The Baltimore Orioles on Friday night took the luster off Mike Clevinger’s return from the injured list, scoring seven early runs off the right-hander in a 13-0 rout of the Cleveland Indians.
Chance Sisco homered and had a career-high five RBIs for the Orioles, who built an 8-0 lead in the second inning and cruised to only their second win in 15 games.
With a victory yesterday, struggling Baltimore would have its first winning streak since May 4-6 and capture its first series since April 22-24.
Photo: AFP
Like Clevenger, Baltimore starter John Means (7-4) was activated from the injured list (shoulder) to pitch in this game.
However, Means was far more successful: The lefty allowed one hit and one walk with five strikeouts in five innings.
After notching a total of 25 wins over the past two seasons, Clevinger (1-2) was making his fourth start of the season following two separate stints on the injured list with back and ankle problems.
This appeared to be the perfect scenario for his return, given the plight of the Orioles and Clevinger’s 4-0 career record against them.
After walking the first batter he faced, Clevinger got two outs before Sisco hit a fastball far over the right-field wall — the 99th homer to reach Eutaw Street in the 27-year history of Camden Yards.
Two walks and a two-run double by Hanser Alberto followed.
Clevinger gave up three more hits before being pulled in the second inning, and Anthony Santander greeted Tyler Olson with a two-run homer. That left Clevinger with this unsightly pitching line: 1-2/3 innings, seven runs, five hits and three walks.
After getting 10 wins in 13 games, the Indians managed only five hits in their sixth shutout loss of the season. Their most notable play came on defense, when center fielder Oscar Mercado made a leaping catch in the fourth inning to rob Sisco of a second home run.
Sisco rebounded to hit a two-run double during a four-run eighth that capped the Orioles’ most lopsided victory since May 13 last year against Tampa Bay.
Yu Chang became the second Taiwanese player in Indians history, starting at third base and going zero for three in his major league debut after being recalled from Triple-A Columbus.
Summoned from the minors on Friday after Jose Ramirez went on paternity leave, Chang became the 16th player in big-league history born in Taiwan.
The 23-year-old batted .151 before going on the injured list with a knuckle injury from April 17 to June 17 and returned to hit .320 in six games.
“They say he’s really looked like a different player, kind of like Chang, instead of Chang with a bad finger,” Indians manager Terry Francona said.
In other results, it was:
‧ Braves 6, Mets 2
‧ Marlins 6, Phillies 2
‧ Rangers 5, Rays 0
‧ Blue Jays 6, Royals 2
‧ Nationals 3, Tigers 1
‧ Reds 6, Cubs 3
‧ White Sox 6, Twins 4
‧ Pirates 3, Brewers 2
‧ Astros 2, Mariners 1
‧ Rockies 13, Dodgers 9
‧ Athletics 7, Angels 2
‧ Padres 3, Cardinals 1
‧ Giants 6, Diamondbacks 3
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