Yes, Terry Francona wrestled with the idea. It was the eighth inning of Tuesday's home opener and the score was tied, 1-1, between the Indians and White Sox.
Abraham Almonte and Carlos Santana walked to start the inning. Francisco Lindor, his hottest hitter, was at the plate. Lindor had accounted for the Tribe's only run, a first-inning homer.
Michael Brantley, Encarnacion and Jose Ramirez were waiting behind Lindor. Would Francona let Lindor swing away or bunt to advance the runners?
Lindor bunted to move Almonte to third and Santana to second base. With first base open, Brantley was intentionally walked to bring Encarnacion to the plate against hard-throwing Nate Jones. Encarnacion ended the threat when he bounced into a 5-4-3 double play.
After the game, Lindor said Francona made the right call.
"I gave it (the bunt sign) to him Tuesday and I wrestled with it for a lot of reasons," said Francona. He didn't want to take the bat out of Lindor's hand, but the Indians were struggling to score runs and a sacrifice bunt seemed like the thing to do.
"Now, maybe if we let him hit, maybe we would've scored quicker," said Francona. "But, nobody has a crystal ball. You do what you think is right."
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