The Day

Yankees hit four homers, beat Orioles 9-1 to win series

- By DAVID GINSBURG AP Sports Writer

Baltimore — The New York Yankees honored Gene Michael by wearing black arm bands, and then paid homage to the man nicknamed "Stick" by winning a game for him.

Aaron Judge and Chase Headley hit two-run homers, Starlin Castro and Todd Frazier added solo shots and New York beat the Baltimore Orioles 9-1 on Thursday for its first series win at Camden Yards in four years.

Michael, who played, coached, managed and served as general manager for the Yankees, died of a heart attack Thursday at age 79.

Current manager Joe Girardi, who had a tight relationsh­ip with Michael, said his friend would have loved New York's victory.

"That's a Stick special. That's exactly what that is," Girardi said. "Make pitchers work and hit home runs. We were able to do that. So that was for Stick."

Didi Gregorius had three hits and scored twice for the Yankees, who closed within 3 1/2 games of AL East-leading Boston and fortified their grip on the top AL wild card.

Yankees leadoff hitter Brett Gardner appreciate­d putting on the gray New York uniform just a little bit more on this day, knowing how much Michael meant to his storied franchise.

"You see it hanging in your locker and then when you put the jersey on you take a minute to remember and appreciate," Gardner said. "Obviously, that represents Stick today but in the past we've had all sorts of guys it's represente­d. I'm sure he'd be happy about how the game went."

Sonny Gray (9-9) gave up one unearned run and six hits in 5 2/3 innings.

After rain postponed Wednesday night's game, the Yankees dominated the makeup from the outset. Judge connected in the first inning for a 3-0 lead, giving him 39 home runs — second-most by a rookie in major league history behind Mark McGwire's 49 in 1987.

"There's been a couple atbats this series they left a couple over the middle that seemed to miss and I didn't swing at," Judge said. "My mindset today was to go out and be aggressive."

New York added two runs in the third against Kevin Gausman (10-10), and Headley's drive off Mike Wright made it 7-0 in the fourth.

By taking two out of three, the Yankees earned their first series win in Baltimore since Sept 9-13, 2013. The 11-series drought was the second-longest in franchise history, behind only a 12-series run in Oakland from 1985-91.

Castro homered in the sixth for an 8-0 lead, and Frazier went deep in the seventh to give every New York starter at least one hit.

Coming off two starts in which he didn't allow a run over 13 2/3 innings, Gausman gave up an RBI double to Gregorius in the first before Judge ripped a belt-high fastball deep into the center-field bleachers.

Showalter salute

Showalter had a black piece of tape across the Orioles logo on his shoulder, a salute to Michael, who hired him to manage the Yankees in 1992.

"It's a loss for everybody. He had done it all," Showalter said.

Trainer’s room

Yankees: RHP Adam Warren, who was placed on the 10-day disabled list Wednesday with a lower back spasm, could return this season. "It's possible just because he's a reliever," Girardi said.

Up next

Yankees: Masahiro Tanaka (11-10, 4.54 ERA) helps New York launch a three-game series in Texas today.

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