New York Daily News

FIREWORKS HERE

Guardians finally find way to silence Yank bats

- BY KRISTIE ACKERT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS GUARDIANS

CLEVELAND — OK, it is time to take a deep breath and exhale. After getting shut out by Triston McKenzie and the Guardians, 2-0, on Sunday at Progressiv­e Field, the Yankees finally get a day off and a chance to catch their breath after 20 games in 20

YANKEES

days.

McKenzie shut down the Yankees, allowing just one hit, for seven innings and Guardians’ closer Emmanuel Clase worked out of a jam in the ninth to hand the Yankees (58-22) just their sixth shutout of the season.

The Bombers had already won the series, sweeping both ends of a doublehead­er on Saturday, but with the win the Guardians avoided the embarrassm­ent of going 0-6 against the Yankees for the season. The Yankees fell to 2-2 on this odd four-city, 10-game trip with the loss to the Astros on Thursday, but maintained the best record in baseball.

The Bombers went 14-6 in a span that saw them face seven teams with winning records.

Sunday was not the ending they were hoping for.

It simply came down to the fact the Yankees could not get much going against McKenzie.

He retired the first 10 batters he faced, before walking Giancarlo Stanton in the fourth. Josh Donaldson got the only hit off him — after Stanton’s walk. He struck out seven and walked just one.

“Their guy was really good,” Jordan Montgomery said of McKenzie. “He executed at the top of the zone for heaters and then threw a curveball that just kind of ran into a guy.

“Still a good series, good to come out of here with a series win.”

The Bombers did try to rally in the ninth against Clase. Anthony Rizzo drew a leadoff walk and then Stanton reached on an error. Donaldson flew out to center and Gleyber Torres struck out. Aaron Judge, pinch-hitting for Jose

Trevino, worked a full-count walk to load the bases before Aaron Hicks grounded out.

Clase kept them off balance by relying on his off-speed stuff instead of his fastball that can touch 101 miles an hour.

“Once you get to two strikes, you gotta have that 101 (fastball) in the back of your head you don’t expect him to feel three sliders in a row,” Hicks said. “I just gotta jammed trying to hit the ball up the middle and got out.”

Montgomery was good, but not efficient. The lefty allowed one run on three hits and three walks. He struck out a season-high eight. Montgomery, who needed 30 pitches to get through the third, needed 94 to get through five innings. It was a strong bounce-back

after allowing nine earned runs over his last two starts (12.2 innings).

Franmil Reyes did the only damage against him, hitting a 384-foot homer into the left-field bleachers in the fourth inning. He went on to strike out the side that inning.

JP Sears, who returned Sunday to take the bullpen spot left when

Ron Marinaccio went on the injured list Saturday night, allowed a run on three hits in 2.2 innings. He struck out one.

He got help from his defense in the eighth. After a leadoff double to Steven Kwan followed by an Amed Rosario single, Gabriel Arias hit a grounder back to shortstop. DJ LeMahieu fired a throw to home, where Trevino tagged

Kwan out. Trevino fired the ball to shortstop and the Yanks got Arias in a rundown before first baseman Anthony Rizzo tagged him out. That was it for Sears. Reyes singled off Albert Abreu on a ground ball to center to eventually drive in the Guardians’ second run. A Torres throw to first was wide on Owen Millers’ ground ball to keep the inning alive.

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 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Josh Donaldson can’t get around on pitch from Guardians’ Triston McKenzie (inset) in sixth inning Sunday in Cleveland.
AP PHOTOS Josh Donaldson can’t get around on pitch from Guardians’ Triston McKenzie (inset) in sixth inning Sunday in Cleveland.

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