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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -
Justin Morneau
came through with yet another clutch hit for the
Minnesota Twins
. The
Chicago White Sox
should have taken notes.
After giving themselves chance after chance to break a game open, the
White Sox
watched Morneau hit a two-out RBI double in the seventh inning to give
Nick Blackburn
and the Twins a 4-3 victory on Wednesday.
''I just said, 'I can't strike out looking and look silly again,''' said Morneau, being a bit hard on himself after his drive
to deep left-center off a high, full-count pitch from
Boone Logan
scored
Carlos Gomez
and hung the loss on reliever Ehren Wasserman (0-1).
Morneau raised his average with runners in scoring position to .481 with 18 RBIs in 27 at-bats.
''He's an RBI guy. That's what he does,'' manager
Ron Gardenhire
said.
Gomez, who went 3-for-4, scored twice and reached on a bunt single to begin the inning, boasted that when he's on second or
third base with
Joe Mauer
or Morneau batting he'll score 90 percent of the time.
Blackburn (2-1) wasn't sharp, but he lasted seven innings and made the right pitches at the right times. He allowed eight
hits, three runs and two walks while striking out four and gave the Twins consecutive victories by starting pitchers for the
first time in 18 days.
Chicago's
Nick Swisher
walked on four pitches to start the game and scored on
Jim Thome
's double, then delivered a two-out single in the fifth for a brief 3-2 lead.
That hit was the only success the Sox had with runners in scoring position, leaving them 1-for-8 for the afternoon and 5-for-45
in their last five games.
''Another day with our hitting,'' manager
Ozzie Guillen
said. ''It's not easy when they're not swinging the bat well to score some runs and put some pressure on them.''
Chicago leads the league with 36 homers, but the team's batting average is a league-low .242.
''When our pitchers go out there and do a heck of a job for us, we have to score some more runs for them,'' Swisher said.
''And it's going to come. ... We've had plenty of opportunities to win a lot of games, and that's one thing we're going to
have to work on. I think the one thing that we might be doing is trying TOO hard, trying to get the big hit EVERY time.''
After Blackburn departed,
Dennys Reyes
struck out Thome to start the eighth.
Pat Neshek
struck out
Jermaine Dye
and
Carlos Quentin
, who hit a solo homer in the fourth but slammed his bat down in disgust after the side-retiring whiff against the side-arming
Neshek.
Joe Nathan
earned his ninth save in nine attempts with a scoreless ninth, putting two men on with one out but getting pinch-hitter
Pablo Ozuna
to fly out and leaving Swisher looking at strike three to end it.
''We just have to find a way to get the hits and score some runs. It's tough to win the games when you only put up two or
three runs a game,'' Guillen said.
Because of a doubleheader last Saturday, long reliever
Nick Masset
made just his second career start for Chicago. Guillen wasn't willing to use
Mark Buehrle
or
John Danks
on three days' rest, and he was quite pleased with Masset's fill-in performance.
He threw 66 pitches in four innings and was plenty wild, throwing over the heads of
Jason Kubel
and
Brendan Harris
before hitting
Michael Cuddyer
near the shoulder with one that got away in the third.
Masset - who surrendered five hits and three runs - struck out five to offset three walks. He fanned Kubel with runners on
first and second to end both the first and third innings.
Blackburn was better, though. Pitching coach
Rick Anderson
visited the mound with two outs and two on in the seventh, and Blackburn promptly retired
Orlando Cabrera
on a fielder's choice grounder.
''Usually later in the game I will settle in a little bit better, so I think Gardy and Andy are starting to realize that,''
Blackburn said. ''I think their faith is building in me.''
Their confidence in Gomez is not quite there yet. He stole his league-leading 11th base in the fourth with two outs and Mauer
batting, then came home when the throw got away and was called out at the plate.
Video replays appeared to show Gomez getting his foot in before catcher
Toby Hall
tagged his back, and Gardenhire argued for a bit with home plate umpire Tim Timmons. After the game, Gardenhire said he wasn't
upset with the call, though. He was more worked up by the overeager Gomez, who said he saw a steal sign from the dugout.
Notes: RH
Scott Baker
ran hard and threw harder in a pregame throwing session in the bullpen without problems, so he'll make his scheduled start
for Minnesota on Saturday. Baker has been fighting a mild groin strain. ... Guillen gave 1B Paul Kornerko the game off, partly
because of a sore hand he aggravated Tuesday night. The plan is to rest some of the veteran regulars on this six-game, all-articifial-turf
road trip that moves to Toronto for the weekend, but Guillen said he didn't want to leave the lineup ''naked'' so he will
limit that.
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