Jose Abreu |
That turned out to be the difference in a 5-2 victory. In fact, the Sox had three runs on three hits on the first five pitches of the game thrown by Toronto starter Jose Berrios.
Luis Robert singled on the first pitch of the game. Yoan Moncada singled on the third pitch. Jose Abreu lauched a 3-run homer, his 26th of the season, on the fifth pitch to give the Sox a 3-0 lead.
From that point forward, the Sox pounded out 15 more hits for a total of 18, but they could only produce two more runs. That's hard to do when you think about it. Wouldn't you score more runs just on accident? The South Siders stranded 12 runners.
But, the pitching was good enough to make that early lead hold up the entire game. Dylan Cease (10-6) picked up his 10th win of the season, tossing seven innings of one-run ball. He struck out seven, walked one and limited Toronto to four hits.
Cease continues to make a strong case for inclusion in a potential playoff rotation.
The Sox bullpen? Shaky again, but a win is a win. Liam Hendriks recorded his 29th save of the season, and he needed 39 pitches to record five outs.
With the Sox leading 5-1, Michael Kopech allowed a pair of Toronto singles with one out in the bottom of the eighth, putting runners on first and third. Hendriks entered and walked Marcus Semien to load the bases.
That brought up Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who is good enough to be the AL MVP this season -- he just won't be because of that Shohei Ohtani guy. Hendriks ran the count full before coaxing Guerrero to ground into an inning-ending double play.
Hendriks labored through the ninth, too, allowing a run on three hits. But he induced Santiago Espinal to ground out to second base with two on and two out to end the game.
Exhale.
The Sox are 73-54. The Cleveland Indians lost, 7-3, to the Texas Rangers. The Sox now have a 10-game lead in the AL Central.
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