Hartford Courant

Yankees swept

Rays send New York to fifth straight loss, sweep weekend series.

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK — Gerrit Cole shook his head, disgusted. Aaron Hicks put hands on hips and bowed his head. By the end of the afternoon, pretty much all of the New York Yankees were appalled, along with their loudly booing fans.

Yoshi Tsutsugo hit a tiebreakin­g double off Cole in the seventh inning that lifted the Tampa Bay Rays to a 4-2 win Sunday and a three-game sweep that extended the Yankees’ losing streak to five games. New York fell to an AL-worst 5-10, its poorest start since 1997.

“I’m frustrated, personally frustrated,” said 2020 AL batting champion DJ LeMahieu, who concluded the Yankees were “tight and pressing.”

“No one’s going to feel sorry for us,” he said. “No one’s going to throw softer or throw easier for us. We’ve got to find it within ourselves to continue to get better and play the way we’re capable of.”

Opener Andrew Kittredge, Ryan Yarbrough (1-2), Diego Castillo and Jeffrey Springs (first big league save) combined on the Rays’ second three-hitter of a series in which New York managed 11 hits in all. Tampa Bay outscored the Yankees 17-7, and NewYorkpus­hed across just three runs other than on homers.

“We’ve got great players in that room,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “They do know that at their core, obviously, we’re getting

punched in the mouth right now.”

Cole (2-1) was hurt by slipshod defense that made three mistakes in the Rays’ two-run third inning alone, two by Hicks in center and one by Clint Frazier in left. One of the three runs off Cole was unearned, giving the Yankees a major leaguehigh 10.

Joey Wendle added a ninth-inning homer off Darren O’Day, prompting boos from the crowd of 10,606, who saved their loudest jeers for the final out.

New York has lost five straight for the first time since Sept. 4-8, getting outscored, 30-14.

“You have to strap your boots on and wade through the mud a little bit,” Cole said. “If we stay in that mindset and we leave the field every day exhausted, good things are on the horizon, but I don’t have the magic wand. I don’t know when it’s going to turn.”

Aaron Judge struck out three times and has four hits in his last 28 at-bats, Hicks has one hit in his last 15, Gleyber Torres three in his last 24 and Giancarlo Stanton, despite a second-inning home run, has three in his last 26. Frazier is 1 for his last 24 and does not have an RBI in 40 plate appearance­s this season.

New York’s batting average is downto .210, one point above AL-worst Cleveland.

Boone said his hitters have to guard against “being obsessed with chasing a result, which is hard to do when you get off to a slow start individual­ly. You want to get a hit so bad that that can sometimes work against you.”

Yarbrough allowed one run and two hits in five innings, and the Rays beat the Yankees for the 16th time in the past 21 meetings, including in last year’s Division Series. Tampa Bay swept a series for the second time in its last three visits to Yankee Stadium after sweeping just two of their previous 51 series of three games or more in the Bronx.

“It’s just not an easy thing to do. It doesn’t happen very often,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “So you’ve got to enjoy it when it does.”

Cole retired 13 in a row before Wendle singled with one out in the seventh. Tsutsugo, his average down to .146, followed by driving a changeup to right-center for an RBI double and a 3-2 lead.

Cole struck out 10 in 6 ⅓ innings and with 39 strikeouts set a Yankees mark for most in his first four starts, with three more than Masahiro Tanaka in 2014.

 ?? KATHYWILLE­NS/APPHOTOS ?? The Yankees watch from the dugout as another game slips away in the seventh inning of Sunday’s loss to the Rays at Yankee Stadium, their fifth loss in a row.
KATHYWILLE­NS/APPHOTOS The Yankees watch from the dugout as another game slips away in the seventh inning of Sunday’s loss to the Rays at Yankee Stadium, their fifth loss in a row.
 ??  ?? The Yankees’Aaron Judge reacts after striking out and stranding two runners Sunday. He struck out three times in the game.
The Yankees’Aaron Judge reacts after striking out and stranding two runners Sunday. He struck out three times in the game.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States