Hot Yankees enjoying comforts of home

July 23, 2008|Mike Fitzpatrick, Associated Press

NEW YORK - Robinson Cano is hitting .522 since the All-Star break. The New York Yankees are even better: 5 for 5.

Bobby Abreu hit a go-ahead home run in the sixth inning and drove in three runs, leading the surging Yankees past the Minnesota Twins, 8-2, last night, their ninth consecutive victory at home.

Derek Jeter added a two-run double and Cano continued his typical second-half tear with two RBI singles, his fifth straight multihit game as New York improved to 5-0 since the break.

"We're playing great right now," Cano said. "We're doing our job with men on base better than the first half."

New York's effective bullpen came through again after Darrell Rasner was pulled in the sixth, and the Yankees (55-45) reached 10 games over .500 for the first time this year. They moved within 3 1/2 games of first-place Tampa Bay in the American League East, the closest they've been to first since May 14.

The home winning streak is New York's longest since a nine-game run in May 2005.

"You've got to take advantage of being at home," manager Joe Girardi said. "The most important thing to me is that we're playing better."

Minnesota, which is 1 1/2 games behind first-place Chicago in the AL Central, dropped to 3-18 at Yankee Stadium since the start of the 2002 season. The Twins (55-45) have lost seven straight series in the Bronx.

"We missed a couple plays out there, which always kills you in this ballpark," manager Ron Gardenhire said.

Trailing, 2-1, in the sixth, New York got a rally going against Kevin Slowey (6-7), who was pitching for the first time in 12 days.

Johnny Damon led off with a single and Abreu hit a two-run homer with one out. Alex Rodriguez then singled to chase Slowey, who was 4-0 in his previous six starts.

Rodriguez stole second and Dennys Reyes walked Jason Giambi before Cano's RBI single made it 4-2.

"I felt like it's not a good effort. It's my job to finish that sixth inning," Slowey said. "I made one mistake to Abreu and he kind of jumped on it. All it takes is one mistake."

The Yankees broke it open with four runs in the seventh.

Light-hitting rookie Brett Gardner drew a leadoff walk from Jesse Crain, and Damon reached on an error by third baseman Brian Buscher. Jeter grounded a two-run double down the third base line and Abreu followed with an RBI double.

Giambi's run-scoring single off Brian Bass made it 8-2.

David Robertson (2-0) relieved Rasner with runners at the corners in the sixth and retired Delmon Young on one pitch to keep New York's deficit at 2-1.

Jose Veras pitched a scoreless seventh, Kyle Farnsworth struck out three in a hitless eighth, and Dan Giese finished.

Yankees relievers have a 1.60 ERA over the past 21 games.

"The bullpen's been incredible," Rasner said. "Some things are coming together."

Rodriguez hit a leadoff double in the second and scored on a one-out single by Cano, who is 12 for 23 since the All-Star break. The second baseman is batting .339 after the break for his career.

"Lucky," he said. "I'm doing the same things."

Cano's father, Jose, who pitched briefly for the Houston Astros in 1989, threw to him last Wednesday back home in the Dominican Republic and the two worked on game situations.

"I feel like I'm staying behind the ball, not reaching or jumping like I was in the first half," Cano said.

Minnesota went ahead, 2-1, in the sixth. Carlos Gomez led off with a double, went to third on Denard Span's infield single, and scored when Giambi couldn't handle Cano's rushed throw to first.

The error was charged to Giambi, who later made a nice play on Jason Kubel's RBI ground out.

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