Derek Lowe showered and dressed quickly and stood in the hallway of
the visitors’ clubhouse at Comerica Park, a living symbol of hope and
possibility.
Russell Martin looking on after failing to throw
out Quintin Berry stealing second in the fifth. Berry came around to score.
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Wasn’t it Lowe who started Game 4 of the 2004
American League Championship Series against the Yankees, a game that changed
the course of history in the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry?
And wasn’t it Lowe who started and won Game 7 of
the same series, making the Red Sox the only baseball team to comeback from an
0-3 deficit?
This is what it has come to for the Yankees, who
find themselves on the verge of being swept in a best-of-seven series for the
first time since losing four straight to Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine in the
1976 World Series. After drastic lineup changes, blown umpiring calls and a
third straight loss, this one a 2-1 defeat, to the Detroit Tigers in the
American League Championship Series, their plight is so desperate, so bleak,
that they may need to look to a former Red Sox as proof that they still have
hope.
But they also know they send their best chance to
the mound Wednesday in C. C. Sabathia. Sabathia is coming off a complete game
gem in Game 5 of the division series, and other than Raul Ibanez, he seems to
be the only Yankee capable of willing this team to victory.
“We’ve gotten good pitching all the way throughout the playoffs,”
Manager Joe Girardi said, “and we will need it again tomorrow if we want to live
another day.”
Sabathia will face the Tigers’ Max Scherzer in
Game 4 on Wednesday, but what the lineup backing Sabathia will look like is
anyone’s guess.
Tuesday, in the most drastic shake-up of his
managerial career, Girardi shuffled his lineup in search for more offense,
benching Alex Rodriguez and Nick Swisher and replacing them with Eric Chavez
and Brett Gardner. They combined to go 0 for 7 and Chavez made the error that
led to the second run.
In a less dramatic, but more effective
substitution, Girardi used Eduardo Nunez at shortstop instead of Jayson Nix,
and Nunez spoiled Justin Verlander’s bid for a shutout with his ninth-inning
home run.
But Verlander was still superb, continuing his run
of postseason dominance with another terrific performance to go to 3-0 this
postseason. He shut out the feeble hitting Yankees for eight innings until
Nunez led off the ninth with a line drive over the left-field wall.
Verlander got one more out in the inning and then
Phil Coke was summoned to finish it off. But not until the Yankees managed to
put two runners on base, including Robinson Cano, who ended a single postseason
record 0-for-29 streak, with a single.
His hit brought Ibanez, who three times this
postseason has hit a homer to tie or win a game, to the plate. But Coke struck
him out on a 3-2 pitch to end the game.
The Yankees managed only three hits off Verlander
and have now scored only 21 runs in eight postseason games, a rather surprising
figure for a team that lead baseball with 804 runs.
“Very surprised,” Mark Teixeira said. “Every now and then you expect
to have a little rut, but this is too long for us.”
Nunez’s improbable home run ended a streak of 20
consecutive innings in which the Yankees failed to score a run, tying a club
record from the 2000 playoffs.
Verlander threw 132 pitches and came out with one
out in the ninth. Coke came on and got Ichiro Suzuki to ground out, but gave up
a single to Teixeira. Nix came in to run for Teixeira, and went to second on
Cano’s single to left. But this time, Ibanez could not get the hit, and the
Yankees offensive woes continued.
Girardi tried hard to shake it up. All season,
when one of his players struggled at the plate, Girardi would defend his
decision to stick with them by insisting they would come around because they
always had in the past.
But here in the middle of October with the season
on the line, Girardi’s words of faith were trumped by his tactics. For the
second time this postseason, he benched Rodriguez in a lineup shuffle that had
the look and feel of desperation.
Rodriguez has $114 million guaranteed over the
next five years and this series of demotions could have long-term ramifications
for Rodriguez and his relationship with Girardi and the Yankees.
“Of course that’s something that you have to worry about,” Girardi
said before the game. “But I don’t think you can worry about it today.
Relationships go through their ups and downs, no matter who they are, and you
have a chance to rebuild them.”
There is less concern over Swisher, who could
leave the team as a free agent after the season. Rodriguez did not speak to
reporters after the game, but Swisher lent his support to Girardi.
“Obviously you want to be in the lineup, but I can’t fault him,”
Swisher said. “You have to back his decision.”
Gardner had not started a game since April 17,
when he injured his right elbow. He was in left field and leading off. Suzuki
was batting second and playing right field, Chavez was at third base in place
of Rodriguez, and Nunez was at shortstop in place of Nix, who started Game 2 in
place of the injured Derek Jeter.
Girardi said he did not know what his lineup for
Game 4 would be until Wednesday. He can take comfort though, in writing
Sabathia’s name at the bottom. He might want to consider using Lowe, too.
Then again, Lowe grew up in nearby Dearborn, as
a Tigers fan.
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