Celebration in the Bronx
Yankees 5, Angels 2: After getting an extra day off due to the rainy Saturday night, the Yankees seemed to be the fresher team from the start. The Angels however struck first. Jeff Mathis, the hot-hitting catcher who was receiving another much-deserved start, doubled to lead off the top of the third. With 2 outs and Mathis still on base, Bobby Abreu drove him in with a base hit up the middle. The RBI was just his second RBI of the series. With runners on base in almost every inning, the Yankees finally broke through against Angels starter Joe Saunders with the bases loaded in the bottom of the fourth. Johnny Damon came through with a 2-run single to give the Yankees a 2-1 lead and Alex Rodriguez walked to drive in the third run and that was all for Saunders. Darren Oliver came on in relief to get Jorge Posada to hit into a double-play, ending the inning and keeping the game at 3-1. Oliver held the Yankees scoreless through his 2.2 innings. Yankees manager Joe Girardi chose to go with closer Mariano Rivera for a six out save, bringing him in to start the 8th inning. Rivera may be one of the best pitchers in postseason history and had not given up a postseason run at home since 2001…until Game 6 of the 2009 ALCS. Vladimir Guerrero drove in Chone Figgins in the inning to make it a 3-2 game. The Angels had their chances in the inning, but great defense and positioning by the Yankees kept their lead. However the Angels defense failed them in the bottom of the 8th inning. After Ervin Santana walked Robinson Cano, lefty Scott Kazmir came in and got Nick Swisher to sacrifice bunt but Howie Kendrick dropped the throw at first base. So now with 2 men on base, Melky Cabrera laid down a sacrifice bunt, but Kazmir sailed the throw over Kendrick’s head, allowing a run to score. Kazmir got Derek Jeter to groundout, but then walked Damon to load the bases, leading to a Mark Teixeira sacrifice fly. Kazmir was out and Jered Weaver was in. Weaver walked A-Rod but struck out Posada to finally end the inning. The bottom of the 8th inning completely deflated the Angels. With the Yankee fans on their feet, Rivera went quickly through the Angels order in the 9th inning, highlighted by a strikeout of Gary Matthews, Jr. to end the game…and the celebration began. “It feels good,” Sabathia said. “We came in with the goal in Spring Training of winning the championship, and we’re one step closer. It’s a close team, and we have a lot of fun together. It just feels good to be able to celebrate with those guys in there.” But the celebration cannot last too long as Game 1 of the World Series begins on Wednesday, as A-Rod will be making his first World Series appearance.
Major League Baseball awarded the ALCS MVP award to the Yankees CC Sabathia. Sabathia made two starts against the Angels in the ALCS, Game 1 and 4. He won both starts with a 1.13 ERA. Sabathia pitched in 16 innings with 12 strikeouts. “He’s been huge,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. “To shut their team down twice and really give our bullpen almost a whole day off when he pitched, he’s been able to do that in almost each one of his games — he’s been incredible.” Every Yankee felt that Sabathia deserved the award as he completely shutdown the Angels and to win in the postseason, a team needs great starting pitching. Sabathia is most likely to start Game 1 of the World Series on Wednesday night at Yankee Stadium.
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