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Try it freeA Yankees starter is going to give up multiple runs — maybe even three — someday.
But not now, not yet — and most of the time, not even one.
Cam Schlittler was masterful once again, throwing 6 ¹/₃ shutout innings on the way to a 5-3 win over the Mariners to claim the series at T-Mobile Park while continuing the Yankees run of pitching dominance to begin the season.
Schlittler, who retired the final 15 batters he faced and would have gone even deeper had he not been on a pitch count, recorded the fourth scoreless start by a Yankee in the team’s first six games — two by him and two by Max Fried.
Yankees starters have still only given up just two runs over their first six games — spanning 33 ²/₃ innings — marking the fewest by any team’s starting rotation through their first six games of a season since 1900.
“I think the staff’s dominant and the bullpen’s been great as well,” said Schlittler, who struck out seven and scattered just two hits. “The team as a whole, just feeding off each other and taking it each game, each start and keep rolling with it.”
The bullpen, which has mostly been strong in its own right early, threatened to light the game on fire late after the Yankees led 4-0, fueled by Paul Goldschmidt’s three-run shot.
Camilo Doval loaded the bases with two outs in the eighth inning before Cal Raleigh roped a two-run single off David Bednar to make it 4-2.
After Bednar struck out Julio Rodríguez to end the threat, Ben Rice got a run back in the top of the ninth on his first home run of the season, which provided a bit more breathing room for when the Mariners fought back again in the bottom of the ninth, pushing across another run. But Bednar finally nailed down the final out on his 40th pitch, sending the Yankees flying home high following a 5-1 West Coast trip ahead of Friday’s home opener.
“Really good baseball,” manager Aaron Boone said. “Obviously pitching at a really high level. The defense was excellent on the trip overall. Some timely hitting, a couple big homers along the way. Just really good baseball and a good way to open the season and head back home into an off day and hopefully start off a nice homestand.”
Across 79 pitches Wednesday — still building up after back inflammation had slowed him briefly in camp — Schlittler continued to pound the zone and attack with his three fastballs. He has still not walked a batter this season, only letting three runners on base at all across 11 ²/₃ scoreless innings.
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The 25-year-old became the first pitcher in Yankees history to begin a season with back-to-back starts of five-plus scoreless innings and seven-plus strikeouts.
“He’s not afraid to throw his best stuff and come at you in the zone,” said Rice, who capped off a strong series by going 2-for-3 with a walk, RBI double and the 427-foot homer. “Clearly he is very difficult to hit.”
It is still early, but this kind of start has allowed the Yankees to dream on the high-end potential of their rotation over the full season, especially with Carlos Rodón and Gerrit Cole expected to join it before long.
“What a week of pitching,” Boone said. “Credit to those guys for, along with [Austin Wells] and J.C. [Escarra] and the pitching group, coming up with a really good game plan and those starting pitchers going out there and executing at a really high level.”
Goldschmidt, who was only in the lineup because the Yankees wanted to give the red-hot Giancarlo Stanton a proactive day off to keep him healthy over the long haul, delivered the biggest swing in the sixth inning. The veteran first baseman crushed a three-run shot off right-hander George Kirby to put the Yankees ahead 4-0 — set up by Trent Grisham and Rice each drawing a walk — creating some cushion for Schlittler and Co.
“Being efficient, limiting the walks, limiting the hits and getting the strikeouts,” Schlittler said, “is a good way to put the team in a position to win.”