Thursday, May 24, 2012

For Yankees, it seems a lot like 2008

By RONALD BLUM

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 2:43 p.m. ET May 22, 2012

NEW YORK (AP) - Joe Girardi was frustrated. Six losses in seven games left the New York Yankees last in the AL East.

"I'm hoping this is rock-bottom," the manager said.

No, that's not this week. That was on May 20, 2008, 45 games into Girardi's first season as the Yankees manager - and the only season since 1994 that New York failed to make the playoffs.

As Yogi Berra says, it gets late early - especially in the Bronx. For a team that likes to constantly refer to its history, 2012 is starting to resemble 2008, when the Yankees started 20-25 and never really contended. Now they're 21-21, tied for last in the AL East with the Boston Red Sox.

New York's offensive struggles with men on base reached new lows during Monday night's 6-0 loss to the Kansas City Royals. The Yankees went 0 for 13 with runners in scoring position, the Yankees' most hitless at-bats with RISP since July 1990.

Bases loaded, no outs and they still couldn't score. Robinson Cano looked at strike three, Alex Rodriguez swung at strike three and Raul Ibanez flied out deep.

Even when they hit the ball hard, it's right at someone, prompting captain Derek Jeter to say: "At times, it looks like there's 20 people out there playing defense."

"Everything bad that could be happening right now is happening," Nick Swisher said. "We've just got to start winning."

Several teams are doing that lately at the Yankees' expense. In the last seven days, four different clubs have beaten them, with Kansas City joining Cincinnati, Toronto and Baltimore, STATS LLC said. It's the second time this year that four teams have defeated the Yankees in a single week.

A 5 1/2-game deficit in the AL East could be wiped out rather quickly, but the Yankees seem to be adrift.

Left fielder Brett Gardner has been sidelined by an elbow injury since April 17, sapping the batting order of spark and speed.

Closer Mariano Rivera is likely out for the season since tearing his right Achilles tendon while shagging fly balls at Kansas City on May 3. His replacement, David Robertson, is on the disabled list with a strained muscle in his left ribcage.

Before Rivera got hurt, the Yankees were batting .270 with runners in scoring position. Since then, they're hitting .159, including 6 for 72 (.083) in their last nine games. New York is 0-10 when failing to hit a home run.

"It's very frustrating," Rodriguez said. "We've talked about it over and over again. You can't really describe it. It's not a lot of fun obviously going out and not getting the job done. But at this point, nobody's going to feel sorry for us."

CC Sabathia (5-2, 3.78 ERA) and Ivan Nova (4-2, 5.69) have winning records, but Hideki Kuroda (3-6, 4.56) and Phil Hughes (3-5, 5.23) have lagged. Freddy Garcia (0-2, 8.22) was sent to the bullpen, eventually clearing a spot for Andy Pettitte (1-1, 2.51).

At .265, the batting average is among the AL's highest - though not up to the Yankees' standards.

And the fans are letting them know, with the boos getting louder.

"You're going to hear it on the road, and you're going to hear it at home when you don't play well," Girardi said. "It's because our fans are passionate and they want us to win. And I understand that. So do the guys in that room. If they're unhappy with us, believe me, we're probably unhappier."

In the quiet clubhouse late Monday night, several players attributed the lack of offense at times - and the losing - to bad luck.

"More than anything, we've just got to pull together. We've got to have faith in each other. We know that we're all capable of doing the job. The back of everybody's baseball card looks pretty good," Swisher said. "Obviously the start hasn't been good for a lot of us - it's been good for some of us. But we've just got to keep pushing, man, because this team is a never-give-up type of team. And regardless of where we are right now, we're going to keep fighting, man, I can promise you that."

At 31 years, 222 days, the Yankees easily started the season with the oldest average roster, according to STATS. The Royals - the youngest at 27 years, 155 days, seemed to have a lot more energy.

While acknowledging "the scoreboard definitely speaks for itself," center fielder Curtis Granderson said the Yankees just have to persevere during their slump and remain in position to make a run.

"You know you're going to have some ups and downs," he said. "Right now, as a whole, we're pretty much having a down. And that's probably the most interesting thing, the fact that there's so many guys that just haven't gotten it going yet. But that's baseball. That means the good side is when we do all finally get it going together, we're going to be very tough.

"And there's still a long time for everything to go ahead and get on the same page. So it just takes a couple things here and there, a couple balls to fall, a couple balls to go our way," he said.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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