Chi White Sox at San Francisco
05/16/2008 -
By Ryan Leong
PA SportsTicker Contributing WriterSAN FRANCISCO (Ticker) -- Even though Alexei Ramirez is batting
just .156, his first career home run was the difference in a
pitchers' duel. Ramirez hit a two-run blast in the seventh inning to lead the
Chicago White Sox to a 2-0 victory over the San Francisco Giants
in the opener of their interleague series Friday. Ramirez, who defected from Cuba last November, was signed by the
White Sox on January 22 and only has four hits in his last 28
at-bats. However, the most important one came on a 1-1 offering
from Jonathan Sanchez (2-3), a pitch the 26-year-old deposited
over the wall in left field with two outs to snap a scoreless
tie. "I feel very happy, and also this home run helped me out because
I'm going to show all the fans in Chicago who Alexei is,"
Ramirez said through an interpreter. "I work hard to
concentrate on this game and I receive a lot of support from my
family, and I want to keep it going to help this team." It was Ramirez's first homer in 45 major league at-bats,
including three on Friday. "He should have more home runs," White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen
said. "He should have three or four. Maybe he'll hit more in
Chicago in the summer. ... He's got some power. He's doing a
lot of good things for us, even though he does not have the most
playing time." The blast made a winner of Gavin Floyd (4-2), who limited the
Giants to four hits and three walks with three strikeouts in six
innings. The righthander, who hit two batters and uncorked a
wild pitch, has not allowed an earned run in four of his eight
starts this season. "To be able to make a pitch and get outs is good," Floyd said.
"It could have been real ugly otherwise, but I made some pitches
and got people out. (I was) trying to get better as the game
went on, try to get my focus back and try to get better. "I found myself in the fifth and sixth inning, started getting
my rhythm and tempo and feeling really good. I'm just trying to
keep the team in the game and make pitches. It'd be a lot
easier if I got ahead, but I'll take the game." Ehren Wassermann, Boone Logan and Scott Linebrink combined for
two scoreless innings before Bobby Jenks worked around a one-out
double in the ninth for his ninth save. "Overall, it was a good performance from our pitching staff, and
especially Gavin," White Sox catcher A.J. Pierzynski said. Sanchez worked 6 2/3 innings, yielding two runs, five hits and
three walks with six strikeouts. It marked the first time the
lefthander lasted at least six frames in four starts. "He pitched great," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. "It was a
great job and a great effort. It was a changeup that came back
down and in (to Ramirez for the homer), but he really pitched
well. He had command of all his pitches." Neither team was able to push across a run over the first six
innings, but both threatened. In the bottom of the first, Fred Lewis walked, stole second and
advanced to third on a errant throw by Chicago catcher
Pierzynski. But with the infield in, Floyd retired Omar Vizquel
on a grounder to first, got Randy Winn on a pop-up and struck
out Bengie Molina to escape unscathed. Molina was the final out in the first, third and fifth innings,
each time with a runner in scoring position. The Giants put runners on the corners with one out in the
second, but Jose Castillo grounded into an inning-ending double
play. "When you squander some opportunities, that usually gives the
pitcher on the other side a little bit more confidence," Winn
said. "And (Floyd) is a guy that's come close to a couple of
no-hitters this year, so when you have those opportunities, you
need to capitalize on them." With two outs in the top of the sixth, Pierzynski t
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