[外電] Yankees turn 4-6-5-6-5-3-4 triple play
快速翻:一切都進行的很像洋基贏球方式,這是自1968年以來首度主場三殺,
,而上一次三殺則是在2010年對上運動家時,而且你還該看看他們
興奮的反應,這三殺讓大家都變成快樂的小朋友。
Yankees turn 4-6-5-6-5-3-4 triple play in win over Orioles (video)
By Mark Townsend | Big League Stew
觀賞影片:http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?content_id=26222161&c_id=mlb
Everything was going the New York Yankees way in their 5-2 win over the
Orioles on Friday night.
With the bases loaded in their half of the seventh, Francisco Cervelli tagged
a flyball to straight away center field that the usually sure-handed Adam
Jones had measured up but couldn't squeeze for the final out in the frame. It
wasn't an easy play by any means, since the ball right at you is the most
difficult to judge, but it's a play Jones will make 99 times out of 100. He
just didn't here, and when the ball hit the ground three runs ended up
scoring giving the Yankees their margin of victory.
That was the first break to go New York's way. Honestly, at the time, it
would have been impossible to imagine a bigger break going their way the rest
of the game, and perhaps even the rest of the month, but it only took a half
inning to top it.
The Orioles put runners at first and second to begin the top of the eighth
inning with Manny Machado coming to the plate. Machado would smack one on a
short hop to second baseman Robinson Cano, which he fielded cleanly and
flipped to shortstop Jayson Nix for the force out at second. There's one out.
Now cue the circus music.
Lead runner Alexi Casilla was in a tough spot considering he didn't know
whether or not the ball would be caught, so he's trapped in no man's land off
second. After three tosses and a valiant effort, Casilla's finally tagged by
third baseman Kevin Youkilis for the second out.
That brings us back to Machado, who decides he has a chance to move up to
second while the rundown is taking place. Bad idea. Completely aware of his
intentions, Youkilis fires a throw behind him to first baseman Lyle Overbay,
who quickly unloads back to Cano to tag the sliding Machado for the third
out. Triple play.
Easy as 1-2-3.
Scored as 4-6-5-6-5-3-4.
It's the first home triple play for New York since June 3, 1968 against the
Minnesota Twins, and their first overall since April 22, 2010 at Oakland. I'm
sure neither were quite this dramatic, though every triple play has to
include some drama.
Ironically, Adam Jones was left standing in the on deck circle and would not
have his chance at redemption until the ninth when it was far too late. He
popped out to left field.
And how about that reaction by Robinson Cano, Kevin Youkilis and others? They
may be grown men with more money than we can dream off, but the game has a
way of making all of us kids again when something special like a triple play
happens.
http://ppt.cc/1eQn
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04/13 23:07, , 1F
04/13 23:07, 1F