Final
Texas won 4-2
| Game 1: Friday, October 15 | ||
|---|---|---|
| NY Yankees | 6 | Final |
| Texas | 5 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 2: Saturday, October 16 | ||
|---|---|---|
| NY Yankees | 2 | Final |
| Texas | 7 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 3: Monday, October 18 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Texas | 8 | Final |
| NY Yankees | 0 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 4: Tuesday, October 19 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Texas | 10 | Final |
| NY Yankees | 3 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 5: Wednesday, October 20 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Texas | 2 | Final |
| NY Yankees | 7 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 6: Friday, October 22 | ||
|---|---|---|
| NY Yankees | 1 | Final |
| Texas | 6 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
8:00 PM ET, October 15, 2010
Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Arlington, Texas
ARLINGTON, Texas -- A chopper by Brett Gardner with a headfirst slide into first base, and the New York Yankees were rallying again.
"I stepped on his hand. So he was safe," Texas Rangers starter C.J. Wilson said.Gardner's infield single leading off the eighth inning ignited a five-run outburst against Wilson and four Texas relievers to push the Yankees to a 6-5 victory in Game 1 of the AL championship series Friday night.More from the ALCS
ESPN.com
It all looked so good for the Rangers through the first seven innings, but once the Yankees came to life late in the game it was all over for Texas, writes Jerry Crasnick. Story
• Neyer: Rangers' bullpen mismanaged
• Caple: Lewis vs. Hughes: Huge Game 2
ESPNNewYork.com
If CC Sabathia keeps pitching like he did in Game 1, the Yankees have no shot at title No. 28, writes Ian O'Connor. Story
• Matthews: Blue-collar Bombers dig in
• Marchand: Deja vu Game 1 comeback
• Marchand: Hughes' Game 2 full circle
ESPNDallas.com
Despite a stellar regular season, the Rangers' bullpen imploded, proving it can't be trusted in the playoffs, writes Richard Durrett. Story
• Caplan: Wilson 'almost good enough'
• MacMahon: Rangers loss won't linger
Better Late Than Never
The Yankees became the fifth team in MLB postseason history to come from at least four runs down in the eighth inning or later. The last team to do it was the 2005 Astros. Here's a look:
| Season | Team | Series |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Yankees | ALCS vs. Rangers |
| 2005 | Astros | NLDS vs. Braves |
| 2004 | Yankees | ALDS vs. Twins |
| 1993 | Blue Jays | WS vs. Phillies |
| 1992 | Blue Jays | ALCS vs. Athletics |
— from Elias Sports Bureau
Game notes
Yankees pitchers had thrown 24 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings in playoffs games at Rangers Ballpark, since the third inning of Game 4 of the 1996 division series. They pitched shutouts at Texas in 1998 and 1999. ... Hamilton was 1 for 10 with four strikeouts in his career against Sabathia before the first-inning homer.
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Playoff Series
Scoring Summary
| NYY | TEX | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | J Hamilton homered to right (359 feet), E Andrus and M Young scored. | 0 | 3 | |
| 4th | M Young doubled to deep right center, M Treanor and E Andrus scored. | 0 | 5 | |
| 7th | R Cano homered to right (394 feet). | 1 | 5 | |
| 8th | D Jeter doubled to left, B Gardner scored. | 2 | 5 | |
| 8th | A Rodriguez singled to left, D Jeter and N Swisher scored, M Teixeira to second. | 4 | 5 | |
| 8th | R Cano singled to center, M Teixeira scored, A Rodriguez to second, A Rodriguez to third on error by center fielder J Hamilton. | 5 | 5 | |
| 8th | M Thames singled to left, A Rodriguez scored, R Cano to second. | 6 | 5 | |
| View complete Play-By-Play | ||||
Game Information
| Stadium | Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Arlington, TX |
| Attendance | 50,930 (105.7% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 3:50 |
| Weather | 80 degrees, clear |
| Wind | 3 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Gerry Davis, First Base - Tony Randazzo, Second Base - Jim Reynolds, Third Base - Angel Hernandez |
Research Notes
Marcus Thames is the first Yankee DH with a go-ahead hit in the 8th inning or later in a postseason game. | ||||||||||||||||||
Alex Rodriguez single in the 8th inning was his first career hit with the bases loaded in the postseason (was 0-5 prior to hit). | ||||||||||||||||||
CC Sabathia is the 8th pitcher (9th time) to throw a wild pitch and have a balk in a postseason game, and the first since Justin Verlander in Game 2 of the 2006 ALCS.
