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  Saturday, Aug. 5 4:35pm ET
Cone gets no-decision in Yanks loss
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

NEW YORK (AP) -- A trip to the Yankees' pitching doctor didn't quite cure David Cone's ills.

Cone, back from a 1½-week stay at New York's minor league complex, struggled through six laborious innings and remained winless since April 28 as the Yankees lost to the Seattle Mariners 6-5 Saturday.

David Cone
David Cone didn't pitch poorly, but the Yankees did lose the 13th straight game he started.

After Cone lost his eighth straight decision July 27, owner George Steinbrenner banished him to Tampa, Fla., to work with pitching guru Billy Connors, who helped Dwight Gooden resurrect his career and Roger Clemens win AL pitcher of the month in July.

"The stint in Tampa got me back on the right track," Cone said. "I know what I need to do. I have a blueprint with which to work. Before I was constantly searching for something."

Cone, 37, once again tinkered with his mechanics -- making his delivery more compact and throwing more over the top -- but the results weren't measurably better.

His slider still appeared flat at times and he couldn't put hitters away. Cone reached two-strike counts on 20 of 28 hitters, but nine reached safely.

"It's been the same story all year," he said. "The stuff is there, but I'm just not efficient enough. I get to 0-2 and I start pressing and I can't put the hitters away."

Cone avoided serious damage by holding Seattle to 1-for-7 with runners in scoring position -- an RBI single by Al Martin in the third.

Alex Rodriguez followed with his 27th homer to make it 3-2, but that was all Seattle could get until the ninth. Cone avoided his ninth straight loss when Jorge Posada homered in the seventh.

"That was the first good break he's had," said manager Joe Torre, who said Cone will stay in the rotation for at least one more start. "At least he didn't get the loss."

But the Yankees did lose the 13th straight game started by Cone as Seattle scored three in the ninth.

Pinch-hitter Stan Javier led off with a single off Gooden (5-4), advanced to second on a sacrifice and to third on Rickey Henderson's single. Mariano Rivera came in and gave up an infield hit to Martin, a sacrifice fly to Rodriguez and an RBI single to Edgar Martinez.

Brett Tomko (6-3) pitched two innings for the win, and Kazuhiro Sasaki got his 26th save in 29 chances, giving up a two-run homer to Posada.

The sellout crowd of 55,629 was supportive of Cone, giving him a standing ovation as he walked to the bullpen before the game. They applauded for every two-strike pitch -- all 52 of them -- and gave Cone a lengthy ovation after he struck out Mike Cameron to end the fifth, the 2,500th of his career.

"How many pitchers who are 1-10 get that type of ovation?" Cone asked. "They showed me a lot of respect, and I appreciate that."

Torre, who tries to keep Cone's pitch count below 110, was just as supportive, sending him to pitch the sixth -- despite being at 113 pitches -- in a desperate attempt to get Cone his first win in 15 starts.

Cone allowed seven hits and five walks, but needed 137 pitches -- the most he's thrown since making 147 in Game 5 of the 1995 playoffs against Seattle - to make it through six.

"I think he was being too careful at times and tried to make that perfect pitch," Torre said. "But I'm happy with this outing. He kept us in the game."

New York gave Cone a 2-0 lead in the first inning on David Justice's two-run single off Aaron Sele. New York could muster only one more runner until the sixth.

"The Yankees were a little more aggressive than they usually were," Sele said. "I was able to make an adjustment down in the strike zone."

That's when things got controversial. With one out, Paul O'Neill hit a line drive off Sele's right ankle. The ball deflected in the air to Rodriguez at shortstop. Because the umpires did not signal an out, Rodriguez threw to first, pulling John Olerud off the bag.

Seattle manager Lou Piniella argued, and O'Neill was called out after plate umpire Angel Hernandez conferred with crew chief Mark Hirschbeck and ruled the ball was caught.

Tomko started warming up, and with runners on second and third, Piniella came back out with a trainer to check on Sele. Piniella brought in left-hander Arthur Rhodes -- who was not warming up -- to face lefty Tino Martinez. Rhodes was given as much time as he needed to get ready, sparking a protest by the Yankees.

"Lou wanted to bring the left-hander in and the umpires allowed it," Torre said. "If I'm not mistaken, he ran off the field. They allowed him to get away with it."

Piniella disagreed.

"Tomko was warming up for the next inning," he said. "But I noticed Sele wasn't pushing off. He stiffened up pretty good. We just couldn't take a chance on leaving him in."

Hirschbeck sided with Piniella.

"They can bring anybody in they want," the umpire said. "We're not doctors. The team took the pitcher out due to injury."

Rhodes got Martinez to ground out, preserving the 3-2 lead. Sele had a bruised right ankle, but said he expects to make his next start.

Game notes
Posada has six career multihomer games. ... Rodriguez has 17 career homers against the Yankees, tied with Kansas City for the most he's hit off any team. ... Cone is 3-15 in 33 starts since pitching a perfect game against Montreal on July 18, 1999.
 


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AUDIO/VIDEO
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 David Cone showed some fight against Seattle on Sunday.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6

 Joe Torre is happy with Cone's performance on Sunday.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6