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Blue Jays spoil Chamberlain's first start
TORONTO 9, NY YANKEES 3
 


By Larry Fleisher
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- The hype and fanfare went to Joba
Chamberlain's first major league start. The actual pitching
aspect of the night was reserved for Toronto Blue Jays ace Roy
Halladay.

Halladay allowed two runs on six hits in six innings to lead the
Blue Jays to a 9-3 victory over the New York Yankees Tuesday
night in the opener of a three-game series.

Rod Barajas drove in a pair of runs and David Eckstein had three
RBI for Toronto, which won for the eighth time in 11 games.

The latest victory came on a night that was devoted to hyping
Chamberlain's first start as a member of New York's rotation. It
is the role that the Yankees had always intended for the 41st
overall pick in the 2006 draft but was accelerated due to
ineffectiveness and injuries to fellow rookies Phil Hughes and
Ian Kennedy.

Limited to roughly 65 pitches, Chamberlain threw 38 in the
opening inning. He lasted 2 1/3 innings and gave up two runs -
one earned - on just one hit while walking four in a 62-pitch
outing that saw him reach a full count on six of the 12 hitters
he faced.

"I was mad at myself," Chamberlain said. "You know you got so
many pitches and I didn't a very good job conserving those
pitches."

"Obviously he had a tough first inning," Yankees manager Joe
Girardi said. "After getting ahead of (Shannon) Stewart, he ends
up walking him and they end up scoring without a base hit. I
thought he threw the ball pretty decent. The first inning hurt
him in the sense of pitch count."

Chamberlain was unsure of why the outing transpired the way that
it did.

"I felt great. My body felt great," Chamberlain said. "My arm
felt great and I just tried to get too fine. They're an older
club, a veteran club. They had a plan and they knew what I had
going."

Lost in the dramatics of Chamberlain's night was another strong
showing by Halladay (7-5), who allowed both runs in the first
and three of his six hits in that frame. The righthander won his
third consecutive start and has allowed a total of four runs and
18 hits in 23 innings during that span.

"You notice (it)," Halladay said of the Chamberlain hype.
"Obviously there was a lot of excitement for him. As far as my
part was, it's pretty much normal. It was definitely I think a
lot of excitement around (the Yankees)."

After allowing consecutive two-out RBI singles to Hideki Matsui
and Jason Giambi in the first, Halladay retired 15 of the final
20 hitters he faced. He struck out three, walked one and threw
102 pitches.

Not including a 2 1/3 inning start in Philadelphia due to rain
delays on May 18, it was just the second time Halladay failed to
make it to the seventh. He compensated by getting key outs all
night, including an inning-ending double play in the sixth.

"It felt like for the most part, I pitched out of the stretch
for the entire game," Halladay said. "It always seems to be that
way here. They work the count, you end up throwing a lot of
pitches and you're always battling. You're always fighting."

"I thought Halladay was good," Toronto manager John Gibbons
added. "They made him work and he held them to two runs but it
wasn't easy."

The Blue Jays held a 3-2 lead for most of the night on RBI
groundouts by Alex Rios and Scott Rolen, and Eckstein's
sacrifice fly. They turned the game into a rout with a six-run
seventh off the trio of Jose Veras, Edwar Ramirez and LaTroy
Hawkins.

Lyle Overbay drew a four-pitch bases-loaded walk off Ramirez,
and Barajas followed with a two-run double to left. Eckstein had
a two-run double to right off Hawkins and Marco Scutaro capped
the frame with a sacrifice fly.

Chamberlain took the mound to a standing ovation from the crowd
and issued three of his walks in the first. Toronto took a 1-0
lead just three batters in as Stewart walked, took second on a
balk and third on a passed ball by catcher Jose Molina before
scoring on Rios' groundout.

"I think we just did a good job of trying to put together good
at-bats and make him throw a lot of pitches," Eckstein said.
"It's tough going out there on a pitch count, knowing that you
have (a limit)."

After the Yankees scored their only runs off Halladay, Toronto
chased Chamberlain when Rios walked with one out in the third.

After Dan Giese (0-1) replaced Chamberlain, Rios stole second
and advanced to third on Molina's throwing error before coming
home on Rolen's groundout.

The Blue Jays went ahead for good when Eckstein lifted a
sacrifice fly in the fourth.

 
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