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End of 8, A's 4 Tribe 3
Top 9
Pitching Change: Jim Johnson replaces Sean Doolittle.
1.
Ryan Raburn singles on a line drive to right fielder Josh Reddick.
2.
Nick Swisher singles on a line drive to right fielder Josh Reddick. Ryan Raburn to 2nd.
3.
Jason Kipnis grounds into a force out, second baseman Nick Punto to shortstop Jed Lowrie. Ryan Raburn to 3rd. Nick Swisher out at 2nd. Jason Kipnis to 1st.
Coaching visit to mound.
With Carlos Santana batting, Jason Kipnis steals (2) 2nd base.
4.
Carlos Santana walks.
5.
Michael Brantley singles on a ground ball to right fielder Josh Reddick. Ryan Raburn scores. Jason Kipnis scores. Carlos Santana to 3rd. Michael Brantley advances to 2nd, on a fielding error by right fielder Josh Reddick.
6.
Jim Johnson intentionally walks Asdrubal Cabrera.
7.
David Murphy out on a sacrifice fly to center fielder Sam Fuld. Carlos Santana scores.
Coaching visit to mound.
Pitching Change: Evan Scribner replaces Jim Johnson.
8.
Mike Aviles flies out to center fielder Sam Fuld.
Bottom 9
Pitching Change: John Axford replaces Cody Allen.
1.
Sam Fuld strikes out swinging.
2.
Josh Donaldson flies out to center fielder Michael Brantley.
3.
Jed Lowrie flies out to right fielder David Murphy.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

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Boy did we win out on the New Closer Derby in this series! Johnson was exactly as bad for the As as Axford apparently was last April for the Brewers. Although Johnson deserves most of the credit for our win, Brantley deserves credit for another clutch hit. What's his contract situation? I'd like to tie him up for a half dozen years.

McAllister unfortunately was just as ineffective as we was during much of spring training. Josh Tomlin lurks in the shadows.

Re: GameTime!™

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GOODYEAR, Ariz. -- Michael Brantley heard rumors that being traded to Cleveland was a possibility. The Brewers swung a five-player trade with the Tribe to reel in ace CC Sabathia in July 2008, and Milwaukee included a player to be named that would be finalized after the regular season.

After wrapping up his season with Double-A Huntsville, Brantley headed home, where speculation followed him. Sure enough, when the calendar flipped to October, Milwaukee agreed to send Brantley to the Indians to put the final touch on the blockbuster trade.

At the time, Cleveland could not have known it was landing a key piece to its future core. On Thursday, the Indians made it clear that Brantley is viewed in that light by officially announcing a four-year contract extension with the outfielder that includes a club option for 2018.

"When you make a trade," Indians general manager Chris Antonetti said, "you have some sense, from your scouting reports, of what a player's on-field abilities might be. And you try to do the best you can to get an understanding of their makeup and what makes them tick. In bringing Michael over, we had some sense of those things.

"But I'm not sure we could fully appreciate just how great of a worker he is, how great of a teammate he is and how driven he is to be successful."

Brantley entered this offseason eligible for arbitration for the first time, but he decided to skip the entire three-year arbitration process entirely. His new contract includes $25 million in guaranteed salary and the fifth-year option is worth $11 million (or a $1 million buyout). The deal also includes a $3.5 million signing bonus that will be spread throughout the life of the contract.

Over the next four years, Brantley's base salaries will be $1.5 million in 2014, $5 million in '15, $6.5 million in '16 and $7.5 million in '17.

"This is a great day," Brantley said. "It's a blessing and I'm very happy to be a part of the Cleveland organization."

Signing Brantley to a multi-year contract falls in line with Cleveland's trend of trying to lock up young core players. The Indians inked catcher Carlos Santana to a pre-arbitration five-year, $21 million deal (with a sixth-year option) in April 2012.
Cleveland also signed shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera to a two-year extension early in the 2012 season.

Among the team's other current players, extension candidates include starter Justin Masterson and second baseman Jason Kipnis. Cleveland has halted long-term talks with Masterson -- eligible for free agency next offseason -- for now in order to focus on a one-year deal to avoid arbitration. The team explored a multi-year deal with Kipnis last offseason and might revisit the talks again this spring.

"Continuity is important," Antonetti said. "We feel really good about the core group of guys that we have and we want to try to keep them together for as long as we can."

There are a variety of reasons behind Cleveland's belief that the 26-year-old Brantley was worth the investment. There is, of course, his steady play on the field, but Antonetti was quick to point to Brantley's selflessness. Without complaint, Brantley shifted out of center field and into left after the Tribe signed Michael Bourn last winter. Last season, Brantley also started games in eight of nine lineup spots.

