Archive for July, 2005


Tigers at Indians 07/04/05-07/05/05

Game 1 (Final Score 3-9, Indians win)

Johnson faced Elarton in the first half of the day/night doubleheader in Cleveland. While Elarton and the Detroit offense combined to throw zeroes on the board, Johnson gave up some crooked numbers. It started in the first with one out gone and Crisp at bat; He doubled and scored on Hafner’s single (0-1). Hafner made it to second on Johnson’s wild pitch but Broussard struck out, reducing the scoring threat. Belliard hit an infield single but Gerut ended the inning.

Crisp again started a successful inning for the Indians, hitting a one out single. Hafner’s singled sent him all the way around to third and Broussard’s single scored Crisp (0-2). Belliard hit a sac fly that only scored Hafner and Johnson escaped after allowing another single when Hernandez jumped on the first pitch he saw and hit an inning ending groundout (0-3).

Bard brought the pain in the fourth, leading off with a double and scoring on Peralta’s single (0-4). Sizemore singled and Hafner, Johnson’s last batter, brought everyone home with a three run homer (0-7). Creek relieved Johnson and pitched pretty well until Hafner connected again, deep to center this time, in the sixth (0-8).

Both teams scored in the seventh, the Tigers on White’s single (the third in a row) and the Indians on Peralta’s (1-9). The Tigers’ singles all came with no outs used but only one crossed the plate because Rodriguez and Young combined to make three outs. The last Tigers’ gasp was in the top of the ninth when Shelton and White hit back-to-back extra base hits, Shelton for two and White for four (3-9). That was, however, a new line of harmony added to the Tigers’ 2005 Season Symphony I’m dubbing “Too Little Too Late.”

Game 2 (Final Score: 0-6, Indians win)

The Indians tagged Verlander for three early runs and never looked back. Sizemore became Verlander’s first major league victim and Crisp took the first hit of Verlander’s career. While Crisp stole second, Hafner became Verlander’s first career strikeoutee. Martinez’s double was the first extra base hit and Crisp the first earned run allowed by Verlander (0-1). Broussard followed with another double and Peralta hit an RBI single (0-3). Verlander threw his first wild pitch and issued his first and second walk to Gerut and Hernandez respectively before finally completing his first major league inning courtesy of Cora. Oh by the way, it was Verlander’s first career major league appearance today.

The second and third innings were also quite interesting. Monroe hit a one out double and Wilson drew a two out walk in the second but Logan stranded them. Not to be outdone, the Indians’ Sizemore hit a lead off double in the bottom half and was stranded. Inge singled to start the Tigers’ third and was doubled out on Polanco’s grounder so Shelton thought it was the perfect time to hit a double and Ordonez thought he’d groundout to end the inning. Verlander had his first major league fielding error but it came to nil since the Indians weren’t in a threatening position.

The fourth and fifth innings passed unremarkably into history but the Indians started something in the bottom of the sixth. Peralta singled, Gerut walked, Hernandez hit a fly for an out, and Walker replaced Verlander, ending his day. Cora was good for the second out of the inning but Sizemore hit a double that plated Peralta (0-4).

To start the seventh, the Tigers looked like they could claw their way back into the game. Miller replaced Davis on the mound for Cleveland and Infante greeted him with a lead off double. Wilson’s single was followed by Logan’s fielder’s choice, which featured Infante being thrown out at home. Inge used the second out but the Tigers still looked dangerous since Miller helped the cause with a balk, sending Logan over to second and Wilson to third. Alas, Polanco could only hit a hard grounder for the third out. Rodney was called on to put out the bases loaded fire in the bottom half and the game moved to the eighth inning.

The Tigers did jack against Miller’s replacement but Cleveland struck again with the long ball. Crisp beat out an inside-the-park homerun on a ball that Logan couldn’t play cleanly and Hafner crushed Rodney’s full count pitch deep into right field (0-6).

Riske finished the Tigers in the ninth but Detroit again made it interesting. Wilson was ejected when he complained that both strike two and three were off the plate and he wasn’t getting those calls all day. During the verbal exchange, the third base umpire ran down to help out and tripped, falling into Wilson, who thought he was getting tackled. Wilson later insinuated that the umpire was in a hurry to leave and that is why he called a couple of bad pitches strikes. I might have made that last bit up, but I swear I read it some where.

Game 3 (Final Score: 3-2, Tigers win)

The Tigers avoided the sweep in Cleveland by winning a close game, powered by the pitching of Maroth. The Tigers’ new batting order started the game right, two men on with one out and bases loaded with two out in the first inning but couldn’t get anything done. Maroth did his part keeping the Indians scoreless until his hitters gave him a lead.

The Tigers strung together a few hits in the third. Polanco led off with a single, took third on Guillen’s double, and scored on Shelton’s groundout (1-0). Ordonez came up next and he parked the 1-0 pitch in the cheap seats in right and escorted Guillen home (3-0). Maroth threw only six pitches in the bottom half of the inning but one of them Boone hit for a home run to put the home team right there (3-1).

The Tigers and Indians traded 1-2-3 innings or innings with only a single base runner through eight. Westbrook gave way to Cabrera in the sixth and Maroth gave way to German in the seventh, who gave way to Farnsworth in the eighth when the fun started up again. Farnsworth got Sizemore to swing at strike three in a full count but Crisp singled and Martinez walked, giving Broussard runners at the corners and one out. He went the way of Sizemore and so did his buddy Belliard. Percival entered in the ninth to close the game out but being a showman, he decided to give the home side’s fans some hope. Peralta led off with a solo shot but only Hafner was able to get on base the rest of the inning with a walk and Percival squeaked out another one (3-2).











































































































































































































































































































Hitters AB R H RBI BB TB AVG SLG
C Guillen 8 2 5 0 0 6 0.625 0.750
O Infante 3 0 1 0 1 2 0.333 0.667
B Inge 11 0 1 0 0 1 0.091 0.091
N Logan 7 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000
C Monroe 10 0 2 0 0 3 0.200 0.300
M Ordonez 8 1 2 2 0 5 0.250 0.625
P Polanco 8 1 2 0 0 2 0.250 0.250
I Rodriguez 8 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000
C Shelton 12 1 3 1 0 5 0.250 0.417
J Smith 3 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000
R White 7 1 2 3 1 5 0.286 0.714
V Wilson 3 0 1 0 1 1 0.333 0.333
D Young 9 0 0 0 1 0 0.000 0.000
Totals

97

6

19

6

4

30

0.196

0.309

Pitchers IP H R ER BB SO ERA WHIP
D Creek 2.2 1 1 1 1 3 4.09 0.91
K Farnsworth 1 1 0 0 1 3 0.00 2.00
F German 1.1 0 0 0 0 1 0.00 0.00
J Johnson 3.1 11 7 7 0 4 20.32 3.55
M Maroth 6.2 4 1 1 2 4 1.45 0.97
T Percival 1 1 1 1 1 1 9.00 2.00
F Rodney 1.1 2 2 2 0 2 16.36 1.82
C Spurling 1 2 1 0 1 0 0.00 3.00
J Verlander 5.1 7 4 4 3 4 7.06 1.96
J Walker 1.1 3 0 0 1 1 0.00 3.64
Totals 25 32 17 16 10 23 5.76 1.68



Yankees at Tigers 07/01/05-07/03/05

Game 1 (Final Score: 2-10, Tigers win)

Bonderman drew Johnson to start the series and pitched pretty well. He allowed base runners in every inning but two and only two runs. The team’s defense was pretty good; They helped Bonderman out by turning a pair of double plays with runners on early in the inning and the one error didn’t hurt much. Reviewing the game log, a majority of the outs (22 of 27) were recorded with groundouts or strikeouts, including double plays. The furious Yankees rally in the ninth (a double, two walks, and a wild pitch) was calmly handled by Bonderman, who definitely earned his win today.

The teams traded first inning runs before the Tigers broke the game open in the second. A pair of singles and a balk put Sheffield in a perfect position to punish the Tigers but he hit a groundout that scored Jeter from second and advanced Cano to third (1-0). Rodriguez (ARod for the rest of the series) and Matsui ended the inning quietly. Inge’s and Polanco’s back-to-back doubles tied the game up before the rest of the inning was wasted by Guillen, Ordonez, and Rodriguez (IRod for the rest of the series) (1-1). White hit a lead off single and Shelton smacked a two run homer (1-3). Monroe followed with a single, took second on Logan’s successful sacrifice, and third on Johnson’s wild pitch. Inge drew a walk and advanced on Polanco’s sac fly (1-4).

