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  Tuesday, Sep. 26 7:15pm ET
Devil Rays beat Yankees in ninth
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -- Tampa Bay delayed what Fred McGriff concedes is probably the inevitable.

McGriff's RBI single with two outs in the ninth inning gave the Devil Rays a 2-1 victory and prevented the two-time defending World Series champions from clinching another AL East title Tuesday night.

 Jorge Posada
Jorge Posada's excitement with his ninth-inning homer was shortlived when the Devil Rays beat the Yankees in the bottom half of the inning.

"The Yankees are the Yankees, one of the greatest teams of all time," McGriff said. "I've been playing the game a long time ... and it'll take a minor miracle for them to not clinch. If they don't do it here (Wednesday or Thursday), they'll probably do it in Baltimore (this weekend)."

Jorge Posada hit a game-tying homer in the top half off Roberto Hernandez to give New York a chance to wrap up its fourth division crown in five years. But despite losing for the 10th time in 13 games, the Yankees are assured of at least a tie in the division and can win it with one more win or losses by Boston and Toronto.

"We wanted to win this thing tonight," said New York manager Joe Torre, who would also like to see his team finish strong to win home-field advantage next week.

"I'd like to definitely (open) the first round at home. It would be important, especially with a 2-2-1 format. You have no control over who you play. The only thing you can control is where you play."

The Devil Rays, who damaged the Blue Jays' postseason hopes by winning three of four at Toronto last weekend, put off any clinching party for at least one night when they scored in the ninth off Jeff Nelson (8-4).

"You play with pride in this game, and you don't want to watch someone else celebrate," Tampa Bay manager Larry Rothschild said. "But like I said before, it may not be in our hands. We just need to play good, solid baseball baseball like we did tonight."

Randy Winn led off the ninth with a walk off Nelson. After a sacrifice, Mike Stanton walked Vinny Castilla intentionally. One out later, McGriff's grounder between first and second base drove in the winning run.

It was just McGriff's third hit in 25 at-bats against Stanton.

"That's why you go out and play the game," McGriff said. "You never know."

Hernandez (4-6) got the victory, despite blowing the lead he inherited from Devil Rays starter Albie Lopez.

Lopez scattered seven hits, struck out six and walked two in eight innings. The Yankees were 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position against him and had the tying run thrown out at the plate in the eighth inning.

Yankees starter Orlando Hernandez was even more impressive -- allowing just two hits, walking one and striking out six in eight innings. He had a perfect game until Steve Cox singled with two outs in the fourth.

El Duque didn't allow another runner until the sixth, when Gerald Williams homered for the first time in 122 at bats -- a stretch that began Aug. 21.

"He was sensational," Torre said. "He's in there apologizing to me for giving up one run. I thought he was as good as he's been all year ... I'm just glad he didn't get tagged with the loss."

Lopez worked out of jams with runners in scoring position in the first, fifth, sixth and eighth innings for the Devil Rays, who have bounced back from losing a season-high 10 straight games to win four of five.

The Devil Rays starter retired David Justice on a foul ball to end the first, struck out Chuck Knoblauch and Derek Jeter with runners at first and second in the fifth and struck out Scott Brosius with the base-loaded to escape the sixth.

Paul O'Neill began the New York eighth with a single and went to third when Bernie Williams doubled off the wall in left-center. The Yankees didn't take advantage of the opportunity, though.

Justice flied to right and O'Neill, who returned to the lineup Friday after missing six games with a sore hip, was thrown out at the plate by right fielder Jose Guillen. Lopez got out of the inning when Tino Martinez grounded to first.

O'Neill, who didn't slide, thought he might have beaten the throw.

"As a runner, you're coming down the line and home plate was open, and all of a sudden it wasn't," he said. "I don't know if I slide if I'm safe or if I'm better off just trying to get the foot in there. Obviously, it happened so quick that you can't do it over."

Game notes
Jeter went 1-for-4, moving within five hits of his third straight 200-hit season. He would join Lou Gehrig (1927-29) and Don Mattingly (1984-86) as the only Yankees to accomplish the feat ... By shutting out the Yankees for eight innings, Lopez extended a streak of scoreless innings by Devil Rays starting pitchers to 25 innings ... In his previous four starts, Lopez allowed 23 runs and 34 hits in 18 innings, and lost the games by a combined score of 37-8.
 


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