Sabathia's tape-measure homer, 10 K's lift Indians over Dodgers in extras

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- C.C. Sabathia made a pregame promise to his teammates that he'd swing for the fences.

He backed up that boast in a hurry.

Sabathia hit a tape-measure home run in his first at-bat of the year and also struck out 10, highlighting the Cleveland Indians' 7-2 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers in 11 innings Saturday.

"I told everybody I was trying to hit homers today because I had two singles last year and everybody was all over me, saying I was a singles hitter," the reigning AL Cy Young winner said. "It was awesome."

Sabathia enhanced his reputation on the mound and at the plate in the interleague game at Dodger Stadium. He launched a home run estimated at 440 feet and improved to 12-for-40 (.300) lifetime as a hitter with two career homers and seven RBIs.

He didn't even take any practice swings in the on-deck circle or going up to the plate because he spent too much time trying to locate his batting helmet.

"It's always fun for me to hit," Sabathia said. "I took BP the other day in Colorado, but that was it. I've been looking forward to this. I started counting the days back in May, trying to figure if I was going to hit in Colorado or hit here. I love to do it, so it was a lot of fun today."

With NL rules in effect, Sabathia wasted little time once he got to the plate. He drove a 1-0 fastball from Chan Ho Park into the lower seats in the right-field corner leading off the third, drawing a collective gasp from the crowd of 45,036.

"I was just looking for a fastball out over the plate," said the 6-foot-7, 290-pound pitcher, who did a slow trot around the bases in the 95-degree heat. "Everybody was laughing when I got back to the dugout."

Sabathia's other home run came in 2005 against Elizardo Ramirez at Cincinnati, a two-run shot to center field in a 10-3 victory.

"C.C. told me he couldn't sleep last night. I don't think it was because of his pitching. I think it was because he knew he was going to get a chance to hit," manager Eric Wedge said. "He's a fantastic athlete."

Sabathia allowed one run and five hits and improved his league-leading strikeout total to 107. The big lefty took a three-hitter and a 1-0 lead into the sixth before Matt Kemp hit his seventh home run of the season.

"He's a good hitter. He put the bat right on the ball, and that's what he's supposed to with a pitch like that," Sabathia said. "I wanted it a little more in, but unfortunately I left it on the inner third of the plate -- and that's right in his spot."

Jamey Carroll ignited Cleveland's winning burst in the 11th with a single and capped it with a sacrifice fly. But it came too late to put another win on Sabathia's 5-8 record.

"It's not frustrating at all," Sabathia said. "I mean, for us to get a win, being able to play music in here and getting everybody feeling good, it's definitely worth it.

"To win the first two here is big, after getting swept in Colorado. So it doesn't really matter how we do it. If I win or not, I'm just trying to keep us in the game. I'm just glad that we were able to score some runs at the end and pull it off," he said.

With the score 1-all, Carroll and Ben Francisco opened the 11th with singles against Cory Wade (0-1). Jhonny Peralta, whose two-run double in the 10th Friday night gave the Indians a 6-4 win, hit a go-ahead single off Scott Proctor. Casey Blake hit an RBI single, Kelly Shoppach added a two-run single and Grady Sizemore singled home another run.

"The name of the job right now is about going out and getting outs, and I'm pathetic," Proctor said. "It's embarrassing for the team when guys compete like that all day to go out there and pitch like that is stupid. I'm tired of people making excuses and saying I'm hurt. It's not that. I have to go out and make pitches and get outs.

"It's not rocket science. And to let a game like that get away, I'm embarrassed. I've never had this. It's one of those things that will make you stronger in the end, but it's bad. You wrack your brain trying to figure out what the hell is going wrong."

Masahide Kobayashi (4-3) pitched a perfect 10th inning for the victory and Scott Elarton finished up, allowing an RBI double by James Loney.

Game notes
Sabathia's homer was the first by a visiting pitcher at Dodger Stadium since July 26, 2006, when San Diego's Jake Peavy connected off Brad Penny. ... Dodgers SS Angel Berroa singled in three at-bats against Sabathia and is 4-for-40 lifetime against him. ... The Dodgers and Indians were scheduled to meet in the 1993 Hall of Fame game at Cooperstown, but the game was rained out. ... The Tampa Bay Rays are the only team that hasn't played at Chavez Ravine, although the Dodgers played a pair of interleague series at St. Petersburg, Fla., in 2002 and 2007.