Indians 9, Tigers 6: Notes from Wednesday's loss - Detroit Free Press
AT COMERICA PARK
WHAT HAPPENED: Shin-Soo Choo led off the game with a single on an 0-2 pitch. Two outs later, Brennan Boesch dropped Carlos Santanas fly ball. On Max Scherzers next pitch, Michael Brantley hit his first homer of the season, a three-run blow to right. The Indians led all night, and those three unearned runs stood as the difference after Cleveland scored once in the sixth to go ahead, 9-6.
NIGHT OF FIRSTS: Brantleys homer came on his 206th at-bat. Don Kellys homer in the third was his first of the season, on his 70th at-bat.
AND THEN: Clevelands Johnny Damon stole his first base of the season in the fourth. It came on the first stolen-base attempt against catcher Bryan Holaday in his career. It was the former Tigers 405th career steal. DAMONS OTHER STEAL: He jumped at the leftfield wall and took away a homer from Prince Fielder leading off the bottom of the second. NOT STARTING WELL: The only time the Tigers first hitter of the inning reached base came when Jhonny Peralta doubled in the fifth. The Tigers scored four runs off starter Jeanmar Gomez in that inning to pull within 8-6.
SCHERZERS HOMERS: Scherzer has allowed at least one homer in his past eight starts. He has given up 13 for the season, most on the club. However, until Wednesday, hed allowed only two homers with someone on base. The homers he allowed Wednesday each came with at least one runner aboard.
BENOIT RETURNS: Joaquin Benoit pitched for the first time since he left Saturday nights game with forearm stiffness. He retired the side in order in the eighth.
WOE VS. TRIBE: The Tigers are 0-5 against Cleveland this season. That head-to-head record accounts for why the Indians are 5 1/2 games ahead of the Tigers.
SPECTACULAR: Jose Valverde got the final out in the ninth when Quintin Berry made a diving catch on Brantley.
THREE STARS: 1. Brantley, 2. Casey Kotchman (two-run HR off Scherzer), 3. Cleveland pen (four innings, one hit).
Contact John Lowe: 313-223-4053 or jlowe@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @freeptigers.
Join sports writer Brian Manzullo for a live blog of the Tigers-Indians game Thursday afternoon at freep.com/sports. Then come back Friday, as Baseball America editor Nathan Rode answers your questions about the Tigers draft picks in a live chat at 11 a.m. Submit questions now! Also be sure to enter our contest for a Tigers VIP package at the June 15 game against the Rockies.
Muse to release sixth album in September 2012 - BBC News
Muse's Matt Bellamy revealed the new album would be out in September
Muse have revealed the title and release date for their forthcoming sixth studio album.
The Teignmouth rockers announced the title of the album, The 2nd Law, in a video trailer posted on their website.
The clip also confirmed that the album would be coming out in September after spending most of the year in a studio in London.
The band's most recent album The Resistance topped the UK album chart when it was released in 2009.
The two-minute long video on the group's website for the new album features a montage of news events, performance footage of the band and a clip of a track which appears to be influenced by dubstep.
Last month thousands of people turned out to see the threesome carry the Olympic flame through their Devon home town.
Their last live appearances in the UK came when they headlined the Reading and Leeds festivals in August 2011.
Legal battle brewing over Mitchell Park Library project - San Jose Mercury News
The city of Palo Alto is gearing up for a legal fight against the general contractor hired to rebuild the Mitchell Park Library and Community Center.
Oklahoma-based Flintco Pacific Construction was scheduled to wrap up construction on the $24.3 million project on April 29, but city officials say the finish line is now actually more than a year away.
"There have been significant delays on this project and the city is displeased with the contractor's performance to date," City Manager James Keene told a visibly disappointed city council Monday night.
Keene pinned the most recent setback on subcontractor Fast Glass, which he said failed to meet the deadline for installing new windows. That in turn has pushed back the next step: weather-proofing.
With the project shifting into "dispute mode," the city attorney's office has assembled a team of legal experts to provide counsel. Council members will meet in a closed session later this month to discuss what City Attorney Molly Stump called the city's "relative risks and responsibilities."
Keene said he expects legal proceedings to pick up steam once construction has been completed.
"Our primary focus is building completion," he said, "and once that is achieved our focus will shift to further determining the level of responsibility each of the city consultants and contractors bears for the delays and associated costs."
Based on expenditures, the project is about 72 percent
complete. Experts the city has conferred with have indicated it could be finished before the contractor's revised estimate of May 2013, said Phil Bobel, the city's assistant director of public works."Our confidence level in the contractor Flintco and its (subcontractors) is not high," said Bobel. "However, we're going to work hard to try to exceed the schedule. That is, bring it in before that date."
The city council has been keeping close tabs on the troublesome project since Sept. 12, when it reluctantly agreed to increase a contingency fund to cover unanticipated cost overruns by 20 percent of the $24.3 million price tag.
At the same time, council members ramped up their oversight of the project by requiring monthly reports on change orders. To date, $1.7 million worth of change orders have been approved. Monday, the city council voted to add detailed progress updates to future reports.
Much is riding on the project. It represents the centerpiece of a $76 million bond measure passed by voters in 2008 to upgrade the city's dilapidated book-lending facilities. The Downtown Library already received a $2.85 million makeover and the Main Library is next on the list.
Despite the numerous setbacks and overruns, the project remains well below the $41 million the city had expected it to cost. Still, that was no salve for Vice Mayor Greg Scharff.
"I think it's really unfortunate the contractor is not living up to the promises they made to us on this," he said.
Email Jason Green at jgreen@dailynewsgroup.com.


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