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Dustin Moseley, the second of four Yankees' relievers, struck out four in his two perfect innings.
Mariano Rivera worked the ninth for his 42nd career postseason save, extending his major league record. After a pinch-hit single and a sacrifice bunt, Rivera struck out Young and retired Hamilton on a grounder.
Things had started so well for the Rangers in their first ALCS game, and the first time playing a postseason series opener at Rangers Ballpark.
Ryan, the Hall of Famer and team president, threw out the ceremonial first pitch. The all-time king of strikeouts and no-hitters fired a heater that drew maybe the loudest pregame cheer from the crowd of 50,935.
Then with Hamilton's homer, Texas already had more runs than it scored in all the 1998 and 1999 division series against New York. The Rangers scored only one run in each of those while being swept in three games both times. They lost the last three games in the 1996 after winning their playoff debut in old Yankee Stadium.
Only a fortunate bounce on what could've been a bases-loaded wild pitch stopped the Rangers from getting more in the first after Hamilton pulled a pitch down the right field line for his first postseason homer.
After an extended gap between starts, eight days of rest since Game 1 of the AL division series against Minnesota, the Yankees' big left-hander labored through the first. Sabathia walked three, gave up three hits and was pitching to the ninth batter when he finally got out of a bases-loaded jam on his 36th pitch -- the 20th ball.
That high pitch clipped catcher Jorge Posada's mitt and ricocheted hard off the brick-facade backstop. Posada turned, retrieved the ball and flipped it to Sabathia to get Nelson Cruz trying to score.
Cruz immediately pointed at home plate while pleading with umpire Gerry Davis, and Washington ran out to join the conversation. But replays showed clearly that Sabathia tagged Cruz on his left arm before his feet slid across the plate.
Young put the Rangers up 5-0 with a two-run double in the fourth before Hamilton took an inning-ending called third strike. That was it for Sabathia in the shortest of his seven postseason games for the Yankees over two Octobers -- and his shortest in 36 starts this year, his two postseason starts included.
Sabathia gave up five runs and six hits and four walks.
"He was definitely off today, but didn't give up 10 runs," Girardi said. "He kept it to five and we were able to come back. "
Notes: Yankees pitchers had thrown 24 2-3 consecutive scoreless innings in playoffs games at Rangers Ballpark, since the third inning of Game 4 of the 1996 division series. They pitched shutouts at Texas in 1998 and 1999. ... Hamilton was 1 for 10 with four strikeouts in his career against Sabathia before the first-inning homer.
[Associated Press;
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