Catcher Russell Martin helped ignite a five-run ninth inning with a leadoff home run as the New York Yankees beat Baltimore 7-2 in game one of their American League Division Series.
Ichiro Suzuki added a run-scoring single in the ninth and finished with two RBI, while Robinson Cano also drove in a pair of runs for the Yankees in the Major League Baseball opening round playoff contest on Sunday at Camden Yards ballpark.
Pitcher C.C. Sabathia allowed the two runs on eight hits and a walk with seven strikeouts over 8-2/3 innings in the win in front of a crowd of 47,841. He had been 0-2 in three starts against the Orioles this season.
“My fastball command was good and I was just trying to work off that,” Sabathia said. “Throwing the ball pretty good getting the corners. Tried to stay out there and make some pitches.”
Jim Johnson (0-1) surrendered all five runs in the ninth to take the loss for the Orioles.
Rain delayed the start of the game for two hours and 26 minutes.
Baltimore were coming off a 5-1 win over the Texas Rangers in the AL’s winner-take-all wild-card playoff.
In Detroit, Michigan, Tigers’ Don Kelly hit a sacrifice fly to score Omar Infante with the winning run in the ninth as Detroit beat Oakland 5-4 to seize command of their first round playoff series.
The Tigers took a 2-0 lead in the best-of-five AL matchup with game three today in Oakland.
Relief pitcher Grant Balfour, who retired the last 26 batters he faced in the regular season, entered for Oakland in the ninth inning to face the best Detroit batters with the game deadlocked at 4-4.
With one out, Infante singled and reached third base on a Miguel Cabrera single. The A’s then decided to intentionally walk star slugger Prince Fielder, setting up an inning-ending double play possibility.
Instead, Kelly smacked a long sacrifice fly out to right field. Once the ball was grabbed, Infante tagged up and raced home with the winning run.
“It’s unbelievable,” Kelly said. “I was just trying to get a pitch to hit. It was a great opportunity.”
By taking advantage, the Tigers are on the brink of advancing to the American League championship series.
“To go up 2-0 in front of our home fans is huge,” Kelly said. “It’s easier to win one out west than to have to win two.”
Oakland took a 2-1 lead in the seventh inning when Seth Smith walked, reached second base on a sacrifice bunt and scored on a single up the middle by Cliff Pennington.
However, the Tigers jumped ahead 3-2 in the seventh after singles from Austin Jackson and Infante and a fielding blunder by Oakland center fielder Coco Crisp.
Crisp tried a basket-style catch as he ran toward a fly ball hit by Cabrera, but the ball popped out of his glove and into the air.
The ball fell into the fingertips of Crisp’s glove, but squirted out of his grasp as he tried to close his glove around it, falling to the ground and allowing Jackson and Infante to score to give the Tigers the lead.
The A’s reclaimed the lead at 4-3 in the eighth inning after a wild pitch by Detroit relief pitcher Joaquin Benoit allowed Yoenis Cespedes to score from third base and Josh Reddick followed with a solo homer to rightfield.
However, the Tigers equalized at 4-4 when they came to bat in the eighth when a wild pitch by Oakland reliever Ryan Cook allowed Kelly to score from third, setting the stage for Kelly’s heroics in the ninth.
Shohei Ohtani and his wife arrived in South Korea with his Los Angeles Dodgers teammates yesterday ahead of their season-opening games with the San Diego Padres next week. Ohtani, wearing a black training suit and a cap backwards, was the first Dodgers player who showed up at the arrival gate of Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul. His wife, Mamiko Tanaka, walked several steps behind him. As a crowd of fans, many wearing Dodgers jerseys, shouted his name and cheered slogans, Ohtani briefly waved his hand, but did not say anything before he entered a limousine bus with his wife. Fans held placards
Taiwan’s Tai Tzu-ying yesterday advanced to the quarter-finals at the All England Open, beating Kim Ga-eun of South Korea 21-17, 21-15. With the win, Tai earned a semi-final against China’s He Bingjiao, who beat Michelle Li of Canada 21-9, 21-9. Defending champion An Se-young defeated India’s P.V. Sindhu 21-19, 21-11. An on Wednesday cruised into the second round, unlike last year’s men’s winner, Li Shifeng, who suffered a shock defeat. South Korea’s An, the world No. 1, overcame Taiwan’s Hsu Wen-chi 21-17, 21-16 to set up the match against Sindhu. In other women’s singles matches, Taiwan’s Sung Shuo-yun lost 21-18, 24-22 against Carolina Marin of
EYEING TOP SPOT: A victory in today’s final against Storm Hunter and Katerina Siniakova would return 38-year-old Hsieh Su-wei to the world No. 1 ranking Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei and Elise Mertens on Thursday secured a spot in the women’s doubles finals at the BNP Paribas Open after dispatching Nicole Melichar-Martinez of the US and Australia’s Ellen Perez 6-2, 7-6 (7/5) at Indian Wells. Hsieh and her Belgian partner Mertens, who won the Australian Open in late January, coasted through the first set after breaking their opponents’ serve twice, but found the going tougher in the second. Both pairs could only muster one break point over 12 games, neither of which were converted, leaving the set to be decided by a tiebreaker. Hsieh and Mertens took a 6-3 lead,
DOUBLES PAYBACK: Hsieh Su-wei and Elise Martens avenged their defeat in the quarters at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open against Demi Schuurs and Luisa Stefani Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei on Wednesday advanced to the semi-finals of the women’s doubles at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, California. Hsieh and partner Elise Mertens of Belgium dispatched Demi Schuurs and Luisa Stefani 6-1, 6-4 to set up a clash against Nicole Melichar-Martinez of the US and Australia’s Ellen Perez for a spot in the final of the WTA 1000 tournament. Hsieh and Martens made a blistering start to their rematch after they lost to Schuurs and Stefani in the quarter-finals at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open last month, winning three games without reply at the start of the first set