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Baez Homers as Cubs Rout White Sox 8-1

Baez Homers as Cubs Rout White Sox 8-1
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By The Associated Press
Jul. 28, 2016 | CHICAGO, IL
By The Associated Press Jul. 28, 2016 | 05:02 AM | CHICAGO, IL
The Chicago Cubs saved their scoring and drama until the later innings. Aroldis Chapman then capped it in his Cubs' debut, even in a non-save situation.

Javier Baez hit a tiebreaking two-run homer deep into Wrigley Field's left bleachers in the seventh, Addison Russell added a grand slam in a five-run eighth and the Cubs beat the White Sox 8-1 on Wednesday night.

Jason Hammel (10-5) allowed one run and five hits while striking out seven in seven innings. Hector Rondon pitched a perfect eighth, and Chapman pitched a 1-2-3 ninth — striking out Jose Abreu and Avisail Garcia — while hitting speeds of 103 mph.

The sellout crowd of 41,116 buzzed when the hard-throwing lefty entered the game. Afterward, Chapman's teammates were talking as much about him as the late homers.

"I thought we were getting a guy who threw 105. We only got 103," Hammel joked. "That's impressive, jaw-dropping to see."

Chapman had 20 saves in 21 chances this season with the Yankees before the Cubs acquired the hard-throwing lefty on Monday for a package of prospects.

Manager Joe Maddon said it was easier for Chapman to debut when the game wasn't on the line, especially after the lefty struggled answering reporters' questions on Tuesday related to an altercation last year with his girlfriend and ensuing 29-game suspension.

"Good for him to get through the last couple of days and get out there," Maddon said.

Chapman first balked at talking to reporters after the game, but after some negotiations, catcher Miguel Montero served as his translator.

"The adrenaline was pretty good even though it wasn't a save situation," Chapman said. "It was fun to hear the crowd cheering."

Baez went deep on a full-count pitch against Anthony Ranaudo (1-1) to chase the right-hander in his White Sox debut.

Ranaudo didn't allow a hit until Kris Bryant's solo homer with one out in the sixth tie the score 1-1. Bryant's 26th homer matched his total last season when he was NL Rookie of the Year.

"Definitely something I'll remember the rest of my life," Ranaudo said. "The way the game kind of turned, that kind of took a bad turn for us."

After Ben Zobrist's RBI double in the eighth, Russell followed two hitters later with his 12th homer to help the Cubs end a two-game slide and snap the White Sox's four-game winning streak.

Ranaudo allowed three runs and two hits — both homers — in 6 2/3 innings and smacked an opposite-field homer in the fifth for his first major league hit to give the White Sox a 1-0 lead.

The 6-foot-7 Ranaudo, acquired from Texas on May 12, was 5-3 with 3.20 ERA at Triple-A Charlotte in 13 starts. In two games with the Rangers this season, the 26-year-old righty was 1-0, but had a 17.18 ERA and walked eight.

The White Sox beat the Cubs 5-4 and 3-0 in the first two games of the crosstown series. The fourth game is Thursday night.

Ranaudo's homer was the first by a White Sox pitcher since Mark Buehrle went deep on June 14, 2009, at Milwaukee.

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