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Giambi, Pettitte help Yankees avoid sweep
NY YANKEES 4, CINCINNATI 1
 


By Zachary Braziller
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- Once the thunderstorms subsided, the
New York Yankees provided their own kind of power.

Jason Giambi hit a two-run double and Jorge Posada added an RBI
double of his own during a sixth-inning rally as New York
avoided a sweep with a 4-1 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on
Sunday.

Held to three runs in the first 23 innings of this three-game
interleague series, the Yankees exploded for three in their
first at-bat following a 56-minute delay to salvage the finale
in front of 54,234 at Yankee Stadium.

"You don't really like rain delays, you like to stay in the
flow, but it worked out well for us," Yankees manager Joe
Girardi said.

Andy Pettitte delivered six scoreless innings and Robinson Cano
snapped New York's 15-inning scoreless streak with a sacrifice
fly in the fifth inning.

Pettitte (8-5) extended his shutout streak to 13 innings,
allowing just four hits and striking our four, but was lifted
after the break in action. Three Yankees relievers combined to
allow four hits and one run in three innings of work, with
Mariano Rivera collecting his 21st save after working the final
1 1/3 frames.

The Reds, on the other hand, weren't complaining about the
weekend series.

"It is a good start," Cincinnati manager said of starting their
road trip by taking two-of-three from New York. "We wanted this
one badly but it's tough to sweep these guys."

Pettitte started particularly strong, retiring 10 of the first
11 batters he faced. He navigated out of his toughest jam in
the fourth, striking out Joey Votto and Jay Bruce after
sandwiching walks to Ken Griffey Jr. and Paul Yanish around a
single by Brandon Phillips.

"I was able to make some good pitches when I need to get out of
some tough situations," Pettitte said.

The Yankees, meanwhile, were doing little against young Reds
starter Johnny Cueto. The 22-year-old righthander struck out
five Yankees through the first four innings, stranding a runner
in the first two frames.

In the fifth, Cincinnati ran themselves out of the inning.
First, Norris Hopper ran into his own bunt, and David Ross was
picked off.

The Yankees' offense finally came through in the bottom half
against Cueto (5-8). Giambi started the rally with a single,
Posada doubled down the left field line and Cano hit a sacrifice
fly. New York could add no more, however, as Melky Cabrera
struck out and Johnny Damon popped to shortstop.

"The guys they threw against us have shutdown pitches," Damon
said. "They were pretty good against us."

With clouds engulfing the stadium and 25-mile-an-hour winds
affecting play, Pettitte stranded two more Reds, striking out
Votto to end the frame. The game was stopped thereafter, the
skies opening up.

"It blew me off one time," Pettitte said.

After the rain delay, the Yankees finally strung together some
hits, with six of their 11 coming in the sixth inning or after.
In that frame, Giambi drove in Derek Jeter and Hideki Matsui,
who had both singled, with an opposite field double off
lefthander Jeremy Affeldt. One batter later, Posada doubled
home Giambi.

After knocking out 10 runs in the first two games of the series,
Cincinnati did not get on the board in this one until the
eighth, when Ken Griffey Jr. blasted career home run No. 601 off
Kyle Farnsworth.

"He's been getting it all over," Baker said of Griffey's
reception. "People around here appreciate greatness and he's had
a great career."

Farnsworth had to leave the game directly with an unknown hand
injury after when he attempted to field a chopping infield
single by Phillips. He received three stitched to the webbing
behind his pinky and index finger, and wasn't sure if he will be
available Tuesday in Pittsburgh.

"It depends on how sore the finger is," Farnsworth said. "But I
hope to go out there with it."

 
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