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Fire damages central Lorain home

August 15, 2011 in Local News by Rona Proudfoot

Firefighters were on the scene at 2504 Reid Ave. this morning.

Firefighters were on the scene at 2504 Reid Ave. this morning.

LORAIN — A fire pretty much completely damaged a home at West 25th Street and Reid Avenue this morning, according to Fire Capt. Jeffrey Fenn.

The home, a pink house on the southwest corner of the intersection at 2504 Reid, had damage to the entire structure. The fire was reported about 7:20 a.m.

No one was hurt, according to Fenn, and neighbors said the home had been vacant.

Fenn said the 2 1/2-story home will likely be considered a total loss because it was valued at only $10,000, and repairs will likely come close to that amount or exceed it.

Click here to view more photos.

Fenn said a cause of the fire has not yet been determined, and the department’s Fire Prevention Bureau is investigating.

Check back at Chroniclet.com for more on this story as it becomes available.

CT reporter goes on patrol with Lorain police

August 15, 2011 in Front Page, Local News by Weol.com

With hot weather, more people outside and students out of school, July and August are traditionally the busiest months for the Lorain Police Department. Overnight shifts on the weekend are often the busiest time. To give readers a better idea how police cope during busy shifts, reporter Evan Goodenow spent about eight hours riding along with officers overnight this weekend.

LORAIN — The bar fight at Gil’s International Lounge on East 28th Street was over by the time police Officer Wesley Fordyce arrived around 1:25 a.m. Saturday, but the night was still young. Minutes after Fordyce arrived, he was soon back in his cruiser heading to the possible shooting of a 16-year-old in the 800 block of West 17th Street.

Police Officer Christopher Colon frisks a suspect during a drug-related traffic stop on West 20th Street about 1:30 a.m. Sunday. Seated is William Malone, who police said was carrying a small amount of crack cocaine. (CT photo by Evan Goodenow.)

Police Officer Christopher Colon frisks a suspect during a drug-related traffic stop on West 20th Street about 1:30 a.m. Sunday. Seated is William Malone, who police said was carrying a small amount of crack cocaine. (CT photo by Evan Goodenow.)

“Welcome to the weekend,” Fordyce said as he headed to the crime scene with a caravan of cruisers at 70 mph with lights and sirens activated. Patrol work is often feast or famine, but officers like Fordyce usually find themselves bouncing from call to call overnight on weekends.

Through Friday morning, officers had responded to 33,482 calls so far this year, according to Lorain police. That compares with 29,501 at the same time last year, an approximately 13.5 percent increase. July was the busiest month this year with 5,640 calls.

Many of the calls were routine — earlier, Fordyce had counseled a suicidal female and checked out a suspicious car parked in the driveway of a vacant home — but shooting calls are the most serious. Around 3:30 a.m. Friday, Officer Craig Payne apprehended city resident Brandon Atkinson at gunpoint after Atkinson allegedly shot a man in the foot.

Nearly 24 hours later, Payne, a 32-year-old officer who joined the department in 2005, tried to sort out the details of the latest incident from the woozy 16-year-old who was bleeding from the head.

“Is that a bullet wound or did you get pistol whipped?” Payne asked the boy as they sit in an ambulance.

The boy told Payne he was pistol whipped and then shot at as he ran. A bloody handprint was on the porch of the house in the 1600 block of Washington Avenue that the boy ran through as he fled.

“I heard a boom-boom, and he just ran up on my porch,” a woman at the house told police. “There’s blood all over the place.”

The boy said the shooters accused him of shooting into a house earlier in the day which he denied. Witnesses said the boy has a bounty of “75 stacks” on his head.

Stacks is slang for bindles of heroin, which have an approximately $20 street value, meaning the bounty is about $1,600. “Seventy-five bindles is a lot for a heroin addict, or you could sell it,” Fordyce said.

The incident was one of about 20 calls Fordyce had responded to since his shift officially began at 6 p.m. Fordyce also handled eight calls between 2:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. on overtime.

Patrol officers work 12-hour shifts from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. On Saturday night, there were 10 officers on patrol including a rookie riding with a field training officer. The department, which is hiring nine new officers, has 91 officers but about 20 unfilled positions due to budget constraints.

