Yankees score 13 runs in an inning for 1st time in 21 years - ESPN
WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — One big inning was more than enough Sunday for the New York Yankees.
Fueled by a fiery pep talk from captain Aaron Judge, the Yankees scored 13 runs in the third and beat the Athletics 13-8, finishing one run shy of the highest-scoring inning in the storied history of the franchise.
«Remarkable,» manager Aaron Boone said. «Glad we were able to make it stand up. Obviously, a lot of really good things offensively.… I don't think the prettiest game on either side, necessarily. But we were able to make a really outstanding inning stand up.»
The game began well for A's starter Jacob Lopez, who retired all six New York batters in the first two innings. That led to a heated message from Judge to his teammates that they needed to wake up.
«I just felt like we were a little asleep there that first two innings. I expect more out of the guys, and I know they expect more of themselves. A couple of choice words there just to get it going. The boys responded,» Judge said.
They sure did.
Lopez failed to retire any of the seven hitters he faced in the third, starting with a single by Anthony Volpe.
The totals in the inning were staggering as the Yankees had 11 hits, four walks and four stolen bases. They sent 18 batters to the plate and faced 75 pitches during their most productive inning since scoring 13 runs in the eighth against Tampa Bay on June 21, 2005. It was one shy of the franchise record for an inning set July 6, 1920, against the Washington Senators.
Lopez walked two batters after Volpe's hit and then failed to cover the bag on Paul Goldschmidt's bases-loaded grounder to first, allowing a run to score on an infield single. Ben Rice followed with a two-run double, Judge blooped a single to center and


