Shot to arm doesn't stop McAllister, Tribe

7/17/2012
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cleveland Indians starting pitcher Zach McAllister throws during the first inning of a baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays.
Cleveland Indians starting pitcher Zach McAllister throws during the first inning of a baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Zach McAllister shrugged off being struck in his pitching arm by a line drive to finish six solid innings and the Cleveland Indians held on to beat the Tampa Bay Rays 3-2 on Monday night.

McAllister (4-1) appeared to get hit in the right arm above the elbow by Jeff Keppinger's RBI single in the fourth inning. He remained in the game to retire the next six batters and eight of the last nine he faced overall.

Shin-Soo Choo had a RBI double in the third after he had what initially was ruled a home run overturned by instant replay in the first for Cleveland.

The umpires huddled after Rays center fielder B.J. Upton signaled that the ball hit high off the wall instead of clearing it and bouncing back onto the field. Choo was sent back to second base and eventually scored on a passed ball that gave the Indians an early lead on Alex Cobb (4-6).

Choo scored again in the third when Jason Kipnis doubled to make it 3-0.

McAllister allowed one run and three hits before being replaced by Esmil Rogers, who yielded a first-pitch home run to Desmond Jennings leading off the seventh. A pair of two-out walks put the potential tying run in scoring position before the third Indians pitcher of the inning, Vinnie Pestano, came on to strike out Ben Zobrist.

Pestano fanned pinch-hitter Brooks Conrad to escape another jam with two men on in the eighth. Chris Perez worked a perfect ninth, earning his 26th save in 28 opportunities.

Pitching on seven days' rest, McAllister made his second consecutive start against the Rays. He retired 13 of the first 14 batters he faced against them at home on July 8, but wound allowing four runs and four hits over 5⅔ innings and was not involved in the decision of a 7-6 loss.

The 24-year-old right-hander walked three and needed 41 pitches to get through the first two innings this time. He held the Rays hitless until Upton singled, leading off the fourth. Luke Scott followed with a single and Keppinger drove in Tampa Bay's first run when he lined a pitch that struck McAllister on his follow-through.

Cleveland's trainer examined the spot where McAllister said he was hit, and the pitcher remained in the game. He avoided further damage in the inning when Jennings bounced into a double play and Jose Molina grounded out.

Meanwhile, the Indians wasted several opportunities to build on their early lead. They loaded the bases with no outs, yet failed to score in the fourth and began the fifth with a double and walk only to strand a runner at third.

Notes: Cobb allowed three runs and five hits over 3⅓ innings. ... The Indians said OF Trevor Crowe was released from Triple-A Columbus. ... Tampa Bay OF Matt Joyce, on the disabled list since June 22 with a left external oblique strain, could be nearing the end of a rehab assignment with Single-A Charlotte. He will be re-evaluated today and could rejoin the Rays before the end of this four-game series. ... Rays manager Joe Maddon said 3B Evan Longoria (partially torn left hamstring) may travel with the team to continue workouts during a road trip that begins next Tuesday at Baltimore.

Phillies Halladay set to return from disabled list

LOS ANGELES -- Roy Halladay is ready to return to the Philadelphia Phillies' rotation. They can only hope it's not too late.

The two-time Cy Young Award winner has missed the past seven weeks with a strained right lat muscle, one reason the Phillies have faded to last place in the NL East after five straight division titles.

After making a rehab start for Class-A Clearwater last week, Halladay is scheduled to come off the disabled list today against Los Angeles.