Fordyce — a 34-year-old officer who joined Lorain police last year after eight years as a Cleveland Clinic police officer — said this summer seems busier than last year. He predicted that the department will probably exceed the 49,963 calls responded to last year.

“For the size of our city, we have an immense call volume,” Fordyce said. “We’ve had a lot more shootings, felonious assaults and stabbings than we did last year.”

During slow periods, Fordyce tries to be proactive. He advised a suspected prostitute walking on Oberlin Avenue near West 16th Street to go home, warning her that two women were recently assaulted in the area. He reluctantly told youths playing basketball in the playground at Washington Elementary School to leave. Fordyce would prefer to let them play, but a city ordinance forbids people from being on school grounds when school’s out.

“When they’re playing ball and having a good time they’re not shooting each other up,” he said. “Sometimes you hate to send them back to their homes because they don’t have a home life.”

Around 4 a.m., 15 or 16 shots were fired from a vehicle at another car in the 1300 block of West 14th Street, but the shooter was long gone when police arrived. Because 911 calls must be routed from county dispatchers to local dispatchers before officers get information, Fordyce said it’s tough to catch drive-by shooters.

“Sometimes it seems like we’re going all night chasing those guys,” he said. “We’ll be chasing shadows all night.”

Saturday night ended with shots fired in a domestic dispute around 11:55 p.m. in the 100 block of West 23rd Street. Angry about her husband going to a bar, an Akron resident told officers she snatched the keys from his car. He followed her to her car and demanded them back. The wife, who was charged with domestic violence and illegally discharging a firearm, admitted she pulled out a .32-caliber semiautomatic pistol and fired two shots in the air as she and her husband argued.

“Fun, fun, fun, another gun,” said Officer Corey Middlebrooks as officers searched for the shell casings. Middlebrooks, a narcotics officer, said the pistol was the fourth gun police seized last week.

Middlebrooks, a 42-year-old officer who joined the department in 1998, and his partner, Christopher Colon, ride in an unmarked vehicle and back up patrol officers on serious calls such as the shooting incident. However, their primary job is narcotics interdiction. As they drove around the west side of the city early Sunday morning, they pointed out several drug houses they helped shut down.

Narcotics officers have been nicknamed “the jump out boys” by local drug dealers for quickly getting out of their unmarked vehicle to make street arrests. They play a cat and mouse game with drug dealers, shifting their work schedules to keep the dealers on their toes.

“Our road guys do a hell of a job, but they don’t have the time to just sit and watch a drug house,” said Colon, a 37-year-old officer who joined the department in 1999. “The minute we leave and neglect this area, things start happening.”

On a traffic stop of a suspected drug dealer on West 20th Street around 1:30 a.m. Sunday, Middlebrooks pulled William T. Malone out of the passenger side of a pickup truck. He recognized Malone — a 38-year-old city resident with an extensive criminal record — from a recent drug house raid.

“Did you spit the dope out?” Middlebrooks asked Malone. “You got a mouth full of crack!”

Middlebrooks recovered a rock of crack about the size of a baby’s tooth that Malone allegedly tried to swallow. Malone is due in Lorain Municipal Court this morning on cocaine possession, possession of drug paraphernalia and tampering with evidence charges.

While the department is short on officers and long on calls, officers like Fordyce said they enjoy working nights. Fordyce said he took a big pay cut after leaving the Cleveland Clinic, but likes patrolling his hometown and working with fellow officers whom he said he trusts with his life.

“We get paid a lot less than other departments and do a s—load more work than they do,” he said. “You’re here because you want to be.”

Contact Evan Goodenow at 329-7129 or egoodenow@chroniclet.com.

Lorain’s Catholic Charities: Demand for food up 10 percent lately

August 15, 2011 in Front Page, Local News by Weol.com

LORAIN — An hour before Wednesday’s weekly dinner at the Catholic Charities Lorain Family Center, the waiting room is full. About 50 clients, including a few children and elderly people, sit at tables conversing while a young boy plays chess.

Alexander Fiason and Ramira Weeks, both of Lorain, talk with friends Aug. 10 at the Catholic Charities Family Center in Lorain. (CT photos by Steve Manheim.)

Alexander Fiason and Ramira Weeks, both of Lorain, talk with friends Aug. 10 at the Catholic Charities Family Center in Lorain. (CT photos by Steve Manheim.)