The Tigers added to their lead with liberal use of the long ball, except in the fourth when Logan pretty much killed a good inning with his double play ball after Shelton and Monroe hit a pair of singles to start (1-5). Guillen singled with one away in the fifth and Ordonez had his first home run in the Majors this year (1-7). For the curious, Ordonez is hitting .071 with one homer for $7.2 million in salary this year (Yes, I know he’s been injured).

Polanco trebled Matsui’s solo homer in the top of the sixth with his three run shot in the bottom. With two outs, Logan was hit by a pitch, stole second, and Inge walked. Polanco hit the 1-2 pitch from Proctor-ologist deep into left and put the Tigers way ahead (2-10). The lead off triple and one out walk in the seventh that were erased on Monroe’s double play didn’t much matter as the Tigers took care of business in the opener.

Game 2 (Final score: 8-4, Yankees win)

The Tigers scored a respectable number of runs and still lost because the Yankees made Percival pay with two outs left in the ninth. These things happen to good relievers every now and again against good teams so it is disappointing but not depressing to see this result. What is disappointing is that Womack and Williams combined for the deathblow that totaled four runs and neither is having a year worth remembering. A tip of the hat to Douglass who continues to look like a major league level fifth starter and kept the team in the game.

Douglass and Mussina traded scoreless innings until the fourth when ARod walked on four pitches. Matsui added a single and ARod scooted all the way over to third and scored on Posada’s fielder’s choice hit to short (1-0). Williams added a single but it was in between outs two and three so it didn’t amount to much. Polanco and Guillen led off the bottom of the fourth with two singles and Polanco scored on Ordonez’s double (1-1). After IRod made the first out, Young cleared the bases with his homer before Shelton and Monroe combined to end the inning (1-4).

The Yankees mounted an effective come back that began when ARod reached first with some help from IRod, who dropped strike three and couldn’t make the play. Matsui walked, Posada struck out, Giambi grounded out, and Douglass looked like he was going to be OK. Williams hit a single that plated both runners and squished that thought (3-4). The come back was completed with Rodney on the mound facing Sheffield. After Jeter worked a nine pitch at bat for a weak single and Cano popped out, Sheffield smacked the second pitch Rodney threw him for a double, scoring Jeter (4-4). Rodney and Walker combined to keep the Yankees from taking the lead by striking out ARod and getting Matsui to ground out.

Gordon steamrolled the Tigers in the bottom of the seventh and Farnsworth pitched an exciting eighth. With one out used, he walked Giambi (pinch runner Womack) and Williams followed with a single. Martinez pinch hit for Crosby and hit into a fielder’s choice but the lead runner stayed on. Jeter walked and Cano jumped on the first pitch he saw, sending it to short for the third out. Gordon allowed two base runners on a walk and an error in the bottom of the frame but they didn’t do anything to help.

In the top of the ninth, ARod hit a one out double and scored on Womack’s single (5-4). Matsui popped out and Posada was intentionally walked by Percival to get to Womack. With two men on, Williams hit a three run homer, paving the way to Rivera’s scoreless ninth (8-4).

Game 3 (Final Score: 1-0, Yankees win)

The rubber match went to the Yankees in stomach turning fashion. Wang was effective but not even close to dominant; I’m not sure how in the span of two games you can go from kicking around a great pitcher to being kicked around by a rookie. This game is a story of missed opportunities and another example of Robertson catching the shaft from the Detroit offense. He reminds me of a friend that goes out and has women all over him every weekend but always ends up going home with a drag queen instead (Not that there’s anything wrong with that).

In the first, Inge and Polanco led off the game with a single and a hit by pitch and Guillen, Ordonez, and IRod couldn’t get them home. Polanco hit a two out triple in the fifth and Wang convinced Guillen to strand him there. Ordonez worked a walk during a ten pitch at bat to start the sixth and IRod followed him on base, getting hit by another pitch. Young struck out and Shelton hit into a double play and no one came home. Those were the golden opportunities the Tigers wasted with Wang pitching.

Meanwhile Robertson had only three nasty situations in his nine innings of work. He allowed two singles to start the third before getting Flaherty and Jeter to end the inning. In the fourth, Cano scored the game’s only run on Sheffield’s single after his lead off double (1-0). ARod struck out and IRod gunned down Sheffield on his steal attempt so Williams’ and Matsui’s back-to-back singles were squandered when Sierra used up the last out of the inning. Giambi walked to start the fifth and Flaherty botched his bunt, letting the Tigers erase the lead runner. Jeter followed with a single but Cano and Sheffield wasted both runners.

