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Seven-run first fuels Orioles past Yankees
BALTIMORE 12, NY YANKEES 2
 

By Larry Fleisher
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) - The New York Yankees struggled
without Alex Rodriguez - and things were not much better with
him on Tuesday.

The reigning American League Most Valuable Player homered in his
return to lineup, but the Yankees fell behind early and lost
captain Derek Jeter to a hand injury in a 12-2 loss to the
Baltimore Orioles.

"That's not the way you draw it up," New York manager Joe
Girardi said. "It's an ugly loss. You've just got to put this
one aside. Every team goes through a couple of these every year.
I hope it's our last one."

Mike Mussina (6-4) equaled the shortest start of his career as
he recorded just two outs and was charged with seven runs - one
earned - and five hits. It matched his shortest start which
occurred on July 13, 1995 against Kansas City in Baltimore.

"I didn't look comfortable," Mussina said. "I didn't feel
comfortable. I wasn't out there long. I didn't do anything
right for the 30-something pitches I threw. It was just bad. We
were out of it in 15 minutes."

Mussina's first loss in six starts and the huge deficit appeared
to be the only problem for New York, which has dropped nine of
12. That was until the bottom of the third when Jeter was hit on
the left hand by a Daniel Cabrera fastball.

Jeter, who missed six games last month with a left quad injury,
was diagnosed with a contusion in his left hand.

"It wasn't a good game," Jeter said. "That's the bottom line.
You hope this is as bad as it gets."

Before getting injured, a throwing error by Jeter also helped
Baltimore score seven runs in the first. The Orioles already
had a 1-0 lead and two on when Jeter fielded Luke Scott's
grounder but his high throw to first base took Jason Giambi off
the bag.

"It shouldn't (unravel)," Girardi said of the first inning.
"Obviously 'Moose' is trying to make pitches and he's trying to
get out of that inning. With the 'Moose', it just wasn't his
night tonight."

Instead of the third out, the Orioles equaled their biggest
inning of the season as Ramon Hernandez drew a bases-loaded
walk. Baltimore then got a three-run double from Adam Jones and
an RBI triple from Brian Roberts that ended Mussina's night.

Rodriguez appeared in his first game since April 28 when he
injured his right quad. He hit a two-run home run in the sixth
when the game was well out of hand.

If the huge deficit and Jeter's injury weren't enough, the teams
nearly engaged in a benches-clearing brawl with two outs in the
sixth when LaTroy Hawkins threw two straight pitches high and
inside near Scott's head. The second pitch led to Hawkins'
ejection by plate umpire Chuck Meriwether.

"Jeter got hit, nobody else got hit," Hawkins said. "I'm not
that type of person. The way it looked, he had a reason to be
(upset)."

Both benches and bullpens emptied, but there were no punches
thrown or other ejections. There also was no retaliation by
Baltimore.

"We don't do that," Orioles manager Dave Trembley said. "There
was no reason for us to do a thing. There was no reason for us
to retaliate. It goes against my idea of playing the game with
respect."

Jones set career highs with four hits and four RBI while Kevin
Millar and Scott homered for Baltimore, which has won eight of
its last 10. The Orioles also scored a season-high 12 runs and
beat the Yankees for the third time in four meetings this
season.

Cabrera (5-1) benefited from the support and won his third
straight start. He pitched seven innings and allowed Rodriguez's
home run among five hits.

"I just go with my stuff, try to throw strikes and get people
out early in the count," said Cabrera, who struck out four and
did not issue a walk for the third time this season. "It's good
when you have a lot of run support. It's always good."

 
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