The Maui News

Stanton slam helps Yankees take Game 1 from Rays 9-3

- By BERNIE WILSON The Associated Press

SAN DIEGO — Giancarlo Stanton and the Bronx Bombers made themselves right at home in Petco Park on a warm October evening in Southern California.

Stanton hit a grand slam in the ninth inning for New York’s fourth home run of the game, and the Yankees beat the Tampa Bay Rays 9-3 on Monday in the opener of their AL Division Series at Petco Park.

Stanton homered to straightaw­ay center field on a 2-2 pitch from John Curtiss. The slugger took several steps with his bat still in his hands as he watched the ball sail through the pleasant San Diego evening air before beginning his trot.

A few fans chanted “Let’s Go Yankees!” from a balcony on an office building just beyond right field of the mostly empty ballpark.

“That SoCal air, man. That SoCal weather. That’s what it is,” said Stanton, who is from Los Angeles and won the Home Run Derby at Petco Park in 2016. He spent his first eight seasons with the Marlins and has nine homers in 20 games at Petco Park.

Kyle Higashioka, another SoCal native, and Aaron Judge hit the tying and go-ahead home runs off Blake Snell in the fifth to back winner Gerrit Cole. Clint Frazier hit an impressive shot into the second deck in left in the third.

The Bronx Bombers became the first team in American League history to hit a grand slam in back-to-back playoff games. Gio Urshela connected in Game 2 of the first-round sweep against Cleveland. Two NL teams have done it, the 1977 Dodgers and 2011 Diamondbac­ks.

Stanton has played in only 41 games over the past two seasons because of injuries.

“I feel great for him because I know this is what I envisioned for him last year,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “He’s such a dangerous hitter in the middle of our lineup. When he’s controllin­g the strike zone, he’s as deadly as anyone.”

Tampa Bay dominated the contentiou­s regular-season series, going 8-2 against the rival Yankees and winning the AL East by seven games over second-place New York.

With the calendar flipped to

October, it was a different story in their first postseason meeting.

“They can hit, there’s no secret in that,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “There’s nothing that was unexpected with them. They’ve just got some guys back that are healthier. There were a handful of players who didn’t have consistent reps against us or throughout the 60-game season due to injuries. They looked healthy tonight.”

The ball was flying for the Rays as well against Cole in downtown San Diego. Randy Arozarena homered in the first and Ji-Man Choi muscled an opposite-field, two-run shot in the fourth into the Rays bullpen in left-center to give Tampa

Bay a 3-2 lead.

Cole went six innings, allowing three runs and six hits while striking out eight and walking two.

Snell pitched five innings and allowed four runs on six hits while striking out four and walking two.

Game 2 in the best-of-five series is today, with 21-yearold rookie Deivi Garcia set to become the youngest Yankees pitcher to make a postseason start. Tyler Glasnow goes for the Rays.

 ?? AP photo ?? The Yankees’ Giancarlo Stanton celebrates with teammates after hitting a grand slam in the ninth inning of New York’s win over Tampa Bay on Monday.
AP photo The Yankees’ Giancarlo Stanton celebrates with teammates after hitting a grand slam in the ninth inning of New York’s win over Tampa Bay on Monday.
 ?? AP photo ?? Houston’s Carlos Correa hits a solo home run during the seventh inning of the Astros’ Game 1 win over the Oakland Athletics on Monday.
AP photo Houston’s Carlos Correa hits a solo home run during the seventh inning of the Astros’ Game 1 win over the Oakland Athletics on Monday.

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