Lorain Schools, which serves meals to children, are out for most of the summer, making July and August the busiest months at the center, which serves poor people. And with the economy struggling, demand is up.

David Boyce said the center — which served about 28,000 meals last year to approximately 3,300 clients — has seen an approximately 10 percent increase in demand since the recession, which officially began in December 2007.

Click here to view more photos.

“Lorain does have a high poverty rate, a high unemployment rate, and that’s reflected in the number of people we feed every day as well as the number of people who come to our (food) pantry,” he said. “The need’s been increasing, (and) we try to anticipate that as we look toward the future.”

On Wednesdays, the food pantry provides baked goods and produce from area grocery stores whose shelf life has been exhausted but remain edible. Clients, who are called alphabetically, can choose eight items.

“If your name starts with an F or G, you can come in,” Karen Leadbetter, center food service coordinator, told clients. “There’s some really nice peaches over here if you want them.”

In addition to the weekly distribution, clients can pick up food once a month from a “choice pantry” with amounts based upon family size.

“It’s a very dignified way of giving them an opportunity to take those foods instead of just giving them a grocery bag,” Boyce said. “The choice pantry gives them a say in the food they get to bring home.”

The food is donated to the shelter through Second Harvest Food Bank of North Central Ohio, which helped feed 77,000 people in Crawford, Erie, Huron and Lorain counties last year, according to its website. That’s a 134 percent increase since 2006.

“They have a chance to get produce that maybe they normally wouldn’t go to a store and purchase,” Boyce said of clients, many of whose food stamps run out before the end of the month. “We get a variety. It just depends on what the stores turn in.”

Boyce said the majority of clients are between the ages of 20 and 45. Nearly all are Lorain County residents, and most are unemployed, although some work part time.

In addition to food, the center also provides anger management, job training and musical therapy classes, as well as free monthly medical exams and a free eyeglass program. The center — part of the Diocese of Cleveland — has an annual budget of about $290,000 and a staff of two full-time and two part-time employees. The staff includes a resources coordinator who connects clients with drug rehabilitation, heating assistance, housing or psychiatric programs.

“We want to make it kind of a one-stop place for individuals to come in and achieve a variety of different kinds of services,” Boyce said. “We really do a lot of other kinds of things that will help individuals meet some of their basic needs.”

Boyce said the center works closely with area providers such as the Neighborhood House Association, the Nord Center and the Salvation Army. The center also relies on about 700 volunteers including about 50 regulars.

Boyce, 58, worked in education publishing before becoming director in 2008. While a completely different environment, he said the transition has been smooth and he enjoys the work despite its challenging nature.

“Our mission is still to treat everybody with respect and dignity that walks through these doors and do our best to meet the needs they have,” he said. “We’re just going to keep plugging away and doing the best we can to serve these men and women.”

Contact Evan Goodenow at 329-7129 or egoodenow@chroniclet.com.

Longtime EC coach and supporter Lou Rotunda dies at age 85

August 15, 2011 in Front Page, Local News by Weol.com

ELYRIA — Lou Rotunda graduated from Elyria High School, worked 44 years at The Chronicle-Telegram, was a lifelong member of St. Mary Church, was heavily involved in CYO, belonged to the Knights of Columbus, the Elyria United Polish Club and the Elyria Senior Fellowship and was both a Moose and an Elk.

Lou Rotunda

Lou Rotunda

While he was certainly proud of each and every organization on that list, his one true love was obvious to anyone who knew him or even just met him: Elyria Catholic High School.

“His whole life was Elyria Catholic,” former EC basketball coach Bob Guinta said.

Rotunda, who served as freshman basketball coach, assistant athletic director, equipment manager, substitute teacher and supporter without peer at Elyria Catholic, died Sunday morning at The Abbewood. He was 85.

In a life of service and dedication to others, one thing is clear: They didn’t call Rotunda “Mr. Elyria Catholic” for nothing.

“His life was sewn into the very fabric that is the school’s mission,” said Elyria Catholic president and longtime friend Andrew Krakowiak. “I never knew anyone who loved Elyria Catholic as much as he did.”

Krakowiak first met Rotunda when Krakowiak was coaching basketball with his brother at Holy Name High School nearly 30 years ago.

“He came down and sat on the bench with me and introduced himself,” Krakowiak said. “He said, ‘I love the way you guys coach your teams.’ … He loved his basketball. He loved to talk basketball until the very end. … He was very sharp, very sharp until the end.”

