Sox rained out at KC, now 4 1/2 games behind Twins who beat Angels

KANSAS CITY—-The White Sox and Royals series opener at Kaufman stadium was postponed due to rain Friday night and will be now played as part of a twi-night double header Saturday evening.   Umpire Joe West has already cost the White Sox fines this season, but on Friday night the feeling was that West – who was the crew chief for the start of the series with the Royals – may have cost them even more this time around.Despite bad weather in the Kansas City area projected throughout the evening, it was West’s decision to start the game between the Sox and Royals. A game that lasted a total of five hitters before it was first delayed, and then eventually postponed.That left the Sox angry, as well as scrambling with how to handle Saturday’s traditional double-header, which will start at 6:10 p.m. Because of the exclusive TV rights FOX has a day-night doubleheader was ruled out.How it affected the Sox specifically? Well, Edwin Jackson, who was arguably the hottest starting pitcher the Sox had going, threw seven pitches, on top of the usual pre-game warm-up, so that basically took him out of the equation for coming back Saturday and pitching. The Sox announced that Freddy Garcia would start Game 1, but they were scrambling to find a Game 2 starter. It will either be a roster move or a bullpen game, with Tony Pena the likely candidate to start. Either way, it makes Jackson a non-factor for almost a week and a half from when he pitched last until when he takes the mound again, and will put a strain on a bullpen that already has question marks with how much overtime they’ve put in as of late. The real kicker? After starting Game 1 at 6:10 and then Game 2 30 minutes after Game 1 ends, the Sox have to comeback on Sunday morning for a 1:10 p.m. first-pitch against Zack Greinke.Thanks to the Minnesota Twins winning a laugher over an Angels team that looks like its ready for the offseason, the Sox will play the three-game marathon starting the evening 4 ½ games back.Friday’s decision making was poor at best. For conspiracy theorists it could go even a step further. It was West that was responsible for the Mark Buehrle “balk game’’ back on May 26 in Cleveland, when Buehrle was called for a balk by West, it was argued by Guillen, who was then tossed. An inning later, West called Buehrle for a second balk, leading to Buehrle’s ejection.Both Guillen and Buehrle made it very clear how they felt about West afterward on that day.

“Because he’s a f—ing a—hole, that’s what he is,’’ Guillen said of West. “I just went out to ask him … I wasn’t asking about the balk because you’re not allowed, anytime you go out there to ask about balk or whatever. The thing I went out to ask him about was why he was embarrassing Buehrle. I’m not going out to argue about the balk because the rule, but I went out to ask him why he’s embarrassing Buehrle and he give me one of this [dismissing him with his hands]. When you’re a professional and you have to respect the managers, the way we’re supposed to respect the umpires, they are supposed to respect back. … sometimes he thinks f—ing people pay to watch him f—ing umpire. He’s the type of guy that wants to control the game, it’s good for the game, and to me one of the best umpires in the game, no doubt. But in the meanwhile, those years are on his shoulders and kind of heavy and showing people who he is.’’

Buehrle fired off this gem: “I did the same move the toss right before that and [West] didn’t call a balk on it. I think he’s too worried about promoting his [Country Music] CD and I think he likes seeing his name in the papers a little bit too much instead of worrying about the rules.’’

Both Buehrle and Guillen were fined, as was West.No wonder Friday was a head-scratcher.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Saturday night, Philip Humber will make his first big league start of the season for the Royals in the opener against Freddy Garcia. Bryan Bullington goes in the second game for Kansas City, while the White Sox are undecided.The teams played for 9 minutes Friday night before heavy storms hit Kauffman Stadium. Sean O’Sullivan retired the White Sox in order in the first. After Gregor Blanco walked to lead off the bottom of the inning, the count was 1-1 with Jason Kendall at the plate when the tarp was placed on the field.After waiting 91 minutes with no let up in the rain, West postponed the game.The Sox trail first-place Minnesota by 4½ games in the AL Central and comes to Kansas City after losing two of three to the Twins. “When you go there [Minnesota] and play the way we did and then you say, ‘Wow, we’re going to Kansas City,’ it’s the opposite,” White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. “People thought we were going to kick Baltimore’s butt. Very good surprise — we lost the series. We go to Detroit — we lost the series.We better bring our best game here, because it could be a very disappointing weekend. We’d better be prepared to fight. We better be prepared to win this weekend. It’s not going to be easy.”

