Crazy comeback: Yanks outslug O's in 10

Crazy comeback: Yanks outslug O's in 10

Crazy comeback: Yanks outslug O
Radio Call: Holliday's walk-off 0:29
Yankees radio broadcaster John Sterling calls Matt Holliday's walk-off home run that sealed an improbable come-from-behind win for New York

NEW YORK -- Just before Starlin Castro launched a game-tying homer to set up Matt Holliday's walk-off blast, powering the Yankees' wild 14-11, 10-inning victory over the Orioles on Friday night, the second baseman issued a bold prediction from the Yankee Stadium infield clay.

Jacoby Ellsbury's seventh-inning grand slam brought New York within three runs, chipping away at what had been an eight-run deficit, and Castro told teammate Didi Gregorius that he sensed something special was brewing against long odds in this wild slugfest.

Full Game Coverage

"After that happened, I told Didi, 'Let's keep the game here. We might win the game today,'" said Castro, who tied the game with a two-run blast off Brad Brach in a three-run ninth inning. "When we scored those runs, we're really close. I just go up to the plate looking for something that I can drive. It happened the right way."

Castro
Castro's game-tying homer
BAL@NYY: Castro crushes game-tying two-run homer
Starlin Castro connects and lifts a two-run homer to left field, tying the game at 11 in the bottom of the 9th inning

The Yankees (14-7) grabbed a share of first place in the American League East with the victory, sealed as Holliday clubbed the decisive drive into the Yanks' bullpen off Jayson Aquino. Holliday's three-run homer was the fifth one hit by the Yankees in Friday's game.

Must C: Yankees rally on homers
Must C: Yankees rally on homers
Must C Comeback: Yankees stun O's with barrage of HRs
Jacoby Ellsbury, Starlin Castro and Matt Holliday hit clutch homers as the Yankees rally to walk off against the Orioles in extras

"I think the good thing about this team is we have a lot of firepower and we can hit homers and get people on base," Holliday said. "I think that's a good recipe to come back in a game like that."

Holliday on walk-off homer
Holliday on walk-off homer
BAL@NYY: Holliday discusses his walk-off home run
Matt Holliday talks about his approach during his walk-off home run and how the Yankees kept chipping away to complete the comeback win

Aaron Judge homered twice off Orioles starter Kevin Gausman -- one measured as the hardest-hit homer in the Statcast™ era, at 119.4 mph -- and Ellsbury hit the first grand slam of his career, a shot off Vidal Nuno that also marked Ellsbury's 100th home run.

Judge crushes two home runs
Judge crushes two home runs
BAL@NYY: Judge hits two homers in Yanks' walk-off win
Aaron Judge belts a solo home run in the 5th and a two-run homer in the 6th to help the Yankees in a comeback victory over the Orioles

"I kind of let them get off the hook, let them back in the ballgame," Gausman said. "Darren [O'Day] and Brad shouldn't even be getting in the game, especially when we're up, 9-1."

Ellsbury
Ellsbury's milestone grand slam
BAL@NYY: Ellsbury belts a grand slam for 100th homer
Jacoby Ellsbury drives his first career grand slam to right field, notching his 100th career home run to cut the Yankees' deficit to 11-8

Baltimore took the defeat despite Mark Trumbo's fourth career grand slam, a sixth-inning blast off Bryan Mitchell, and a three-RBI performance from Manny Machado that included the longest home run in the Majors this year: a fifth-inning solo drive that cleared the restaurant over Monument Park and was calculated at 470 feet by Statcast™.

Statcast: Machado
Statcast: Machado's 470-ft. HR
BAL@NYY: Machado clobbers a 470-foot homer to center
Statcast measures the exit velocity, launch angle and projected distance of Manny Machado's 470-foot home run, currently the longest of 2017

"It felt good to contribute," said Trumbo, who led the Majors in homers last year and hadn't gone deep since Opening Day. "Wasn't enough [to win], but hopefully that can be a nice way to get things moving in a better direction."

Trumbo
Trumbo's grand slam
BAL@NYY: Trumbo cranks a grand slam to left-center
Mark Trumbo powers a grand slam to left-center field to extend the Orioles' lead to 9-1 in the top of the 6th inning #PapaSlam

MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
Manny being Manny: The Orioles grabbed the lead in the third inning by piecing together a two-out rally against Yankees starter CC Sabathia. Joey Rickard reached on an infield dribbler up the third-base line, and Adam Jones worked a walk to set up Machado, who pounced on a 92.2-mph sinker and blasted it over Ellsbury's head in center field for a two-run double. That served as a prelude for Machado's monster blast off Sabathia in the fifth inning; Sabathia allowed seven runs in 5 2/3 innings.

Machado
Machado's two-run double
BAL@NYY: Machado lines a two-run double to center
Manny Machado drills a two-run double to center field to open the scoring for the Orioles in the top of the 3rd inning

"He was having quality at-bats all night, and then he had that one to center field that I think went over the glass in center," Judge said. "Not too many people do that. It's impressive." More >

Star bright: The seventh homer of the night belonged to Castro, a two-run shot to left field, and it brought everything back to even as the Yankees tied the game against Brach. Chase Headley got the inning started with a leadoff walk, and Holliday banged a long single off the right-field wall to set up Ellsbury's run-scoring fielder's choice. Castro then notched his third hit of the game by jumping on the first pitch he saw from Brach, a 94.9-mph fastball.

"It's an amazing feeling," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. "We're down, 9-1, and then we're down, 11-4, but this group is resilient. We never quit. We have the ability to hit the ball out of the ballpark, and that's what we did. We got a bunch of big hits along the way."

QUOTABLE
"The leadoff walk, I felt, was the bad thing. I know I gave up the home run later, but with a three-run lead, I've got to attack the hitter. I can't be messing around like I did. You just don't want to lose those games." -- Brach More >

SOUND SMART WITH YOUR FRIENDS
Friday's loss marked the first time since July 29, 2006, that the Orioles have scored 11 or more runs and lost a game. The O's 'pen allowed nine runs just once all of last season, on Aug. 19 against Houston.

Ranking all eight homers from Yankees' wild win

WHAT'S NEXT
Orioles: Ubaldo Jimenez will take the ball in Saturday's 1:05 p.m. ET matinee, hoping to get back on track. He's 1-0 with a 5.95 ERA on the season and has been widely inconsistent, though the Orioles are 4-0 in his starts.

Yankees: Michael Pineda (2-1, 3.86 ERA) will make his fifth start of the season on Saturday. Pineda last pitched on April 22 at Pittsburgh, taking a no-decision after permitting three runs and five hits over five innings, including a pair of home runs.

Watch every out-of-market regular-season game live on MLB.TV.

Bryan Hoch has covered the Yankees for MLB.com since 2007. Follow him on Twitter @bryanhoch and on Facebook.

Brittany Ghiroli has covered the Orioles for MLB.com since 2010. Read her blog, Britt's Bird Watch, follow her on Facebook and Twitter @britt_ghiroli, and listen to her podcast.

This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

Share on Google Plus

About Unknown

This is a short description in the author block about the author. You edit it by entering text in the "Biographical Info" field in the user admin panel.

0 nhận xét:

Đăng nhận xét