IRod took Rivera deep to left in the bottom of the ninth- like against the White Sox -but not deep enough. His lead off extra base hit was diddled away once again by the Tigers batters and the Yankees took the series.









































































































































































































































Hitters AB R H RBI BB TB AVG SLG
C Guillen 12 2 3 0 0 3 0.250 0.250
B Inge 11 2 3 0 2 4 0.273 0.364
N Logan 8 1 1 0 0 1 0.125 0.125
C Monroe 12 1 3 0 0 3 0.250 0.250
M Ordonez 10 2 2 3 2 6 0.200 0.600
P Polanco 10 2 4 5 0 10 0.400 1.000
I Rodriguez 11 0 3 0 0 6 0.273 0.545
C Shelton 11 2 4 2 1 7 0.364 0.636
R White 4 1 1 0 0 1 0.250 0.250
D Young 8 1 1 3 0 4 0.125 0.500
Totals

97

14

25

13

5

45

0.258

0.464

Pitchers IP H R ER BB SO ERA WHIP
J Bonderman 9 8 2 2 2 5 2.00 1.11
S Douglass 6 7 3 1 2 6 1.50 1.50
K Farnsworth 1 1 0 0 2 0 0.00 3.00
T Percival 1 3 4 4 1 0 36.00 4.00
N Robertson 9 9 1 1 1 4 1.00 1.11
F Rodney 0.2 2 1 1 0 1 45.00 10.00
J Walker 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0.00
Totals 27 30 11 9 8 16 3.00 1.41



Tigers Destroy Browns, Win Eighth Straight

July 5, 1935 Tigers 16, Browns 1 (44-29)

After putting 29 runs on the board in a doubleheader against the last place Browns a little over a week ago, the Tigers continued to beat up on St. Louis’ pitching in a new series at Navin Field. Hank Greenberg had one of his best games of the season as he was perfect a four for four. He drove in four, scored four and two of his four hits were homeruns.

Pete Fox and Goose Goslin also had big games. Fox went three for five with two doubles and three runs scored. Goslin went three for four with a triple, three RBIs and he scored four times.

Vic Sorrell kept the Browns in check for the entire game. The Browns scored a single run in the third, but that was the only run they’d get. Sorrell allowed only seven hits and he struck out three.

The win was the Tigers eighth in a row.



Birthdates and Verlander

Justin Verlander made his MLB debut last night in the second half of the Tiger’s doubleheader with the Indians. One start isn’t a good sample size, but he took the loss. He didn’t get shelled, but I’d hardly say he pitched well. I’m still not sure what Dombrowski and Tram were trying to accomplish with this, but I’m hoping Verlander quietly gets sent back to Erie and continues where he continues his great season, along with a more normal MLB progression.

Today is my 34th birthday. I’m not sure if that’s old by blogging standards anymore because there’s hundreds of baseball blogs out there now. Unfortunately my birthday won’t be nearly as fun as the long weekend since I have to work. So, it will come and go with little fanfare.



Tigers Take Two Against Indians, Win Seventh Straight

July 4, 1935 Tigers 6, Indians 5 (42-29)

Doubleheaders are rough on a team. Doubleheaders where the first game goes into extra frames is even tougher, and that’s exactly what happened to the Tigers on Independence Day. After trailing 5-4, the Tigers scored a run in the top of the ninth to tie it, and they scored a run in the eleventh to win their sixth straight.

Mickey Cochrane went four for five with a homer and three runs scored while Goose Goslin went two for six with a couple of RBIs. Billy Rogell also had two hits.

General Crowder started the game and went 5 1/3 as he gave up the five runs. Elden Auker, Chief Hogsett and Tommy Bridges then combined to hold the Indians scoreless over the final five innings of the game. Hogsett walked away with the win while Tommy Bridges earned his first and only save of the season.

July 4, 1935 Tigers 10, Indians 4 (43-30)

Not even a doubleheader could slow down the Tigers bats as they won their seventh straight game. The Tigers ran up the score with ten runs on sixteen hits.

