Baltimore has been home to 2 legendary police dramas: Homicide: Life On the Street, and The Wire. People are used to turning on their TVs and seeing someone get killed in Baltimore.
This time, it was cold-blooded: The Yankees were killing the Orioles. It was Homicide: Life On Eutaw Street at Camden Yards last night.
The Yankees scored 3 runs in the 1st inning, 3 in the 3rd, and 3 in the 5th. 30303? That's not a linescore, that's a ZIP Code in Atlanta. Gary Sanchez followed the previous night's game-winning homer with an early one, and finished with 4 RBIs. Clint Frazier hit 2 homers, finishing with 5 RBIs. It was 9-0 Yankees going to the bottom of the 5th.
But the Orioles scored 3 runs in that inning. Since Domingo German finished the inning having thrown 93 pitches, Aaron Boone decided not to take the chance, and sent David Hale -- a 31-year-old journeyman righthander, and a Princeton University graduate -- out to pitch, and let him pitch the last 4 innings. By the save rule, since he was the finishing pitcher, but not the winning pitcher, and went at least 3 innings without blowing the lead, he was entitled to a save, even though he came into the game with an 8-run lead, since the Yankees made it 11-3 in the top of the 6th and he entered in the bottom of the 6th.
The final was Yankees 11, Orioles 4. WP: German (9-1). SV: Hale (1). LP: David Hess (1-6).
With the win, and the Tampa Bay Rays' loss, the Yankees are now in 1st place in the American League Eastern Division by 2 games -- 1 in the all-important loss column. The Boston Red Sox are 5 1/2 back, the Toronto Blue Jays 10 1/2, and the Orioles 15 1/2.
The series concludes tonight. CC Sabathia starts against Dan Straily. At this rate, the Orioles may end up sleeping with the fishes. Or, given that it's Maryland, with the crabs.
Personal Jesus
52 minutes ago
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