Reversed home run-call trips Tribe

4/24/2011
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Indians catcher Lou Marson tags Alexi Casilla with the help of a cannon-like throw from right fielder Shin-Soo Choo. Casilla also blew through a stop sign given him by third-base coach Steve Liddle.
Indians catcher Lou Marson tags Alexi Casilla with the help of a cannon-like throw from right fielder Shin-Soo Choo. Casilla also blew through a stop sign given him by third-base coach Steve Liddle.

MINNEAPOLIS — The ball just didn’t bounce Michael Brantley’s way on Sunday.

Brantley’s three-run homer in the fourth inning was taken off the board upon replay review, a ruling that wound up playing a pivotal role in Cleveland’s 4-3 loss to the Minnesota Twins.

Brantley’s shot to right field hit the limestone facing and was initially ruled a home run. He rounded the bases for a 4-2 lead, but Twins manager Ron Gardenhire convinced the umpires to review the call. They did, and summoned Brantley out of the dugout and credited him with a two-run double.

Twins starter Carl Pavano stranded him on second base, and the Indians faltered in the seventh when Jason Kubel hit a two-run double off of Rafael Perez (2-1) to lift the Twins to the win.

If umpires had ruled that the ball caromed off the top of the wall, it would have remained a home run. But replays showed it hit the corner, and all Brantley and the Indians could do was shrug at their misfortune, a game of inches lost by the narrowest of margins.

“They made the right call,” Brantley said. “I watched the replay two innings later and it definitely wasn’t a home run. It hit the corner of the wall and came back. It was unlucky for us, but that’s the way the game goes.”

Right fielder Shin-Soo Choo threw out two runners at home in the third inning to keep the Indians in it, but starter Carlos Carrasco left with tightness in his right elbow after just three innings. He will be re-evaluated in Cleveland.

“He felt from the beginning he couldn’t get loose pretty good and just went out there and said he couldn’t get it loose at all,” Indians manager Manny Acta said. “We kind of sensed some of that because his velocity wasn’t where he was in the past. He just couldn’t get it loose.”

Travis Hafner and Orlando Cabrera had two hits apiece, but Cabrera’s error at second base in the seventh inning set up Kubel’s go-ahead hit.

The Indians led 3-2 in the seventh when Alexi Casilla singled and Denard Span reached on Cabrera’s error. Jason Repko bunted them up a base and Kubel hit a changeup high off the wall in right-center field for the lead.

“Obviously, they took advantage of the extra out and their big hitters came through,” Acta said.

Grady Sizemore doubled in the ninth to put the tying run on second base, but Matt Capps got Asdrubal Cabrera to fly out to the warning track in left field to end the game.

Kubel and Justin Morneau had two hits for the Twins, who took both games of the rain-shortened series. They have won three in a row and five of seven after a 4-10 start.

The Indians stayed in it thanks to Choo’s cannon left arm in the third inning. With one out and runners on first and second, Kubel came through with a hard-hit single to right field. Casilla ran right through third-base coach Steve Liddle’s stop sign and Choo, who led the league in outfield assists last year, threw him out by five feet.

Morneau followed with a two-run double, and Carrasco was again on his heels. Michael Cuddyer then delivered a soft single to shallow right and Liddle first waved Morneau home before putting up a stop sign when Morneau was halfway down the line. Choo’s throw easily beat Morneau to the plate to end the inning.

Choo nearly had a third assist in the fourth inning, but Jim Thome just beat his throw into second base for a double.

“The good thing is he never gets caught by surprise,” Acta said of Choo. “He throws the ball on a line, makes a good throw. Whether people run on him or not he makes the throw, which is to his credit because they’re on line and good throws.”

NOTES: The Indians now head home, where they have won seven in a row for the first time since 2007. They’re off today and open a series against Kansas City tomorrow. ... Choo’s two assists give him four for the season. ... Indians RHP Vinnie Pestano threw 1? scoreless innings. He has allowed one run in eight innings this season (1.12 ERA).