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Jeter
hurt,
Young
stars as
Tigers
win ALCS
opener
NEW YORK
- The
Detroit
Tigers
took the
lead on
Delmon
Young 's
ringing
double
in the
12th
inning.
Then
came the
blow
that
really
staggered
the New
York
Yankees
.
A little
grounder
up the
middle
left
Derek
Jeter
sprawled
in the
dirt,
screaming
in pain.
The
Yankees
had lost
more
than the
AL
championship
series
opener -
they had
lost
their
captain
for the
rest of
the
postseason
with a
broken
left
ankle.
Detroit's
6-4 win
and
Jeter's
injury
on
Saturday
night
capped a
game of
wild
swings
and wild
swings
of
emotion.
"Watching
Jete go
down
was, and
still
is, a
very
difficult
moment
for us
as a
team and
what he
means to
us, a
great
player
and the
great
leader
that he
is,"
said
Raul
Ibanez ,
who hit
yet
another
tying
home run
as the
Yankees
rallied
from a
4-0
deficit
in the
ninth
inning.
Jeter
rolled
when he
reached
down in
an
attempt
to glove
Jhonny
Peralta
's
grounder
up the
middle
in the
12th,
planted
his left
foot and
tumbled,
landing
on his
stomach.
Unable
to move,
he made
a
backhand
flip
toward
second
baseman
Robinson
Cano -
the same
motion
he made
in the
famous
play
against
Oakland
11 years
ago.
Jeter
was down
for
about a
minute
and was
helped
up, the
n
assisted
to the
dugout
with
manager
Joe
Girardi
on his
left and
trainer
Steve
Donahue
on his
right.
"They
talked
about a
three-month
recovery
period,"
Girardi
said.
"Won't
jeopardize
his
career,
but he
will not
be
playing
any more
for us
this
year."
Jeter,
who
extended
his
career
record
earlier
in the
game
with his
200th
postseason
hit, has
been
playing
with a
sore
left
foot for
weeks.
He
joined
closer
Mariano
Rivera
on the
sidelines.
Rivera
tore a
knee
ligament
in May
while
shagging
fly
balls
before a
game in
Kansas
City.
"It is
kind of
a
flashback
to when
Mo
didn't
get up,"
Girardi
said.
"Oh,
boy, if
he is
not
getting
up,
something's
wrong.
We have
seen
what he
played
through
in the
last
month
and a
half,
and the
pain he
has been
in, and
how he
found a
way to
get
(through)
it. So
it
brought
back a
flashback
for me."
Still,
without
Rivera,
the
Yankees
won the
AL East
for the
13th
time in
17
years.
"I think
some
people
left us
for dead
when Mo
went
down,
and here
we are
in the
ALCS."
Girardi
said.
"And
Jete is
going to
tell us,
`Let's
go."'
Eduardo
Nunez
will
fill
Jeter's
roster
spot,
with
Jayson
Nix
likely
taking
over at
shortstop.
"We've
got to
win this
series.
Somebody's
got to
step in
and fill
that
spot,"
said
Andy
Pettitte
,
Saturday's
starting
pitcher.
Detroit
was
coasting
toward a
4-0 win
before
the
Yankees
rocked
Tigers
closer
Jose
Valverde
in the
ninth.
Valverde
has
allowed
seven
runs in
three
playoff
games
and
could
lose his
closer's
role to
Octavio
Dotel .
"We
really
want to
put our
heads
together
and
discuss
it
first,
to be
honest
with
you, and
get
together
as a
coaching
staff
and talk
about
it,"
Tigers
manager
Jim
Leyland
said.
Valverde
is
already
looking
toward
his next
possible
appearance.
"There's
nothing
you can
do. It's
in the
past.
It's
over,
and you
have to
be ready
for
tomorrow,"
Valverde
said. "I
have
confidence
for me
and for
my team,
and I'll
be there
to
support
my
team."
Ichiro
Suzuki
started
the
Yankees'
comeback
with a
two-run
homer
with one
out in
the
ninth,
and the
40-year-old
Ibanez
hit
another
two-run
drive
with two
outs.
Three
nights
earlier,
Ibanez
hit a
tying
home run
in the
ninth
against
Baltimore
in Game
3 of the
division
series
and
another
homer in
the 12th
to win
it.
"If we
are
going to
be good
enough,
we have
to be
able to
take a
punch,
and we
took a
big
punch,"
Leyland
said.
"We took
a right
cross in
the
ninth
inning
but we
survived
it."
Young's
one-out
double
off
David
Phelps ,
which
followed
a
leadoff
walk by
Triple
Crown
winner
Miguel
Cabrera
, sliced
in right
and
eluded
Nick
Swisher
, who
appeared
ready to
dive but
couldn't
get his
glove
out when
he
realized
the ball
was
closer
to him
than he
had
thought.
"I
thought
I had a
great
jump,
but then
I got
caught
in the
lights,
and I
lost it
for a
few
seconds,"
Swisher
said. "I
was
completely
blind.
It's a
helpless
feeling.
I really
thought
I could
make
that
play."
Young
drove in
three
runs,
hitting
an RBI
single
in a
two-run
sixth
against
Pettitte,
and a
solo
homer in
the
eighth
against
Derek
Lowe .
That
gave him
a Tigers
record
six
postseason
homers,
breaking
a tie
with
Hank
Greenberg
and
Craig
Monroe .
"We're
big
leaguers.
Things
are
going to
happen,"
Young
said.
