Indians sweep reeling Yankees


Associated Press

new york

Cleveland went ahead for good nine pitches into the opener when a fastball just below the knees deflected off the mitt of catcher Gary Sanchez for a run-scoring passed ball.

Sixteen pitches into the second game, the Indians burst in front to stay when Edwin Encarnacion singled off Yankees rookie Jordan Montgomery.

A doubleheader sweep Wednesday by scores of 2-1 and 9-4 dropped New York 51/2 games behind AL East-leading Boston heading into a four-game series against the Red Sox at Yankee Stadium starting tonight.

While the Baby Bombers lead the wild-card race, eight teams still have realistic chances to make the one-game playoff, and 24 of New York’s remaining 30 games are against those contenders.

“It’s impossible not to look at the scoreboard. It’s right there,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. “I’d have to really have my head in the sand not to see the scores of games.”

Trevor Bauer won his career-best seventh straight decision, Jose Ramirez tied his big league high with four hits and the Indians took advantage of an unearned run to grab a 2-0 first-inning lead in the opener.

Carlos Santana followed Encarnacion with an RBI double and Yandy Diaz hit a two-run single as the Indians sent 10 batters to the plate in a 43-pitch first inning against Montgomery in the second game.

Encarnacion, Yan Gomes and Francisco Lindor added home runs for Cleveland, which took a 9-1 lead, completed a three-game series sweep and extended its winning streak to seven games.

Defending AL champion Cleveland has won 16 of 20, opening a 71/2-game lead over second-place Minnesota in the AL Central and moving a season-high 20 games over .500 at 76-56. After a day off, the Indians play another doubleheader Friday at Detroit. Cleveland has swept a pair of twinbills this year and split two others.

“Any time we’ve had doubleheaders, we haven’t looked fatigued at all,” outfielder Austin Jackson said. “We don’t worry about all the distractions or doubleheaders.”

New York’s division deficit matched its biggest this season. At the start of the series, the Yankees trailed Boston by 21/2 games.

“It’s as frustrating as it gets,” outfielder Brett Gardner said. “Calendar’s going to flip to a new month here pretty soon, and we’re running out of time to catch those guys.”

Bauer (14-8) allowed one run, four hits and four walks over six innings on an afternoon that began with a crowd of 39,568 watching in brilliant sunshine and ended with only a few hundred fans staying for the final out. Bauer is 7-0 in nine starts since a July 16 loss at Oakland.

“It was a struggle,” he said. “Day games are always kind of weird.”

Cody Allen struck out three of four batters for his 22nd save in 25 chances, combining with Tyler Olson and Bryan Shaw for one-hit relief. Slumping rookie Aaron Judge, held out of the starting lineup for a second consecutive game, pinch hit with two outs in the ninth and struck out. He was 1 for 3 with a walk in the second game.

Jaime Garcia (1-2) gave up two runs, six hits and three walks in five-plus innings.