Advertisement

Finley Injury Overshadows Win

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Whatever streak Chuck Finley had going lost all importance when a Chad Kreuter liner made contact with the Angel pitcher’s left elbow Saturday night.

The Angels beat the Chicago White Sox, 5-3, in front of 37,500 at Edison Field. The game featured Damon Mashore’s game-winning, two-run double in the sixth, the ejection of Chicago slugger Albert Belle and White Sox Manager Jerry Manuel in the seventh and a rain delay before the eighth.

It was also the Angels’ ninth victory in their last 10 games, but it didn’t seem to matter.

Advertisement

The most important Angel development came in the fourth inning when Finley, their best pitcher, left the game after being hit by a ball.

It first appeared that Kreuter’s two-out liner had nailed Finley in the left hip. The ball caromed toward the third-base line, where Finley, in obvious pain, retrieved it.

After athletic trainer Ned Bergert examined Finley’s elbow and forearm, and when Finley didn’t even attempt a warmup pitch before leaving, it was apparent the situation was much more serious.

The preliminary report is that Finley, who has a 14-game win streak and was named American League pitcher of the month Friday, has a bruised left elbow and will be reevaluated today.

No X-rays were taken Saturday night. The Angels’ best player, right fielder Tim Salmon, and one of their starting pitchers, Jack McDowell, already have gone on the disabled list this past week.

Afterward, Collins said he remained convinced that Finley’s injury was not as serious as it looked.

Advertisement

“The ball actually hit him on the muscle just below the elbow, not flush on the elbow,” Collins said. “It swelled up, and he’s going to be sore [today]. I told him I’ve had about 10 of those throwing batting practice. He may not make his next start, but I think the most we’re looking at is one missed start.”

Finley, who left the stadium before the game ended, told Collins he could have stayed in the game, but Collins said he removed him as a precaution.

“He probably could have pitched, but I was worried it would tighten up between innings,” Collins said. “He said he was OK, but he just stood there. That sucker hurt. It makes you sick to your stomach. Here’s a guy who makes a living with his left arm. I just didn’t want to mess with it.”

Compounding matters for Collins was the fact that neither of his two long relievers, Omar Olivares and Shigetoshi Hasegawa, was available Saturday night because they combined for nine innings in Friday night’s victory over the White Sox.

But James, Rich Delucia and Troy Percival limited the White Sox to one run on three hits the rest of the way, and when Percival struck out Frank Thomas for his eighth save to end the game, the Angels enjoyed a nice but temporary distraction to Finley’s injury.

Finley, who entered with a league-leading 1.54 ERA and hasn’t lost a game since last June 27, had given up two runs on four hits and struck out three Saturday night when he left with the score tied, 2-2.

Advertisement

Chicago scored in the first on Belle’s sacrifice fly, and the Angels countered with two in the bottom of the first when Jim Edmonds singled and Cecil Fielder lined a homer to left off White Sox starter Mike Sirotka.

Consecutive singles by Robin Ventura and Wil Cordero and Magglio Ordonez’s double-play grounder gave Chicago the tying run in the fourth, but the Angels went ahead, 3-2, in the bottom of the inning on Fielder’s walk, Dave Hollins’ single and Garret Anderson’s RBI single.

The White Sox tied it, 3-3, on Kreuter’s RBI double in the sixth, but the Angels avoided further damage when Anderson cut down Kreuter at the plate. Kreuter tried to score on Chris Snopek’s single to left, and catcher Matt Walbeck withstood a collision with Kreuter to make the tag.

Hollins and Anderson then singled with two outs in the bottom of the sixth, and both scored when Mashore drilled a double just inside the third-base line for a 5-3 lead.

Advertisement