He is the FIRST Yankee to throw a wild pitch and have a balk in a postseason game. | ||||||||||||||||||
CC Sabathia threw just 51 strikes in his 93 pitches, for a strike percentage of 54.8%.
Only once during the regular season did he have a lower strike percentage - on April 22 vs the A's, 52.6% of his pitches were thrown for strikes. | ||||||||||||||||||
Robinson Cano (NYY): 3-4, HR, 2 RBI
As has been the case for most of the 2010 campaign, Cano came up big for the Yankees. He got the Yanks on the board with a 7th-inning homer off a C.J. Wilson slider - one of 2 sliders Cano saw on the evening.
The fact that Cano saw few sliders - and that he crushed one - should come as no surprise.
Cano has now hit 11 of his 30 home runs this season (regular season and playoffs) off the slider, compared to 12 off the fastball.
Combining the regular season and playoffs, Cano is hitting .337 against the slider and .331 off the fastball.
Cano was 2-3 off the heater Friday night.
His three hits were all deemed to be "well-hit" by Inside Edge. | ||||||||||||||||||
How the Rangers pitching fell apart in the 8th inning:
- In innings 1-7, C.J. Wilson controlled the Yankees - especially with his fastball. Yanks hitters were 2-16 (.125) against the heater and only 2 balls were deemed "well-hit" by Inside Edge.
- In the eighth inning, the Yanks adjusted against Wilson and the FOUR Rangers relievers - especially against the fastball. Of the 44 pitches in the frame, 34 were fastballs. The Yanks were 4-6 (.667) against the heater and 4 balls were deemed "well-hit". | ||||||||||||||||||
Marcus Thames flashback:
On August 11, he had a go-ahead hit in the 9th inning against the Rangers, a game in which the Yankees overcame a 6-1 deficit and beat the Rangers, 7-6.
Friday, he had the go-ahead hit in the eighth inning as the Yankees came back from five runs down to beat the Rangers. | ||||||||||||||||||
Dustin Moseley: 4th reliever to win, pitching at least two innings of hitless ball in his postseason debut.
Other 3 include a couple of good names: Earl Johnson (1946 Red Sox), Bruce Sutter (1982 Cardinals), and Randy Myers (1988 Mets). | ||||||||||||||||||
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CC Sabathia: Fifth pitcher in Yankees history to allow at least five runs in four innings or fewer in a postseason opener since Mike Mussina against the Diamondbacks in Game 1 of the 2001 World Series. [+]5+ Runs in 4 or Fewer Innings
Close [X] | ||||||||||||||||||
CC Sabathia: 4 Ip....that's the 3rd-shortest Game 1 start by a Yankees' pitcher in ALCS history. Ron Guidry lasted just 3 IP in 1980 against the Royals and Don Gullett lasted just 2 IP in 1977 against the Royals | ||||||||||||||||||
The last time the Yankees won a postseason game in which they allowed 3+ runs in the first inning was Game 1 of the 1997 ALDS against the Indians.
The Indians scored 5 runs in the top of the first, but the Yankees rallied to win, 8-6. | ||||||||||||||||||
Last time Yankees gave up 3+ in first inning of a postseason game
Game 5 of the 2009 ALCS against the Angels (4 runs)
Last time they did it in a series opener
Game 1 of the 2007 ALDS against the Indians (3 runs) | ||||||||||||||||||
Josh Hamilton: First 0-2 HR of 2010 postseason
Last one was in Game 1 of the 2009 WS by Chase Utley against CC Sabathia.
First HR driving in 3+ on an 0-2 pitch since Andruw Jones, 2004 Braves NLDS Game 3 against the Astros
Hamilton entered with 2 of his 93 HR coming on an 0-2 pitch. His last 0-2 HR came on June 3, 2008
Sabathia's last one allowed was the one to Utley in the 2009 WS | ||||||||||||||||||
ESPN Stats & Information |


