Cabrera first Yankee in 14 years to hit for cycle as Yanks drop White Sox
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| Regular Season Series |
| New York leads 4-3 (as of Sun 8/2) |
| Thu 7/30 |
@CWS 3, NYY 2 |
Recap |
| Fri 7/31 |
@CWS 10, NYY 5 |
Recap |
| Sat 8/1 |
@CWS 14, NYY 4 |
Recap |
| >Sun 8/2 |
NYY 8, @CWS 5 |
Box Score |
| Fri 8/28 |
@NYY 5, CWS 2 |
Recap |
| Sat 8/29 |
@NYY 10, CWS 0 |
Recap |
| Sun 8/30 |
@NYY 8, CWS 3 |
Recap |
| · Complete Schedule: White Sox | Yankees |
| Scoring Summary |
| NYY | CHW |
 | 2nd | M Cabrera homered to left, N Swisher and R Cano scored. | 3 | 0 |
 | 3rd | G Beckham singled to left, S Podsednik scored. | 3 | 1 |
 | 3rd | J Dye homered to right, G Beckham scored. | 3 | 3 |
 | 3rd | J Thome homered to left. | 3 | 4 |
 | 4th | J Molina singled to center, M Cabrera scored. | 4 | 4 |
 | 4th | J Damon singled to center, J Molina scored, D Jeter to second. | 5 | 4 |
 | 5th | M Cabrera singled to center, A Rodriguez scored, N Swisher to second. | 6 | 4 |
 | 5th | J Hairston Jr. singled to right center, N Swisher scored, M Cabrera to second. | 7 | 4 |
 | 8th | C Quentin singled to right, G Beckham scored, J Thome to third. | 7 | 5 |
 | 9th | D Jeter singled to left, M Cabrera scored, C Ransom to third. | 8 | 5 |
| · View complete Play-By-Play |
| Game Information |
| Stadium | U.S. Cellular Field, Chicago, IL |
| Attendance | 36,325 (89.4% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 3:10 |
| Weather | 71 degrees, sunny |
| Wind | 10 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Greg Gibson, First Base - Ted Barrett, Second Base - Tim Mcclelland, Third Base - Andy Fletcher |
Associated Press
CHICAGO -- No one on the bench wanted Melky Cabrera to stop. He wasn't about to, anyway, when he saw the ball shoot out into right field.
He sprinted around second and slid into third just ahead of the relay to complete a rare cycle. And in a flash, his teammates went wild on the bench.
"Definitely a day to remember,"
Alex Rodriguez said.
Fast As You Can
Perhaps the White Sox should have mixed it up with Melky, as Cabrera saw 19 pitches in five at-bats, and 15 of them were fastballs. Three of the four off-speed pitches went for hits (the other was a changeup for a ball in his last at-bat). He got the cycle on the 15th fastball he saw and the sixth of that at bat (fifth straight).
What Melky Cabrera faced in five at-bats
| Pitch |
MPH |
Result |
| Changeup |
79.7 |
HR |
| Curveball |
70.6 |
Double |
| Changeup |
79.4 |
Single |
| Fastball |
92.7 |
Groundout |
| Fastball |
93.5 |
Triple |
Cabrera's cycle was the 15th time a Yankees player has accomplished the feat and he's the first Yankee in 14 years to hit for the cycle, leading New York to an 8-5 victory over the
Chicago White Sox on Sunday afternoon.
Cabrera hit a three-run homer in the second to give the Yankees a 3-0 lead, doubled in the fourth and chased
Mark Buehrle (11-5) with an RBI single in the fifth. He then tripled to right leading off the ninth against
Scott Linebrink, driving the ball over
Jermaine Dye's head and drawing a loud roar from a crowd that had showered Buehrle with cheers before his first start at home since his perfect game.
This time, the fans saw something rare happen at the plate.
When he looked into the dugout after the triple, Cabrera said, "I felt very happy." He saw a raucous bench, a group that wanted him to go for the triple even if he couldn't make it.
"Everybody was running with him,"
Derek Jeter said.
On the other side?
"It was very painful," manager Ozzie Guillen said, laughing.
The cycle was the first by a Yankee since
Tony Fernandez did it against Oakland on Sept. 3, 1995, and the second by a White Sox opponent in as many seasons. Minnesota's
Carlos Gomez did it against the White Sox at U.S. Cellular Field on May 7, 2008.
The four hits by Cabrera also tied a career high and lifted the Yankees to a much-needed win after a 14-4 pounding the previous day left them just a half-game ahead of Boston in the AL East.
It helped them avoid their first four-game sweep by the White Sox in nine years and their first at Chicago since August 1964 and allowed them to prevail despite a somewhat shaky start by
CC Sabathia (11-7).
What looked like a promising matchup between aces never materialized.
Staked to the early lead after Cabrera's 10th homer, Sabathia quickly gave it back in a four-run third when Jermaine Dye hit a two-run shot and
Jim Thome followed with his 559th home run. The Yankees responded, scoring two each in the fourth and fifth to grab a 7-4 lead, and Sabathia settled down.
It was still a three-run game when
Gordon Beckham chased him with a leadoff double in the eighth -- the 10th hit against Sabathia.
Phil Hughes struck out Jermaine Dye and walked Jim Thome to put runners on first and second, bringing the tying run to the plate.
Paul Konerko then struck out before
Carlos Quentin hit an RBI single off
Mariano Rivera, who had just entered the game, to make it 7-5.
Rivera then pitched a scoreless ninth for his 30th save in 31 chances.
Buehrle was far from effective let alone perfect in his first start at U.S. Cellular Field since that perfect game against Tampa Bay on July 23. This time, he allowed seven runs and 12 hits in 4 1/3 innings after teasing another historic performance in his previous start against Minnesota.
In that game, he retired the first 17 batters to set a major league record with 45 outs in a row before the Twins rallied for the win. This time, he simply got hit hard again by the Yankees and is 1-6 in nine career starts against them.
"You go out there and get 45 straight guys out, and then today, I can't get two guys out in a row," Buehrle said.
Cabrera was just about perfect on Sunday, going 4 for 5 while driving in four runs and scoring three.
"We have lots of confidence in Melky,"
Johnny Damon said. "He plays the game right. He's capable of being a five-tool presence. He's real close. If he adds a little more power in his game, we can put him in that category."
Game notes Sunday marked the 30th anniversary of Thurman Munson's fatal plane crash in Canton, Ohio, and Reggie Jackson still remembers the "chilling feeling" that gripped him when he heard the news. The Yankees had a day off, and Jackson was in Connecticut when he learned about the crash. "I got a really eerie feeling because it said 'Yankee great,' 'Yankee superstar,' or something like that 'dies in a plane crash," said Jackson, now a special adviser. Munson often flew home on days off to be with his family and was practicing takeoffs and landings in a Cessna citation jet when it clipped a tree and fell short of the runway at Akron-Canton Regional Airport. His last game was a three-inning stint at first base the day before at Chicago.