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    Tuesday, April 16, 2024

    Nats rout Yankees 11-4 on late homers and 3 errors

    Washington Nationals' Josh Harrison (5) celebrates with third base coach Bob Henley after hitting a three-run home run during the eighth inning of the team's baseball game against the New York Yankees on Friday, May 7, 2021, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

    New York — Washington burst ahead in a six-run eighth inning that included three errors and Josh Harrison's three-run homer, and the Nationals beat the New York Yankees 11-4 Friday night to stop a three-game skid.

    With the score tied at 3 on a chilly night, Yadiel Hernández lined a single against Jonathan Loaisiga (3-2) that right fielder Aaron Judge allowed to bounce off his glove for his first error since Sept. 30, 2018.

    "He's as good as it gets out there so anytime he doesn't do something perfect it catches you off (guard) a little bit," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.

    Victor Robles followed with a sacrifice bunt up the third-base line and reached when DJ LeMahieu, moved across the diamond a day after Gio Urshela injured his left knee, threw wide of first.

    "I know that guy's fast, but I probably had an extra step to make a better throw," LeMahieu said.

    Trea Turner hit a go-ahead single and Harrison, batting .325 on the season, drove a 1-0 fastball into the left-field stands for a 7-3 lead.

    "We got presented with more opportunities to drive guys in today and we got it done," Harrison said. "It was exciting to have one of these games and to have one of those innings as well."

    Kyle Schwarber hit a run-scoring single off Luis Cessa, and shortstop Gleyber Torres allowed Yan Gomes' grounder to bounce past his glove for a run-scoring error.

    Juan Soto, making his first start after missing 10 games with a strained shoulder, added a two-run homer against Cessa in the ninth.

    New York's bullpen had a major league-best 2.24 ERA through Wednesday but Chad Green wasted a 3-2, eighth-inning lead in a 7-4 loss to Houston on Thursday, and Loaisiga and Cessa combined to allow eight runs — six earned — in two innings.

    The Yankees lost their second straight following a five-game winning streak and dropped back to .500 at 16-16.

    Kyle Finnegan (2-0) pitched a scoreless seventh for the win. Washington's bullpen entered with 28 consecutive outs before Finnegan walked Gary Sánchez, his second batter in the seventh. A streak of 36 outs for Nats relievers ended when Clint Frazier hit an RBI single off Will Harris in the ninth.

    "This bullpen here is a strength of hours," starter Patrick Corbin said. "It's very deep."

    LeMahieu hit solo opposite-field homers to right in the first and fifth innings off Corbin, who allowed three runs and four hits in six innings, dropping his ERA from 8.10 to 7.36. LeMahieu has six homers off Corbin, his most against any pitcher and the most Corbin has allowed to any batter.

    "I've faced him really all the way from Double-A in 2010 or '11, so I've faced him so many times I think that's probably the hitter's advantage," LeMahieu said.

    Josh Bell hit a solo homer in the second off Jameson Taillon and Gomes hit a two-run drive for a 3-1 lead.

    Sánchez homered in the bottom half, his first home run since April 3. Sánchez had been in a 2 for 30 slide.

    Taillon retired 15 in a row following Gomes' homer.

    Slugger on the mend

    Soto was 2 for 5. The reigning National League batting champion appeared as a pinch-hitter in each of Washington's previous three games, failing to reach base.

    "He understands the hitting portion of this game very well as a young hitter," manager Dave Martinez said. "Those few at-bats that we gave him as a pinch-hitter really helped his timing out a lot."

    Slumping slugger

    Judge was 0 for 4 and has one hit in his last 21 at-bats.

    Welcome back

    Miguel Andújar was recalled from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and went 0 for 4 in his first big league game at first base. Andújar got his first chance right away as Turner led off the game with a grounder to the right side which Andújar fielded cleanly for an unassisted putout.

    "I thought he did all right. That first ball hit to him was actually a little bit of a tricky play with the spin that Turner hit it with," Boone said.

    Andújar has missed significant time with injuries since finishing runner-up to the Angels' Shohei Ohtani in the 2018 AL Rookie of the Year voting. Reliever Albert Abreu was optioned.

    Red rocket

    Frazier ran a long way into left-center for a sprawling catch on Harrison in the third. Harrison rounded the bases and appeared to laugh as he completed his jog.

    "The first one that got caught, I thought it was at least a double but that's part of baseball," Harrison said.

    Trainer's room

    Nationals: RHP Wander Suero (strained left oblique) was with the team Friday and continued his throwing program. He is scheduled to travel Saturday and pitch in Lehigh Valley on Sunday for Triple-A Rochester. ... RHP Stephen Strasburg (right shoulder inflammation) was also with the team and is scheduled to pitch in a simulated game Tuesday at Nationals Park.

    Yankees: Urshela (swollen left knee) is day-to-day. An MRI confirmed the knee is structurally sound. Urshela has minor swelling. ... 1B Luke Voit (left knee surgery) was 0 for 3 with a walk and a run scored for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. The hulking slugger played four innings in the field.

    Up next

    In a Saturday matchup of 2017 Cy Young Award winners, Nationals RHP Max Scherzer (2-2, 2.54 ERA) hopes to build upon his last start during which he held Miami to just one run in a complete game victory. Yankees RHP Corey Kluber (2-2, 3.03) earned his 100th career win Sunday against Detroit, hurling eight scoreless frames. Kluber last faced Scherzer on May 21, 2013.

    New York Yankees' DJ LeMahieu hits a home run during the sixth inning of a baseball game against the Washington Nationals, Friday, May 7, 2021, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

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