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From: clarinews@clarinet.com (STEPHEN C. RUTKOWSKI, UPI Sports Writer)
Newsgroups: clari.sports.baseball,biz.clarinet.sample
Subject: American League Roundup
Keywords: baseball, men's professional
Message-ID: 
Date: 22 Sep 89 07:28:14 GMT
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ACategory: sports
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Priority: regular
Format: summary
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Codes: ysbpmxx.


	The Thursday night performances of the Oakland Athletics and
California Angels may have decided the American League West winner.
	The first-place A's received all the necessary ingredients such as
good pitching, timely hitting and superb defense to nip the Minnesota
Twins 2-1. The second-place California Angels went 17 innings with the
Cleveland Indians in an effort to keep pace with Oakland, but finally
fell 5-4.
	The A's victory increased their lead in the division to 3 1-2 games
over California and pushed the Kansas City Royals five games back. The
Angels have only nine games remaining to try to catch the A's, who have
10 games left.
	``That's as good as the A's can play,'' said Oakland Manager Tony
LaRussa after Bob Welch and two relievers combined on a six-hitter and
Mark McGwire homered and scored both runs.
	Oakland, which has won four straight, is looking for a return trip
to the World Series where they lost last year to the Los Angeles Dodgers
in five games. California is looking for its first division title since
1986.
	Welch, 17-8, became the fourth member of Oakland's staff to win 17
or more games -- Mike Moore (18-10), Storm Davis (18-7) and Dave Stewart
(19-9) are the others. Relief ace Dennis Eckersley pitched the ninth for
his 31st save.
	``Talking to players on the other clubs, they don't like to face
this pitching staff,'' McGwire said. ``It makes you feel good to be on
this team.''
	Though Jose Canseco has not supplied the punch like last year,
McGwire has. The first baseman blasted his 29th home run of the year in
the fifth to give the A's a 2-0 lead. The homer, the first ever at the
Metrodome, was measured at 450 feet.
	``The Metrodome hasn't been the greatest of places,'' said McGwire,
who credited an improved lighting system this year. ``When I came in
here the first time I saw a little difference. Confidence is with you
knowing you're seeing the ball a little bit better.''
	At Cleveland, Brook Jacoby's sacrifice fly in the 17th inning
scored Tommy Hinzo to end the longest game in the AL this season.
	The 5-hour, 26-minute marathon snapped California's five-game
winning streak and ended Cleveland's six-game losing streak. The victory
by the Indians was only their third in 18 extra-inning games this
season.
	Pete O'Brien led off the 17th with a triple to right off loser Rich
Monteleone, 2-2, the sixth California pitcher. Hinzo ran for O'Brien and
Jacoby, batting with the infield and outfield drawn in, hit a sacrifice
fly to right.
	Despite the costly loss, the Angels are not ready to concede the
division.
	``We had our chances,'' California first baseman Wally Joyner said.
``We just couldn't get that extra hit. We're not going to fold up shop.
We're not out of it, we're not going to be out of it.''
	The Angels got the leadoff batter to second in the extra frames
three times, but could not get him home.
	California had rallied for three runs in the ninth to tie the score
4-4.
	Elsewhere in the American League, Milwaukee beat New York 14-1 in
the first game of a double-header and New York took the second game 5-4
in 10 innings and Seattle downed Texas 8-3.
	In the NL, it was: San Diego 11, Cincinnati 7; Chicago 9,
Philadelphia 1;Atlanta 3, Houston 0; Montreal 6, Pittsburgh 5; New York
6, St. Louis 1 and San Francisco 4, Los Angeles 3.
                    _B_r_e_w_e_r_s_ _1_4_-_4_,_ _Y_a_n_k_e_e_s_ _1_-_5
	At New York, Don Mattingly clubbed a two-run homer with none out in
the 10th inning to rally New York in the nightcap. Rob Deer had given
the Brewers a 4-3 lead with a homer in the top of the inning.
	In the opener, Joey Meyer knocked in four runs and Charlie O'Brien
had three RBI to power Milwaukee to the rout. The game included a
sixth-inning brawl that resulted in the ejection of Brewers starter and
winner Mark Knudson, along with Yankee DH Luis Polonia and outfielder
Mel Hall.
	Milwaukee could have moved to within 5 1-2 games of AL East-leading
Toronto with a sweep.
                      _M_a_r_i_n_e_r_s_ _8_,_ _R_a_n_g_e_r_s_ _3
	At Arlington, Texas, Scott Bradley's bases-loaded single
highlighted a five-run Seattle fourth. The decision broke a four-game
Texas winning streak, its longest in two months. Seattle did not have a
hit off starter Jamie Moyer through three innings, then drove Moyer,
4-8, from the mound by putting seven runners on in the fourth. Rookie
Randy Johnson, 7-8, was the winner.