The Yankees are quite aware of how well Orioles closer Jim Johnson has pitched this season.
Three of his club-record 51 saves during the regular season came against New York as he pitched to a 1.29 ERA over seven appearances versus the Yankees.
So his losing effort in Sunday's Game 1 loss - five runs allowed (four earned) in just one-third of an inning - was more a blip than the norm when it comes to Johnson facing the AL East champs.
"It was a really good game, a...
Orioles manager Buck Showalter has spoken in the past about how closer Jim Johnson can spoil a team with his lengthy string of successful outings. A glitch comes out of nowhere. It's never anticipated.
Johnson entered Game 1 of the American League Division Series with the score tied in the top of the ninth. He walked off the mound having retired only one batter, four runs already charged to him and an unearned run coming as he sat in the dugout.
"It's tough. It's just tough going,...
Jim Johnson said he made mistakes with his location tonight, costing him and the Orioles as the New York Yankees scored five in the ninth off the O's closer to post a 7-2 win tonight in Game 1 of the American League Division Series.
"I made a mistake, obviously to (Russell) Martin and a couple of other mistakes over the middle of the plate, and we paid for it," Johnson said. "It's unfortunate after the effort we got out of everybody else. I didn't hold my end of the bargain. I feel...
Jim Johnson has been so great for the Orioles this year. He entered this game in the top of the ninth of a 2-2 tie tonight having allowed just one run over his last 26 innings and three homers all year and none since June 5.
But Russell Martin homered to left on a 2-0 pitch leading off the ninth and the Yankees went on to a 7-2 win in Game 1 of the American League Division Series in front of 47,841 at Camden Yards.
The Orioles will need to win tomorrow night behind Wei-Yin Chen or they will...
Left-hander Troy Patton replaced starter Jason Hammel with two outs in the sixth and a runner on first, gave up a single and retired Curtis Granderson on a fly ball to keep the game tied.
Clutch.
Darren O'Day only let six of 43 inherited runners score during the regular season. He inherited two in the seventh inning tonight and stranded them to keep the game tied.
Clutch.
Brian Matusz retired the first two batters in the eighth, walked Mark Teixeira and struck out Granderson on three...
ST. LOUIS - Just to recap today's ballgame for all those who were stuck in a cave somewhere all afternoon: National League Cy Young Award candidate Gio Gonzalez walked seven hitters, the Nationals struck out 13 times, left the bases loaded twice and made two errors in the final three innings.
Oh, yeah, and they won 3-2.
"I don't really know how we won that game, to be honest," reliever Craig Stammen said with a smile creeping onto his face. "But we pulled it out somehow. That's kind of...
Every postseason story has great plays that become the trademark for a team. A huge double play. A timely run-scoring hit. A game-saving catch.
The Nationals had all three Sunday in their first postseason win, a 3-2 stunner at St. Louis in the National League Division Series opener.
In the bottom of the sixth, with the Cardinals leading 2-1 and David Freese at first base, second baseman Daniel Descalso launched a long fly ball to deep right field that had a very good chance of leaving Busch...
ST. LOUIS - Remember all the talk about the vast difference in playoff experience in this National League Division Series? How the Cardinals had an edge over the Nationals because they'd been through all this before? How the Nats might be affected in big spots because of the added pressure that comes with late-inning, playoff situations?
"It obviously didn't affect us," reliever Ryan Mattheus said after today's 3-2 Nationals win.
Nope, it sure didn't. That isn't to say that experience...
In the postseason, the highs are higher, the lows are lower. Like Tom Boswell said in his Sunday morning column, the playoffs are the "myocardial infarction games," a Tilt-a-Whirl ride that seesaws the emotions up, down and all around. True to form, when Jayson Werth came to bat in the first inning of the first playoff game ever in Nationals history, the hearts of the collective fan base were beating about 200 strokes per minute.
Then Ian Desmond got the first base hit in the second inning...
The crowd erupted for the first time tonight when the first chords of "Sweet Home Alabama" were heard over the PA system. The next ovation came when three members of the grounds crew walked onto the field with brooms to sweep away puddles on the warning track, which was followed by a "Let's Go O's" chant.
Yeah, the fans are fired up for the first playoff game at Camden Yards in 15 years.
The rain delay lasted 2 hours, 26 minutes, but it couldn't dampen their enthusiasm. They don't...