Despite not being a basketball player himself, Rotunda became EC’s first freshman coach in 1954 and kept the job until 1993, compiling an impressive 419-223 record. He had just four losing seasons in all those years.

He grew in the job, too. Suzanne Camp, a teacher and former coach and assistant AD at EC, remembers when she was hired to coach girls basketball 37 years ago.

“I had no experience whatsoever,” Camp said. “Lou would diagram plays for me. Even though he was coaching the boys, he took time to come to our practices and work with the girls. He was just an outstanding help to me and always was a true friend to everyone. He genuinely cared for the students, and not just the athletes.

“His memory is going to live in the halls of EC forever. The loyalty he had for the school is amazing. He will truly be missed.”

It was also basketball that led former Chronicle sports editor Jerry Rombach to Rotunda when Rombach arrived in town in 1965.

“He was Mr. Basketball,” Rombach said. “One of our editors told me to call Lou Rotunda to get all the background on Elyria Catholic and the area sports.”

Rotunda filled Rombach in over lunch and the two became good friends as well as co-workers. Rotunda was city assistant circulation manager for 20 years at The Chronicle before moving to the composing room.

Rotunda accompanied Rombach and former Chronicle sportswriter Roger Negin to many EC games over the years.

“We had a lot of long talks,” Rombach said. “He’s an institution at Elyria Catholic. He really is. He’s almost a legend. He told me players he coached 30 years ago would send him cards and letters.”

Rotunda didn’t come from a big family and he never married. He is survived by his sister-in-law, Mrs. Sam Rotunda, a niece and a nephew, and several great-nieces.

“He’d send cards to kids when they graduated,” said Guinta, who, like Rotunda, was inducted into the Elyria Sports Hall of Fame. “It was his life.”

“I know the kids liked him,” Guinta added. “He took an interest in the kids. That was his whole life. You didn’t say anything about Elyria Catholic.”

When Rombach began the Pick-It-Line, a longtime Chronicle tradition in which members of the sports department pick the winners of the area high school football games, he included Rotunda. It became a good-natured running joke that Rotunda would never pick against the Panthers.

“EC could be playing Notre Dame or Ohio State and he’d still pick EC,” Guinta said with a laugh. “He didn’t want to bend and give up that loyalty to his school.”

Of course, that loyalty is what set Rotunda apart. Krakowiak said there’s a line in the EC alma mater that makes him think of Rotunda every time he hears it.

Loyalty that never dies.

“I really think he is the epitome of that line,” Krakowiak said. “He was a man of great integrity and loyalty. He was truly a man of God. He will be missed but his presence will always be there.”

Besides the Elyria Sports Hall of Fame (he is a member of the class of 1978), Rotunda was also inducted into the Lorain County Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 1994 and the Elyria High School Distinguished Alumni Hall of Fame in 2000. In 1956 he received the Eagle of the Cross for Youth Work from the Cleveland Diocese and was awarded the Ohio High School Athletic Association State Award in 1999-2000 for exemplary contribution and services.

His contributions to EC are almost impossible to list, but include raising money for the school’s trophy cases and helping design them, helping to design the 3,000-seat Coliseum, making the victory bell and starting the Panther Club. He also attended almost every boys basketball and football game as well as numerous other sports and activities at the school over the years.

Perhaps the contribution he was most proud of was the Lou Rotunda Award he started, which has been given to the best all-around senior male athlete at EC since 1960. The award is based on athletics, academics and extra-curricular activities and is voted on by faculty, staff and students.

“He really did represent all the school stands for,” Krakowiak said.

And even when the first impression Rotunda made wasn’t a great one, it was difficult to stay angry at him. Just ask Mark Reichlin.

Reichlin, one of the owners of Reichlin Roberts Funeral Home and an EC graduate, has a distinct memory of Rotunda.

“He cut me as a freshman basketball player,” Reichlin said.

But that didn’t stop Reichlin and Rotunda from becoming friends. In the past few years, when Rotunda had trouble getting around, it was Reichlin who made sure he got to the events he wanted to attend.

“He’d always laugh, ‘Why are you so nice to me? I cut you.’ ”

Maybe it has something to do with loyalty.

Funeral arrangements were incomplete Sunday and were to be announced today by Reichlin Roberts Funeral Home.

