2000 Diary, June 3: Yankees bullpen blows lead in Atlanta
June 3: Yankees 7, Braves 11 (box score)
Record: 29-22 (Tied for 1st place in AL East)
The visiting Yankees came into the second game of the three-game interleague series having won the first contest by a score of 5-2. And with two fantastic but stylistically different arms on the mound for both sides, it was bound to be an exciting bout with the Yankees looking to win a big series on the road against a 35-18 Braves squad.
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The Bombers arrived on time, as well. The first four men in the order found their way on base via a hit. Chuck Knoblauch smoked a line drive to left, and Derek Jeter followed that up with a single of his own to center field. Paul O'Neill brought Knoblauch across home plate for the first run of the game with another line drive single to left, and Bernie Williams brought Jeter home with a double to center, putting the Yankees up 2-0.
The Braves responded in the bottom of the first against Clemens, cutting the lead to one run, but as a result of an error by Clemens on the throw to first. Clemens struck out the next two batters to keep the Yankees in the lead.
After Maddux struck out Clemens to begin the top of the second, Knoblauch hit another ball to left field, this time a double. He stole third base with Jeter up at the plate, and the Yankees' shortstop brought his middle infield partner across to score with a single, reinstating the two-run lead.
The Braves did not go away, though, as Bobby Bonilla doubled to right to lead off the bottom of the second inning. Groundouts from Rafael Furcal and Fernando Lunar brought Bonilla across to score, bringing the deficit back to one before the inning ended.
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A surprising backup soon helped the Yankees out. Catcher Chris Turner stepped in for Jorge Posada after the soon-to-be All-Star took a pitch off the hand behind the plate and left injured. Although not remotely the offensive threat that Posada was, Turner celebrated his coincidental appearances at Turner Field by putting the Yankees back up two runs with a leadoff home run off Maddux in the top of the third, his first as a Yankee. Despite the billing of a matchup of two elite pitchers, neither starter could establish a rhythm.
In the bottom of the third, Jones led off the inning with a walk against Clemens, and after Wally Joyner reached on an error by Jeter, it was Brian Jordan's turn to respond, and he did. A loud crack of the bat sent the baseball flying over the left field wall and put Atlanta up 5-4, giving them their first lead of the game.
Yet again, the top of the Yankees' lineup came back against Maddux. Knoblauch went back to the dugout for the first time on the night before singles from Jeter and O'Neill. A double steal would've put runners in scoring position, but the throw from Atlanta catcher Lunar sailed, scoring Jeter and putting O'Neill at third. Williams grounded out with no movement from Jeter at third, but Martinez stepped up and brought Jeter across to score, reclaiming a 6-5 lead.
The Braves tied the game on a Javy López pinch-hit double to center that Williams could not corral, scoring Furcal. But in the top of the sixth, again the Yankees fought back, at last forcing Maddux from the game. Jeter scored his third run of the game on another Turner hit, and Maddux departed after 5.2 innings pitched, a startling 13 hits allowed, and seven earned runs against.
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With the Yankees up 7-6, all they needed was for the bullpen to hold on, but that wasn't on the cards. Jason Grimsley pitched one inning clean, but allowed two unearned runs after an error credited to Martinez, a hit by pitch, and a wild pitch. A double from López scored two runs and gave the Braves a lead that they would not give away again.
New York's bullpen gave up three more runs in the bottom of the eighth, and the offense could not find a rally in their bones, dropping the contest 11-7. It was a sour way to go down; it must've been hard to envision dropping a game with Clemens on the mound on a day the offense pounded out 13 hits. In any event, the Yankees would look to regroup and take the series the next day with Andy Pettitte on the mound.
Read the full 2000 Yankees Diary series here.
