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Girardi takes blame for loss in Game 2

- By Jake Seiner

NEW YORK — After a crushing loss, Yankees manager Joe Girardi spent the night pondering his decision not to challenge a critical hit-by-pitch call during a game-changing sixth inning. His verdict? “I screwed up.” Girardi took the blame Saturday after his call not to challenge possibly shifted the complexion of New York’s 9-8, 13-inning defeat in Game 2 of an AL Division Series against Cleveland.

“I take responsibi­lity for everything,” Girardi said during a day off. “And I feel horrible about it.”

New York trails 2-0 in the best-of-five series. Game 3 is tonight at Yankee Stadium.

With New York ahead 8-3 Friday, Cleveland’s Lonnie Chisenhall was awarded first by plate umpire Dan Iassogna on an inside pitch by reliever Chad Green.

Catcher Gary Sanchez immediatel­y asked Girardi to challenge, and slowmotion replays showed that the ball hit the knob of Chisenhall’s bat. The question was whether it first grazed Chisenhall’s hand.

Plate umpires often rely on sound more than sight on such plays, making calls based on what they hear — as in, did a pitch nick the body, the bat or both? To get the ruling reversed, an umpire in the replay room would’ve needed definitive proof the ball completely missed Chisenhall’s hand.

Sanchez caught the 0-2 pitch, which would have been an inning-ending third strike if ruled a foul tip.

Girardi relies on coaching assistant Brett Weber to scour replays before challengin­g. Weber didn’t see anything conclusive in the 30-second window allotted by Major League Baseball to request a review, and so Girardi disregarde­d Sanchez’s plea and didn’t challenge.

Weber and the Yankees didn’t get the slo-mo replay until Francisco Lindor was already atbat. Lindor hit a grand slam off Green to make it 8-7, sparking a dramatic comeback by Cleveland.

New York led the major leagues by winning 72 percent of their challenges in the regular season. Girardi said Friday night that he didn’t want to waste one of his two challenges and that he didn’t want to disrupt

Green’s rhythm. The Yankees had already won one earlier in the game.

But if he could do it over?

“Yeah, I wish I would have challenged it,” he said.

“Very seldom have I ever wasted a challenge when it wasn’t conclusive,” he added. “That’s just what I’ve done, you know. Maybe that’s the wrong way.”

Girardi defended his call to disregard Sanchez, saying he doesn’t rely on players to determine what should be reviewed.

“It has nothing to do with me trusting a player,” Girardi said. “It’s having video evidence to make sure the call will be overturned before you use it.”

The 10th-year Yankees manager also stood by his bullpen management. Girardi pulled starter CC Sabathia after just 77 pitches to get to Green in the sixth inning, and Green gave up Lindor’s slam.

Girardi said he’s relied on the same “formula” for his relievers through the last few months, including regularly using Green in the fifth or sixth innings. Green got two crucial strikeouts in the first inning of the Yankees’ AL wild-card win over Minnesota after replacing starter Luis Severino with just one out, and he had a 1.83 ERA during the regular season.

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