Goose Goslin was the MVP of the doubleheader as he had another great game. He went three for five with three RBis. Charlie Gehringer homered and relief pitcher Hogsett even contributed with a two run homer.

Schoolboy Rowe walked away with another win although the boxscore I have shows him only throwing 3 1/3 innings.



Back in Town

The long weekend trip was a nice one although travelling with a one year old always makes things interesting. We got down to the Great American Ballpark in time to see the ninth inning of the first game (Reds lost), then stuck around for most of the second game (Reds won). The ballpark is a really nice one. We were sitting on the first base line about half way up the outfield. I got to see Adam Dunn and Ken Griffey both hit homers, and my son was having a blast.

Yesterday we went to King’s Island and once again, Devin did really well. He even stopped trying to pull his ear plugs out of his ears and was able to have some fun in the water park. Probably the funniest thing he did was when we put him into a kids ride (cars that go around in circles). He was having such a blast he was screaming and waving to everyone as he went around.

The drive home was uneventful, which was definitely a good thing. Now it’s back to reality. With quarter end at work, another Business of Baseball Report due for Wednesday over at the Hardball Times, and the fact that once again I’m behind on both the 1935 Tiger Diary and 1975 Reds Diary, I have to put my nose to the grindstone and get some work done this week.



Tigers Come From Behind to Win Fifth Straight

July 3, 1935 Tigers 11, Indians 7 (41-29)

The Tigers continued to roll as they won their fifth straight game (and eight of their last nine). Vic Sorrell couldn’t even get through the second inning as the Tribe jumped out in front 3-0. The Tigers stormed back as rookie lefthander Joe Sullivan righted the ship.

Backup catcher Ray Hayworth had a big game as he went four for five with five RBIs. Billy Rogell went two for four, but he scored four runs while Hank Greenberg went two for five with an RBI.



Tommy Bridges Bounces Back, Tigers Win Fortieth

July 2, 1935 Tigers 8, Indians 3 (40-29)

The Tigers won their 40th game of the season as Tommy Bridges bounced back from a rough outing the previous week. Bridges held the Indians to only three runs on seven hits while striking out three.

Charlie Gehringer had the hot bat as he went four for five with a homerun, three RBIS and two runs. Pete Fox continued to hit the ball extemely well as he went two for five with two runs.



Elden Auker Pitches Tigers to Third Straight Win

July 1, 1935 Tigers 4, Indians 1 (39-29)

Elden Auker threw a gem as the Tigers walked away with their third straight win. He went the distance and only gave up one run on five hits.

Pete Fox had his third straight banner game. He went two for four, scored twice and stole two bases. Marv Owen went two for four with two RBIs and a triple.



White Sox at Tigers 06/28/05-06/30/05

Game 1 (Final Score: 1-2, White Sox win)

In close games the missed opportunities really jump out at you since you feel like they would have made the difference. There’s no guarantee that the two on, one out spot in the bottom of the first would have made the difference. The one that stings is the wasted lead off triple in the bottom of the ninth that WOULD have give the Tigers more time to tack up some more runs on the Sox. Young actually had a pretty good at bat from what I caught of it except for the end of it when he popped up into the troposphere. Monroe and Shelton showed their youth it looks since they both swung at the second pitch they saw and beat it into the ground.

The Tigers struck first in the second, getting a run on Shelton’s single. With one out, Monroe singled and took third on Widger’s throw when he was stealing second. Shelton’s single scored him from third and the rest of the inning went out quietly (1-0).

The Sox tied the game in the fifth and took the lead an inning later. Uribe’s one out triple became the first run on Podsednik’s sac fly (1-1). Robertson escaped the single and walk he gave up to the next two batter when he convinced Konerko to swing at a really tempting pitch. With one out gone in the sixth on a 2-2 count with Dye, Robertson hung an inside fastball that was sent post haste into the outfield for the winning run (2-1).

Game 2 (Final Score: 3-4, White Sox win)

I’m sorry I missed watching more of this game; As it stands, the six innings I watched was less than half the game. Johnson was effective but not as good as he’s been. Sidebar: Could someone please tell me who defined a “quality start” to be what it is? (Back to the usual blather.) He staked the Sox to an early lead with men on second and third after a pair of singles by Everett and Pierzinski and a bad throw in from the outfield. Crede’s one out single plated Everett and Johnson’s wild pitch did the same for Pierzynski (2-0). In the bottom half Shelton smacked a two run homer after Monroe’s one out single (2-2).

