El Dorado News-Times

Yankees upend defending champion Nationals.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Gleyber Torres helped the New York Yankees prevent the Washington Nationals from tooting their own horn.

Yes, the reigning World Series champs had an actual, honest-to-goodness trumpet in their dugout Sunday. Alas, their bullpen blew a lead, so the

Nationals never got the chance to jazz up a victory celebratio­n with the brass instrument.

Facing two of Washington's top relievers, Torres homered in the seventh inning to begin the rally from a two-run hole, then tacked on a go-ahead single in the eighth, lifting New York to a 3-2 victory for wins in two of three games in the season-opening series.

Torres had started 2020 by going 0 for 7 before delivering hits in three consecutiv­e at-bats Sunday.

“I felt a little more confident," the shortstop said. “The first couple games, I was a little too excited.” Teammates noticed. “We were waiting for Gleyber to break out," said Luke Voit, who also homered, "and today he finally broke out in a clutch way.”

On a sunny afternoon, with the temperatur­e topping 90, Washington's Patrick Corbin retired 18 of the first 19 Yankees batters, Trea Turner homered off Jonathan Loaisiga, and Eric Thames provided an RBI single.

But with one out in the seventh, Torres took

Corbin deep on a firstpitch fastball to make it 2-1.

“A low heater in,” Corbin said. “Probably would have liked it a little more in.”

Nationals manager Dave Martinez then turned to a key new reliever, Will Harris, expected to help the team fare better in late innings than it did for much of 2019.

Harris surrendere­d a tying homer to Voit, who joined Torres in flexing their biceps on the way into the dugout.

In the eighth, after Sean Doolittle (0-1) put men on via a walk and single, Torres pushed New York ahead with his third hit of the day.

“I'm super-frustrated with the results,” Doolittle said, “not being able to put a zero on the board there and navigate that inning.”

New York's bullpen was better, with Chad Green (1-0) working two innings for the win.

After a throwing error by Torres and Adam Eaton's double put runners on second and third for the Nationals in the eighth, Tommy Kahnle struck out Starlin Castro and Thames to get out of the jam.

“It felt like a high-pressure situation. I loved it,” Kahnle said. "Felt just like a regular season game with stakes at hand and everything. Definitely the same, even without the fans.”

Serving as the Yankees' primary closer while Aroldis Chapman is on the COVID-19 injured list, Zack Britton worked around a leadoff infield single and a passed ball charged to Gary Sánchez in the ninth for his first save of 2020.

Pinch-runner Emilio Bonifácio tried to steal third but overslid the bag and was thrown out by Sánchez.

“It was a good aggressive play,” Martinez said. “I kind of liked it.”

Bonifácio is the utility player who brought his trumpet to the ballpark — even polished the horn with a white towel while sitting on the bench during the game.

It might just be this year's version of Washington's “Baby Shark” shenanigan­s: Bonifácio had red T-shirts made with a drawing of a gold horn, and Nationals have been pretending to play notes after base hits.

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