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Angels get pushed to edge

NEW YORK YANKEES 10, ANGELS 1

CC Sabathia dominates Angels again and Alex Rodriguez has a big game as Yankees take a 3-1 lead in AL Championship Series.

October 21, 2009|MIKE DiGIOVANNA, ON THE ANGELS

These were the games that prompted the Angels to trade for Scott Kazmir in August, his track record against the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees and his affinity for "the big stage" making the pitcher a much-needed October commodity in Anaheim.

Of course, these were also the games the Yankees had in mind when they shelled out $161 million for CC Sabathia last winter, giving New York the kind of front-of-the-rotation horse it hadn't had since 2003, when Roger Clemens wore pinstripes.


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It seemed almost inevitable the two left-handers would collide in the playoffs, and when they did in Game 4 of the American League Championship Series on Tuesday night, Kazmir looked out of his weight class, in more ways than one.

Sabathia, an imposing mound presence at 6 feet 7 and 290 pounds, mowed down the Angels, giving up one run and five hits in eight innings to lead the Yankees to a 10-1 victory in Angel Stadium.

The Yankees took a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series and need one more win for their first World Series berth since 2003.

Pitching on three days' rest for the sixth time in his career, Sabathia, who won Game 1 over the Angels, struck out five and walked two, his only blemish Kendry Morales' solo homer in the fifth, to improve to 3-0 with a 1.19 earned-run average in three playoff starts this month.

Even if the Angels win Game 5 in Anaheim on Thursday night and Game 6 in New York on Saturday to force a Game 7, waiting for them Sunday night -- on regular rest in chilly Yankee Stadium -- will be Sabathia.

"We would love to see that happen," Angels third baseman Chone Figgins said. "We have to realize we have a chance. We have to go down fighting. They just beat us plain and simple tonight. You can never dwell on a game like this."

The 6-foot, 190-pound Kazmir, who was 6-5 with a 2.67 ERA in 15 games against the Yankees, struggled with his command, needing 89 pitches to throw four innings, in which he was tagged for four runs and six hits, walked four and struck out three.

"It's very disappointing -- this is not how I wanted to pitch today," Kazmir said. "I wasn't getting ahead of hitters, and when I got behind, I wasn't attacking the zone. It was ball one, ball two, get a strike here and there and try to work back into counts. That's not how you face those guys."

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