New York Post

Cabrera rips Sanchez for cheap shot

- By KEN DAVIDOFF and DAN MARTIN

DETROIT — The main event of this overloaded fight card occurred right at home plate Thursday afternoon at Comerica Park. It starred a slam-dunk Hall of Famer, a guy who already has Yankees fans fantasizin­g about his own day in Cooperstow­n and a man whose family treats baseball the way western Pennsylvan­ia families used to look at the local steel mill.

It featured insults, profanity, a cheap shot and an ex post facto questionin­g of tactics. It will result in a mountain of discipline, to be announced as soon as Friday.

In the bottom of the sixth inning, Tigers legend Miguel Cabrera and Yankees backup catcher Austin Romine kicked off the first of three bench-clearing brawls. Within that brawl, Yankees starting catcher Gary Sanchez punched Cabrera as he laid on the ground wrestling with Romine.

“He can do whatever he wants to,” Cabrera said of Sanchez. “But if he wants to punch me, let it be face-to-face.”

“I was in the dugout and I saw Romine rolling on the [ground] with the other guys,” Sanchez said through an interprete­r. “At that moment, just instincts take over, because you want to defend your teammate. That’s your family out there.”

“I think I was trying to pull him off at the time,” Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said of Sanchez. “He wanted to throw a punch at me when I was pulling him off, but thank God someone grabbed him from behind, because he might have knocked me into the stands.”

If Tommy Kahnle hadn’t thrown behind Cabrera, the young Yankees reliever sending a clear message to the Tigers for Sanchez getting plunked by Michael Fulmer in the top of the fifth, then Cabrera and Romine wouldn’t have gone at it in the fight that brought Sanchez, who started the day at designated hitter, into the scrum and into trouble. Romine and Cabrera fought after Aroldis Chapman, replacing the ejected Kahnle, had finished his warm-up pitches. Romine stood up and removed his mask, and Cabrera shoved Romine and punched him, with Romine counterpun­ching.

Romine, whose brother, Andrew, plays for the Tigers and whose father, Kevin, played for the Red Sox from 1985 to 1991, and Cabrera offered stories that overlapped yet didn’t match entirely.

“He asked if I had a problem with him,” Romine said. “I said, ‘This isn’t about you.’ And then he pushed me. I felt like he wanted a confrontat­ion, and I tried to defend myself the best I could. I didn’t say a word to him. There’s nothing I need to say to him.”

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MIGUEL CABRERA

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