Marmol blows lead in ninth, Lee 0-4 in Braves debut

 
Derrek Lee struggled in his first game with the Atlanta Braves and still had a good time.This was exactly what the big first baseman expected when he joined the NL East leaders.Rick Ankiel hit a bases-loaded triple off a wild Carlos Marmol with two out in the ninth inning, lifting Lee and the Braves to a 5-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs on Friday.

“You can see the difference with a winning team,” said Lee, who was dealt to Atlanta on Wednesday after nearly seven seasons with the Cubs. “When you’re playing well, you have the confidence.”

Marmol entered with a 3-2 lead and walked three of the first four batters he faced. After Melky Cabrera struck out, Ankiel lined a 2-2 pitch into the right-field corner.Atlanta leads the majors with 22 wins in its final at-bat and Ankiel, who arrived last month in a trade with Kansas City, was happy to finally do the honors. He entered the game with only three RBI since joining the team.Lee received a standing ovation before his first at-bat and went 0 for 4. He struck out, flied out and lined out against best buddy Ryan Dempster before striking out against Marmol for the first out of the ninth.Dempster stepped off the mound in the first inning so Lee could enjoy the applause. He waved his helmet to the crowd before flying out on the first pitch, stranding a runner at third.”I was happy to hear the crowd give him the ovation he deserved,” Dempster said. “I thought I respected him a lot, and then you really realize the respect you have for a guy like that. I’m excited for him. He’s going to a first-place team, playing with a great bunch of guys for a great manager. And he’s got a chance to go to the playoffs and win a World Series.”

The Cubs lost their eighth straight home game — their longest skid in four years — and fifth consecutive overall.

“A tough stretch,” said Dempster, who pitched eight strong innings but was denied his fourth straight victory. “Sometimes you find ways to lose instead of finding ways to win.”

Marmol (2-3) walked Martin Prado, Brian McCann and Alex Gonzalez before Ankiel’s hit. It was his fifth blown save in 26 chances.

“You just can’t walk people with a lead,” Lou Piniella said. “We walk three of them, and that’s what cost us the ballgame.”

Billy Wagner retired three straight hitters after Darwin Barney’s leadoff single in the Chicago ninth, earning his 30th save and No. 415 for his career. He struck out two to move into a tie with Jesse Orosco for the most Ks by a left-handed reliever with 1,169.Ankiel also made a nice catch in center field to rob Starlin Castro in the first and later threw out Koyie Hill trying to stretch a single into a double.Dempster allowed two runs and four hits, retiring the last nine batters he faced. He is 3-0 with a 1.65 ERA in four starts this month.Peter Moylan (5-2) pitched a perfect eighth in relief of Jair Jurrjens, who gave up three runs and nine hits in seven innings for Atlanta.Hill singled in a run in the second, but Atlanta tied it in the third on Omar Infante’s home run and grabbed a 2-1 lead on Gonzalez’s RBI double in the fourth — the final hit allowed by Dempster.Aramis Ramirez homered in the bottom half for the Cubs and doubled in Marlon Byrd in the sixth. Ramirez has 12 homers and 33 RBI in his last 37 games after failing to produce in the first half of the season.

NOTES—Tyler Colvin will play first base for the first time during next week’s series at Washington, Piniella said. The Cubs want to see if Colvin, who last played the position as a college sophomore, is a legitimate option at first for next season. Piniella said he wanted Colvin’s first games there to come on the road, away from the Chicago spotlight….The Miller Lite sign located on a rooftop past right field usually features a statement that taunts the opposition. Friday, though, it paid tribute to Cox, who is retiring after the season: “BRAVO BOBBY! CHEERS TO 29 YEARS!”

