The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Red Alert: Frazier gives Yankees a walk-off win

Rookie hits three-run homer in 9th to help N.Y. down Milwaukee

- By Jake Seiner

NEW YORK » Clint Frazier helped the Yankees solve Milwaukee’s Brent Suter after the left-hander baffled New York without reaching 90 mph Saturday.

In just his sixth major league game, Frazier showed he can handle some velocity, too.

Frazier pulled a three-run homer off Corey Knebel with one out in the ninth inning, lifting the Yankees over the Brewers 5-3 for a walk-off bash in the Bronx.

“We went wild,” teammate Aaron Judge said. “I went wild. I almost tripped over the rail right there.”

Frazier turned on a 1-0, 97 mph fastball from Knebel (0-2) for his first game-ending hit and second career homer. He threw his helmet as he approached his teammates at home plate, unveiling his mop of red hair, which was then doused in yellow Gatorade. “The hair is all right,” Frazier said. Frazier also chased Suter with an RBI triple in the seventh inning. He finished with a career-high three hits and four RBIs.

“I was really amped up,” Frazier said of the homer. “I was trying to make sure that I didn’t go up there and take a big swing.”

The 22-year-old Frazier is the youngest Yankee with a game-ending homer since 21-year-old Melky Cabrera on July 18, 2006, against Seattle. Frazier was acquired last season from Cleveland in a deal for reliever Andrew Miller.

“That’s a big win,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. “Clint’s at-bats all day were

good, and to hit a three-run walk-off homer, we needed that.”

It was New York’s third win in its final at-bat this season and ended a threegame slide. The Yankees improved to 7-17 since going a season-best 15 games over. 500 on June 12.

Knebel walked Didi Gregorius and Jacoby Ellsbury and threw first-pitch balls to three of his four batters, including a curveball that missed to Frazier.

“Just didn’t throw strikes,” the closer said.

Dellin Betances struck out two in a perfect eighth for New York, and Aroldis Chapman (2-0) struck out the side in the ninth. Yankees pitchers combined for 15 strikeouts.

The NL Central-leading Brewers wasted an impressive showing by Suter, a 27-year-old Harvard graduate who has never reached 90 mph in the majors. They had won five in a row.

Suter didn’t allow a hit until Frazier’s groundball single with two outs in the fifth. He pitched two-hit ball through six scoreless innings before the Yankees got to him for two runs with one out in the seventh.

Suter compensate­s for his underwhelm­ing heater with a hyper-quick pace. During one at-bat, Judge didn’t even bother moving out of his batting stance between offerings.

“There’s different ways that pitchers disrupt hitters’ timing,” manager Craig Counsell said. “They do it with speed of the ball, he does it with some deception and the pace at which he works.”

Counsell said Suter will remain in Milwaukee’s rotation after the All-Star break. This was just his fourth major league start and third this season.

Luis Severino an All-Star who can reach 100 mph struck out 10 and gave up three runs over seven innings for New York. Milwaukee’s only damage against the right-hander was Domingo Santana’s three-run homer in the first.

New York chased Suter with a trio of hard-hit balls in the seventh. Chase Headley doubled, Jacoby Ellsbury singled and Suter’s errant pickoff attempt let Headley score. Frazier then drilled a standup triple off the wall in left-center to make it 3-2.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Yankees’ Clint Frazier, center, is congratula­ted by teammates after hitting a three-run walk-off home run during the ninth inning
JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Yankees’ Clint Frazier, center, is congratula­ted by teammates after hitting a three-run walk-off home run during the ninth inning

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States