The Oklahoman

Yankees beat Astros, cut series gap to 3-2

- The Associated Press

NEW YORK— DJ Le Ma hi eu and Aaron Hicks stunned Justin V er lander with firstinnin­g home runs, James Paxton made the early lead stand up and the New York Yankees beat Houston 4-1 Friday night, cutting the Astros' lead in the AL Championsh­ip Series to 3-2.

After the Astros scored on a wild pitch, LeMahieu homered on Verlander's second pitch and Hicks homered off the rightfield foul pole, his first long ball since July after a lengthy injury lay off. Paxton pitched six innings, and the Yankees' bull pen followed with shutdown relief. Now the teams head back to Texas, where the series resumes Saturday night without a day off.

Sabathia suffers injury in last appearance

CC Sabathia walked into Yankee Stadium's interview room with his left arm in a sling Friday, 16 hours after shuffling off the mound in pain following the 58,692nd and final pitch of his major league career.

That powerful left shoulder which earned six All-Star appearance­s, the 2007 AL Cy Young Award and possibly a spot in the Hall of Fame finally had given out.

“I think it's just kind of fitting,” he said . “I threw until I couldn't anymore.”

His burly body 6-foot-6, 300 pounds and perhaps a tad more had echoed the decision he announced last winter.

No second thoughts about retirement following 19 major league seasons. No temptation for more, the 39-year-old explained to his wife.

“I told Amber last night that this was the best way for it to end for me because of the way I've been feeling, loving the bullpen, jogging out, feeling pretty good, I feel like about July of next year I'll be like, `I think I can pitch,”' he said.

He dislocated a joint in his pitching shoulder during the eighth inning of New York's Game 4 loss to Houston on his 17th pitch, then pushed his arm through three more before the torment became too great. He was dropped from the Yankees' AL Championsh­ip Series roster Friday before Game 5 and replaced by righthande­r Ben Heller.

New York trailed 3- 1 in the best- of- 7 series, and even if the Yankees advance, Sabathia would not be eligible to return for the World Series. He said he will have an MRI to determine whether he needs surgery.

“I was in a pretty good amount of pain last night and today. Waking up, I didn't sleep that good,” Sabathia said. “It's pretty sore and the pain has been pretty intense since that pitch.”

Tributes came from throughout baseball. His arm may have betrayed Sabathia, but teammates and opponents spoke of his heart.

“CC is such a big man and big personalit­y of a big man,” said Houston manager AJ Hinch, the former Midwest City High star who caught Sabathia during spring training with Cleveland in 2003. “If he wanted to stay as a lefthanded reliever, teams would line up to let him keep pitching.”

Sabathia finished with a 251-161 regular season record with 3,093 strikeouts. He announced before the season that this was going to be his last year, and he made four trips to the injured list caused by his balky right knee, repaired by surgeries after the 2010 season, in July 2014 and again after the 2016 and `18 seasons. He needed a brace on the knee to pitch along with periodic injections of painkiller­s and lubricant.

Modern medicine and a grueling, 2-hour warmup routine enabled him to throw 56,405 pitches in the regular season and 2,287 more in the postseason, according to STATS.

 ?? [AP PHOTO/FRANK FRANKLIN II] ?? New York Yankees trainer Steve Donohue, center, checks on pitcher CC Sabathia during the eighth inning of Game 4 of the American League Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros on Thursday. Sabathia suffered a dislocatio­n in his shoulder.
[AP PHOTO/FRANK FRANKLIN II] New York Yankees trainer Steve Donohue, center, checks on pitcher CC Sabathia during the eighth inning of Game 4 of the American League Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros on Thursday. Sabathia suffered a dislocatio­n in his shoulder.

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