Yankees clinch AL East, home field thru postseason
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
NEW YORK — Soaked to the skin with champagne, Mark Teixeira stood on the giant "NY" logo in the Yankees clubhouse and shouted like crazy.
"Tastes good!" he hollered.
Favored to win the World Series since opening day, the New York Yankees celebrated like playoff newcomers after beating Boston 4-2 Sunday to clinch the AL East title and home-field advantage throughout the postseason.
Absent from the playoffs last season, the Yankees put a bow on this title with their major league-leading 100th win.
"Everything is clicking right now," winning pitcher Andy Pettitte said. "When you miss out, it makes you a little more hungry to get back there."
Maybe that's why Derek Jeter, Mariano Rivera and a roomful of All-Star multimillionaires went wild, chanting and jumping and spraying each other with bubbly. Teixeira and many others wore goggles to stave off the sting — of victory, that is.
"I think the way last year ended left a bad taste in all our mouths," manager Joe Girardi said. "There's a lot of excitement. This has been a fun group, and they enjoy it."
Hideki Matsui's go-ahead single in the sixth inning energized the damp fans and put them on notice that a party was coming. The first real bash at the new Yankee Stadium began with a most familiar scene — Rivera on the mound, closing out another clincher.
Catcher Jose Molina leaped up from behind the plate even before Rivera had fielded Jacoby Ellsbury's soft comebacker for the final out. The Yankees swarmed Rivera on the first-base side of the mound while players in the bullpen streamed in.
Nick Swisher wasted no time putting on an AL East Champions hat. The crowd responded with a standing ovation as the Yankees began walking off the field, with Jeter at the front and several teammates pulling on gray championship T-shirts.
"Winning a championship is what I came here for," pitcher CC Sabathia said. "It definitely feels good — first one in pinstripes, first one in the new stadium, first celebration."
The three-game sweep extended the Yankees' winning streak to five. They finished 9-9 against Boston this year, surprising since New York lost the first eight matchups.
"We're going to see them again down the road, we have a feeling," slugger Alex Rodriguez said.
Despite the defeat, the Red Sox remain in firm control of the wild-card race. Their magic number is two to beat out Texas for the final playoff spot.
"Hope we win tomorrow," Boston manager Terry Francona said. "That's normally what we do. Play. If you win, move on. If you lose, learn and move on. That's what our next chore will be."
Still to be determined is who New York will meet in the best-of-five opening round, and when. The Yankees will most likely face the AL Central winner, either Detroit or Minnesota.
Once all the playoff teams are determined, the Yankees will get 1 hour to decide which playoff schedule they prefer. They can choose to start on either Oct. 7 or Oct. 8; the earlier start date includes a day off between the first two games.
Boosted by newcomers such as Teixeira, Sabathia and Swisher, the Yankees won their first division title since 2006. They drenched the high-tech clubhouse, with plastic sheets preventing the computer screens at every stall from getting doused.
All alone in first place since July 21, the Yankees can now spend the final week resting players and setting up the playoff rotation.
"I like this team here," Jeter said.
Pettitte (14-7) outpitched Paul Byrd (1-3), and Rivera finished for his 44th save in 46 chances.
Boston put two runners on base in the ninth. Pinch-hitter Victor Martinez's 25-game hitting streak ended when his grounder was ruled an error on second baseman Robinson Cano.
"Hard work, determination and a bunch of great attitudes, when you put that all together you accomplish a lot of things," Rivera said.
After a 63-minute rain delay at the outset, the Yankees beat Boston for the seventh straight time at home.
Matsui met Red Sox reliever Takashi Saito with a two-out, two-run single in the sixth barely in front of right fielder J.D. Drew's dive. Teixeira's solo homer in the eighth provided insurance.
"This team is so talented, this team has so many weapons," Teixeira said. "Hopefully, there are a few more celebrations."
Cautioned catcher Jorge Posada: "Let's not get ahead of ourselves. Right now we're very happy with what we've done. Maybe we can do a little more later."