Twins win 6-4, drop Indians to last place

Published 8:32 am Thursday, September 20, 2012

CLEVELAND — Liam Hendriks finally has a win, thanks in part to another productive night for Josh Willingham.

Willingham had four hits and four RBIs to help Hendriks and the Twins beat Cleveland 6-4 on Wednesday, dropping the Indians into last place in the AL Central.

Hendriks (1-7) allowed two runs and two hits in six effective innings to get the win in his 18th career start. The right-hander was pelted with shaving cream by happy teammates after picking up the elusive win.

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“It took a long, long time,” Hendriks said. “I could have done without the shaving cream in my eye, but I’m excited to become the 16th Australian to win a major league game.”

Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire couldn’t help but tease the 23-year-old pitcher.

“I told him if it takes him that long to win again, the shaving cream is going to be gasoline,” Gardenire cracked.

Willingham belted a tiebreaking two-run homer off Zach McAllister (5-8) in the fifth inning, giving Minnesota a 4-2 lead. He also had three singles.

Willingham now has 35 homers and 110 RBIs in his first year with the Twins. It’s the most homers by a Minnesota player since Hall of Famer Harmon Killebrew’s 41 in 1970. His previous career high for RBIs was 98 set last season with Oakland.

“It has been a special year for me,” said Willingham, who said he didn’t predict any numbers when he moved to Minnesota as a free agent, turning down Cleveland’s contract offer last winter.

“To make a long story short, I wanted three years and two teams offered that,” he said. “Cleveland was not one of them.”

Gardenhire is glad.

“He can put it in the seats and we knew that when we signed him,” he said. “He has some big RBIs for us.”

Cleveland shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera homered, but left in the seventh with a sore right wrist as the Indians fell to 5-12 against Minnesota. Manager Manny Acta said Cabrera will not play Thursday.

Glen Perkins worked the ninth for his 14th save.

Minnesota’s Joe Mauer went 1 for 4 with a walk and had an RBI single taken away when the umpires reversed a call. Mauer is hitting .324 while contending for his fourth AL batting title. Detroit’s Miguel Cabrera leads at .333.

Mauer hit a sinking liner to left with Jamey Carroll on second base in the eighth. Vinny Rottino made a diving catch, but third base umpire Mike Muchlinski gave a safe sign as Carroll scored.

Acta argued with Muchlinski, a fill-in ump from the minors. The entire crew huddled for a moment and Muchlinski reversed his call, ending the inning and keeping the score at 6-2.

“I thought I could see he caught the ball,” Acta said. “It’s always a tough call.”

Jason Kipnis and Michael Brantley each singled in runs in the bottom half, but Cleveland fell to 11-39 since July 26. It has dropped 11 of its last 13 at home.

The Indians led the AL Central for 40 days and held a four-game advantage on May 17, but are 39-72 since.

Hendriks, who made four starts in 2011, was the fifth pitcher since 1920 to go winless in his first 17 starts, three shy of the record shared by Bill Caudill of the Chicago Cubs (1979-81) and Mike Mohler of Oakland (1993-97).

“It’s nice to get the young man a win,” Gardenhire said. “He stayed away from the big inning. Willingham had a heck of a night, but the night goes to Liam.”

Cabrera put Cleveland ahead 1-0 with his 15th homer in the first. He later aggravated a wrist injury that caused him to miss four starts last week.

Mauer and Willingham had consecutive run-scoring singles in the third to give Minnesota a 2-1 lead.

Rottino hustled for the tying run in the bottom half. He walked, stole second and advanced to third on a groundout. He waited until shortstop Pedro Florimon fielded the ball hit by Shin-Soo Choo and threw to first, then took off and beat Justin Morneau’s throw back across the diamond. He scored on a single by Kipnis.

Chris Herrmann made it 5-2 with a run-scoring groundout in the fifth off Chris Seddon. Willingham added an RBI single in the sixth.

McAllister gave up four runs and eight hits over 4 1-3 innings and dropped to 0-4 in seven starts since beating Boston on Aug. 11. In 12 starts since defeating Tampa Bay on July 16, the right-hander is 1-7.