1 Total Update since July 19, 2011
almost 2 years ago Update 0 comments
The Yankees fell to the Rays on a dramatic night in St. Pete.
A two run homer from Robinson Cano (you know, the homerun derby champion) and an RBI single from Reid Brignac (thanks to a triple from Sam Fuld) were the only runs scored in a relatively boring first six innings. Great pitching made it a quiet game until things got really interesting in the seventh:
THE SEVENTH
Jeremy Hellickson got into a seventh inning jam, allowing two base runners with two outs. Joe Maddon played his usual game of letting starters go one extra batter, and Hell-boy fortunately got the final out. I like the strategy, it instills confidence and let's pitchers take responsibility for their work, but boy is it dangerous!
Bartolo Colon also pitched a two runner jam in the seventh, but he was pulled with only one out on the board. Trailing, 2-1, Robinson Chirinos initiated the rally with an infield single, beating shortstop Derek Jeter's theatric throw to first. Sean Rodriguez followed Chirinos' lead, lining a single to right field and chasing starter Bartolo Colon from the game.
And you never know what the Trop will bring. On what should have been out two, a routine fly ball to center was lost in the catwalk lights at the last second by Curtis Granderson and the bases were loaded.
Elliot Johnson, pinch hitting for Brignac, ricocheted a fastball in the dirt to pitcher Boone Logan - who popped the ball farther in the air with his glove and allowed a runner to score. An error made it a tie ball game (2-2) on what should have been out three.
Bases Loaded, Johnny Damon. Boasting a .378 average with six career grand slams in bases loaded at-bats, Damon decided to reach to the corner of the strike zone for a blooper - which became a sac fly as hard-running Granderson slid feet first to catch the ball (video). Grandy attempted to throw it home, but actually threw it 18 feet wide of home to let the runners advance.
Tampa Bay up 3-2, Matt Joyce came in to pinch hit for Ben Zobrist. This was not a good sign. Zobrist left the game with swelling in his right leg after fouling a ball into his calf. The injury looked quite painful and was reminiscent of Joyce hurting his knee only a few nights ago. Hopefully Ben will have no issues going forward, the Rays are lucky it missed the shin. Back to the issue at hand, Zorilla was replaced by a lefty with a LHP on the mound. Joyce struck out looking on a nasty slider thrown to the outside bottom corner, limiting the runs scored but still a Tampa Bay lead.
THE EIGHTH
Jake McGee worked a fantastic eighth, reaching 97 mph on a good fastball with a killer slider. He had lightning in his fingertips. The lefty took a ground ball to the leg for his only base runner as he K'd Granderson (not his night) before a double play off Robinson Cano. All the hype of Jake becoming the future closer for Tampa Bay got another spark tonight.
In the bottom, B.J. Upton and Robinson Chirinos worked walks on two outs (six and ten pitches respectively) before Sean Rodriguez flew out to deep left to end the inning.
THE NINTH
Kyle Farnsworth was NOT called on for the ninth. After blowing last night's lead, Maddon gave him some rest. Instead, control master Joel Peralta was brought in to close out. Nick Swisher, batting near .330 against right handers, struck out easily.
Up against Jorje Posada, Joel was called on a quick-pitch by the umpire, in other words not waiting long enough for Jorje to take his practice swings (please...) disallowing a fastball high. The next pitch was a ground out to first.
Russell Martin was the last hope for the Yankees, and he pasted a deep fly to left that would be caught at the warning track. That gave Peralta his first save since 2007 and Hellickson the win.
GAME NOTES
almost 2 years ago Update 0 comments
Jeremy Hellickson has not pitched in 16 games thank to the All Star Break. Bartolo Colon has been injured. Both have been a pleasant surprise this season, and defied odds to be ranked third in their team's pitching rotation. The Rays' Hell-boy has never faced the Yankees, but recent history could put the odds in his favor.
Hellickson's last outing: 7 2/3 innings, six hits, only three earned runs and a win against St. Louis
Colon's last outing: two-thirds of an inning, eight earned runs and a loss to Toronto
Last night's loss was hard to bear. It was a crazy night and the bullpen was exhausted. Kyle Farnsworth blew a 5-out save in the eighth to tie the game at 4 runs a piece, and future-starter Alex Torres pitched the ninth. Fresh off the plane ride, he eventually walked in the winning run for New York. To keep the bullpen fresh, he was demoted this morning to make room for Dane De La Rosa. A righty, he will make his major-league debut as number 49. Per Marc Topkin: De La Rosa is already on the 40-man roster - which is a factor in his promotion over others such as Lance Cormier - and holds a 3.86 ERA in 35 games for Triple-A Durham, striking out 50 and walking 21 in 46 2/3 innings.
The Tampa Bay Rays are a season-high eight games out of the AL East lead behind the Red Sox. The Rays have not lost four straight since their 0-6 start and trail the Yankees by 6 1/2 for the wild card. The next two games in this series will be crucial.
Game Time: 7:10 PM, Tropicana Field
Pitching Matchup: Bartolo Colon (6-5, 3.47 ERA) vs. Jeremy Hellickson (8-7, 3.21 ERA)
Television/Radio: SunSports HD, WDAE 620 AM
Notes from mlb.com:
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