Indians rock Yankees

By The Associated Press

Friday, October 5, 2007 9:56 AM EDT

CLEVELAND - At times, it looked like 1995 again. Or 1997. Or 1954. Or 1948.
The Associated Press
The Yankees' Roger Clemens, left, Andy Pettitte, second from left, Alex Rodriguez, center, Doug Mientkiewicz and Jorge Posada, right, watch late in their 12-3 loss to the Indians in Game 1 of an American League Division Series game Thursday, in Cleveland.
Back in the playoffs after a six-year absence, the Cleveland Indians came out swinging like Octobers past.

C.C. Sabathia recovered after giving up a homer on his fifth pitch, Kenny Lofton drove in four runs and Cleveland homered four times to stun the New York Yankees 12-3 in their AL playoff opener Thursday night.

On an unusually warm night that felt more like Indian summer than fall, the AL Central champions looked as though they just might be the team to beat as they chase their first World Series title in 59 years.

“They just were hitting everything,” Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez said. “Even their outs were hard.”

A-Rod will have to wait at least another day to repair his tarnished postseason image. Sabathia and three Cleveland relievers silenced his powerful bat.

On Friday, the Yankees turn to Andy Pettitte, who is 14-9 in postseason play. Fausto Carmona, Cleveland's other 19-game winner, will oppose him.

“Let's just get over it and lick our wounds and then we'll figure it out,” New York manager Joe Torre said.

The Indians' playoff inexperience was never a factor.

Cleveland's kids were all right.

“They just went out there and played the game,” said Lofton, a postseason veteran. “You don't have to have a whole lot of experience to understand that the game hasn't changed. That's what I've been talking to the guys about: Go out there and play baseball.”

Playoff newcomer Victor Martinez hit a two-run homer and rookie Asdrubal Cabrera had a solo shot off ineffective starter Chien-Ming Wang.

Travis Hafner and Ryan Garko homered later, and the Indians knocked the Bronx Bombers flat.

The 40-year-old Lofton raced around the bases they way he did in two previous stints with Cleveland. Casey Blake added two RBIs for the Indians, energized by a towel-waving crowd eager for more.

A few Cleveland fans even turned on Cavaliers superstar LeBron James, a devoted New York fan who boldly came to Jacobs Field wearing a Yankees cap. Early on, fans sitting near James behind home plate chanted “Take off the cap,” and by the sixth inning, he did.

When Hafner's homer off Ross Ohlendorf gave the Indians a 10-3 lead, James turned to his entourage and ordered an exit.

The Yankees, 6-0 against the Indians during the regular season, went nearly as fast. Down 4-3 in the fifth, they managed only a meaningless, two-out single in the ninth after Cleveland broke away.

It was the first time New York lost by more than eight runs in the postseason since an 11-1 first-round drubbing by Oakland in 2000.

Indians manager Eric Wedge, another playoff first-timer, was prepared to ride Sabathia as long as needed. If that meant 120 or 130 pitches, Wedge was willing to let his left-hander push his limit.

Wedge never could have imagined that would come after five innings.

Not only did Sabathia, who entered 1-7 with a 7.13 ERA in his career against New York, have to deal with New York's awesome lineup, but plate umpire Bruce Froemming's strike zone was paper thin for the left-hander, who battled through 114 pitches, allowing three runs and four hits in five innings.

Sabathia walked six (his total for September), allowed two homers - both to lefties - and had one of his worst outings all season.

The Yankees were facing Sabathia for the first time in three years, and unless they get their offense untracked in the next few days, it might be many more more.

The Yankees' best chance was in the fifth. Trailing 4-3, they put runners at second and third with one out against Sabathia. With first base open, he intentionally walked Rodriguez to face Jorge Posada.

Posada got ahead 3-0 in the count, then fouled off a pitch. Sabathia fought back for a strikeout.

Then, he got behind 2-0 to Hideki Matsui before getting the Yankees' DH to pop to shortstop, ending New York's last rally.

The Indians put it away with five runs in their half of the fifth, the big blows coming on Martinez's two-run homer off Wang, a 19-game winner during the regular season, and Blake's two-run double, a shot that sent the crowd of 44,608 into a frenzy.

Damon led off the game with a shot to right initially ruled foul by umpire Jim Wolf, who might have lost sight of the ball in the sun's glare.

After an infield meeting, several umpires twirled their fingers to indicate a homer as Damon, who had stayed on the field during the discussion, crossed home plate.

After Wang got two outs in the bottom half on three pitches, he walked Hafner and gave up a single to Martinez. Garko followed with an RBI single and Peralta drew a walk following a nine-pitch at-bat.

Lofton then delivered a two-run single to make it 3-1, and the Indians barely looked back.

Indians 12

Yankees 3

Game 2

Indians lead series 1-0

When: Today

Where: Cleveland

Time: 5:07 p.m.

TV: TBS

NEW YORK CLEVELAND

ab r h bi ab r h bi

Damon lf 4 1 1 1 Szmore cf 4 0 1 0

Jeter ss 4 0 0 0 ACbera 2b 4 2 1 1

BAbreu rf 2 0 1 1 Hafner dh 4 2 1 1

ARod 3b 2 0 0 0 VMrtnz c 5 2 3 2

Posada c 4 0 0 0 Garko 1b 4 3 3 2

Matsui dh 4 0 0 0 JhPlta ss 4 1 1 0

Cano 2b 3 1 1 1 Lofton lf 4 1 3 4

MeCbr cf 4 0 0 0 Gutirrz rf 2 1 0 0

Mntkw 1b 1 0 0 0 Blake 3b 4 0 1 2

Duncan 1b 2 1 1 0

Giambi ph 1 0 1 0

Totals 31 3 5 3 35121412

New York 100 110 000-- 3

Cleveland 301 052 01x--12

DP--New York 1. LOB--New York 7, Cleveland 6. 2B--BAbreu (1), VMartinez (1), JhPeralta (1), Lofton (1), Blake (1). HR--Damon (1), Cano (1), ACabrera (1), Hafner (1), VMartinez (1), Garko (1). SB--Lofton (1). CS--Cano (1), Sizemore (1).

IP H R ER BB SO

New York

Wang L,0-1 4 2-3 9 8 8 4 2

Ohlendorf 1 4 3 3 1 0

Veras 1-3 0 0 0 0 0

Hughes 2 1 1 1 0 2

Cleveland

Sabathia W,1-0 5 4 3 3 6 5

RPerez 2 0 0 0 0 4

Lewis 1 0 0 0 0 1

RBetancourt 1 1 0 0 0 1

HBP--by Ohlendorf (Garko), by Wang (Sizemore).

Umpires--Home, Bruce Froemming; First, Laz Diaz; Second, Ron Kulpa; Third, Fieldin Culbreth; Left, Gerry Davis; Right, Jim Wolf.

T--3:44. A--44,608 (43,415).

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