Contact Kevin Aprile at 329-7135 or ctsports@chroniclet.com.

Indians: Rainouts wreaking havoc on Tribe schedule

August 15, 2011 in Local News by Chris Assenheimer

CLEVELAND — Baltimore beat Detroit on Sunday to trim Cleveland’s deficit to 2 1/2 games in the Central Division standings, but the weather sure isn’t doing the Indians any favors these days.

Rain postponed another game at Progressive Field, ruining the series finale with Minnesota and the opportunity for Cleveland to record the three-game sweep of the Twins, while gaining even more ground on the Tigers.

The Indians were at least on the positive side of getting that done, leading the Twins 1-0 on a Shin-Soo Choo single, and with starting pitcher David Huff yet to allow a baserunner (four strikeouts), when rain halted the start of the third inning.

Following a 2:55 delay, the game was postponed.

“The only thing that’s worse (than the rainout) is the amount of games we’re piling up at the toward the end of the season,” said Indians manager Manny Acta. “I know we’re going to have a full house with the September call-ups, and with Grady (Sizemore) back, but that’s still the most disappointing thing to us.”

A host of rainouts at Progressive Field has put a scheduling crunch on the contending Indians, who, provided their regular season finishes in 162 games, will play 45 times over the final 44 days, beginning Tuesday against the White Sox in Chicago.

Cleveland’s schedule is especially brutal at the end of the final month of the season, when the Indians play nine times in seven days before finishing the year with what could be a pivotal three-game series in Detroit.

The nine-game trek begins with a makeup game against Seattle on Sept. 19, followed by the second of the Indians’ three home doubleheaders over the remainder of the season, Sept. 20, to kick off a four-game series against the White Sox.

The postponed game Sunday is expected to be made up as a doubleheader during a four-game series (Sept. 23-25) against the Twins to wrap up the week.

Cleveland’s first of the three doubleheaders is scheduled for Aug. 23 against Seattle.

Other than giving position players some days off, Acta doesn’t plan on any new approach to deal with the tough stretch. With the Indians in a pennant race, he said he would not consider employing a six-man rotation.

“In the situation we’re in, I think we have to have our best guys go as many times as possible,” Acta said.

Huff will remain in the current rotation for at least another start, Saturday against the Tigers in Detroit. Then, the Indians will have to decide between him and Carlos Carrasco, who is on the disabled list with right elbow inflammation and still needs to serve a six-game suspension.

Huff has pitched well in a brief stint this season, going 1-1 with a 0.51 ERA in three starts. He was en route to doing the same again Sunday before the rains came.

“We’ve been very encouraged by the way he’s throwing the ball,” Acta said. “Every one of his pitches are better. It would have been nice to see him continue to pitch (Sunday).”

Though he is pitching well, it’s been a bit of a frustrating big league experience for Huff this year. He has had two starts rained out and was on the losing end of Ervin Santana’s no-hitter for the Angels on July 27.

“It’s one of those things you can’t control,” Huff said. “It (stinks) but, oh, well. There’s nothing you can do about it.”

The Indians’ focus will now shift from rain and scheduling nightmares to staying in the division race on their upcoming six-game road trip that takes them through Chicago and Detroit. The third-place White Sox trail the Indians by 1 1/2 games.

“It’s very important but we can’t forget there’s a month and a half of the season left,” Acta said. “But, it’s extremely important because we’re playing the two teams that are closest to us (in the standings).”

“It’s big,” Huff said. “We’re going to Chicago and Detroit. We need to get some wins there.”

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com. Fan him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.


Indians notes: Duncan down but could return soon

August 15, 2011 in Local News by Chris Assenheimer

CLEVELAND — David Huff was recalled from Triple-A Columbus to start Sunday’s postponed series finale with Minnesota, and as was expected, the left-hander replaced a position player on the roster — outfielder Shelley Duncan.

Duncan, who is hitting .246 with four home runs and 23 RBIs in 43 games, was optioned back to Columbus. He has been up and down between the majors and minors all season, and could be back with Indians again soon.

Outfielder Michael Brantley is in jeopardy of landing on the disabled list thanks to a lingering right wrist injury and Duncan could be recalled before his required 10-day stay in the minors if Brantley is placed on the injured list.

