The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Gray spins 8 solid innings for red-hot Yanks

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, MO. » The Yankees rightfully lamented a miserable week filled with rainouts, broken planes and a patchwork schedule that forced right-hander Sonny Gray to pitch on eight days’ rest.

Well, that last bit turned out to be a good thing.

Gray discovered a couple of tweaks in his delivery during his extended time off, and he transferre­d it to the mound on Sunday, going eight innings and helping the Yankees beat the Kansas City Royals 10-1 to win an eighth consecutiv­e series for the first time in 20 years.

“I’m pretty quick to the plate a lot of times. I just had to stay on top of the rubber and deliver a good pitch,” said Gray, who also credited catcher Austin Romine for helping him stay in rhythm.

“It was pitch, mound, sign, go,” Romine explained.

Sure sounds simple. It works pretty well, too, when you’re getting big production from the Yankees’ powerful lineup. Tyler Austin hit a pair of two-run homers, and Miguel Andujar and Romine went backto-back in the ninth to New York win for the 14th time in 15 games against the AL Central.

Kansas City remains winless in six rubber games this season.

Gray (3-3) was coming off a tough start against Oakland in which he allowed five runs and a seasonhigh nine hits in five innings. But there was nothing tough about facing the Royals’ popgun lineup, which didn’t manage its first hit until there were two down in the fifth.

Gray wound up allowing one run while striking out five and walking one.

Eric Skoglund (1-4) gave up six runs, eight hits and two walks in five innings in the latest lousy start by the Royals’ rotation. Kansas City’s 5.51 team ERA is by far the worst in the majors.

“I see really bright spots in a game like today and then I see where the lights go out,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “He was moving the ball around very effectivel­y, a good curveball and pitching aggressive­ly and kind of struggled to do that in the fourth and the fifth.”

One night after the Yankees pounded five homers, including two from Gary Sanchez, it was the strong but inconsiste­nt Austin that gave New York the lead and kept adding to it.

Skoglund had managed to avoid early trouble, nearly getting a triple play in the second inning, but walked Aaron Hicks to start the fourth. Austin turned on the first pitch he saw and sent it about 440 feet over the left-field wall — it actually went about 500 feet with the bounce.

New York tacked on two more runs, the first on Romine’s single later in the inning and the other on Hicks’ triple in the fifth, before Austin got into the act again.

This time, his two-run shot was a high fly ball that just cleared the centerfiel­d wall.

It was the second twohomer game of the year for Austin, who also did it March 31 at Toronto. The four RBIs matched a career high, which he also accomplish­ed April 23 against Minnesota.

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