Yanks squander early lead, fall to O's in 12th
NEW YORK -- With five runs in the first inning, the Yankees felt good Sunday. With the game tied and in the hands of the two bullpens late, they still felt good.And when they had the bases loaded with nobody out in the bottom of the 12th inning with Aaron
NEW YORK -- With five runs in the first inning, the Yankees felt good Sunday. With the game tied and in the hands of the two bullpens late, they still felt good.
And when they had the bases loaded with nobody out in the bottom of the 12th inning with
The early lead didn't last. The bullpen didn't hold. And at the end of an ultra-frustrating first week at home, Stanton struck out once again to end an 8-7 Yankees loss to the Orioles.
The Yankees were stuck with a 5-5 record through 10 games as they get ready to head to Boston for their first meeting of the season with the Red Sox.
"We had a chance to finish off a good homestand," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.
Instead, Boone was left to explain that he feels good about his bullpen, even though that heralded group has had a big hand in each of the team's five losses so far. He was left to explain he feels good about Stanton, even if the 2017 National League Most Valuable Player Award winner just had his second five-strikeout game in a week where he went 3-for-28, struck out 16 times and heard boos from his new home fans.
"I think in time he'll be fine," Boone said. "He's too good a player. Before long, it'll be an old story."
For now, though, the Yankees' stories are that the things that were supposed to be so good haven't been good enough. Stanton has three impressive home runs, but not enough in between. The bullpen has looked better, but three times this weekend against the Orioles, the Yanks' relievers were the ones who gave up the game.
"We expect to put up zeros," Warren said. "We expect to be great out there."
Instead, Yankees relievers have combined for a 4.89 ERA (compared to 3.34 last season). Sunday, after starter
"[The walk] was probably the one thing that bothered me," Warren said. "The [two hits] were ground balls that found holes."
MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
The missed chances: It wasn't just the 12th inning, when the Yankees threatened to score. There was also the 10th inning, when Didi Gregorius' one-out double set them up to win it. But Gentry went back to make a game-saving catch on
Romine delivers three times: With
QUOTABLE
"You've just got to look at it as a bad week. The season's much longer than a week." -- Stanton
SOUND SMART WITH YOUR FRIENDS
The Yankees and Orioles played 14 innings Friday night (with the O's winning, 7-3) before Sunday's marathon. It was the first Yankees home series with two games that went at least 12 innings since July 6-7, 1990, against the Twins. In that series, the Yankees lost a 2-0, 12-inning first game of a doubleheader, then won, 5-4, in 12 the following day.
MITEL REPLAY OF THE DAY
The Yankees got a break in the bottom of the fifth inning, extending the fifth inning on a two-out replay review call that was overturned.
WHAT'S NEXT
The Yankees travel to Boston for their first 2018 meeting with the rival Red Sox. Right-hander
Watch every out-of-market regular-season game live on MLB.TV.
Danny Knobler is a contributor to MLB.com based in New York.