advertisement

Cease improves to 8-0 over Tigers; White Sox romp 15-2

DETROIT - Dylan Cease became the first White Sox pitcher to win his first eight career starts against an opponent, cruising to a 15-2 romp over the Detroit Tigers on Saturday.

Cease is the first major league pitcher to win his first eight starts against another team since Jamie Moyer started 10-0 against the Marlins in 2006-08.

"I've been really locked in the last few times I've faced them, and that makes me hard to hit," he said. "They've got a good lineup, though, so I've been lucky enough to have this much success."

Brian Goodwin, called up from the minors on Thursday, homered and drove in 5 runs in his White Sox debut.

"It was great to have a chance to show my new teammates that I'm going to be able to help them win games," said Goodwin, who signed with Chicago as a free agent last month. "This is the first team that ever drafted me, and even though I didn't sign out of high school, I've still always had some love for the White Sox.

"Plus this seemed like a team I could help win some games," he said.

Cease (5-2) allowed 2 runs on 4 hits in 5 innings before being removed with a 13-2 lead. He walked one and struck out seven and saw his career ERA against Detroit rise to 2.09.

"He was pitching fine, but he had too many long innings in the dugout and we didn't want his arm to get cold," White Sox manager Tony La Russa said. "We had him throw in the cage a few times, but you can only do that so many times."

Tigers starter Jose Urena (2-6) allowed 8 runs while getting only 5 outs.

Doubles by Tim Anderson and Goodwin made it 1-0 after three pitches, Urena hit Yasmani Grandal and Jose Abreu reached on an error to load the bases.

Yermin Mercedes hit a two-run single through the drawn-in infield, and the runners moved up on Eric Haase's passed ball.

Urena struck out Adam Eaton, drawing a sarcastic cheer from the crowd, and escaped the inning without further damage.

Detroit also scored quickly, with Harold Castro hitting a two-run homer on Cease's seventh pitch, but he struck out the next three hitters.

The White Sox made it 6-2 in the second on Goodwin's three-run homer off Urena.

"Obviously, he didn't have his best stuff today," Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. "It was big for us to get two runs in the first after they got three, but we weren't executing on the mound and our bats never did anything else."

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.