Sky lose home finale to Sun

Chicago Sky

ROSEMONT—Renee Montgomery scored 20 points and the Connecticut Sun held off the Sky 78-71 Friday night.The win was the second straight for the Sun (17-16) who will miss the playoffs for the second straight year. “I don’t care if the game isn’t going to get us to the playoffs, the game isn’t going to do anything, but it’s still about to pride,” Montgomery said. “We are out there, people are coming to see you play and you need to perform.”  Epiphanny Prince scored 19 points for the Sky (14-19), who were eliminated last week.Connecticut’s 66-55 lead dwindled to one point midway through the fourth quarter, but consecutive buckets from Tan White, Asjha Jones and Tina Charles provided breathing room. Jones finished with 16 points for the Sun, who missed the WNBA playoffs for the second straight year, established control in the third quarter with an 18-2 run that erased a seven-point Sky halftime lead. “We gave up an 8-0 run to start the quarter,” Chicago coach Steven Key said. “It’s something that has been a negative thing for all us all season. We work hard to get a lead and then we give something back as a gift. We can’t do that.”

Sox get finale 11-0 from Twins behind Buehrle,Konerko. Now four games out

  
MINNEAPOLIS—Just when the Minnesota Twins really looked to be grabbing hold of the AL Central division, Paul Konerko, Mark Buehrle and the White Sox delivered an emphatic message: This race is far from over.Well mabey.Konerko had five hits and four RBI and Buehrle pitched seven shutout innings to help the White Sox slow surging Minnesota with an 11-0 romp on Thursday night.Buehrle (12-9) allowed five hits and struck out four. Konerko hit his 31st home run and had a double and three singles among the 21 hits to help the Sox avoid a sweep and shave the Twins’ lead to four games in the AL Central.Carl Pavano (15-8) set a career high and tied a club record with 15 hits allowed. He gave up seven runs in six innings. The Twins lost at sold-out Target Field for the first time in 10 games and missed a chance to take a six-game lead in the division.”We expect it to be all the way down to the end,” Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said of the race. “We’ll attack it as is.” Mark Teahen and Alexei Ramirez each had three hits and two RBI for the White Sox. Ramirez’s two-run homer in the eighth off Glen Perkins made it 11-0.In the first two games of the series, the Twins rallied in the late innings to win. With Buehrle dealing and the Sox slugging, Minnesota had no chance in this one.Buehrle allowed just three baserunners past first base all night long, an encouraging sign for a guy who was 1-4 with a 6.69 ERA in his last six starts against the Twins.The fast-working lefty wasn’t the only White Sox player who has struggled against the Twins. The Sox lost 10 of the first 14 meetings in the season series and there was talk that the Twins held some kind of mental edge that could prove too much to overcome in the final six weeks of the season.But the Sox brushed that aside in a big way on Thursday night.Pavano entered the game hoping to join CC Sabathia as the only two 16-game winners in the AL. But as great as he has been all year for the Twins, there were signs that a rougher start was coming.The mustachioed righty allowed 132 baserunners in 125 innings before the All-Star break, but the hits were starting to come in bunches recently. Pavano has allowed 48 baserunners in his last 25 1/3 innings pitched.He was able to pitch out of jams effectively in his previous four outings, winning three of them.No such luck this time around. The White Sox jumped on Pavano early, getting two runs and four hits, including an RBI single by Teahen to take a 2-0 lead in the first.Teahen added an RBI-triple in the third and A.J. Pierzynski followed with a double off the wall in right-center to make it 4-0.Konerko led off the fifth with a solo shot, essentially putting the game out of reach for a Twins offense iced by Buehrle.

NOTES—Twins SS Nick Punto left the game in the fifth inning after straining his left hamstring on a slide into second base. It’s the same injury that landed him on the DL earlier this month. Gardenhire said Punto will be examined by team doctors on Friday….J.J. Putz left the game in the eighth inning with right knee inflammation. He is listed as day-to-day…..Buehrle got some help on defense, too, getting a great diving stab from ageless 3B Omar Vizquel to save a run.

Cubs send D.Lee to Braves, lose to Padres again.

 

mlb story thumbnail 

DERRICK LEE IS LATEST CUB TO LEAVE IN CURRENT HO– USE CLEANING.

