[ad_1]
ST. PETERSBURG, Florida – Gary Sanchez, who strolled after a pass in the first run and cost a run to the Yankees, pushed him back to the ninth on a ground ball that could have tied the game, and instead Yankees lost to the Tampa Rays, 7-6, Monday night at Tropicana Field
After his double laziness offense, Sanchez would have to face a bench by director Aaron Boone, who should send a message to his lapsed, lazy and apathetic receiver – not to mention his team, which continues to fall further behind the Red Sox, who beat the Baltimore Orioles, 5-3, and who are now leading the Yankees by six games in the East AL.
With the Yankees trolling, Sanchez, knocking. 188, came in the ninth inning with the bases loaded and two outs. He tore a ball down in the middle, but Aaron Hicks broke the flip in second place. Sanchez, who was coming down the line, was however eliminated at the beginning, to end the game.
Hicks, by the way, left the field limping after his blade to reach second place.
How the match ended with Gary Sanchez's at-bat [?] pic.twitter.com/Y1P2BXb5Qk
"First of all, I want to watch and see what happened," Boone said. "I'm still having conversations with guys – positive, negative, but I want to see what happened first."
Sin was obvious – and it was the second of Sanchez's night.
Jake Bauers He scored from second base on a ball passed in the first inning when Sanchez did not jostle the ball when he went up the third baseline and then hit the Bauers in the back by sending a shot to the pitcher Luis Severino.
Sanchez gave Boone his first real test as a manager: Will Boone step up and discipline the chronically lazy receiver?
Remember, Boone was given the job after Joe Girardi was sent off to the sidewalk because GM Brian Cashman wanted manager who could better relate to young players like Sanchez.
In the ninth, Boone also made a curious decision. With runners in first and second place and no player on the outside, he had Didi Gregorius' sacrifice in shortstop, and the successful rifle left the first base open. Stanton was 9-in-9 at Tropicana Field in his last nine games, including a two-run single that had taken place. reduce the deficit to 7-6.
Aside from Sanchez, the Severino starter was the other big disappointment.
It was not a big story when the only sure thing in the rotation of the Yankees went into the All-. The break in the starts was longer than expected … three innings in five innings in a win, then four out of five in no decision.
Severino followed these disappointing outings with his worst of the season, it became a red flag concern that needs to be dealt with as soon as possible.
Will the Yankees trade? Beat Writers Take Burning Questions
Amid the media and fans, the Yankees need to add another ace before the trade deadline, July 1st. Severino (14-3)) have been manhandled for seven points in the season, six of them have won, out of a total of 11 strokes on more than five innings and the Yankees have gone 0-4 this season to the Tropicana Field.
The Yankees almost defeated Severino They scored three goals in the seventh to turn a 7-3 deficit into a one-point game, but the Rays continued to win.
The Yankees filled the goals with a ninth-left strike on left-handed Jose Alvarado, the Rays' 7th thrower, but Aaron Hicks picked a 5-2 outfielder and then Sanchez lost his ball and was sent off to first base after Hicks managed a shot to raise.
Here's a look at Severino Luttant:
In his last three starts, he has awarded 13 points, of which 12 have been won, at 25 pm C & # 39; is in 15 innings, an extension of his season, of 1.97 to 2.57
Home kick hurt Severino
Rays' first rookie goal, Trey Bauers, hit a right-field wall for a three-run homerun that put the Yanks in a 4-1 hole
Then, after the Yanks came back to score two in sixth and bring the score to 4-3, Daniel Robertson, second baseman. hit Severino's first shot down the sleeve above the center right wall to ignite a three-point run that ended with Tampa Bay in front of 7-3
NOTABLE
– Stanton was 4-in-4 with a double, two-point run and an intentional walk to increase his average to .285, which is one percentage point more than the average .284 of Aaron Judge.
– Gleyber Torres played the second of three games on Monday night in nearby Tampa for the top A Tarpons and was 2-for-4 with a double play second base for the nine innings of a 7-7 win. 4 on Bradenton. Torres, who is now 3-for-7 in two rehab games, has been on the disabled list since July 5 with a right hip strain. The goal for the Yankees is for Torres to play for Tampa again on Tuesday, and will be coming out of the DL for the Rays final on Wednesday.
– Ronald Torreyes finally returned to action on Monday night by playing the Tampa short-stint a detox game after being on the Scranton / Wilkes- temporary list of inactivity. Triple-A bar since June 26 because of a family problem. Torreyes was 1-for-3 before being raised for a hitting striker in the sixth inning.
– Outfielder Clint Frazier, who was put on the disabled list on July 20 after experiencing dizziness during a Triple-A match by a Connecticut neurologist on Monday and diagnosed with post-migraine headaches. commotion
LOOKING AT THE ADVANCE
Tuesday: Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays, 7:10 pm, YES. RHP Masahiro Tanaka (7-2, 4.54) vs. TBA.
Wednesday: Yankees at the Tampa Bay Rays, 12:10 pm, YES. RHP Luis Cessa (1-1, 3.00) against RHP Nathan Eovaldi (3-4, 4.26).
Thursday: Kansas City Royals at the Yankees, 7:05 pm, WPIX. RHP Jakob Junis (5-10, 5.03) against RHP Sonny Gray (7-7, 5.34).
Friday: Kansas City Royals at the Yankees, 7:05 pm, WPIX. RHP Brad Keller (3-4, 3.20) against LHP CC Sabathia (6-4, 3.51).
Randy Miller can be reached at [email protected] . Follow him on Twitter @RandyJMiller . Find NJ.com on Facebook .
[ad_2]
Source link