New York,NY : Ellsbury crashes into wall; Yanks beat Royals on may, Tuesday 23th 2017
Luis Severino opened with a 97 mph fastball on the low, inside corner of the plate, and Alcides Escobar drove it deep to centre field.
Jacoby Ellsbury sprinted 107 feet, raised his glove above his head and snagged the ball as his head jarred into the wall. He landed on his back, toppled head over heels to the warning track but held on.
"It set the tone of the game. Escobar is standing on third or it's 1-0 if it comes out of his glove," said left fielder Brett Gardner, who ran over to comfort his New York Yankees teammate.
Ellsbury left after the first inning with a concussion and sprained neck that sent him to the disabled list. Severino allowed four hits over eight innings in his finest big league start , a 3-0 win over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night that opened a season-high 2 1/2-game AL East lead.
"Not too many people in the game make that play," right fielder Aaron Judge said. "I don't know how he held onto that ball. He hit that fence pretty hard."
Yankees manager Joe Girardi and head athletic trainer Steve Donohue spoke with Ellsbury during a 90-second delay. Girardi removed the centerfielder's cap while they looked in the outfielder's eyes.
"He felt like it was his neck that was bothering him a little bit. Nothing to do with his head. It was more like a whiplash," Girardi said.
Donohue talked to Ellsbury at the end of the half inning, and the Yankees decided to remove the 33-year-old from the game. Doctors then determined Ellsbury sustained a concussion, and he will go on the seven-day concussion disabled list.
"Obviously we're going to miss him for a while now," Girardi said. "He plays hard."
Ellsbury ran face first into the wall on May 1 catching a fly by Toronto's Ryan Goins, and he missed four starts.
Didi Gregorius homered against Jason Hammel (1-6) leading off the third inning, Gregorius' seventh hit in a span of 12 at-bats. New York tacked on runs with Matt Holliday's sacrifice fly in the sixth and Gardner's RBI single over a drawn-in infield in the seventh.
His fastball reaching 99 mph, Severino (3-2) allowed four hits over eight innings, struck out seven, walked one and threw a career-high 114 pitches. Severino, who lowered his ERA to 3.11, had been 0-1 in four outings since beating Boston on April 26.
"He's pitching the way that we've thought he was capable of pitching," Girardi said.
This year has been quite a turnaround for the 23-year-old right-hander, who lasted only seven starts last season before going to the disabled list and then the minors with an 0-6 record and 7.46 ERA.
"I think last year I was trying too much, trying to make the action," said Severino, who debuted in August 2015. "I was commanding all my stuff. I think today was one of my best outings."
In a sign of maturity, he froze Eric Hosmer with a 3-2 changeup for a strikeout that ended the fourth with a runner on.
"He was lights out tonight, pretty much unhittable," said Lorenzo Cain, who was 0 for 4 with three strikeouts on the night.
Dellin Betances, closing while Aroldis Chapman is on the disabled list, struck out the side in a perfect ninth for his fourth save as the Royals were shut out for a major league-high fifth time.
"Chapman's a huge loss for us," Betances said. "I wasn't looking forward to this. I'm just going out there trying to do my job 'til Chapman comes back."
Hammel, working entirely from the stretch for his fourth straight start, gave up three runs, six hits and two walks in six-plus innings. The 34-year-old right-hander, whose 1.69 WHIP is second-worst to Baltimore's Kevin Gausman among qualified starters, had not pitched since allowing five runs over six innings in a 7-1 loss to the Yankees on May 16. He worked between starts on squaring his shoulders and not flying open.
"I'll take it as a step forward," Hammel said. "Obviously a loss is never good, but it's something we can build on."
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Ellsbury crashes into wall; Yanks beat Royals