No excuses for Allen after tough-luck 9th

Closer allows two infield hits, issues walk on close 3-2 pitch before grand slam

August 18th, 2016

CLEVELAND -- For most of the ninth inning, Indians closer did his job. He generated a pair of infield choppers and induced a weak popup. Baseball, however, has a history of turning a series of flukes into an offensive firestorm.
"It's a weird game sometimes," outfielder said after Cleveland's stunning 10-7 loss to the White Sox on Wednesday night.
Leading up to a ninth-inning meltdown that came at Allen's expense -- a rally that culminated with a grand slam off the bat of -- things were set up perfectly for the Tribe.
had worked into the seventh inning, the offense had answered a pair of pushes by Chicago's lineup and setup man turned in a seamless eighth to have the Indians poised to walk away with another win. After Allen took over for the final frame, with Cleveland clinging to a 7-5 lead, the powerful righty struck out with one of his signature knuckle curves.
"We put ourselves in good position," said Allen, who entered the night with a 1.19 ERA and 12.2 strikeouts per nine innings in his past 30 appearances.
Things quickly came unglued for the Tribe, which was without the services of ace reliever for this game due to his recent workload.
Chicago's five-run ninth began when pulled a fastball from Allen sharply into the hole between shortstop and third base. Indians shortstop ranged to his right, gloved the ball on the run and threw across his body toward first base. It was deemed an infield single, considering Frazier's hustle up the line, but the off-target throw led to a costly error. Frazier moved up to second on the play.
Indians manager Terry Francona was asked if Lindor -- known for his highlight-reel defense -- should have held on to the ball.
"Yeah, probably," Francona said. "But again, how many times have we seen him make plays, where you don't want to take his aggressiveness away?"
Lindor's decision loomed large, though, when J.B. Shuck followed with a chopper back up the middle. The White Sox outfielder sent a 2-2 offering from Allen just beyond the edge of the pitcher's glove, and bouncing through the infield. Second baseman retrieved it after two hops, but Shuck raced up the line and beat the throw for an infield single.

Had there not been an error, Kipnis might have had a play at second base.
"Cody Allen made pitches," Lindor said. "They were just able to play it. They made something happen, that's what happens when you put the ball in play. They did that. They played better in the ninth inning than us."

Allen followed with a walk to rookie , who watched a full-count fastball pop into catcher 's glove just below the strike zone. For a moment, given how well Perez framed the pitch, Francona thought home-plate umpire Jim Wolf was going to call a strike.
"You could see the umpire flinch like he almost called it," said the manager.
Then, before the blast, there was a bloop.
With the bases loaded, lofted a pitch from Allen down the left-field line, where it nicked off the glove of third baseman Jose Ramirez. That single, which came with an exit velocity of 66 mph, according to Statcast™, plated Frazier to trim the Tribe's lead to 7-6. Three pitches later, Eaton drilled an 0-2 breaking ball over the wall in right for a stadium-hushing slam.
"They had a lot go their way," Guyer said. "That's baseball."
Allen made no excuses.
"You've got to make pitches when you have to," he said. "[We] had a nice opportunity right there to kind of limit what was going on."