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Cuddyer lifts Twins past Yankees
MINNESOTA 5, NY YANKEES 1
 


By Brian Hall
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

MINNEAPOLIS (Ticker) -- The Minnesota Twins might be feeling a
little lucky after beating the New York Yankees on Sunday.
Starting pitcher Nick Blackburn's luck didn't have to do with
the victory.

Michael Cuddyer went 3-for-4 with three RBI, but Blackburn left
the game in the fifth inning after he was hit by a line drive
off the bat of Bobby Abreu as the Twins cruised to a 5-1 victory
over the Yankees at the Metrodome on Sunday.

After Derek Jeter belted a solo home run - his third of the
season - in the fifth, Abreu lined a shot up the middle that
deflected off Blackburn's glove and hit him in the nose. The
rookie righthander fell to the ground, but later walked off
under his own power. X-rays proved negative and he is listed as
day-to-day.

"I think if I didn't get glove on it, it would have been a lot
worse," Blackburn said. "Luckily, reactions just took over and
I was able to stop it a little bit."

Blackburn pitched 4 1/3 innings, giving up just one run on five
hits and three walks. He struck out three. Brian Bass (2-1)
entered, throwing 1 1/3 innings to get the victory. Jesse Crain
added two solid innings, and Joe Nathan finished it off with a
scoreless ninth.

Minnesota struck early off New York starter Darrell Rasner
(3-2). In the first, Alexi Casilla singled and Mike Redmond
doubled before Cuddyer drove them both home with a two-out
single to center.

"Not just two-out hits, but hits with runners in scoring
position," Cuddyer said. "I looked up and saw we were leading
the league in average with runners in scoring position, and
that, in my opinion, is the ingredient to win. When you get
opportunities to score, you have to score them."

Rasner went 5 1/3 innings, allowing four runs on eight hits
while striking out five. But his offense didn't offer much
support.

The Yankees squandered a big-time opportunity in the third after
loading the bases. Johnny Damon doubled and Blackburn walked
Jeter and Abreu. Alex Rodriguez then popped out weakly to
second, and Hideki Matsui was retired after bouncing a ball back
to Blackburn as the Twins got out of the jam.

"You're going to have days like this," New York manager Joe
Girardi said. "We didn't really have a ton of opportunities.
We had one big opportunity and we weren't able to cash in.
Blackburn has thrown the ball well all year and he did a nice
job against us.

"Anytime you get the bases loaded with less than two outs, you
expect to get some runs. Today, it didn't happen."

An inning later, Minnesota loaded the bases and followed with a
bit more success. Justin Morneau led off with a ground-rule
double, Cuddyer singled and Jason Kubel walked. Mike Lamb
scored Morneau with a sacrifice fly to give the Twins a 3-0
advantage.

Jeter's home run made it 3-1, but Morneau answered back in the
sixth with a bit of a break. Leading off the inning, he nailed
a drive to the right-center field gap. New York center fielder
Melky Cabrera picked up the ball at the wall, but slipped on the
warning track. In the process, he overthrew Abreu allowing
Morneau to circle the bases to make it a 4-1 game. Morneau was
credited with a triple and a run on the error.

"He thought his best option was to get the ball to Bobby and he
overthrew Bobby," Girardi said. "You know, if you are around
the game long enough, you see some strange things."

Cuddyer then struck again with two outs in the seventh with an
RBI triple, scoring Redmond as Minnesota ended a three-game
losing streak to the Yankees.

"If they take him off on a stretcher, then yeah it would have
been extremely hard to continue to play," Cuddyer said.
"Especially tough for someone like Bass to have to come in and
pitch after that, but he did an unbelievable job and kept us
with the lead. Then we took over after that. Just a good job
by the pitching staff today."

 
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