Brantley has been out of the lineup for the past five games, including Sunday’s rainout. He is scheduled to be examined Tuesday when the Indians open a three-game series against the White Sox in Chicago.

Manager Manny Acta said if Brantley was not given clearance Tuesday, it was likely a DL situation.

If Brantley is sidelined, the Indians could choose to promote outfielder Travis Buck, but Duncan is the likely candidate. Buck has already cleared waivers once to return the Indians and would have to do it again.

Kip-nicked

Had the Indians played Sunday, rookie second baseman Jason Kipnis would have missed his second straight game with what the Indians are calling right side soreness.

Acta said Kipnis sustained the injury from “all the diving and running around” in a 13-inning, 3-2 win over the Tigers on Tuesday.

Kipnis wore tape on his side in the clubhouse on Sunday, but was confident he could play after an off-day today.

Losing Kipnis for an extended spell would be a blow to an already inconsistent Cleveland offense. He’s hitting .279 with six home runs and 11 RBIs in 18 games, and has been extremely productive as of late after a slow start to his big league career.

Next up

The Indians are off today, beginning their three-game series against the White Sox at U.S. Cellular Field on Tuesday at 8:10 p.m.

Ubaldo Jimenez (7-9, 4.37 ERA) opens the set for Cleveland, opposing RHP Gavin Floyd (10-10, 4.53), while Fausto Carmona (5-12, 5.12) starts Wednesday (8:10) against LHP Mark Buehrle (10-5, 3.06).

Justin Masterson (9-7, 2.69) starts the series finale Thursday (8:10), while the White Sox counter RHP Phil Humber (8-8, 3.67).

The Indians have lost six of seven games to the White Sox this season, including both at Chicago.

Not in this house

The postponement dashed the Indians’ all-time home run leader Jim Thome’s final chance of the series to hit his career 600th homer in Cleveland, where he broke into the big leagues and played from 1991-2002.

Thome started the first two games and went 0-5 with a pair of walks, hitting the ball out of the infield just once.

Provided he hasn’t accomplished the milestone yet, he will get another opportunity to do it in front of his former hometown fans when the Twins make their final trip to Cleveland on Sept. 23-25.

Thome, who has nine homers in 181 at-bats this season, has 20 in his career against the Indians.

Minor details

Columbus overcame a rough outing for Mitch Talbot (six runs on six hits over two innings) to beat Rochester 11-7 Saturday. Clippers third baseman Jared Goedert went 5-for-5 with a pair of doubles, three runs and two RBIs, while center fielder Tim Fedroff went 3-for-5 with two doubles and five RBIs. … High-A Kinston DH Jeremie Tice went 2-for-5 with his ninth homer, two runs and two RBIs Saturday in a 9-7 victory (13 innings) over Salem.

Roundin’ third

The Indians are batting .266 and averaging 4.86 runs over their last 14 games. Cleveland has recorded 10 or more hits in eight of those games, while hitting homers in 12 of them. … Hall of Famer and former Indians pitcher Gaylord Perry threw out the ceremonial first pitch.

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com. Fan him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.


Body found under overpass

August 14, 2011 in Front Page, Local News by Weol.com

ELYRIA — An Elyria man was found hanged under the Gulf Road/Ohio Turnpike overpass in an apparent suicide.

Deputy Coroner Eric Lockhart said the man was found hanging by his belt from a fence by a motorcyclist who had stopped to get out of the rain around noon today.

Lockhart said the man, who was in his late 40s, will be identified Monday after his relatives have been informed. No suicide note was found, Lockhart said.

Asdrubal Cabrera’s three-run homer gives Indians, Tomlin all the support they need in win over Twins

August 14, 2011 in Local News by Chris Assenheimer

CLEVELAND — The Indians are clicking at the right time. Whether it translates into their first Central Division title since 2007 remains to be seen.

Cleveland secured the series with Minnesota on Saturday night at Progressive Field with a 3-1 victory that gave the Indians their sixth win in nine games.

With a month-plus remaining in the regular season, the Indians, who trail the first-place Tigers by three games in the standings, have begun to pick up steam as a pivotal stretch approaches.

“There are a lot of signs (now) of how we played in April,” said closer Chris Perez, whose team got off to the best start in baseball and owned the majors’ top record over the majority of the first two months of the season. “It was a good recipe. It got us off to a good start.

