Watch CBS News

A's Allen Slugs Two Homers In Win Over Yankees

NEW YORK (AP) — Nick Swisher had already pulled the Yankees close with one swing. In the ninth, he strode to the plate with a chance to do something even more special with another.

Not this time.

Swisher hit a flyball that was caught just in front of the wall in right-center field with the bases loaded, ending the Yankees' late rally and giving the Oakland Athletics a 6-5 victory over New York on Tuesday night.

"You always want to be the guy in that spot," Swisher said. "At least I do."

Swisher hit a three-run homer off Brandon McCarthy with two outs in the eighth for the Yankees' first runs in a game they played without Alex Rodriguez.

A-Rod returned from knee surgery for his first game since July 7 on Sunday and sprained his thumb fielding a ball against the Twins. X-rays Tuesday were negative and he is day to day.

"It wasn't what I wanted to hear today," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. "Hopefully it gets a lot better by tomorrow."

Brandon Allen hit two tape-measure homers and Eric Sogard connected for one that barely cleared the wall for the A's, who built a 6-0 lead in the eighth.

The Yankees rallied for two runs in the ninth against Andrew Bailey.

Bailey gave up a homer to Jorge Posada to open the inning and Russell Martin doubled. Brett Gardner reached on an error by third baseman Scott Sizemore, who entered as a pinch-hitter in the seventh, and Curtis Granderson walked to load the bases after Derek Jeter sacrificed the runners over.

An out later, Robinson Cano walked on what appeared to be strike 3 to make it 6-5.

"I thought it was a strike but I can't let it get to that point," Bailey said. "Adrenalin has the best of you in that situation and you got to keep your cool and go get the next guy."

Swisher then hit a fly that gave A's manager Bob Melvin a scare.

"You've got to will it down," Melvin said.

Bailey secured his ninth save in nine chances since the All-Star break and 17th overall, but he given up at least a run for the fourth time in six appearances.

Sizmore doubled in two runs on the first pitch he saw off Boone Logan as a pinch-hitter in the seventh inning and Josh Willingham had a sacrifice fly in the sixth for Oakland.

McCarthy (7-6) gave up eight hits and struck out six in 7 2-3 innings, improving to 6-1 in eight starts since the All-Star break.

"0-1, 0-2, every single at-bat," New York's Mark Teixeira said. "His location is what put us off balance."

Engineers gave Yankee Stadium a clean bill of health after an earthquake in Virginia shook much of the East Coast, and 47,343 fans saw the A's improve to 2-5 against New York this season.

The A's came in having hit 81 home runs, tied for second-fewest in the American League, but they did most of their damage with the long ball Tuesday.

With one out in the second inning, Allen crushed a drive off Bartolo Colon (8-8) into the third deck, only the second ball to reach that height at the new Yankee Stadium, which opened in 2009. Seattle's Russell Branyan did it in August last year.

In the eighth, Allen hit a line shot off Hector Noesi into the second deck in right after striking in his two previous at-bats.

"I don't look at 'em, I just run around the bases," Allen said. "Act like you've done it before."

It was Allen's first two homers with the A's and first multihomer game of his career. Three of his five hits with Arizona were home runs before he was sent to Oakland in a July 31 trade.

Sogard connected in the third for the type of drive that frustrates many opposing teams in the Bronx, a flyball that barely cleared the wall in right, 314 feet from home plate. It was his first big league homer.

Colon gave up five runs for the second straight start. He got the loss in Kansas City on Wednesday and has not won since July 30, a span of four starts.

"To me I though I pitched good," Colon said. "I mean, I gave up two home runs, but other than that I thought I pitched well."

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.