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Rookie Gardner helps Yankees salvage split with Red Sox
NY YANKEES 5, BOSTON 4 (10 INNINGS)
 


By Larry Fleisher
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- On Friday, rookie Brett Gardner had
a good look at Jonathan Papelbon's pitches. That led Joe
Girardi having a good feeling when the rookie left fielder faced
Papelbon again Sunday, even if the New York Yankees manager
wasn't around to see it in person.

Gardner delivered a walk-off single with two outs in the bottom
of the 10th inning off Papelbon as the Yankees rallied for a
dramatic 5-4 victory over the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium.

New York gained a split of the four-game series and won its
second straight one-run contest. It did so by getting another
effective at-bat from Gardner, who made his major league debut
Monday against Texas.

Gardner came into the at-bat with a .100 batting average but had
produced several lengthy at-bats, including Friday's eight-pitch
encounter with Papelbon (3-3) that produced a ninth-inning walk.

"I had a good feeling," Girardi said. "I think Papelbon - up
until that point - had walked five guys all year, possibly in
approximately 35 or 36 innings. He saw a lot of pitches, fouled
a lot of pitches off and it's what he's been doing the whole
time that he's been here."

This time, Gardner came up with the opportunity to drive in
Robinson Cano from second. Cano led off the 10th with a single
and advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Melky Cabrera.

After pinch hitter Wilson Betemit struck out, Gardner quickly
fell behind 0-2 but fouled off two more pitches to stay alive.
He evened the count and fouled off another pitch before capping
his second eight-pitch at-bat against Papelbon with a slow
roller up the middle that deflected off shortstop Alex Cora's
glove and scored Cano.

"I've been trying to buy a hit for six or seven games now and I
just tried to grind that at-bat out and get some good pitches to
hit," Gardner said. "(Papelbon) actually threw me some
fastballs over the plate that I should have hit and I just
fouled them off.

"He threw me a couple of tough pitches I was able to get a bat
on and the last one was a (split-fingered fastball) and I didn't
really see it go out of his hands, but I was just able to stay
through it enough and execute it up the middle."

Despite his low batting average, Gardner has already earned a
place in his manager's heart with his competitive spirit.

"Papelbon gets ahead of him; he (Gardner) fouls a couple of
tough pitches off - a couple of balls that are up in the zone
and tough to foul out (at 96-97 miles per hour with movement) -
and that's what Brett Gardner does," Girardi said. "He's just
going to fight you and fight you."

Gardner's hit gave the Yankees their 21st comeback win of the
season and moments after becoming the first Yankee to record a
walk-off hit in his sixth game or earlier since Alfonso Soriano
in 1999, he was mobbed by

his teammates.

"It was like everything happened in three or four seconds,"
Gardner said. "But it was definitely a great experience and
something I'll never forget."

Mariano Rivera (3-3) earned the win with two scoreless innings
but, unlike Saturday, he did not create near as much anxiety for
the home crowd. In Saturday's 2-1 win, the Yankees closer
loaded the bases with no outs but was able to escape with his
23rd save, Rivera allowed a leadoff single to Sean Casey in the
ninth on Sunday.

After Coco Crisp moved pinch runner Brandon Moss to second with
a sacrifice bunt, pinch hitter Jason Varitek grounded out to
Rivera for the second out of the inning, moving Moss 90 feet
away from scoring the go-ahead run.

However, Rivera was able to strand Moss when he fanned pinch
hitter Manny Ramirez on three straight fastballs and then
retired the side in order in the 10th, giving the Yankees a
chance for the win.

"The first inning he didn't throw many pitches and then he gives
us another inning which was great," Girardi said. "It's unusual
for us to see what Mo (Rivera) did for us yesterday but Mo found
a way to do it both nights."

Girardi watched all of the late-inning drama unfold from the
clubhouse after getting ejected for the second time this season.
This time, his issue was with plate umpire Laz Diaz's strike
zone, which resulted in his ejection with one out in the sixth
when he argued a close pitch on Gardner.

At the time, New York faced a 3-1 deficit and Alex Rodriguez's
536th home run that tied Mickey Mantle for 13th place on the
all-time list was its lone hit in 16 at-bats off Tim Wakefield.

The Yankees began their rally immediately after Girardi was
tossed and made it a one-run game when Gardner scored on Derek
Jeter's single. Jeter was doubled off second and made a
throwing error in the top of the seventh that eventually led to
Boston's fourth run.

However, New York finally tied the game at 4-4 in the seventh
off reliever Javier Lopez, who surrendered a two-run triple to
Cano that scored Rodriguez and Jorge Posada.

The Red Sox did little off Yankees starter Joba Chamberlain, who
allowed three runs on four hits over six innings. They scored
three runs off the hard-throwing righthander in the fifth as
Kevin Youkilis scored on a wild pitch and Pedroia lined a
two-run single.

Gardner's hit also capped a frustrating 3-7 road trip for the
Red Sox, who entered this series with a five-game losing streak
that knocked them out of first place in the American League
East.

"It probably sounds like a broken record at this point, but
every time it seems like you're turning a corner and starting to
get better on the road, something happens," Boston manager Terry
Francona said.

 
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