OAKLAND, Calif. - Chien-Ming Wang ended the worst stretch of his career with his first win in seven starts, taking advantage of an early lead and an insurance run on Melky Cabrera's solo homer in the ninth inning of the New York Yankees' 3-1 victory over the Oakland Athletics on Tuesday night.
The Yankees staked Wang to a 2-0 lead in the first on RBI singles by Alex Rodriguez and Jason Giambi, who was booed by his former crowd seven years after he left the A's following the 2001 season. Johnny Damon had two singles in the leadoff spot and has hit safely in 17 of his last 19 games, and Bobby Abreu singled twice and drew two walks for New York.
Wang (7-2) even had his share of fans in the modest Coliseum crowd of 26,402 in his first start against the A's since 2006. The Taiwanese right-hander hadn't won since beating the Seattle Mariners on May 2 to start the season 6-0 and had been tagged for 23 earned runs in his last four outings.
Wang got through the first on seven pitches and that's after he plunked Jack Hannahan with his first offering of the night as the clubs opened a three-game series with their first meeting of 2008. Oakland put its leadoff hitter aboard in each of the first seven innings. Wang allowed one earned run and seven hits in 7 1-3 innings, struck out two and walked two on an efficient 83 pitches.
Cabrera connected for his seventh homer in the top of the ninth, then closer Mariano Rivera pitched the bottom half to bounce back from a tough appearance a day earlier for his 17th save in as many chances.
New York began a six-game road trip after losing 3-2 to Kansas City on Monday, when Rivera gave up a tiebreaking ninth-inning home run to the Royals' Jose Guillen on the way to his second defeat of the year.
Mark Ellis hit a pair of doubles, singled and drove in a run for the A's two days after his game-winning grand slam in the 12th inning against the rival Los Angeles Angels. The A's had won five of seven but Oakland missed key chances by grounding into double plays in the third, fifth, sixth and seventh innings.
The A's loaded the bases in the seventh. Ellis singled, Travis Buck one batter later and Carlos Gonzalez singled to center but Buck had to stay put at third. Kurt Suzuki then hit into a double play.
The Yankees (33-32) moved back above .500. They headed into Tuesday's game at .500 for the 22nd time, matching the 1959 Chicago Cubs for the most times at the even mark in major league history through 64 games, according to The Elias Sports Bureau.
Oakland's Dana Eveland (4-5) struggled to find any consistency in his first career outing against the Yankees, surrendering a season-high six walks in six innings. The lefty allowed four hits and two runs with three strikeouts.
He has only one win in his last eight starts and had gone 4 1-3 innings in each of his previous two outings since pitching a three-hitter for his first career complete game against Tampa Bay on May 21.
Home plate umpire Jerry Crawford took a foul tip off his mask and right collarbone area with Derek Jeter at the plate leading off the third. Crawford was clearly in pain and A's athletic trainer Steve Sayles came out to check on him. Crawford stayed in the game.
Notes: The A's are 12-8 vs. the AL East. ... The Yankees were the last AL team Oakland had yet to face this year - and this was the clubs' first meeting in nearly a year since they played last June 29. Oakland has already played Boston seven times. ... The Yankees released INF Morgan Ensberg and minor league 1B Ben Broussard. ... Injured A's DH Frank Thomas (knee and hamstring injury) will travel from Las Vegas where he has been rehabilitating to Los Angeles for a doctor's appointment Wednesday. The 40-year-old Big Hurt could be back in action June 20 after the A's play interleague in NL parks and don't need the DH. “That'd be close,” manager Bob Geren said. “He felt that his swing could come back quickly.”
Yankees 3
Athletics 1
Wang (7-2) even had his share of fans in the modest Coliseum crowd of 26,402 in his first start against the A's since 2006. The Taiwanese right-hander hadn't won since beating the Seattle Mariners on May 2 to start the season 6-0 and had been tagged for 23 earned runs in his last four outings.
Wang got through the first on seven pitches and that's after he plunked Jack Hannahan with his first offering of the night as the clubs opened a three-game series with their first meeting of 2008. Oakland put its leadoff hitter aboard in each of the first seven innings. Wang allowed one earned run and seven hits in 7 1-3 innings, struck out two and walked two on an efficient 83 pitches.
Cabrera connected for his seventh homer in the top of the ninth, then closer Mariano Rivera pitched the bottom half to bounce back from a tough appearance a day earlier for his 17th save in as many chances.
New York began a six-game road trip after losing 3-2 to Kansas City on Monday, when Rivera gave up a tiebreaking ninth-inning home run to the Royals' Jose Guillen on the way to his second defeat of the year.
Mark Ellis hit a pair of doubles, singled and drove in a run for the A's two days after his game-winning grand slam in the 12th inning against the rival Los Angeles Angels. The A's had won five of seven but Oakland missed key chances by grounding into double plays in the third, fifth, sixth and seventh innings.
The A's loaded the bases in the seventh. Ellis singled, Travis Buck one batter later and Carlos Gonzalez singled to center but Buck had to stay put at third. Kurt Suzuki then hit into a double play.
The Yankees (33-32) moved back above .500. They headed into Tuesday's game at .500 for the 22nd time, matching the 1959 Chicago Cubs for the most times at the even mark in major league history through 64 games, according to The Elias Sports Bureau.
Oakland's Dana Eveland (4-5) struggled to find any consistency in his first career outing against the Yankees, surrendering a season-high six walks in six innings. The lefty allowed four hits and two runs with three strikeouts.
He has only one win in his last eight starts and had gone 4 1-3 innings in each of his previous two outings since pitching a three-hitter for his first career complete game against Tampa Bay on May 21.
Home plate umpire Jerry Crawford took a foul tip off his mask and right collarbone area with Derek Jeter at the plate leading off the third. Crawford was clearly in pain and A's athletic trainer Steve Sayles came out to check on him. Crawford stayed in the game.
Notes: The A's are 12-8 vs. the AL East. ... The Yankees were the last AL team Oakland had yet to face this year - and this was the clubs' first meeting in nearly a year since they played last June 29. Oakland has already played Boston seven times. ... The Yankees released INF Morgan Ensberg and minor league 1B Ben Broussard. ... Injured A's DH Frank Thomas (knee and hamstring injury) will travel from Las Vegas where he has been rehabilitating to Los Angeles for a doctor's appointment Wednesday. The 40-year-old Big Hurt could be back in action June 20 after the A's play interleague in NL parks and don't need the DH. “That'd be close,” manager Bob Geren said. “He felt that his swing could come back quickly.”
Yankees 3
Athletics 1
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