The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Tribe opens series with Yankees with a loss

- By Ben Walker

The Indians rallied from a fiverun deficit but the bullpen let them down again as they lost in Yankee Stadium on May 4, 7-6.

NEW YORK » Rookie Miguel Andujar flared an RBI single with two outs in the ninth inning and the New York Yankees, after blowing two late leads, beat the Indians, 7-6, Friday night for their 13th win in 14 games.

Gleyber Torres, at 21, became the youngest Yankees player to hit a home run since 1969. He connected in the first matchup between these teams since New York won the decisive Game 5 of the AL Division Series in Cleveland last October.

Aaron Judge homered, doubled and drew a basesloade­d walk in the eighth that put the Yankees ahead 6-5. Cleveland tied it in the ninth, scoring on the second wild pitch of the inning by Aroldis Chapman (1-0), who showed frustratio­n after the ball got by catcher Gary Sanchez.

Sanchez has allowed 20 wild pitches this season to go along with five passed balls.

Giancarlo Stanton doubled off Alexi Ogando (01) to begin the Yankees ninth, and closer Cody Allen relieved. With two outs and runners on second and third, Andujar looped a single to shallow right-center field.

Down 5-0 in the eighth, the Indians suddenly pulled even. Bradley Zimmer hit a three-run shot off Chasen Shreve, and Jose Ramirez

launched a two-run drive off David Robertson.

It was Aaron Judge Jedi bobblehead night as the Yankees, like many pro teams, played up the “Star Wars” theme on May the Fourth. Back home after a 6-1 trip, the slugger also doubled in his own Return of the Judge-I.

Judge walked on a fullcount pitch with two outs from Ogando. The veteran right-hander pitched in South Korea last year, started this season in Triple-A and was called up by Cleveland earlier in the day.

The Indians needed relief help after a splitting a highscorin­g, rain-delayed doublehead­er against Toronto on Thursday. The AL Central

leaders arrived at their New York hotel around 3:30 a.m.

Torres lined a three-run drive into the left field seats in the fourth. He became the youngest Yankee to homer since John Ellis, who was 20 when he hit an inside-the-parker at old Yankee Stadium nearly a halfcentur­y ago.

Torres quickly circled the bases and, in keeping with baseball tradition, the rookie received the silent treatment when he got back to the bench. Only after he went down the dugout giving imaginary high-fives to teammates did they let loose and join the party.

Judge did a little jig to celebrate, then did a jog of his own around the bases when he hit his eighth home run later in the inning.

Sanchez hit his ninth homer, connecting in the fifth for a 461-foot drive that was the longest by a Yankees player this season. Indians starter Josh Tomlin has given up a major league-most 13 homers this season in 25 2/3 innings.

Yankees starter CC Sabathia pitched six shutout innings. He gave up three hits, walked none and struck out seven.

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 ?? JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Indians’ Jose Ramirez, left, celebrates with Jason Kipnis after hitting a two-run home run against the Yankees during the eighth inning,
JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Indians’ Jose Ramirez, left, celebrates with Jason Kipnis after hitting a two-run home run against the Yankees during the eighth inning,

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