Rather than ask to have a home in one part of the batting order, Brantley accepted his role and performed as one of the Indians' top hitters in clutch situations. He hit .305 (.783 OPS) with two outs, .375 (.870 OPS) with runners in scoring position and .364 (.932 OPS) with two outs and RISP. Those numbers were only a touch above Brantley's career showing in each category.

"Whether he loves it or hates it, he handles it," Indians manager Terry Francona said. "Wherever you put him, he can hit good pitching. You saw his numbers with runners in scoring position and all those types of things. It makes him a guy that, wherever you put him ... it makes the guy in front of him or behind him better."

Antonetti added that not every player completely adopts that team-first mentality.

"A lot of guys talk about that," Antonetti said, "and will give the surface, 'Hey, I'm a team player, I'm a team player.' Michael lives that every day."

Brantley credits his dad, former big leaguer and former Major League hitting coach Mickey Brantley, for his development not only as a hitter, but as a professional behind the scenes. Brantley said his father also stressed the importance of having a plan before stepping into the batter's box.

From Little League to the big leagues, Brantley has strived to take that approach.

"That started when I was really young," Brantley said. "I've kind of made sure I've kept that same mindset and that same focus each and every at-bat. I never try to give an at-bat away."

Brantley has one of the highest contact rates in the Majors and posted a .284/.332/.396 slash line last season, along with 10 homers, 26 doubles, three triples, 73 RBIs, 17 stolen bases and 66 runs in 151 games. Defensively, he contributed 11 outfield assists and made no errors, extending his franchise-record outfield errorless streak to 245 games.

In parts of five Major League seasons with the Indians, Brantley has hit .277 with 26 home runs, 140 extra-base hits, 212 RBIs and 240 runs scored in 514 games. Over the past two seasons as a regular in the outfield, he has turned in a .286/.340/.399 slash line across 300 games.

Roughly 11 months after being traded to the Indians in 2008, Brantley made his Major League debut. Last season, Brantley was an integral part of the Tribe's first trip to the playoffs since '07.

Brantley had both moments in mind when deciding to sign his extension.

"Cleveland gave me the first opportunity to play at the Major League level," Brantey said. "That doesn't go unnoticed and I appreciate it. We took some great strides last year and I feel like we can play better as a team, as a group. We have such a great group of guys in the locker room and I'm excited to be a part of it for years to come."

Jordan Bastian is a reporter for MLB.com. Read his blog, Major League Bastian, and follow him on Twitter @MLBastian. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

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OAKLAND -- Indians manager Terry Francona came out on top in his first instant-replay challenge of the season.

In the sixth inning of the second game of Wednesday's doubleheader between the Indians and A's, Mike Aviles attempted to steal second base. Aviles appeared to reach safely, but second-base umpire Gabe Morales called the Cleveland infielder out on the play.

Aviles immediately shifted to his feet to argue the call and Francona emerged from the dugout.

Francona challenged the call, which was quickly reviewed at the Replay Operations Center in New York. After only one minute and 19 seconds, the ruling on the field was overturned and Aviles was credited with a stolen base. On replays, it was clear that A's second baseman Nick Punto missed Aviles on the tag attempt.

Aviles knew immediately that he was not tagged on the play.

"Yeah, when I slid, I definitely didn't feel a tag," Aviles said. "In that situation, I was just letting [the umpire] know, 'Hey, I didn't get tagged.' He said 'OK.' And then I was hoping [Francona] would come out. I was going to do anything I could. Jump up and down or something. Wave him down and hopefully replay."

There has been one reviewed play in each of Cleveland's three games in Oakland this series.

While players, managers and umpires are getting used to the new instant-replay rules, Aviles said his stolen base was a perfect example of how the system is meant to work.

"That's exactly the whole point," Aviles said. "There's a lot going on. Umpires are human. They're going to make mistakes the same way we all make mistakes. It's a good thing we have replay to help out from time to time. In that situation, maybe he couldn't see the play or whatever the case may be. Fortunately, we had the replay to help out."

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Gotta wonder how much these major league umpires suck. They have better umpiring in my beer leagues. From what I've seen so far, these umpires have blown a lot of calls so far this season. You have to wonder how this will translate throughout the rest of the season. I really do hate these appeals and instant replays. Save them for the playoff. The game is slow enough as it is without adding more interruptions. Might as well eliminate umpires and let the computers arbitrate the games.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

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Where baseball is concerned, I'm old fashioned. I hated the DH rule when it was introduced and I haven't grown any fonder of it since. Either change the rules for both leagues or don't change them at all. I do not like the instant replay rules for the same reasons. Gotta make the umpires look like butt holes in front of the whole stadium as well as the universe with the internet transmitting the games. It's not right.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller