CLEVELAND—Dan Johnson hit his first three homers of the season and the White Sox added two more in the game as they routed the Cleveland Indians 9-0 on Wednesday night.Gavin Floyd (12-11) gave up three hits over seven innings. He struck out six, one short of getting 145 strikeouts for the fifth straight season despite being on the disabled list twice this year.Johnson hit two two-run homers off David Huff (3-1). His 424-foot shot in the second inning was his first in more than a year. His second made it 7-0 in the fifth, two batters after Paul Konerko hit his 26th of the season.It was Johnson’s fifth career multihomer game and first time he hit three in a game. He’s the first player to hit three in a game against Cleveland since Konerko in July 2009.Dayan Viciedo hit his 25th home run, third in three nights and sixth against Cleveland in the ninth, followed by Johnson’s third.He had not hit a homer since his dramatic pinch-hit shot for Tampa Bay saved the Rays’ 2011 season. His two-out, two-strike solo drive in the ninth inning tied the score at 7 on the final night of the regular season. The Rays had trailed 7-0 and beat the New York Yankees 8-7 in 12 innings to make the playoffs.Cleveland went 3-3 in the final week for interim manager Sandy Alomar Jr., who will be interviewed for the fulltime job on Thursday. Terry Francona, who guided Boston to World Series titles in 2004 and 2007, will make his pitch to the Indians on Friday in an effort to get back to managing after being dismissed a year ago when the Red Sox folded and were edged out by Tampa Bay.
“I can’t match Terry’s resume and only control what I can do,” Alomar said before the game. “I am confident I can do the job.”
The Sox went 4-11 down the stretch to place second to Detroit after leading the AL Central by three games on Sept. 18. Robin Ventura’s 85 wins are the most for a first-year White Sox manager since Gene Lamont won 86 in 1992. Lamont is the Tigers’ third-base coach.Before the game, general manager Kenny Williams addressed the discouraging end to an otherwise good season.
“We didn’t win enough games, so we’re going home,” Williams said. “I can’t say enough about these guys for their effort. I can be only so disappointed for not closing this thing out. All we had to do was take care of business on our last road trip. We’d be getting prepared for the playoffs.”You have to play your whole schedule. No excuses and none needed. They literally gave everything they could.”
Floyd allowed only a two-out single by Lonnie Chisenhall in the first until Jason Kipnis lined a one-out single in the sixth. The right-hander is 4-1 the past two years and 8-4 in his career against Cleveland.Hector Gimenez bounced a two-out RBI single up the middle to make it 3-0 in the fifth.Huff gave up nine hits over 4 2/3 innings. Only three runs charged to him were earned. A throwing error by third baseman Chisenhall made the Sox entire four-run fifth unearned.
NOTES—Konerko is due to have left wrist surgery Thursday. … Cleveland RF Shin-Soo Choo extended his career-best hitting streak to 13 games with an eighth-inning single. …Adam Dunn did not play, finishing with 222 strikeouts, one shy of the major-league record set by Mark Reynolds with Arizona in 2009. … The Indians’ 110 stolen bases are their most since taking 113 in 2000. … Cleveland scored 667 runs in 2012, down 37 from 2011. … DH Travis Hafner went 1 for 4 and got a standing ovation in his final at-bat of what could have been his last game for Cleveland. The Indians likely will pay the oft-injured 35-year-old a $2.7 million buyout instead of picking up his $13 million option for 2013. … Cleveland’s total home attendance of 1,603,596 was its second-lowest since 1992, not quite 213,000 ahead of 2010.