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Anderson, A’s avoid sweep

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That’s just not the way the A’s have operated this year.

Last week, Oakland entered its final three-game series of the regular season needing to sweep the two-time reigning AL champion Rangers to capture the AL West – and the A’s did it, sending a stunned Texas team to the one-game wild card, which it lost to Baltimore.

A club with a majors-best 14 walkoff wins and countless whipped cream pie celebrations snapped the longest postseason skid in franchise history at six games.

“We’ve played a lot of games when we lost tough games and we’ve come back and won the next day,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said earlier. “We do have some history with that.”

Anderson faced the minimum in three of his four innings, throwing 51 pitches through four.

Cabrera stepped to the plate to huge boos in the first, when he grounded out to second on the first pitch he saw to start a 1-for-4 day with a strikeout.

Detroit manager Jim Leyland knew he would need more from his hitters to win this one after Detroit scored only one run via hit in their first two games at home — on Alex Avila’s solo home run in Saturday’s 3-1 Game 1 victory.

“That’s a little freaky, to be honest with you,” Leyland said before Game 3.

The Tigers are trying to reach second straight AL championship series after losing last year’s ALCS in six games to the two-time reigning AL champion Texas Rangers.

Detroit clinched the AL Central in Oakland last year and is hoping for another clinching party as soon as possible.

Anderson did his job to delay it.

He insisted he was healthy and ready to go — and Melvin took his pitcher at his word and gave him a shot in the biggest start yet. Anderson had shown plenty when he returned in August following a 14-month absence recovering from elbow-ligament replacement surgery and made six impressive starts.

He allowed two hits, struck out six and walked two in six innings. Then the reliable bullpen took over.

Ryan Cook pitched the seventh, Sean Doolittle struck out the side in order in the eighth and closer Grant Balfour finished the four-hitter. The A’s staff pitched the 11th postseason shutout by the franchise, while the Tigers were blanked for the 13th time in the postseason.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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