Konerko’s third inning job put the Sox up and the game stayed pretty even until the eighth (3-2). Johnson’s second wild pitch went for naught just like both teams’ incidental base runners. The game was tied after a one out triple by Shelton on White’s pinch hit sac fly (3-3). The Tigers loaded the bases on Politte’s ineffective pitching with two singles from Polanco and Guillen and Young’s walk. Rodriguez struck out on three pitches to make the first out and Monroe hit the 1-2 pitch he saw into the ground for two more.

Vizcaino almost let the Tigers take the game in the ninth with two out singles from Inge and Logan before Polanco grounded out to end the threat. German returned the favor in the ninth before escaping the deadly Thomas with a foul out.

The game looked like it was over in the bottom of the eleventh or top of the twelfth but either was not to be. Vizcaino and Takatsu gave up a pair of runners but the Tigers couldn’t convert and Rodney gave up a pair of one out base runners before finally escaping only to be greeted with Thomas’ homer on a 2-0 count in the top of the thirteenth (4-3). The Tigers came storming back, loading the bases on two singles and an intentional walk, but Takatsu mowed down Inge and Polanco for the Sox victory.

Game 3 (Final Score: 6-1, White Sox win)

After last night’s excellent game and the long rain delay today, the Tigers laid this piece of crap on us. Yes, I am bitter. This was a great game through five innings and then it just fell apart and the team is watching .500 and respectability get further away. If the team is below .500 at the end of this year there will continue to be a substantial Tiger premium to sign free agents and some of the best will likely ignore the money entirely. Illitch looks like he’ll spend but I don’t want to have to overpay a pitcher like Jason Johnson to hold up the bottom end of the rotation for three years since that is embarrassing. Yes, there is young help in the minors but we’re one or two freak injuries away from no future.

The Tigers had a potent offense for two innings. Garcia allowed runners on second and third with one out after he threw one away and we watched White and Monroe waste this opportunity. Gomez led off the second with and single and Infante joined him on base after an error by Ozuna. Wilson plated Gomez and Logan used the first out to sacrifice the runners over to second and third (0-1). Inge and Polanco ended the last serious scoring threat and this inning quietly for the Tigers.

Crede of all people scored the first three runs when he belted Maroth’s pitch he saw in the fifth into the stands (1-3). Maroth allowed his second homer of the day when Everett plated two more with his effort in the sixth (5-1). Spurling relieved Maroth in the seventh and Dye finished the scoring with his RBI double (6-1). A lead off double was all the rally the Tigers could sustain in the ninth and the Sox’s sweep passed into the history books.
































































































































































































































































































Hitters AB R H RBI BB TB AVG SLG
A Gomez 6 1 1 0 0 1 0.167 0.167
C Guillen 10 0 2 0 0 2 0.200 0.200
O Infante 4 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000
B Inge 15 0 2 0 0 2 0.133 0.133
N Logan 9 0 3 0 2 3 0.333 0.333
C Monroe 14 2 4 0 0 4 0.286 0.286
P Polanco 14 0 3 0 1 4 0.214 0.286
I Rodriguez 10 0 3 0 0 6 0.300 0.600
C Shelton 14 2 6 3 0 11 0.429 0.786
J Smith 1 0 1 0 0 1 1.000 1.000
R White 8 0 3 1 0 4 0.375 0.500
V Wilson 3 0 1 1 0 1 0.333 0.333
D Young 9 0 0 0 1 0 0.000 0.000
Totals

117

5

29

5

4

39

0.248

0.333

Pitchers IP H R ER BB SO ERA WHIP
K Farnsworth 2 0 0 0 0 2 0.00 0.00
F German 2 2 0 0 0 0 0.00 1.00
J Johnson 7 7 3 3 0 2 3.86 1.00
M Maroth 7 6 5 5 2 1 6.43 1.14
T Percival 1 0 0 0 1 1 0.00 1.00
N Robertson 7 6 2 2 2 9 2.57 1.14
F Rodney 2 3 1 1 0 1 4.50 1.50
C Spurling 2 2 1 1 2 0 4.50 2.00
J Walker 1 1 0 0 0 1 0.00 1.00
Totals 31 27 12 12 7 17 3.48 1.10



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