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Athletics rally to set up Verlander vs. Parker showdown

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The third such hit followed shortly, and loudly.

Griffin left an 0-2 fastball over the plate to Prince Fielder, who crushed it to right field, leaving no possibility of it being brought back a la Crisp the night before. Instead, Reddick barely looked up as it sailed into the seats.

Scherzer, a big right-hander who led all A.L. pitchers this season by striking out 11.1 batters every nine innings, breezed through four innings on 46 pitches. He struck out the side in the fifth, getting Cliff Pennington swinging with runners on first and third to end the inning.

But as Scherzer’s night lengthened, his fastball appeared to lose steam. Leading off the sixth, Crisp battled for 10 pitches before hitting a one-hopper that bounced off Fielder’s glove for a two-base error. Crisp then scampered to third on a wild pitch.

Stephen Drew, playing stellar defense for two nights, laced a double to right-center to score Crisp. Drew tried for third, and Infante’s relay of Jackson’s throw from center reached the bag well ahead.

The hit knocked Scherzer out of the game. The out was costly. Instead of a runner on second and no outs, the A’s had nobody on and one down, and after Brandon Moss drew a two-out walk, Reddick’s fly ball died at the warning track in center.

The Tigers added a run in the eighth on Quintin Berry’s run-scoring single to stretch their lead to two and put the game in the hands of their closer in the ninth.

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