 

The Cubs sent a parade of rookies to the mound during another loss at Wrigley Field, then said goodbye to a popular former All-Star.There were no such problems for the San Diego Padres, who just keep following the same formula to more victories.Matt Stairs, taking advantage of a rare outfield start, hit a two-run double and Adrian Gonzalez homered, powering San Diego to a 5-1 victory over the Northsiders on Wednesday.The reeling Cubs announced after the game that they had traded Derrek Lee to the Atlanta Braves for three minor leaguers. The big first baseman was still at the cozy ballpark when the deal went down, watching the Padres add another win to the NL’s best record.Clayton Richard allowed one run and seven hits in 6 2/3 innings for the Padres, who have outscored opponents 53-20 while winning nine of their last 10 games. San Diego (72-47) is 25 games over .500 for the first time since its pennant-winning 1998 season.The pathetic Cubs (50-71) — whose season-opening payroll was more than $100 million greater than that of the Padres — lost their sixth straight home game and are 4-17 overall since July 27.Lee arrived in Chicago with great fanfare in 2004, joining a club that lost to Florida in the NL championship series. But the Cubs didn’t make the playoffs in ’04, and the division-winning teams of 2007 and 2008 went a combined 0-6 in the playoffs.After joining Ted Lilly, Ryan Theriot and Mike Fontenot as recently traded Cubs, Lee was asked if the culture of losing — 102 title-free years — has contributed to the failure.

   

“I think so. Having to hear about losing kind of puts you in a negative environment,” Lee said. “I don’t think that’s conducive to winning. I think you want a little more positive energy going on.But I also think everyone understands that when they come here. That’s what you’re going to hear until the team wins. Honestly, it’s one of the enticing things. Everyone wants to come here and be on that team that finally breaks the so-called curse.” 

  

One of baseball’s top pinch hitters, Stairs,a Cub in 2001, was making his 12th start for the Padres — his 12th team in 18 seasons. He didn’t seem at all rusty when he faced Casey Coleman in the first inning with the bases loaded, doubling off the top of the left-field wall to give Richard all the support he would need.Long considered a defensive liability, Stairs also made a run-saving catch in left field in the second inning.Gonzalez hit a solo drive in the third for his 23rd homer and fifth in his last six games at Wrigley. Gonzalez, who also singled and walked three times, has a career .329 average in Wrigley.Gonzalez scored for the third time on Andrew Cashner’s eighth-inning wild pitch and Chase Headley added a sacrifice fly in the ninth.Coleman (0-1) allowed three runs and six hits over 4 1/3 innings in his first start for the Cubs. The right-hander was followed by five more rookies, setting a single-game franchise record on the mound.Alfonso Soriano and Jeff Baker hit consecutive doubles in the second for the Cubs, but that was all they could muster against Richard (11-5), who improved to 4-0 in his last five starts.It didn’t matter to him that he defeated a beaten-down team.  

NOTES—San Diego improved to 36-25 on the road and 25-12 in day games….Padres CF Tony Gwynn left in the sixth inning with what the team called a sprained right wrist. He was injured while fouling off a pitch….Before Wednesday, Richard was 1-6 with a 5.61 ERA in day-game starts, compared to 20-9 and 3.90 at night…..Slumping Cubs rookie Tyler Colvin will return to the outfield Thursday after getting a four-game “breather,” manager Lou Piniella said…..The announced attendance at Wrigley was a season-low 33,267 which appeared much slower.  

Thome bomb stuns Sox,Thornton in tenth

  

mlb story thumbnail What a finish. Jim Thome hurts his former team with a walk-off shot in the 10th to give the Twins a 7-6 win over the White Sox.   