“This is crunch time. It’s time to get going.”

The Indians got going against the Twins thanks to another quality start from Josh Tomlin, one big hit from All-Star shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera and another suffocating effort from the bullpen.

Tomlin lasted just 613 innings (84 pitches), but he allowed only a run on four hits to improve to 12-5 with a 3.97 ERA in 24 starts. The right-hander has worked at least five innings in each of his 36 career starts, the longest streak in the majors since 1919.

“Tomlin was terrific again,” manager Manny Acta said. “He pitched ahead in the count all night and gave us a great opportunity to win the ballgame.”

“I didn’t feel great but I was able to go out and make pitches when I needed to,” said Tomlin, who didn’t allow a run and just two hits over the first six innings. “I was able to keep hitters off balance.”

Tomlin had not won since July 15, taking no decisions in three outings and a loss in another over the span.

“What counts is how many games the Indians win,” Acta said. “Those guys understand that. They give us an opportunity to win and then they can’t control the rest.”

Despite the Indians putting runners aboard in each inning, Tomlin was backed by just one swing of the bat from Cabrera, who clouted a three-run home run for all of his team’s runs in the third.

Cabrera, who already has more homers this season (20) then he owned in his career before the year began, became just the third Cleveland shortstop to reach the 20-homer plateau, joining Woodie Held (1958-64) and Jhonny Peralta (2003-10) — both players accomplishing the feat three times apiece. Cabrera is four homers shy of tying Peralta for the most by an Indians shortstop over a single season.

“Cabby was our offensive hero today,” Acta said. “He’s done it for us the whole year and he’s going to continue to do it if he stays healthy.”

With a 3-0 lead, two on and one out in the seventh, Acta turned to his bullpen, one the American League’s best, and the relief corps didn’t let him down.

Though Joe Smith allowed the only run credited to Tomlin on a Delmon Young hit, he ended the seventh with limited damage before handing it over to Tony Sipp in the eighth and Perez in the ninth.

Both Sipp and Perez retired the side in order, with Perez ending the game by striking out Jim Thome on three pitches — all called strikes.

“When we have the opportunity to match up, we’re pretty tough,” said Perez, who converted his 25th save in 28 chances. “We’re not easy to hit against. We know if we’re up after five (innings), we’re going to win.”

With two games down, Thome is still stuck at 598 career homers. He went 0-for-2 with a walk in the series opener, and was hitless with a walk in four trips to the plate Saturday.

Now that they have fallen behind the Tigers, the Indians know they have to string together some victories to keep the heat on Detroit.

“We all want to start a streak, obviously,” Tomlin said. “Everybody’s playing their tails off. The effort is there.”

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com. Fan him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.

TODAY

• WHO: Cleveland vs. Minnesota
• TIME: 1:05
• WHERE: Progressive Field
• PITCHERS:Huff (1-1, 0.51 ERA) vs. Slowey (0-0, 4.91)
• TV/RADIO: Channel 3, SportsTime Ohio; WEOL 930-AM, WTAM 1100-AM

Chris Assenheimer: Indians vs. Tigers … who has the edge?

August 14, 2011 in Local News by Chris Assenheimer

Though the White Sox are still in it, it looks as though the Central Division race will be decided by the first-place Tigers and second-place Indians, with three games separating the two in the standings.

The teams have played nine times this season, with the Indians winning six of them, including five-of-six at Progressive Field. They will play nine more times before the season is complete, six in Detroit, including the final three games of the year.

Here’s how Cleveland and Detroit stack up in head-to-head matchups, with statistics through Friday:

FIRST BASE

Matt LaPorta, Cleveland (.239, 10 HRs, 41 RBIs) vs. Miguel Cabrera, Detroit (.318, 22 HRs 72 RBIs)

The Edge: Tigers

The Reason: This one doesn’t even deserve a discussion. Cabrera is one of the game’s most potent offensive weapons, while LaPorta, a highly touted slugger, has shown little of that.

SECOND BASE

Jason Kipnis, Cleveland (.279, 6 HRs, 11 RBIs) vs. Ramon Santiago, Detroit (.235, 1 HR, 11 RBIs)

The Edge: Indians

The Reason: Kipnis has only played in a handful of games but he’s starting to look like a veteran, at least at the plate. Detroit has used a number of players at this position, including veteran Carlos Guillen, who is probably the best the Tigers have to offer there.

