF Jhonny Peralta made his major league debut, playing
third for the final two innings. Peralta, 21, was recalled from
Triple-A Buffalo when Vizquel went on the 15-day DL. ... The
Indians open a three-game series Friday with the Los Angeles
Dodgers. The franchises haven't played since the 1920 World Series
when Cleveland beat the Brooklyn Robins.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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