MINNEAPOLIS—Jim Thome hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the 10th inning against the team that decided not to bring him back this season, sending the Minnesota Twins to a 7-6 victory over the White Sox on Tuesday night to stretch their AL Central lead to four games.After Delmon Young’s leadoff single against Matt Thornton (3-4), Thome smashed an 0-1 pitch and sent it sailing over the right-field bleachers to send his new team and the fans at sold-out Target Field into a frenzy. Thome chucked his helmet into the air as he eagerly approached the mob at the plate.Alexei Ramirez hit the tying home run in the ninth inning and the go-ahead RBI single in the 10th, as Twins relievers Matt Capps and Jon Rauch (3-1) gave up three hits apiece in the last two innings.The Twins are 23-7 in their last 30 games, and the White Sox are 15-16 in their last 31. The teams have just five more meetings this year.White Sox starter John Danks recovered from a four-run first inning to finish seven frames and save the beat-up bullpen from more overuse. The Twins, who had two runners thrown out at home, took the lead back at 6-5 on Young’s fifth-inning homer.Paul Konerko, who earlier became the second player in the league to reach 30 homers this season, grounded into a double play after the White Sox loaded the bases in the ninth following Ramirez’s homer.Minnesota’s bullpen was cruising until Capps came in, retiring 10 of 11 batters in relief of Scott Baker. Glen Perkins, in his first appearance at Target Field, got Mark Kotsay to ground out with the bases full to finish the fifth and stranded A.J. Pierzynski following a leadoff double in the sixth.Ozzie Guillen insisted before the game the Twins don’t have a mental edge over his team, but they’re on some impressive runs against the Sox: 20-6 overall and 12-4 at home. Guillen joked that Twins manager Ron Gardenhire gets so stressed out that he has to go to the hospital every time they play, then went on about how much more comfortable he is at Target Field than at the Metrodome.The division continues to revolves around this rivalry, as it has for the last decade, but with Guillen’s constant praise for the Twins and their pesky reputation and the turnover on both teams it hasn’t been quite as heated as it once was.It’s still intense, though, as Young proved in the eighth inning when he charged home on a groundout and veered toward chief agitator Pierzynski to deliver a forearm shiver that didn’t dislodge the ball from the catcher’s mitt.Orlando Hudson’s solo homer sparked the early surge against Danks. Then Jason Kubel’s two-run triple and Jim Thome’s RBI single padded the lead. Baker couldn’t hold it, giving up Konerko’s shot, Carlos Quentin’s smash double and Kotsay’s two-run homer. Kubel’s outstanding, outstretched catch in right field helped Baker escape the third inning after Juan Pierre’s leadoff walk, but back-to-back doubles by Kotsay and Pierzynski in the fourth tied the game at 4.Danks was 5-1 in his previous seven starts, with one run or less allowed in five of those. He avoided further damage when second baseman Gordon Beckham made a perfect relay throw to the plate to nab the lumbering Thome trying to score from first on Danny Valencia’s double.

  

NOTES—Justin Morneau’s swing looked strong during early batting practice, but he still feels some post-concussion symptoms so the Twins have no timetable for his return. “The more he gets out there on the field and tells us he’s feeling ready, then that’s when we’ll start talking to him about something else. We’re just letting him do his thing,” manager Ron Gardenhire said. … The Twins had a 10-game run without allowing a homer at Target Field end. Konerko went deep on each end of the streak. 

 

Cubs can’t score in womens prison even with a hand full of pardons. Padres win 1-0

 

Jon Garland pitched seven innings and Jerry Hairston Jr. drove in the game’s only run in the first inning and the San Diego Padres beat the Cubs 1-0.The NL-West leading Padres won for the eighth time in nine games and moved five games ahead of the second-place San Francisco Giants.Heath Bell pitched a scoreless ninth for his major league-leading 36th save in 39 opportunities, but not before nearly allowing a game-ending two-run home run in the ninth to Blake DeWitt.After allowing a leadoff single to Aramis Ramirez, Bell struck out the next two batters. DeWitt followed a long fly ball to right and Ryan Ludwick went into the ivy and ended the game with a leaping catch.Garland (12-8) allowed four hits and pitched around three walks with three strikeouts. He retired the last 12 batters he faced. He surpassed his win total from last season. The right-hander has pitched 17 scoreless innings dating to three starts. He has only allowed five hits in his last 12 innings. The Padres, who had just three hits in the game, improved to a season-high 24 games over .500 (71-47).The Cubs have lost eight of its last nine home games.The discusted fans response….”BOOOOOO!”. Padres reliever Mike Adams pitched out of trouble in the eighth. With runners on first and second and one out, he induced Marlon Byrd to ground into a double play.Cubs starter Randy Wells (5-11), who allowed six earned runs in his last start at San Francisco, rebounded to pitch seven strong innings. He allowed one run and three hits, struck out six and walked three and hit a batter. Hairston led off the game with a single and advanced to second on Miguel Tejada’s walk. One out later, Wells hit Ludwick to load the bases. Hairston scored on Chase Headley’s groundout.

