New York Post

Up-and-down Torres ends day on high note

- By ZACH BRAZILLER

In the eighth inning Wednesday, Gleyber Torres’ brain cramp contribute­d to the Yankees losing the lead.

In the ninth, his clutch single helped them go back ahead and ultimately leave Camden Yards with a 4-3 victory over the Orioles.

It was yet another interestin­g day in this bizarre season for the 24-year-old infielder.

Torres, pulled from Tuesday’s win because manager Aaron Boone was unhappy with his lack of hustle and concerned about his defensive shortcomin­gs, may have swung and ran his way back into the Yankees’ good graces after another hiccup in the field.

After Luke Voit led off the ninth with a walk, Torres singled to center field off Orioles reliever Tyler Wells, then stole second as part of a double steal with Tyler Wade and scored the game-winning run on Brett Gardner’s bloop single.

“I think it was important, just a really tough at-bat he threw up there,” Boone said after the Yankees won their third straight game, on the heels of 12 losses in 15 games. “It’s a big spot there and I think he did a really good job within the at-bat . ... He helped set us up big-time in that inning.”

An inning earlier, Torres had made a mental mistake. With the leadoff runner on base in the bottom of the eighth, Cedric Mullins hit a rocket toward Torres at second. Torres, moved from shortstop to second base on Monday as his defensive problems have worsened, fielded the ball after a brief bobble. But he immediatel­y threw to first base instead of second, for what may have been a double play. Instead of two outs, the Yankees only got one. And with two outs, Austin Hays took Chad Green deep for a go-ahead, two-run homer.

“Initially, [Austin] Wynns kind of freezing on him a little bit just threw him off,” Boone said, referring to the Orioles’ catcher who was the runner at first. “Obviously it was a play he should’ve ended up going to second. He had the time, but ended up taking the out at first.”

Before the game, Boone addressed pulling Torres in Tuesday’s eighth inning. He said it wasn’t only about his defense, but his failure to run out a ground ball. The two spoke about the play that irked the manager.

“I talked to him after the game [Tuesday] night and we’ll kind of leave it at that,” Boone said. “It’s not something that I’m planning on doing necessaril­y. There were things that came up in the game [Tuesday] night, that I felt it was necessary to get him out of there [that] night.”

When asked if it bothered him that Torres didn’t bust it down the line after grounding out, Boone said: “A little bit, yeah.”

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