Banner Graphic, Volume 19, Number 215, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 May 1989 — Page 9
Pirates’ Kramer wins 1-hitter
By The Associated Press Randy Kramer had a no-hitter going until Ron Oester’s two-out double in the eighth inning, and the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Cincinnati Reds 5-0 Tuesday night. “I had the obvious response. I wondered what would have happened what if, what if,” said Kramer, who was trying to become the 14th rookie to pitch a no-hitter. KRAMER’S BID was kept alive by a controversial scoring decision in the seventh inning. Oester, batting just .175, spoiled it for good by slicing a liner 10 feet inside the left-field line. . In other games, San Francisco trounced Philadelphia 13-5, Houston beat St. Louis 8-7 in 11
Toronto starting to win By The Associated Press For six weeks under Manager Jimy Williams, the Toronto Blue Jays did hardly anything right. The Blue Jays couldn’t get the big hit, failed to protect leads and lost 24 of their first 36 games. BUT WILLIAMS WAS fired Monday, and in two games under interim Manager Cito Gaston, the Blue Jays have gotten the big hits and even a save. Lloyd Moseby homered to snap an eighth-inning tie and Toronto rallied from a six-run deficit to beat Cleveland 7-6 Tuesday night for its second straight victory under Gaston. Mariners 6, Brewers 5 Ken Griffey Jr. snapped an eighth-inning tie with a pinch-hit two-run homer as Seattle rallied from a four-run deficit to edge Milwaukee at the Kingdome. Darnell Coles singled with one out in the eighth and Griffey, making his first major league pinch-hitting appearance, hit Bill Wegman’s 1-0 pitch over the rightfield wall for his fourth homer of the season. Yankees 3, Athletics 2 Clay Parker pitched seven-plus innings for his first major league victory and Steve Balboni snapped an eighth-inning tie with a two-out, two-run homer as New York beat Oakland at the Coliseum. Curt Young, 1-4, gave up a twoout single to Jesse Barfield before Balboni hit a 3-0 pitch just over the 330-foot marker down the left-field line for his fourth home run. Angels 7, Red Sox 2 Johnny Ray drove in four runs and Kirk McCaskill allowed two runs in eight-plus innings as California beat visiting Boston for its fourth straight victory. McCaskill, 5-1, has a 1.06 earned run average, tops among starters in the American League. Ray, Claudell Washington and Jack Howell each had three hits for the Angels. Ray had a two-run homer, an RBI double and a sacrifice fly. Royals 8, Twins 1 Kurt Stillwell hit a pair of tworun homers and Mark Gubicza allowed five hits in eight innings as Kansas City routed Minnesota in the Metrodome for its fifth straight victory. Bo Jackson homered, doubled and scored three runs for the Royals. Gubicza, 3-3, struck out three and walked one. Tigers 9, White Sox 7 Keith Moreland’s three-run double keyed a six-run fourth inning as Detroit beat Chicago at Tiger Stadium despite five RBIs by Harold Baines. Frank Williams, 2-2, who took over in the fifth for Mike Trujillo, got the victory with 3 1-3 innings. Chicago starter Melido Perez, 2-4, gave up six runs and five hits in 3 2-3 innings. Indians take two from Louisville By The Associated Press Indianapolis increased its lead over second-place Nashville to 7Vi games in the American Association’s Eastern Division with a doubleheader sweep of Louisville. Mike Blowers had an RBI triple in the 4-2 nightcap and an RBI single in the 2-1 opener Tuesday night in Indianapolis. Indianapolis upped its record to 27-11, while Louisville dropped to 18-23.
innings, San Diego defeated Montreal 5-2 and Chicago held off Adanta 4-3. Los Angeles and New York were rained out and rescheduled for Thursday. Herm Winningham opened the seventh with a hard grounder that bounced off first baseman Sid Bream’s glove and rolled away. Official scorer Glen Sample ruled it an error after watching the replay. Kramer, 1-1, struck out three and walked one. Rick Mahler, 54, lost for the first time in five decisions. Giants 13, Phillies 5 Atlee Hammaker won his first start of the season and drove in three runs, leading San Francisco on a rout in Philadelphia. The
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Giants’ 13 runs and 18 hits were season highs as they ended a threegame losing streak. Astros 8, Cardinals 7 Rafael Ramirez hit a sacrifice fly in the 11th inning and Bill Doran drove in five runs, helping Houston beat visiting St. Louis. The Astros loaded the bases with none out in the 11th on a leadoff triple by Craig Biggio and two intentional walks. Ramirez flied to center field and Biggio beat Willie McGee’s throw home. Dan Schatzeder, 1-0, pitched three scoreless innings. Cris Carpenter, 1-3, took the loss. Cubs 4, Braves 3 Ryne Sandberg’s two-run triple highlighted a strange first inning
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and sent Chicago over Atlanta at Wrigley Field. The Cubs scored four times in the first inning against Tom Glavine, 5-1. They opened with four straight hits and Glavine then left the game with a sprained left ankle, which he hurt covering first base. Scott Sanderson, 4-2, gave up two runs on four hits in six innings. Padres 5, Expos 2 Jack Clark hit a two-run homer and a run-scoring single as San Diego won in Montreal. Clark connected on a 3-0 pitch from Brian Holman, 1-1, for his sixth home run and a 4-1 lead in the fifth inning.
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Pirate fans bashing GM
PITTSBURGH (AP) With the Pirates in last place and not much else doing in sports, Pittsburgh fans have found another springtime activity: bashing Larry Doughty. Eight months into his tenure as general manager of the baseball team, Doughty is catching heat in the Steel City for some questionable trades, the Pirates’ return to the cellar and plunging attendance. “Larry’s taking some unfair criticism,” Manager Jim Leyland said. “He’s made some good trades, but you don’t hear anything about those. All you hear is we should cash in the season. ... and we’ve got more
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May 17,1989 THE BANNERGRAPHIC
than 100 games left.” To many, Doughty isn’t the shrewd wheeler-dealer the man he replaced was popular Syd Thrift resuscitated the franchise only to be fired last October. But the Pirates’ drop from second place last season to the National League East basement this season is more a result of injuries to front-liners Andy Van Slyke, Mike LaValliere, Sid Bream and Jim Gott than any of Doughty’s deals. That, however, hasn’t stopped Pirates’ fans from painting a big target on the broad back of the former Cincinnati Reds’ scouting director.
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