NOTES—Derrek Lee missed his second game with a bulging disc in his back. He is listed as day-to-day. … Padres 2B David Eckstein is expected to begin a rehab assignment with Single-A Fort Wayne on Wednesday. He has been on the DL with a right calf strain since July 21.

Sky rally past Dream in Atlanta, big deal, too late!

Chicago Sky

ATLANTA—If the Atlanta Dream fail to get home court advantage in the first round of the playoffs, they can just look towards their play against the already eliminated Sky.Sylvia Fowles had 18 points and 14 rebounds, Epiphanny Prince scored eight of her 14 points in the fourth quarter and the Sky rallied to defeat the Dream 84-79 on Tuesday night at Phillips Arena.Atlanta (18-14) has lost five of its last six games to fall to the fourth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. The top two teams get home court for the first round of the postseason and only a slim chance remains of Atlanta finishing second.The Dream are 10-6 at home with a game to go against Washington on Sunday, but the last-place Sky (14-18) won all three games in Atlanta this season.The Dream led 73-65 with 6:15 left before the Sky rallied behind Fowles. Her free throw gave the Sky a 78-77 lead with a minute left.Prince then had a basket and two free throws to expand the lead. Iziane Castro Marques scored with six seconds remaining to cut the lead to three points, but Dominique Canty sealed the win for the Sky with two free throws.Castro Marques had 19 points to lead the Dream. Angel McCoughtry scored 16 points and Yelena Leuchanka grabbed 11 rebounds. Canty had 17 points and Jia Perkins scored 15 for the visitors. The Dream snapped a four-game losing streak and clinched a playoff spot with 98-74 rout of the Sky in Chicago on Saturday, breaking the game open with a 31-11 edge in the second quarter and leading by as many as 35 points.The Dream took a 65-63 lead into the final quarter by scoring the final six points of the third – the last two baskets coming from Coco Miller. Perkins had seven points, Canty scored six and the Sky built a 58-53 lead midway in the period with a 15-6 run.Atlanta went up 39-31 lead midway in the second quarter with a 16-3 run and was up 45-43 at halftime after the Sky briefly regained the lead at 41-39 thanks a 10-0 streak. The Dream shot 56.7 percent in the first half and the Sky made 54.3 percent.Fowles had 13 points and nine rebounds at the intermission and Canty scored nine. McCoughtry led the Dream with eight first-half points.

Cubs modest 2 games winning streak GONE as Padres win 9-5

 
Kevin Correia pitched six scoreless innings and hit a rare RBI double, leading the San Diego Padres to a 9-5 victory over the Cubs on Monday night.Miguel Tejada was 4 for 5 with a double and two RBI and Chris Denorfia added three hits for the NL West-leading Padres, who have won seven of eight and moved four games ahead of second-place San Francisco.After taking two of three from the Giants last weekend, the Padres won behind another strong showing from of one of their starters.Correia (10-7) allowed five hits and struck out five with one walk. After giving up four hits in the first two innings, he settled down to retire his last eight batters and became the fourth Padres starting pitcher to win at least 10 games this season.Correia also gave the Padres a lead that they would never give up.Cubs starter Tom Gorzelanny retired the first two batters in the fifth but allowed a single to Denorfia before Correia helped himself with a double down the left-field line. Denorfia scored from first, just beating the relay throw to give the Padres a 1-0 lead.Correia came into the game with a .108 batting average and only two doubles in 176 major league at-bats.The right-hander also escaped a major jam in the first and improved to 5-1 since the All-Star break with a 3.00 ERA in six starts.The usually dependable San Diego bullpen struggled, however, yielding two runs in the seventh and three in the eighth. It took five relievers to secure the win. Mike Adams got one out in the eighth and closer Heath Bell finished up with a perfect ninth.Alfonso Soriano hit an RBI double in the eighth and Blake Dewitt followed with a two-run homer for the Cubs, who have lost seven of eight at home.Gorzelanny (6-7) was tagged for five runs and nine hits in 6 1/3 innings. He didn’t allow a hit until a leadoff single by Tejada in the fourth.The Padres helped Correia in the next two innings. Tejada led off the sixth with a single and advanced to third on Adrian Gonzalez’s single. Ryan Ludwick followed with a sacrifice fly.In the seventh, Tony Gwynn Jr. pinch-hit for Correia and reached safely on a bunt. Gwynn stole second and scored on Tejada’s double. Gonzalez chased Gorzelanny with an RBI single. After a walk to Yorvit Torrealba, Cubs reliever Justin Berg gave up an RBI single to Chase Headley that gave the Padres a 5-0 lead.Kosuke Fukudome had a two-run double for Chicago in the seventh, his third hit of the game.The Padres got those two runs back in the eighth against reliever Andrew Cashner. Denorfia singled and advanced to third on Gwynn’s double. During Tejada’s at-bat, Denorfia scored on Cashner’s wild pitch. Tejada drove in Gwynn with a single.Cubs manager Lou Piniella has been irked by his young bullpen. On Sunday, he watched the bullpen nearly blow a 9-2 lead in the ninth against the Cardinals before holding on for a 9-7 win.Denorfia’s two-run triple in the ninth made it 9-5.Piniella doesn’t know if the Cubs have anyone in the minor league system that they can bring up for help.

