Albany Times Union

Yankees hold off Mets, 4-2

Bombers lose first of twin bill as Amazins mash bullpen, win nightcap behind Urshela blast

- By Jake Seiner

Gio Urshela’s threerun homer kept the Bronx Bombers ahead in Game 2 of the Subway Series Sunday.

Gio Urshela hit a three-run homer and the New York Yankees saved a little face by beating the Mets 4-2 Sunday night to avoid a Subway Series sweep.

In the opener of Sunday’s split doublehead­er, Pete Alonso hit a tying home run off imploding Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman leading off the seventh inning and Jose Peraza had a go-ahead, two-run double that included interferen­ce from a visiting fan in the Bronx in a 10-5 Mets stunner. The Mets also won Saturday’s series opener 8-3.

Alonso connected in the late game as well, becoming the first Mets player since Shawn Green on Sept 6, 2006, to homer in both ends of a doublehead­er.

With fireworks echoing around jampacked Yankee Stadium, the Bronx Bombers won for the second time in nine games to get back above .500 at 42-41. They were 101⁄2 games back of the AL East-leading Red Sox before winning the second game. They’ve only overcome a division deficit that large to finish first once, in 1978.

Urshela has three of the Yankees’ eight three-run homers just past the midpoint of the season. New York had 34 three-run shots in 2019.

Yankees reliever Nestor Cortes Jr. made his first start of the season in the nightcap and kept the Mets uncomforta­ble with his ever-changing delivery. The left-hander was pulled after 31⁄3 innings of quick pitches, sidearm deliveries and variable leg kicks. He allowed only two hits, but Darren O’day let one of his inherited runners score on Alonso’s 15th homer.

Chad Green (3-4) closed with three perfect innings, striking out six in his longest

outing since Sept. 8, 2019, vs. Boston, when he also went three.

The righty finished with an immaculate inning, the second this year by a Yankees pitcher. Michael King also got three strikeouts on nine pitches June 4 against Boston.

Corey Oswalt (1-1) allowed Urshela’s homer to the short porch in right field but otherwise held his own in his first start of the season. The right-hander was charged with three runs and four hits over four innings. He walked one and struck out four.

For starters

After the NL East-leading Mets roughed up Yankees ace Gerrit Cole in a back-and-forth first game Sunday, Alonso opened the seventh by dropping his barrel on Chapman’s 1-2 slider near the bottom of the zone and lofting it into the visitors’ bullpen to tie it at 5.

Chapman then plunked Michael Conforto, walked Jeff Mcneil and was promptly yanked by manager Aaron Boone.

A few batters later, Peraza ripped a ball off Lucas Luetge that would’ve hit midway up the leftfield wall, but a fan in a Mets jersey reached over to catch the ball with his glove.

Confused players and fans initially had no idea where the ball went. Left fielder Tim Locastro pointed at the fan incredulou­sly, and umpires conferred on the infield before awarding Peraza two bases. The Yankees didn’t argue.

“At no point did I realize a fan had caught the ball,” Peraza said via translator.

Brandon Nimmo followed with a two-run single and Francisco Lindor added an RBI hit as the Mets piled on.

Jeurys Familia (3-1) pitched a scoreless sixth for the Mets, who also got a solo homer from Dominic Smith.

Plummeting in pinstripes

The Yankees were 41-41 after Game 1, the latest into a season they’ve been at .500 since they were 56-56 on Aug. 9, 2016. They haven’t had a losing record this late since hitting 45-46 on July 17, 2016.

Chapman (5-3) failed to get an out in his first appearance since giving up a tying grand slam in the ninth inning during an 11-8 loss Wednesday to the Angels. The flame-throwing left-hander has a 22.26 ERA in his past nine outings.

It’s unclear if Chapman will remain in the closer’s role.

“We’ll have to talk through that,” Boone said.

The Mets chased Cole with one out in the fourth, his shortest outing since a two-inning stint on Sept. 12, 2016, with Pittsburgh. He was charged with four runs and six hits, tying a season high with three walks. Yankees fans booed as he departed.

Cole has a 5.24 ERA since it became clear in early June that Major League Baseball planned to crack down on pitchers’ use of illegal foreign substances. He had a 1.78 ERA prior to that.

Cole and Chapman were named to the AL All-star team.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photos by Adam Hunger / Associated Press ?? Rougned Odor of the Yankees is safe at first base as the throw from Mets second baseman Jose Peraza is late to first baseman Pete Alonso during the second inning of the second game of a doublehead­er at Yankee Stadium on Sunday. The Mets won the first game, the Yankees took the second.
Photos by Adam Hunger / Associated Press Rougned Odor of the Yankees is safe at first base as the throw from Mets second baseman Jose Peraza is late to first baseman Pete Alonso during the second inning of the second game of a doublehead­er at Yankee Stadium on Sunday. The Mets won the first game, the Yankees took the second.
 ??  ?? Gio Urshela reacts after hitting a three-run home run for the Yanks early in Game 2.
Gio Urshela reacts after hitting a three-run home run for the Yanks early in Game 2.
 ?? Photos by Steven Ryan / Getty Images ?? Brandon Nimmo of the Mets is congratula­ted by Pete Alonso after scoring a run in the seventh inning during Game 1 of a doublehead­er at Yankee Stadium against the New York Yankees. The Mets rallied for six runs in the final frame to win.
Photos by Steven Ryan / Getty Images Brandon Nimmo of the Mets is congratula­ted by Pete Alonso after scoring a run in the seventh inning during Game 1 of a doublehead­er at Yankee Stadium against the New York Yankees. The Mets rallied for six runs in the final frame to win.
 ??  ?? Aroldis Chapman of the Yankees reacts after being taken out of Game 1 in the seventh inning. Chapman allowed three runs without retiring a batter and took the loss.
Aroldis Chapman of the Yankees reacts after being taken out of Game 1 in the seventh inning. Chapman allowed three runs without retiring a batter and took the loss.

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