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INDIANS 4, Yankees 1

Copyright © 1998 Nando Media
Copyright © 1998 Associated Press


Cleveland            	000 100 000 003--4 7  1

New York             	000 000 100 000--1 7  1
COMPLETE BOX SCORE

NEW YORK (Oct 7, 1998 - 21:14 EDT) -- A questionable call led to Chuck Knoblauch losing his cool and the Cleveland Indians escaping Yankee Stadium with a split.

After 11 innings of excruciatingly intense baseball, Game 2 of the AL championship series turned on a bizarre bunt play in the 12th inning Wednesday and led to a 4-1 Cleveland win.

Umpires failed to call Travis Fryman out for interfering with the throw as he ran inside the line on his bunt attempt, and Enrique Wilson broke a 1-all tie by scoring all the way from first base as Knoblauch stood at the bag pointing and arguing, instead of picking up the ball.

Kenny Lofton followed with a two-run single, and the Indians beat New York, evening the AL championship series at one game apiece.

It was a play that will surely be debated, much like J.C. Martin's controversial bunt in Game 4 of the 1969 World Series.

Forget about domination, and put revenge on hold -- plays like this can turn a series around.

Jim Thome singled off Jeff Nelson leading off the 12th, Cleveland's first runner since Omar Vizquel tripled with one out in the eighth. Wilson ran for Thome, and Fryman sent a bunt up the first-base line to Tino Martinez.

Martinez threw to Knoblauch, the second baseman who was covering the first-base bag, and the ball hit Fryman, clearly running in fair territory, in the back.

"I started out inside the line and when I knew I could get by Tino, I tried to straighten out a little bit," Fryman said.

Baseball rules require that a runner be on the foul side of the line for the final 45 feet to first base, but it is up to the umpire's judgment whether a runner interferes with the play.

While Wilson rounded second, Knoblauch was pointing at the base, trying to get first-base umpire John Shulock to reverse the call.

While Wilson rounded third, Knoblauch still was pointing.

Finally, he picked it up, but it was too late. Wilson, who nearly tripped himself up as he headed home, sprawled into the plate with the go-ahead run.

Yankees manager Joe Torre argued to no avail.

"It was so blatant. I don't know what to say. It was a terrible call," Torre said. "There was no line ever touched."

In blowing out Jaret Wright in the first inning of Game 1 Tuesday and cruising to a 7-2 victory, the Yankees looked invincible, just like they did during the regular season. But maybe avenging last year's loss to Cleveland in the first round won't be so easy for the Yankees, who lost for the first time in five postseason games this fall.

Right from Kenny Lofton's game-opening flyout to the warning track in center, the Indians seemed different. David Cone nearly matched Charles Nagy but the top of the New York batting order, nearly silent in the first-round sweep of Texas, once again sputtered.

David Justice put the Indians ahead with a fourth-inning homer off Cone -- the first time the Yankees trailed this postseason -- but Scott Brosius' RBI double tied the score in the seventh and chased Nagy, who had been working on a four-hit shutout.

Cleveland is used to coming from behind in the postseason. This is the eighth straight time the Indians lost a series opener.

After an off day, the series resumes Friday night at Jacobs Field in Cleveland, with Andy Pettitte (16-11) pitching for New York against Bartolo Colon (14-9).

Dave Burba, the sixth of seven Cleveland pitchers, was the winner, and Mike Jackson got the save. Nelson, the fourth of five New York pitchers, was the loser.

Nagy and Cone were brilliant. Nagy, who beat Boston in Game 3 last week after winning five of his last six decisions in the regular season, allowed one run and five hits in 6 2-3 innings, striking out five and walking one.

Cone, who wanted to atone for an awful start in the opener against Cleveland last year, gave up five hits in eight innings, striking out five and walking three.

Justice, only 3-for-18 against Cone in his career, homered for the first hit off Cone, sending an 0-1 pitch over the fence in right as Paul O'Neill came close to denying him with a leaping catch.

Cleveland then loaded the bases on walks to Manny Ramirez and Brian Giles around a single by Fryman. But Sandy Alomar stranded them when he grounded to first.

Omar Vizquel created another great chance when he sliced an opposite-field triple off the left-field line with one out in the eighth. But Cone got Justice on a topper in front of the plate that catcher Joe Girardi picked up -- Vizquel held at third -- and Ramirez hit a soft comebacker to the mound for the third out.

New York also squandered chances. O'Neill doubled leading off the fourth and moved to third when Bernie Williams grounded out. But Martinez flied out and Tim Raines struck out.

Brosius' double pushed across the only run in what could have been a big inning. Williams opened the seventh with a single and Martinez walked, but Raines struck out for the third time after failing on a bunt attempt, and Shane Spencer flied to center.

After the two-out double put runners on second and third, Steve Reed came in and retired Girardi on a grounder back to the mound.

New York left two on again in the eighth. Derek Jeter walked with one out and stole second, but O'Neill flied out to the gap in left-center against Jim Poole and, after a walk to Williams, Paul Shuey fanned Martinez.

Raines legged out an infield hit leading off the ninth and Homer Bush stole second, but Shuey struck out Shane Spencer, Brosius was intentionally walked, and pinch-hitter Jorge Posada bounced into a double play.

Notes: Justice's home run was his 10th in the postseason, tying Fred McGriff for second among active players behind Ramirez, who hit his 12th in the ninth inning Tuesday night. ... Jeter has hit safely in all seven AL championship series games he's played.

By RONALD BLUM, AP Sports Writer



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