   

NOTES—Chris Young threw 64 pitches in a bullpen session, according to Black. Young went on the DL on April 12 with a strained shoulder. He had arthroscopic surgery last August and has made only one start this season….Starlin Castro had the night off. He leads all rookies with a .314 batting average…..Derrek Lee missed the game with a bulging disk in his lower back. He is day-to-day…..The Cubs bullpen has allowed earned runs in eight of the last nine games. 

  

 

Sox lose late again to Tigers, now three games behind Twins

The Detroit Tigers finally won a road series.Johnny Damon hit a go-ahead, two-run triple in the eighth inning, Jhonny Peralta homered twice and the Tigers rallied to beat the slumping White Sox 13-8 on Sunday.Miguel Cabrera and Ryan Raburn also connected for the Tigers, who won for only the third time in 16 road games. Detroit also snapped a string of 10 straight road series losses dating to a two-game sweep at Oakland in May.The White Sox wrapped up a disappointing 2-4 homestand that opened with them tied with the Twins for the AL Central lead and finished with them three back of Minnesota. They open a key three-game series against the Twins on Tuesday night at Target Field.Detroit blew a 5-1 lead and starting pitcher Armando Galarraga and catcher Alex Avila had to be separated following a heated exchange in the dugout after the first inning. Galarraga called it a “misunderstanding.Paul Konerko hit a tiebreaking two-run homer in the sixth inning to give the White Sox a 7-5 lead, but the Tigers battled back against a fatigued White Sox bullpen missing closer Bobby Jenks.Cabrera went deep against Sergio Santos in the seventh and Detroit added three more in the eighth. Damon had the key two-out hit against J.J. Putz (5-5), but center fielder Andruw Jones dropped pinch-hitter Brandon Inge’s fly ball for a run-scoring error that made it 9-7.After Jones homered in the White Sox eighth, Detroit put the game away with four runs in the ninth. Peralta went deep against Tony Pena, Don Kelly had a two-run single and Inge drove in Austin Jackson with a fielder’s choice.Putz yielded three runs, two earned, and two hits in the eighth. The struggling right-hander gave up Avila’s two-run homer in the ninth inning of Saturday’s 3-2 loss.Putz pitched in three consecutive games for the first time since July 27-29, 2007. He left without talking to reporters. The White Sox have lost five of eight at home after a 19-1 stretch at U.S. Cellular Field. They have dropped six of eight overall.Brad Thomas (5-1) pitched a scoreless seventh for the victory.Galarraga allowed four runs, three earned, and seven hits in five innings.After not getting out of the third inning in Tuesday’s loss to the Twins, Freddy Garcia was tagged for five runs and eight hits in five innings.The Tigers led 5-1 before the White Sox scored three times in the fifth and sixth. Alexei Ramirez hit a tying a single before Konerko’s 29th homer.

NOTES—Don Cooper was ejected in the seventh inning for arguing balls and strikes with plate umpire Jeff Nelson…..Jenks (back spasms) was unavailable. The White Sox will decide on Tuesday if Jenks will be placed on the DL…..Tigers closer Jose Valverde was unavailable with a strained oblique. He is day to day.