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Monday, June 19 | |||||
Yankees admit they hit low point vs. ChiSox | |||||
BOSTON -- So much for all those worries about the New York
Yankees.
Coming off an embarrassing weekend that put them on edge, the
wobbling Yankees bounced back with a vengeance Monday night,
routing Boston 22-1 in their highest-scoring game in 47 years.
"I'm just shaking my head," manager Joe Torre said.
A day earlier, a lot of Yankees were doing the same thing -- for
a different reason.
In a humiliating loss that also cost them pitcher Orlando
Hernandez, the Yankees were smacked 17-4 by the Chicago White Sox.
The two-time World Series champions were swept at home in a
four-game series and outscored 42-17.
"Right now, we're playing as badly as we can play," general
manager Brian Cashman said after that game. "You're never as bad
as you look, and right now we're bad. We're stinking out the joint
right now."
New York wobbled into Fenway Park for a four-game set, the start
of a season-long 13-game road trip. There was word that owner
George Steinbrenner -- and his supposed trade interest in Sammy Sosa
-- might be in town Tuesday.
Steinbrenner met with high-level Yankees executives Monday -- including special advisers Clyde King and Al Rosen, who were
scouting the team's Class-A Tampa affiliate -- at the team's spring
training complex in Tampa, Fla.
"I haven't talked to him, but obviously it's a blow to the
organization, to the owner, to the general manager, to myself, the
way things are going," Torre said earlier.
Suffice to say, Torre's skill at keeping the clubhouse calm and
free of the Boss' bluster was bound to be severely tested in the
next few days.
Of course, that might have changed a bit with the romp over the
Red Sox.
"You just can't figure this game," Torre said. "You never
want to beat somebody up like that, but you can't control it."
It was New York's highest-scoring game since Aug. 12, 1953, when
it beat Washington by the same 22-1 margin. Only the Yankees' 25-2
win over Philadelphia on May 24, 1936, was by a bigger score in
team history.
It was the highest-scoring game against the Red Sox since
Chicago beat them 22-13 on May 31, 1970. Boston's worst loss was
27-3 at Cleveland on July 7, 1923.
Before the game, there were no signs of panic in the Yankees'
cramped clubhouse at Fenway.
Derek Jeter, Mariano Rivera, Jorge Posada and several other
players hooted as they watched a tape of extreme fighting bouts on
a big-screen TV. A few others calmly worked on a crossword puzzle.
Coach Willie Randolph pedaled away on an exercise bike.
"We've had about five do-or-die series in a row," third
baseman Scott Brosius said. "We just need to get on track and play
the way we can."
Brosius' three-run homer capped a seven-run ninth inning. That
was one of five Yankees home runs.
At 35-29, the Yankees moved a half-game ahead of Boston for the
AL East lead.
Even so, there have been concerns in the Bronx. As in:
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