CLEVELAND -AP- Colby Lewis keeps winning and so do the Texas Rangers.
Lewis allowed two hits over six shutout innings, leading Texas over the Cleveland Indians 7-3 on Tuesday night and improving to 5-0 for the first time in his major league career.
Bryan Holaday and Jurickson Profar homered off Corey Kluber (4-6), and the AL West-leading Rangers won for the ninth time in their last 11 games.
"He knows how to pitch," Rangers manager Jeff Banister said of Lewis. "He presents a challenge to hitters because they can't sit on one single pitch."
 
Rangers' Lewis throws 6 shutout innings in 7-3 win
 
Lewis has won his last three starts and has pitched at least six innings in 10 of 11 outings this season. The 36-year-old right-hander gave up singles to Lonnie Chisenhall and Rajai Davis in the third. He is 3-0 and has allowed five earned runs over 26 innings in five road starts.
"For us to put the runs up that we did, and to pitch against a guy like Kluber, you know you've got to keep it close," Lewis said.
Sam Dyson got two outs for his sixth save in seven chances.
Holaday, whose two-run homer put Texas ahead in the third, hit Kluber's first pitch following Jared Hoying's single.
"I didn't want to mess around and see what else he could throw me, because he's pretty good out there," Holaday said.
Profar's two-out homer in the fifth landed in the right-field seats. The 23-year-old switch-hitter hit a home run on the first pitch of his major league debut, at Progressive Field on Sept. 2, 2012.
"There's a lot of feel-good for him here," Banister said. "He's played well. He has great joy playing the game. You can see it in his face."
Kluber was removed after the first three hitters in the eighth reached base. He allowed six runs and eight hits in seven innings.
Cleveland has lost three straight after briefly moving into the AL Central lead on Saturday. Chisenhall had three RBI, including a two-run homer in the seventh.
Texas has won the first two games of the series, outscoring Cleveland 16-5.
"They're a team that's shown they can go the distance, get to the playoffs," Indians manager Terry Francona said. "They're good enough to do that. They're a fun team to play because they're good."
Ian Desmond's two-run double in the eighth extended his hitting streak to nine games. Elvis Andrus was 1 for 4 and has hit safely in 29 of 30 career games at Progressive Field.
Hoying, a native of northwest Ohio, got his major league RBI with a ninth-inning single and had two hits.
BEHIND THE PLATE
Holaday made his third straight start and has four hits and four RBI. Wilson is batting .526 over his last five contests, but Banister doesn't want to overwork either one.
"Neither of those guys has been an everyday catcher, so I'm always monitoring their energy level," he said.
 

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