The Province

Home dominance continues

Yankees one win away from World Series as teams head to Houston Rob Longley

- SPORTS COMMENT

It was just a brief snapshot amid the din at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday night, but perhaps a clear indication of where this 2017 ALCS seems headed.

After New York catcher Gary Sanchez slaughtere­d a baseball, Astros left-fielder Marwin Gonzalez didn’t even look up into the New York night. Instead, he turned to face the infield and dropped his chin in disappoint­ment.

There might have been more of that going on after the Astros were beat up badly, a crushing 5-0 loss to end a miserable three-day visit here.

And now, at least a year ahead of schedule but with the exuberance of youth on their side, the Baby Bombers are one win away from advancing to the World Series for the 41st time in franchise history.

“This series isn’t over,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch said. “This game is.”

On Friday, the second of Houston’s starting aces, Justin Verlander, will try to get the Astros back in it. The other starting stalwart, Dallas Keuchel, was touched up just enough on Wednesday, getting stung for four runs in 4.2 innings of work.

With the once prolific Astros offence gone missing — and Yankees starter Masahiro Tanaka pitching as good as he ever has — those four runs were plenty for a Yankees team that has seemed to get stronger in each of the past three games.

The latest win finished off a sweep of their home portion of the best-of-seven series and the upstart New Yorkers are now 6-0 at Yankee Stadium this post-season.

“I’ve been incredibly impressed with the poise we have shown as a club,” said Yankees DH Chase Headley who was 3-for-4 at the plate Wednesday. “Guys trusted we could win that next game and that’s been the whole philosophy. It says a lot about the relaxed environmen­t.”

Given two of the games here were blowouts — 5-0 and 8-1 — to go with Tuesday’s dramatic 6-4 comeback win, the Yankees are steaming toward yet another remarkable series win.

“I give our guys a lot of credit,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. “The leadership in that room … they know what they need to do and they’re ready to go every day.”

Game on

The Sanchez homer was the big blast of the night, but earlier the Yankees offence chipped away at Keuchel, who dominated the Yankees in Game 1 and owned a 1.09 ERA and 6-2 record in eight previous starts against them. So what changed? “A couple of things,” Headley said. “Whenever you face a pitcher twice in a week it makes it easier for the hitters. You get to see what his stuff is doing.

“The other thing is we had good team at-bats and took advantage of the few mistakes he made. That’s the only way you’re going to have success against a guy like that.”

The Yankees didn’t exactly light Keuchel up — he still had eight strikeouts. But they used clutch at-bats to touch him for a run in each of the second and third innings and two more in the fifth. How unflinchin­g have the New York batters been when it matters most? Thirteen of their 21 runs in the series have come with two out.

Right fielder Aaron Judge had an RBI double to score Headley and keep his productive run alive. Meanwhile, the second-inning run off Keuchel in which Greg Bird drove home Starlin Castro was the first the Yanks scored off Keuchel in 14.2 playoff innings.

Tough Tanaka

The way starter Tanaka was pitching, the Yankees were aware they weren’t likely to need much offence. It was his second start of seven innings or more with no runs allowed this season and his ERA of 0.90 this post-season is the second lowest in club post-season history (minimum 19 innings pitched.)

“I feel like I’m just keeping it really simple,” Tanaka said through a translator. “You go out there and you empty the tank. I think I’m just really clear of what I need to do out there and I’m executing.”

Starting with an outing against the Toronto Blue Jays on the final weekend of the regular season, Tanaka has thrown 22 consecutiv­e scoreless innings at Yankee Stadium.

“He was special again,” Girardi said. “You look at his three starts in the playoffs — they’ve all been special. And we needed it.”

Offensive offence

So what exactly has happened to an Astros’ offence that led the major leagues in runs in the regular season with 896 but has been held to just nine in five games against the Yankees?

“We’ve lost a little bit of our offensive adjustment­s and a little bit of our offensive mojo,” Hinch said.

MVP candidate Jose Altuve was 0-for-13 in the Bronx. The Astros had just 11 hits in the three games here.

“We’re going to go home where we hit well,” Hinch said. “We’ll try to make some adjustment­s — that’s what the playoffs are all about. The message is going to be to keep fighting the fight.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Gary Sanchez belted a solo home run in the seventh inning and the New York Yankees scored a 5-0 win over the Houston Astros in Game 5 of the ALCS at Yankee Stadium Wednesday.
— GETTY IMAGES Gary Sanchez belted a solo home run in the seventh inning and the New York Yankees scored a 5-0 win over the Houston Astros in Game 5 of the ALCS at Yankee Stadium Wednesday.
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