SHORTSTOP

Asdrubal Cabrera, Cleveland (.290, 19 HRs, 68 RBIs) vs. Jhonny Peralta, Detroit (.310, 16 HRs, 62 RBIs)

The Edge: Indians

The Reason: This is a tougher call than most would expect. Both players are All-Stars, though Cabrera was voted into the game, while Peralta was a replacement for  injured Derek Jeter. And Cabrera is the much better defender.

THIRD BASE

Lonnie Chisenhall, Cleveland (.240, 3 HRs, 7 RBIs) vs. Wilson Betemit, Detroit (.360, 2 HRs, 10 RBIs)

The Edge: Tigers

The Reason: Detroit’s longtime third baseman Brandon Inge was sent to the minors, with the club recently trading for Betemit. He’s not great, but he’s a veteran that gets the nod over the rookie Chisenhall, who has not been the run producer the Indians had hoped.

CATCHER

Carlos Santana, Cleveland (.238, 18 HRs, 59 RBIs) vs. Alex Avila, Detroit (.290,

13 HRs, 54 RBIs)

The Edge: Tigers

The Reason: This is another close call, with Santana starting to heat up as of late, but Avila is an All-Star and he doesn’t have the defensive liabilities of the Indians’ backstop.

RIGHT FIELD

Shin-Soo Choo, Cleveland (.244, 5 HRs, 28 RBIs) vs. Magglio Ordonez, Detroit (.224,

4 HRs, 22 RBIs)

The Edge: Indians

The Reason: Both players have had ineffective injury-plagued seasons, but Choo looks more poised to finish strong, and he is the younger player.

CENTER FIELD

Kosuke Fukudome, Cleveland (.268, 3 HRs, 18 RBIs) vs. Austin Jackson, Detroit (.244, 5 HRs, 28 RBIs)

The Edge: Tigers

The Reason: Fukudome, who shifted over in the outfield when Choo came off the DL, hasn’t done much since arriving in a trade from the Cubs. Jackson’s offensive numbers aren’t real impressive, but he’s a top-shelf fielder.

LEFT FIELD

Michael Brantley, Cleveland (.270, 7 HRs, 44 RBIs) vs. Brennan Boesch, Detroit (.285, 16 HRs, 54 RBIs)

The Edge: Tigers

The Reason: Brantley has adapted better to the big leagues this season, but Boesch has had the better year and gets the nod here.

DESIGNATED HITTER

Travis Hafner, Cleveland (.293, 10 HRs, 46 RBIs) vs. Victor Martinez, Detroit (.317,

6 HRs, 64 RBIs)

The Edge: Tigers

The Reason: Both players have spent time on the disabled list this season and have been productive when in the lineup. But Martinez is the better hitter, especially now that Hafner doesn’t possess the same power he used to.

STARTING PITCHING

Cleveland (38-42, 4.19 ERA) vs. Detroit (49-40, 4.14 ERA)

The Edge: Indians

The Reason: Even with the addition of frontline starter Ubaldo Jimenez (7-9, 4.37), the Indians don’t have anyone to match Tigers ace Justin Verlander (17-5, 2.35), who is a strong candidate for the American League’s Cy Young award. Still, Cleveland’s rotation is deeper with Justin Masterson (9-7, 2.69), Josh Tomlin (11-5, 4.08) and, when he’s right, Fausto Carmona (5-12, 5.12).

BULLPEN

Cleveland (21-15, 3.35 ERA) vs. Detroit (14-15, 4.37 ERA)

The Edge: Indians

The Reason: Both relief units possess top-shelf closers - Cleveland’s Chris Perez (2-5, 3.38, 24-of-27 in save opportunities) and Detroit’s Jose Valverde (2-3, 2.81, 34-of-34). But the stats say the Indians have one of the AL’s best bullpens, while the Tigers have one of the worst.

MANAGER

Manny Acta, Cleveland (59-57, second place) vs. Jim Leyland, Detroit (63-55, first place)

The Edge: Even

The Reason: Leyland is considered one of the game’s best managers, but Acta is the frontrunner for the AL Manager of the Year award for guiding an Indians team projected to finish fourth by most into contention.

Contact Chris Assenheimer at 329-7136 or cassenheimer@chroniclet.com. Fan him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.