New York – Robbie Ray said he was one of the sausage environments he has launched, placing him with confidence in his first three. The Yankees manager Aaron Boone said that they were probably the “sausage conditions we have experienced.” Jung Hoo Lee said the game would never have started at the KBO.
On Friday night at the Yankee Stadium it was not for casuals or fairweathers, but rather by a frigid, humid and agonizing Plog of a ball game suitable exclusively for staunch and ball demons. For those of a certain generation, the weather may have evoked memories of those extra night input games in Candlectick Park, resistance tests in which fans were rewarded with “Croix de Candlestick” pins. The Yankees announced a paid assistance or 35,286; It would be generous to assume that only half of the bones appear.
In the middle of the downpour, San Francisco’s offensive poured Carreras. Manager Bob Melvin modified his alignment and instantly saw results. Lee home run in his first bat in the bright lights of the Yankee stadium. Ray somehow shouted through four unique ball innings. The environment was atypical, but for the thesis giants (10-3), the result was familiar enough: a 9-1 blow of the New York Yankees (7-6) around six entries cut with rain.
San Francisco has found different ways of winning ball games in the first two weeks of the season. It has bone tlugfests. They have bone barbar burn. This victory, a battle between Nature and New York, resides in its own category.
“Obviously, the conditions were difficult,” Melvin said. “It seemed that the conditions were never going to end. But we did some really good things. Anyone who launched in today’s game was having a difficult opportunity.”
Of the seven combined pitchers to take the mound on Friday, no one had a good opportunity that Marcus Stroman of the Yankees, the first headline to see the adjusted alignment of the giants. With Mike Yastrzemski emerging and Lamonte Wade Jr. fighting, Melvin overturned his points in the alignment. Yastrzemski would hit the beginnings, and Wade would beat the sixth place. The result? Yastrzemski, Wade and Jung Hoo Lee headed a first five -run input, one where Stroman recorded two outs before being taken out.
Yastrzemski, just out of a start -up home run on Wednesday, begged the night scratching an initial double in Stroman’s first release. After Willy Adames walked, Lee broke a line impulse that continued to carry and cleared the fence of the right-handed field for her first home run of the year, one that gave the giants a 3-0 advantage.
“That’s great. That didn’t lose me,” Melvin said. “You enter this place and you have heard it and obviously never before you play in it. It hits a home run in difficult conditions after having two types immediately. It certainly gives an elevator in the first.”
Like the rain, San Francisco’s offensive did not yield.
Matt Chapman and Heliot Ramos took consecutive walks to prepare the stage for Wade, who took a double in the corner of the right field. Chapman and Ramos scored, and San Francisco extended their advantage to 5-0. The giants would accumulate more at the entrance, but success in chasing Stroman, who was thrown with two outs after allowing a single to Tyler Fitzgerald. While the sky shower with rain, the relentless crowd bathed him angry.
With established healthy leadership, the game became a kind of race against rain.
Meteorological forecasts estimated that the precipitation of the will is removed around 9:00 pm est, but the start of the game was curiously delayed from 7:05 pm to 7:30 pm with the advantage of five races, the giants the victory of the giants, the necessary victory. Going through five entries in a timely manner on a night like this was easier to say than it. Ray, who struck out seven but walked four, can attest to that first hand.
The left -handed needed a 98 non -economic releases to complete four entries, only 56 or that were attacks. Of the 289 total releases that were launched, approximately 60 percent of them landed for attacks.
“I felt that the weather, Itelf, was not so bad, but the field conditions began to turn a little after the second post,” Ray said.
Until that time, the terrestrial crew of the Yankees did everything possible to maintain the dry painting, especially the mound.
In the second, for example, Austin Wells of the Yankees reached a double RBI that bounced at the top of the field wall of the center of the right, and the referees gathered to determine that it was a homer. While the referees looked at the call, the crew of the land threw dry land throughout the field. For Ray, there were only so much that they could come.
“It gets muddy. I think that’s the most important thing,” Ray said. “It doesn’t matter how quickly discards. When rented like this, it becomes mud. It’s just a careless situation.”
The giants and the Yankees needed a bit of about two hours to complete five careless entries, but also crawled along that finish line around 9:45 pm just in time.
In the upper part of the sixth, the environment was no longer sustainable for baseball, it is not really.
The Yankees reliever, Yodrys Gómez, almost hit Adames with a wandering sweeper, resulting in a mound visit by Matt Blake’s release coach. Gomez continued to walk Lee and almost looting him in the final field, forcing the crew of the land to spread the mound with dry land. But after Wade Dew a walk loaded with bases, the crew of the land rolled the canvas to the field at 10:04 pm est and the game entered a rain delay. Finally, at 10:34 pm” The game was called. The giants had won, and Ray was rewarded with a victory despite throwing only four entries.
“Everyone has to launch in it, right? It is not that I will change. For me, it is that the releases can and do everything possible to give the team the opportunity to win.”
On a night as challenging as any other, Ray certainly did his share. The crime handled the rest.
Originally published:
]