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New York Times
26 minutes ago
- New York Times
Clayton Kershaw reflects on long, difficult journey to 3,000 strikeouts
LOS ANGELES — There was no difference in Clayton Kershaw's slow, methodical trot off the mound. It was the exact same walk he's made back to his Dodger Stadium dugout thousands of times. Stoicism painted his face, even as a capacity crowd showered him with the kind of raucous applause heard after a World Series win. His manager of a decade, Dave Roberts, pumped his fist, a gleeful grin on his face. Advertisement But Kershaw didn't acknowledge his feat — 3,000 career strikeouts — until he was about 10 paces from the dugout. There, he stopped, took off his hat and saluted the people who had spent 18 seasons supporting him. He'd spent all night chasing strikeouts, getting one pitch away and not finishing the job. The bullpen had warmed up twice. His pitch count eclipsed triple digits for the first time in years, and the distinct fear of getting No. 3,000 during his next start in Milwaukee left a pall over the evening. Then, Kershaw fired a slider over on the outside corner to White Sox infielder Vinny Capra. It wasn't a good one, Kershaw said. But as soon as home plate umpire Jim Wolf rung Capra up, that no longer mattered. 'I was pretty desperate to get strikeouts all day,' Kershaw said with a chuckle, letting his guard down after the 5-4 walkoff win, on-field celebration and clubhouse toast. 'I understand the list of what the 3,000 strikeout club is. So I am grateful to be a part of that list. But at the end of the day, individual stuff comes and goes. It's just the people around you that make it special. I'm so thankful for that.' It hasn't been easy for Kershaw to embrace making this about himself, to admit that this moment was as big a deal to him as it was for everyone else. His teammate, Freddie Freeman, has been counting down each strikeout. So has his oldest son. But for a pitcher who has won three Cy Young awards, an MVP, a Gold Glove, garnered 10 All-Star Game invitations and won two World Series, this still meant something. To the 53,536 fans who were there, to all the family and friends who came out. To even the two managers — both of whom he's faced — this was a celebration of a career as much as it was a milestone. 'To get 3,000 strikeouts, that takes a long time,' Roberts said. 'And a lot of trials, tribulations, surgeries, rehabs, frustrations, tears. To continue to fight back, come back, show up and post, that's hard to do. 'Now, I think he can even say that every box has been checked.' Dodgers fans often get derided for showing up late and leaving early. On Wednesday, the capacity crowd was almost entirely seated by the time Kershaw's quest began. For them, it was an emotional roller coaster, disappointment after disappointment, audible groans heard even when he recorded outs. Boos abounded when the home plate umpire wouldn't ring up batters on pitches well off the plate. The 37-year-old produced 13 two-strike counts through the first five innings. Roberts said it was like managing a no-hitter, with the push-and-pull of when to remove the starter changing with every pitch. Advertisement No one was there to watch the Dodgers and the White Sox. They wanted to see Kershaw secure the final 0.1 percent of his all-time milestone. And until it happened, there was no guarantee that it would. 'I honestly didn't pitch that great tonight. My slider was so bad,' Kershaw said. 'It's a little bit harder when you're actually trying to strike people out. I've never really had to do that before.' After two innings, Kershaw's K till was empty. The first 11 batters came and went. Three runs scored — Austin Slater already had a home run and a triple. Fifty pitches in, and nothing to show for it. This night had been the preordained endpoint, with dozens of Kershaw's friends and family in attendance. And suddenly, the odds of him finishing it off went from a sure thing to on the verge of perilous. Then, he got Miguel Vargas, a former teammate, whiffing on a curve off the inside corner in the third. A brief reprieve, then another 11 batters passed before he struck out Lenyn Sosa in the fifth. When he finally caught Vinny Capra staring at his signature slider in the sixth, he'd thrown a season-high 100 pitches. It was his last batter, a must-K situation. And the surefire first-ballot Hall of Famer rose to the occasion. 'He made a really good pitch,' Capra said. 'He's a really good pitcher, and he's been doing it for a long time.' It's a refrain Capra repeated several times after the game. He'd only had a couple hours to process his place in history, and a few minutes to get over the gut-wrenching walk-off loss. Cheers, Kersh. — Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) July 3, 2025 It's been 17 years, one month and eight days since Kershaw recorded his first career strikeout — an up-and-away fastball to Skip Shumaker. A proud hitter who, all these years later, can appreciate his place in Kershaw's career, even if it came at his own expense. 'Let's ambush him, welcome him to the big leagues,' Shumaker thought, reflecting on his mindset before the at-bat. 'I'm like, first pitch, I'm going for it. I'm gonna welcome this kid to the big leagues.' Advertisement By the end of the at-bat, Shumaker said he had a new thought: 'Oh boy, this is going to be a long game.' 'I think people would be lying if they told you that they knew. They knew he was going to be an All-Star pitcher. There was no doubt,' said Shumaker, who went on to play for the Dodgers in 2013, and is regularly reminded by Kershaw of the punchout. 'Did I think I was going to be one of 3,000? No. I did not think that. What he's turned into, I'm just so happy for him.' After Shumaker, the strikeouts continued. Buster Posey was his 500th strikeout in 2011, then came Yonder Alonso for K No. 1,000 two years later. Drew Stubbs was the 1,500th victim a decade ago, Jonathan Villar marked No. 2,000 in 2017 and Nick Ahmed No. 2,500 on Sept. 3, 2020. It's been five long years since the last milestone. Kershaw has been on the IL seven times and signed three free-agent contracts since. He's been beaten up in the playoffs, and at times, looked like his career might be over. But on Wednesday, he finally crossed the finish line. And as he looked up into the crowd, to his family seated on the first row of the second deck, it all felt worth it. 'We've been through it, we have,' Kershaw said. 'I've been through it, a lot. Ups and downs here. More downs than I care to admit. But the fans tonight, it really meant a lot. It was overwhelming.'

Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
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Chicago Tribune
41 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
Shota Imanaga wins his 2nd straight start since coming of IL for Chicago Cubs
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