Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Stanton playing left field for crucial G3

- By Kristie Ackert

NEW YORK — In a week, the Yankees went from giving Giancarlo Stanton his first start in the outfield since July to putting him in the large left field at Yankee Stadium for a critical Game 3 of the American League Championsh­ip Series. It has been 1,106 days since the slugger stepped out to the left field in the Bronx, dating back to Game 1 of the 2019 ALCS on Oct. 12, 2019.

“Just thought he moved around well out there in Houston, obviously made a really good play out there,” Boone said of playing Stanton in the much smaller left field at Minute Maid Park. “So seeing how he was after that game, which [he] came out of that feeling good, the next day felt good as well. As I deliberate­d on it yesterday, I checked in with him just to make sure that he felt good about it. I told him I was considerin­g it. He was all in on it, ‘Let’s go,’ and decided to go that way.

Boone admitted it’s not the perfect situation, but it’s where the Yankees are right now. They went into Saturday night’s game down 0-2 to the Astros in the best-of-seven games series, their offense stalling against Houston’s excellent pitching and a roster that was given to him with limited options.

After Joey Gallo turned out to be a bust in New York, Andrew Benintendi was acquired before the trade deadline specifical­ly for these situations. He plays a Gold Glove-worthy lefty field and hits the type of pitches the Astros pitchers throw well. But he fractured the hook of the hamate bone in his right hand in early September.

In the past, Boone would move Aaron Judge to center and use Aaron Hicks or another center fielder in left to let Stanton play the much smaller right field. Hicks is out six weeks with a sprained knee. Harrison Bader is an exceptiona­lly good defensive center fielder, but because he came to the Yankees injured, Boone did not have a chance to let him do that in the regular season.

Bader, who has four home runs in the last seven games, was leading off in Game 2 on Thursday night, but was dropped to sixth Saturday. Boone had Anthony Rizzo leading off for the seventh time this season.

“I just really wanted to get the third lefty at-bat in there today against [Christian] Javier, who’s got pretty extreme reverse splits,” Boone said. “I mean, he’s had a great year against both, but he’s especially tough on righties. So I just wanted to have the three lefties in there today.”

Rizzo was one at the top of the lineup and Boone had Matt Carpenter in there at the No. 5 spot as a designated hitter. Carpenter, who missed the last two months of the season after fracturing his foot, is 0-for-7 with seven strikeouts in seven at-bats in the postseason.

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