China Daily (Hong Kong)

Astros clinch AL series as Yankees bomb in the Bronx

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HOUSTON — CC Sabathia was on the mound, unbeaten when starting after New York Yankees losses.

Aaron Judge made another home run-robbing catch early in the game, but the Yankees still lost the decisive Game 7 of the AL Championsh­ip Series 4-0 to the Houston Astros on Saturday night.

The Yankees’ 41st American League pennant will have to wait.

Sabathia, among only three players remaining from New York’s last World Series team in 2009, was unable to save them again in maybe his last game with the Yankees.

The big left-hander was done in the fourth inning.

“I feel like I wasn’t as sharp. They came out very aggressive, and I felt like I couldn’t get on track,” Sabathia said.

After sweeping the Astros in three games at Yankee Stadium, New York scored just three runs and had 20 hits in the four games at Houston, striking out 48 times.

Joe Girardi’s contract is expiring and he has not said whether he wants to return for an 11th season in the Bronx.

“I love what I do, and I’ve always said the first thing that I do is I always talk to my family. They come first,” the manager said.

“I’ll sit down and talk to my wife, and the kids, and see where they’re at and what they’re thinking, and then see what the Yankees are thinking.”

Sabathia can become a free agent and Japanese righthande­r Mashiro Tanaka can opt out of his contract.

Tanaka didn’t want to talk about his situation, but Sabathia said he’s likely to remain with these Baby Bombers.

“I feel like this is a young team, and we will turn this into something great,” Sabathia said. “I just wasn’t sharp enough today.”

New York had avoided eliminatio­n four times already this postseason, winning the AL wild card game and then overcoming a 2-0 deficit in the best-of-five AL Division Series to beat Cleveland. That included the clinching Game 5 that Sabathia started, though he got a no decision in the Yankees’ only road playoff win.

Starting a Game 7 for the first time in his career, Sabathia got three one-pitch groundouts after giving up George Springer’s leadoff single in a seven-pitch first inning.

The Astros second began with Yuli Gurriel’s long drive to right field, but Judge made a running, leaping catch with his left arm fully extended on a ball that appeared headed for the seats.

After Sabathia escaped jams with two runners on in each of the second and third innings, Evan Gattis started the Astros’ fourth with a homer off the left-field facade. The Yankees lefty was done three batters later after Josh Reddick’s first hit of the ALCS put runners at first and second.

Sabathia had been 10-0 with a 1.69 ERA in 13 starts after Yankees losses this year, including his six scoreless innings in Game 3 of the ALCS.

Reliever Tommy Kahnle induced an inning-ending, double-play grounder on his first pitch, so Sabathia allowed only one run in 3 1/3 innings. But the 37-year-old left-hander allowed five hits and three walks without any strikeouts.

Not even Judge was tall enough to take a homer away from Jose Altuve when he hit a ball into the right-field seats in the fifth. After consecutiv­e singles put two more Astros on base, former Yankees catcher Brian McCann hit a two-run double into the right-field corner for a four-run lead.

Judge, the rookie slugger who led the AL with 52 homers, hit four in the postseason — three in the ALCS. But he also set a major league playoff record with 27 strikeouts in 48 at-bats in the playoffs.

 ?? TROY TAORMINA / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Houston Astros starting pitcher Justin Verlander poses with the MVP trophy after the Astros beat the New York Yankees 4-0 on Saturday to win the AL Championsh­ip Series.
TROY TAORMINA / USA TODAY SPORTS Houston Astros starting pitcher Justin Verlander poses with the MVP trophy after the Astros beat the New York Yankees 4-0 on Saturday to win the AL Championsh­ip Series.

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