Blue Jay Rookie Stalls Yankees’ Drive for the Postseason

This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

The New York Sun

The Yankees took a day off yesterday. At least, that’s how it looked.

The Yankees’ drive for a playoff spot paused, with Andy Pettitte falling behind early and a smallish crowd watching Toronto rookie Jesse Litsch pitch the Blue Jays to a 4–1 victory.

“It definitely felt like a makeup game,” Pettitte said.

Rescheduled from an April 25 rainout, there was hardly any energy in the ballpark. That is, until it was over.

Then, in their version of rookie hazing, the Yankees made their newcomers dress up in Wizard of Oz costumes for the bus ride to the airport and flight to Tampa Bay. There was plenty of hooting and hollering, and the rooks all posed for pictures.

Joba Chamberlain drew the Cowardly Lion, Edwar Ramirez was the Wicked Witch of the West and Ian Kennedy was Dorothy.

“I think I got the short end,” Kennedy said, stepping into his sparkly, ruby red slippers.

Had things clicked right, the Yankees could’ve clinched a postseason berth — they needed a win, coupled with a Detroit loss later against Minnesota.

Instead, the Yankees never quite woke up in their final home game of the regular season and fell two games behind idle Boston in the AL East.

Alex Rodriguez drove in the Yankees’ lone run for his 147th RBI, albeit on a dribbler that barely rolled halfway down the first-base line. Many hitters swung at the first pitch as New York lost for just the fourth time in the last 18 games.

“We weren’t anything offensively today,” manager Joe Torre said.

There were only about 12,000 people in the seats when the game started. Officially, there were 23,567 fans at the park.

Because all 53,281 tickets were sold, this counted as the Yankees’ 50th sellout of the year. That brought their season attendance to a record 4,271,356, breaking last year’s mark of 4,243,780.

Still, it was a sleepy afternoon for most everyone on the New York side. Derek Jeter misplayed an easy grounder for an error, Rodriguez let a bouncer roll underneath his glove and Pettitte (14–9) struggled.

Kennedy had a tough start, too, and he didn’t even pitch. The 22-year-old was briefly stopped at the players’ entrance by a guard who didn’t recognize him.

Litsch (7–9) also looked a little different, at least to the Yankees. They’d tagged him twice this season, but this time he pitched fivehit ball for 7.2 innings without a walk.

“You want to keep people out as much as you want to win yourself,” Litsch said.

Casey Janssen finished for his sixth save.

Litsch started in place of A.J. Burnett, who left the Blue Jays for a day on what they described as “personal business.”

Instead, Litsch and the Blue Jays did fine on their own.

“We’re going after our own pride,” manager John Gibbons said. “I’ve never seen them tank it.”

The Blue Jays also had a not-soalert moment. With two outs and runners at the corners in the eighth, left fielder Reed Johnson caught a fly ball and fired home, forgetting the inning was over.

Pitching for the first time since posting his 200th career victory, Pettitte fell behind 3–0 in the second inning.

After Aaron Hill singled and Gregg Zaun walked, Curtis Thigpen hit a grounder down the third-base line. Rodriguez took a couple of quick steps, tapped his glove and then saw the ball scoot past him for an RBI double.


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