8 straight: Streak rolls as Tribe tops Tigers in G1

September 1st, 2017

DETROIT -- The Indians stretched their winning streak to eight games, one short of their season high, thanks to some Friday afternoon dramatics. 's ninth-inning RBI single scored , whose one-out triple continued Cleveland's magic for a 3-2 win over the Tigers in the first game of a day-night doubleheader at Comerica Park.
Hours after the Tigers traded to the Astros and to the Angels, Detroit put up a fight against the American League Central leaders behind five solid innings from Matthew Boyd. ' fifth-inning RBI double provided all the scoring they could muster in seven innings against , but three eighth-inning hits off Cleveland's bullpen -- including an RBI infield single from off closer -- tied the game at 2.
 

Bruce stepped off the bench against Tigers closer (3-3) and sent a drive off the out-of-town scoreboard in right-center field. Lindor plated him with a line drive through the middle. Allen (2-6) stayed on for the ninth before loading the bases, but Joe Smith earned his first save by retiring .
"Really, Miggy hit the ball on the screws to end the game," Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said. "He hit the ball on the screws three times [during the game] and didn't get anything to show for it."

MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
Encarnacion erupts: The Tigers' momentum of Iglesias' game-tying double lasted just two pitches into the sixth inning thanks to , who denied reliever any chance of a shutdown inning by jumping a hanging slider on a 1-0 pitch. The resulting drive left Encarnacion's bat at 110.1 mph, according to Statcast™, traveling 397 feet to left. Encarnacion's 32nd home run of the year was his first off Tigers pitching since he signed with Cleveland last winter and became a division rival.

Extra bases matter: Bruce's first triple since 2016 was partly a credit to hustle after his drive to right-center bounced off the out-of-town scoreboard. While center fielder and right fielder Alex Presley waited for each other to field it, Bruce kept going, ending up on third. The extra base forced the Tigers to play the infield in against Lindor, who lined his go-ahead single through it.

"When I saw that they didn't pick the ball up very quickly as I was getting to second base, I felt like it was time to give it a chance," Bruce said. "There was one out there. They had to make a perfect throw. I had plenty of time, I felt like." More >
QUOTABLE
"[Allen] was at 30 [pitches]. That's a bunch. That's a lot to ask. I looked at Miggy, and I'm like, 'This is the last guy you want hitting,' and there is no good matchup against Miggy. The one thing with [Smith] is you know he's not going to walk anybody." -- Indians manager Terry Francona, on turning to Smith for the final out
"He's got mixed emotions. He grew up a Detroit Tiger, and from what he told me, I think it was an excruciatingly difficult decision, one that I think even now is very hard to swallow because he's never worn another uniform. But I think he'll be fine." -- Ausmus, on Verlander, who visited the Tigers' clubhouse before the game before packing up his locker
Avila on trades | Tigers players react
REPLAY REVIEW
The Indians gained a one-out baserunner in the fifth inning by challenging first-base umpire Nick Mahrley's call that had thrown out at first base. After a 51-second review, the call was overturned, putting Guyer on first with a single. He scored Cleveland's first run two batters later.

The Tigers challenged a Mahrley call at first base in the seventh inning after Carrasco picked off of first base. After a 2-minute, 13-second review, the call was reversed once replay officials determined McCann snuck his hand back onto the bag ahead of 's tag.

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