Sunday, June 17, 2018

Yanks Take 3 of 4 from Rays In a Strange Season

On Thursday, the Yankees began a 4-game home series with the Tampa Bay Rays. Domingo German started, still looking for his 1st major league win. He did his job, going 6 innings, allowing 3 runs on 5 hits and 2 walks, striking out 10.

He got help, in the form of home runs by Aaron Hicks and Gleyber Torres, both in the 5th inning. Chad Green, Dellin Betances (who has rebounded from a bad last couple of seasons to pitch very well this year) and Aroldis Chapman each pitched a scoreless inning.

Yankees 4, Rays 3. WP: German (1-4, his 1st big-league W). SV: Chapman (19). LP: Blake Snell (8-4).

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The Friday night game was the major league debut of pitcher Jonathan Loáisiga (pronounced "Loh-EYE-see-gah," and pictured above), a 23-year-old righthander from Nicaragua. Naturally, fans were nicknaming him "Lasagna." I sure hope no one has told him about the 2006 Premier League finale between Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United.

Loáisiga sure didn't pitch like a debutant -- or like a virus-afflicted athlete. Manager Aaron Boone let him go 5 innings, and he was terrific: He allowed no runs on 3 hits, with 6 strikeouts. One worrying point: 4 walks. Jonathan Holder, David Robertson, Betances and Adam Warren each pitched a scoreless inning

Pitching for the Rays was Nathan Eovaldi, the former Yankee known as Nasty Nate, an All-Star before injury wrecked his career. He did not have a good game, although he did pitch into the 8th inning. Didi Gregorius took him deep in the 3rd inning. In the 6th, another run scored on an Aaron Judge double, a Gregorius single, and a Giancarlo Stanton sacrifice fly.

Eovaldi loaded the bases in the 8th, and was removed. But Gary Sanchez brought all those runners home with a double, making the final score Yankees 5, Rays 0. WP: Loáisiga (1-0). No save. LP: Eovaldi (1-2).

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Yesterday was a Sevy Saturday. Luis Severino pitched 8 shutout innings, allowing 3 hits and 2 walks, fanning 9. He got an RBI double by Torres in the 2nd, an RBI single by Gregorius in the 3rd, and back-to-back dingers by Stanton and Sanchez in the 5th.

Unfortunately, Boone decided to relieve Sevy. Even more unfortunately, he did so with Chasen Shreve, who allowed a home run to the 1st batter he faced, Matt Duffy. He then allowed a triple to Jake Bauers. That's 7 total bases in 2 batters. Boone decided not to fool around any further: He brought Chapman in, and the result was groundout, groundout, strikeout.

Yankees 4, Rays 1. WP: Severino (10-2). SV: Chapman (20). LP: Ryan Yarbrough (5-3).

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All good things must come to an end. I just wish this winning streak didn't come on Old-Timers' Day.

Maybe it's my fault. I went to Point Pleasant Beach, and to Martell's Tiki Bar. The Yankees were around 0-25 (an estimation, but not an exaggeration) with me dining there until finally winning a game in 2011, and another in 2012.

Granted, they only played the Old-Timers' Game while I was there -- 37-year-old OTD debutant Nick Swisher, who last played in just 3 years ago, with the Atlanta Braves, hit a home run -- not the regular game, but it doesn't matter: Somehow, whoever decides these things decided, "Hey, Uncle Mike was at Martell's today, so the Yankees must lose their game." And, rooting against Mexico because I'm an American, I saw Mexico pull a World Cup shocker over Germany.

CC Sabathia -- 4 months older than Swish, but still pitching like a champion this season -- gave it his all, getting into the 8th inning, allowing 3 runs on 10 hits, but only 1 walk, and struck out 10. Alas, he didn't get much support. The only Yankee run came in the 5th, a homer by Hicks. Hicks had that homer and a single, Gregorius had a single and a triple, but, other than that, just 3 singles by Stanton, Sanchez and Greg Bird.

Rays 3, Yankees 1. WP: Chaz Roe (1-1). SV: Sergio Romo (3). LP: Sabathia (4-2).

So the Yankees took 3 out of 4 from Tampa Bay, despite the fact that they started 2 rookie pitchers and both came away with wins. They end the week half a game behind the Boston Red Sox in the American League Eastern Division -- but, having 5 games in hand on them, 2 games ahead of them in the all-important loss column.

It's already been an odd season, and we're still in mid-June.

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