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Sunday, Apr. 30 2:05pm ET
Athletics' Hudson rollin' like a river | |||||
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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME LOG
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Oakland Athletics pitcher Tim Hudson is back on track and manager Art Howe couldn't be happier. Hudson's good stuff took a brief hiatus earlier this season but his second consecutive strong start, an 8-2 victory over the Minnesota Twins Sunday in which he struck out 10 in 7 2/3 innings, indicated that he's back to his 1999 form. "He was sharp today. That's an understatement," Howe said. "He's locked in now. He's throwing the ball extremely well." Hudson (3-2), whose ERA ballooned to 6.26 this month after he went 11-2 with a 3.27 ERA in his rookie season last year, confounded Twins hitters with a wicked forkball and an effective changeup. He said he didn't lose confidence after giving up 11 runs in four innings over two starts earlier this month, but he did spend time with pitching coach Rick Peterson working on altering his mechanics. "I've always had a good work ethic and that's never been a question," Hudson said. "With mechanics, every now and then you get a little flaw here and there, so you make the necessary adjustments." Staked to a three-run lead before he took the mound, Hudson faced just three batters over the minimum through six innings. "We got off to a bad start and never recovered," Twins manager Tom Kelly said. "Hudson was too good for us. He pretty much took control of the ballgame." Every Oakland starter except Frank Menechino had at least one hit as the A's pounded out 14 hits, including four by Ben Grieve. Hudson lost his shutout in the eighth when Denny Hocking stole home on a strikeout by Cristian Guzman, who appeared to interfere with catcher Ramon Hernandez's throw to second. Grieve, whose 10th inning grand slam won Saturday's game for Oakland, had three singles and a double before being replaced by a pinch runner in the seventh. He has 10 RBI in his last five games and is hitting .371 in his career against the Twins. Rookie Adam Piatt hit his first major league home run and also hit two towering triples. Piatt is 8-for-19 since being called up from Triple-A Sacramento on Monday. "Adam, you can tell he has a great idea up there hitting, knowing what he wants to do," Oakland's Matt Stairs said. Twins starter Sean Bergman (2-1) was shaky from the beginning and after his first six pitches, Oakland led 3-0. Terrence Long led off the game with a single to center, then Miguel Tejada hit a 395-foot homer to left center. Jason Giambi hit the next pitch 360 feet into the left field bleachers to give Oakland a 3-0 lead. Bergman was done after the third, when he yielded two more runs on a pair of walks and two hits -- including a triple by Piatt that Torii Hunter badly misjudged and allowed to hit the center field wall. "It was just a terrible game for me," Bergman said. "It's tough when after three batters, you're down 3-0." Matt Lawton extended his career-high 16-game hitting with an RBI double in the eighth. Lawton's streak is the longest in the majors this season. It was Oakland's first sweep of the Twins since Sept. 9-13, 1998.
Game notes | ALSO SEE Baseball Scoreboard Oakland Clubhouse Minnesota Clubhouse RECAPS Boston 2 Cleveland 1
Oakland 8
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