New York Post

Nothing ‘Natural’ about this loss

- kdavidoff@nypost.com

ST. LOUIS — Dearly departed film critic Roger Ebert reviewed “The Natural,” the 1984 baseball movie starring Robert Redford, and complained that the onthefield scenes didn’t pass his smell test: “When a team is losing, it makes Little League errors. When it’s winning, the hits are so accurate they even smash the bad guy’s windows.”

Thirty years later, life imitated art at Busch Stadium.

The Yankees brought a threegame winning streak into Tuesday because they had been playing outstandin­g fundamenta­l baseball, highlighte­d by great situationa­l hitting and clutch defense. That winning streak ended with perhaps their worst fundamenta­l game of the season, culminatin­g in a 60 loss to the Cardinals.

If there’s a takeaway from this stinker, it’s that the Yankees really miss Mark Teixeira, who sat out his second straight game due to pain in his surgically repaired right wrist. The Yankees’ lineup without middleofth­eorder threats Teixeira and Carlos Beltran (right elbow) managed little pop against Cardinals starting pitcher Lance Lynn, who threw his first career shutout, and Teixeira’s inexperien­ced backup, Kelly Johnson, committed his third error of the season at first base. It sure seems like the Yankees should search outside the organizati­on for a superior Plan B at first. So on a day that began with them feeling on top of the New York baseball world — after all, the Mets just fired their hitting coach Dave Hudgens because of the team’s inability to hit with runners in scoring position — the Yankees put on a performanc­e more befitting the 1962 Mets.

“We didn’t play a very good game today, but we had run off three pretty good games in a row,” Joe Girardi said, dismissing a question about his team’s possible fatigue. “That’s just part of the game. You have ups and downs.”

Maybe, but you’d understand if the Yankees felt wiped following their 12inning, 64 victory over the Cardinals Monday, their third extrainnin­g victory on this road trip — a game in which defensive excellence by Brett Gardner and Brendan Ryan made the win possible. Yankees starting pitcher David Phelps deserved far better in his homecoming start Tuesday, getting victimized by a Brian Roberts error right after Johnson’s miscue in the home team’s fourrun third and receiving absolutely no run support. Johnson, making his 17th start of the season at first base after starting there just twice in his previous nine seasons, couldn’t execute a catchandta­g swipe on Allen Craig’s grounder to Derek Jeter in the third inning; the ball fell out of Johnson’s glove for his third error at first base, Matt Holliday scored from third for a 20 Cardinals lead and the bases remained loaded.

“I think that play could happen to just about everybody,” Johnson said, when asked if his inexperien­ce contribute­d to the sequence.

On the very next play, Jhonny Peralta hit a potential doubleplay grounder to Roberts, and the second baseman let the ball roll under his legs for another error; two runs came in, and the rout was on.

“We certainly as a defense take the blame for that one,” Roberts said.

The Yankees put together a .417/.469/.458 slash line with runners in scoring position during their threegame run over the White Sox (two wins) and Cardinals (one). Of their 10 hits in 24 atbats, nine had been singles and the 10th a double (by Alfonso Soriano on Saturday). On Tuesday against Lynn, the Yankees went hitless in nine atbats, drawing two walks, with runners in scoring position.

The Yankees came to work Tuesday with confidence all over the field. They punched out having exhibited a massive display of incompeten­ce. The plummet from great to terrible seemed anything but natural.

 ?? AP ?? SO CLOSE! Alfonso Soriano is unable to catch Allen Craig’s solo home run during the fifth inning.
AP SO CLOSE! Alfonso Soriano is unable to catch Allen Craig’s solo home run during the fifth inning.
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