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NEW YORK (AP) -
Joe Girardi
bolted from the Yankees' dugout, and it was showtime.
The New York manager took out a season's worth of frustration on his hat, the umpires and the dirt, earning an ejection Thursday
night with the kind of theatrical argument that local fans never saw while
Joe Torre
was in town.
Moments later, the Yankees won in the bottom of the ninth inning. Coincidence or correlation?
''Joe got fired up and I guess it got us fired up,''
Jason Giambi
said after the 2-1 victory over the
Baltimore Orioles
.
Robinson Cano
singled home the winning run with two outs, with
Hideki Matsui
scoring from second base by sliding in under left fielder
Jay Payton
's high throw.
''It means a lot, to see the manager fighting for the team,'' Cano said.
With their revamped bullpen allowing only one runner in three innings, the last-place Yankees posted their first two-game
winning streak in 2 1/2 weeks.
Cano's opposite-field hit ended what began as a neat duel between Baltimore lefty
Brian Burres
and struggling
Ian Kennedy
.
Mariano Rivera
(1-1), working in the ninth as the Yankees convert
Joba Chamberlain
into a starter, pitched a perfect inning. Rivera,
Jose Veras
and
Kyle Farnsworth
combined to shut out the Orioles.
Jim Johnson
(0-2) relieved Burres and got the last out in the eighth. After Matsui singled, Johnson fanned
Alex Rodriguez
and Giambi.
Girardi rushed from the dugout after plate umpire Chris Guccione ruled Giambi was out on a foul tip. Girardi certainly got
his money's worth for his first ejection as Yankees manager - he twice threw down his hat and kicked it once, then kicked
the dirt while finishing his rant with crew chief Tim Welke.
''I wanted to kick something, and I figured that was the best thing. Walls don't work too well,'' Girardi said. ''I don't
have any concern. I don't think I did anything that warrants a suspension.
''I just didn't like the explanation. And that's all I'm basically going to say. I'll just leave it at that. I got a little
upset over it,'' he said. ''My purpose to go out there was not to fire them up, because I think they're fired up every day.''
Guccione said he heard the pitch hit something, and ruled that it glanced off Giambi's bat into the glove of catcher
Ramon Hernandez
for strike three.
''That play might be one of the hardest things, because you can't see it. It happens a lot and people question it,'' Guccione
said.
Welke said Girardi didn't make contact with any umpires. Still, Welke thought the argument was a bit out of the ordinary.
''Yes, I would say it was. There are not many nights when a manager throws his hat and kicks dirt at us,'' he said.
Yankees captain
Derek Jeter
took another view.
''It was funny. I enjoyed it,'' he said.
The crowd was still buzzing when pinch-hitter
Bobby Abreu
walked, and Cano followed with a single through the left side for the Yankees' first game-ending hit of the year.
It was Girardi's 100th career win as a major league manager, not that he was in the dugout to see the finish. Instead, he
was back in his office.
''I had a pen in my hand, and I was so happy, I threw it extremely hard against the couch,'' he said.
Johnson said the delay during Girardi's dispute did not bother him.
''The walk really killed us. You can't defend a walk,'' he said. ''I'll take the blame for it. I didn't execute my pitches.''
Burres gave up six hits over 7 2-3 innings while walking none and striking out five. Kennedy pitched four-hit ball for six
innings.
Freddie Bynum
hit an RBI triple for a 1-0 lead in the third, but Baltimore missed a big chance to get more.
The Orioles loaded the bases with one out, helped when
Brian Roberts
stole second - he made it despite falling down and getting caught in a pickle. Rattled early in a loss last month at Baltimore,
Kennedy composed himself, striking out
Nick Markakis
and retiring
Aubrey Huff
on a routine fly.
The crowd, sensing the 23-year-old Kennedy needed a confidence boost, responded with a standing ovation and Rodriguez patted
the pitcher on the chest while cutting across the diamond.
The Yankees made it 1-all in the fourth on singles by Matsui and Giambi and a sacrifice fly by
Shelley Duncan
.
Notes: Markakis robbed Matsui of extra bases with a leaping catch at the RF wall in the first. Markakis also robbed CF
Adam Jones
on the play, jumping in front of his teammate for the grab and then doubling
Johnny Damon
off first. ... Orioles 3B
Melvin Mora
sat out, a day after being accidentally spiked in the right hand by Matsui. Mora hopes to start Friday night at Tampa Bay.
... Yankees RHP Chien-Ming Wang will run Friday to test his sore right calf. If he's OK, he'll start Sunday against Seattle.
He originally was set to pitch Saturday.
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