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NEW YORK (AP) -The last time the
Detroit Tigers
left Yankee Stadium with a three-game sweep,
Al Kaline
was playing the outfield and
Denny McLain
was on the mound.
Miguel Cabrera
homered, tripled and drove in three runs, and Detroit beat the Yankees 8-4 Thursday night for its first three-game sweep in
New York since 1966.
''That's not going to happen very often,'' Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. ''You feel very fortunate here if you win two
out of three. You feel OK if you win one out of three.''
Reserve infielder
Ramon Santiago
made the most of his first start at shortstop this season, turning in a key defensive play and hitting a tiebreaking triple
to back
Nate Robertson
(1-3).
Magglio Ordonez
had three hits - including a two-run double off
Ian Kennedy
- and scored twice for the Tigers, who got a strong effort from their bullpen and won for the eighth time in 10 games.
''We've got a long way to go, but we are playing better,'' said Leyland, whose star-studded team opened 0-7. ''I don't think
we're over the hump yet.''
Bobby Abreu
hit a three-run homer in the first inning, but failed to come through with the bases loaded in the sixth. The banged-up Yankees,
who have lost six of eight, got more bad news before the game when they learned pitcher
Phil Hughes
is expected to be out until at least July with a stress fracture in one of his ribs.
''Right now it just seems like we have to be perfect out there and that's tough to do sometimes,''
Johnny Damon
said. ''We caught Detroit at the wrong time. Maybe when we go there (May 9-11) we can repay them.''
With
Alex Rodriguez
and
Jorge Posada
also injured,
Shelley Duncan
batted cleanup for New York and hit an RBI single that tied it at 4 in the fifth.
With two on and two outs, Santiago ranged to his left for
Melky Cabrera
's grounder and made a difficult flip to second base for the inning-ending forceout.
''That was a big league play,'' Robertson said.
Carlos Guillen
singled leading off the sixth,
Jacque Jones
doubled and Santiago put Detroit ahead 6-4 with a two-run triple to right-center off
Jonathan Albaladejo
(0-1).
Batting ninth, Santiago filled in admirably for shortstop
Edgar Renteria
, rested by Leyland after starting the first 28 games this year.
''They got momentum going in that inning and we shut it down there,'' Santiago said.
A steady drizzle fell through the middle innings, and Robertson tumbled headlong to the turf while breaking to cover first
base on
Robinson Cano
's groundout to the right side in the sixth.
''I think he was more embarrassed than injured,'' Leyland said.
New York chased Robertson later in the inning and loaded the bases with two outs, but
Zach Miner
retired Abreu on a fly to center with a 3-1 pitch.
Ordonez singled in the seventh before Cabrera lined an opposite-field shot to right off Albaladejo for his sixth home run.
Miner worked 2 1-3 scoreless innings and
Francisco Cruceta
finished Detroit's first sweep of at least three games at Yankee Stadium since a season-opening series in 1966.
''We started slow this season, so to come in here and win three games is big for us,'' Cabrera said. ''We feel confident.''
Robertson allowed four runs and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings for his first win in five career outings in the Bronx. He kept
a game ball as a souvenir after improving to 2-5 against the Yankees and beating them for the first time since July 2004.
The left-hander fell behind 3-0 after three batters. Damon walked,
Derek Jeter
singled and Abreu homered to right on a 3-1 pitch.
But the Tigers came back quickly against the 23-year-old Kennedy, winless in six outings this season. Santiago hit a bloop
double to left, moved up on a wild pitch and scored on
Curtis Granderson
's groundout.
Placido Polanco
doubled,
Gary Sheffield
walked and Ordonez drove a 1-2 delivery off the right-field fence for a two-run double that tied it at 3.
''I should have put him away,'' Kennedy said. ''I just left a fastball over the plate.''
Cabrera followed with a triple that Abreu misplayed in deep right, giving Detroit a 4-3 lead.
Notes: Longtime Yankees announcer and former outfielder
Bobby Murcer
was at the ballpark and plans to resume his regular broadcasting schedule Friday night. Murcer said it's taken him a while
to recover from the brain biopsy he had in early March. Murcer had surgery in December 2006, four days after being diagnosed
with a malignant brain tumor. ... Leyland also rested C
Ivan Rodriguez
.
Brandon Inge
made his fourth start behind the plate. ... Jeter tied
Joe DiMaggio
for fourth place on New York's career runs list at 1,390. ... Yankees DH
Hideki Matsui
extended his hitting streak to a team-high 11 games.
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