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Abreu, Giambi homer in Yankees' rout
NY YANKEES 12, SEATTLE 6
 

By Larry Fleisher
PA Sports Ticker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) - The New York Yankees accomplished two
things Saturday. They had another productive day at the plate
and successfully continued Joba Chamberlain's transition to a
starting pitcher.

Chamberlain pitched two scoreless innings in relief of Mike
Mussina and the Yankees had 16 hits as they extended their
season-high winning streak to four games with a 12-6 victory
over the Seattle Mariners.

Jason Giambi hit an opposite-field three-run home run in a
four-run second inning while Bobby Abreu homered and drove in
four runs.

Robinson Cano tied a career high with a four hits and also
equaled a career best with three doubles. Melky Cabrera added a
pair of run-scoring singles for New York, which has scored 35
times in its last four games.

The Yankees have scored 25 runs in their last two games, their
most in consecutive games since getting 26 on July 29 and 31 of
last season.

They also hit .419 (13-for-31) with runners in scoring position
in the final two games of the week, which started with two
blowout losses to the New York Mets and Baltimore.

The offensive surge has coincided with the return of third
baseman Alex Rodriguez, who was activated from the disabled list
on Tuesday.

"I think we're OK right now," Abreu said. "That's the way that
we play the game. We score some runs and give support to our
pitchers and this is us."

The offense took a backseat to Chamberlain's 19th relief
appearance, which started in the sixth inning instead of his
usual spot in the eighth setting up for closer Mariano Rivera.
Chamberlain came in as part of the process to make him a member
of the rotation at some point this season.

"It was a little bit (different mindset), just to make sure my
legs are going and everything," Chamberlain said. "It was weird
riding the bike in the third inning. It took a little bit to
get going but your mind is so used to get going when you're out
there, so it's just another thing to get used to."

The adjustment actually started in Wednesday's 8-0 rout of
Baltimore, when Chamberlain threw 35 pitches in the final two
innings. After Wednesday's game, Yankees manager Joe Girardi
officially announced that Chamberlain's role was going to
change.

On Saturday, Chamberlain followed Mussina (6-4), who allowed
four runs and seven hits in five innings en route to his sixth
win in his last seven starts.

Chamberlain, who was projected to throw 45 pitches, was pulled
after tossing 40 on Saturday. Girardi did not say when the next
phase of the transition will continue because he needed to first
consult with pitching coach Dave Eiland.

"It's a process," Girardi said. "It's going to take some time.
We can't hit the exact number every time like we did last time."

Chamberlain needed just 13 pitches to get through the sixth and
he ended the frame with back-to-back strikeouts of Richie Sexson
and Kenji Johjima - both on sliders.

He struggled a bit more in the seventh, throwing 27 pitches
while allowing a leadoff single to Yuniesky Betancourt and a
two-out walk to Jose Vidro.

"It's going to be the same mentality as it was in the eighth
inning throughout the first, the second and through seven,"
Chamberlain added. "You still got to go attack them and make
sure that you have everything that you did in the eighth
inning."

The Yankees struck for four runs in the second off Carlos Silva
(3-4) as Giambi lined a 1-2 changeup over the left-center field
fence for his ninth home run. The Yankees had six hits in the
inning and went up 4-0 on Cabrera's RBI single.

Mussina, who pitched on three days' rest, gave it right back as
Vidro hit a three-run home run and Adrian Beltre added a solo
shot.

Richie Sexson hit a two-run home run in the eighth inning that
made it a six-run game.

The Mariners equaled a season high with their fifth straight
defeat and lost for the 18th time in 23 games. Seattle also
fell to 1-12 in its last 13 road contests and has been outscored
44-13 in its five losses to the Yankees this season .

"You want to keep playing hard, no matter what," Silva said.
"You want to fight to the end. I wish everyone had that
mentality."
 
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