The Morning Call

Yanks rule Britannia

Four-run deficit gets wiped out as they sweep London series

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LONDON — Britain treasures tradition, and the New York Yankees wrapped up Major League Baseball’s first trip to Europe with one of their sport’s classic customs: a lateinning pinstriped comeback.

Gary Sanchez hit a go-ahead two-run single in a nine-run seventh, and the Yankees overcome a four-run deficit to beat the Boston Red Sox 12-8 on Sunday for a two-game sweep of the groundbrea­king, highscorin­g trek across the pond.

“It was a pretty cool experience,” Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge said.

DJ LeMahieu doubled off Marcus Walden (6-1) leading off the seventh and hit a two-run double against Josh Taylor later in the inning as the Yankees opened an 11-4 lead, sending 14 batters to the plate in their highest-scoring inning in four years.

“The energy never let up,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “It felt like a huge event, these two games.”

Boston and New York combined for 50 runs in the wacky games, four more than in any previous consecutiv­e matchups between the rivals. Batters totaled 65 hits, 15 doubles and 10 homers over 18 innings that took 9 hours, 6 minutes to play out at Olympic Stadium, the Coors Field of Europe.

The games at the home of the soccer club West Ham drew 118,718, a mix mostly of Americans who flew over and Britons.

“It felt like a soccer match at the end, so it was pretty cool,” said New York’s Didi Gregorius, who went deep against Ryan Brasier in the eighth and extended New York’s record streak of games with home runs to 31.

New York won the opener 17-13 after taking an 11-run lead and the finale after going ahead 12-4. Zack Britton ruled Britannia both days, escaping eighthinni­ng trouble with the tying run at the plate.

New York also relied on an Old Chap — Aroldis Chapman — who closed out each game and struck out the final three batters Sunday.

“I did not think I would pitch in both games, winning by that many runs,” Chapman said through a translator.

Built for the 2012 Olympics, the stadium was designed for minimal wind, leading to speculatio­n that might have been a factor in pitchers’ difficulty locating breaking balls. The temperatur­e dropped to a more-normal 73 degrees at first pitch — 20 below Saturday’s scorcher.

Shadows, glare, white seats and a swift turf left every lead as perilous as a 16th-century trip to the Tower of London.

“The ball flies — the ground balls too,” said New York’s Luis Cessa, who pitched shutout ball from the second through the fifth.

Before a sellout crowd of 59,059, the defending champion Red Sox began brightly in their alternate red jerseys. Xander Bogaerts, J.D. Martinez and Christian Vazquez became the first trio of Boston batters to hit home runs in the first inning, banging and mashing to a 4-0 lead against Stephen Tarpley, who was making his first bigleague start.

But Boston made a depressing Brexit in a game that took 4:24. The Red Sox dropped a season-high 11 games behind the American League Eastleadin­g Yankees (54-28), who won for the 13th time in 14 games overall and improved to 6-1 against Boston this year.

“Right now, they are a lot better than us, and we need to get better,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “Last year, we were putting teams away; this year, we’re not doing that.

“It’s not a lack of effort. I think it’s lack of execution.”

Boston’s bullpen blew a save for the 17th time, second only to the New York Mets’ 21 blown saves.

“I don’t think we’re pressing,” Walden said. “For me right now it’s just missing location with the slider.”

Adam Ottavino (3-2) got the win. After Boston rallied in the eighth on Vazquez’s two-run single off Chance Adams, Eduardo Nunez’s RBI double and Sam Travis’ run-scoring single against Britton, Rafael Devers left the bases loaded when he grounded out.

 ?? DAN ISTITENE/GETTY ?? The Yankees’ Brett Gardner swings at a pitch during Sunday’s game against the Red Sox in London.
DAN ISTITENE/GETTY The Yankees’ Brett Gardner swings at a pitch during Sunday’s game against the Red Sox in London.

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