Dropping series at home to teams on pace for 98 losses is no way to go through life, folks. Bad game, bad series. The Yankees dropped Wednesday night’s series finale 4-1 to the White Sox. It’s their first series loss at home to Chicago since 2005. The ChiSox had been the last remaining American League team without a series win at the new Yankee Stadium.

The Great Ryan LaMarre
Ryan LaMarre? Seriously? The guy is a career .224/.274/.279 (49 wRC+) hitter at the big league level and he’s been on five teams in the last four years. The dude is so far down the organizational ladder that he pitched at Yankee Stadium earlier this year, when he was with the Twins. Tyler Austin took him deep. Seriously. And then Wednesday night he …
- … had his second career multi-extra-base hit game.
- … had his seventh career game with an extra-base hit period.
- … drove in a career high four runs.
- … had his first career multi-RBI game.
How annoying. LaMarre struck first in the second inning. CC Sabathia allowed back-to-back singles to start the inning, then recorded two outs and got ahead in the count 0-2 on LaMarre. He was on the verge of stranding both runners. Then Sabathia left an 0-2 cutter up in the zone and LaMarre drilled it to right field for a two-run double and a 2-0 lead. Giancarlo Stanton and his one good hamstring almost made the lunging catch near the wall, but alas.
Elevated two-strike fastballs were a theme for Sabathia that inning. He went to a two-strike count on six batters that inning and all six at-ended ended on a fastball. The two-strike fastball locations:
Egads. Two singles, a double, and a walk on elevated two strike fastballs, which for Sabathia means a cutter. He did get one fly out and a jam shot ground ball on two-strike cutters. Otherwise the White Sox turned those mistakes into runs. LaMarre’s two-out, two-strike, two-run double was a real letdown. Sabathia was a pitch away from stranding those two leadoff singles. No dice.
LaMarre burned the Yankees again in the fourth inning. Sabathia walked Yoan Moncada on four pitches with one out, then left a 1-0 cutter out over the plate to LaMarre, who drove it to left field for a double. The speedy Moncada scored from first with ease given there were two outs and he was off and running on contact. LaMarre also added an (opposite field!) solo homer against Chad Green in the seventh. He drove in all four White Sox runs. Dude.
Sabathia was mostly fine against non-LaMarre hitters. His line: 6 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 2 BB, 6 K on 91 pitches. According to James Smyth, the Yankees dropped to 51-6 when getting a quality start this season. That’s not just the best record in baseball. It’s the third best record when getting a quality start since 1913, behind the 1931 Athletics (78-9) and 1932 Yankees (69-8). That is bonkers.

A Bad Decision
The Yankees had their best (only, really) chance to make this a ballgame in the fifth inning. They were trailing 3-0 after hitting what felt like rocket after rocket after rocket at defenders for four innings. Their first four batted balls of the game: 96.5 mph line out to left, 97.0 mph line out to third, 104.7 mph line out to second, 100.1 mph line out to right. Man. One of those games. The Yankees had eight batted balls at 95+ mph go for outs Wednesday.
Anyway, in that fifth inning Neil Walker and Gleyber Torres led off with back-to-back singles, then Austin Romine drew a one-out walk to load the bases. ChiSox starter Reynaldo Lopez went breaking ball, fastball, breaking ball, fastball, breaking ball against Ronald Torreyes. Torreyes took the first two breaking balls in the zone for called strikes. He was ready for the third breaking ball and pulled a ground ball single to left to score a run.
Brett Gardner, who has been slumping hardcore in August and can’t get a day off because the Yankees have neglected to get an outfielder in the five weeks since Aaron Judge got hurt, struck out for the second out of the inning. That brought Giancarlo Stanton to the plate with the bases loaded and two outs … and then Torres got thrown out at home on a wild pitch. Sigh. Here’s the play:
Also, the Yankees put on a clinic stranding leadoff runners this game, holy cow. Greg Bird’s leadoff double in the third inning was wasted. Stanton’s leadoff walk in the sixth was wasted. Gleyber’s leadoff single in the seventh was wasted. Miguel Andujar’s leadoff single in the ninth was wasted. The Yankees put the leadoff man on base five time in nine innings and scored one run. Gardner, Stanton, and Aaron Hicks (i.e. the 1-2-3 hitters) went a combined 0-for-11 with a walk. Tough to score when they do that.
Leftovers
Thanks to LaMarre’s home run against Green, the bullpen has now allowed at least one run in seven of the last eight games dating back to the 12-inning game in Miami last week. Green has allowed eight home runs in 62.2 innings this season. He allowed four homers in 69 innings last year. A.J. Cole and Tommy Kahnle, the only when losing relievers, each struck out two in a perfect inning.
Bird had a double! He caught up to an 83.1 mph changeup from Lopez and hooked it into right field. It was his first hit in ten days. Funnily enough, each of his last four hits have gone for extra bases (two doubles, two homers). His last single came August 12th. Bird is now 5-for-45 (.111) in his last 12 games, though he did raise his season batting line to .198/.285/.388 (81 wRC+), so … progress? (Please hurry back Judge so Walker can play first.)
Scary moment in the seventh inning. Torres was spiked in the left thumb applying the tag on Yolmer Sanchez’s steal attempt. It wasn’t intentional. Just a bang-bang play and Gleyber’s glove was in the wrong place and the wrong time. He has a cut but did stay in the game and even stroked a single in his next at-bat. He’s fine, apparently. And thankfully.
Box Score, WPA Graph & Standings
The box score and updated standings are at ESPN and the video highlights are at MLB. Here’s our Bullpen Workload page and here’s the loss probability graph:
Source: FanGraphs
Up Next
The White Sox leave town and another AL Central team comes to the Bronx. The Yankees open a four-game series with the Tigers on Thursday night. Veteran left-ballers J.A. Happ and Francisco Liriano will be on the mound in the series opener.
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