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Abreu drives in winning run as Yankees edge Twins
NY YANKEES 7, MINNESOTA 6 (12 INNINGS)
 

By Anthony Maggio
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

MINNEAPOLIS (Ticker) - They are still in fourth place in the
American League East, but at least the New York Yankees are back
over .500.

The Yankees outlasted the Minnesota Twins, 7-6, in 12 innings at
the Metrodome on Saturday to improve to 28-27, the club's first
above-.500 record since New York was 17-16 on May 4.

Bobby Abreu broke a 12th-inning tie with an RBI single and
Mariano Rivera shut the door to clinch the victory, the Yankees'
eighth in their last 10 games.

"To me it's important to get over .500 because you start looking
at trying to get five games over and you go in small
increments," New York manager Joe Girardi said.

The Yankees' hottest stretch of the season has come on the heels
of their worst of the year - when New York lost six of seven
games to fall five games below .500 at 20-25.

The return of Alex Rodriguez from a right quad strain on May 20
has hardly been a coincidence.

"Just his presence, even if he walked up to an at-bat with both
legs aching, shoulders aching, it doesn't matter," outfielder
Johnny Damon said. "Just him standing there creates
opportunities for us."

Rodriguez had a two-run single in this one and stole a pair of
bases, but it was righthanded reliever Ross Ohlendorf who stood
out the most. Ohlendorf (1-1) pitched two innings of scoreless
relief - stranding a pair of baserunner in both frames - to earn
his first major league win.

Ohlendorf nearly gave up a game-winning home run to Mike Lamb
with two outs in the 10th inning, but the high fly ball went off
the top of the baggie in right field for a triple. Ohlendorf
struck out Carlos Gomez on three pitches just two batters later
to strand Lamb at third.

He gave up a leadoff single and walked Joe Mauer to start the
11th inning, but retired Justin Morneau, Michael Cuddyer and
Jason Kubel in order to end the threat.

After Damon, Derek Jeter and Abreu all hit one-out singles in
the 12th off Twins reliever Juan Rincon (2-2), Rivera pitched a
perfect 12th inning for his second save in as many nights and
15th in 15 tries this season to get Ohlendorf the win.

"It was certainly a memorable night," Ohlendorf said. "I think
it makes it more special for me in that it was a pressure
situation."

New York led, 6-3, after 5 1/2 innings, but ace righthander
Chien-Ming Wang couldn't hang on to the lead.

The Twins clawed back within one in the bottom half. Delmon
Young and Nick Punto both singled and scored on Carlos Gomez's
base hit and Alexi Casilla's fielder's choice, respectively.

Minnesota knotted the score at 6-6 an inning later when Cuddyer
hit a solo home run off Edwar Ramirez - his first since April
26. It was the first run Ramirez has allowed this season,
snapping a run of 21 straight scoreless appearances between the
Yankees and Class AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

Wang continued his recent struggles, with at least five earned
runs allowed in his third straight start. The righthander
allowed five runs on nine hits with three walks and four
strikeouts in 5 1/3 innings - his shortest outing since April 16
against Boston. Wang, who said after the game he is "a little
bit" worried about his recent performance but said physically he
feels fine, is 0-2 in his last five starts overall.

"He was just having a tough time repeating his delivery,"
Girardi said. "He hasn't thrown the ball quite like he did
before, but all starters go through that. I'm not worried about
him at all. He'll get back. Even when he's off, he's still
pretty good."

Twins starter Boof Bonser, who likely will lose his spot in the
rotation when Scott Baker makes his impending return from a
groin injury, had one of his better starts of the season despite
failing to complete six innings. The righthander allowed five
runs - two earned - on five hits with three walks and two
strikeouts, and was not even on the field when his earned runs
crossed home plate.

"He threw fine," Minnesota manager Ron Gardenhire said. "We'll
make decisions for Boof and everybody else, what we'll do with
our rotation, in the next couple of days."

After allowing just one hit his first time through the Yankees
lineup and getting a 3-0 lead, Bonser was the victim of some bad
luck in the third inning. He retired the first two batters out
before walking Damon.

Jeter followed with a slow grounder to shortstop that Punto
fumbled while trying to make a running pickup and throw in one
motion. Abreu followed with an RBI double and Rodriguez looped
a two-RBI single just over Punto's outstretched glove before
Bonser could get out of the inning.

Bonser made it through two more innings unscathed before walking
Hideki Matsui and giving up Jason Giambi's single to start the
sixth inning.

Jesse Crain came on in relief and got Robinson Cano to pop out,
but then allowed Jose Molina's RBI double, Melky Cabrera's
sacrifice fly and Damon's RBI single before escaping the frame.

Casilla walked and scored in the first and third innings, and
Young doubled and scored in the second as Minnesota built a 3-0
advantage.

Minnesota has lost four straight and seven of its last nine home
games.


 
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