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Hit batsman gives Yankees win over Athletics
NY YANKEES 4, OAKLAND 3 (12 INNINGS)
 


By Larry Fleisher
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BRONX, New York (Ticker) -- The New York Yankees spent nearly
five hours leaving one runner after another on base. When they
escaped with a win, they were able to overlook the futility.

Lenny DiNardo hit Jose Molina with a pitch to force in the
winning run with one out in the bottom of the 12th inning as the
Yankees rallied for a 4-3 victory over the Oakland Athletics on
Saturday afternoon.

The contest took 4 hours, 45 minutes, which was five minutes
shorter than Tuesday's All-Star Game that lasted 15 innings.
This one featured plenty of hitting as the teams combined for 24
hits.

"We still had a chance to win the game, " New York manager Joe
Girardi said. "I think it's more frustrating when you lose,
because you look back and look at all the opportunities that you
had. But when you win a game, the bottom line is, we won the
game."

It also featured plenty of missed opportunities for both teams
as they combined to strand 35 and go 5-for-31 with runners in
scoring position. The Yankees stranded 21, two shy of their
franchise mark for an extra-inning game.

Oakland rallied from a 2-0 deficit and took the lead against
Mariano Rivera in the ninth, only to see New York tie it when it
was down to its last strike vs. Huston Street.

"It's part of the game," New York rookie Brett Gardner said.
"We didn't do a good job with runners on base. We were
fortunate that our pitching staff can do what they continue to
do, and that's keep us in ballgames. Anytime you can go in
extra innings like that, it's such a huge advantage being the
home team. It's frustrating that we didn't do better with
runners in scoring position, but at the end of the day, big
deal, we won."

Eventually, the Yankees produced their first walk-off win by
virtue of a hit batsman since July 15, 1965, when Clete Boyer
was hit by Washington's Steve Ridzik.

The winning rally started when Jeter singled up the middle off
DiNardo (1-1) and moved to second on Bobby Abreu's grounder in
front of the plate. DiNardo intentionally walked Alex
Rodriguez, who was hitless in five at-bats and struck out three
times.

That move backfired as DiNardo also walked Richie Sexson, who
entered the game as a pinch hitter for Justin Christian in the
10th and struck out. That left it up to Molina, who came into
the game when Jorge Posada bruised his hand.

Molina fell behind in the count, 1-2, but DiNardo's curveball
hit him in the right knee and Jeter scored, giving New York its
season-high sixth straight home win and seventh victory in 10
games overall.

"That last pitch I threw was just an inch off," DiNardo said.
"I was trying to throw a cutter in and make them roll over it.
It was just an inch too inside."

"I've never been so happy to see someone get hit," Jeter said.
"Any way you can get a win is good."

The Yankees stranded their most runners in a game since leaving
22 on in a 17-inning loss to the Detroit Tigers in the first
game of a doubleheader on July 20, 1998. They set the franchise
mark of 23 left on against Boston in the opener of a
doubleheader on September 5, 1957.

"It's a tough game," Molina said. "They had good pitching. I
think they were leading the league in pitching, and they were
pitching us really, really good. To get a win against them and
to win the series is nice for us."

Joba Chamberlain allowed one run and six hits in six innings,
marking the ninth time in the last 10 games Girardi has seen his
starting pitcher allow three runs or fewer. Chamberlain also
displayed an explosive fastball, striking out eight in an
96-pitch outing.

The righthander was staked to a 2-1 lead, but his teammates
could not get more as they stranded two runners apiece in each
of the first six frames. The top four hitters in the lineup
were a combined 2-for-18.

Jose Veras lost the lead when his wild pitch in the seventh
allowed Wes Bankston to score. Two innings later, Rivera gave
up an RBI single to Ryan Sweeney.

But Street blew his fourth save in 21 opportunities when Wilson
Betemit lined an 0-2 pitch into left-center field, scoring
Robinson Cano. It could have been the winning run, but earlier
in the frame, Christian slipped on the basepaths and was caught
stealing second while running for former Athletic Jason Giambi,
who drew a leadoff walk.

The Yankees stranded two in the ninth and three more before the
12th but still had a chance due to two scoreless innings from
Edwar Ramirez and one from David Robertson (1-0), who picked up
his first career victory.

New York had a chance to win in the 11th, but right fielder
Carlos Gonzalez saved the game with a diving catch on Melky
Cabrera's line drive, stranding Cano at second. Cano had four
hits, giving him six in the first two games after the All-Star
break.

The Yankees scored their first two runs in the second inning,
when Betemit delivered an RBI single and scored on Gardner's
double. They failed to add more, however, as Jeter, Abreu and
Rodriguez struck out swinging against Oakland starter Sean
Gallagher.

 
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