Red Sox 4, Yankees 1...
For Friday's starters, the Yankees previously sent three of their top prospects to the Oakland A's for their ace while the Boston Red Sox picked up their's off the scrap heap. Nothing against Doug Fister but there's no way he should look like Corey Kluber or Chris Sale on the mound. However, for yesterday's game, the listless Yankees made him appear to be one of the game's aces as the Red Sox easily got past the Yankees.
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When the Yankees scored first, on Aaron Judge's first RBI against the Red Sox since April, it looked like it might be the start of something good with Sonny Gray on the mound. But after that point, the Yankees didn't have to worry about their problem with runners in scoring position because they couldn't get any.
After Gray breezed through the Red Sox in the top of the first, the Yankees got to business in the bottom of the inning. Brett Gardner led off with a double to deep center, bouncing on the warning track and off the wall. Aaron Judge followed him with another double to the wall in left center to score Gardy with the game's first run. Sadly, at that moment, the Yankees forgot that it was only Doug Fister on the mound. The next three hitters grounded out and the Yankees had seen their last RISP when Judge was left standing at second.
The Red Sox erased the Yankees' lead in the top of the 3rd. After striking out Sandy Leon, Gray walked Brock Holt. Eduardo Nunez made him pay for it with a two-run shot to left. Brett Gardner could only watch as the ball sail into the stands. From there, the Red Sox tacked on a couple of unnecessary insurance runs in the form of solo home runs.
Andrew Benintendi, doing to the Yankees what I can only wish Aaron Judge would do to the Red Sox, pounded a Gray pitch into the right field stands (nearly into the Judge's Chambers) in the top of the 5th.
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Hanley Ramirez, having a down year against any team not called the Yankees, drilled a shot to right center in the top of the 7th.
I'd like to find a positive in the game but unfortunately I can't. Both Gray and Fister went seven innings with 98 pitches. Gray only gave up one more hit than Fister (five to four) but the three home runs were the difference maker. We needed Gray to have his finest moment in Pinstripes but instead it was the Red Sox partying on the field after the game.
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Aroldis Chapman pitched the eighth inning. He gave a hit (a single to Mookie Betts) but recorded all three outs by strikeout. Velocity didn't seem to be a problem with Chapman hitting nearly 105 mph on a pitch that Dustin Pedroia fouled off. Adam Warren also pitched an inning of one-hit, scoreless relief.
I'm sorry, there was one positive in the game. Bernie Williams did a great job of playing the National Anthem on his guitar during pre-game ceremonies. I will always appreciate #51.
This was a very winnable game. Instead, the Yankees (71-63) are back to 5 1/2 games behind the Red Sox in the AL East standings. The Baltimore Orioles won, beating the Toronto Blue Jays 1-0 in extra innings, so they are just 2 1/2 games behind the Yankees. New York maintained its one game lead in the Wild Card standings thanks to the Minnesota Twins' 7-6 loss to the Kansas City Royals, but there are seven AL teams within striking distance (3 1/2 games or less).
The Yankees need to take care of business. If they go down fighting, it's one thing. When they go down meekly, it is unacceptable.
Odds & Ends...
The Yankees made the first of their September call-ups with names you'd expect to see: DH Matt Holliday, C Erik Kratz (acquired solely to back up Gary Sanchez and Austin Romine while they serve their staggered suspensions), RHP Bryan Mitchell, LHP Jordan Montgomery, and RHP Ben Heller. To make room for Kratz on the 40-man roster, the Yankees moved RHP Luis Cessa (ribcage injury) to the 60-day DL. I am glad to see that the Kratz move didn't result in a "forced" DFA. I didn't see an easy candidate to dump. There will be other names to follow but the Triple A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders will begin play in the International League play-offs next week so it may be a few weeks before we see guys like Miguel Andujar or Jake Cave.
I thought CC Sabathia getting upset about Eduardo Nunez's bunt in the first inning of Thursday's game was a little over-reactionary (why not exploit an opponent's weakness?). But Hall of Famer Jim Rice's comments about CC's weight were, in my opinion, out of line.
Tyler Clippard must think he won the lottery. A couple of months ago, he was pitching like the worst reliever in baseball for the Yankees. Now, he finds himself with a vital role in the bullpen for a team poised to make a World Series run with starting pitchers led by Justin Verlander and Dallas Keuchel.
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Have a great Saturday! Here's hoping that Masa washes those dirty Sox. Go Yankees!
As long as Girardi keeps batting Judge and Sanchez and Didi in the 2-4 they are not gping to produce.
ReplyDeleteStats show it.Sanchez when hitting 5th or 6th rakes at over .400 and Judge in 5th rakes.Didi hits at a .350 clip and in the 7th.
Bird though unproven seems to be a good fit in 3 and Starlin hits his best in the 4 hole.
What good are statistics if you don't look at them.
Girardi needs to open that binder and look under stats / splits