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Giambi's homer lifts Yankees to dramatic win
NY YANKEES 9, TORONTO 8
 


BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi
was one strike away from having to explain a sloppy and
frustrating loss. After pinch hitter Jason Giambi launched a
slider into the upper deck in right field, that explanation
became an afterthought.

Giambi's two-run home run in the bottom of the ninth inning
Thursday lifted the Yankees to a dramatic 9-8 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays.

It was the fourth career walk-off homer - and third with the
Yankees - for Giambi, who crushed an 0-2 pitch from Toronto
closer B.J. Ryan (1-2) to cap a three-run rally in the ninth.

"First two (sliders) were really good," Giambi said. "I was
kind of looking fastball, but he threw another (slider), and it
just didn't do as much as the last two."

Ryan's inability to execute a third straight slider allowed the
Yankees to post their biggest comeback of the season and record
their first win in 28 games when trailing after eight innings.

"I was just trying to throw a good slider," Ryan said after
blowing his second save in 14 opportunities. "I threw a couple
of good ones to start him off and then I just made a terrible
pitch at a terrible time."

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, it also was the first time
a pinch hitter blasted a walk-off homer on an 0-2 count since
Gregg Zaun connected off Arizona's Byung-Hyun Kim in Houston on
June 27, 2002.

"It's exciting to be able to come through," Giambi said.
"That's the great thing about baseball - you can go from zero to
hero real quick."

It took nearly four hours before Giambi stepped in against Ryan.
Giambi, who had been 2-for-14 lifetime against the closer, was
not in the starting lineup due to a sore foot but told Girardi
he was available to pinch hit after finishing batting practice.

Giambi's second regular-season homer as a pinch hitter also was
his seventh blast in his last 23 games after opening the season
with a .150 batting average.

"It doesn't matter how far it goes," Girardi said. "It just has
to go over that little wall. But G's been great for us. I've
had a lot of belief even before spring training started that he
was going to have a good year for us."

The blast ended what had been an exasperating afternoon for the
Yankees, who appeared headed for a certain defeat after another
shaky outing by Chien-Ming Wang and a costly error by center
fielder Melky Cabrera that led to five Toronto runs in the fifth
inning.

Girardi called Thursday's win the biggest of the season for the
Yankees.

"You are going to make mistakes from time to time, but it
doesn't make you happy," he said. "But obviously to win a game
when you make mistakes (is good)."

With runners on first and second and the Yankees trailing, 7-6,
in the eighth, Johnny Damon made a bid to put New York ahead.
But right fielder Brad Wilkerson - a defensive replacement -
tracked down his drive against the wall in right-center field.

Damon's near-miss came on a day when the Yankees were 1-for-11
with runners in scoring position through the first eight
innings.

That appeared to end the Yankees' chances, especially after Kyle
Farnsworth (1-2) gave up an RBI double in the ninth by Matt
Stairs, who drove in a season-high five runs.

But the Yankees staged a two-out rally against Ryan as Alex
Rodriguez singled, took second on catcher's indifference and
scored on Hideki Matsui's single. Giambi, batting for Jose
Molina, followed with his first game-winning homer since June
15, 2005 against Pittsburgh's Jose Mesa.

"It's a tough loss right there," Toronto shortstop David
Eckstein said. "It's a real tough loss coming here and having
an opportunity to take two out of three."

"I can't explain this one," Blue Jays manager John Gibbons
added. "We had them right there at the end of the game. It
wasn't meant to be, but they got their magic in this place
(Yankee Stadium). They got magic. That's why they win every
year."

The Blue Jays tied the game, 2-2, on Stairs' two-run homer in
the fourth, then appeared to break open the contest in the
fifth.

Toronto took a 3-2 lead when Joe Inglett scored from second
after Cabrera dropped Alex Rios' line drive that was hit right
at the center fielder. Wang then plunked Scott Rolen and
allowed Stairs' two-run single and Lyle Overbay's two-run
double.

In his second-shortest outing of the season, Wang allowed seven
runs - six earned - and five hits in 4 1/3 innings while tying a
season high with four walks.

The Yankees battled back, however, scoring two runs in the
bottom of the fifth and pulling within 7-6 on Wilson Betemit's
two-run homer in the sixth.

Pinch hitter Jason Giambi's two-run homer in the bottom of the
ninth inning Thursday lifted the New York Yankees to a dramatic
9-8 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays.

It was the fourth career walk-off homer - and third with the
Yankees - for Giambi, who belted a 1-2 pitch from Toronto closer
B.J. Ryan (1-2) into the upper deck in right field to cap a
three-run rally in the ninth.

The blast ended what had been a frustrating afternoon for the
Yankees, who appeared headed for a certain defeat after another
shaky outing by Chien-Ming Wang and a costly error by center
fielder Melky Cabrera led to five Toronto runs in the fifth
inning.

With runners on first and second and the Yankees trailing, 7-6,
in the eighth, Johnny Damon made a bid to put New York ahead.
But right fielder Brad Wilkerson - a defensive replacement -
tracked down his drive against the wall in right-center field.

That appeared to end the Yankees' chances, especially after Kyle
Farnsworth (1-2) gave up an RBI double in the ninth to Matt
Stairs, who drove in a season-high five runs.

But the Yankees staged a two-out rally against Ryan as Alex
Rodriguez singled, took second on catcher's indifference and
scored on Hideki Matsui's RBI single. Giambi, batting for Jose
Molina, followed with his first game-winning homer since June
15, 2005 against Pittsburgh's Jose Mesa.

The Blue Jays tied the game, 2-2, on Stairs' two-run homer in
the fourth, then appeared to break open the contest in the
fifth.

Toronto took a 3-2 lead when Joe Inglett scored from second
after Cabrera dropped Alex Rios' line drive that was right at
the center fielder. Wang then plunked Scott Rolen and allowed
Stairs' two-run single and Lyle Overbay's two-run double.

In his second-shortest outing of the season, Wang allowed seven
runs - six earned - and five hits while tying a season high with
four walks.

The Yankees battled back, however, scoring two runs in the
bottom of the fifth and pulling within 7-6 on Wilson Betemit's
two-run homer in the sixth.

 
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