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New York could try again by throwing money at him in the offseason, when he can become a free agent.
"He certainly got their attention," Rangers president Nolan Ryan said with a chuckle.
Michael Young had three hits for the Rangers, who are 4-0 on the road in these playoffs. Texas won all three games at Tampa Bay in the first round, including a pair of masterpieces by Lee.
Then he said he was looking forward to facing the Yankees.
Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez and Co. fared no better than the Rays. Cutters, curves, sliders -- they couldn't touch Lee, who pumps in one strike after another like a robot programmed to do so.
"It's really not that easy. He's not just firing balls down the middle of the plate, he's throwing quality strike after quality strike and there's a big difference," Young said.
Lee was so dominant, New York hitters were left shaking their heads in the dugout or questioning calls by plate umpire Jim Reynolds.
Robinson Cano showed bunt, Brett Gardner tried another headfirst dive into first base. None of it worked.
Gardner singled leading off the sixth and stole second, but Lee never rattled. He struck out Jeter for the second time, then induced routine grounders from Nick Swisher and Teixeira, who is 0 for 11 in the series.
"It's really fun being out in center field and watching him pitch," Hamilton said. "It's just amazing to watch."
Lee has 67 strikeouts and seven walks in 64 1-3 postseason innings. Even after throwing a season-high 122 pitches, he was going to pitch the ninth until Texas broke it open.
"We were going to ride him," manager Ron Washington said.
Lee retired his first 11 batters, striking out seven, before missing high with a full-count fastball to Teixeira. His only walk in 24 innings this postseason, it drew a loud roar and a standing ovation from some in the sellout crowd of 49,840.
Rodriguez drove the next pitch to deep left-center, but Cruz reached down for a running catch that ended the fourth.
Jorge Posada fisted an opposite-field single into shallow right with two outs in the fifth for New York's first hit.
Working quickly as usual, Lee ran his total to 34 strikeouts in three playoff starts this year. Opponents are batting .173 against him in his postseason career.
The 38-year-old Pettitte set down 15 of 16 after the home run, but it wasn't enough. Pitching on 10 days' rest, he lost for the first time in his last 10 postseason starts.
[Associated Press;
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