Toronto Star

Cleveland rallies to down New York in extras

> INDIANS 9 > YANKEES 8 (CLEVELAND LEADS SERIES 2-0)

- TOM WITHERS

CLEVELAND— Yan Gomes singled home Austin Jackson from second base with none out in the 13th inning as the Cleveland Indians rallied from five runs down to stun the New York Yankees 9-8 Friday and snatch a 2-0 lead in the AL Division Series.

Jackson drew a leadoff walk in the 13th from Dellin Betances and stole second. Gomes went to a full count before pulling his bouncer just inside the third-base bag, easily scoring Jackson. The Indians poured out of their dugout to mob Gomes, who ended the five-hour, eight-minute thriller.

The Indians overcame an 8-3 deficit, a terrible start by ace Corey Kluber and a potentiall­y serious injury to slugger Edwin Encarnacio­n. Francisco Lindor hit a grand slam in the sixth to rally Cleveland, right after a close call on a hit by pitch that the Yankees didn’t challenge.

The Yankees had their chances late, but they stranded the go-ahead run at third in the ninth and 10th — and had pinch-runner Ronald Torreyes picked off second in the 11th by Gomes from the behind the plate.

Cleveland will try for a sweep in Game 3 Sunday at Yankee Stadium.

Encarnacio­n was scrambling to get back to second base when he jammed his foot into the bag and rolled his ankle in the first inning.

He dropped to the ground in obvious pain and writhed in the infield dirt while waiting for medical personnel. Encarnacio­n, who was doubled up on the play, was unable to put much weight on his leg and had to be helped off the field. He had to pause on the trip to the dugout because he was hurting so much.

The Indians said Encarnacio­n has a sprained ankle and is undergoing further evaluation.

Michael Brantley, who made it all the way back from a serious ankle injury to make the post-season roster, replaced Encarnacio­n as Cleveland’s designated hitter in the second inning and struck out on three pitches to leave the bases loaded.

In his first season with Cleveland, Encarnacio­n hit 38 homers with 107 RBIs. Cleveland signed him to a three-year, $60 million (U.S.) contract in January after he spent sevenplus seasons with the Blue Jays.

The loss of Encarnacio­n for any significan­t time would be a major blow to the defending AL champions, who are trying to get back to the World Series and end a 69-year title drought.

 ?? DAVID DERMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cleveland DH Edwin Encarnacio­n grimaces after rolling his ankle trying to get back to second base.
DAVID DERMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cleveland DH Edwin Encarnacio­n grimaces after rolling his ankle trying to get back to second base.

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