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In the span of a week, Cam Schlittler registered polar-opposite outings.
The Yankees' 25-year-old right-hander pitched New York (50-40) to Monday's 5-1 win at the Tampa Bay Rays with one of his early career's best outings after last Tuesday's season-worst start against the Detroit Tigers -- a result that Schlittler took personally.
"Yeah, I mean, again -- last week was tough, right?" Schlittler said. "They want to say that there's f--king regression because I had one bad outing. So, again, it was personal to go out there and just have a dominant start and put this team in the right position."
Schlittler (9-5, 2.01 ERA) went a season-high-tying eight innings at the Rays (52-36), striking out eight while allowing one run on four hits and throwing 101 pitches (72 strikes) after surrendering six runs in four frames during last week's 9-3 loss to Detroit.
"It was huge," said Yankees manager Aaron Boone. "You know, I'm not surprised. I'm not surprised he bounced back from arguably his toughest outing of his young career so far against the Tigers, so he was great, he was dominant, he was efficient and, yeah, great way to get the road trip started."
The Yankees had lost nine of their past 10 games before they ultimately got back on track Monday with Schlittler giving a boost and returning to form.
"It's frustrating, right?" Schlittler said. "You want to stop the bleeding. I just wasn't able to do that. So, I feel like I dedicated myself this week to just kind of being more locked in and, again, trying to go out there and put the team in a position to win against the first-place team in our division is good.
"So, I think we played great ball tonight and we've got three more to go."
Continue reading...
The Yankees' 25-year-old right-hander pitched New York (50-40) to Monday's 5-1 win at the Tampa Bay Rays with one of his early career's best outings after last Tuesday's season-worst start against the Detroit Tigers -- a result that Schlittler took personally.
"Yeah, I mean, again -- last week was tough, right?" Schlittler said. "They want to say that there's f--king regression because I had one bad outing. So, again, it was personal to go out there and just have a dominant start and put this team in the right position."
Schlittler (9-5, 2.01 ERA) went a season-high-tying eight innings at the Rays (52-36), striking out eight while allowing one run on four hits and throwing 101 pitches (72 strikes) after surrendering six runs in four frames during last week's 9-3 loss to Detroit.
"It was huge," said Yankees manager Aaron Boone. "You know, I'm not surprised. I'm not surprised he bounced back from arguably his toughest outing of his young career so far against the Tigers, so he was great, he was dominant, he was efficient and, yeah, great way to get the road trip started."
The Yankees had lost nine of their past 10 games before they ultimately got back on track Monday with Schlittler giving a boost and returning to form.
"It's frustrating, right?" Schlittler said. "You want to stop the bleeding. I just wasn't able to do that. So, I feel like I dedicated myself this week to just kind of being more locked in and, again, trying to go out there and put the team in a position to win against the first-place team in our division is good.
"So, I think we played great ball tonight and we've got three more to go."
Continue reading...