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DENVER — This weekend represents a lose-lose situation for the Yankees at Coors Field. If they win, they are supposed to. If they lose, it will be treated by some as a catastrophic event
against the historically awful Rockies. Friday represented the latter scenario, and while the sky did not immediately fall on the Yankees, perhaps that is just because it was reserved for
falling on the Knicks back in New York. Facing the team that was off to the worst 50-game start to a season in the modern era at 8-42, the Yankees fell flat in a 3-2 loss to the Rockies in
front of a jubilant sellout crowd of 47,211 that certainly seemed to savor the final out. The Yankees (30-20) came into the night on a four-game winning streak, having won 11 of their past
14, while the Rockies (9-42) were on a five-game losing streak, having lost 17 of their past 19 games. And, well, that’s baseball, Suzyn? “We’re all competitors in here. Anytime you lose,
we’re pissed off,” said Clarke Schmidt, who grinded through 4 ²/₃ innings and was charged with all three runs. “We’re not trying to go out there and lose ballgames. It shows in here in the
energy in here — obviously, everybody’s pissed off. But you play 162 games. You’re going to have games like this, nights like this where you don’t perform and you don’t get the job done.
“Obviously, it pisses you off. I’m pissed off right now. So yeah, it definitely pisses you off.” EXPLORE MORE The result marked the second-largest winning percentage disparity (-.452) for a
team at least 50 games into the season in the expansion era, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. ------------------------- ------------------------- Aaron Judge, playing his first career
game at Coors Field, put the Yankees ahead 2-1 in the top of the fifth with his 17th home run of the season in a 2-for-4 effort. But the Rockies came back to take the lead in the bottom of
the inning after Schmidt recorded two quick outs. Ezequiel Tovar and Hunter Goodman extended the frame with back-to-back singles, knocking Schmidt out of the game at 97 pitches, with Boone
calling on lefty Tim Hill to face the left-handed hitting Ryan McMahon with runners on the corners. McMahon delivered a two-run double that hit off the top of the center-field wall, putting
the Rockies ahead 3-2 and doing what no other lefty hitter had done against Hill this season: He recorded an extra-base hit. Entering the night, lefties were 3-for-35 against Hill with
three singles, but McMahon pounced on a sinker that was near the low-and-inside corner to do damage. “To elevate the ball, you just don’t see lefties do that much against [Hill],” manager
Aaron Boone said. “Put a great swing on it, and it was the difference today.” The Yankees could not scratch across any offense the rest of the way as Tanner Gordon tossed six innings of
two-run ball before handing it off to the Rockies bullpen, with Jake Bird, Seth Halvorsen and Zach Agnos each tossing a scoreless frame to pull off the upset. GO BEYOND THE BOX SCORE WITH
THE BOMBERS Sign up for Inside the Yankees by Greg Joyce, exclusively on Sports+. THANK YOU “Those guys are professionals, just the same,” said Hill, who has been frustrated with his command
of late. “Just losing a game in general is never good, especially when you have such a big part in it.” Schmidt, who had tossed six innings in each of his past three starts coming into the
night, was not as sharp Friday, which he attributed in part to pitching in the high altitude. He said it was difficult to throw sinkers here, which forced him to adjust on the fly and rely
more on his cutter and sweeper. The Rockies also fouled off 18 pitches and got into deep counts to drive up Schmidt’s pitch count. “You have to be a little bit more fine and more
exaggerated with your areas and where you’re trying to throw the ball,” said Schmidt, who struck out eight and walked two. “I felt like the stuff overall was [good] and I was getting to good
areas, but not being able to use the sinker was crippling a little bit at times. I just didn’t do my job tonight.” The Yankees jumped out to an early lead in the top of the first when
Judge ripped a single up the middle and scored from first on Paul Goldschmidt’s triple off the right-center field wall. But after Judge’s homer off Gordon in the fifth, the Yankees had just
two base runners the rest of the night — both walks that proved harmless. Boone also lamented a hard-hit grounder by Austin Wells that turned into a slick double play turned by second
baseman Adael Amador as the Rockies seemed to save their best baseball of the season for Friday night. “They beat us tonight,” Boone said. “I thought our focus was good, our conversations
were right. We didn’t get a big hit to break open an inning. It’s going to happen.”