Originally published Sunday, May 18, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Game of the Day | Santana keeps Yankees in cellar
Johan Santana made the Yankees pay for passing on him. The two-time Cy Young Award winner pitched efficiently into the eighth inning, and...
NEW YORK — Johan Santana made the Yankees pay for passing on him.
The two-time Cy Young Award winner pitched efficiently into the eighth inning, and the New York Mets got home runs from Jose Reyes and David Wright to top the Yankees 7-4 Saturday in the opener of a rain-shortened Subway Series.
"I think we showed today how to play as a team," Santana said.
Billy Wagner got four outs for his ninth save in nine chances — one day after manager Willie Randolph held a closed-door meeting in response to remarks by the closer that some perceived as critical of his teammates.
After clearing the air, the Mets clocked reliever Kyle Farnsworth. They got key throws from outfielders Ryan Church and Carlos Beltran, beating Andy Pettitte after Friday's scheduled game was rained out.
"You couldn't draw it up any better for all the negativity that's been going on," Wright said.
Santana (5-2) served up three more homers but lasted 7-2/3 innings, his longest outing this year.
"I had a lot of fun," he said. "I'm very happy where I am right now."
The Yankees initially pursued the left-hander in the offseason, then decided to keep their top young pitchers rather than trade them to Minnesota. Santana was dealt to the Mets for four prospects instead, and the Yankees have yet to get a win from youngsters Phil Hughes or Ian Kennedy this season.
"I wasn't trying to show anything. I'm just trying to do my job," Santana said.
Derek Jeter, Jason Giambi and Bobby Abreu homered, but little else went right for the Yankees (20-23) as they fell a season-worst three games under .500. They are last in the AL East. Jeter even lost a pop-up in the sun, soon after he was thrown out by Beltran trying to stretch a single.
"We hit the three home runs, that was about it. We need to get some things going," Jeter said. "You don't get too many opportunities against him."
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Santana recovered from a shaky start, snaring Giambi's leadoff liner in the fourth with quick reflexes. Santana won his fourth straight decision and improved to 4-0 with a 2.98 earned-run average against the Yankees in the regular season.
"You bring him here to pitch this kind of game," Randolph said. "He's my stopper."
Pettitte (3-5) allowed three runs in six innings, falling to 0-4 in his past five starts — his longest skid since May 2003.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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