A-Rod, Matsui Power Yankees Past Angels

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The New York Sun

Alex Rodriguez and the Yankees held their own home run derby yesterday.

Rodriguez, Hideki Matsui, and Robinson Cano hit three-run homers and the Yankees hammered their way into the All-Star break, routing the Los Angeles Angels 12–0.

Rodriguez leads the majors with 30 home runs and 86 RBIs. Still recovering from a strained left hamstring, he’ll sit out today’s Home Run Derby in San Francisco but play in the All-Star game the next night.

“I’m never satisfied,” he said. “There’s always a lot of room for improvement.”

Chien-Ming Wang (9–4) threw 6 1-3 scoreless innings for his sixth straight victory. Despite winning five of seven, the Yankees headed into the break under .500 for the first time since 1995. At 42–43, they’re 10 games behind Boston in the AL East.

“We’re playing with a lot of heart right now and it’s unfortunate we have to take a two-, three-day break here,” Rodriguez said.

The AL West-leading Angels matched their most-lopsided shutout loss in 20 years, and fell for the eighth time in 12 games. They trailed 10–0 by the fourth inning, and manager Mike Scioscia soon pulled outfielders Vladimir Guerrero and Gary Matthews Jr. on the 92-degree afternoon. “We’ve haven’t played well. There’s no sugarcoating it,” Scioscia said.

The Angels also lost 12–0 at Detroit in May. The California Angels lost 14–0 to Seattle in 1987. Rodriguez raised his arms after launching his 494th home run, moving him past Lou Gehrig and Fred McGriff into 22nd place on the career list.

A-Rod’s homer total is the highest for a Yankees player at the All-Star break since Roger Maris hit 33 in 1961. Rodriguez also had an RBI single and boosted his average to .317.

“Phenomenal,” manager Joe Torre praised. “Knowing him, it’s not something he’s going to be satisfied with until he puts together the other half.

“I’m happy for him, knowing how tough last season was for him.”

Matsui’s shot into the upper deck in right field made it 4–0 in the first against Ervin Santana (5–10). After the next batter walked, Scioscia took off his sunglasses and went to the mound himself — he usually sends pitching coach Mike Butcher — for an eye-to-eye talk with Santana.

Cano connected off Santana in the fourth and Rodriguez homered later in the inning against reliever Chris Resop. Five pitches later, Resop left because of irritation in his right elbow. The six-run inning matched the Yankees’ biggest of the year.

Santana had been 5–0 lifetime against the Yankees, including a win in the 2005 playoffs. But he quickly fell into his strange home-road pattern: he is 4–2 with a 3.42 ERA at Anaheim this season, and 1–8 with an 8.59 ERA elsewhere. He wound up with his fourth straight loss, matching a career worst.

“It is frustrating. Our confidence is still strong with Ervin,” Scioscia said. “The results are obviously 180 degrees from what we need.”

Wang gave up five singles and remained unbeaten in eight starts since losing to the Angels in late May. He beat them for the first time — he’d been 0–3, including a postseason loss.


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