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Back in the dugout, his head hung low and his eyes narrowed as he watched his teammates try to fight back.
"I've got to take it hard. It's me," Burnett said. "These guys played the game they played, put up runs that usually win ballgames."
It was the first time in 14 games this postseason that a Yankees starter failed to last six innings -- and the shortest outing by a World Series starter since Houston's Roger Clemens left Game 1 against the Chicago White Sox in 2005 after two innings because of a strained hamstring.
Girardi and the Yankees have learned at least one thing about Burnett during his first year in New York: He's not a guy you can count on to close out a postseason series.
Burnett also had an opportunity to wrap up the AL championship series on the road in Game 5 against Los Angeles, but he yielded four runs in the first. When his teammates rallied to take a seventh-inning lead, he failed to put away the Angels.
Andy Pettitte won Game 6 to clinch that Series. He's expected to get the ball again Wednesday night, this time on three days' rest.
"We're going to check with Andy tomorrow when we work out," Girardi said. "If Andy physically feels good, he's going to go on Wednesday."
This outing certainly wasn't what the Yankees were looking for when they signed Burnett to an $82.5 million, five-year contract as a free agent in the offseason.
In perhaps the biggest game of his life, he had his shortest start since going two innings on April 4, 2007, with Toronto at Detroit.
"He just didn't have his stuff," teammate Johnny Damon said.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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