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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
DETROIT (AP) -- They still have the worst record in the majors.
But two straight wins over the defending World Series champions
have the Detroit Tigers feeling a lot better about themselves.
Jose Macias had three hits, including a two-run triple, and Jeff
Weaver pitched 6 2/3 strong innings as the Tigers beat the New York
Yankees 6-3 Saturday.
|  | | Tigers call-up Jose Macias, who had three hits, is 5-for-9 in two games against the Yankees. |
Detroit (11-23) has scored 15 runs in two wins over the Yankees
after scoring just two in its previous four games.
The Tigers are assured of winning just their second series this
season. They took two of three from Seattle in the first series at
Comerica Park on April 11-13.
"To heck with the series," Detroit manager Phil Garner said,
looking ahead to the weekend finale Sunday. "I want to win three
in a row. We haven't done that yet, have we?"
Detroit hasn't won three straight since a six-game winning
streak last September. But Gregg Jefferies, who was 2-for-2 with
two walks and two runs scored, said it's not imperative to sweep
the Yankees.
"I'd just like to keep up the energy we've had," Jefferies
said. "If we can just keep up the energy it's a lot more fun for
us and a lot more fun for the fans. When the New York Yankees come
to town, you better have energy."
The Yankees lost their third in a row, their longest skid of the
season. They still have an AL-best 22-12 mark.
"Teams come out to play us, there's no doubt about it," New
York's Paul O'Neill said. "When we come to town, they come to
play. If we don't play a good, solid game, we're going to get beat.
That's just the way it is."
Macias, 5-for-9 in the series, performed impressively in spring
training but was sent to Triple-A Toledo when the Tigers decided to
keep Jefferies and Shane Halter as their extra infielders. Macias
was called up May 3 and made his second straight start at second
base in place of Damion Easley, who went on the disabled list
Friday with a broken wrist.
"I just like his aura," Garner said. "He doesn't seem to be
worried about anything. It just seems like something's going to
happen when he's around."
Weaver (1-4) allowed three runs -- one earned -- on seven hits. He
struck out five and walked two.
"Each pitch is definitely a key pitch against those guys, and
things seemed to work out today," Weaver said.
Todd Jones pitched the ninth for his ninth save of the season
and second of the series.
Andy Pettitte (2-2), who won his last two starts, was roughed up
for five earned runs on 10 hits in 4 2/3 innings.
"He was struggling," Yankees manager Joe Torre said. "A lot
of pitches were belt-high. He needs to live around the knees."
It marked the second straight day a Yankees starter lasted less
than five innings. Roger Clemens was knocked out after allowing six
runs in 4 2/3 innings of the Tigers' 9-7 victory Friday.
Both teams struggled with a stiff wind blowing mainly to left
but often swirling around Comerica Park.
"It reminded me of Candlestick Park out there," Torre said.
O'Neill, playing right field, saw a seemingly routine, two-out
fly ball from Dean Palmer blow back and fall in front of him as a
run scored in the Tigers fourth.
"It was just like somebody threw it straight down back to the
infield," Pettitte said. "It was crazy."
Bernie Williams hit a fly ball that Tigers left fielder Rich
Becker first charged and then saw sail over him in the sixth.
Becker was charged with an error, and Tino Martinez followed with
an RBI single that cut the Tigers' lead to 6-2.
The strangest play was turned in by Detroit catcher Brad Ausmus.
He first chased a ninth-inning foul popup from Scott Brosius to his
right, backpedaled as the wind carried it left and caught the ball
while falling flat on his back.
"He looked like Jerry Rice," Jefferies said.
Brosius hit an RBI single that gave the Yankees a 1-0 lead in
the second.
The Tigers answered with four in the home half as Macias hit a
two-run triple, Ausmus an RBI double and another run scored on
Pettitte's second throwing error of the day.
Palmer's wind-aided hit made it 5-1 in the fourth, and Pettitte
exited in the fifth after two singles and Luis Polonia's sacrifice
fly gave the Tigers a 6-1 lead.
Run-scoring singles from Martinez in the sixth and Chuck
Knoblauch in the seventh finished the scoring. Knoblauch's RBI was
just his third of the season, with the others coming in
back-to-back games April 15-16 against Kansas City.
Game notes
Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter missed his second straight
game and is still listed as day-to-day with a left side abdominal
strain. ... The Tigers placed first baseman Tony Clark on the
15-day disabled list with an injured left rib cage. Clark suffered
the injury last weekend at Minnesota and reaggravated it Friday
night during the Tigers' 9-7 win over the Yankees.
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