Sunday, May 13, 2012

All hail King Millwood

            With the weak-hitting Seattle Mariners nice enough to spend a few days in New York and the scheduled return of Andy Pettitte on the way, this was drumming up to be fun weekend. Fresh off from taking two out of three against the Rays, the Yanks were looking to stay par by taking two out of three from Seattle as well, accepting the one loss as a result of having to face King Felix in the Friday night opener. Felix Hernandez entered the game 3-0 in his last three Yankee Stadium starts, so things weren't looking good for the bombers.

   

              Daring to battle King Felix was the courageous Hiroki Kuroda, who has been the recipient of only 2 runs of support per game in his last three starts, and was looking at the same fate against the 2010 Cy Young award winner. Seattle jumped out to a 1-0 lead when the very first hitter of the game, Dustin Ackley, took a Kuroda pitch over the left field wall for an opposite field homerun. In the bottom of the frame the Yanks answered back when Cano, who's back in full hitting force, singled in Granderson to tie it 1-1. The Yankees blew a golden opportunity to knock the king off his throne when Mark Teixeira got a single which would've loaded the bases, instead (a theme which would ruin Mother's Day for the Yankees) it all turn out to be waste and zero runs scored. A-Rod tried to score from second on the Teixeira hit and was slowed down by judging if the ball was going to fall in or not. Although he had no shot at scoring, A-Rod ran past third base and headed for home in which he was gunned down by a mile.



             Swisher and Ibanez made outs after that, and a sure bases loaded no out situation was erased in a split second. Seattle blew their own chances for a big inning as they loaded the bases in the 5th inning, only to have Kuroda escape the jam by striking out Brendan Ryan and getting Ichiro to ground out. What Kuroda wasn't able to escape was the solo homerun the next inning he gave up to former Yankee star prospect Jesus Montero, who was traded in the winter along with Hector Noesi, in the deal which brought Micheal Pineda here to have his shoulder blow out for 2012.



             The same as earlier in the game, as soon as the Mariners took the lead, the Yankees answered back, and in a big way. With runners on the corners and one out, Nick Swisher just needed a fly ball to the outfield to tie the score, but instead he struck out. It looked like another wasted opportunity with runners left on the bags, but next stepped in Raul Ibanez, who took the first pitch he saw from King Felix and lined it over the generous right field wall for a huge 3-run homer which gave the Yankees the 4-2 lead. In addition to Ibanez, another Cashman cog, Andrew Jones, added a towering homer of his own later on in a pinch-hitting appearance to seal the Yankees 6-2 win. Winning the game they were expected to lose, the Yanks had to be thinking sweep with the next two scheduled starters for Seattle being Noesi and Kevin Millwood.



            Phil Hughes took the ball for the Yanks in the next game and was looking to build off his impressive start last Sunday against the Royals. Facing an even weaker hitting club than this time, Hughes was even better. Shockingly, he took the ball into the 8th with his 7.2 innings of work only giving up one earned run from a homer. Seattle starter and former Yankee Hector Noesi was slapped around for 5 runs, including yet another homerun from the 39 year-old slugger Raul Ibanez., his 7th of the season. The score was the same as the night before, 6-2 Yankees. With the final game on Mother's Day also the day Andy Pettitte was going to officially return to the team since he retired after 2010, only having to face the supposed washed-up Kevin Millwood, it was looking like a sure sweep was in the Yanks' cards.

 

             Once Pettitte took the mound he looked like he had never left at all. He was good, as in no-hit good through his first three innings of work. Unfortunately for the Yanks, Kevin Millwood, another blast from the past, was equally as effective and held the Yanks hitless through his first three innings as well. Pettitte blinked first as he gave up a 2-run homer to Justin Smoak which put the Yanks in a 2-0 hole. The Bombers loaded the bases in the bottom of the 5th inning and cut the lead in half when Millwood walked in the Yanks first run of the game. Then the next hitter, Derek Jeter, grounded into a doubleplay. Pettitte served up another 2-run shot which barely hit the foul pole to increase Seattle's lead to 4-1. Kevin Millwood, who was an absolute joke in Baltimore two seasons ago and sported a 0-4 record coming into this game, stifled the Yankees in his 7 innings of work and ruined Pettitte's coming home party. Mark Teixeira had a two-out bases loaded chance of his own to at least tie the game or give the Yanks the lead, but he too made sure to do nothing with it and struck out. The bullpen for the Yankees let two more runs score and Seattle gave the Yanks their own '6-2' medicine with a 6-2 win of their own.



              Going into this weekend with King Felix as one of the starters, the Yanks had to be content with taking two out of three. Plus, even the most die-hard Yankee fan had to be curious on how Pettitte's stuff would be after not had thrown a pitch in the majors since the 2010 playoffs, and it was all there, except a few location mistakes. Next the Yanks visit their home away from home to face the first place (yes, true) Baltimore Orioles.

              With Pettitte back and Hughes finally looking like a starting pitcher, the Yankees at 19-15 can say they have a rotation for 2012........




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