"The
other
team
wants to
drive
Mercedes-Benzes
and eat
Morton's,
too. ...
We got
back in
to play
the 10th
inning.
Everyone
just
regrouped,
and
basically
a 0 0
ballgame."
Tigers
rookie
Avisail
Garcia
singled
in a run
against
Boone
Logan ,
and Andy
Dirks
added an
RBI
single
in the
12th on
a
comebacker
that
glanced
off
Phelps'
pitching
hand.
Rookie
Drew
Smyly ,
who had
started
warming
up in
the
third
when
starter
Doug
Fister
took a
line
drive
off his
right
wrist,
got the
win by
pitching
two
scoreless
innings,
ending a
4-hour,
54-minute
marathon.
In Game
2 on
Sunday,
New York
will
start
Hiroki
Kuroda ,
who will
be
pitching
on three
days'
rest for
the
first
time in
his big
league
career.
Detroit
will
send
Anibal
Sanchez
to the
mound.
Twenty-five
of 42
previous
Game 1
winners
have
gone on
to take
the AL
pennant.
Before
the
12th,
the star
of the
night
was
Ibanez,
the
first
player
to hit
three
home
runs in
the
ninth
inning
or later
in a
single
postseason.
On
Wednesday,
he hit a
tying
shot as
a pinch
hitter,
and
three
innings
later
became
the
first
player
to hit
two
homers
in a
postseason
game he
didn't
start.
This
made him
the
first
player
in
baseball
history
with two
tying
ninth-inning
home
runs in
a single
postseason,
according
to STATS
LLC.
Cincinnati's
Johnny
Bench ,
in 1972
and
1976,
had been
the only
player
to do it
twice in
a
career.
Fister
escaped
three
bases-loaded
jams in
the
first
six
innings
- the
first
time in
their
375
postseason
games
the
Yankees
stranded
a trio
of
runners
three
times
without
scoring
in any
of those
innings,
according
to STATS
LLC.
Alex
Rodriguez
, back
in New
York's
lineup
following
a
benching
in
Friday's
division
series
finale,
was 0
for 3
and
stranded
six
runners
-
striking
out on
three
pitches
with
runners
at
second
and
third
and no
outs in
the
sixth as
fans
booed
loudly.
Girardi
sent up
Eric
Chavez
to hit
for
A-Rod in
the
eighth,
the
third
time
Rodriguez
was
taken
out
early in
the last
three
games he
has
played.
Not that
A-Rod's
teammates
were any
better.
The
Yankees
stranded
13
runners
and were
3 for 13
with
runners
in
scoring
position,
leaving
them at
10 for
45
(.222)
in the
playoffs.
Fister,
who beat
the
Yankees
in Game
5 of
last
year's
division
series,
had a
shaky
start,
walking
the
bases
loaded
in the
first
and
allowing
three
two-out
singles
in the
second.
Rodriguez
bounced
into a
forceout
that
ended
the
first,
with
shortstop
Peralta
making a
spectacular
diving
stop. In
the
second,
Cano
lined a
ball off
the
inside
of
Fister's
right
wrist,
and
Peralta
picked
up the
ball on
a bounce
and
threw to
first
for the
out.
Both
plays
were so
close
that
even
replays
didn't
definitively
show
whether
the
calls
were
correct.
Detroit
was so
concerned
about
Fister's
wrist
that
Smyly
started
warming
up in
the
third.
Fister
changed
from a
short
sleeve
undershirt
into
long
sleeves
and
stayed
in the
game for
6 1-3
scoreless
innings.
His
finest
moment
came
with
Detroit
leading
2-0 in
the
sixth.
After
fanning
Rodriguez,
he
loaded
the
bases
with a
walk to
Swisher,
then
struck
out
Curtis
Granderson
and
Martin
with
breaking
balls.
Fister
allowed
six
hits,
struck
out five
and
walked
four.
"It was
a little
stiff,
little
sore,
but
nothing
too
major,"
he said
of his
wrist.
"I went
in and
checked
it out,
and made
sure
nothing
was
remarkably
hurt.
Put on
some
sleeves
to keep
warm,
and went
back out
there."
Rodriguez
was
dropped
to sixth
in the
batting
order
for the
first
time
since
the 2006
playoff
finale
against
Detroit,
but the
key
situations
find the
$275
million
man no
matter
where he
is. He
is
hitting
.105 (2
for 19)
with no
RBIs in
the
postseason,
going
hitless
in 15
at-bats
against
right-handed
pitchers
with 10
strikeouts.
A-Rod
hasn't
homered
in 87
at-bats
since
Sept.
14.
Cano (2
for 28),
Granderson
(3 for
23) and
Swisher
(3 for
23) also
remained
mired in
deep
postseason
slumps,
with
Swisher's
eighth-inning
double
the only
hit
among
the
three.
Making
his
record
44th
postseason
start,
Pettitte
gave up
two runs
and
seven
hits in
6 2-3
innings.
Afterward,
the
Yankees
clubhouse
was as
quiet as
it ever
is. The
loss of
Jeter
weighed
on the
minds of
his
teammates
more
than the
defeat,
"I think
we
probably
feel
more for
him than
anyone
else
because
we know
how
important
it means
to him
personally,"
Teixeira
said.
NOTES:
Leyland
is 2-4
in
previous
LCS he
has
managed.
... On a
cool,
49-degree
night,
there
were
empty
seats in
the top
two
decks in
the
outfield
for the
second
straight
day.
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